tv Headliners Replay GB News March 22, 2023 2:00am-3:01am GMT
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intentional and it wasn't wasn't intentional and it wasn't reckless. submit ing his 52 page defence dossier to the committee. the former prime minister admitted gatherings at downing during lockdown should never happened. he also said statements in the house of commons were made good faith. he's due give more evidence in person before tomorrow . person before tomorrow. international news in russia strengthened ties with china, saying it's prepared to step up oil deliveries to the country . oil deliveries to the country. president putin made the on the second day of the chinese state visit to moscow describing talks between the two of them as constructive , adding he hopes constructive, adding he hopes they'll remain in contact. yesterday president putin welcomed , his dear friend, the welcomed, his dear friend, the kremlin , the pair discussed kremlin, the pair discussed china's peace plan for ukraine. now group of eurosceptic, you're conservative mps has described parts of the prime minister's new brexit deal with the eu as
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practically useless . the practically useless. the european research group commissioned lawyers to scrutinise the windsor ahead of tomorrow's vote on the stormont brake element of the proposal. a spokesperson for rishi sunak says it is a deal and he's urging to back it. says it is a deal and he's urging to back it . lastly people urging to back it. lastly people have been protesting outside trump towers in new york, calling the authorities to condemn the former us president over an alleged hush money payment . donald trump over an alleged hush money payment. donald trump has been accused of paying off a actress in the run up to the 2016 elections. if is charged, it will be the first criminal case brought against a us president. former national security adviser mr. trump john bolton told nigel farage earlier on this evening the important matter would be mr. trump was convicted . the mr. trump was convicted. the real question is not whether trump gets indicted. i think that's coming in in days. i know exactly when, but it's days not
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weeks in the stormy daniels, stormy daniels matter. the real is, will he get convicted if he is, will he get convicted if he is acquitted? i that will give trump the republican and could elect him to the president's . elect him to the president's. john bolton . you are up to date john bolton. you are up to date on tv online , dab+ radio and on on tv online, dab+ radio and on the tunein app with gb news the people's channel. time now for. thank you, paul. hello. welcome to headline news. the best paper reviews show around and the most humble. i i'm simon evans joining me tonight we have two comedic giants literally and figuratively we have leo kearse and scott cooper who how are you both? all right you look as if you've just been dragged from your holidays. both of you just getting ready for summer. are you okay? you've been off a bit poorly. yeah, just had a bit
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poorly. yeah, i just had a bit of yeah, not. not the of a cold. yeah, not. not the duty throat lozenge . some people duty throat lozenge. some people have been really sweating it lately . i'm a have been really sweating it lately. i'm a bit anxious about that one. well, i mean, was mind flu, so was overestimate the severity have you've to dodge all this scott ? yes, i was severity have you've to dodge all this scott? yes, i was in all of this scott? yes, i was in the czech republic telling jokes all of this scott? yes, i was in the (they republic telling jokes all of this scott? yes, i was in the (they import ic telling jokes all of this scott? yes, i was in the (they import theelling jokes all of this scott? yes, i was in the (they import the comedian; well they import the comedian there obviously. yeah especially like me a jewish one because they've run out. it was great there, though was really mountainous , is there not? mountainous, is there not? there's a tradition of dissident comedy in the czech republic . comedy in the czech republic. isn't used to bring isn't that being used to bring down authorities so on? down the authorities and so on? i they played too much i think they played too much actually. in fact, when i went to leave they were like, bye bye. and i'm like, watch that things me. painful things back to me. painful memories for people like me. right? quick at right? let's have a quick at wednesday's front pages . we have wednesday's front pages. we have the daily mail up first bullish bofis the daily mail up first bullish boris up for the fight. meanwhile, teachers , gwyneth meanwhile, teachers, gwyneth paltrow is also up for a fight of a slightly less momentous nature guardian jonathan , fight nature guardian jonathan, fight for political survival at party hearing. and then once again, is gwyneth paltrow universally
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acknowledged to be more picturesque than ex—prime minister. the financial times falling like expectancy triggers delay to raising of state pension age to 68. if you think that's bad you should move to france . the telegraph hypocrite france. the telegraph hypocrite starmer to avoid tax on pension the times pale and coyle is not a new zealand but contraceptive methods shown to raise breast cancer risk and the daily star ever go their own way . ever go their own way. pinocchio, i am not a liar i'm just a there is as boris's defence proceed with a degree of liberal margin by the stuff those where you're pages . those where you're pages. paraphrase. that's the word i wanted not pricey so let's kick things off with the front page of the daily mail. so the front of the daily mail. so the front of the daily mail. so the front of the daily mail got a picture
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of the daily mail got a picture of gwyneth wearing a big long coat. she of looks like like to you don't each other's shoulders thick in the cinema for the price of one packet those are not her legs are they. she needs eat a meal look how skinny she is from top to bottom she's the same with . yes, yes, i know. she same with. yes, yes, i know. she had somebody she had somebody when she was skiing like climbed into them and get damage into them and get them damage out she just bounce off out of those she just bounce off but the main story is boris says bullish for the fight bullish boris up for the fight and was a classic the daily and it was a classic the daily mail's a rabble rousing boris headlines. a party headlines. apparently a party people are saying party is going to is going to bring boris johnson down. he's already been brought down prime minister anymore. this is like shutting the , the horse's the stable door, the horse's bullet and burning the stable down. and you don't you don't need is the incentive need to. but is the incentive try and have him lose his constituency of parliament altogether. would actually altogether. would that actually help labour he could be help labour so he could be suspended or even expelled from from parliament. in the end, bofis from parliament. in the end, boris has come back and said, you it did, did mislead
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you know, it did, it did mislead parliament over because he said he didn't break any rules and then later transpired they then it later transpired they had rules had broken some, but the rules were stupid and nobody knew were all stupid and nobody knew what laws own rules . what they were. laws own rules. the question is, which is defence is to say whether it's true or not, whether or not he had been misled as what the rules were. no, might . well, rules were. no, you might. well, he should not have relied on anybody else's advice. but that's argument. they that's the his argument. they were his laws that he were actually his laws that he had yeah. but he's gone had passed. yeah. but he's gone actually. remember actually. if you remember on television night about television every night for about a week , barking the laws at a week, barking the laws at people and telling them what they how they they should do and how they should and then should behave. and then he didn't the didn't just mislead the parliament. actually broke parliament. he actually broke his he ran a speakeasy, his own law. he ran a speakeasy, didn't were a red stripe didn't he and were a red stripe in a bucket. he a birthday cake after work. he couldn't do the working home over zoom thing . working home over zoom thing. well, we've seen the photos of him in the courtyard having dnnks him in the courtyard having drinks with people. do you feel this just like you this is just like you personally? but do you he personally? but do you that he need to transgressions were just him wanting enjoy himself or that he was trying to run a team
