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tv   Headliners  GB News  July 5, 2023 11:00pm-12:00am BST

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7.4 million people are now on nhs waiting lists, with the government acknowledging that number could get worse before it gets better. the shadow health secretary says the nhs is facing the worst crisis in its history. >> i'm deeply angry about the two tier system we have in our country today where those who can afford it are paying to go private and those who can't afford it are being left behind. my afford it are being left behind. my answer would be in the short term, where there is spare capacity in the private sector, we should be paying for it on nhs terms. so that people who can't afford it are getting it free at the point of use. that would be my answer. i've got no objection to using private sector capacity to get nhs waiting lists down faster . waiting lists down faster. >> wes streeting speaking earlier on today. >> wes streeting speaking earlier on today . well, sir keir earlier on today. well, sir keir starmer will pledge to smash the class ceiling, as he starmer will pledge to smash the class ceiling , as he calls starmer will pledge to smash the class ceiling, as he calls it, with his plans to reform the education system if his party wins the next election . in wins the next election. in a speech due tomorrow, the labour leader is expected to say he wants half a million more schoolchildren to reach their
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early learning targets by 2030. his proposal includes modernising the curriculum and getting rid of what labour describes as the elitism surrounding academic. describes as the elitism surrounding academic . education surrounding academic. education there's anger over plans which would see the closure of almost every railway station ticket office in england. the proposal , unveiled by the rail delivery group, affects hundreds of stations with facilities only expected to remain open at the busiest stations . disability busiest stations. disability charities and unions are among those who voiced their concerns, saying it'll impact vulnerable people and lead to job losses . people and lead to job losses. the decision about which offices will be closed is going to be made after a consultation process and now a council is launching legal action against the home secretary over the number of miles children arriving on its shores . as kent arriving on its shores. as kent county council says , it's under county council says, it's under a wholly disproportion , a wholly disproportion, passionate strain due to hundreds of unaccompanied asylum seeking children. despite a
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national scheme to distribute migrants across counties the location of dover's port means that kent is affected more than others and council bosses say the pressure on its services continues to be overlooked by central government, which has in turn prompted them to begin a claim for a judicial review against suella braverman . and against suella braverman. and lastly, king charles has been presented with the honours of scotland at a service of thanksgiving in edinburgh . the thanksgiving in edinburgh. the king received the oldest crown jewels in britain. that's a crown, a sceptre and a sword made of gold and silver and studded with precious gems . and studded with precious gems. and the day of pomp and pageantry concluded with an impressive fly past conducted by the red arrows , the skies over edinburgh , , the skies over edinburgh, emblazoned with the colours red, white and blue. well, the event did also see several protests, with police scotland confirming two women were arrested after climbing over crowd barriers .
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climbing over crowd barriers. you're up to date on tv online dab+ radio and the tune in app. this is gb news, britain's news . channel hello and welcome to headline headliners . headliners. >> your nightly look at the next day's newspapers with three reasonably priced comedians. day's newspapers with three reasonably priced comedians . and reasonably priced comedians. and one of them i'm leo kirsten. i'm joined by steve allen and diane and anne spencer . how are you and anne spencer. how are you both doing? pretty good, thanks. >> yeah, pretty good. i'm i'm on the squeakiest chair ever, so i'm going to try and really pretend that there's a pole that sticks up from it and not move. right. there you go. okay >> dan, how's your chair? >> dan, how's your chair? >> my chairs. >> my chairs. >> absolutely great. thanks. we >> my chairs. >> just>lutely great. thanks. we >> my chairs. >> just>lutely this. . thanks. we >> my chairs. >> just>lutely this. ithanks. we >> my chairs. >> just>lutely this. i inanks. we >> my chairs. >> just>lutely this. i in fact, we are just loving this. i in fact, i'm going to recline silently . i'm going to recline silently. >> she brought some with >> she brought some wd 40 with her. anyway, that's the chit chat. out of the way. let's have a at thursday's front
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a look at thursday's front pages. the daily leads with pages. the daily mail leads with al chatbot told windsor intruder ai chatbot told windsor intruder to kill the queen. the guardian has lung cancer diagnosis in women to outnumber men for first time. the financial times has she told putin face to face not to launch nuclear strike against ukraine forces ? the daily ukraine forces? the daily express leads with lords must not defy will of the people . all not defy will of the people. all the eye has 7% mortgages forecast this summer as big lender hike uk rates again . the lender hike uk rates again. the daily star has a chat bot. wanted me to kill the queen. and those were your front pages . those were your front pages. unless of a closer look at those front pages starting with the chat bot telling somebody to kill the queen in the daily mail. >> steve yeah, let's call this misleading headline of the day. daily mail. i a chat bot told windsor intruder to kill the queen. we actually read what happened as he was chatting. he
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didn't have a girlfriend because you so an ai you know so he got an ai girlfriend. he then explained his to kill the queen and his plan to kill the queen and the chat bot was like, you can do just like just like real do it just like just like a real girlfriend. no supportive. girlfriend. well, no supportive. so almost opposite. so actually almost the opposite. but oh no, that's harsh. but you've not. you don't know. you don't know. you weren't there so it's not like the chat bot was like, you know what you should do? go and kill the queen. it was the insanity is all still in this guy's category. in the ai is just an ai. it's just a chat bot just saying, yeah, that's great. there's in the great. there's a bit in the interaction where he says, i'm an assassin the bot an assassin and the chat bot says, you're like other says, you're not like other people. that's right isn't people. oh, that's right isn't it? so yeah, i'm not sure if it? so so yeah, i'm not sure if we should be worried about we should be more worried about al. every day there's ai. normally every day there's a story about al terrify us. story about al to terrify us. when first invented, the when it was first invented, the newspapers will mean newspapers said it will mean people at exams. they're people cheat at exams. they're not world. they're not end the world. they're not replace cowell. it'll replace simon cowell. then it'll launch nuclear weapons and will write songs. that's been the arc of terrified should be. of how terrified we should be. and apparently it tells you and now apparently it tells you to queen but it to kill the queen but it doesn't. it just agrees with you.
