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tv   Headliners  GB News  July 11, 2023 1:00am-2:00am BST

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gb news headliners is up next. >> but first, here's the latest from the gb news newsroom and our top story, the parent of the young person at the centre of the bbc presenter scandal say they stand by their claims . they stand by their claims. that's according to the sun newspaper . it comes after newspaper. it comes after a lawyer representing the youngster told the corporation that their mother's allegations were rubbish and nothing inappropriate or unlawful. happened follows reports that a male presenter paid a teenager for explicit photos earlier met police. detectives said they'll work to establish if there's any evidence of a criminal offence . evidence of a criminal offence. yesterday, the bbc announced that it had suspended the star almost two months after a complaint was first made. the male teacher who was stabbed at tewkesbury academy in
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gloucestershire , has been gloucestershire, has been discharged from hospital. police have announced . meanwhile, have announced. meanwhile, a teenage boy arrested on suspicion of attempted murder remains in custody. the secondary school was put into temporary lockdown , along with temporary lockdown, along with two neighbouring schools following the incident. police say they do not believe it was terror related and us president joe biden has completed his brief tour of the uk after meetings with the prime minister and the king. he's now travelled to lithuania for a two day nato summit which starts tomorrow. mr biden was given a very warm welcome at windsor castle , where welcome at windsor castle, where he discussed climate issues with king charles. that followed a meeting with rishi sunak at downing street, where, despite recent tensions over ukraine, both leaders paid tribute to the special relationship between the two countries. nato chief jens stoltenberg says turkey has agreed to support sweden's bid to join the alliance . the to join the alliance. the announcement comes after the nato chief held talks with the
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president of turkey and the prime minister of sweden . prime minister of sweden. earlier this evening, erdogan met with charles michel, head of the european council. erdogan has also demanded that a path must now be made for turkey to join the eu . a coroner has ruled join the eu. a coroner has ruled that british victims of an ethiopian airlines crash were unlawfully killed when a boeing 737 max crashed en route from addis ababa to nairobi in 2019. all 157 passengers and crew died in the disaster , including in the disaster, including humanitarian workers samuel pegram and sustainability campaigner joanna toole pegram and sustainability campaignerjoanna toole in investigators found that a flying control system had malfunctioned , causing the malfunctioned, causing the aircraft to dive uncontrollably . boeing was fined £18 billion after employees were found to have misled regulators about the system . we're on tv online have misled regulators about the system .we're on tv online on system. we're on tv online on dab+ radio and on tune in to this is gb news. time now for headunes.
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headlines. >> hello and welcome to headliners. i'm simon evans. joining me tonight to go through tuesday's papers. we have a scottish invasion. the aukus and bruce devlin . how are you, bruce devlin. how are you, gentlemen? well very well. excellent. right. i am not too bad just seeing a photograph of myself from 12 years ago and i've slightly. it's a little emotional . adjustment is needed, emotional. adjustment is needed, but , you know, these things can but, you know, these things can be clawed back with with diet and dermatological care trip to turkey a decent night's sleep trip to turkey. that's a great idea . absolutely. next time you idea. absolutely. next time you get on that flight, do you fly? i'm 78. yeah. no you look amazing. absolutely as bruce springsteen at hyde park, 73, that was the one thing i wasn't convinced was entirely natural. the airline absolutely immaculate. yeah >> oh, transplant .
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>> oh, transplant. >> oh, transplant. >> yeah. plugs. i mean, if you've got springsteen money, why wouldn't you? you absolutely would. you can get everything. get the teeth. >> they do everything over there. breed you. there. they dare my breed you. >> probably had like >> he's probably had like lateral implants hasn't he. to themselves. but the cap sleeve shoulders . anyway, let's take shoulders. anyway, let's take a look at tuesday's front pages. the daily mail have 1 in 6 people know who scandal hit bbc bbc star is that is quite the assertion we have eye news bbc present for did nothing wrong claims young person at centre of sex photo scandal the sides are being taken the sun dad bbc are liars the financial times rising above all of that biden salutes solid uk ties and there are the grenadier guards welcoming him. the guardian young person at centre of bbc scandal says claims are rubbish and the daily
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star were going to el . i think star were going to el. i think that's el nino rather than el dorado on this occasion. it means a hot summer basically. those were your front pages . those were your front pages. however, let's go to one that didn't appear in that roundup. it's only just arrived. tuesday's telegraph off. >> so ukraine is to be offered nato light protection major powers have committed to an israel style security guarantee for kyiv , but stop short of the for kyiv, but stop short of the timetable for full alliance membership. >> well , they can't full >> well, they can't have full membership at moment because membership at the moment because they've russian on they've got russian troops on their yeah, under full their soil. yeah, under full nato membership. if you've got, you know, of any other country attacks nato member, then all attacks a nato member, then all the other nato members instantly come in and fold that country in half, which they'd have to do with russia. is nuclear armed . with russia. is nuclear armed. we can't have that situation. >> won't get full nato >> so they won't get full nato membership until russia's membership until until russia's expelled from ukraine. and until
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the borders are secure. yes, it's interesting, though. so israel style security guarantees, which is , you know, guarantees, which is, you know, what people were expecting . but what people were expecting. but if it's israel style, does that mean that the guardian and left wing people will start hating ukraine? >> well, it'll be interesting. i think there is also possibly a little tendency of that kind already . it's never quite as already. it's never quite as straightforward their sympathies. but does that mean the iron dome then, for kyiv, that would be that idea. would it? yeah. i mean, they've already extent got already to a certain extent got i not not a full dome, but i mean not not a full dome, but they're all the patriot they're getting all the patriot air defence systems and stuff like that. air defence systems and stuff like thatthis has come about >> and this has come about because turkey's finally dropped the becoming the veto on sweden becoming a nato member, which it resists did because, you know, sweden's friendly to kurds and also sweden allowed quran burning and stuff like that . but there's, stuff like that. but there's, you know, there's a lot of political horse trading going on. on path to on. so turkey's on the path to join the so they've been join the eu. so they've been they've sort of been told. so charles michel, who's the eu or the ec president said, you know,
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they should be they should have access to. >> and that was considered to be a sort of conspiracy theory seven years ago, wasn't it? yeah, that's what things seven years. change. i am years. things change. i am intrigued the idea intrigued by the idea that i mean obviously they cannot, as you be given nato you say, be given nato membership there's membership whilst there's a war ongoing would ongoing because it would immediately world immediately trigger world war iii. the idea that iii. yeah and yet the idea that a state could be admitted as soon as this has been resolved, even everyone's satisfaction, even to everyone's satisfaction, whether keep any whether that be russia keep any territory are territory or whether they are just humiliate. you feel just humiliate. how do you feel about that? >> what i don't understand is why the membership process takes so long. i'm do you i don't know , because the head office is in cardiff. >> oh, wow. right okay. it's i mean, i don't know. i feel a little bit ambivalent about long. i think there's sometimes there's something to be said for. it's like self accreditation mortgages. you remember those? no, no. back in the there was this massive the 90s, there was this massive property boom and worried property boom and banks worried that were missing out that they were missing out on business because had to business because people had to go tiresome business go through the tiresome business of documentary of producing documentary evidence were a good