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who were working long hours and allowing them little bit of leisure. i think does what. leisure. i think he does what. he andi leisure. i think he does what. he and i don't think he he wants and i don't think he ever anything wrong. ever he does anything wrong. right | ever he does anything wrong. right i think that he right i don't think that he understands people are going understands why people are going after him still. i don't think that he that what he did was incorrect i think incorrect at all. and i think that finding this quite that he's finding this quite demeaning he's wanting why demeaning and he's wanting why they're break they're making him break his tour that is tour of million dollar that is interesting. i mean, if he's not unless he thinks is going to come back and be prime minister again , of course, that is again, of course, that is currently the sort of it's the money, isn't it? he's so last. i mean be way for the mean it would be a way for the tory party to the election. tory party to the next election. well have six months go. well i would have six months go. that might have been the case potentially. so i agree with you boringly success. anyway, boringly success. well, anyway, let's have a look at the guardian. scott. yes doubts over uk claim of perfect war against the uk still claims that they have 100 states pardon me, islamic state say yes . islamic state say yes. apparently the uk government is still claiming they didn't kill any civilian ones during the islamic bombings in iraq . and
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islamic bombings in iraq. and it's come out recently from a non—profit watchdog, airwars , non—profit watchdog, airwars, that that might not be the case. okay they may have killed some people who or injured as well. some of the victims still alive is still claimed. they saw the planes dropping off bombs. so they were a clean sheet? yes, 100. well done, greg. a retired air marshal said that that has always said that was a stretch that % good record in would have that% good record in would have been fine and that the british government still claiming 100% is really incorrect. no weddings at least well by comparison with the american force know the american air force has never claimed to not have killed people. they've always said that they did and they they've apologised do you apologised it. yes. what do you think now. yeah. i mean seems think now. yeah. i mean it seems ridiculous to bomb an urban area with civilians in it and to say that your bombs only took enemy combatants . but i just think it combatants. but i just think it shows we should just leave middle east alone. just don't get involved in their dramas, just sort themselves. just let them sort themselves. we need oil any we don't need their oil any more. we're all to be
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more. we're all going to be driving cars . i mean, driving electric cars. i mean, you putting that aside in you know, putting that aside in chemical do chemical terms. but i do remember a candidate chemical terms. but i do renprimer a candidate chemical terms. but i do renprime minister a candidate chemical terms. but i do ren prime minister who candidate chemical terms. but i do renprime minister who saididate for prime minister who said exactly jeremy not exactly that jeremy corbyn not very ago, that was his very long ago, that was his record had said record and it had been said jeremy corbyn lose funded jeremy corbyn to lose funded funded by iran state broad cut new connections. the middle there no but he was absolutely i suspect that's what did you know he said that shouldn't get he said that we shouldn't get involved know he doesn't say involved i know he doesn't say he doesn't want involved because he's making out it. he's making money out of it. he's them the air. he's getting them off the air. what you think we what about libya? you think we should bombed libya? well, should have bombed libya? well, i mean, the middle east. this should have bombed libya? well, i difficult|e middle east. this should have bombed libya? well, i difficult northdle east. this should have bombed libya? well, i difficult north africa?:. this should have bombed libya? well, i difficult north africa?:. a1is a difficult north africa? it's a difficult thing because, you know, we went in with good intentions. to intentions. we're trying to support you the people support the you know, the people the then things the uprising. but then things got complicated quickly. got complicated very quickly. you i just we're fighting you know, i just we're fighting alongside the, you know, uprising. yeah. so, yeah . and uprising. yeah. so, yeah. and regime has never really regime change has never really a goodidea regime change has never really a good idea either. we're going to good idea either. we're going to go talk bolton about bolton later was about him. later. that was all about him. regime change in libya really worked out interesting in the last of weeks. don't last couple of weeks. i don't know noticed, but know whether you've noticed, but we're up to i guess it's
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we're coming up to i guess it's the anniversary, 20 year anniversary of the invasion of iraq. know, there's iraq. so, you know, and there's been re—examination of been a lot of re—examination of what commentary was saying what the commentary was saying about time and the about it at the time and the extent which there was extent to which there was liberal support for and liberal support for it. and america shocking. we america quite shocking. well, we saw the statue fall in saw the statue fall down in the us. america's got us. i think america's got excited thought oh excited because they thought oh finally taken finally that has been taken down. maybe down. yeah, maybe there's a chance. yeah. the great folly of sort of neocon is thinking if we just this western liberal just iraq, this western liberal democracy will rise from the ashes like watercress . so paper ashes like watercress. so paper towel . let's look at wednesday's towel. let's look at wednesday's financial now earlier so yes this is the about the falling life expect see triggers delete to the reasoning the state pension age to 68 the delete plans to raise the pension age to 60 in the uk probably from looking across the english channel to see happened in france where macron just raised it. he just raised it to 66, which is what our pension age is right now. they've got riot in france at the moment and it's difficult to riot when you're on a zimmer frame. so, you know, full to those 66 in