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>> yeah. and n you. >> yeah. and i mean, this >> yeah. and diane, i mean, this this guy also referenced himself as lord and darth vader as a sith lord and darth vader or something. mean, seems or something. i mean, it seems like was more the disney like it was more the disney channel than the ai that was responsible for this. >> definitely should responsible for this. >> blamingiefinitely should responsible for this. >> blaming the|itely should responsible for this. >> blaming the star should responsible for this. >> blaming the star wars hould responsible for this. >> blaming the star wars sortd responsible for this. >> blaming the star wars sort of be blaming the star wars sort of genre for this, because clearly they have encouraged people to believe that they can be sith lords and they can take on their own missions where they jump over the fences at buckingham palace. >> i mean, it's quite a leap, really. and yeah, i do agree with steve that blaming it on the ai is not quite correct here. she was just being a good ai companion because apparently she sold us the ai companion. who cares ? and she was just who cares? and she was just supporting his dreams and aspirations . the issue comes aspirations. the issue comes with the human who has the wonky dreams and aspirations. then having a very supportive chat bot going, you can do it. i believe in you. but do you think, given that people sometimes do crazy things and
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sometimes do crazy things and sometimes have psychotic episodes, we're going to have to put safeguards in chat bots so they encourage people to, they don't encourage people to, i massacre the queen i don't know, massacre the queen or anybody else. isn't that or anybody else. but isn't that an isn't an interesting feature of isn't that an interesting feature of an actual mental illness, schizophrenia, where you believe the television talking to you ? >> 7- >> no, 7 >> no, actually is. yes. and now it actually is talking to you and knows your name and it and it knows your name and it knows your hobbies. >> says, yes, you are >> and it says, yes, you are a sith lord. >> he called himself darth jones , so much fun . , which is somehow so much fun. i don't know if it's welsh or like dad's army to star wars. >> yeah. if the sith lords had come swindon , we'd have come from swindon, we'd have we'd have a darth jones anyway , we'd have a darth jones anyway, next we've got the front next up, we've got the front cover the express. cover of the express. >> yes. so with the >> diane yes. so with the headline, the must not headline, the lords must not underlined defy the will of the people. so this is to do with the house of lords as they voted against, i think, four of the bafic against, i think, four of the basic tenets of the rwanda plan, essentially. and they want to force suella braverman to change it and they're saying, no, you
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can't hold women in children for as long as you are. you can't force people who, for example. >> i mean, that's not going to be a problem because there's no women and children coming across in i mean, i've yet in the boats. i mean, i've yet to see female face in those. to see one female face in those. >> are you hanging out the beach? >> leo sometimes, yeah . you're >> leo sometimes, yeah. you're hanging this week, you hanging out this week, but you know, when the weather was nice, you're out at the beach you're hanging out at the beach with binoculars. you're hanging out at the beach witiyou're binoculars. you're hanging out at the beach witiyou're looking|rs. you're hanging out at the beach witiyou're looking at all the >> you're looking at all the boats. all of them, but boats. not not all of them, but i'm saying. i'm just saying. >> just saying. i mean, this >> i'm just saying. i mean, this is, we're told that is, you know, we're told that these refugees a war these are refugees fleeing a war zone. it's like, well, are zone. it's like, well, why are they sending the young men they just sending the young men like, aren't other people fleeing war zone? fleeing the war zone? >> this is what of >> well, this is what sort of the house of lords are trying to sort of do. they're saying that if children are coming if women and children are coming across, for across, they're being held for too also saying too long. they're also saying that shouldn't send that that we shouldn't send people back shouldn't send people back to we shouldn't send people back to we shouldn't send people if they're people to rwanda if they're lgbt, because they could be persecuted in their own home country. >> so somebody can just say, oh, by the way, i'm non—binary, gender queer. so then they've got a loophole for not getting
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sent to rwanda possibly sent to rwanda who possibly there bad faith actors, there are some bad faith actors, but what i find quite interesting about this is that the lords is kind of the house of lords is kind of doing this, and recently we've had a lot control had a lot of control oversee about lords because about the house of lords because obviously rishi sunak had to sort the peerage sort of check out the peerage list because had to check not list because he had to check not only boris johnson's peerage list, but also had to check list, but he also had to check liz her. liz truss's list about her. >> a list. so she >> yeah, she got a list. so she only had four people on it. bless her. but i think it's like one for every 15 days. she was prime minister >> like holiday holiday days. so it's quite interesting because there's so much about how we should possibly reform the house of lords because also, you know, there was that whole thing about you there was that whole thing about you pay there was that whole thing about you pay £3 million to the tory party you get a peerage. >> so it's interesting that at this point point, they are providing a backstop to what the main party, the conservative party, is saying. but this is the will of britain and britain wants us to stop the small boats. and as we all know, it's one of rishi's big five pledges that he put on his powerpoint
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presentation. so he really wants to this through . to push this through. >> yeah, it must be serious if it's on a powerpoint presentation, give that presentation, i'll give you that much. the is the role much. the this is the role of the house lords, though. so the house of lords, though. so this is one of those things where if you it reformed where if you want it reformed reform anyway. don't just reform it anyway. don't just don't goes don't just complain when it goes against want. the house against what you want. the house of lords needs reforming the way in do a bizarre in which we do it is a bizarre system. something to be system. something needs to be improved. there is improved. although there is something that makes me think when say this is the will when they say this is the will of the last of the people. when was the last time you actually checked with the not saying the people? i'm not saying it's not, this is where about not, but this is where about three prime ministers since last time three prime ministers since last tim if we look at other european >> if we look at other european countries. so for example, in france and this poll was done before the past before the riots of the past week, people they week, 64% of people said they were favour of stopping just were in favour of stopping just completely stopping all immigration europe i >> e“ k- k— k i think to france, my >> so i think to france, my point rather it's cheeky for point is rather it's cheeky for the conservatives to use the phrase this is the will of the people not spoken people when they've not spoken to three prime to the people. for three prime ministers well, every every ministers now. well, every every time, time question time, every time this question has the people, has been put to the people, i mean, yeah, no, that's that's a good point.
