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tv   Headliners  GB News  April 3, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am BST

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good in a moment, headliners. but first, let's bring you up to date with the latest headlines and the stop top story on gb news tonight . the man who news tonight. the man who murdered olivia pratt—korbel in liverpool was sentenced today to life in prison. he to serve a minimum term of 42 years. thomas cashman shot the nine year old girl as he chased a man victim drug dealer into her home in august last year. drug dealer into her home in august last year . the 34 year august last year. the 34 year old refused to appear in the dock to hit victim impact statements or his sentencing outside the court, the school mother, cheryl cobell . her mother, cheryl cobell. her family has already started their life sentence having to spend the rest of their lives without olivia . they've lost the lives
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olivia. they've lost the lives of our lives . sassy, chatty of our lives. sassy, chatty gail, who never ran out of energy. she was a character. she was my baby. and she has amazing qualities and knew what she wanted in life . if you want a wanted in life. if you want a daughter , she was the baby off daughter, she was the baby off of our family. daughter, she was the baby off of our family . on my little of of our family. on my little of my shadow . now everything we do my shadow. now everything we do in everywhere we go was a constant reminder that if she is not there with those all our promise for their future so clearly taken away . well, also clearly taken away. well, also in the news today , prime in the news today, prime minister has announced a new task force to crack down on grooming gangs. rishi sunak said the aim to prevent victims and whistleblowers from being ignored by authorities because of cultural sensitivities or political correctness. it's after the home secretary singled out british pakistan men as a particular concern when speaking exclusively to gb news, suella braverman said her comments on pakistani men were based on reviews and reports. it's not
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racist to tell the truth about what has going on here in rochdale or in rotherham or in telford . local reviews and have telford. local reviews and have confirmed the grooming gangs scandal that has gone on here has been permeated by largely british pakistani men. now it's important not to demonise a whole community and the vast majority of british pakistanis are law abiding and straightforward people . tributes straightforward people. tributes have been paid tonight to the concert of mp and former chancellor nigel lawson after his death at the age 91. the leading brexiteer served in margaret government and sat in the house of lords until his retirement december. he survived by his seven children, including the tv cook and author nigella lawson. rishi sunak has called him a transformational chancellor and an inspiration . chancellor and an inspiration.
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and tonight, donald trump has a rived at trump tower in york city. he's due to appear in court tomorrow in manhattan and face criminal charges . the face criminal charges. the former us president has been in relation to alleged hush money payments to adult film star stormy before his election campaign in 2016. trump will be arraigned. fingerprint two and photographed in the court in manhattan tomorrow. his lawyer, though says he will enter a not guilty . he's though says he will enter a not guilty. he's also due to speak tomorrow evening in florida and we'll have coverage of that here on tv news on tv, online, deb, plus radio on the tune in app. this is gb news is the people's channel. time for headliners . channel. time for headliners. hello to headliners. i'm simon
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evans me through tuesday's top news stories we have the most well read in the country. leo kearse and steve allen . and kearse and steve allen. and that's not saying much, is it also i mean well read in the last couple of hours anybody caught up a it anyway let's crack on with our front pages the time was kick us off almost half of voters say stuff much still lacks vision. they could have gone with over half say he doesn't i paper uk summer holidays hit by passport delays after new strife links. the guardian revealed cbi into mobile following new claims of sexual misconduct . a photograph sexual misconduct. a photograph of the recently arraigned donald trump some fail i no longer have a brother daily express have 42 years life for olivia's life . years life for olivia's life. and finally the daily star queen's corgis are no longer grieving fickle dogs. those your
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front pages . so kicking off with front pages. so kicking off with the suddenly and usually yes so the suddenly and usually yes so the ever pictured of my dating leo their and although i wasn't going to reveal it but she's she's going straight to sun but the mean the mean story oh my wife's okay the main story is that her name was maya. maya. no and always got a different name. oh maya. there's a little joke about this. is maya dating leo. you mean i'm sorry. that's not a good sign. is the next reason you you're the joke. leonardo dicaprio, she's dating . i dicaprio, she's dating. i understand. just a little joke. before we talk a bit. feel like, oh, she was jealous of leonardo. i didn't understand . she might i didn't understand. she might be jealous of you writing been married for over a year to ever met like you don't even know his name. he crack him with the yeah i mean do just a little short
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before we talk about phillip schofield brother so yeah phillip schofield is his brother has been revealed and has been sentenced as is a who blackmailed a teen into sex acts . phillip said after after the verdict was announced . my verdict was announced. my overwhelming concern is and has always been for the well—being of the victim and his family, but it was reported in december 2021, according to phillip's testimony , phillip, who says his testimony, phillip, who says his brother phoned him and an extreme state of agitation in tember 2021 to reveal these crimes . him. tember 2021 to reveal these crimes. him. so there's, you know, a gap of what, three months there where the overwhelming concern wasn't the victim's family, it was for it was for something else. i don't know what maybe maybe you know it was all going to get swept under the carpet. so are you saying just unclear? are you saying just unclear? are you saying that, phillip schofield himself like could come forward with evidence , alerted the with evidence, alerted the police more at this point, if
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was told in september 20, 21 when she says he was then could have come forward to the police before december 20, 21, when these claims were announced. but that's when they were announced. you don't say that that something going on under under. no. when these so they say the allegations were reported in december 2021. well, we should be very cautious about what we might infer from that. i'm not inferring . i'm just reading what inferring. i'm just reading what it in the sun. what do you it says in the sun. what do you think, well the closest think, steve? well the closest attempt to try and find something that won't us sued something that won't get us sued but at least roy is bit but is at least roy is the bit when we read the transcripts of phillip schofield a bit really sinister, tell sinister, his brother tell whatever to tell me. whatever you want to tell me. there's nothing you can say that'll make me hate you. yeah, he about that. what's he was about that. what's wrong? yeah i have i yeah what about saying i have i no a brother. i don't. no longer a brother. i don't. i don't want to put data on his distress, but that's an odd construct, isn't it? he does have a brother and brother has committed terrible and committed a terrible crime and don't like don't think you can just like retrospectively genetic retrospectively detach genetic relationship like that. no, but it's just disowning isn't it.