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evidence that they were a good credit risk. so instead they would just ask you whether you thought were a good fit. thought you were a good fit. and, you know, a lot more people got of them, it got houses, but some of them, it turned out, couldn't pay the mortgage, sometimes mortgage, you know? so sometimes along winded application process, right ? i mean, want process, right? i mean, you want to join mayfair club that to join a mayfair club that takes six months. you takes at least six months. you know, a couple of know, there's a couple of blackballing that's not blackballing seconds. that's not a ritual. that's a, you know, just a right. >> yeah. and it's not euphemism. >> no, no. okay. or indeed, a paintballing. anyway, let's take a look at the times now. bruce. >> so there's things >> yeah. so there's two things nigel up giving dinner parties. >> she's had enough of it. >> she's had enough of it. >> yeah, righto. >> yeah, righto. >> the real story. >> the real story. >> i mean, it's only how you make your living love, but i do like aim. yeah, there is the article that says hotel given millions to reserve bed for migrants. so what has happened ? migrants. so what has happened? because there has been a buffer on the arrival of migrants coming into the country that ministers are spending. is it more than half £1 million a day? keep buying these hotel rooms are available. >> keep them empty. that's not
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the bill to house migrants. that's just keeping potential rooms available. yeah until they get through whatever they need to get through in which to get there do we have any idea? there and do we have any idea? i mean, doubt it goes into mean, i doubt it goes into detail, but what kind of tier of hotel this is? presumably the lower tier, is it? >> it's all all it's all >> i think it's all all it's all tiers. from what i've tiers. i mean, from what i've seen, so short on on seen, there's so short on on places to put these migrants. i mean, as you can imagine with no i mean there's like 600 came across yesterday we'll across yesterday i believe we'll get numbers it was 40, 40 across yesterday i believe we'll get thousand bers it was 40, 40 across yesterday i believe we'll get thousand last it was 40, 40 across yesterday i believe we'll get thousand last year. s 40, 40 across yesterday i believe we'll get thousand last year. yeah. 40 odd thousand last year. yeah. and it's to be higher and it's going to be even higher this year. >> utah and i'm assuming >> leo, utah and i'm assuming you do, you find i you do, bruce, you find i occasionally have to put my own hotel rooms on tour. i have noficed hotel rooms on tour. i have noticed the prices have gone up a bit lately. well, what i do and wondering whether is and i'm wondering whether it is like kind of supply and demand like a kind of supply and demand thing whack because of thing is out of whack because of this. i'm this. i don't. i'm just speculating, course. but, you speculating, of course. but, you know, and of course, we've seen, you since since tony blair you know, since since tony blair opened mass opened the floodgates for mass immigration and immigration went from year, which from about 50,000 a year, which is manageable to now is kind of manageable to now we've got like a million a year.
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>> got to live >> everybody's got to live somewhere. people somewhere. you know, people aren't climbing aren't just, you know, climbing up trees and sleeping in the trees. everybody's got to live in a bit in a house. well there's a bit of shortage of housing of a shortage of housing now. and obviously sending and obviously that's sending rental sky high. rental prices sky high. >> there's whammy. and >> there's a double whammy. and you know, people in this office talk that the rental talk about it that the rental market london has gone market in london has gone insane. and part of the reason of that is that the government have quite deliberately made it much a much less attractive to be a private landlord london. for private landlord in london. for many was an absurdly many years it was an absurdly profitable business you profitable business because you put gains well of put the capital gains as well of the house prices as well. they've made much less they've made it much less appealing through various appealing now through various deliberate messages, deliberate tax messages, measures, which means that landlords up , which landlords have sold up, which means the supply has been reduced. suddenly if you reduced. and suddenly if you arrive london hoping rent, arrive in london hoping to rent, it is in insanely expensive. yeah. and hotel rooms are insanely expensive as well because of this. >> if you do want a cheap hotel room when you're on tour, just turn say that you're a 14 turn up. say that you're a 14 year old albanian and lost your passport and they'll just stick you in. >> i'll have two free rooms. i don't know, but i have to take
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this down a couple of just get down of a bit of the down to kind of a bit of the pictures i've seen of 14 year old cross—channel migrants. >> not to change >> you would not have to change a they're all turned a thing. they're all turned up like fonz. like the fonz. >> you know, when like 47 >> you know, when he was like 47 trying to pretend he's like a high school. have we got in high school. what have we got in the guardian? leo so the guardian drama guardian has this ongoing drama over scandal. over the bbc scandal. >> person at the >> the young person at the centre of the scandal says centre of the bbc scandal says that made by his that the claims made by his mother are rubbish and he should know he's the young person at the centre this scandal. the centre of this scandal. so yeah, this is a yeah, i mean, this this is a real curveball. i didn't, you know, didn't i wasn't know, i didn't i wasn't expecting as the mother expecting this. as the mother has claims this kid has made claims that this kid was paid £35,000 over the course of a number of years, to be fair, i think. >> but yeah, maybe three years or something like that. three years from 17 to he was years from 17 to 20. he was spending money on crack or something. >> on crack. it is. i mean, yeah, i mean it makes you feel great, yeah. so she's, she's great, but yeah. so she's, she's made those you know, now made those claims, you know, now this coming out. i don't know this is coming out. i don't know if pr if the bbc's pr if it's pr if the bbc's pr machine into overdrive machine is going into overdrive trying to, trying to diminish
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this. i mean , we don't even this. i mean, we don't even know. i mean, we kind of do, but we don't we technically don't even the name of the press. even know the name of the press. >> don't know. there are certainly been certain individuals who seem have the individuals who seem to have the consensus to formed consensus seems to have formed around. can easily around. but that can very easily be i've seen that go be wrong. and i've seen that go wrong the past. and if it is wrong in the past. and if it is wrong, i feel terribly sorry for the involved. is the individuals involved. it is odd, i mean, you odd, isn't it? i mean, if you want it to be cynical about it, you might think that this lad wants the relationship to continue if he's continue it. you know, if he's been doing out of it been doing all right out of it as far as he's concerned, he doesn't maybe necessarily even feel abused. he might he doesn't maybe necessarily even feel in»used. he might he doesn't maybe necessarily even feel in quite he might he doesn't maybe necessarily even feel in quite ae might he doesn't maybe necessarily even feel in quite a viablet he doesn't maybe necessarily even feel in quite a viable ongoing was in quite a viable ongoing sort of business relationship. but like an only fans with a single customer sort thing. single customer sort of thing. >> but there's no route to promotion with with something like especially promotion with with something like that especially promotion with with something like that the especially promotion with with something like that the source specially promotion with with something like that the source ofecially promotion with with something like that the source of money now that the source of money might might be drying up, might now that the source of money migh lessjht be drying up, might now that the source of money migh less moneyirying up, might now that the source of money migh less money to ng up, might now that the source of money migh less money to spend might now that the source of money migh less money to spend with1t have less money to spend with his well, that be his salary. well, that may be certainly case. certainly the case. >> you what do you think >> bruce, you what do you think about this? >> i really would like to know as whether we will actually as to whether we will actually find who is, whether it find out who it is, whether it will seems will come out, because it seems to have like come from nowhere.