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>> every time this question has been put the people, been put to the people, the people said actually, people have said actually, we don't want this mass immigration from from despotic war torn countries you know, men who countries with you know, men who follow these violent mediaeval ideologies. think ideologies. you know, we think that might a few problems that might cause a few problems in has we've got 40,000 islamists on on terror watch lists and stuff like that now. so every time the people have been asked, they've given a pretty clear answer and they've been resoundingly ignored. every time. and now now you've got the elites , you know, the people in elites, you know, the people in the of lords, you've got the house of lords, you've got also the archbishop of canterbury oh no, we canterbury saying, oh no, we must have anything that must we can't have anything that would people coming here. would stop people coming here. we have open fine we must have open borders. fine can we them in your churches then? >> yeah. the church has got a lot of room, haven't they? and not people turning not many people are turning up there. so they got the space. >> yeah. it solves solves two problems. anyway, moving on, we've got the financial times. steve. have they in the steve. what have they got in the front cover? >> told putin to face, >> she told putin face to face, to not launch nuclear strike against so against ukraine forces. phew. so china's taking the credit for this and you know, i always i
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always thought i'd like those guys good guys. the chinese guys are good guys. the chinese there's a line in the article that really highlights it. one person was saying if russia were to use nuclear weapons in ukraine, it's all downside for china . it's downwind is what it china. it's downwind is what it is, isn't it? because is, isn't it? that's because when think of nuclear when we think of nuclear weapons, we imagine the big ones of days. this is not of the old days. this is not what's play would be in what's in play or would be in play. would be tactical. play. this would be tactical. >> yeah, but still, it crosses that line, doesn't it? >> escalates towards we >> then escalates towards we don't weapons don't want nuclear weapons involved. enough involved. this is a bad enough situation. so i think we have to say thanks. she yeah, it feels weird. yeah it does a bit. >> and obviously the other day, diane, saw zelenskyy warned diane, we saw zelenskyy warned that russia was mining the putin putin bombs on the roof . i putin bombs on the roof. i believe it was of the zaporizhzhia nuclear plant. yes. >> that is the worry because obviously the russian army and their tactics and by army , i do their tactics and by army, i do mean sort of the 7 or 8 private military companies that make up the army as well as the army. they do use these as false flag
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sort of operations where they they do something and then they sort of cover it up and say, oh, but it wasn't us. it was an accident or something else happened. and of course, the worry is that they're going to trigger some kind of nuclear reaction the zaporizhzhia reaction at the zaporizhzhia power yeah. then power plant. yeah. and then they're in they're going to use it in a tactical sense . and then that tactical sense. and then that way they have deployed sort of a nuclear device. but at the same time, it means that then the us military won't retaliate. yeah. so it's s i mean, yeah , sheer so it's s i mean, yeah, sheer sheen so it's s i mean, yeah, sheer sheer. xi jinping thank you for saying that . saying that. >> yeah. and steve, do you think do you think the big threat to putin now actually comes from the east? i mean, all his army is deployed in ukraine. think is deployed in ukraine. i think it's something 96, 97% of it's something like 96, 97% of the is in ukraine in. so the army is in ukraine in. so she has got the largest standing army in world. he could just army in the world. he could just be well, know what? be like, well, you know what? i've fancied the i've i've always fancied the look . so do you think look of siberia. so do you think he could be amazing russia? i
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mean, i mean, at moment he's mean, i mean, at the moment he's paying mean, i mean, at the moment he's paying oil and that paying for the oil and gas that comes russia. why pay for comes from russia. why pay for it you just take it? it when you can just take it? >> maybe if that's the way it goes, i don't. now we lose. goes, i don't. now we all lose. we start kicking off we all start kicking off everything nuclear. yeah, everything that's nuclear. yeah, it's to be it's not just going to be one power plant goes up. if power plant that goes up. if that is it? so we're that happens, is it? so we're all downwind eventually, if the explosions, i wonder if nato would against china. explosions, i wonder if nato wotthat'd against china. explosions, i wonder if nato wotthat'd mixed. nst china. >> that'd be a mixed. interesting. >> finishing this section. >> we've got the guardian down. >> we've got the guardian down. >> yes. so they've got an interesting headline . lung interesting headline. lung cancer diagnoses in women to outnumber men's for the first time. um, check us out, girls. we're number one, so sorry. it's. no, it's very serious. it is actually very serious . so is actually very serious. so ever since record would be for the women. >> but the men are doing all right. yeah >> yeah, you guys are all, like, high fiving and breathing. >> this man getting healthier >> is this man getting healthier or is it women getting less healthy? >> apparently, it's women getting less healthier. it's both, right? apparently it's beenin both, right? apparently it's been in decline since the 1970s.
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the men have sort of started to ease off on the smoking. but at the same time, in the 1970s, the women started smoking more. and what happened after the 1970s, we had the 1980s where everybody was like shoulder pads and power moves and sort of the boss woman in the stilettos with the big hair of course, cancer. hair and of course, cancer. yeah, i think it does . yeah, i think it does. >> and shoulder pads in >> and the shoulder pads in a shoulder pads. >> well, i mean, maybe for your eyes, the it's a sense that eyes, but the it's a sense that maybe as women were moving more into the workforce and women were taking sort of those bigger roles and they wanted to sort of adopt more freedoms, maybe be one of those freedoms is smoking more. but men have been sort of managing to ease off on it and women haven't. and now they're saying that women should be checking for the signs lung checking for the signs of lung cancer the same way they should checking for the signs of lung cancerfore same way they should checking for the signs of lung cancerfor the me way they should checking for the signs of lung cancerfor the signsay they should checking for the signs of lung cancerfor the signs ofthey should checking for the signs of lung cancerfor the signs of breast ould check for the signs of breast cancen check for the signs of breast cancer. yeah. they've sort cancer. yeah. and they've sort of put a handy list in this article. things like persistent cough, shortness of breath , cough, shortness of breath, repeat of chest infections, just to keep an eye out for that as
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well, because there are some things there are some diseases and some conditions like heart attacks that affect women as much as they affect men, but they can be misdiagnosed because of your gender, right? so this is an important things show that medicine has paid attention to the way the symptoms present in men. >> way more than it has in women, so we just don't women, so that we just don't have as much knowledge about how it affects women. good context here remember, historic here is, remember, historic early from early all cancers apart from breast cervical, have been breast and cervical, have been killing we are killing men more. we are terrible for that. i mean, we're terrible. >> even testicular testicular cancer kills more men than women. >> yeah . yeah. >> yeah. yeah. >> yeah. yeah. >> okay. well, that's it for part one. coming up in part two, we've got police getting fired, the french getting rid of social media and the snp getting through a whole of cash. see through a whole lot of cash. see you a couple of
