tv Headliners Replay GB News March 30, 2023 1:00am-2:01am BST
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meagre essential team and meet meagre essential living . the daily mail says . the living. the daily mail says. the duke of sussex is privacy claim them should be rejected its entirety and has brought in far too late . associated newspapers too late. associated newspapers says the legal challenges brought by prince harry and other celebrities, including sir john, have no real prospects of succeeding. but the legal team for harry and others have described the publisher's bid as hopeless and plainly inappropriate . the government's inappropriate. the government's announced a £1 million funding boost for synagogues and schools in a bid to crack down anti—semitic crime. the government says it also wants to ensure criminal who threatened jewish communities to feel the full force of the law . the full force of the law. the funding will cover security measures such as cctv and new alarm systems. a quarter religiously motivated hate crimes . the uk between 2021 and crimes. the uk between 2021 and 2020 to targeted the jewish .
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2020 to targeted the jewish. community now the queen consort is said to be deeply saddened at the death tv presenter and dog paul o'grady. he's last night suddenly at the age of 67 she said his warm hearts and infectious humour lit up the lives of so many and. his partner, andre petecio , said he partner, andre petecio, said he died unexpectedly but peacefully . the president has hailed a new chapter in relations between his country and the uk as he welcomed the king and queen consort to a state banquet in berlin and warning, if you're watching on television, there are some flashing images coming up . king charles and camilla up. king charles and camilla have been greeting guests arriving at the bellevue palace before sitting down to dinner. presidents day muster and his wife and son king. the king for choosing germany as his first foreign visit. it was the first foreign visit. it was the first foreign visit. it was the first foreign visit as head of the royal and the president. germany described that as a tremendous
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personal gesture . lastly for personal gesture. lastly for cheeta , cubs have been born in cheeta, cubs have been born in india 70 years since their virtual extinction. as part the country's 13 virtual extinction. as part the country's13 year virtual extinction. as part the country's 13 year effort to restore the species , india restore the species, india joined the united nations pledge last year to conserve 30% of its land and ocean by 2030. but only 6% of its territory is currently protected. up to date on tv, onune protected. up to date on tv, online dab radio and tune in app . you're with gb news the people's channel. now it's time for headlines headlines. hello, i'm josh howie and welcome to headliners. joining me tonight to demolish thursday's are two wrecking ball comedians . and louis schaefer comedians. and louis schaefer and nick dixon. how are you gentlemen .7 i'm not doing that.
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gentlemen? i'm not doing that. well, how about to do tv show? and i'm not prepared for it. well, that's because we spent the last 2 hours talking about our different diets. are you prepared, lewis? you just. you do a very good of being do a very good of not being prepared. you i'm prepared. but you what? i'm i try to prepare, but i'm one of those people. i'm not like you. i'm and iq. like, i'm not hundred and 37 iq. like, this your job. and i think this is yourjob. and i think about lewis actually reading , about lewis actually reading, these i be these newspapers, should i be trying him more time? trying to give him more time? because not quite as smart as nick. i don't think you understand how it works. these are tomorrow's that early are tomorrow's that we get early to think this is going to read. i think this is going to read. i think this is going to be tough. can i. can i get the midday in advance so we can advance? oh, of course. yeah. i'll speak the conspiracy i'll speak to the conspiracy people. right. let's have a quick for thursday's front quick dash for thursday's front pages. mail children put pages. daily mail children put at risk by gender in at risk by gender ideology in schools. the telegraph households to face net zero penalty for gas use. i'm going. guardian government defies expert with gamble on expert with huge gamble on carbon capture i paper demand inquiry after sunak gave budget boost a firm with his wife expressed fears of a revolt hold pension age rise and finally the
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daily saw at sun's falling to bits. part two and those are the front pages. i didn't look. kicking off an in—depth look in the papers your favourite paper. nick the guardian. love it. my love it. couple of interesting stories in the guardian. they got ministers urged to act on religious oppression, which is like this is colin bloom has issued this report on things like on faith schools forced religious nationalism and the gone about my life my yeah the guy who doesn't want to say who's doing this ben but does say that this is going to bolster gove's stricter calls for stricter oversight on islamic groups in particular, which they claim has sparked anger from british muslims . but anger from british muslims. but it's also partly sikh is apparently an issue which i didn't know about. but and then the muslim council's responded sort of vaguely saying that it means of any meaningful means a lack of any meaningful engagement by government engagement by the government with diverse british muslim communities. sure communities. not really sure what seems what that means, but it seems like they're trying to like they're actually trying to
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do his support to do something in his support to tackle, you know, things like forced marriage and unregulated faith that's that's forced marriage and unregulated fa positive that's that's forced marriage and unregulated fa positive if that's that's forced marriage and unregulated fa positive if it that's that's forced marriage and unregulated fa positive if it happens that's forced marriage and unregulated fapositive if it happens and�*s a positive if it happens and then this other story governments are sort of staying with that one for good. louis yeah , jus we got mentioned in yeah, jus we got mentioned in that little article . well, they that little article. well, they have to throw us in. it's one of those, it's one of those situations where they've got to throw everybody in to make it seem like left wing seem fair, like left wing terrorism, right wing terrorism, muslim they've to muslim terrorism. they've got to just everybody it's there just make everybody it's there is there an is an argument that there an issue with the orthodox jewish community with the schools, with the yeshivas , where they're not the yeshivas, where they're not necessarily learning basics necessarily learning the basics subjects, english and whatever they're too much they're spending too much time arguably studying , the torah, arguably studying, the torah, you yiddish . we did that you learn yiddish. we did that story to me. yeah, exactly. so i this is this a and also this is this is a and also there's quite interesting angle on i thought on the story, which i thought you nick. they all you might like nick. they all want promote religion as well want to promote religion as well . the benefits . talk about the benefits of it because course we grew up in because of course we grew up in this society where we tell it all religions are evil and it all religions are evil and it all and all this stuff. all wars and all this stuff. yeah, religious. go to i
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all wars and all this stuff. yeito religious. go to i all wars and all this stuff. yeito synagoguer. go to i all wars and all this stuff. yeito synagogue and go to i all wars and all this stuff. yeito synagogue and there's go to synagogue and there's a lot of benefit to going to having a faith. what do they mean, oppression? well who is a oppressing who, talk oppressing who, who we talk about? people in about? oh, well, people in general. just like general. well, it's just like the that religions the idea that the that religions are behind all evil in humanity, which i it's kind of like how you're being oppressed. i was on the show they make you read the stories early and things that it's like, mistreat me. i mean, stories early and things that it's dictionaryeat me. i mean, stories early and things that it's dictionary definition�*nean, stories early and things that it's dictionary definition of an, the dictionary definition of what you who's oppressing? what you mean who's oppressing? oh, you kidding? no, oh, my god, are you kidding? no, no. all right. we've already got the. of betsy. the. i always thought of betsy. it would be about 10 minutes in, but minutes. tell but we've about 2 minutes. tell us the story. and us about the other story. and the is just. oh just doing the story is just. oh just doing the story is just. oh just doing the calm don't worry, the calm one. don't worry, lewis. this the defies experts with gamble on carbon with huge gamble on carbon capture how the capture at least that's how the guardian's i think it just guardian's it. i think it just means actually using means that we're actually using nonh means that we're actually using north instead of north sea oil so instead of going to put a bet technology to capture and store carbon in undersea and is undersea caverns and shapps is talking this it's talking about this saying it's the calling it the the they're calling it the powering britain strategy and powering up britain strategy and saying transition saying that we to transition using we can't just using oil and gas we can't just completely. well it's interesting because it interesting i did it because it turns got