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yeah.i it's just disowning isn't it. yeah. i think is that is that dramatic thing. the you know, like a bigoted would do like a bigoted father would do it seventies, you know, it in the seventies, you know, so mind i don't know. i don't like it personally. i don't like it. only child, so it. i'm an only child, so i suppose it'll only know it's suppose it'll only i know it's also way things going also the way things are going with, know , drag queens with, you know, drag queens teaching children about sex. you know, we don't know in five years time is phillip schofield going to be seen phobic? well, i suppose that i mean, perhaps suppose is that i mean, perhaps part of thinking god knows perspective likes him, but perhaps his thinking is perhaps part of his thinking is that he needs particularly to try himself try hard to distance himself from such suggestion because from any such suggestion because he still have there may he may still have there may still be a part of the audience that has on was a call this that he has on was a call this morning. his name is big show who rocked his own who were slightly rocked his own revelations and in their minds is there's a slippery from their ruling when he came out as gay. what i'm saying there's still poverty part of the population that think well then what's that think oh well then what's next coming now you know next what's coming now you know and in fact it will turn out that phillip is the good one.
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well i don't know. i still think a slightly odd way of speaking about it . but a slightly odd way of speaking about it. but yeah. a slightly odd way of speaking about it . but yeah. anyway, you about it. but yeah. anyway, you say is an only child that he's trying to nick your territory. thatis trying to nick your territory. that is not true. i identify as an only child . let's have a look an only child. let's have a look at garden. steve not much at the garden. steve not much better when he starts off with these cbi turmoil due these these cbi in turmoil due these sexual claims . these cbi in turmoil due these sexual claims. i mean sexual misconduct claims. i mean grisly details . there's almost grisly details. there's almost two sides of it. there's the actual claims of the sexual misconduct and there's the culture, both of which are under difficult know what say. difficult to know what to say. other bad at the other than it looks bad at the moment. guess find moment. i guess we will find more. the we're talking more. the reason we're talking about guardian page, though, about the guardian page, though, is this picture, donald is because this picture, donald trump's in the news. people trump's back in the news. people are shocked. news he are shocked. the news that he paid woman after sex. yeah the paid a woman after sex. yeah the old saying which i always thought was quite insightful about you don't pay a prostitute to have sex. you pay her to go away afterwards. who really wants kind of slightly wants those kind of slightly boys club? but there's a there's a bit of truth to that actually. you know, generally speaking that's you'd hear of that's something you'd hear of the cbi. yeah look, it is. yeah, but this i mean, it is
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but this is i mean, it is historic . you know, he's the historic. you know, he's the first president to have to go through this. yeah least. through this. yeah at least. i mean. i mean, this. my father, bill clinton, did definitely pay women speak afterwards. but women to speak afterwards. but but he didn't do it out of campaign funds or something. that's the thing. it's a financial paula jones was paid $850,000 by bill clinton to be quiet. and that's when a dollar was worth something. oh, yeah. yeah. you can accounting for that'd be of 7 trillion. certainly is. and i mean and bearin certainly is. and i mean and bear in mind that paula jones was uglier than stormy. yeah that were made against john f dunng that were made against john f during the, you know , tragically during the, you know, tragically truncated term managed to serve. but, you know , marilyn was an but, you know, marilyn was an obvious example . there were many obvious example. there were many other definite cases . i mean, by other definite cases. i mean, by all accounts, he was having a different prostitute shipped to his every other day. yeah, it was an important part of his masculine self image. according to christopher hitchens , in his to christopher hitchens, in his defence, he was paying to have them shipped away afterwards. there we go. that's how it works. is always what will
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works. this is always what will bnng works. this is always what will bring trump, though, isn't bring down trump, though, isn't it? always going to be some it? it's always going to be some sort lazy financial sort of lazy financial irregularity than the irregularity rather than the scandal. could actually scandal. but this could actually him actually going to him this is actually going to inspire his base also could inspire his base and also could inspire his base and also could inspire other people who might have on the fence because have been on the fence because it looks like a political persecution. yes, i think it is persecution. yes, i think it is persecution. this could persecution. this this could backfire untested backfire. this is an untested defence. it's a misdemeanour . defence. it's a misdemeanour. but they're saying they can make it into federal charge. some felony. yeah that's the big deal felony. yeah that's the big deal, isn't it. and if it falls, if they don't make it over that fence, then it is going to it's going to count against them. previous attempts of. absolutely he is teflon despite the fact that you wouldn't think that to look at him. that's i like the idea they're going to fingerprint fingerprinting i just want with those fingers up and over the last anyway if we've got the times now so almost half of voters say this storm are lacks vision i don't know what the other half smoking but keir starmer he says keir starmer says i will be ruthless
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in power which is always a reassuring thing from a left wing politics. you know, that's never honest. i'll never do remembers. i agree. he was piles of skulls thousand feet high . of skulls thousand feet high. yeah, yeah. this is according to these these polls , a fifth of these these polls, a fifth of these these polls, a fifth of the public see keir starmer as a great or good party leader. however almost half of britons believe he hasn't set a clear vision. and the right i mean keir starmer flip flops and everything he's not sure what a women is he'll change his mind on women's week week, on women's week to week, depending most depending on what's the most popular . but depending on what's the most popular. but even in this article points himself, he's article points to himself, he's not that yet. he has not sent that vision yet. he has three and the phase that three phases, and the phase that we're if not them , we're into is the if not them, why us? because at the moment, this poll. yeah, it's asking the question, think of question, do you do you think of keir which is almost keir starmer which is almost the wrong question. not how wrong question. that's not how they'll winning the they'll end up winning the election. because of what election. it's because of what you think about the tories need. the always lose the government always lose rather opposition. rather than the opposition. that's and would that's true. and also i would say seem to be living say we do seem to be living currently and i'm a huge currently and i'm not a huge long but currently long term trend, but currently in where are
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in a period where people are quite comfortable with technocrats. the choppy technocrats. after the choppy water of last years, water of the last few years, technocrats generally don't have vision. these vision. they just keep these the managerial you managerial class, you know, you you choice. next is going you your choice. next is going to between banker and to be between a banker and a lawyer. there are no great boris's or jeremy's with you know big waving. yeah know big flag waving. yeah i think think across think i think across europe we're we're seeing voters we're seeing we're seeing voters rejig the sort technocratic centre left governments used to be the government was was thrown out and it looks like we're going to have quite a right wing coalition government and its place is going to be interesting and right wing alien knows that . that's rejecting a technocrat having won for a while. this was a small slice. it's the pallet cleanser of a boring government after characters and who was key is going to have to come up with some thing though that i think has a little flavour it after a year from now because something that continues on the kind of steady trajectories have now the memories chaos the memories of the chaos of the last of year will start to fade . and he does a rather
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. yeah. and he does a rather unfortunately uninspiring . i'm unfortunately uninspiring. i'm not saying sunak you know i mean he you know equally what there's definitely a kind of laughing blair kind of thing with him, but more convincingly but he's more convincingly new labour starmer sunak than starmer is isn't it. you know. well days the daily star to finish off this section queen's corgis are no longer grieving thank heavens we got this news . thank heavens we got this news. so the queen's devoted corgis are no longer. i love the way that phrase is this so i'm reading out word for mourning for. her match is the front page andifs for. her match is the front page and it's not the respect for official , and it's not the respect for official, but and it's not the respect for official , but the revelations official, but the revelations made by the duchess of york who said, you know, i guess they're fine because they're dogs. the duchess of york, who is now looking after little mite. that's how the star described corgis cool is a quite hefty thing. what little mice if one of those treads on you but on the other she's a prince andrew. oh that's probably true, isn't it? well, anyway , we're pleased it? well, anyway, we're pleased to see that the cool bears are a legitimate member. the
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household. after all the recent scandals . that's it for household. after all the recent scandals. that's it for part one. join us after the break. for labour causing controversy , for labour causing controversy, the conservatives causing controversy and the snp causing controversy. we'll see you in a couple of minutes .