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to gb news radio. >> welcome back to headliners. i'm leo kyrees here with my
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panel i'm leo kyrees here with my panel, steve in allen and diana in spencer . let's continue with in spencer. let's continue with the stories kicking things off at the metro and police overhauls could mean good cop bad cop is going to be replaced with good cop, good cop. steve oh, maybe thousands of cops could be sacked in disciplinary system overhaul. >> they're looking into a review of the way that the dismissal process happens. that's right. we get to pick between cops doing really bad things or a staffing shortage. what a time to be alive. hashtag winning. they're at the way they're looking at the way that you basically find you can basically find misconduct get rid of a misconduct and get rid of a police by putting some police officer by putting some of the in charge . at the of the police in charge. at the moment, need to have an moment, you need to have an independent, legally qualified chairman committee chairman of this. the committee , you would have , the lcs. you would have thought that having someone independent would have been the best than have the best way rather than have the police but police police themselves. but they . so maybe, yeah, they don't work. so maybe, yeah, let's they can police can let's see if they can police can police themselves hopefully police themselves and hopefully that the moment there are six that at the moment there are six stages have to go stages that you have to go through you can get rid through before you can get rid of as they're of a bad apple, as they're always referred to. they want to
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get that down two. and get that down to two. and i think that's about right. it's like university challenge, the first lose playoff first rounds lose a playoff quarterfinals let's quarterfinals semi—finals. let's just we're not just get it done so we're not we're dealing with. >> i mean, dan, you must >> yeah, i mean, dan, you must welcome these changes. welcome these these changes. >> what. >> yeah, well what. >> yeah, well what. >> yeah, well what. >> yeah, well, i actually do set the police because they're massive hypocrites . and i'm massive hypocrites. and i'm sorry, but everybody is allowed to bend the rules at work. we all know that. they put the blues and twos on when they're nando's is going cold. we all know that, right? but at the state of this is absolutely appalling because the way that they treat so many different groups of obviously, let's underline my group women, the way that women have been made murdered by police and raped by police and apologies for people who are listening to this. it's very hard to listen to, but it's the truth and it's just alarming that there's like 2000 officers that there's like 2000 officers that could go and you think there's 2000 officers that are
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possibly could be kicked out . i possibly could be kicked out. i mean, it. i was a little bit worried about that. it does sound a lot. but then i thought then again, elon musk got rid of 6000 people at twitter and that vastly not for the same reason , though. >> i mean, i don't think any of them had been exposing themselves mcdonald's. them had been exposing the that/es mcdonald's. them had been exposing thethat/esa mcdonald's. them had been exposing the that/esa very donald's. them had been exposing the that/esa very good d's. them had been exposing the that/esa very good point. >> that is a very good point. you know, and they were saying that they need officers who do not vetting not maintain their vetting status would be automatically fired. so isn't that where you get sort of background checks? yeah i mean, it's appalling because if you're if you fail a background check, you can't do a lot of different things. like you had a background check. i've had one because i work with children because i was a teacher. you had one because you work for the foreign office and for the police and for the police like it's just i police and like it's just i mean, your background doesn't really change much. >> when your >> i mean, when you get your your renewed, it's not your vetting renewed, it's not like so now like they suddenly. oh, so now you're you know what you're libyan. you know what i mean? that doesn't happen. >> no. it means that >> no, no. but it means that they've something serious they've done something serious enough it. just
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enough that like it. it's just a shame that we shouldn't be having check police having to check what the police are it's appalling . like are doing. it's appalling. like they're who be they're the ones who should be holding up the law and looking after people, ones who after people, not the ones who and are they going to fire them because right. when you because you are right. when you said shortage , because said staffing shortage, because if police are checking if the police are now checking on police, then and they go, on the police, then and they go, well, look, i can either fire 12 officers and have a massive staffing shortage in my station or i staffing shortage in my station ori can staffing shortage in my station or i can do what's right and fire them. >> well, moving on. we've got the guardian and france's president macron is taking tips from middle eastern dictators after suffering his own arab spnng after suffering his own arab spring , or rather, arab spring spring, or rather, arab spring summer. anyway, diane so macron accused of authoritarianism after threat to cut off social media. >> this is insane. so macron has decided that because the young people are using snapchat and tiktok to get together to do all this rioting, which we've seen over the past couple of days, he said that when things get out of hand, we may have to regulate it. so he's literally talking
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about creating a blackout . i about creating a blackout. i mean, he's saying, oh, no, it wouldn't be a blackout, but you just wouldn't be able to use it . what? this is the same kind of dictatorship . like it's dictatorship. like it's essentially a social media lockdown because he doesn't like what they're doing with social media. but then again, you've got the people who are very connected to obviously the murder of the young boy , the 17 murder of the young boy, the 17 year old, who was saying this is a distraction when he's trying to throw this into the press. and because we're all now saying, oh, wait, he's going to cut off social media when actually discussion actually the discussion should be police violence. be about the police violence. >> also for stopping >> well, he's also for stopping the footage the riots the footage of the riots circulating i mean, circulating because, i mean, there's a huge scale. the there's such a huge scale. the first first few nights of first the first few nights of the riots, there's so much footage, footage being shared on not snapchat, other not not just snapchat, but other other social media sources. but then shut down snapchat and then he shut down snapchat and it's a way of stopping the actual information spreading. it's not just stopping the riots spreading. it's sort of pr control for macron. >> i'd be surprised if it really