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turns out that we've got something that rest of europe doesn't have brexit and but have these giant beneath us doesn't have brexit and but have thesweiant beneath us doesn't have brexit and but have thesweiant store beneath us doesn't have brexit and but have thesweiant store supposing us doesn't have brexit and but have thesweiant store supposing all and we can store supposing all of sort of bad stuff of europe's sort of bad stuff that what it says in here but stuff yeah. young all of you ground around the story in those caverns for 250 years or 250 years. what ursula von der leyen will be down to the question is whether technology has actually will develop enough to make that feasible. right and hopefully in 250 years they will have discovered that if that maybe c02 discovered that if that maybe co2 does cause problems i really that we can go oh really? okay, fine. but there are some parts of that bill that people say maybe didn't go far enough. they didn't do anything really about home insulation, which does make a and also, a huge difference. and also, they lifted this ban on they haven't lifted this ban on onshore wind farms. what do you think about that, nick? you you think about that, nick? you you think got a salient take on when i thought i've just been given like a minute ago i don't know about women. i don't about what
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i would ban when you're wind for god's. are you saying you're not prepared? no, i'm. you just say that he said i'm not prepared to read about some the things read about some of the things that talk wind farms going on. when what was when you went on to, what was the question? do you like wind farms? think farms. farms? i don't think wind farms. okay. the next okay. moving on to the next papenl okay. moving on to the next paper. i don't i don't i don't know the story again, because i mean, the people are this is the telegraph with this with telegraph board with this with the okay. the climate change. well, okay. well, talk about story the climate change. well, okay. well, this talk about story the climate change. well, okay. well, this isilk about story the climate change. well, okay. well, this is this bout story the climate change. well, okay. well, this is this is ut story the climate change. well, okay. well, this is this is gb story the climate change. well, okay. well, this is this is gb news.y here. this is this is gb news. these people don't care. and they care much. let's go to they care very much. let's go to they care very much. let's go to the telegraph. about the telegraph. nice is all about me. this you? you don't me. this is this you? you don't need the resource for this, right? you know what? the reason this on the front pages? this is on the front pages? because want us to because they don't want us to eat they want us die. eat meat. they want us to die. and it rotten meat may have and it says rotten meat may have sent supermarkets years. sent to supermarkets for years. what mean? rotten what does that mean? rotten meat, know anything meat, maybe. you know anything can could have happened and they're they're they're saying they're saying that food agency that the food the food agency arrested three people because one firm and then north was like leaving leaving meat out that could have been unfrozen and
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then again and not frozen it's rotten . the thing about meat is rotten. the thing about meat is our stomachs we got to go and you just get you do it. you got 20 seconds to sell the meat thing and then we'll never talk about meat during our stomachs. i want the most acidic stomachs in entire in the entire in the entire in the entire animal kingdom. okay, cool. we can . right. i would can handle. all right. i would like to say what the story's actually about. yes say that it's just about how rotting meat may have been sold unwittingly to for years and it to supermarkets for years and it could left to saw out could have been left to saw out on floor to that. i on the floor to say that. i know, but but the thing the good point is lewis will still eat it. right. as long as it's not cooked. yeah, that's something he but i by he really thawing out. but i by the way just do little the way can we just do a little shout out to farmers weekly? well done, farmers weekly. you uncovered story with your uncovered this story with your journalism. they don't get enough say. are people not mentioning they mentioning talking about if they can talking about, can also start talking about, you know, investigate some of the issues with an answer? the other issues with an answer? so the problem. the so this is the problem. the problem is, is you have the problem is, is when you have the government regulating the food, which good which sounds like a really good idea, be up to the idea, but it should be up to the companies themselves that buy
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this product. but they obviously feel that that's the point well, then should be sued. it then they should be sued. it shouldn't be. it shouldn't be the it's too late the government. it's too late now. we sort got it now. we already sort of got it through let's go to through our system. let's go to the yeah, so the the mail now, nick. yeah, so the mail have got children put at risk by gender in schools. and we talked lot. people we talked this a lot. people like cates have done good like miriam cates have done good work to expose work trying to expose this. people realise bad it's people in realise how bad it's got schools. so so child got in schools. so so child welfare is in danger from gender identity says identity theory it says teenagers change teenagers letting people change their uniforms without their names or uniforms without parents being parents or professionals being alerted. thing. don't alerted. a strange thing. don't tell weird tell your parents this weird thing developed in thing that's developed in this comes the policy policy comes from the policy policy exchange think tank. so hopefully are finally waking up to the problem of sex in schools, gender, ideology in schools, gender, ideology in schools and so on. and also things like single sex, toilets are basically been to not work. certainly in an environment like school, you got a girl i believe she some boy just kicked the doorin she some boy just kicked the door in and she had a got a big gash her head. you've also got sort of there's a lot of talk boys sort of putting camera
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phones up. it's just deep down one that's the whole point that you have the boys in the girls toilets right and the same reason you have boys girls schools and maybe girls shouldn't go to school. okay to the point that you're saying , the point that you're saying, no, that's not what i'm saying . no, that's not what i'm saying. it's very much what you just said. that's where this leads to when you separate separate agencies, one of the. so you think. yeah throw it all out with the blouse. the ultimate gendenl with the blouse. the ultimate gender. i am saying there are people out there that are to this and saying, you know, it's slippery to start to slippery slope to start to switching yes, it's women switching off. yes, it's women sitting . yeah. sitting around basically. yeah. and they know is. yes, it is. no, actually no one's saying that there's anyone say why don't we just deal with the single sex toilets in the schools first and we'll deal with the other stuff later. lewis i mean, lewis but i mean. lewis i mean, you have kids, but i think they kind of escaped this. they're a bit older than they were. they kind of escaped this. they're a bit o|takenian they were. they kind of escaped this. they're a bit o|taken away. ey were. they kind of escaped this. they're a bit o|taken away. everything's' were taken away. everything's ready. don't it's ready. so i don't let that. it's a bathrooms. that's the. a bathrooms. okay, that's the. yeah i mean, not me. that doesn't go into. it's interesting. this started very much as a seemingly somewhat