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full respect to those 66 in in french is i wonder if that the same age as us because don't know age differently know if they age differently do they a lot more they possibly have a lot more sand wine and good sand and wine and good food? they more leathered but they look more leathered but they're healthier. might be healthier. probably healthier. yeah they probably look to their look forward to their retirement. deal more than retirement. a deal more than it's be in a shoebox it's going to be in a shoebox in. birmingham if you hurry, you live they they do have knees live they do they do have knees i mean they do some nice things before you even joke about the knees knees lovely places to go to retirement but i've a lot to in retirement but i've a lot of there but of friends who retire there but then also they do then but they also they do prepare their entire life for that retirement really that retirement is a really important thing france and important thing in france and also they're expecting, i also that they're expecting, i think, dollars come think, more tax dollars come from from from corporations and not from people that's people working longer. that's what . yeah. what they're angry about. yeah. yeah, it yeah, that's true. it is obviously it still is. more to obviously. it still is. more to do with the fiscal arrangements so isn't it. there is so on isn't it. but there is a sort of tradition isn't there. i picture of the french retirement as corleone as being like the corleone retirement. know just retirement. you know just playing vineyard you, playing in a vineyard with you, with over the with your grandson and over the heart wearing a hawaiian shirt. i french i know that's he's not french for, you know, that's how i picture everything south of the channel. think a lot of
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channel. i think it's a lot of just embittered sitting there staring the i think staring out the window. i think they been throwing they would have been throwing literally france literally the prime of france because health because it's such a good health care system. people live a lot longer there. yeah i'm off terms with section. let's take a look at time. scott the at wednesday's time. scott the pill coil is shown raise pill and coil is shown to raise breast cancer risk. apparently taking a pill, a breast cancer risk. apparently taking a pill , a contraceptive taking a pill, a contraceptive as an oral contraceptive has a 20 to 30% higher risk of breast cancen 20 to 30% higher risk of breast cancer, particularly older women. so breast cancer is the most common cancer worldwide for women and the study was done by the cancer research uk that stated that women are presented as at risk, although cancer research then went on to say, women can control more so their of breast cancer, with their diet, with weight, not drinking, not smoking , which of course not smoking, which of course kind of gets on my nerves a little bit because the dietary claim has never really improve in it kind of puts the responsibility on the cancer patient which is seems unfair to me and i think what they might
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think about doing is finding maybe a contraceptive taken orally that doesn't increase women's. i mean , it was it's women's. i mean, it was it's been around for a long time and it still stayed pretty much as it still stayed pretty much as it did. it came out in the sixties and it is massively disruptive without sort of going into i know into details. i know anecdotally, evidence women anecdotally, evidence of women who find it really of it is who find it really sort of it is and i don't know why men don't just tie the string i don't know why take it but once why manages to take it but once they have kids, once you've they do have kids, once you've had couple of kids, then had your couple of kids, then tied few years time tied up in a few years time everyone will get pregnant using ivf deposit sperm ivf and men will deposit sperm at of their adult at the beginning of their adult lives which kept frozen lives, which will be kept frozen for they will then the for them. they will then the knot women will deposit eggs the same thing . when you want to same thing. when you want to have children, will go. you have children, you will go. you a button and it'll a robot. a button and it'll be a robot. they will fertilise about a couple of dozen eggs and you will go, oh, i'll have that one. that's the with the pretty that's the one with the pretty one. i've noticed a lot one. exactly. i've noticed a lot of modern are using their of modern women are using their personalities, a contraceptive, in your case at least. i'm sure you experience you're you experience that a, you're married have you have a married now. you have you have a child. sex is over.
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child. yes, but the sex is over. everybody should have babies. we shouldn't be having and stuff. everybody should babies everybody should have babies is the that can the greatest thing that can happen. could. the thing happen. if you could. the thing with of course, make with ivf is, of course, you make sure a naughty one sure you don't get a naughty one and these sort of things. so and all these sort of things. so having children will become a much more. and also you be much more. and also you can be like a sort of they like brought in a sort of they do it in an air fryer or something now don't made the first save dental something now don't made the first they'll;ave dental something now don't made the first they'll have dental something now don't made the first they'll have nice ntal something now don't made the first they'll have nice teeth care. they'll have nice teeth from the go. it will be from the word go. it will be right. that's the papers of right. that's the papers out of the way. join us after the break. we have ramadan breaks football. bowden explores the covid and how to reset your covid lab and how to reset your sense in sense of self. see you in a couple of minutes .
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yeah, this is the intelligence is going to release all available material on the origin of the daily virus , which has of the daily virus, which has killed more than 1.1 million americans around world dead. it really? because all of them were just about to go dead had it not yeah yeah. 81 years old but he says this is this is what biden said. he says we need to get to the bottom of covid 19 origins, including including potential links to the wuhan institute of virology. ago we virology. no a few weeks ago we were being castigated for gb news being castigated for discussing this as a possible, viable theory . and now of viable theory. and now of course, it's come out the fbi, various other intelligence have said no, this is the most likely source of the source of the virus. so it is interesting to be vindicated that the responsibility for this is the originally started here. well, i don't know . i mean, originally started here. well, i don't know. i mean, this is interesting. this was know this is a far right conspiracy theory was one the conspiracy wonder what other far right conspiracy theories going to come true next week. i did also note this
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evening, it's the times isn't it it's reported in expertise elsewhere. the elsewhere. well but even the times they say fbi think times they say the fbi think that it's with like limited certainty they think it's a lively. yeah and then they go on to say but other government agencies still think as if the fbi are isolated . the fbi. fbi are isolated. the fbi. i want to i think nine government agencies that have an intelligent, informed view on this. but the majority of those have expressed an opinion now think is the lab leak. but the fbi, famous for not sharing information with other within the government within the us government or within other the other government like the chinese . oh yeah. you know, it chinese. oh yeah. you know, it started in a lab from a creature right. yeah. i would would it's a bit like whatever . yeah. he a bit like whatever. yeah. he said, she said it like i remember the new york post right after covid covid came out, the reports ran a story about how technicians at the wuhan lab were selling cadavers of the animals down to the wet market for people to eat, which is obviously transmission. yeah, the shoe then if it does prove