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will come out, because it seems to hnot like come from nowhere. will come out, because it seems to hnot necessarily rom nowhere. will come out, because it seems to hnot necessarily understand a. i'm not necessarily understand reading the motives of the mother by virtue of the people. she immediately contacted, because i don't think as far as i'm aware, she went to the police as a first off, but then maybe that's to do with the fact that the young person, as they are being referred to, had a problem with serious drugs . problem with serious drugs. >> and yeah, maybe we should bnngin >> and yeah, maybe we should bring in the final front page, which is the sun, which is the same story. and they, of course are doubling down on their version. >> so they they have a very different version of events. and they of youth spent they say family of youth spent hour beeb their fears in hour telling beeb their fears in may. we only spoke out to help save vulnerable addict child. may. we only spoke out to help save bbc1erable addict child. may. we only spoke out to help save bbc are ble addict child. may. we only spoke out to help savebbc are liarsddict child. may. we only spoke out to help savebbc are liars soct child. may. we only spoke out to help savebbc are liars so yomild. may. we only spoke out to help savebbc are liars so you know dad bbc are liars so you know that's to it's going to go to the wire i think it is but i think you're right if it comes out that it's not who it is alleged in the rumour mill. yeah that's a hellish way of doing for someone professionally. yeah. yeah. if you see what he will, he will be entitled to.
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>> i mean i don't know whether the compensation, but that's the trouble with social media is that there's nobody who can even apologise meaningfully, you know, to the guy who hosted stars in their eyes, can't even remember his name. >> now, matthew kelly. matthew kelly. terrible you know, his name through the mud. and then there was that >> and then there was that ridiculous who ridiculous individual who persuaded the labour deputy leader, wasn't it, who that looked like half a dozen, like famous figures from the past and so on. so on. >> so on. >> but then remember, they did the thing the kind of the thing with the kind of essentially did they essentially raided. did they read richard's house. have read cliff richard's house. have i got that. yeah. i got that. oh yeah. >> flew over it and choppers overhead. >> yeah. so i mean and he's never really recovered from that. i don't overhead. >> think i should have >> i think i should have rephrased anyway, rephrased that. anyway, that's for front page is done for all the front page is done now join us in a few seconds now but join us in a few seconds for deflating china. not quite so zero and scurvy making a comeback. you in
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> and welcome back to headliners with me, simon evans. we're going through the best of tuesday's stories with leo wallace, aukus and robert, the bruce devlin. so bruce, yay times now after fears of inflation, stagflation , inflation, stagflation, playstation and staycations , it playstation and staycations, it looks like they found a new kind of asian deflation . deflation? of asian deflation. deflation? >> deflation, yes. chinese factory prices, fuel concerns about deflation. i'm apparently the gate prices have fell at the
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fastest pace in more than seven and a half years. in june . and and a half years. in june. and consumer inflation was flat. rising concerns about deflation. >> so this is domestic deflation in china not happening here, not being exported here, but no . being exported here, but no. >> and a lot of it seems to do with the pork prices having dropped, which i didn't realise they exported. so much. but but but i was thinking about it was that i remember i don't know if you remember article that that i remember i don't know if you |werenber article that that i remember i don't know if you were building.article that that i remember i don't know if you were building. it:icle that that i remember i don't know if you were building. it was that that i remember i don't know if you were building. it was like they were building. it was like a kind of huge prison for pigs to breed battery pigs called a farm is it? yeah, right. okay no, but it was like a tiered thing. this wasn't a farm they weren't running about. these pigs weren't running about. these pigs were just in the. >> it was like a multi—storey car park. >> oh, no, i'm being serious. >> oh, no, i'm being serious. >> i thought. thought chinese >> i thought. i thought chinese people really well. >> i mean, even the danes treat pigs >> i mean, even the danes treat pigs than the brits. i pigs worse than the brits. i feel sorry for the british feel very sorry for the british farmers. we are virtually the only in the world who only people in the world who give lifestyle give our pigs a decent lifestyle and it seems like british farmers like a bit too much. >> what's wrong with this? >> what's wrong with this? >> what's wrong british
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>> what's wrong with british farmers? the up on farmers? waves up on the up on the sussex downs. and it's always a pleasure to see them snuffling around. and that's why i snuffling around. and that's why l pay snuffling around. and that's why i pay a bit extra for my we're talking the talking about the farmers of the pigs. right. but anyway, pigs. pigs right. but anyway, carry with the carry on. bruce with the analysis the chinese economy. analysis of the chinese economy. i'm sorry. yeah. >> was saying that the >> so i was saying that the consumer price index was unchanged year on year compared with in so what with a 0.2% in may. so what they've also seen as well, people are are very wary about buying houses or big ticket items such as cars and all that kind of stuff. yeah i don't know. >> and i suppose it matters, doesn't it? because although it's a long way away and it's a domestic economy is now the largest world, largest economy in the world, in the that we used to pay the same way that we used to pay attention to the american economy. kind of economy. this is the kind of thing could have a knock on thing that could have a knock on effect here. >> yeah, and this is i mean, this linked to us because we this is linked to us because we buy but i don't buy this stuff. but i don't i don't see how they're spinning it as terrible news. it's like don't see how they're spinning it a stuffible news. it's like don't see how they're spinning it a stuff that1ews. it's like don't see how they're spinning it a stuff that we s. it's like don't see how they're spinning it a stuff that we buy,; like don't see how they're spinning it a stuff that we buy, you; don't see how they're spinning it a stuff that we buy, you know, the stuff that we buy, you know, the stuff that we buy, you know, the that's been getting so the stuff that's been getting so much more expensive over the last couple it's going last couple of years, it's going to cheaper. i mean, to get a bit cheaper. i mean, it's be they're
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it's still going to be they're still going to be inflation. if you look over a three year period, there's still going to be to inflation be plenty of to inflation i suppose will happen, what suppose what will happen, what the fear is the deflation the fear is if the deflation is bad you want bad in an economy, you want to keep just at keep inflation in at just at around 2, ideally just around 1 or 2, ideally just enough incentivise, you know, enough to incentivise, you know, planning the future and that planning for the future and that kind stuff. planning for the future and that kin�*if stuff. planning for the future and that km” the uff. planning for the future and that km” the chinese economy >> if the chinese economy actually experience actually were to experience deflation, be deflation, that would be a little worrying sign little bit of a worrying sign because has basically been little bit of a worrying sign beceexposedis basically been little bit of a worrying sign beceexposed ending ally been little bit of a worrying sign beceexposed ending at( been little bit of a worrying sign beceexposed ending at( beeian just exposed ending at such an extraordinary for the last extraordinary rate for the last 30 fuelling 30 years. it's been fuelling all the in the world. the other activity in the world. yeah mean, yeah and we've seen i mean, japan's had a long time of deflation and it means like central banks can't lower interest stimulate interest rates to stimulate the economy can't go interest rates to stimulate the econo than can't go interest rates to stimulate the econo than zero. can't go interest rates to stimulate the econo than zero. yeah, n't go lower than zero. yeah, absolutely. they start lower than zero. yeah, absolutcrazy they start lower than zero. yeah, absolutcrazy ideas ay start lower than zero. yeah, absolutcrazy ideas like art having crazy ideas like literally people literally advising old people to commit suicide and commit ritualistic suicide and stuff. won't stuff. so hopefully that won't come anyway, come to china just yet. anyway, onto telegraph and leo, who onto the telegraph and leo, who was said , i think the was it who said, i think the people in this country have had enough experts from enough of experts from organisations with acronyms saying know what is saying that they know what is best getting it consistently best and getting it consistently wrong. was . wrong. no, that was. >> was it george osborne? >> was it george osborne? >> it was michael gove. michael gove lambasted , lambasted gove was lambasted, lambasted for saying that in the brexit