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fringe . now you fringe topic online. now you have the front page children put at risk by gender ideology in schools. the fact is that people now know what gender ideology is. it means i mean , this is is. it means i mean, this is just very much a recent phenomenon the last two years phenomenon in the last two years or so has taken a long time, penetrate mainstream penetrate into the mainstream consciousness. about consciousness. we've about it. i wasn't i tell my parents by stuff thought was nuts. stuff and i thought i was nuts. all kind of everybody, all these kind of everybody, they hit them, right? yeah. and when them evidence, when you show them evidence, they're no, no, no they're like, no, no, no, no, no and now we literally see it here finally, thank god. right? finally end with the finally we going to end with the star , sun lewis well, star story, the sun lewis well, it's interesting that daily star which is talking about our sun, which is talking about our sun, which is talking about our sun, which is a star, but as only thing to do what they're saying is this there's a sun spot. they don't call it sunspots anymore . don't call it sunspots anymore. it doesn't sound that scary. they call it whole as there's a hole in the sun and that all of the sun pushing out. a lot of the sun is pushing out. a lot of micro i don't understand how the the sun is pushing out. a lot of mic|works.|'t understand how the the sun is pushing out. a lot of mic|works. andiderstand how the the sun is pushing out. a lot of mic|works. and the stand how the the sun is pushing out. a lot of mic|works. and the truth how the the sun is pushing out. a lot of mic|works. and the truth is»w the the sun is pushing out. a lot of mic|works. and the truth is thate sun works. and the truth is that all physicists out there all the physicists out there don't understand how it works. it's a very high brow article
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for for the star. mean, for the for the star. i mean, there's a of science in this there's a lot of science in this article. yeah, there's lot of article. yeah, there's a lot of science. i want sciences. science. and i want sciences. they've lot wikipedia they've done a lot of wikipedia clipping. yeah. and, but clipping. yeah, yeah. and, but all is wrong because all the science is wrong because the sun is not falling the sun, the sun is not falling to bits . the sun is the end of to bits. the sun is the end of like the sun is like a lightning rod with all the universal electricity is floating around. they're aiming for this one spot and any moment the electricity could go another spot and we would not have a sun was like really weird tv , lewis really weird tv, lewis explained. science was i was actually entranced. yeah i do, but always just like mesmerised . to see this strange time and this and people who are listening, no one will know who this guy is . volokhonsky i'm this guy is. volokhonsky i'm going to say it's all about yourself. every squeeze . it's yourself. every squeeze. it's funny. it's a it's a it's a gaping coronal hole which we've all struggled for good, but that after well, i mean, i've had the after well, i mean, i've had the after a few courage. it's tough. yeah. just for what it is. what
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could the after corona y is always the star of this cover this i always think this is either wrong or it's a massive story the other papers are ignonng story the other papers are ignoring which is the sun is falling apart you not i mean. yes it is it that right. it's huge. it is a huge story because at any moment i said, you see the whole again, don't it the whole again, oh, don't do it again. say it's like men again. we'll say it's like men in black where they get their news from the tabloid newspapers don't. national is don't. they national enquirer is not always not real. there is always i mean, before go to britain, is that have any that going to have any ramifications they're saying that sunspots can that these kind of sunspots can take out mobile networks stop phones, stop radio . i mean, is phones, stop radio. i mean, is that likely happen ? i am that likely to happen? i am concerned. then the concerned. but then again, the person consulted, lewis. person i've consulted, lewis. yeah, i know. i would say this we cannot be concerned. it was something that happened night in 1859 called the carrington incident , where it was a huge incident, where it was a huge infusion on earth and it turned off everything . luckily, at the off everything. luckily, at the time there was nothing much to turn in 1859. okay. well, thank lewis. i think what i mean
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world and after i say welcome back to headliners amy josh howie all the america less mentally stable me lewis schaffer and lives near me lewis schaffer and lives near me takes on full view josh wowed by lewis let's kick off this section with thursday's guardian and is the idea to take from peter to give to peter well do you know what very well not quite well said this one of the most interesting stories that i have it well said this is a real story that the guardian's come up with and nick probably has missed the real story element
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this but it says overseas budget cut to meet soaring costs of housing refugees in the uk . housing refugees in the uk. basically no one knew about this but every dollar that is spent on refugees in this country gets taken away from some poor countries. money that they would get . so they have no idea how get. so they have no idea how much money going to go to some starving person , some starving starving person, some starving place because of the coming here. so it's kind like so here. so it's kind of like so the is not penalised the government is not penalised letting all these billions of people they it off of the people they take it off of the what you would call it the overseas aid overseas aid. and this is according according to the independent commission for aid absolutely aid impact. it's absolutely brilliant because at the same time it comes up with money to house these rest these undeserving refugees it basically create more refugees the countries that they come from because not giving them any money. yeah i mean i mean it is interesting they're coming in we see a lot of commentators on this channel as well saying you know with this is spending uk
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money and what not but it actually turns out that was money that was already allocated to be sent abroad so it's not costing us anything extra and there is an argument that we're actually spending the money that was going to be spent abroad within the uk to our hotels all the other companies here and it's staying within the uk. now you those would say a couple of things they might say well is state aid set the right level state aid set at the right level anyway maybe . maybe it's too anyway maybe. maybe it's too high. oh, the high. they might say, oh, the other you're saying is it other thing you're saying is it within country, it's within the country, but it's refugees in hotels. so people might still say, you know, what about, are not about, the people who are not refugees, of living, refugees, cost of living, crisis, i don't i'm crisis, etc. i don't have i'm not saying just not necessarily saying i just think got i couldn't think if we've got i couldn't get a fund what is 4.9 get within a fund what is 4.9 and god how many. well million is point 9 million outstanding taxpayer . yeah, but is point 9 million outstanding taxpayer. yeah, but we're talking about 3.5 billion. i know it's a slight. he's been laid off. i didn't check there was a decimal place. you know you see louis, you made a very, very valid point. there he goes. that put that one up. but you're
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absolutely i mean this the idea behind the aid budget in the first place is it's to send that money to other parts of the world to raise their health, to raise income, to raise the opportunities that they. yeah. so they want to stay there and not come here if we're spending that money already a sort of chicken and egg situation chicken and the egg situation here seem to be doing it here and we seem to be doing it the wrong way round. no but but their minds, they're doing it their minds, they're doing it the because they want the right way because they want immigrants here those immigrants to come here those people everything people in charge of everything a rishi want massive rishi sunak they want massive immigration because somebody has to their their to pick their their strawberries. got strawberries. somebody's got to paint houses, their paint their houses, their apartment buildings they own. they immigration . it's they want immigration. it's true. i would halt immigration , true. i would halt immigration, including louis schaefer. it's too late . i have to go. i'm my too late. i have to go. i'm my fan. all right. thursday telegraph nick and nick, try. turns out the what the really hated were ultra low emission . hated were ultra low emission. yes, that was what really got them . that's how it all started. them. that's how it all started. so that econ claims sympathisers have latched on to anti—eu ulez protest. he said this before.