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welcome back to headline as i'm your host simon evans with me to exhume comedians curse steve and alan they are both fully briefed we're ready to go into the papers. the times down here and keir starmer is to visit albania to demonstrate he knows what to do about the small boats crisis. i can see a problem that what how is it going to get there on one of the thoughts that they've. keir starmer they've. yeah keir starmer says he'll better job they've. yeah keir starmer says he'll betterjob on he'll do a betterjob on migrants he's going to visit albania and friends in an effort to he would a better to assure he would do a better job of stopping small than job of stopping the small than rishi says wants to rishi sunak, he says wants to stop the boats, smash the gangs their clear up the
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their terms, and clear up the utter mess, which is quite centrist. there's quite a right position for a leader of the labour party to take and it shows how he's trying to appeal , you know, beat everyone to , to , you know, beat everyone to, to everyone even says he's . lisa everyone even says he's. lisa nandy the shadow up secretary, declined to see whether labour would keep the rwanda deportation deal because obviously it's a key part of stopping the small boats across the channel. we've seen , for the channel. we've seen, for example, when joe biden got in america, he actually kept a lot of the a lot of the message cages the on the southern border and stuff. i mean i think some of those is really interesting how the press report these things because a of those things because a lot of those actually preceded trump as well. you of these things. you know a lot of these things. is the cage was invented really how many how many kids can we stuff this thing? you're stuff in this thing? but you're right. there is not right. his rhetoric there is not that distinguishable from from braverman mean the rwanda braverman and i mean the rwanda protocol that those ideas have been present have been portrayed
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as being cartoon initially even by the press and. yet labour won't disavow even though i saw the interview and she was failing to answer question failing to answer that question and come more like i'm and it did come more like i'm not making policy here and now because that's that's the gift of being the opposition you don't to do the detail don't have to do the detail until and it's a until you get closer and it's a relatively bar. it's a keir starmer is looking at doing better than the rishi sunak stopping the boats. well this is the with the tories, the problem with the tories, they've had a long while and they've had a long while and they've well they've not done very well at stopping boats. she stopping the small boats. she hasn't, hasn't had a long hasn't, she hasn't had a long while and they've been stymied by they've been by labour and they've been stymied and stymied by europe and politicians as but also politicians as well. but also the is this the big thing is this 1% processing. you're you're processing. if you're if you're only processing 1% of the people you need to process. that's why your hotels are full. that's why we have the issues about raaf base is being used. all base is being used. spend all the money the other things the money on the other things that headlines, getting your that get headlines, getting your backlog do your backlog sorted and then do your other plans. yeah, it that other plans. yeah, we do it that way. have you hotels way. at least have you hotels free. well, they've on free. well, they've got them on the moored off the the victorian moored off the qantas coast now having to answer to the hotel. so that's a
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good start i think i seem to remember was huge remember norman wisdom was huge in remember that? yeah. in albania. remember that? yeah. they've statues unhealthily they've got statues unhealthily feeling we're using soft feeling we're not using our soft power. some way power. they must be some way we can revive through and can revive through air and everyone of pleading. we everyone sort of pleading. we don't come , he said. terrible don't come, he said. terrible things this is the quality things like this is the quality of you'll have if you of comedy you'll have if you come. got now . steve come. exactly. got in now. steve suella braverman is accused of using dog whistle racism , which using dog whistle racism, which is presumably why i haven't been able to hear it, but perhaps have, i don't know. well, number 10 then denies it. here's how i think i can break this story down. yeah. so. well wrong rishi sunak. right in the way that they've about this. they've talked about this. rishi says shouldn't let says that you shouldn't let political stop you political correctness stop you in crime . brilliant. in reporting a crime. brilliant. i that's what i mean, surely that's what everyone agree if you everyone should agree on. if you don't agree that, that's a don't agree on that, that's a sticky wicket. a man sticky wicket. so a brave man said. the issue is that almost all of gangs are all members of such gangs are british, pakistani. what you british, pakistani. what do you do data? you use do with that data? do you use all british, pakistani? no the problem if people infer problem that if people infer that from what you've just said, it's not good saying the it's not as good as saying the race matter when it
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race doesn't matter when it comes to reporting people. so shouldn't let political correctness you. correctness stop you. what i said that's i know. said that's wrong. i know. i think got that right. and think you've got that right. and i interesting thing i think the interesting thing with braverman is with suella braverman is i suspect she is not great at suspect she is not that great at at forming whole paragraphs on the hoof. you get that feeling her sometimes on television she is i don't i think her policies and her intentions are right but i do think she is capable of setting snares herself and i am broadly speaking in her camp. i do these need be do think these things need to be acknowledged, sighted. i acknowledged, clear sighted. i do think the media, the social services, police, whole services, police, the whole infrastructure to infrastructure almost was to blame for hoping that this wouldn't like be as divisive and potentially as it is. but she hasn't been the best person at framing that. well not sure. i'm going to think we're focusing on one comment by soil improvement when the issue is the when in fact the issue is the she's she's correct these these crimes were perpetrated by a particular group in society in particular group in society in particular demographic. that depends what you mean by these crimes because i mean yes there are i mean yes. the specific
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grooming gangs that we're talking about. but that's the kind of society circular argument. the argument. you're saying the pakistani were pakistani grooming gangs were overwhelmingly men overwhelmingly formed of men either from or second generation and from north—west pakistan. and there's a there is obviously a story there, but it is part of a story there, but it is part of a larger story in which you try and attack. i mean, our very own charlie peters wasn't, it wrote a very good thread today on on on , breaking the on twitter, breaking the statistics down. and you absolutely can make a case that pakistani men overrepresented in this crime , they be it's this crime, they be it's a particular sect . it's quite particular sect. it's quite within the demographic. it's a smaller demographic. and yeah , smaller demographic. and yeah, know i know muslim men from from the middle east who are furious that they're being tarred with the same association. but what the same association. but what the guardian consistently does is misrepresenting the data to deny obfuscate the was an actual problem and there was a overrepresentation in this particular demographic and you only need to at the mug shots to