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debate. but it turns out turns out he's absolutely right. >> central bankers, >> so central bankers, the experts gove was experts that michael gove was talking about, got it spectacularly wrong on net zero inflation. so apparently the elites obsession with going green will cause prolonged pain for millions. so going green was supposed to make energy cheaper and we get free energy from the wind and from the sun. apparently not. it's really expensive. so instead of cutting bills, it's going to it's to going increase energy. we've already seen it. we've already seen it happen. and also it needs to be subsidised. and also it's always we it's not always there. so we still need to burn fossil fuels also. going also. another thing that's going to it is tax to be bad for it is tax collection is going to be hit. so an so if everybody moves to an electric to electric car, we're going to miss out on all the fuel duty. >> because you can't >> yeah, because you can't punish the punish people for doing the right to be a right thing. it used to be a very lucrative effort, didn't it? mean, the number of it? yeah. i mean, the number of parking fines i pick up lately just having coffee just from having an extra coffee and service you know, just from having an extra coffee and i'mervice you know, just from having an extra coffee and i'm sure you know, just from having an extra coffee and i'm sure the you know, just from having an extra coffee and i'm sure the electric] know, just from having an extra coffee and i'm sure the electric cars w, and i'm sure the electric cars get scot and of get away scot free and all of that as yeah, it's that as well. yeah, it's interesting because you used to park for about hours
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park for about eight hours to charge kind charge it. there was this kind of vision. was very kind of of vision. it was very kind of what it? the what candlelight, wasn't it? the sort of way they presented? oh, in of years of in a couple of years of switching green and switching to green and everything be shiny everything will just be shiny and surfaces and reflective surfaces and people hovering a couple people will be hovering a couple of ground. yeah, people will be hovering a couple of doesn't ground. yeah, people will be hovering a couple of doesn't feel ground. yeah, people will be hovering a couple of doesn't feel like �*ound. yeah, people will be hovering a couple ofdoesn't feel like that, yeah, people will be hovering a couple of doesn't feel like that, doesi, it? >> instead, the reality like >> instead, the reality is like actual somalia. yeah >> and can't afford to eat. >> and we can't afford to eat. >> and we can't afford to eat. >> the other problem is >> but also the other problem is apparently know. i don't know if this or not, the this is correct or not, but the weight electric car is weight of an electric car is causing potholes and more causing more potholes and more damage yeah. and damage on the roads. yeah. and also it's something do with also it's something to do with the there's the batteries. there's rare elements degrade and elements which don't degrade and all that kind of stuff. so it's all that kind of stuff. so it's a bit plus the fact as well. i think don't in think if you don't live in a city like london, it's still like in scotland. there isn't the infrastructure i live in brighton, they desperately want to promote electric cars. >> no charging points >> there are no charging points . consider one. . i would probably consider one. there breaks and stuff. there are tax breaks and stuff. there's no way i would ever be able to next one. able to park next to one. but they're expensive. they're so expensive. >> yeah seem be. >> yeah. yeah they seem to be. >> yeah. yeah they seem to be. >> we're way off yet. anyway, >> we're a way off yet. anyway, it's bankers . i it's good to see the bankers. i think he deserves a think specifically he deserves a name . mark carney, the name check. mark carney, the banken name check. mark carney, the banker, a former governor of the
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banker, a former governor of the bank doubled down on bank of england, doubled down on his assertion that net zero transition is disinflationary . transition is disinflationary. we. ha ha ha ha ha ha ha. no doubt he's still got a good job. daily mail next. bruce this is a bit more likely to return to victorian values. are you keen on this? >> yeah, i'll go off my carp thing. so the cost of living crisis sparked the return of things scurvy, rickets and things like scurvy, rickets and other dickensian victorian era illnesses . and as malnutrition illnesses. and as malnutrition rates double in a decade. so obviously goes on to talk about people having to use food banks and things. but that's really bad that a lot of people they're saying, a lot of parents are doing a tea and toast diet so that they can kind of on that they can kind of pass on some more food or more some more decent food or more nutritious should i say nutritious food. should i say they're ? they're lazy? >> no, it ain't. kids toast every day is not a no, no, no, ho. 110. >> no. >> not saving the paint are eating the toast. >> they're not having the meals. so i don't think it's necessarily always the children that have got the take it all back. >> yeah, i'd like to maintain
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that they're lazy. >> oh, no. okay jack monroe. is that her name ? and she tell you that her name? and she tell you have to drain the tomato ketchup from your spaghetti . whoops. from your spaghetti. whoops. there looks more like an italian meal. >> yeah. i mean, it's. i don't know . i think. i think yeah, she know. i think. i think yeah, she did that. >> put the spaghetti hoops in a sieve wash the tomato sieve and wash off the tomato sauce. can have sauce. and then you can have that soup later. and that as a soup later. and meanwhile, just. i mean, no, she's insane. wow. but anyway, but this, i mean, this isn't i don't think in this country we've really got this issue where afford, where people can't afford, you know, can to eat know, if you can afford to eat junk is what they're junk food, which is what they're saying, are junk food. >> they're not getting the vitamins because it's not nutritious, nutritious enough. if things like lentils, if you eat things like lentils, chickpeas, , then chickpeas, even chicken, then you can get all those things really cheaply compared to junk food. >> and they could very easily distribute vitamin pills if they're really about scurvy. >> apparently some people, depending you get is tax depending if you get is a tax credits other benefit credits or some other benefit that you can some that you can get some complimentary vitamins if you're on, i think that probably works. >> but i mean, just to switch my persona, i do
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persona, like flip it 180, i do understand when life is miserable , you turn to junk food miserable, you turn to junk food to cheer you up because you get little rush, don't you, from the and if you're working two and also, if you're working two jobs, know, and they're hard jobs, you know, and they're hard jobs, you know, and they're hard jobs, to jobs, you don't have the time to like you know don't like you know you don't feel like you know you don't feel like you? yeah. yeah. but like it do you? yeah. yeah. but everybody's everybody's got the time a can chickpeas everybody's everybody's got the timethey're a can chickpeas everybody's everybody's got the timethey'relike:an chickpeas everybody's everybody's got the timethey're like :an come eas everybody's everybody's got the timethey're like :an come on. and they're like £0.20 come on. >> an education problem, and they're like £0.20 come on. >> haveeducation problem, and they're like £0.20 come on. >> have you ation problem, and they're like £0.20 come on. >> have you become»blem, and they're like £0.20 come on. >> have you become»b|shill not a have you become a shill for big chickpea? >> that's twice one section. >> that's twice in one section. 617 on your tour, just 617 on your tour, i've just become less scottish since i've moved london. he's on the moved to london. he's on the road to hummus. yeah. final story in this section. tuesday's daily express. leo unlike oscar wilde , harry something more wilde, harry has something more to declare than genius. to declare than his genius. >> so the us department of homeland security has turned down a freedom of information act request to reveal details of prince harry's us visa application for the second time, despite a furore over his drug use. i mean, the ferrari was was mostly in the express, but no, there is it his memoir , prince there is it his memoir, prince harry said he took marijuana, cocaine and psychedelic mushrooms. i'm not sure if it was all at once or if he's got a