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he's saying it again he's doubung he's saying it again he's doubling down. it was a disgusting thing the time disgusting thing the first time saying right before all he saying right wing before all he seemed be saying. he's seemed to be saying. now he's say i think did say like. yeah, i think he did say like. yeah, i think he did say things and he say things like that and he listed tories in that, now listed tories in that, but now he's well changed that's he he's well he's changed that's he said my is that they're latching on decent tories decent on to decent tories decent people the ulez people who oppose the ulez expansion are now expansion but there are also now i mean because we've seen this tactic with j. kane in new tactic with kelly j. kane in new zealand, far zealand, you call someone far right, it's a green light to do whatever you want to them. it's a of shutting down the a way of shutting down the argument. who argument. these are people who don't pay the ulez don't want to pay the ulez because awful. i'm hoping because it's awful. i'm hoping it's comms tax and it's going to be comms tax and people will just rebel against it, which they doing. it, which they are doing. how they well, people they rebelling? well, people are people, you know, they're protesting. people protesting. some people have like shut down cameras. like they've shut down cameras. i saw something they were i saw something there. they were sort just driven through sort of just driven through this. was a 50 this. oh, no, that was a 50 minutes but anyway, this minutes series. but anyway, this sort sampling and sort of judge sampling and rebellion. is, rebellion. but the thing is, emily thornberry says, she emily thornberry here says, she saw one swastika with saw at least one swastika with mr. khan's face on it. isn't that khan likely that calling khan more likely for ulez? you hadn't, you for his ulez? if you hadn't, you wouldn't swastika with wouldn't have a swastika with his would you? his face. you were a, would you? so not now. there might be
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so that not now. there might be some actual people there because the leader of the party. well, i mean, with the mean, what they're with the sign. there some sign. i mean there might be some people, generally people people, generally bad people usually some people usually happen to some people might also might be planted that also happens happens happens maybe these happens big protests or you know protests in america or you know it's smearing your it's just smearing your opponents as far right. well, if you agree with things here, lewis, all, it's quite lewis, first of all, it's quite interesting that i think this is the first time i've ever heard a name. politicians talk about the decent tories. yeah, that's quite well, he's divided. quite nice. well, he's divided. he's speedy. yeah he's like a nice speedy. yeah the other. but the other thing is that he the implicit idea that the is only going to be the tories who are the protest so against it. well i know a lot of labour supporters. yeah who are very much against this policy. well, i think what he means , i well, i think what he means, i think this is what's happening now. that's silo theory, which we've discussed is there's no room for overlap . no, there's no room for overlap. no, there's no venn diagrams more if you're either with us 100% or you're against us 100. and he's if you're not with us on the ulez
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thing , you are you're not with us on the ulez thing, you are a tory by definition by death. and of course it is. well, that's what they've said about the trans rights issue, even though, as you know, a bit of leftie, but at the same time because i've been supporting women's rights, that me by default and that makes me by default and that's whatever. but that's a far right whatever. but this and ijust to say this is and i just want to say what were saying, that what you were saying, that narrative is dangerous and has had, horrible had, you know, horrible implications , new zealand as implications, new zealand as well. but it's an interesting thing where these, these turned up at this event, let women speak and then all people, all the trans activists like , well, the trans activists like, well, look now then they're not. but they weren't invited by these women. these women are mostly left wing women . and then they left wing women. and then they were like, well, why didn't they challenge? maybe it's like, you you're meant to be the antifascist and you're mostly men and none of you stood up to actually do it. but you expect these women to fight them off. yeah, it is a weird thing and the way just on your question about what people are doing, they've they've wires
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they've they've cut the wires of these it over these cameras. they it over lenses. are like lenses. so people are like aggressively against this and it's breaking the law. it's it's not breaking the law. it's not enough to just say that not good enough to just say that they're a they're far right. there was a they're far right. there was a they just hate the policy. yeah we'll an impact we'll see if it makes an impact on the election i guess. but keep in mind that i wrote it down. the claiming fact schism or ism is the last resort of. the so and the scoundrel. thank so much and thank for that down this you thank you for that down this you know a real intellectual andrew doyle would have just remembered one but you're just not remember the thing of the day is the thing is the guy in next i'm trying to be too good you mate good for you next time don't and you've written it down onto the guardian next. lewis it seems like forever the guardian goes everyone must follow. well this is another one of those guardian stories . they're like totally stories. they're like totally involved in slavery and things like that. and you think of all the special despicable and says the special despicable and says the uk government and called on to investigate links after the
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guardian apology, which is when they because they had some role in slavery, everybody had a role in slavery, everybody had a role in start to save everyone. i think and they they put £1,010 million for reparation. i mean speaking i speak forjosh here have you gotten your money from egyptians slavery that we were we had to live under yet? not yet. so where is our money. where's thousand? is 2000? you've been waiting that we've been waiting. and my bicycle was delivered with reparations for my bicycle stolen when i was 12 years old in great neck. long anyway, did you say that it was you trade? would you write that one down as well? i just please the right please delete deleted . never happened. what do you think? i mean the people here who are the people who are saying that now? everybody else has to do it and is the guardian just also deflecting a little bit like we're sorry we did some now just. yeah if you need now let's just. yeah if you need to apologise what exactly it to apologise now what exactly it hilarious when it was happening to guardian they've to the guardian because they've lectured seven. lectured us all on may seven. thenit lectured us all on may seven. then it was very funny that they
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were ones behind slavery, as were the ones behind slavery, as you very. but now it's you say, very. but now it's annoying because un experts. annoying because now un experts. well, of oxymoron well, some sort of oxymoron are coming saying we should coming in saying that we should investigate government coming in saying that we should inve the ate government coming in saying that we should invethe royal government coming in saying that we should inve the royal go they're1t and the royal family they're saying but the saying it's laudable, but the contents it, my is that contents of it, my hope is that those suffer the those who suffer the consequences their past consequences of their past actions the actions will benefit from the sums. but they're just sums. but but they're just saying that everyone has to do it it's going to be very it now and it's going to be very handwringing boring. go on handwringing and boring. go on forever. actually bring forever. and actually you bring an point about an interesting point about everyone's oppression. and i go back where a lancashire, everyone's oppression. and i go bacimy where a lancashire, everyone's oppression. and i go bacimy family's ere a lancashire, everyone's oppression. and i go bacimy family's from lancashire, everyone's oppression. and i go bacimy family's from lancashire. my, my family's from lancashire. half of them, yeah. lancashire. cotton mill worker had a, i think life expectancy think it was a life expectancy that half that of a slave that was half that of a slave living time. so what that was half that of a slave living reparations time. so what that was half that of a slave living reparations forne. so what that was half that of a slave living reparations for the so what about reparations for the industrial revolution thing? because owned because my ancestors owned a lancashire, so one more thing i want to about this. one of want to say about this. one of the experts, professor the un experts, professor verryn, says the verryn, a shepherd, says the british refused to british state has refused to apologise simply apologise and then simply uttering meaningless statements of regret, remorse and deep sorrow . that sounds like an sorrow. that sounds like an apology to me. also this. she also keeps on going on about this not when she wants reparations whatever not saying the actual word, but that's what