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that this is becoming overwhelming , the is the degree overwhelming, the is the degree to which fauci is implicated. right. because he had commissioned or funded or directed some of the research there. yeah and that's that's there. yeah and that's that's the bit that they really don't want say the suspicion that want to say the suspicion that that the democrats and the administration generally been trying to keep it suppressed. but is weird, isn't it? if you let the air out slowly enough. i mean this would have been absolutely explosive. a couple of ago. i mean, this would of years ago. i mean, this would have the world have been the of world war three. change maybe . three. now things change maybe. we'll the hiv we'll find out about the hiv aids all yeah, aids thing after all this. yeah, that'd be i think i know that'd be nice. i think i know where is , but she has a lot where that is, but she has a lot of blood on his hands over that one to daily mail premier league match be paul's players match is to be paul's players can a of breakfast same can have a bit of breakfast same reasonable who are referees reasonable yes. who are referees in premier league and in the premier league and engush in the premier league and english football. you've reportedly been asked to pause evenin reportedly been asked to pause even in games during ramadan to allow players break their fast. yeah.i allow players break their fast. yeah. i mean this seems to be making lot of changes to accommodate accommodate a religious belief can imagine me in saudi arabia the equivalent
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of a football match a public stoning demanding that they stop so i could make a pancake this pancake thing that led me to make love tank. i think the thing i find a bit odd is some of the moonies and they just need to take on some flags because they're not even allowed to drink well you think that's reasonable, do reasonable, but then please do that on the pitch that all the time on the pitch anyway. yeah squinting that stuff in the mouth. don't me i stuff in the mouth. i don't me i think need to know, i think think they need to know, i think they actually like a minute where actually lot where they can actually a lot of. hydrate a lot okay. of. yeah hydrate a lot okay. yeah i it seems yeah because i mean it seems reasonable i suppose. i don't know. know better than the know. i know better than the dying field. think they're dying the field. i think they're going stop to let other going to stop to let other players crackers. players christmas crackers. i mean, why we really know for a fact wouldn't do this for fact they wouldn't do this for christians. they're not going to be oh, let's practise, be like, oh, let's practise, let's have a harvest festival in the but christian the middle. yeah, but christian players on easter. players are playing on easter. they or they don't they don't care or whatever think makes sense. i mean sure they mean i'm not sure they should playing players who have fasted not anything all day. yeah not drunk anything all day. yeah it. that's it. feels to me like that's quite a significant concern. if i don't know it's the thing
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i don't know if it's the thing happens the minutes or happens in the first minutes or the eighth but if the or the eighth minute. but if you've play a full half you've had to play a full half of football having not drunk anything, that's what anything, well, that's what they're about. is they're worried about. this is their exploding or their hearts exploding or whatever happen. whatever is going to happen. yeah, then people will yeah, yeah. then people will start theory about. start a conspiracy theory about. about that. exactly. yeah. and worrying and then. worrying telegraph now and then. exclu john exclu sieve for them. john bolton, trump's former i don't know. was like defenceman know. it was like a defenceman is national security is sort of national security national security. he says trump is sort of national security natiwill security. he says trump is sort of national security natiwill be curity. he says trump is sort of national security natiwill be cu disaster;ays trump is sort of national security natiwill be cu disaster john trump 2.0 will be a disasterjohn bolton was trump's national security grapes security visor and bitter grapes grower because he claims now that trump garbage after he that trump is garbage after he sat on his lap for two years while trump is so hilarious , while trump is so hilarious, bolton is just angry because trump has called him reckless and useless and fired him and humiliated in the international market. all they did kind of work together on the iran maybe they did they were on lockstep that well it's so to speak i mean bolton is a real foreign policy and he was yes. and he's really supportive in regime change change regimes in iran,
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syria libya. and now he's saying that trump is a national danger. and he will danger. he endangers us and security. and he says he the one who did it for two years and it continues to do it. yeah he's more but this is one of the things they seem to there's a lot of people on the yourself included who are very concerned about trump will find him ridiculous what's ridiculous but what's interesting is there's also a lot people on the in lot of people on the right in the party who don't the republican party who don't want don't like fact want it, who don't like fact that be that he tends to be non—interventionist militarily, that he tends to be non know, lentionist militarily, that he tends to be non know, and onist militarily, that he tends to be non know, and that militarily, that he tends to be non know, and that stance, ly, that he tends to be non know, and that stance, more you know, and that stance, more significant aspect of for the world. very world. and also he's very socially yeah on socially liberal. yeah so on socially liberal. yeah so on social he's he's too far to the left a lot republicans left a lot of republicans although ironically he did tell the pentagon being the pentagon when he's being shown around during his first candidacy, keep well if candidacy, he did keep well if there's problem we can't we there's a problem we can't we just them and pentagon just nuke them and pentagon generals because they know we don't do don't do that i'm don't do that don't do that i'm really really option so i really not really an option so i don't how hawkish as don't know how non hawkish as you're is or how how you're saying he is or how how isolationist as a president isolationist he as a president i think it's quite interesting in this country it's probably very in certainly for his in america and certainly for his
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base the base but in this country the reporting on trump so emphasised base but in this country the reffocussed trump so emphasised base but in this country the reffocussed on jmp so emphasised base but in this country the reffocussed on social» emphasised base but in this country the reffocussed on social faux)hasised base but in this country the reffocussed on social faux pasised so focussed on social faux pas behaviour is very scandals. you had almost no sense of any sort of policy at all, but didn't have any either. and when he was questions, he pointed to other people. he gave a lot of people. he gave both a lot of power that took it away from. i think the problem with trump is he fired people because he didn't didn't fill didn't and he didn't fill position the swamp . position of drain the swamp. well, what he was because a stand comedian people stand up comedian and people kept why kept forgetting that that's why the shirt was out of place. that's why the hair is a bit ridiculous that's he looked ridiculous that's why he looked a and.the ridiculous that's why he looked a and. the seemed a bit crazy and. the wife seemed out place as so what would out of place as so what would you say to the there are people still saying, i don't know whether, he's dying down there. there people still saying there are people still saying putin not invaded putin would not have invaded ukraine. trump's watch. no. putin think putin has said, and i think that's repeated, that's why people repeated, oh, who i mean, think who knows? no. i mean, i think was pretty that, you was pretty obvious that, you know, wouldn't something know, you wouldn't do something like is like that with somebody. is crazy. is trump in the seat? that's why, you know, maybe we need insane leaders. we need insane, insane leaders. we have more. you've got to have more than. are right more insane than. they are right now. north korea.