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name for that concoction, but. >> but yeah, earl grey speedball i >> -- >> he took all those drugs . >> he took all those drugs. yeah. what's that? it's like. it's like pink floyd, meet motley . he took all it took motley crew. he took all it took all those drugs . but then i'm all those drugs. but then i'm assuming when he applied for his us visa, he didn't say, oh, by the i'm habitual user of the way, i'm a habitual user of class because if you see class c drugs because if you see that, you don't get a visa in the so there's obviously the us. so there's obviously i mean, there is a thing in memoirs. >> i nobody's ever w—l >> i mean nobody's ever held to account for memoirs, are they? most celebrity memoirs and showbiz contain criminal showbiz memoirs contain criminal activity or another. activity of one kind or another. sometimes than nobody sometimes more than just nobody has called in on has ever like called in on it. it just seems like a it just seems to be like a i don't know, just an unwritten rule. i have to say. i preferred him when he doing all those him when he was doing all those drugs . clean, drugs as well. it's clean, harry. don't like. drugs as well. it's clean, haryeahion't like. drugs as well. it's clean, haryeah ,>n't like. drugs as well. it's clean, haryeah , yeah.:e. needs he needs >> yeah, yeah. he needs he needs that up a bit. that mature up a bit. >> he was when he had an ak 47 and a bag of whisk. he was a good lad, a of weed as good lad, a bag of weed as elijah . elijah. >> elijah. >> elijah. >> so it frees him with. >> so it frees him with. >> do you know what? i really don't understand? he must don't understand? that he must have have have known that there would have been non botox raised
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been a few non botox raised eyebrows. you're revealing eyebrows. when you're revealing that where you live and how that and where you live and how tough they on their drug tough they are on their drug policy going in because you would and you would be denied a esta and you wouldn't get in, would you? >> all right, isn't he? >> but he's all right, isn't he? he's in. and basically homeland security back security have got his back on this well. they're not this one as well. they're not going release the going to release it to the tabloids. yeah, closed ranks. >> yes. >> yes. >> well, we've made our way. and still no sign of harry, but lots more come , including the more to come, including the future of warfare. of future of warfare. the future of women's prisons and the future of pageants. we'll see of beauty pageants. we'll see you few moments. is the you in a few moments. is the weather warm feeling inside weather that warm feeling inside from boxed boilers? >> proud sponsors of weather on . gb news alex deakin here from the met office with your latest gb news weather forecast. >> wet one tonight for large chunks of the country. we do have met office yellow warnings in place, quite mild and quite blustery, all thanks to low pressure that's been throwing cloud and rain in from the atlantic for much of the day. across the west , whilst we've across the west, whilst we've seen sunny spells the seen some sunny spells in the east, cloud now
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east, the cloud is now thickening further. rain to come across england and the across southwest england and the midlands. the heaviest rain midlands. but the heaviest rain across have across scotland where we do have across scotland where we do have a office yellow warning in a met office yellow warning in place, some downpours place, also seen some downpours today across parts of northern ireland. further ireland. so some further disruption through disruption likely through this evening overnight. does evening and overnight. it does turn a little drier over north wales and northern england. quite particularly quite a mild night, particularly in south—east. temperatures in the south—east. temperatures really up really holding up here in a dull, damp, humid start to tuesday. should peter tuesday. that rain should peter out across east anglia and southern counties of england. and then it's a case of, yes, some sunny spells, but also plenty of showers moving through some sunny spells, but also plentbrisk;howers moving through some sunny spells, but also plentbrisk;howersfor)ving through some sunny spells, but also plentbrisk;howersfor)ving thut gh on a brisk breeze for most, but light winds in northern scotland means we could see some slow moving, intense or even thundery downpours here during the afternoon. temperature wise , afternoon. temperature wise, again around or maybe a touch below average for the time of yeah below average for the time of year. struggling to get into the low 20s most places is a low 20s for most places is a dry, sunny start across eastern england wednesday. england during wednesday. but then the showers get going again through the day. so again, it'll be case of dodging the be a case of dodging the downpours. perhaps not as many, not intense , but still some
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not as intense, but still some lively showers moving through. and again, things on the cool side and the breeze with temperatures high teens or low 20s best. 20s at best. >> that warm feeling inside from boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . weather on.
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. welcome back to headliners. >> now, bruce, over to tuesday's
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mirror and good news. according to a netflix documentary , still to a netflix documentary, still everything to play for in the race to build perfect killer robots . robots. >> well so this is yeah, this is killer robots, which is a documentary which i think aired today. yeah i'm about today. tonight yeah i'm about i in warfare and world powers in a rush to get killer robots on the battlefield. and i arms race despite fears many have expressed and voiced their concerns about the speed at which ai is advancing with a new documentary on netflix one and potentially the catastrophic impact it could have on warfare . or the one thing that i did think was really very interesting was with drones and war, although that's not necessarily anything new. it says here ai is better at identifying white skinned people than those non white skinned people , identifying them as people, identifying them as people, identifying them as people or identifying who they are specifically. i think people say that the person in which to you know, so they could be going for the wrong target. if you see
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what i mean. >> so, yes, well, we have seen that before with hand dryers, haven't lavatories. yes. haven't we, in lavatories. yes. right. you the the right. you know, the ones the automatic that watch for automatic ones that watch for a hand underneath them and hand to come underneath them and they apparently much they apparently they're much more a more likely to function if a white hand comes under them than a brown skinned one. >> racist . yeah. yeah. >> oh, everything was a few years ago. there was somebody quoted on this story, a theme on this earlier . quoted on this story, a theme on this earlier. i this story on twitter earlier. i thought i quite liked it. it was an old star trek episode from about william shatner era, about 1965. william shatner era, in shatner , kirk and the in which shatner, kirk and the crew encounter a couple of planets that are war with one planets that are at war with one another. they just do it another. but now they just do it by computer and when the computer determines who won a certain battle, they then just agree to , like, kill that many agree to, like, kill that many of their men . and i know it's of their men. and i know it's star trek is such a loaded absolute tosh sort of ai version of it. the point being that kirk finds this distasteful. he says, you should have to confront the horror of war. the fear is, i suppose, the point that they were making is that if we get an