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it is. sums committed. but she says not top down way, which is the way god is doing. allocating its programmes think what she's saying is just give us, give us my body into everything. yeah i think when this whole thing is oven think when this whole thing is over, reparations business over, this reparations business is going to demand apology is we're going to demand apology for those people being so patronising saying on everybody how much you want. i know did i pronounce the word purpose appropriate thinking of the guardian especially now they're experts in reparations perhaps they can help advise california nick. yeah. yes, this is reparations to black californians could cost over 800 billion economists hell state and that would be 2.5 times the state annual budget and this doesn't even include the recommended 1 million for all the black resident for health disparities suffered that disparities they suffered that shorten their lifespan so it's this reparations madness again this reparations madness again this would bankrupt california it would be an injustice to everyone living now. so obviously we have historic injustices, but you can't just
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them. i mean, so he is saying it's going to be a real how do you compensate for hundreds of years of harm even 150 years post slavery. obviously you post slavery. well obviously you can't fact they the can't and the fact they the salient point as well is that california slave california was never a slave state current are not state current taxpayers are not responsible historical responsible for these historical injustices. so it's absolutely ludicrous. work. and ludicrous. it possibly work. and i'd and scott adams i'd also add and scott adams said he's the most said it, he's not the most popular he's been popular because he's been counsel, said not counsel, but he said it's not accessible to always be accessible actually to always be back individual or group . back as an individual or group. so don't think it's going to so i don't think it's going to work. slavery horrific, work. yes. slavery was horrific, but is this going to fix but how is this going to fix anything? the anything? and what about the people living this is not people living now? this is not please. mean, think please. i mean, do you think this money actually this money is actually realistically to going out to realistically to be going out to people? gotten? people? well, it's gotten? i think it's it goes it'll go out to people in different ways i mean there's money that's always been going out people been going out to people quietly. they're talking somewhere of a million. 2.5 million. well way the way the economy is going in california, in your mind , is a two and in your mind, is a two and a half times the budget. as soon as all rich people leave that leave the states , they'll be leave the states, they'll be the budget wasn't another argument
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here because the governor, i believe advisory believe set up this advisory committee. they in the wake of what happened , george floyd and what happened, george floyd and sort of say , oh, we're going to sort of say, oh, we're going to set this up. do you think that was somewhat of a deflection tactic to go? look, we are going to start talking about reparations and then that to start talking about repastuff|s and then that to start talking about repa stuff away?then that to start talking about repa stuff away? i|en that to start talking about repa stuff away? i tell that to start talking about repa stuff away? i tell you that to start talking about repa stuff away? i tell you what this stuff away? i tell you what i i think he thought there i think i think he thought there were very few black people living in california because those leftist people don't those leftist white people don't know many people. so he know very many people. so he thought, can give them thought, well, we can give them this because i don't know this money because i don't know any black people. okay, i would just to officially state just like to officially state that's he that's not what happened. he wrote it . no, you write down wrote it. no, you write down really. okay quick break now, but come back. but trans day of vengeance. why guy pierce's apology them probably be apology to them probably be enough and out of us versus black lives matter . surely one black lives matter. surely one of those stories is going to get us cancelled. so, you know .
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all right, welcome to headliners. and we received a text during the from louis sun who said that the show is i quote quite good thank you so much he's not he's not he's not american so let's go to thursday's telegraph nick perhaps this isn't the best time for protest. yeah trans day of vengeance protest to hit washington wake of nashville shooting this is organised by the trans radical activists network and this poster that's getting banned on twitter, it says trans day of vengeance and it stop trans genocide. so it says stop trans genocide. so these actually think there's a genocide of trans people. now, whether some people are disingenuous spreading that or whether actually genuinely disingenuous spreading that or wiin:her actually genuinely disingenuous spreading that or wiin:her sortctually genuinely disingenuous spreading that or wiin:her sort ofially genuinely disingenuous spreading that or wiin:her sort of deludedjinely it in some sort of deluded state, generally spreading it, and then they people just certain believe if certain people believe it. if they especially meant they especially that meant instead crazy instead they then do crazy things. it's completely things. so it's completely it's terrible vengeance terrible and obviously vengeance . jeremy not great. maybe it's john wick clint eastwood, . jeremy not great. maybe it's john wichut lint eastwood, . jeremy not great. maybe it's john wichut generally ood,
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. jeremy not great. maybe it's john wichut generally not western, but generally not a great thing to have a day of and then they are later saying, oh no, unity , not no, it's about unity, not inciting yes, inciting violence. yes, vengeance. not the word for that. comes from that. yeah, this comes from trans radical activist network. there thing, trans there was another thing, trans resistance that were very similar natural similar thing. that said natural shooting one shooting isn't isn't one tragedy, it's because we tragedy, it's two. because we also think about the also have to think about the what the to do what inspired the person to do it this has been obviously it and this has been obviously discussed the media coverage discussed in the media coverage of was saying, but what of this nbc was saying, but what about the trans people that could sort of persecuted could now be sort of persecuted and the reuters it as and the reuters described it as and the reuters described it as a christian student, a former christian student, christian former christian school, former students like i mean people students like now i mean people are trying us on a cover are trying to meet us on a cover up are trying to meet us on a cover up in a disgusting way and change the narrative. yeah and it's all pretty appalling it's all been pretty appalling what three kids were what happened? three kids were killed and three adults. absolutely disgusting, possibly a christians, a hate crime against christians, which and see when which we'll wait and see when the comes out. the the manifesto comes out. the mainstream media treatment of. it appalling. this it has been appalling. this trans is has to go trans day event is has to not go ahead. terrible thing and ahead. it's a terrible thing and that's timing. but even that's terrible timing. but even with happening, a with this event not happening, a somewhat event somewhat ridiculous event because this idea there's a genocide happening is massively
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false. i mean, numbers are just going through the roof. that's the point. it's an ideology that's captured arguably a young teenage girls. and the other thing is that the reason they're doing it is because this proposed legislation and they say it to ban gender affirming across the us. no it's to ban gender affirming care to children . that's the point i'm children. that's the point i'm affirming care being a euphemism for just saying no you are you the person. and also by the way then they use words like we're then they use words like we're the at risk community and stuff. this all started from a statistic black brazilian prostitutes, black brazilian prostitute. so everyone said, oh, the rates of murder is the highest of whatever. that's statistic that's always used . statistic that's always used. actually, the fact is in the uk it's very, very few and certainly over the last ten years and you know when you have women being killed every two days or so. i know there's a disparity between percentages , disparity between percentages, whatnot. just seems