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see this suella braverman was right. oh shoot. i mean, i absolutely agree. and she's right to raise it and she's right to raise it and she's right to raise it and she's right to tackle it. and she's right to tackle it. and she's right to tackle it. and she's right to say that we should absolutely not not allow affairs of accusations , you know, of accusations, you know, heinous. i just she could heinous. i just think she could possibly tightened up possibly have tightened up a language. yeah, it's interesting. that's rishi said and that's i think swirl and that's why i think swirl around right on this around rishi right on this because least said the because at least he said the words the right order that words in the right order that gets right point across. gets the right point across. okay, now. leo an okay, scotch news now. leo an snp msp quick to take offence at the offer of a head straight . the offer of a head straight. good news . so an the offer of a head straight. good news. so an snp the offer of a head straight. good news . so an snp politician good news. so an snp politician had an innocent woman investigated for hate crime over a mix up over a bikini . i know a mix up over a bikini. i know it seems ridiculous, but i mean, scotland is a banana republic . scotland is a banana republic. this is karen adam, who's apparently she was a mormon. she's. she's interesting character, but she complained of being a victim of abuse after receiving unsolicited an unsolicited booking for an intimate salon appointment, she caused an innocent woman to be investigated for a hate crime, and she supported sturgeon's
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gender self i.d. and she said that opponents , the gender self that opponents, the gender self i.d. laws had booked her in for a malicious bikini wax malicious brazilian malicious brazilian bikini eyebrow and lip wax does seem pretty amazing seeing . by seem pretty amazing seeing. by the way, you're a gorilla. yeah we need to take off. i know . we need to take off. i know. said it's going to be painful, but obviously of interest. the new leader of the snp the replacement sturgeon he's replacement for sturgeon he's done tried done similar things he tried to sue a nursery , refused to take sue a nursery, refused to take his children . yeah, well, it his children. yeah, well, it turned out, of course it was just an administrative error . just an administrative error. she had been accidentally confused with somebody with a similar name and offered a and that's who i feel sorry for in this, by the way. yes. because whoever would be whoever that person would be then investigated the police then investigated by the police and cancelled. and had their genuine cancelled. so them i things got pretty so for them i things got pretty hairy. i would have thought it's a madam should a cowardly madam should have gone had that gone along and just had that waiting and taken it on the chin. well the false accusation
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of hate crimes should be a hate crime . you're absolutely right. crime. you're absolutely right. it's a bit like i always think if you take a dive in football, you know, and the referee misses it, but afterwards you look back afterwards and he's given a free kick and and. you dived. kick and you and. you dived. yeah. that should be a retrospect of yellow i think retrospect of yellow and i think that thing should happen that sort of thing should happen with crimes well. very with hate crimes as well. very good. telegraph now good. call the telegraph now steve, report pharmacist steve, a report on a pharmacist who is clearly up to speed with our current blasphemy laws. well, that the nhs stops well, he says that the nhs stops people themselves well, he says that the nhs stops peopl
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prescriptions point prescriptions i guess his point is if you know you can get free medicines whatever goes medicines for whatever goes wrong after your wrong you don't look after your health. if you can health. i don't know if you can look america, which look at america, which easily the counterexample where the obvious counterexample where health not be more expense health could not be more expense if they necessarily seem if they don't necessarily seem to bear that out , do they. yeah, to bear that out, do they. yeah, but i agree them and. yeah, yeah , yeah. i kind of have a feeling there should i don't know, i'm very torn on this because the one hand i think, yes, people should like look after their health on the other hand, health and on the other hand, i despise nanny interventions, know what they call preventative medicine posters up in the doctors telling to eat more fruit. and yeah, it's like, i don't know, i don't know where you what i mean i'm a hypocrite really. i suppose i just wish really. i suppose ijust wish people instinctively for people were instinctively for the right thing. jordan had a great big i know, going great big story. i know, going on great britain. on peterson in great britain. his rules for he said, his 12 rules for life. he said, take for yourself take responsibility for yourself . if, as if you were somebody else, that you looking else, that you were looking after people stop their after the people stop their medication after a couple of days symptoms go away days or if the symptoms go away and they've been told you must stay on this for two weeks. but
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after or days, it dies after two or three days, it dies down and they stop and it flares up again. so you you had up again. so if you if you had a dog that you put on dog that you were put on medication, you would sure medication, you would make sure he medicine every day. he took his medicine every day. but people to themselves don't do i will not just the do it. i will not just kill the dog. finally undermined this dog. you finally undermined this guy, to prove his guy, his example to prove his point is many of us have point is that many of us have read newspapers on the tube read free newspapers on the tube and mind that they're and we don't mind that they're not paid for one. and not as good as paid for one. and somehow extrapolates from somehow he extrapolates from that subconscious psychology that the subconscious psychology of they of an entire nation. so they just mantra like do just like the mantra like i do think you're right. it's think i think you're right. it's not entirely a coherent position and sounds to me like he was and it sounds to me like he was just talking again like what do they a little bit? and they call it a little bit? and yeah, good luck to him. yeah, anyway, good luck to him. he's the biz. up, he's doing well in the biz. up, up away . the has up and away. leo the mail has the latest china's beautiful the latest on china's beautiful bloom. the chinese bay bloom. so the chinese bay balloon that flew across america apparently did gather intelligence from sensitive us military sites before it was shot down. the intel collected was mostly from signals rather than images , according to than images, according to officials . i if they get the gb
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officials. i if they get the gb news youtube feed and another one i mean my card doesn't pick up abc either. the op can you can get what i believe is they shot this down with sidewinder missile was travelling at 1900 miles per hour you don't need to bnng miles per hour you don't need to bring down a balloon. they could have done it to the boat i will simply on that the issue with this balloon as it was flying above the that jet planes can normally fly right and also missiles fired or that just go through it if they tried shooting those things before and the pressure differential on one of balloons is very, very of these balloons is very, very slight. they a long time slight. so they take a long time to deflate . yeah, now i've said to deflate. yeah, now i've said they're extraordinary aren't they. and they they. when they go. and they were they expand the air were when they expand in the air i dissent out with i think should dissent out with a . tom cruise on a flamethrower. tom cruise on the wing of the f—18 . coming up the wing of the f—18. coming up after the break, we have football, testosterone and divorce like an average saturday night. i'll see you in a couple of minutes .