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ai war where there are jets and tanks and drones and everything is completely unmanned and these things clash on the battlefield initially it looks like a good idea because you think , well, idea because you think, well, this you know, body this will save, you know, body bags which is what bags coming home, which is what everyone to avoid. right. everyone wants to avoid. right. but, is then but, of course, there is then the you just go it lowers the danger you just go it lowers the danger you just go it lowers the for getting the threshold for getting engagedin the threshold for getting engaged in the first place. >> yeah, i mean, i think >> yeah, well, i mean, i think i think the russia—ukraine war has sort of blown some of the sort of blown apart some of the ideas what war could be. ideas about what war could be. the that could be this the idea that it could be this attritional. you know, tanks and, like trench and, you know, like trench warfare thought warfare with everybody thought that we'd never have a war like that we'd never have a war like that again . everybody thought that again. everybody thought it was asymmetric was going to be this asymmetric thing where big powers fight, you whatever, or you know, isis or whatever, or or it'll just be done, you know, very quickly with precision weapons . and. no, actually, you weapons. and. no, actually, you know, we're right back in the trenches. fact, sometimes trenches. and in fact, sometimes using from the second world trenches. and in fact, sometimes usingand from the second world trenches. and in fact, sometimes usingand people the second world trenches. and in fact, sometimes usingand people are second world trenches. and in fact, sometimes usingand people are having world trenches. and in fact, sometimes usingand people are having to»rld war. and people are having to cope trauma . cope with horrific trauma. >> you know, their legs blown off in very old fashioned ways, as we saw. >> so, mean, the trouble with >> so, i mean, the trouble with using or using interconnected using al or using interconnected tech is, you know, can
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tech is, you know, people can use or it can can use jammers or it can can be hacked whatever. hacked or whatever. >> i suppose i mean, >> but i suppose the i mean, among the many fears, i suppose one fear that they won't have is that will affect employment that it will affect employment opportunities for young men . you opportunities for young men. you know, there is but that is potential that still remains quite a significant part of the british employment offer. and people can get trained up and so on. but the i suppose my kind of i don't know how well educated this fear is, is that it becomes much easier and quicker for our smaller powers to sort of leapfrog the progress towards becoming serious players in war, you know what i mean? >> yeah, but at least, at least the ai stuff would be battlefield rather than, you know, a small country develops a nuke and all of a all of a sudden everybody's got to kowtow to korea. to it. like north korea. >> i suppose north >> that's true. i suppose north korea will have well, korea will have ai soon. well, anyway , have have a look at the anyway, have have a look at the documentary. return to it documentary. maybe return to it tomorrow telegraph next documentary. maybe return to it tom andrv telegraph next documentary. maybe return to it tom and another telegraph next documentary. maybe return to it tom and another civil|raph next documentary. maybe return to it tom and another civil service xt leo and another civil service employee fails to grasp that kill whitey is meant as a
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critique of the social construct of whiteness, not an actual death threat. >> so a ministry of defence civil servant launched a discrimination claim after a diversity training course featured an academic paper which he claimed attacked white people. and he might have had a point because the research paper was called the psychosis of whiteness . i mean, can you whiteness. i mean, can you imagine? it's ridiculous. so he sued the government for race discrimination and harassment and claimed that the way that diversity and inclusion is being implemented with the mod breach is service code. he is the civil service code. he says it's of left wing says it's a sort of left wing marxist political ideology, but his case has been dismissed. they he funded they said he funded fundamentally misread the meaning of this paper called the psychosis of whiteness. i mean, it's called the psychosis of whiteness. how can you misread that? you imagine they whiteness. how can you misread that it? you imagine they whiteness. how can you misread that it? you )u imagine they whiteness. how can you misread that it? you know, gine they whiteness. how can you misread that it? you know, itne they whiteness. how can you misread that it? you know, it was they whiteness. how can you misread that it? you know, it was called had it? you know, it was called the criminality of blackness or the criminality of blackness or the ness of the exploding ness of muslimness. so racist. >> kehinde right. he is >> kehinde andrews right. he is a he is an extraordinary provocateur. he just reviewed a book written by another black or
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black conservative about why britain is different from america. and it's the most absurdly borderline libellous book review i've ever read . he's book review i've ever read. he's an extraordinarily aggressive academic who has absolutely titled that paper. in order to create this kind of furore. right. what's actually in the paper? or at least there's a there's a documentary version of it. it's quite interesting . it it. it's quite interesting. it looks series of films which looks at a series of films which hollywood has made over the years, have retold stories years, which have retold stories about between about the relationship between whites in america. whites and blacks in america. right. in order to present like the white people as rescuing the black people in like like slave stories in which there are white saviours and so on. right? it's a fairly well—trodden, you know, academic path. it's an ongoing discussion. so why give it a racist hinckley he's given it this title and now they're surprised that this guy feels like he's, you know, under attack. >> i'm surprised the case was dismissed. i mean, it seems seems like he's at least got a point . point. >> but what do you think, bruce ? >> 7.
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>>i 7- >> i don't 7— >> i don't know 7 >> i don't know what i ? >> i don't know what i think about it. to be perfectly honest with you. had no idea it with you. and i had no idea it was in glasgow . that's i suppose was in glasgow. that's i suppose that's big quizzical thing. that's my big quizzical thing. l, that's my big quizzical thing. i, wasn't aware that this was i, i wasn't aware that this was all going on 50 minutes from where live in scotland, behind where i live in scotland, behind the facade . the austere facade. >> father. yeah. sorry >> father. yeah. sorry >> yeah, of course. humza humza stood up in parliament and was like, wait , white, you know, as like, wait, white, you know, as if it some horrible sin to if it was some horrible sin to be scrubbed from your but this is they think there's this view which i don't like in which i don't think like 1 in 100 who haven't which i don't think like 1 in 1iyou who haven't which i don't think like 1 in 1iyou know, who haven't which i don't think like 1 in 1iyou know, a who haven't which i don't think like 1 in 1iyou know, a phd 1o haven't which i don't think like 1 in 1iyou know, a phd in haven't , you know, got a phd in sociology can grasp. >> i struggled but i can just repeat they have this idea repeat it. they have this idea that is nothing. it's that whiteness is nothing. it's not not your not your skin, it's not your ethnicity. a social ethnicity. it's a it's a social construct. it's an abstract proposition which allows you to experience certain privileges in society. this is what they society. and this is what they want to deconstruct. you know, i'm when some of those privileges i'm not feeling privileges this i'm not feeling people are doing papers called the whiteness. people are doing papers called the i'm whiteness. people are doing papers called the i'm feeling 1iteness. people are doing papers called the i'm feeling 1iten> i'm not feeling very loved and privileged. you know what i mean? >> this is what equalisation feels like. leo mira now bruce and the struggling bbc news
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channel could soon be confronting it further cuts to its budget. >> yes . so the tv fee rise could >> yes. so the tv fee rise could be cut next year to ease financial strain on households going back to the cost of living crisis last year, former culture secretary nadine dorries, who was i'm sure she was a woman that forgot that she had a job and ended up in the jungle. do you remember? she says, and i'm a celebrity, i'm an. and she announced that the fee would be frozen two years before frozen for two years before rising 2024. with the sorry, rising in 2024. with the sorry, with inflation, this rise could take the price from 159. is that how much it is to 172? >> i mean, it feels to me like it's much more likely to have a freezing effect, a chilling effect on the bbc than it is to actually help anybody. budget for the winter isn't it? it's not going to make much difference. >> £172 is a lot of money. i mean, i get round but that's not it's not either or. >> it's going to be frozen at that. they're not going to put an extra ten on it. so they're basically a ten or a