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whatnot. but it just seems incorrect. also, i like that on the poster they say wear a mask. well, because that's that's the solace that they're in. it's wear a mask is the trans thing this this thing is really tragic the trans story because as i say, it's the death of love. it's these people basically willingly being castrated . willingly being castrated. they're being they're being neutered . they're preventing neutered. they're preventing themselves from having children forever for this. and these are children who who want go ahead with this by whatever are they're ten, 20, 30 years old andifs they're ten, 20, 30 years old and it's well some of them we've have teenage girls. yeah 12 year old girls. and, you know on these hormones. yeah. and it's been proven yet like you say, they become infertile . and i they become infertile. and i think the worst thing about it is of the desire to be is sort of the desire to be a victim . it's these are people victim. it's these are people who are not necessarily victims to begin and they feel the need actually be a victim . and the
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actually be a victim. and the way they become a victim is by mutilate whatever you don't maybe it's meant to be you see it as a positive thing for them. yeah but you agree in terms of this constant like thing of trying to approach the holocaust. yeah and then and then other is all then the other thing is all institutions america and institutions around america and the west arguably have utterly to this ideology and really this all kicking off, you know what they want a day of vengeance, because now some people are going, you know what? no, i'm you can't go in to have access to women's spaces. you can't be a male rapist in a women's jail. you can't go into female sports and unfairly. yeah that and compete unfairly. yeah that for them requires vengeance and the fact the media is promoting it and the fact the mainstream politicians we saw politicians that we saw new zealand australia, that zealand in australia, that politics and in tasmania, you know, you kind of can say the know, you kind of i can say the word, but he different word, but he used a different word, but he used a different word for we say you word for terms. we say you change it to t yes and he called kelly j change it to t yes and he called kellyj a dropkick and they've given a green light violence given a green light for violence against the times against women right the times next and you're next and lewis you're a hollywood actor. soon be in
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hollywood actor. soon be seen in the background you indiana the background of you indiana jones movie. yes thank you. your character, trans. well, it was it was filmed in the subway down so you could have been trans. we were trans. we were trans. i literally. okay. yeah, literally. okay. yeah, literally. tell us about story. well, this is guy pearce who i've heard of , well, this is guy pearce who i've heard of, but i have no idea who he is. memento confidential and neighbours most famous naval was he neighbours. all those australians. i think if to australia, two thirds if go to australia, two thirds of the population have been in neighbours. tweeted neighbours. he basically tweeted the most shocking thing that you could ever tweet, which is the truth oh, which is saying should he tweeted only should only people allowed to play trans character as be trans or is or can actor? why should we limit the career of an actor? he also said, oh, does that mean that trans people only play trans people? yeah right. so basically thatis people? yeah right. so basically that is the truth. he doesn't want trans people to only play people. he wants them to be full actors. they get the part . it's
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actors. they get the part. it's just the truth. yeah but nick, is this also the thing that like that's you know, people say, oh , only trans people can play trans actors, but and then they can also play whatever actor, but then it seems to be like these two. and he goes one way, yeah, yeah. he's saying you should go both ways. actor should go both ways. actor should act be anyone. it's should act and be anyone. it's an form. but of course an art form. but of course activists don't care about. he still cares about the art form of acting and he's he's naively thought with thought hey people agree with this and this because it's logical. and like says, it's the truth. like lewis says, it's the truth. but in this being the world in he was immediately attacked for this obviously true statement and to back and they said and he had to back down he shouldn't down and say he he shouldn't have done twitter and have done it on twitter and particularly shouldn't be particularly he shouldn't be talking given he has talking about it, given he has a full house of privilege. so he re capitulated full house of privilege. so he re bullies capitulated full house of privilege. so he re bullies whenipitulated full house of privilege. so he re bullies when he jlated full house of privilege. so he re bullies when he actually the bullies when he actually made a correct point. the only person a full house person i know with a full house of privilege is lewis. yeah, but he said, i thought you say two things were all he did, things that were all he did, things that were all he did, things besides things that were wrong besides the initial he deleted the the initial tweet he deleted the tweet like if could tweet like as if it could forgotten as you delete, forgotten as soon as you delete, suddenly are paying more
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suddenly people are paying more attention to you never attention to you can never delete like delete it. you can never like unsee it. it's like, okay, no, no, i agree, i think. but we're not going that second not going to hear that second point i mean, got point because i mean, he's got now, which unbelievably a now, which unbelievably has a fascinating article about trade. mark adidas mark nick yeah. so adidas backtracks on opposition to black lives trademark requests. they that it's three they said that it's three strikes for two similar to their logo and they now this is interesting people say money dictates everything we are in capitalism is what it takes decision but actually that's not the in woke capitalism and the case in woke capitalism and we it clearly here, we see it very clearly here, a source close to the company told reuters u—turn prompted by reuters u—turn was prompted by fears misinterpret reuters u—turn was prompted by fearobjection misinterpret reuters u—turn was prompted by fearobjection as misinterpret reuters u—turn was prompted by fearobjection as criticism :erpret reuters u—turn was prompted by fearobjection as criticism of)ret the objection as criticism of blm mission. and that's the thing you do you can't criticise this decision destroy the nuclear family destroyed nuclear family defund the police is totally discredit the organisation with such fear of upsetting that they actually withdrew and do they have a habit of withdrawing? not really. they filed 90 lawsuits. i did assign more than 200 settlement since settlement agreements since thousand they will thousand and eight, so they will crush they going see it now. crush they are going see it now. do think that's can we have
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do you think that's can we have another me guy another look? it's just me guy that was already if yeah. if it was a small company who unknown. i did ask what just crushed them but because it black lives matter terrified and matter they're terrified and they and that they backed out and that shows you where the real is. yeah i mean, what do you think, louis? what would they back down for mean, what do you think, louis? whéotherld they back down for mean, what do you think, louis? whéother organisation. down for mean, what do you think, louis? whéother organisation. d
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god rest his soul and god bless his soul god rest is all that i wish i'd never people moving on to thursday's telegraph and louis i've been trying hard in this article yeah but it's this article where you're going to go too far. finally i don't think it is, because i think it's this is an andrew doyle. god bless andrew doyle. he would love this thing. he's still alive. but i could see him. i could see talking about this. it's it. it says experts to rule says hate crime experts to rule is a story you talk that through whether whether english the engush whether whether english the english countryside harbours rural racism and so the brothers charity the guys won't the brothers because of their inherited racism over the years of reducing soap which makes people clean which maybe sort of goes back a bit further than that know if is inherent as much as the original is just so we'll they invested in plantations whatnot. yeah it says says whatnot. yeah so it says says they invested in plantations so they invested in plantations so they to check to make sure that ethnic minority hikers don't face open hostility out walking.