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now. what would north korea. yeah, well, braverman is up there she's crazy. there pretty nuts. she's crazy. she's be pm. never she's going to be pm. you never know. now, it turns out know. now, leo, it turns out timothy leary was right all along. the secret they like along. yes. the secret they like drugs reset the sense of self for people with depression. i thought based on thought if this is based on prince harry's but prince harry certainly about you know taking mushrooms and how i love him so self—medicate through his depression but yeah they're looking treatments from looking at new treatments from from mushrooms and also the substance they're looking at here dimethyl some emt. emt which is the active ingredient in ayahuasca which is, you know, used in rainforest retreats where you imbibe it. and over the course of, you know, 48 hours, you vomit and you vomit a lot, the lizard people and stuff. but no, no, you can just smoke in a pipe. well, they say the west is actually i mean, you do have period there do have a long period there where use the scene setting where they use the scene setting and all the rest of it. but the actual trip about half an hour, this is one of the weird things with dmt, it's included, but i'm not taking it. i wouldn't rule
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it out, but have not yet done it out, but i have not yet done it. but it's incredibly intense but very short. whereas acid can last for a day last for like a whole day and really be exhausting. used really be exhausting. they used to call dmt. the businessman's because an a lunch because you do have an a lunch break. you know, put your briefcase down and there's some been interesting written been interesting stuff written about so much about the about it, not so much about the therapeutic, about people therapeutic, but about people going to have an extra sense therapeutic, but about people goingoften ve an extra sense therapeutic, but about people goingoften replicated, sense quite often replicated, recognise person the recognise from one person to the next very experience and they next a very experience and they go retreats they tend to go on retreats and they tend to do times a day do it two or three times a day with the same of people with the same group of people for four or five period. and for four or five day period. and then like to do six then what they like to do six months or a year later is get together with those same people. and the only relationship have with when with these people is when they're to they're either preparing to be high, they're high or the recovery most my recovery rats. most of my friends and it it tends to i think, open people to a bit think, open people up to a bit of intimacy conversation, which they may not have otherwise. yeah, there's yeah, well, there's certainly i've a whole i've read that there's a whole book pollan book michael pollan wrote a book, guy mostly book, the guy who's mostly written about food about the written about food and about the whole and, benefits whole foods and, the benefits of good a book good diet. he wrote a book called something like now you can change your brain or something and. it's something like that and. it's all use of
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all about the use of psychedelics as in therapy. and apparently is massively lot apparently is a massively a lot of in california of my friends in california which running them which i'm running into them on the street when i'm back there i'm you on i'm like have you been on vacation. acid vacation. no, i'm taking acid with therapist. yeah, with my therapist. yeah, everyone's human everyone's doing it. human growth hallucinogens growth hormone and hallucinogens i think is going to oversold people. see, they this people. see, they have this episode experience episode the religious experience they other i did they do dmt the other day i did in doris's mom's room in doris's mom's living room and my room and so yeah my mom's living room and so yeah you're so you blast off in a space. yeah. and you know, you're completely like it's not like, you know, mushrooms or anything you completely anything like you are completely there. when rona doesn't there. but when rona doesn't have religious experience, have this religious experience, i just realised that got a bit far i looked down was like, far so i looked down was like, i'm a bit fat, maybe wishing to blow smoke up your end. you're already quite sorted maybe you didn't have anything really needed and nothing. well maybe you were already fat . i could do you were already fat. i could do that. you were already fat. i could do that . i think you were already fat. i could do that. i think it's time for contractually obligated. i don't think we'll have time to do any dmt, but maybe a cuppa after. that's out of the way. we got a mixture of prince harry's usb visa. why china is actually the
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happiest why you happiest on earth and why you shouldn't birth in glasgow. happiest on earth and why you shouin1't birth in glasgow. happiest on earth and why you shouin a birth in glasgow. happiest on earth and why you shouin a couple rth in glasgow. happiest on earth and why you shouin a couple ofi in glasgow. happiest on earth and why you shouin a couple of minutes|ow. happiest on earth and why you shouin a couple of minutes .w.
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welcome back to headliners. we'll go straight the male now for the beginning of the third sex and the mystery of prince harry's us visa. scott thanks for calling me a male. people do forget. sometimes people want know how did harry get his visa ? they've read his book and in this book sparks . in this book this book sparks. in this book he talks about doing drugs and the heritage wants to know, considering he is basically just growing organs, should prince ever need them right ? yeah, ever need them right? yeah, you're right. but isn't an idea dread to wonder how do he dry his liver and kidney? we might them later would take the hair the. yeah well he's people of the. yeah well he's people of the heritage tradition wants to see the visa to see if he lied
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on it. but the us government doesn't release things like that they certainly won't. and so the asking his government to come forward say, did he answer forward and say, did he answer those questions sometimes questions are asked if they're answered in a way that the person obviously has done drugs. the government might not the us government might not permit in or they might. permit them in or they might. i mean, in the case of celebrities who have said they weed like nigella lawson, it inevitably she getin nigella lawson, it inevitably she get in in that same year she did get in in that same year 2014. i think it's seen as if the person is important enough to let and if it benefits the us government they literally ask you have you ever taken drugs? of course. and then in principle they can not allow you in on that basis of they can. i don't know that we do that. i don't think we do. i don't know. we just everybody we got to go now . are you going to your your nice a nice bottle of come on it and people also want to know what kind of visa has they're wondering if he has an extraordinary ability or oh one visa that has a letterman or if
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he's in as a spouse with his. no one knows. i don't know why people are about this. he's in so i'm to happen it's people are trying to pretend they there's not some privilege that goes with this kind of stuff but i suppose impulses certain suppose new impulses a certain amount wouldn't amount of discomfort wouldn't give thing can give this sort of thing can become politicised then you become politicised then then you know make know somebody wants to make a point can expunge him the point can can expunge him the from the country. it is interesting i thought i i interesting i thought i wasn't i didn't the although didn't read the although obviously it sold fantastically didn't read the although obvallsly it sold fantastically didn't read the although obv all that sold fantastically didn't read the although obv all that we .d fantastically didn't read the although obv all that we mockedtically didn't read the although obv all that we mocked it ally didn't read the although obv all that we mocked it but it for all that we mocked it but it did does feel like he's going did it does feel like he's going to digging around for to endlessly digging around for the bit of salacious tittle the next bit of salacious tittle tattle use yeah. tattle he can use to. yeah. because always case isn't because it's always case isn't it. you're looking for the next high. connected. so. high. he's really connected. so. yeah there's a lot of information, but he might soon later will say something. his own background or about some event that you know he he sees through personal frame that really will cause him but he's surrounded by minders that are looking after everywhere he speaks right they all are yeah you know he tries to you know if he tries to get adopted new family going to adopted by a new family going to be suspicious. yeah. well yeah,