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welcome back to headline this now save in a sign of them divorce rates a ten year high. yeah i mean this is a simple story divorce rates are good because you don't want to be that person. get out of there. in part, they blame it because if financial strains i'm not incredibly sure about i mean, effectively i can't afford another mortgage. so the missus is fine for a while. so i'm not sure there are reasons to get out a marriage or stay if you out of a marriage or stay if you don't a of don't have a lot of money. i suppose it's also probably more unked suppose it's also probably more linked to the fact that now the no have come no fault divorce laws have come through, people would have waited. it'll be extra waited. so it'll be this extra bit and the numbers aren't massive. by 120,000, massive. they're by 120,000, but early 370,000. divorce early 2000 370,000. so divorce is in is it? it's actually swung in the year or so from being a low to a high. and yet, as you say, the numbers on that much so actually it moves within a fairly narrow band. think it fairly narrow band. i think it was low before because people was a low before because people were do it
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were thinking let's not do it now. we have come up with the now. so we have come up with the old fault. let's wait old pretend fault. let's wait until laws are changed. they until the laws are changed. they can log down because you wouldn't couldn't wouldn't you couldn't move house. you know, house. you couldn't you know, you outside, get you step outside, you get arrested, through arrested, thrown back through the funny thing. the window. it's a funny thing. you that must have caused a you look that must have caused a lot of tension as soon as there was opportunity get away was the opportunity to get away it. actually there it. but i actually went there locked got to i think locked in. you've got to i think overthink it as well. these things i mean there's somebody was he thinks that was saying he thinks that possibly go at possibly divorce rates go up at certain in economy certain times in the economy cycle people think that cycle because people think that their can it their house they can get it valued a certain and then valued a certain level and then it be worth more once it's it will be worth more once it's just their house or they have a business they're to business that they're going to have with the wife. but have to split with the wife. but if it's valued at 5 million and then and then it then they split it and then it surges to people really think surges up to people really think in when to get in those terms about when to get divorced. if you want to get divorced, you get divorced. and if true, martin lewis if that were true, martin lewis should that advice. should be giving us that advice. i he's not mentioned i know he's not mentioned divorce a start up anyway, good luck you for starting out luck to you for starting out again. possible again. one possible cure for couples divorce in couples heading for divorce in the times even. that's patch the times even. that's a patch that restores ladies sex
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that restores the ladies sex drive. a testosterone patch drive. yes, a testosterone patch for women in the menopause is a life changer. and it's going to be a soon in the uk. and so testosterone is an essential hormone for women as well as hollywood beefcake his hollywood beefcake and his production drops heavily after the menopause . so you can the menopause. so you can already get oestrogen and progesterone as patches progesterone hormones as patches that you just stick on your arm . so, no, they're going to they're to provide as a they're going to provide as a patch testosterone as a patch, you know, premium up until women have these gels which have been using these gels which provide irregular supply provide an irregular supply they're not designed for menopausal . and britain menopausal. and britain apparently going to be one of the first countries in the to world get access to these patches. so we're going to get a lot of horny middle women say that women is going that middle aged women is going to . i think good to gb news around. i think good luck to them. i mean, i would say i mean, i'm sure these things will get tested. but broadly speaking, if you can extend the period during which there's to live for , there's something to live for, that doesn't seem a bad thing, does i imagine must have does it? i imagine must have been tested lot. just because
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science tends to on men science tends to test on men first, because it's easy do to do the results . it's something do the results. it's something that's how it its name . that's how it got its name. suppose yeah. i suppose suppose so. it's yeah. i suppose it's the patch rather the delivery system rather than the drill. i mean the hormone itself does. i think that the does. yeah. i think that is the funny though that funny thing though is that testosterone a highly what's testosterone is a highly what's the a contentious the word a contentious subject. there are quite a few bestselling books and of bestselling books and some of more prizes and so more fun science prizes and so on just how important on about just how important there is in determining human behaviour. they do tend to behaviour. and they do tend to focus on whether or not it dry male supremacy. you know, that's the big question, have all the top jobs in government and empire building and flying and so on all been, you know ? i'm so on all been, you know? i'm sorry, ladies. just i mean, we all know about body strength. why can't female, why you can't be a female, explains sturgeon . yeah explains nicola sturgeon. yeah tovey of which the waffen ss the lionesses. the lionesses is now steve in the guardian . yeah, steve in the guardian. yeah, there's been a change of the kit that they were. i'm not a football expert, so i got wrong words. but i believe kit
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costume, one of those they change in shorts because they don't want the white shorts . you don't want the white shorts. you might able to see blood when might be able to see blood when they period. this they have a period. i this is surely no one complains about this if you all sat i'm going no, i want to see that you're a bigger problem than other. bigger problem than any other. i can't understand why is even a new story. i mean, ijust can't understand why is even a new story. i mean, i just find it quite bizarre. i presume they have deliberately used this. i mean, have mean, i think they must have issued. this is a press release. no, this is should obviously be. i've the only blue i've seen this is the only blue shorts seen adverts. you shorts i've seen adverts. you can roller ski white leggings all but the trouble all day long. but the trouble with skating the lakes with roller skating is the lakes stay fairly close together you can seen this before can i've seen this before you must to a bicycle must happen to have a bicycle i've seen them climbing ladders. yeah so every single time i cannot understand i think i would have them dressed in all black. that be definitely black. that would be definitely like effective with the like the most effective with the with lions. although as with the red lions. although as the person who does all the laundry because laundry at home because it's chemistry in chemistry i'm getting stuck in my back. give some action. but if you're going to a stain if you're going to put a stain on do it on something on anything, do it on something that's you bleach that's because you can bleach it. maybe they're not. maybe