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basically saying a ten or a year is not going to go up by the tenner that it would done tenner that it would have done if they had kept the amount you have pay be 172, which have to pay would be 172, which is a lot of money. yeah, but you're have to you're already going to have to pay you you're already going to have to pay you you don't. pay that if you you don't. >> just don't pay it. i don't pay you pay it. yeah it's easy. what you do letters. do is they send you letters. they you letters and they they send you letters and they say, oh you're doing it for tv. it's yeah, you know what it's like, yeah, you know what else? don't dishwasher else? i don't have a dishwasher licence. a licence. i don't have a microwave licence. you know what? free man, what? because i'm a free man, i don't pay like coming don't need to pay it like coming to. i don't remember signing that to. i don't remember signing tha it's not it's the news >> it's not it's not the news story. story is about story. the news story is about her that she's not going her saying that she's not going to put the licence by an to put the tv licence up by an extra and tell you, extra ten. and i'll tell you, i'll else. i'll tell you what else. >> third of all women are >> a third of all women who are convicted are convicted over the tv a horrible end tv licence. it's a horrible end to trans prison. it's a brutal it's a brutal crime against women. >> we get utterly derailed. tuesday's telegraph, leo and in perhaps tonight's least surprising news, some wolves in woolly jumpers are just doing it to get access to the knitting service. >> so male sex offenders are apparently faking trans
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identities to move to women's prisons so they can hang out with the tv licence. yeah. what's a handy tip for any bbc people who might be facing a little conundrum, but evidence unearthed by the by the prisoners newspaper inside times found that inmates were pretending to change gender to access the female estate. the figures show that men jailed for sexual are twice as sexual offences are twice as likely to identify as trans women than men jailed for other types of offences. i'm not sure if we're the cart before if we're putting the cart before the or what's the horse there or what's the causal , but yeah, i mean causal link, but yeah, i mean it's not just in prison, it's also in female changing rooms and female toilets . and we've and female toilets. and we've seen, you know, prisoners such as isla bryson and say that they're transgender, which is all you need to do . you just all you need to do. you just say, oh, i'm a woman. and then, you know, you're a woman. you're magically a woman naive that magically a woman naive t that they would nobody would they would think nobody would take that. they would think nobody would takiyeah, that. they would think nobody would takiyeah, butthat. they would think nobody would takiyeah, but the. they would think nobody would takiyeah, but the thing >> yeah, well, but the thing with angela bryson, i do believe is she was segregated. is that she was segregated. i don't think she was. he. yeah he
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is now. >> but some of these people, the thing is they are mad. i mean it's not i'm not saying they're like cynical. and they go, hey, hey, hey, hey. that that, that fellow yesterday who was on the podium trafalgar podium in was it trafalgar square saying square or somewhere like saying punch in the face. punch a terf in the face. >> beautiful woman. >> beautiful woman. >> is his own knackers >> but he is in his own knackers off, i'm allowed to off, i believe if i'm allowed to say that at this time of night. i has done horrific i mean, he has done horrific things to himself pursuit things to himself in the pursuit of idea he has of of some twisted idea he has of himself. he's not like machias auen himself. he's not like machias alien and a long game. alien and playing a long game. these people are they are genuinely disturbed. it's not like a you know, but it's they i don't know, maybe they even believe that they have that they have found the key to their psychic pain. yeah >> and it's i mean, it's a real shame for genuine trans trans people who you know, i know. but sometimes it means you don't get sent to prison at all. there was tanya hughes recently , who's a tanya hughes recently, who's a who's with the child who's a, caught with the child and spared jail completely because they couldn't work out whether to send her to a male or send him to a male or female
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prison. wow >> final section coming up with, appropriately enough, by monkeys is weight loss risks and stag don'ts. we'll see you in a couple of minutes .
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and welcome back to headliners for our final section straight into weight loss news. leo and the telegraph have potentially alarming information for those hoping for miracle cures. >> yes, this is always a worry when there's new drugs. the weight loss jab wegovy is being investigated for self—harm and suicide risk . investigated for self—harm and suicide risk. but on the plus side, at least the coffin will be lighter to carry . so the be lighter to carry. so the wonder drug is being investigated by the european watchdog. after cases of suicidal thoughts are reported. and of course you're going to get suicidal. you're not eating all the nice food that keeps you, keeps you happy. that's that a thought. that's it's
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called comfort eating for reason. >> carbs do keep people's mood up when they first stop eating them. they suffer a bit, them. they tend to suffer a bit, but it usually goes away after 3 or 4 days fortnight at most. maybe don't maybe maybe that's i don't know. maybe this you on in that same this keeps you on in that same sort i've sort of mood, right? i've done that you do get they that before. you do get they sometimes call it a sort of sometimes they call it a sort of flu like symptoms almost . it's flu like symptoms almost. it's not just in your head. you actually a bit rubbish. actually feel a bit rubbish. >> comes from carbs. >> it comes from carbs. >> it comes from carbs. >> you stop eating carbs , >> when you stop eating carbs, sorry, what sorry, you just move to what they high low carb they call a high fat, low carb diet. more sugar, no more diet. no more sugar, no more bread, no more rice , no more bread, no more rice, no more pasta. you're allowed a few, bread, no more rice, no more pastonou're allowed a few, bread, no more rice, no more past of like �*e allowed a few, bread, no more rice, no more pastof like ancientzd a few, bread, no more rice, no more pastof like ancient grainsw, bread, no more rice, no more pastof like ancient grains ., sort of like ancient grains. yeah, okay. but you may need you eat eggs and cheese and you get these flu like symptoms because ice cream is essential for being. >> yeah, right. >> yeah, right. >> yeah, right. >> yeah . but some people do get >> yeah. but some people do get it a lot worse. my wife and i have both tried those sort of diets and i kind of. i feel all right. she goes absolutely mental. she to a day mental. she has to go a day without without comfort without without sugary comfort stuff. like , i'm not stuff. and it's like, i'm not like the michael because like taking the michael because she's more capable of she's more than capable of putting up with other discomforts find
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discomforts that i find intolerable, noise and intolerable, like noise and children and things, you know, so , so , you know, it's horses so, so, you know, it's horses for courses. but i do understand if people are struggling with that and not being made aware of it, it might still work, you know? >> yeah, yeah. >> yeah, yeah. >> because the other weight loss drug ozempic drug of the moment is ozempic very similar things, i think. yeah, think that's primarily yeah, i think that's primarily to diabetes . to treat diabetes. >> yeah. well, it was originally for that and now everyone's gone >> yeah. well, it was originally f> yeah. well, it was originally f> yeah. well, it was originally f> ehm that's yes exactly . it is >> ehm that's yes exactly. it is a very specific brand of monkey. the macaque bisexuality . ehm a the macaque bisexuality. ehm a common trait among species of monkeys. a study found in the animal kingdom. same sex behaviour is not uncommon. in factit behaviour is not uncommon. in fact it has been observed in over 1500 species, including dolphins, penguins and even hons dolphins, penguins and even lions which especially dolphins, dolphins are so randy. >> they will do. really? >> they will do. really? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> are they like they. they can also produce an erection at will. that right. also produce an erection at wilidolphins. that right. >> dolphins. >> dolphins. >> they actually think it up.