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yeah. that's going to be interesting. happiness now leo and in direct contravention of yesterday's news, i don't know if you were watching the show last night, but it seems that liberal democracies , not the liberal democracies, not the happiest places on in happiest places on earth. in fact. they've done a survey fact. yes, they've done a survey around and chinese around the world and chinese people people in people are the happier people in the with nine in ten the world, with nine in ten claiming that satisfied claiming that they're satisfied all aspects their life, all aspects of their life, including work and politics one including work and politics one in ten was sent to the gulag . in ten was sent to the gulag. now, please , that gun away from now, please, that gun away from my head, i've answered correctly right. and i see my mom again too, with saudi arabia . yeah, too, with saudi arabia. yeah, yeah, yeah . see my children . it yeah, yeah. see my children. it is funny, though , this is not is funny, though, this is not the same survey. clearly but maybe there's a time here where they come out. the beginning of spnng they come out. the beginning of spring there was a survey we did yesterday was rather more yesterday and it was rather more plausibly finland, sweden norway, israel and. i think lithuania just come up on or something like finland's. yeah yeah. big nordic countries with a good welfare state. yes free higher education. yeah. but getting through sort of six
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months of darkness. i was quite impressed by that. yeah. yeah. well, guess we got netflix. no but. but only 70% of britain said that they were satisfied. and fall of 13 points and that's a fall of 13 points in previous survey, which in the previous survey, which is pretty means we the pretty that just means we the government no longer quite as government is no longer quite as threatening. say i say people threatening. so say i say people can at least complain in this country now in a way if you could complain about your government, they took your kids away might be a relief for some people as well. yeah you never know, human beings know, though. human beings on the i i would the road. i mean, i know i would prefer to in a liberal democracy having always basically done so and rights for and taking these rights for granted. but it is conceivable people north express people in north korea express this thing they might this kind of thing they might think happening . you're wrong think is happening. you're wrong about but think in about that. but i think in china, maybe they do and their about that. but i think in chiniis maybe they do and their about that. but i think in chiniis about they do and their about that. but i think in chiniis about nine do and their about that. but i think in chiniis about nine times|d their about that. but i think in chiniis about nine times higher gdp is about nine times higher than you can being nine than ours. so you can being nine times more wealthy as a normal person, but they have gone up. this i definitely this is one thing i definitely do about beings do believe about human beings is that really register the that we only really register the trend the, you know, the direction of travel if your life is getting better by five points
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of gdp year on year for six or seven year. you good that's pretty good. genuinely yeah. because you can literally remember having enough to eat and you know you basically food in the fridge. hard be in the fridge. it's hard to be miserable toasting champagne in the koozie. yeah well it's poor little rich girl isn't it. i mean they go spinning to reconcile. he manages it. the guardian and i see they describe this latest issue of abandoned legislation as controversial. scott well , human rights scott well, human rights campaigners are condemning a bill introduced in uganda to imprison homosexuals or kill them . the lgbt community is up them. the lgbt community is up in arms, but only a little bit because they don't want their hands cut off because 389 legislators voted late on tuesday in a hard line anti—human bill. but i mean, that's because uganda is one of the poorest and least developed countries in the world 42 almost half the population lives in poverty is extremely conservative, especially because . they're coming in so unstable and the economy is completely
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unpredictable. they everything they need, they have amazing , they need, they have amazing, fantastic farmland and all resources necessary. but government has no idea how to govern. and so they just blame the queers and well and also they kicked out of the you yasmin alabi brown didn't they. which was everything spiralled of control after that. i mean, you see is really to the poverty bubble of saudi arabia, which is a very rich nation and has very levels of homophobia . well, levels of homophobia. well, that's maybe a more cultural religious thing as well. i don't i mean , would be difficult to i mean, would be difficult to unpick it entirely. i mean, would be difficult to unpick it entirely . but you're unpick it entirely. but you're right, not not right, it's not it's not necessarily i think necessarily bad country. i think we some neighbours who we have some neighbours who went there. the medics and there. they were the medics and they've gone to work on a sort of field type arrangement, but they say it's absolutely gorgeous. everyone's gorgeous. you know, everyone's very it very happy. there's not it doesn't like an oppressive doesn't feel like an oppressive and oppressive state, obviously, you know, with this . sure. you know, with this. sure. walking of a gay on it's walking out of a gay on it's almost guess the thing almost like well guess the thing is weird is again this kind of weird thing about happiness, which is again condone it, again not to condone it, but i suppose if there is absolute
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lutely, no wriggle room at all you are no there are you know, there are no there are no who feeling no people who are feeling oppressed because they're gay. they're just be gay. they're there just can't be gay. yeah, yeah, yeah. i mean, no, no, there no, no. well, apparently there is, lgbt there who is, there is an lgbt there who are feeling threatened. at least that's article said. that's what this article said. but i can imagine that they might as they do. might that excuse as they do. like in countries like like you said in countries like saudi to, imprison and saudi arabia to, imprison and kill to label kill people to just label the finger is enough . i finger pointing is enough. i wonder where they stand on the trends, because funnily enough, some religiously some of the more religiously conservative some of the more religiously con on/ative some of the more religiously con on trans, aren't they? big on trans, aren't they? because i think it's an alternative for. the nhs here. yeah think i got in now and yeah i think i got in now and apparently you can get 3d printed cakes . god, what's that printed cakes. god, what's that all about? well they found a way to make a cake with a 3d printer, a cheesecakes, several layers of which seem super sweet to me. but anyway, they're . they to me. but anyway, they're. they the. it's hard to describe. you have to look at the article the puzzle is yes these tubes are squeezing out . yeah the each squeezing out. yeah the each layer on what the printer is telling them . so the 3d form you telling them. so the 3d form you don't need a baker, you don't
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need the equipment, you just need the equipment, you just need the equipment, you just need the printer. and that's what get, it is. i had what you get, what it is. i had to at some clips of to look at some youtube clips of the i'm going to say the first thing i'm going to say is that the earliest ones are at least years old. they've least eight years old. they've been workable, been promising workable, viable, 3d long time. 3d for a very long time. however, these families come through. it's not i mean, through. but it's not i mean, it's not technological it's not like a technological miracle, basically, just an automatic you automatic nozzle. this is, you know, of liquid cake is know, the sort of liquid cake is what they were trying to do away with was equipment and cooks. yeah. which they done. i don't think 3d printing. it's a think it's 3d printing. it's a bit like when just call it bit like when they just call it cash till i mean it's like some 3d printing depending on the material, maybe cream cheese isn't the best material for doing you know intricate sculptures, but some 3d can be really good for replacing machine parts and gimmicky done . so there's this one video on youtube which is worth watching. a woman has mastered the art of using a 3d printer to create incredible cakes, but what she doesis incredible cakes, but what she does is she creates a mould in with a 3d printer. she then peels off the thing and then bakes the cake in that mould.
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and so you get extraordinary shape. make the cake shape. she can make the cake look if just a bunch of look as if it's just a bunch of cherries. yeah, you cut cherries. yeah, but when you cut it, actually cake . and it, it's actually cake. and she's done that using a mobile 3d printer. but it's not the same the cake with same as making the cake with you. mean is it you. see what i mean is it really annoys me. all right. i know, i know. sue me. yeah i think we should be moving away from food instead of from processed food instead of processed further. although from processed food instead of pthink;ed further. although from processed food instead of pthink they're further. although from processed food instead of pthink they're going er. although from processed food instead of pthink they're going er. makergh i think they're going to make they're use this they're going to use this machinery, burgers . i machinery, make 3d burgers. i mean, they create . exactly yeah. mean, they create. exactly yeah. it's astronaut food . then we'll it's astronaut food. then we'll all be living on it soon. we seem to have got another break already up inter—generational fat shaming caught men aged , fat shaming caught men aged, rudeness and diversity . c in rudeness and diversity. c in a couple of minutes .