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it. but maybe they're not. maybe this a laundry this is less of a laundry concern yeah, that concern for them. yeah, that makes of a lot of patches makes sense of a lot of patches i've placed my eventual i've placed on my eventual eventual guardian now. leo finally, our trans story finally, our first trans story of we're slipping is of the night. we're slipping is to swim. england announces a transgender policy with open and female categories . so instead of female categories. so instead of banning and banning transgender people from from the female swimming events as world swimming events as world swimming has done england which is the english version of world swimming , is just creating this swimming, is just creating this sort of open category , which is sort of open category, which is going to be entertaining to watch. well, you know what? i may be wrong because i've always this is like something i i've never actually checked with the original source is, but i think that's how swimming is always organised. you know, you have breaststroke and butterfly and what call front crawl, but what we call front crawl, but it's freestyle in the it's called freestyle in the isn't meaning can adopt isn't it. meaning you can adopt any like. oh but this any stroke you like. oh but this is adopt from is everyone does adopt from cruel it's the fastest cruel because it's the fastest in same thing they're going to have a breaststroke have a bit like breaststroke you're restricted to breaststroke you're breaststroke women, you're restricted women. then
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restricted to women. and then the anyone can the open category anyone can compete, not only compete, including not only trans men as only trans women , trans men as only trans women, but women just regular know who if biological women presumably men as well. and anybody. dolphins, yeah . just might you dolphins, yeah. just might you think if you have an open category, if they just had wider pools, they could just get it donein pools, they could just get it done in one race and just see who comes first out of the other categories in the same race. well, i'm home by two. well, this why i like the open this is why i like the open water swimming in a triathlon. it's a much more exciting kind of like of because it's like the beginning grand national beginning of the grand national or this or something. it's just this huge, seething, mess of huge, seething, bubbling mess of humanity, one or two humanity, you know, one or two people the other people make it to the other side, and afterwards have to go people make it to the other side countafterwards have to go people make it to the other side count them ards have to go people make it to the other side count them all; have to go people make it to the other side count them all upive to go people make it to the other side count them all up ando go people make it to the other side count them all up and send and count them all up and send in the frogmen. anyway telegraph now, steve, this should be right in or car there in your wheelhouse or car there sometimes. but i thought. yeah, i didn't realise you were that old fashioned. i still call them the wheelhouse way. electric cars. the wheelhouse way. electric cars . some have been written off cars. some have been written off apparently after minor bumps because they're difficult to
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repair . and because they're difficult to repair. and the telegraph said they're writing up they're writing it up as electric cars we with it whereas the actual story should be oh we need to be better at repairing them. i guess they're quite technologies. it's not the whole car as it is the obvious part of it. and they say something quite like kerb at speeds like mounting a kerb at speeds can the thing which can dislodge the thing which obviously is an issue, but it should be addressable. yeah, exactly. and i love the bit in the story where it says that some people don't even like repairing some repairing batteries because some of fire. well, of it could catch fire. well, yeah, like petrol. yeah but yeah, not like petrol. yeah but if issue, if flammability your issue, i have lot of issues with have a lot of issues with electric cars, but that's not one of them. am going to i'm one of them. i am going to i'm going to leverage. intend to going to leverage. i intend to pretend to be wanting to buy one soon council will soon so that brian council will let have drive through and let me have drive through and you very pro electric cars right it's about 18 driveways is in in brighton you know . so you it's about 18 driveways is in in brighton you know. so you just got lucky if you get home late at night if you anywhere near a charging point. otherwise got a brick wall you noticed as is people are buying electric cars to sort of do something for the
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environment as an extra car. yeah i've been really improved. if anything, you've done something you're something worse, you're consuming your consumption problem. exactly what problem. this is exactly what americans did when they were told eat carb. is it told to eat more carb. is it just a no carbs? oh so they were really dragging on to me . i really dragging on to me. i always think about the electric car thing . 20 years ago, car thing. 20 years ago, everyone have guessed. or everyone would have guessed. or i the future will have i suppose the future will have electric along that electric cars and along that path something where electric cars eco ness. cars were linked to eco ness. yeah. then people started yeah. and then people started hating. surely presume in the future we're all but future we're all flying, but at some someone some point someone will say, i don't want to fly bike eco friendly. it's extraordinary how there's nothing is there's almost nothing that is like along quite like divided along quite predictable lines. now predictable tribal lines. now and yet, of course, elon musk , and yet, of course, elon musk, who is a kind of hero of the and so on now is also, you know, the main force behind cars. so he is an interesting sort of i don't know what you call it, an inflexion point. well off laundry detergent. you know, a laundry detergent. you know, a laundry detergent. you know, a laundry detergent is pretty good for environment compared for the environment compared what you know, 30, 40 what it was, you know, 30, 40 years ago. but the companies keep quiet it because .
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keep quiet about it because. they don't want you to think so equally . dishwashers, equally. dishwashers, dishwashers, better for the environment, dishwashers, better for the environment , the washing up by environment, the washing up by hand really does my head in that is noisy. i've convinced it's destroying my family . but destroying my family. but anyway, coming up after the break, how you and workers wind down an alien radio, wind up and rude people in the theatre round . we'll see you rude people in the theatre round .we'll see you in a rude people in the theatre round . we'll see you in a couple of .we'll see you in a couple of minutes . there's help for households. are you over state pension age? if your weekly income is below £182.60, or £278.70 if you live with a partner, you could be eligible for pension credit, even if you own your home or have savings. it's worth, on average, £3,500 a year and you could get help with heating bills and more, plus up to £900 in cost of living payments.