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yeah i mean do. do you have anything to say about this? do you about it? i'm furious about it, of course, because? because if they couldn't i mean, i'm from the country for a start. but look, we've done with that with this to this story with this aspect to this story before there's this concern before that there's this concern that the countryside is an exclusively environment. now that the countryside is an excluis'ely environment. now that the countryside is an excluis wrongvironment. now that the countryside is an exclu is wrong with nent. now that the countryside is an exclu is wrong with amt. now what is wrong with an exclusively english environment in it in england in english, does it mean mind, when i mean why? in my mind, when i know english, don't think it know english, i don't think it should. it shouldn't. but should. no, it shouldn't. but it's very it's look, it's very, very strange. is strange. you've got unilever. is this a charity established by a plantation soap magnate plantation owning soap magnate behind? unilever is leave him radical. so these people would involve in the past and involve a slave in the past and now they're involved with trying to this small race, to get rid of this small race, which is english if you which is english people. if you went another event, amazon or went to another event, amazon or something, they're trying to get rid y'know what rid of, y'know what they're saying, saying that rid of, y'know what they're sayi can't saying that rid of, y'know what they're sayi can't have saying that rid of, y'know what they're sayican't have an saying that rid of, y'know what they're sayican't have an englishthat you can't have an english department small island department in this small island that to have english that happens to have english people. don't think that's people. i don't think that's what they're saying either. i think talking more what they're saying either. i think inclusion talking more what they're saying either. i think inclusion and.king more what they're saying either. i think inclusion and youi more what they're saying either. i think inclusion and you know, about inclusion and you know, that's this stuff this that's to get in this stuff this feels to me like another kind of well, you don't even let make well, you don't even let me make my because.
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my point even quicker because. i do. because what they're saying is inherently verbal racism. the banks to just banks are saying racist to just exist english person exist as an english person in england, some big england, if you are some big company live in, you company that you live in, you went to the amazon and said, write this, try, we're wiping out would horrific. out and it would be horrific. why you have english why can't you have english people england in the will? people in england in the will? this of a study this is actually more of a study to. find out if there is that racism but it is not. i'm sure we'll that more we'll cover that more miraculously. still made miraculously. we've still made it it joined us it this far and it joined us after the break a story after the break for a story about day job children's party entertainer. the reasons is entertainer. the reasons nick is happy gave stand up and happy that he gave stand up and a takes self—love the a woman takes self—love to the next join us. that
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16 or 15 i stop talking about racism. welcome back to headline is a story now for nick in the star that i think we all can relate to three of us at least the job it right yeah comedian left urinating in after left urinating in a jar after heckler attacks with and gives him a broken leg it's terribly headune him a broken leg it's terribly headline that's what headline but that's what
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happened terrible happened and this is terrible this is simon cane not this time cane know a difference. simon cane i know a difference. simon came billingham came from billingham and this was basically was terrible. i mean, basically he heckler was already he said that heckler was already around the microphone around with the microphone before game when the worse before the game when the worse things that's all things you see, that's all up on the stage to get the stage, sit down, shut up. yeah need to down, shut up. yeah we need to stop romanticising hecklers. they okay, what's best they are scum. okay, what's best heckle you've received when they shut up hate and then left? that's good. what is that's the good. what is disgusting and this guy came up and broke his leg because and just broke his leg because had an altercation a disagreement not disagreement on and it's not surprising culture of surprising in a culture words of violence and where we don't really understand basic decorum it's we stand up about it's time that we stand up about free speech playing with the boundanes free speech playing with the boundaries of speech things i people this people do understand this anymore ralphie well anymore know if ralphie no well there they just there you go then they just attack it's just one by attack or or it's just one by the way. i'm against hecklers. lewis hate this guy. have you heard him? simon? what sam? simon, any of us know that? but he describes himself. i think he's from the more what we would call the circuit or, you know, go work himself. nothing wrong with that whether telling sort of more . but he
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of pop gags more. but he describes himself as one of the most outrageous comedians now in the uk . surely that's i mean, the uk. surely that's i mean, that's you. we don't know. we don't. i think you're surely i mean, have you ever been hit on stage? he thinks of lewis as more of a thinker now. oh, yeah, yeah. he writes stuff. lewis writes us down. but the difference. yeah, doesn't difference. yeah, he doesn't remember he just remember his jokes. he just reads his notepad. reads them from his notepad. well, think there's i want to well, i think there's i want to make sure that they right the audience that audience me to make sure that they're right i've never hit on stage. yeah but i understand something. you don't mess with. you mess with a you don't mess with a microphone. i to defend you once nearly i nearly got beat up for you. when was this? because i told you this. i would not go. i don't want to into what the material was. got material was. he got very offended literally killed offended and i literally killed he got beaten up because i had to deal this guy. but i've been like beginning really beat up a bunch i've had like bunch of times. i've had like bounces you bounces that surprised me. you know, in manchester. know, i a riot in manchester. yeah and then also i down yeah and then also i was down the comedian was taking the mickey out. some guys like that were, was very were, you know, it was very
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spiky like they're spiky stuff like so they're not going sleep you guys. going to sleep with you guys. you stop trying to sort you can just stop trying to sort of peacock around them or whatever. anyway i got really offended. the offended. they so rushed the stage these bounces stage and then all these bounces appeared nowhere and just appeared out of nowhere and just saved the last moment. and saved me the last moment. and then to walk the train then i had to walk the train station. i was terrified. it's going get beaten up the going to get beaten up on the way back. i want to know how way back. and i want to know how you riot, but maybe not. you start a riot, but maybe not. i didn't just think of myself. oh yeah. just your personality and to know. yeah. and jokes. i got to know. yeah. something along those lines. yeah the yeah it's pretty crazy. the metro lewis metro next on lewis know florence you know the actress florence you know the actress florence her name rhymes florence pugh her name rhymes with what's the problem with poo but what's the problem with poo but what's the problem with well, the with way with we. well, the problem isn't with we it's yeah he it's just like water and one of the benefits of not drinking water is you don't pay but you also her name is pete also die. and her name is pete pugh for pugh i thought it was par gloria because you're jewish that's all we speak for. i didn't know. but she talks. okay. so she hates water and she was to talking add to james and