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and welcome back for the final fun sector . and welcome back for the final fun sector. tonight's and welcome back for the final fun sector . tonight's show we fun sector. tonight's show we kick off with the metro and scotch news . now it seems if you scotch news. now it seems if you are scottish, you are already living on time. yeah, i mean, we already knew this. so people born in the richest parts of the uk lately to live longer than people born in glasgow 12 years longer if you're born in hampstead in north london you'll have a expectancy of 80. well raised in glasgow will live to 76, so hope they'll make it to the end of the show so. 76 seems quite high for glasgow, you know in the fifties somewhere certainly . you know there's
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certainly. you know there's certainly. you know there's certainly a litany of health failures under the snp . we've failures under the snp. we've seen drug deaths and drug deaths are three and a half times higher in scotland than in the rest the uk. i mean i don't know whether they fail to address that or whether it's got worse, but i was growing up it was but when i was growing up it was that the gerbils area and so on was, was like one of the most horrible gerbils was horrible sort of gerbils was the jerry yeah, going to go jerry yeah, i'm going to go yeah, there was a sort of , jerry yeah, i'm going to go yeah, there was a sort of, i mean, i don't know, it was, it an unknown, but it was, it had a reputation for being pretty rough. don't know if that's still true or whether this, you know, there's certainly concentrated a of people in glasgow a lot of people in scotland live healthy lives eat healthy . but there's certainly healthy. but there's certainly cultures in scotland have eaten the most abysmally unhealthy food . you would not believe the food. you would not believe the stuff people deep fried cheeseburgers , all this kind of cheeseburgers, all this kind of stuff. everything is deep fried. and then you're just drinking fizzy pop and you're taking drugs and getting drunk. there's a poverty of people a real poverty of people don't have live for, so have anything to live for, so they treat their bodies they just treat their bodies like you can get
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like it's how how you can get a kind of a deluded view of the place sometimes if visit frequently enough, you start to believe that you understand a place i go to edinburgh i pretty much annually you know for the last years the festival. last 25 years to the festival. yeah. they all seem pretty yeah. and they all seem pretty healthy know those, healthy to me you know those, the who live in the people who live in edinburgh, they up and down edinburgh, they walk up and down hills stout bones , basically. hills in stout bones, basically. england. yeah, yeah . go. i think england. yeah, yeah. go. i think everything's don't everything's fine. you don't seem about just in seem to worry about just in glasgow. vegan glasgow. have more vegan restaurants per capita than any other large in europe. those who buy the diet that's how terrible they think. oh, for wednesday smile now let's talk about into general fat shaming leo so overweight women may have their mothers to blame according to this study so of mothers of huge influence over how their children tanu behaviours if they run around if they're and what they eat but also the study shows that if the mothers were overweight or didn't have a healthy diet during pregnancy program, the child in the womb to be unhealthy and b biologically more at risk of
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obesity . i biologically more at risk of obesity. i don't think this study is just another thing giving just giving excuses to the women. it doesn't affect son's interests , certainly just son's interests, certainly just that they're more active when they're kids. so why? it's a horrific thing to tell a woman that she's giving birth to child. and now that you have her suppose a certain amount of self behaviour when you're pregnant is understandable , it some is understandable, it some people you know you're not allowed drink any allowed to smoke or drink any more. might turn to cream more. you might turn to cream cakes yeah, think a lot of cakes. yeah, i think a lot of women sort keep themselves women do sort keep themselves they're eating for two with even one is the size of one of them is the size of a broad bean. yeah you only need an was calories goes an extra was 200 calories goes to some point yeah yeah but very tempting because you kind of feel fat, stupid and lazy you know? you know, this is kind of difficult time. a friend mine difficult time. a friend of mine on treadmill she was on a treadmill when she was pregnant then her was pregnant and then her was suicidal. yeah. right. suicidal. so, yeah. sarah right. you horrible to know you can just go horrible to know that could pre—program it. that you could pre—program it. i've that if you get very stressed out during as well you can pass on angst and can kind of pass on angst and a preponderance of anxiety to each other always. sister was other always. my sister was super stressed during her
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pregnancy and still when i go to hug niece, she's like every hug my niece, she's like every time i'm your uncle. time i'm like, i'm your uncle. and yeah , i got no and it was, yeah, i got no things going on. she's very stressful . take your hands off stressful. take your hands off for her. american news now in the times . i for her. american news now in the times. i would imagine this warms the cockles . your warms the cockles. your patriotic heart. i just want the christmas gift back that i gave her so thankless caught backs americans right to be rude in town meetings . a public meeting town meetings. a public meeting in the small town of massachusetts lois baron started to scream at the board members about a law that had been passed that she like. and she called one of the board members, you're a hitler. yes, that's what everybody is. and they disagree with that with you there. and that member said disgusting. had said you're disgusting. you had her and she took that her drag out and she took that member because they said, you can come back to anymore board meetings. town all know meetings. small town all know each she guy each other and she took guy to court she excellent . and court and she was excellent. and she's an old lady now, isn't she? know she's 71 for a she? i don't know she's 71 for a while said look it's we while and she said look it's we can say what we like. that's the
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whole point. public discourse in this country. i read the story the first thing the argument she said this council whatever said this council or whatever this municipality spends like a drunken sailor i'm saying that's quite a phrase that stung quite a good phrase that stung and tried to have us thrown and they tried to have us thrown out for saying that. yes. and that's when she said you're like a hitler. yeah. so that i think is actually perfectly fair. he did at her and you were did yell at her and you were disgusting you got disgusting as well. you got worse a way. it is a big part worse in a way. it is a big part of the american tradition, isn't it, speak in the town hall? it, to speak in the town hall? it think enjoy going in it is, i think enjoy going in the one of reasons they the and one of the reasons they do go is they hope something this kicks off. yeah. yeah so what's my favourite what's what is my favourite scene the simpsons they scene in the simpsons when they go town, the mayor is go to the big town, the mayor is things interesting . you things politics interesting. you know had hectoring know if we had more hectoring like definitely. yeah, we like that definitely. yeah, we more town halls you know there's you know claire fox is battle of ideas and institute ideas things they have debate sometimes and it's in london but they take them on the roads them out on the roads and they're fantastic come in they're fantastic people come in turn out to be surprisingly well—informed and passionate about might they