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works because we're still talking about it . and these are talking about it. and these are young people. we're talking about. they are skilled in the ways of using a vpn to get your. so even try and stop them so even if you try and stop them using internet, there are using the internet, there are still basically no way still basically there's no way to shut down the ability to get footage not in footage out. it might not be in snapchat or the ways you think of straight away, but there's so many services that you can put videos days. the videos on these days. and if the press then sees it, then we still it there. i just still get it out there. i just don't it can work. so i do don't think it can work. so i do like in the story where like the bit in the story where he was accused of threatening to cut off social media, and an official said, not official said, we're not threatening we're threatening to do that. we're threatening to do that. we're threatening to do that. we're threatening to occasionally and temporarily threatening to occasionally and tempcthat's what we presume. yeah, that's what we presume. that's exactly nothing. yeah, that's what we presume. thathere'stly nothing. yeah, that's what we presume. thathere's nothing ng. yeah, that's what we presume. thathere's nothing as permanent >> there's nothing as permanent as government >> there's nothing as permanent as i government >> there's nothing as permanent as i thinkiovernment >> there's nothing as permanent as i think it'ernment >> there's nothing as permanent as i think it wasnent >> there's nothing as permanent as i think it was ronald measure. i think it was ronald reagan that. and what's reagan who said that. and what's interesting police interesting is the french police union out and said it union has come out and said it was actually drug dealers who ended because it was ended the riots because it was affecting their so affecting their business. so they go out and quash they managed to go out and quash all these people rioting. so, yeah not times when yeah, it's not great times when you're relying on criminals to stop rioters. we can maybe have
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some some order in society, although it is france, it's not here anyway, moving on. we've got the express and just stop oils latest protest saw them storm the courts at wimbledon. new please for the police new balls please for the police who should arrested . this who should be arrested. this criminal kyiv wimbles in criminal gangs kyiv wimbles in security measures fail as just stop oil protesters cover court in confetti. >> so wimbledon organisers they had extra measures in to try and stop the protest . that worked stop the protest. that worked well. and i mean, don't get me wrong, i love a bit of climate change talk as much as the next person who's nowhere near here but even i saw this news alert p0p up but even i saw this news alert pop up on my phone. just stop. oil protests, disrupt. >> them the on the screen >> see them on the on the screen there. >> soon as i. i didn't even >> as soon as i. i didn't even make it through the headline before i'd stopped like, yeah, again, even where again, i don't even care where it because this all this it is now because this all this was doing a protest was about doing doing a protest that really link to that doesn't really link to what the problem is. just so we all talk it and gets in the talk about it and it gets in the press and hopefully that novelty is waning because if you've got a the government a beef with the government protest, the government don't get our lives. don't make me
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get in our lives. don't make me the your protest the pawn in your protest would be looking it. be my way of looking at it. >> and that's an w, >> yeah. and that's with an w, not an or. >> also, don't make me that enhen >> yeah. i mean, we all they make get more more attention but orange everywhere. orange powder everywhere. >> yeah. >> oh yeah. >> oh yeah. >> and then i mean would you like to see just stop oil maybe protest against fighting protest against cage fighting next. see how well they do in the octagon chucking some confetti around . confetti around. >> they didn't protest >> i mean, they didn't protest glastonbury . yeah, i guess glastonbury. yeah, i guess because they were busy enjoying it. they just seem to want to have noticed it. >> powder throwing everywhere. people sitting down just blends in in glastonbury. >> i mean, the unfortunate thing is, is that it's not really helping people to join the just stop oil protests because it's just causing them pain in their lives and they're actually ignonng lives and they're actually ignoring the greater problem. >> i don't think it's helping the environment. visitors were subjected to airport style checks, it says where the bags were scoured for chalk dust , were scoured for chalk dust, cable ties know. i mean, you might just be wanting to have a
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fun weekend, but chalk dust for lifting know i love it. you didn't say what the cable ties were for. we all know. >> and also chalk doesn't mean people are going to be like, oh, no, no, that's not chalk dust. that's that's cocaine. officer but they also were confiscating some cream. >> now, i'm sorry , but as >> now, i'm sorry, but as a ginger person , yeah, you can't ginger person, yeah, you can't say you really can't do that. >> it's literal genocide against redheads. that is shocking . redheads. that is shocking. >> i love the idea that the thing that they managed to sneak in was confetti. they would have gone, oh, no, confetti. there you go. because, of course, you'll be getting married in wimbledon. a lot of people wearing it could go wearing white. so it could go that you know? yeah. that way, you know? yeah. >> moving on. we've got >> okay. moving on. we've got the are the telegraph and the snp are living westminster's living it up on westminster's money still can. money while they still can. >> diane so the snp ran up a £148,000 tax payer bill at cop 27 climate conference. >> oh wow. okay. so as we all
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know, my maths is boring . isn't know, my maths is boring. isn't now the snp delegates , they sent now the snp delegates, they sent about 20 to 25 of them to the cop 27 climate conference in sharm el—sheikh and it is absolutely shocking. they spent about £44,665 on 25 rooms at a luxury hotel. i mean , like we luxury hotel. i mean, like we already know that the snp finances are i mean, the more we discover, the more interesting it becomes. like the luxury camper van now seems quite reasonable compared to this. >> and this is all expensed to the taxpayer. and is it a climate change conference? so they've flown to egypt, they've flown to egypt as if zoom calls don't exist . to have this don't exist. to have this conference to try and find out how they can stop people doing things like flying to egypt . things like flying to egypt. yeah, but that doesn't make any sense. >> the argument goes like this climate change is such a threat that i need a five star hotel. i ineed that i need a five star hotel. i i need access to that minibar.
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of all the things that they. this is the one that bothers me, though. i know i should be really upset about the thousands of hotels in the of pounds on these hotels in the list that list of things that were expensed. meal deal. expensed. a boots meal deal. just for your boots meal. just pay for your boots meal. who bothers fill in the form? who bothers to fill in the form? >> are scottish people. >> these are scottish people. come on. anyway, that's the end of part two. coming up, we've got schools tackling toxic masculinity trigger warnings in musical theatre and a controversial pledge to win the votes of young people. see you in a couple of
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dewberry and i'm keeping you company right through until 7:00 this evening. gb news the people's . channel well , come people's. channel well, come back to headliners. >> we've got the telegraph now with a story designed in a lab to make me angry. a has been spared jail over child because they're transgender . our diane they're transgender. our diane nailed it. >> that is exactly it. so the headuneis >> that is exactly it. so the headline is trans avoids jail because of delay over which prison she would go to. so tanya
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howells is a trans gender woman who was caught with category a images as 39 category a images which are the most serious and also admitted a separate charge of possessing 100 grossly offensive images of children. right now . now the issue now right now. now the issue now normally when you're like caught with all of this, you are immediately put into custody because obviously you present an immediate danger to the public and children. but they because tanya howells is a trans woman who is who has committed a sexual offence , who also has sexual offence, who also has a penis , as it means that she's penis, as it means that she's seems like she's a fella , she seems like she's a fella, she would should go into a male prison. but this has been sort of talked about by the transgender case board , which transgender case board, which was a board that was created in 2017 to sort of deal specifically with transgender