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cass. yes. so former of yours before you came on the show. oh, no, no. so they didn't like me, even if they already annoyed me, i no, no . always. i always knew i no, no. always. i always knew what i was like a long time. both of them. but so she's basically saying she doesn't want to drink water, which very inflammatory . it's literally, inflammatory. it's literally, literally a story . but the truth literally a story. but the truth is there's a big debate . water. is there's a big debate. water. oh, my god. do i use the dehydrates? you you know, it is water. as i said , is outside. water. as i said, is outside. does that tell us misinformation? i've read that have read that. and i saw a youtube video of the you try to tell me the other day, i'm you know what it dehydrates your father must have been like oh electricity and you just go , electricity and you just go, dad, i've missed you. that's most iconoclastic, save for water dehydrates . you think water dehydrates. you think about it, even the desert. let me see if they don't drink water. what google. let the people out there are going to google so what's the truth , google it. so what's the truth, anyway? well, we don't need anyway? well, that we don't need
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as much water if we eat. if we eat food, if that even raw eat raw food, if that even raw food. if we eat raw meat. the problem the that we eat the problem with the that we eat the cooking the things lose things flat is a two mainstream piece like you. koehne yeah. you've got to think so, but i've got loads. okay, basically this is a non—story. it's a non—story. louis would say he's actually right. it's a basically it's this woman thinks just want to dnnk this woman thinks just want to drink water. you think, okay, people they people have gone mad, they detach bodies detach from their bodies and they you realise it's they go, but you realise it's just she made a podcast. just a joke. she made a podcast. oh really? great all right, well, let's see what happens. this staying the medtronic this staying with the medtronic and given you any ideas and has this given you any ideas so presenter dare so an radio presenter how dare you because wait you marries herself because wait until you've met the one. and this is a sad story, but erin molan, who's a who's a presenter and her daughter said, oh, it'll be fun. you know, marry yourself. so she did it yourself. and so she did it because a 39 old because she's a 39 year old single mother she single mother saying she probably married. and single mother saying she pr
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come across. she's beautiful come across. she's a beautiful woman. years old. she woman. she's 39 years old. she has one because were has met one because there were millions guys who would go out with girl. looked at with this girl. they looked at her beautiful. her picture. she's beautiful. she a four kid. so she has a four year old kid. so maybe the father of her kid was, the well, marriage is the one. okay. well, marriage is broken. relationships are broken. relationships are broken. it oh, yeah. you're getting you. no. getting married, aren't you. no. so was you said before to so i was you said before to himself. oh to himself. fine. okay. the show is the over. there are thousands . sorry. yes. there are thousands. sorry. yes. i don't want to get rid of. you know what? no water, the reception, everything be written down. so let's down. the show's over. so let's take another quick look at thursday's pages . we are thursday's front pages. we are going to go with the daily mail. children put at risk by gender ideology in schools. the telegraph households to face net zero penalty for gas use guardian defies guardian government defies expert huge gamble on carbon capture . these because are not capture. these because are not covered by winning by the way at the end i paper mps demand inquiry after senate gave budget boost to firm linked with his wife expressed fears of result halt pension age rise . i hope
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halt pension age rise. i hope you didn't need the papers there. finally, the daily star sun's falling to bits. part two those are your front. or at least my words about the front pages. that is our show down for tonight. thank you to iconoclastic lewis iconoclastic guests. lewis schaefer and dixon headlines will tomorrow 11 with will be back tomorrow 11 with myself, dixon and myself, nick dixon and leo kearse remember you're kearse i remember if you're watching a.m. repeat stay watching the 5 am. repeat stay tuned the breakfast show .
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good evening. it's me, jake smog, state of the nation , green smog, state of the nation, green is the symbol of naivete, jealousy and scuppering breaks opportunities . we've gone opportunities. we've gone greener than the eu and are wasting our newfound freedoms in the name of net zero. we'll be into that shortly . the 25th into that shortly. the 25th anniversary of the belfast is
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approaching soon and unfortunately m15 just raised the terror threat in northern ireland to severe none other than the leader of the dup , sir than the leader of the dup, sir jeffrey donaldson, joins us shortly . and his majesty's shortly. and his majesty's government is moving thousands of illegal migrants of hotels and into former military bases. could anything go wrong? state of the nation starts now . of the nation starts now. we've got a particularly brilliant panel this the former editor of the sun, kelvin mackenzie and britain's labour mp lloyd russell—moyle as ever. i want to hear from you. please get in touch by emailing mailmogg@gbnews.uk . but before mailmogg@gbnews.uk. but before all of that , it's time for your all of that, it's time for your evening dose of the with polly middlehurst . jacob thank you and middlehurst. jacob thank you and
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good evening to you. our top story this hour is , a little bit story this hour is, a little bit of breaking news we received within last 15 minutes or so. the vatican has said pope francis has a respiratory infection , will need to spend infection, will need to spend a few days in hospital for treatment. it's understood the 86 year old had complained of breathing days. the breathing in recent days. the says he was taken to hospital for tests but doesn't have covid. this morning he attended for tests but doesn't have co\weekly; morning he attended for tests but doesn't have co\weekly generalg he attended for tests but doesn't have co\weekly general audience 1ded for tests but doesn't have co\weekly general audience ated his weekly general audience at the vatican and appeared in good health. let's bring you into the main of day now. the main news of day now. the immigration minister has announced stop housing announced plans to stop housing seekers hotels and instead seekers in hotels and instead place them in disused military bases, admitting that the use of hotels had harmed some towns. robert jenrick said migrants will now be placed at sites in essex. lincolnshire and east sussex. the accommodation will be guarded by 24 hour security and meet migrants. essential living needs , said these hotels living needs, said these hotels would take valuable assets from communities and place pressures on public services . seaside
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