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welcome back. one last time to headunen welcome back. one last time to headliner, this time now leo complaints theatre staff that the customers are not right or indeed fit for purpose so entitled theatre have apparently forgotten how to after covid lockdowns . so there was lockdowns. so there was a performance of jersey boys, the edinburgh playhouse, and it had to be stopped after a fight
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broke up, just like every public eventin broke up, just like every public event in scotland , only there event in scotland, only there were it was filled with drunken and aggressive peer patrons , not and aggressive peer patrons, not parents who vomit. they may have children who vomit and physically assault . according to physically assault. according to ushers in the front line. thus the state of modern theatres and. i think the problem is these days the ushers are totally weak, a fat milquetoast who aren't up to job. but that's like professions now, isn't like most professions now, isn't it? from the press down, it? from the press on down, i mean was a time when you mean there was a time when you had to be six foot two and solid muscle to be an at that and also also we used to price also you know we used to price come back out of the theatre and these glorious days when i didn't i took my son didn't have to go i took my son and friends to see jersey and a few friends to see jersey boys london. great is the boys in london. great is the life story of frankie valli in the four seasons there were the four seasons and there were loads pensioners singing loads of pensioners singing along quite riotous along and getting quite riotous and i mean i don't, and i don't, i mean i don't, i don't remember it that well. i don't remember it that well. i don't think exactly that kind of band. during the band. but from what i during the fifties and quite often , you fifties and quite often, you know, kind of bands so know, those kind of bands so a certain amount of disarray in the sees slashed
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the audience sees slashed you know that was yeah it's quite authentic opposed to the jersey boys touring it this time they're going to the they're going to create the right context. you think the title is the problem? that if it was called the valli in was called the frankie valli in the seasons story, you the four seasons story, you wouldn't turning wouldn't get ruffians turning up. called jersey boys, wouldn't get ruffians turning up. expect. d jersey boys, wouldn't get ruffians turning up. expect. d jersey know, they they expect. oh you know, they were new jersey. i mean, were like new jersey. i mean, it's they're from the french it's they're not from the french side of the english channel. i think they're it was once. but yeah , i think there's a point yeah, i think there's a point now that i think people are just worse behaved days or i'm worse behaved these days or i'm getting older. i'll tell you what think genuinely and what i think is genuinely and this cultural shift, it's this is a cultural shift, it's happenedin this is a cultural shift, it's happened in my lifetime is people get times out before they go to the go out now, especially to the theatre know theatre because they know theatre because they know theatre 2020, you expect theatre about 2020, you expect you a to get it and you to pay a lot to get it and you to pay a lot to get it and you think i'm going get right and naturally you start getting bolshy as soon as an usher speaks a 12 speaks to you like would a 12 year you know? anyway, more year old, you know? anyway, more boffin news lined up for you now, this is the now, steve. this is from the independent. it is. we discovered that might discovered a planet that might have yet, have intelligent life and yet, oddly, failing make oddly, they're failing to make contact they're contact with us. well, they're sending radio coherent radio
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signals detected from this alien planet , which i signals detected from this alien planet, which i mean, i get this one of these headlines way low. your the headline your expectation. the headline sounds like we've found a planet. they're all local deejays. yeah. great deejays. yeah yeah, yeah. great for drax from zongo . it's not for drax from zongo. it's not that it's fm radio. and by coherent it doesn't mean it makes sense. it's just that all of the photons are aligned and they have the same face. so what's saying it what's that basically saying it is significant is potentially significant means they're kind they're surrounded by the kind of radio frequency protection that we are from the sun's rays, the solar arrays which would otherwise damage life and create cancers. before we got here saying that that planet might have a magnetic field and the movement of the magnetic field means we get the radio signals that here and the magnetic that go here and the magnetic field is thing that protects field is the thing that protects the possibly, yeah i the life. possibly, yeah i mean, good, but but it's not. good, but it's but it's not. it's not it's not like radio delta. there's not going to be competition gb news dab competition gb news on dab almost not. right. almost certainly not. right. although people will no although some people will no doubt it for you. i hope doubt try it out for you. i hope they do find something. i suppose there is there's could be millions of years during
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which life is developing on that planet before. but but idea planet before. but but the idea that picked up the that they've picked up the planet's own magnetic radiation but not any indication that there are people to reach us. yeah. not at all. yes. and it's not even saying the other weren't with magnetic fields just them. they just couldn't spot them. they probably the lonely probably do have the lonely times leo and the strict times now. leo and the strict new guidelines appear to be in place the un on smoking, mass place at the un on smoking, mass smoking time. yes, they finally clamped and the united clamped down and it's the united nafions clamped down and it's the united nations allowed a youth worker to stay in job, even though to stay in his job, even though he admitted to watching to stay in his job, even though he abuse itted to watching to stay in his job, even though he abuse videos» watching to stay in his job, even though he abuse videos while1ing to stay in his job, even though he abuse videos while taking child abuse videos while taking crystal does he think crystal meth. who does he think he is? a bbc deejay. this is it. this incredible. and it's the second scandal for whitney being ima the it needs executive director so this was it was the un it needs it's not called unaids because this has aids , unaids because this has aids, although he does in fact he is hiv positive, always . oh, maybe hiv positive, always. oh, maybe thatis hiv positive, always. oh, maybe that is why he like he is quite interesting , interesting interesting, interesting character. he's been quite active on social media until about a year ago. it's interesting. i had to look he's got own twitter account,
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got his own twitter account, right? you notice yeah. right? you notice active. yeah. he somebody who his he is somebody who is his big thing was i'm hiv positive and can with he very can live with it. he looked very healthy buff and he was an healthy and buff and he was an ambassador that so there is ambassador for that so there is this of i don't know, weird this kind of i don't know, weird crossover. and then he was a podcast saying i got into taking crystal at time and it crystal meth at one time and it turned into a nutcase. i was turned me into a nutcase. i was i became interested in child. so he admitted all this stuff and that's where came out. i that's where he came out. and i think probably it was think he probably thought it was a was doing some a confession, was doing some good. stay good. he was telling kids, stay away crystal meth. it made away from crystal meth. it made me into an evil like i was like my head was full of bad vision. don't kill people. i've got 13 people garden. this people in my back garden. this is life. so is ruining my life. so it's a sickening scandal for winnie byanyima. the executive byanyima. so she's the executive director unaids and she was director of unaids and she was a senior official, oxfam, when the times disclosed that the charity's workers were using prostitutes haiti , also prostitutes in haiti, also abusing children. yeah, she is quite an impressive person in her own right. i think she's like an aviation specialist. and she's through she's she's ridden through the ranks uganda and stuff. it ranks in uganda and stuff. it must difficult. an eye ranks in uganda and stuff. it mleveryone. difficult. an eye ranks in uganda and stuff. it mleveryone. i difficult. an eye ranks in uganda and stuff. it mleveryone. i mean, lt. an eye ranks in uganda and stuff. it mleveryone. i mean, i. an eye ranks in uganda and stuff. it mleveryone. i mean, i knowye ranks in uganda and stuff. it mleveryone. i mean, i know you on everyone. i mean, i know you did the buck stops with the sent