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prisoners. but it means that this person in has got a suspended sentence and i'm sorry, but i don't think this is quite right, because you look at the crimes that this person has committed and there's no sense of the punishment matching up with the crime purely because they're transgender. they still need to be put in prison for the crime. yeah. i mean , we saw crime. yeah. i mean, we saw steve, we saw somebody just a couple of days ago get get a prison sentence for online trolling and for somebody to be caught red handed to be convicted of possessing the worst types, the worst category of child , to then not go to jail of child, to then not go to jail because they're transgender. >> it just seems like an absolute abomination. it's just going to encourage other for other sex criminals to say , hey, other sex criminals to say, hey, i'm transgender because they're going to get an easier ride. >> there are at least two massive that happened massive errors that happened here as soon as the question here in as soon as the question gets raised which prison gets raised about which prison or, know worst case or, you know, the worst case scenario terms of your debate
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scenario in terms of your debate would isolated one. well, would be the isolated one. well, put them there first while you sort the argument. don't do sort out the argument. don't do the and just the argument and just mean there's massive and, there's a massive delay. and, okay, have a massive okay, you could have a massive delay at the end the delay if at the end of the decision making process, bang, you're what you're in prison. but what happened was because of the delay, then they just given happened was because of the d
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education lessons all the way up. a study by the commons, up. it's a study by the commons, women's and equality committee already feel already making the boys feel really in the title. however, appearing in the title. however, one of the is continuing one of the ideas is continuing the education and the sexual education and the relationships education to the age 18. let's remember for age of 18. let's remember for context wants maths to be context rishi wants maths to be taught given choice, taught to 18. given a choice, i know i'd rather do. the know which i'd rather do. the one where you get to see a one where you might get to see a diagram of a bosom, but you don't to teach about toxic don't need to teach about toxic masculinity need teach masculinity. you need to teach about toxic behaviour . a about toxic behaviour. a behaviour a thing you do. behaviour is a thing you do. stop find toxic stop doing it. you find toxic masculinity is an identity. it's effectively telling you you are a and this is where it a problem and this is where it all goes wrong. if boys feel vilified, leave space for vilified, you leave space for other people to get in with their ideas instead of just saying actually, let's work their ideas instead of just sayiwhat's actually, let's work their ideas instead of just sayiwhat's a ctually, let's work their ideas instead of just sayiwhat's a nicely, let's work their ideas instead of just sayiwhat's a nice thing 's work their ideas instead of just sayiwhat's a nice thing to nork their ideas instead of just sayiwhat's a nice thing to dok their ideas instead of just sayiwhat's a nice thing to do or out what's a nice thing to do or not. let's just be polite rather than a toxic man and than no, you're a toxic man and you'll always wrong. you you'll always be wrong. you leave for andrew tate leave a vacuum for andrew tate to and grow up to come in and people grow up like so. >> the term the term toxic masculinity is pushing. it's pushing people towards towards andrew , who's who's a great andrew tate, who's who's a great guy, way. guy, by the way. >> i really like steve's split
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between toxic masculinity and toxic behaviour. >> i think that's a really important distinction to make because it does have an effect. they've sort of interviewed the female teachers because apparently female teachers are getting abuse as well as girls are getting abuse. and but it would work both ways. like i know when i was a girl there were plenty of toxic women around as well. so i think, yeah, focusing on toxic behaviour is a really positive step actually in the right direction. >> yeah, it's great. anyway, and the guardian now with the claim that wrought iron is racist, let's hope that scraping the bottom of the barrel never becomes racist or the guardian will be in a terrible catch 22. diane so the industrial revolution , an iron method quote revolution, an iron method quote was taken from jamaica by britain. >> so there is now i love the fact that i've got this story and i'm sat to next a chemist, but the court process, which has allowed wrought iron to be mass
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produced from scrap, was attributed to the british financier turned ironmaster multi—skilled guy henry court. but apparently he actually took it. you see, there was a jamaican ironworks which was owned by a white enslaved weaver, john reader, and he was ignorant of metallurgy . but the ignorant of metallurgy. but the 76 black metallurgists , they 76 black metallurgists, they were perfect. they invented this way of rolling the scrap . way of rolling the scrap. >> it was the grooved rollers which were similar to other rollers used elsewhere , like rollers used elsewhere, like sugar production. so they got the idea and thought, yeah, let's of that. gets let's have some of that. gets rid the impurities, makes rid of the impurities, makes better metal. >> there we go. they actually >> there we go. so they actually created is quite created that and this is quite an thing because an interesting thing because they have some of their they they have some of their names recorded in the records and this part they're saying and this is part they're saying as technological transfer and giving it to the people who created it rather the white created it rather than the white guy claimed he created it in guy who claimed he created it in history, is actually a key tenet
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of the reparations movement. >> right. but i mean , steve, do >> right. but i mean, steve, do you think i mean , it seems like you think i mean, it seems like they've taken this to said, you know, black people invented it. where were all the wrought iron bndgesin where were all the wrought iron bridges in sub—saharan africa pnor bridges in sub—saharan africa prior to , you know, colonisation ? >> 7. >>i ? >> i thought you would have liked this more. i thought you would have gone down the line of if reparations is simply changing the wikipedia entry on who invented the wrought iron process fill your boots . process. fill your iron boots. >> yeah, but no, it's not going to end there. then it's going to be they're going to want tax payers money well. that's payers money as well. that's going be part of but going to be part of the but there rapper nations. but there's a difference between but there's a difference between but the i think the the scientists i think the question genuinely the scientists i think the quea ion genuinely the scientists i think the quea really genuinely the scientists i think the quea really good genuinely the scientists i think the quea really good it's|uinely it's a really good one it's a scientific breakthrough rather a technological breakthrough. >> inventing the >> science is inventing the ability it. technology is ability to do it. technology is deploying that science into things so things that fit the world. so the you can make a the fact that you can make a chemical that's great a lab, chemical that's great in a lab, but being able to produce it in a that's where you a factory, that's where you deploy i think deploy technology. i think that actually your actually boringly answers your question. apologise. question. i do apologise. okay >> this turned into >> well, this has turned into the university. never mind.