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about things that you might they just learn to wash over them. yeah that is actually democracy working properly instead of voting especially voting once a week, especially local politics people get really worked up as good as they should. so more power to our elbow, to the times. now they have expectations for have great expectations for might bit of might be achieved with a bit of clever casting. leo so the of grit expect tensions he's a black rapper , he's starring as black rapper, he's starring as mr. jagger's great expectations. he the casting people of colour in period dramas is realistic rather than walk. i'm not realistic is i mean if you come back to a period where there weren't really many black people playing a character who wasn't originally black , well, i mean, originally black, well, i mean, i don't know a fact, but i don't know for a fact, but they seem to drunk in a lot they seem to be drunk in a lot of statistics now to support the idea were some black idea that there were some black people some of people and also some people of nonh people and also some people of north african origin or whatever that they've got a figure of 15,000 that's been banded around. how many of around. i don't know how many of out be sure this out of. i'd be quite sure this would three days worth of would be three days worth of bullets these it's not bullets these days. it's not a huge number of people think many of them were working as senior
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lawyers that's that's the key think with that remark assumed he meant in modernising the drama. yeah they are making it more ratio realistic to what britain is now. well but he's not he is he is genuinely justifying it by saying london was more that then than we have been told. he said that. yeah definitely. well you know they may be like i read , i read this may be like i read, i read this really interesting book about the us. it might have been similar in periods of time. there definitely more there were definitely more ethnic involved ethnic communities involved in higher positions, power. there's simply erased history books simply been erased history books because various were passed that were meant raise them in the were meant to raise them in the us. now might or might not us. now that might or might not have but that have happened, but i know that women, definitely in women, the arts definitely in the and in playwriting, in the arts and in playwriting, in painting, have erased from painting, have been erased from that a massive that stage. there's a massive campaign. if you listen to radio three now, they play a lot of female composers, for instance. unfortunately, that's a bad actually. yes. and a lot of companies can trace heritage back to you know, two previous generations of immigrants from or cyprus or greece or whatever.
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yeah. but then, you know , being yeah. but then, you know, being in london after a few generations, you become know what do. a melting what you do. it was a melting pot. absolutely. i think it is quite interesting. still quite interesting. i still struggle a little bit i still find that jolt it knocked out of reality sometimes at the beginning the series. but by episode you sort of episode three you sort of forgotten but i find forgotten about it. but i find young don't experience young people don't experience that kids genuinely that at all. my kids genuinely don't historical . i don't see it as historical. i mean, is some of the more mean, this is some of the more airbrushing history to suit modern realist fiction fictional book. but it's not that fictional , book. but it's not that fictional, you know, it is . and fictional, you know, it is. and you can write thank god, you can read science fiction. thank god you can renew and revise history or else who wants to see the original but then again, original play. but then again, i would shoes. i mean, would say in shoes. i mean, i kind of the same same kind of prefer the same same screenwriter done great screenwriter who's done great expectations, which expectations, wrote taboo, which was hardy thing, was was the tom hardy thing, was a completely original thing in regency another 50 years regency london, another 50 years earlier, was really earlier, there was really extraordinary. it was extraordinary. i mean, it was the plot was a bit incoherent, but great scenes but there were some great scenes and extraordinary visual entertainment, because entertainment, you know, because it was completely original and in that tom hardy had come back
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from africa where he had mistresses and learned witchcraft and something so, it all that was this all made sense that it was this kind stew. you know, kind of big stew. you know, i think to stuff like that, rather than taking, you know, much loved dickensian classics and your kids, david copperfield is black and if you like, you're racist . but your kids black and if you like, you're racist. but your kids might black and if you like, you're racist . but your kids might not racist. but your kids might not know about that had they not seen production that seen this production that possibly true scott a rather story here in the telegraph i can see going full romcom if she wants to sell the rights to this well a 29 year scientists well a 29 year old scientists she enrolled in high school she was enrolled in high school because she felt lonely in his young shin. she's from south korea. she came to the us , she korea. she came to the us, she to the us when she was i think, much younger. obviously she enrolled in a high school, did well, well, university, got well, did well, university, got a but then went some hard a job, but then went some hard times as she graduated from rutgers in thousand 17, she got divorced and went into debt. only about $20,000, which really nothing if that's bad. i should kill myself and. that's the debt you're expected to go into a single year. yeah. did you ?
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single year. yeah. did you? yeah.i single year. yeah. did you? yeah. i mean, god . and she. she yeah. i mean, god. and she. she just became disenfranchised her life and went back to high school the most comfortable time she felt she like i can understand , i can't remember understand, i can't remember exactly what age i was at, but i do remember thinking at various in my twenties and thirties when things wondered if i things rough, i wondered if i could go back to school and could just go back to school and sort you know, necessarily sort of, you know, necessarily high school, would like high school, which would be like 15, to 15, but certainly back to university, the fact university, despite the fact that zero. i a lot that it was zero. i knew a lot of five year undergraduates that fifth year because they really didn't to look for work didn't want to go look for work and a you so have you and it's a of you so have you seen happy days tv and you see the is clearly about the this is clearly about forces. yeah. thing forces. yeah yeah. the thing that's unusual that this is a woman, loads of men institutionalised. yeah. you want ? he wants institutionalised. yeah. you wa go ? he wants institutionalised. yeah. you wago back ? he wants institutionalised. yeah. you wa go back to ? he wants institutionalised. yeah. you wago back to korea, ? he wants institutionalised. yeah. you wa go back to korea, though ants institutionalised. yeah. you wago back to korea, though .nts institutionalised. yeah. you wago back to korea, though . i:s to go back to korea, though. i wish . show is nearly wish her well. show is nearly oven wish her well. show is nearly over. let's take another quick look at wednesday's front pages . the daily mail kicked with bullish boris up the fight. the guard in johnson faces fight for political survival at partygate hearing. the financial times
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life expectancy truth delayed the raising of state pension to 68. the telegraph hypocrite starmer to avoid tax pension the times pill coil shown to raise cancer risk and we've lost the star so that's all feel so up . star so that's all feel so up. thank you to my guest leo kearse and scott cooper. it has been an absolute pleasure. headliners will be back tomorrow at 11 pm. with andrew doyle in this seat, josh howie and christopher, when as remember if as his guest, remember that if you're watching the 5 am. repeat, for the repeat, stay tuned for the breakfast just the breakfast show just after the break. otherwise, thank you for listening. goodnight.
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