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an i think it's an email out i think it's crystal yeah or surely crystal meth. yeah or a surely the kitchen there's a big sign as a message with a line through i don't know i do feel as they have said you know oxfam has been causing a lot of disaster just by it is kind of preachy tone. it just invites you to of 9°, tone. it just invites you to of go, well, let's have a look at your yeah the virtue signal to us and then the abuse themselves . this next story in the mail, i have to say, is one to my own heart. research that women are interested in men's who correctly pronounce their ts , correctly pronounce their ts, which is why all women get turned by brian sewell fact bnan turned by brian sewell fact brian brian sewell. yeah i don't know. i just did a study from family guy impression, but it was close enough to show that the who time many years ago, he was he was good at his teased was he was good at his teased was every word was rather pronounced the who plummy pronounced the three who plummy wasn't so they found 45 wasn't a man so they found 45 heterosexual women in their twenties played them some sounds
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they blokes could speak they like the blokes could speak that's research and it that's this research and it makes sense. i've pulled lot makes sense. i've pulled a lot of women by singing to them that i'm the very of a modern major—general the whole thing major—general do the whole thing and not a single t and i love it is not a single t in that there is about the in that that there is about the cheerful vocalists do cheerful vocalists who do emphasise steve perry in emphasise it steve perry in germany their biggest hit don't stop believin. you know that it just t born and raised in south detroit you really hit that t yeah. it's always stands out and i wonder whether he found that that, you know, through random testing. yeah i think it sure confidence if you're confident enough to your ts then it shows you know, you're not afraid of being a tall poppy. yeah, that's true. and you indeed a tall poppy true. and you indeed a tall poppy avoid what we have now finally. and man in the mirror leo. yes a mortified man is discovered he married his half sister but they're going to stay together. they don't they don't care that much. so it says a
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man's life is in tatters . after man's life is in tatters. after discovering he married his secret half sister only learning the truth about his family after his mom passed away. so she was a apparently had a doctor she apparently had a fling . she got pregnant with fling. she got pregnant with with a after spending the night with a after spending the night with guy who described as a with guy who she described as a tall son a b word . it's not tall son of a b word. it's not me, by the way. she never heard from or spoke to him again, and that's all he knew. so he met this this girl. he 24. she was 19. she was waiting tables and he kept going into the place and she said, don't stop believing again . yeah yeah. i mean, it again. yeah yeah. i mean, it doesn't see where it is. if it's in norfolk , then what's the in norfolk, then what's the problem? this is just in fact, she's probably got less danny than the i'm joking. if anyone from there were some from norfolk was there were some there a great joke. there was a great old joke. i come in, but i used to probably know everyone on the circuit about the son who comes dad about the son who comes his dad every time he's got a new every every time he's got a new dad, got new girlfriend dad, i've got a new girlfriend it's is from number he it's jenny is from number 32. he goes, but you can't goes, sorry, sam, but you can't goes, sorry, sam, but you can't go jenny. it'sjust goes, sorry, sam, but you can't go jenny. it's just another 30 to 1. well, when i was a young
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man, when was dating your man, when i was dating your mother, bike and i used mother, i had a bike and i used to around a bit to remain to get around a bit to remain and imply that he's a dad and he goes through about four or five girls and then eventually he goes mum mommy's goes to his mum because mommy's is i try is terrible every time, i try and take a girl that tells me he had a bike when he was young had a bike when he was a young man goes, you, you want man and she goes, you, you want love. he wasn't the only one who had anyway, a nice had a bike. anyway, it's a nice story. a kind of completes story. it's a kind of completes the circle from where we start with. schofield doesn't with. phillip schofield doesn't it? denial yeah, the it? robert denial yeah, the bicycle was invented in bicycle was invented and in here. keir mill we're near where i grew up and it actually allowed people leave the valley and that's why i've got enough fingers. phantom that you were the norman tebbit of your generation . you didn't complain, generation. you didn't complain, you didn't riot . there are lots you didn't riot. there are lots of great stories in in literature about people marrying people that they don't know that they're related to. and it's always it's a deep and sort of primaeval , but he seems to just primaeval, but he seems to just 90, primaeval, but he seems to just go, well , doesn't make it right. go, well, doesn't make it right. i mean, i've sort of got lot i mean, i've sort of got a lot in common, know, similar
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in common, you know, similar tastes same. no same grandparents. things let's grandparents. these things let's chat christmas chat about buying christmas presents cheaper as a 100 presents is cheaper as a 100 years of solitude will take its toll sooner or later the show is nearly over so take another quick look at. tuesday's front pages , the times almost half of pages, the times almost half of voters say starmer still lacks vision. over half of voters unaccountably say , i paper you . unaccountably say, i paper you. summer holidays hit by passport delays after strikes. lovely, colourful brazilian themed cover . the guardian revealed cbi. that's the business institute in turmoil following new claims of sexual misconduct and a photograph of donald trump being sun says schofield. i know have a brother the daily express 42 years life for olivia's and finally the daily star quiz cougars are no longer grieving those are front pages. so we
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have time for a thank you to my guest. we're back with the same panel guest. we're back with the same panel. goodnight.
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fear of being called racist is doing our country enormous harm. it's one of the major factors that led to the appalling long grooming gang scandal. that led to the appalling long grooming gang scandal . well, grooming gang scandal. well, today the prime minister and home secretary have used language not heard before. they're talking tough . will they they're talking tough. will they deliver the results and fear being called racist is causing major problems in yorkshire and scottish cricket . we'll debate scottish cricket. we'll debate all of that. we'll go to new york where donald trump is as we speak in the air. he'll appear in court in new on criminal in court in new york on criminal charges tomorrow . and joining me charges tomorrow. and joining me on points , mike on talking points, mike osbourne, personality and osbourne, radio personality and without doubt the best donald
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trump impersonator i have ever seen or heard. but before all of that, let's get the news with polly middlehurst . that, let's get the news with polly middlehurst. nigel, thank you and good evening to you. well, our top story tonight on gb news, the man who murdered olivia pratt—korbel in liverpool was today sentenced to life in prison and will serve a minimum term of 42 years. thomas cashman shot the nine year old girl as he chased a convict and drug dealer into her home in august last year . outside the school, last year. outside the school, girl's mother cheryl caldwell said her family has already started their lives sentence having to spend the rest of their lives without olivia . their lives without olivia. labour's the lives of our lives . a sassy, chatty girl who never ran out of energy. she was a character. she was my baby. and she was amazing qualities. i knew what wanted in life . if you knew what wanted in life. if you want a daughter. she was the
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baby

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