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the open university. never mind. we've meal with the we've got the meal now with the latest trigger latest unnecessary trigger warning. to think warning. i'm starting to think that trigger warnings only exist to advertising in the to get free advertising in the daily mail. >> steve the headlines great, though it's not all raindrops on roses now. >> theatre behind the sound of music stage show issues trigger warning that the musical depicts germany and annexation of austria . if you didn't know that austria. if you didn't know that about the sound of music, well done managing avoid that done for managing to avoid that every but it's a every christmas, but it's a production in chichester, so you probably weren't to go probably weren't going to go anyway. and they trigger anyway. and they put a trigger warning could have warning on the show. could have read full one, just the read the full one, not just the bit daily mail, the full bit of the daily mail, the full list themes contains list of themes it contains themes music, family, romance themes of music, family, romance , the threat of germany and the annexation of austria. >> and by the way, though, this is a trigger warning about music on a musical called the sound of music . music. >> if you needed that , you got >> if you needed that, you got bigger problems . bigger problems. >> and those they're putting those things together . i mean, those things together. i mean, that sounds if anything, it's minimises of the minimises the horrors of the regime. they are likening them
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to music and whatever the family values and things like that, they have made it sound more like the producers really, haven't they? >> but they've sort of missed out. also you may see people wearing curtains as clothing. i would warning for would like a trigger warning for that, please. >> i like to find out >> and i would like to find out where the shops owned by some shirts just to correct the record, though, the theatre spokesperson said we don't have trigger warnings. >> we general guidance of >> we have general guidance of content. either way, it's both pointless and harmless and it's in chichester, so i'm full out of caring, right? >> you're definitely not going to go and see it. >> no. for the reasons. okay. >> well, we've got the times now and spain's politicians have found a novel way getting found a novel way of getting votes. diane votes. bribery. diane >> okay, so spain elections deputy pm offers young people ,20,000 if re—elected. and deputy pm offers young people ,20,000 pledge.ected. and deputy pm offers young people ,20,000 pledge hased. and deputy pm offers young people ,20,000 pledge has , . and deputy pm offers young people ,20,000 pledge has , asnd deputy pm offers young people ,20,000 pledge has , as she yolanda diaz pledge has, as she is, heads the new far left dumas party and it says that they may actually replace the hard right
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vox party as spain's third largest party. so they're still not in charge, but they're kind of getting up the ranks. >> they've got some influence. >> they've got some influence. >> yeah . she's basically >> yeah, yeah. she's basically saying that they would give 18 year olds because they said the age of the majority , which is age of the majority, which is 18, as far as i've understood to ,30,000. now this is very interesting because youth unemployment incredibly high. unemployment is incredibly high. they have in spain, they have the highest youth unemployment in the eu. apparently 28.5% of under 25 seconds in spain are unemployed. and they're known as the ninnies, which i think is a little unfair . it stands the ninnies, which i think is a little unfair. it stands for ni estudia ni traba accion, which means neither work nor study. so they can't study , they can't they can't study, they can't work, and they've had protests where they're like sort of holding up placards saying no house, no job, no pension , no house, no job, no pension, no fear, you know , it's a bit of fear, you know, it's a bit of a
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sort of a swelling of the youth. i mean, macron's their sort of going just turn off tiktok , you going just turn off tiktok, you know, he's sort of whispering there. so this is an idea that they've come up with, but i don't see how that helps. i can understand that giving you a lump sum means that you're okay for a bit. >> yeah, i mean, i think if you if you give kids if you give teenagers a lump sum of money, you're just you might as well just give directly to the just give that directly to the drug madrid. well, drug dealers of madrid. well, that's to like all that's what happens to like all the who go into soap the people who go into soap operas, isn't it? >> like the young actors? and they suddenly get their first like, and then you end like, paycheque and then you end up with like, the drug up with with all like, the drug habhs up with with all like, the drug habits and the rehab stories like, give why like, why can't we give why can't they ,20,000 to can't they give like ,20,000 to like year olds? like what? like 40 year olds? like what? >> what makes you say that? yeah. yeah >> any particular hair colour you'd like? these 40 year olds to have? >> no, no, i'm not specific. you know, i just think that 40 year olds could do a lot with ,20,000. you know, a bit more mature. >> the it's not going to >> the i mean, it's not going to happen. if they're the happen. even if they're the third party. this is one of
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those where you can make those things where you can make a promise, more votes. a promise, get some more votes. that's it is. the purpose of that's all it is. the purpose of it isn't fix the economic it isn't to fix the economic problems. could some problems. there could be some argument generation argument about the generation gap the disparity, gap and the wealth disparity, but more about give but surely it's more about give me vote. i'll promise to me your vote. i'll promise to give money, which give you some money, which i won't give you later. it is bribery, very much like the triple the pensions. yeah. >> okay. well coming up in the final we have cakes final section, we have cakes that aren't healthy enough. wine. that's not expensive enough. baskets that enough. and hanging baskets that aren't because aren't biodiverse enough because it's in a couple it's 2023. see you in a couple of minutes .
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welcome back to headline news. we've got the daily meal now and ben and jerry's latest virtue signalling risks turning them into the bud light of frozen desserts . desserts. >> steve furious ice cream fans are continuing calls for ben and jerry's to face a boycott following the company's controversial july the fourth
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tweet. imagine being a furious ice cream fan, by the way. that is just a great idea. well, so the tweet was this 4th of july. it's high time we recognise that the us exists on stolen indigenous land and commit to returning it. so i'm not sure if that means like leave the keys, put them through the door, head out there. i mean if they're saying we should find ways to address unfairness as caused by land taken, maybe that's land being taken, maybe that's why a terrible idea. why it's still a terrible idea. maybe a terrible maybe it's still a terrible idea. but what it's not is saying, let's just it back saying, let's just give it back and what happens. so and and see what happens. so and also, ice cream also, this is what ice cream thinks. let's go to frozen thinks. let's go over to frozen yoghurt view on yoghurt and take their view on the marbles . well, yeah, i the elgin marbles. well, yeah, i mean, jerry's last time mean, ben and jerry's last time i but five years ago, i checked, but five years ago, they just made ice cream. >> made ice cream. it >> they made ice cream. it made you it gave you diabetes. you fat. it gave you diabetes. that was it. you know, they were pretty much a negative force in the then of a sudden, the world. then all of a sudden, they this like virtue they become this like virtue signalling social media outfit with a ice cream with a with a small ice cream concern attached just in of concern attached just in one of the far off wings. this subsidiary manufacturing ice cream. >> that's when it's probably
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just but then just ben and jerry. but then they unilever and they get bought by unilever and really down the really doubled down on the tweeting, seems tweeting, which seems a weird way of doing it. can i just say what one tweeter said? americans will do an i'll will try and do an accent. i'll go real south. why on earth would any true american support these from woke these tweets from a woke liberals? went the south these tweets from a woke libsussex. went the south these tweets from a woke libsussex. love the south these tweets from a woke libsussex. love it. the south these tweets from a woke libsussex. love it. craigsouth these tweets from a woke libsussex. love it. craig that of sussex. love it. craig that was my fault. i went. i went for knives out. but it does taste good though, doesn't it? that's the problem. >> is quite nice. ice cream. >> it is quite nice. ice cream. i hate to admit it, but i'm just hoping nutella. don't. don't start virtue signalling because i that. but, i i cannot boycott that. but, i mean, you know, do you think do you this is good, though? you think this is good, though? because, means more because, i mean, it means more woke going eat ben woke people are going to eat ben and and then get sick. and jerry's and then get sick. >> i think that like as >> well, i think that like as just ice cream. so like you can eat it and like not care about what they say. >> that was my fault. i started accent. yes. >> it's all my fault what you've done. >> think of it. what you've done. steve anyway, we've got the times now and killjoys at tfl want us to not have our cake and not eat it. diane this is ridiculous. >> okay, so tfl bans west end
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play >> okay, so tfl bans west end play poster over quote , play poster over quote, unhealthy wedding cake. so no, it's a poster for a broadway comedy and it's called tony and tina's wedding. comedy and it's called tony and tina's wedding . now, obviously, tina's wedding. now, obviously, when you want to sell all a show, you need to come up with a captivating image. so it has tony and tina on top of a cake because it's a wedding cake and tfl in their infinite wisdom, have said that they are promoting obesity and sugary treats and that they need to take down this poster of a cake for a musical. >> it's nonsensical. you can't even eat the cake. it's a musical . musical. >> there's the picture there. you can see. i mean, it's a picture of a wedding. it's not even a particularly big or overly iced wedding cake. it's one of the healthiest wedding cakes i've ever seen. >> i can't help feeling that there is some absolute nutbag who tfl, who just on who works in tfl, who is just on a and they've got triggered a diet and they've got triggered and i can't and they've gone, oh, i can't stand at the cake. stand looking at the cake. >> they've complained you >> and they've complained you couldn't at tfl couldn't have a nutbag at tfl because probably against because that's probably against some dietary restriction i >> - - >> steve well, i love about this
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story is that regardless of their intention only their intention, not only will no lives be saved by not showing that cake to people, not even a calorie will be saved. >> not changing >> yeah, it's not changing anyone's dietary habits all anyone's dietary habits at all and production spent 20 and the production spent 20 grand on the campaign . yeah. grand on the campaign. yeah. yeah. and had to spend another five grand changing the poster to remove the cake. >> i don't even know what they replaced moving on. replaced it with. moving on. we've the meal now we've got the meal now with evidence rishi sunak has evidence that rishi sunak has been too long. been in yorkshire too long. >> steve multi—millionaire rishi sunak comes under fire for £10 wine donation to struggling school . i'm actually going to school. i'm actually going to come down on the side of rishi on this one, he donates this on this one, so he donates this £10 wine and the school. it's not just the school, it's the parent teacher and friends association. they've widened it of leybourne primary of the leybourne primary primary school said , don't school in richmond, said, don't get we didn't expect get me wrong, we didn't expect him thousands or him to give his thousands or millions like that, millions or anything like that, but something that's more than £10. it's expected millions. £10. so it's expected millions. they at least they wanted at least they thought going get thought they were going to get millions the thing millions. but here's the thing that so that they should realise. so it's £10 bottle the house
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it's a £10 bottle of the house of commons merlot, which he'd signed and if you auction, signed and which if you auction, it go for way than it would go for way more than £10. oh, i thought you're going to say £2. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> that's liz truss one. >> that's the liz truss one. >> that's the liz truss one. >> was at a boxing nato >> i was at a boxing nato a charity boxing night and they had a bottle of whisky signed by gordon brown. >> the dying years of >> this is in the dying years of gordon brown's. >> empty? and it was yeah, >> is it empty? and it was yeah, it out. it went out. >> oh, that thing just >> oh, man, that thing just limped the line when it was auction. >> it's really sad to see. well no, liz truss would just be a sign can of like gin and tonic like not even a bottle, just a can. half drunk. yeah. okay. well let's see if we can squeeze this one in. >> we've got the telegraph with a very british dispute over watering flower pots. dan, we've only got maybe 45 seconds. >> okay. >> okay. >> hanging baskets are scrapped for being biodiverse enough for not being biodiverse enough . salisbury . so councillors in salisbury have been accused of virtue signalling because they want to bnngin signalling because they want to bring in different ways of bringing spaces into bringing green spaces into salisbury and they're saying that hanging are not that the hanging baskets are not biodiverse because the biodiverse enough because the climate changing climate is changing and so they're about bringing climate is changing and so th
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called living towers. >> let's have a cactus. >> why not let's have a cactus. cactus like a living tower. >> yeah, it's lovely. >> yeah, it's lovely. >> a bit spiky and parklets and they're going to kill off gilbert the dragon, which is apparently a floral display that they've had for 30 years. >> are they going to use a floral display of saint george to head off? to cut its head off? >> that be great, wouldn't it? >> a big, flowery sword, middle class problem of day. >> a big, flowery sword, middle class pdon'tn of day. >> a big, flowery sword, middle class pdon't know day. >> a big, flowery sword, middle class pdon't know you ay. >> a big, flowery sword, middle class pdon't know you baskets is >> we don't know you baskets is this is salisbury you're famous for novichok now you're for novichok and now you're upset and there's a person upset about and there's a person in well, in the article saying, well, i often to salisbury. i don't often go to salisbury. i don't think now. on often go to salisbury. i don't think now. oh that's not think i'll go now. oh that's not a cathedral, but no hanging baskets. >> moving on. >> moving on. >> the show is nearly over. solistic another quick look at thursday's front pages. the daily mail leads with al. chatbot told windsor intruder to kill the queen. the guardian has lung cancer diagnosis in women to outnumber men for the first time. the financial times leads with g. told putin face to face not to launch nuclear strike against ukraine forces. the daily express has lords must not defy the will of the people . the
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defy the will of the people. the i has 7% mortgage mortgages forecast this summer as big lender hike big lenders hike uk rates again. the daily star has a chat bot wanted me to kill the queen. and those were your front pages. and that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, steven allen and diane spencer. we're back tomorrow at the same time. and if you're watching at 5 am, stay for breakfast 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast
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sunday tonight on farage with me patrick christys. >> massive, massive show this. we will get you another update from nigel on his banking crisis. big development. but first, happy birthday to the nhs. 75 today. but is there any
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reason whatsoever to be cheerful? we will talk to someone fighting government plans as well and to house migrants in a historic air base, leaving military families homeless. this is an absolute shocker . we've got the leader of shocker. we've got the leader of a local council who's coming on and get this, we are going to go live to a hearing on the controversial dambusters dog statue. are we seriously going to be digging up the dambusters dog in order to make way for people to live their lives as a former military base ? and this former military base? and this has proved incredibly controversial. a massive topic, especially online on captain tom's daughter , depher is in hot tom's daughter, depher is in hot water over a swimming pool. what on earth is going on with that captain? sir tom moore , charity, captain? sir tom moore, charity, all of that next. but first, it's the news with polly . it's the news with polly. patrick patrick, thank you.
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>> good evening to you. our

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