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>> how did. how do you know what they're thinking about? i don't know. >> but that's apparently been tested. i don't know. right. yeah or yeah so maybe for a treat or something. right? something. i guess, right? >> well so people train >> yeah. well so people train dolphins erections dolphins to get erections when they're sardine , you they're offered a sardine, you know, but before they sign them up marines , they've got up for the marines, they've got to go through rigorous psychometric to go through rigorous psychormy ic to go through rigorous psychormy goodness . >> oh, my goodness. >> oh, my goodness. >> so it said that 72% of the male macaques engage in same sex behaviour . male macaques engage in same sex behaviour. and also what was said here by by imperial college london, by professor vincent salvini . i don't know, salvini. i don't know, unfortunately , there is a belief unfortunately, there is a belief that with some people that same sex behaviour is unnatural and some countries still enforce the death penalty for homosexuality. yeah, there's also like some macaques kill their infants as well and eat them. >> i don't that's >> i don't think that's necessarily a defence of the behaviour, but that's same behaviour, but that's the same with hamsters. >> can eat the >> hamsters can eat the baby absolutely. >> yeah. yeah. that's not the unnatural thing is a bit. but i think it is interesting. it seems to be genetically predetermined in them, which is that finding, that is a significant finding, isn't the first
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isn't it? i think it's the first time found that homosexual time they found that homosexual behaviour genetically time they found that homosexual behaviourin genetically time they found that homosexual behaviourin some:ically time they found that homosexual behaviourin some species over prevalent in some species over and above , you know, not not and above, you know, not not like kind of filling in like they do that, like kind of acting out and even and even some of them have preference as well, is right? well, right? is that right? >> like being in >> maybe it's like being in prison or prison . well, being a prison or prison. well, being a prison, yeah. but daily mail next. >> leo sad news on the state of fellowship, friendship and face to face mate hood. >> it's so 1 in 10 british people reveal that they don't have real friend. as have a single real friend. as our lives are spent on our social lives are spent on social and online gaming. social media and online gaming. which more than which sounds more fun than having friends. you having real friends. like you don't actually leave the don't have to actually leave the house. tiresome. you house. that's tiresome. you just. tiresome. just. yeah, less tiresome. but yeah, for 4.4 million yeah, apparently for 4.4 million people across the uk derive all of their social interaction in from the internet. even you don't even talk to the cashier at the supermarket . it's that at the supermarket. it's that self—checkout now. yeah. so >> hello. how are you? beep swipe your sparks card . and it swipe your sparks card. and it is . you know, i do notice shops is. you know, i do notice shops at marks and spencer's. i have friends in brighton and hove
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where we live, but my best friends are still in london. and you can kind of imagine how you might just spend your time talking to them online. yeah, you know, i did a little of you know, i did a little bit of that during lockdown. was that during lockdown. it was interesting. being able interesting. i missed being able to go to pub, but to go to the pub, but i reignited some friendships that had been allowed kind had been allowed to kind of just, you because suddenly just, you know, because suddenly you're call. you you're on a zoom call. you think, might as call think, i might as well call my best mate? think, i might as well call my besandite? think, i might as well call my besand did you do any zoom >> and did you do any zoom drinks? >> yeah, loads of zoom drinks. i even lighting >> yeah, loads of zoom drinks. i even oh, lighting >> yeah, loads of zoom drinks. i even oh, would lighting >> yeah, loads of zoom drinks. i even oh, would have.ighting >> yeah, loads of zoom drinks. i even oh, would have aihting >> yeah, loads of zoom drinks. i even oh, would have a bit1g >> yeah, loads of zoom drinks. i even oh, would have a bit of them. oh, i would have a bit of mood lighting in my office, you know, instead of just having a desk lamp. >> you meant lighting >> i thought you meant lighting . sorry. thinking flaming . sorry. i was thinking flaming sambuca. i was thinking like a ipsis out or something like that. >> final story. we got 30s on it. leo good news on swearing. it's something we can still do better than machines by the sound of it. >> oh, so king's college london, one of our universities one of our esteemed universities , really important , has found the really important thing using a robot to invent thing of using a robot to invent new swear words. and apparently, the best new swear is the best new swear word is either dit. what? seems either dit. what? which seems like a real swear word or a bangen like a real swear word or a banger, which isn't a swear word
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at all. >> banger is like it's a very mild term for somebody who's a bit sexually active than bit more sexually active than attractiveness warrants , isn't attractiveness warrants, isn't it? that's about it, yeah. >> do you mean gore? >> do you mean gore? >> well, the. shaggy yeah, i guess. know. isn't that a word? >> well, the. shaggy yeah, i gthink know. isn't that a word? >> well, the. shaggy yeah, i gthink you're isn't that a word? >> well, the. shaggy yeah, i gthink you're allowed: a word? >> well, the. shaggy yeah, i gthink you're allowed to word? >> well, the. shaggy yeah, i gthink you're allowed to sayd? i think you're allowed to say that. i don't know. i apologise if wrong, but does if that's wrong, but it does seem very doesn't seem very, very weak, doesn't it? think it? i mean, when you think bangers, it's just so easy to think stronger, more think of much stronger, more impactful think impactful words. yeah, i think sometimes does sometimes a simple fiddle does it. fiddle de dee is marvellous, especially your beautiful especially in your beautiful scottish is scottish. anyway, the show is nearly over . let's take another nearly over. let's take another quick tuesday's front quick look at tuesday's front pages. daily mail. 1 in 6 pages. the daily mail. 1 in 6 people know who's scandal hit bbc star is or is not. of course i news bbc presenter did nothing wrong claims young person at centre of sex photos scandal the sun dad bbc are liars. the financial times has biden salute solid uk ties. financial times has biden salute solid uk ties . the guardian solid uk ties. the guardian young person at centre of bbc scandal says claims are rubbish and the daily star. we're going to el nino. those were your
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front pages. that is all we have time for. thank you to my guest, leo, kirsten, bruce devlin. i'll be back tomorrow with leo again and steve and alan. that's at 11 pm. if you're watching at 5:00 tomorrow morning, stay tuned for breakfast. otherwise, thank you and night and good night. >> temperatures rising. >> the temperatures rising. boxed solar , the proud sponsors boxed solar, the proud sponsors of weather on . gb news alex of weather on. gb news alex deakin here from the met office with your latest gb news weather forecast. >> wet one tonight for large chunks of the country. we do have met office yellow warnings in place quite mild and quite blustery. all thanks to low pressure that's been throwing cloud and rain in from the atlantic for much of the day across the west, whilst we've seen some sunny spells in the east, cloud now east, the cloud is now thickening further. rain come thickening further. rain to come across england and the across southwest england and the midlands. but the heaviest rain across do have across scotland where we do have across scotland where we do have a office yellow warning in a met office yellow warning in place, downpours place, also seen some downpours today across parts of northern ireland. so some further disruption likely this disruption likely through this evening. and overnight it does
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turn drier over turn a little drier over north wales northern england. wales and northern england. quite particularly wales and northern england. quite south—east. particularly wales and northern england. quite south—east. temperatures in the south—east. temperatures really up here really holding up here in a dull, humid start to dull, damp, humid start to tuesday. that rain should peter out across east anglia and southern counties of england. and then it's a case of, yes, some sunny spells, also some sunny spells, but also plenty moving through plenty of showers moving through on brisk breeze for most. but on a brisk breeze for most. but light winds in northern scotland means could some slow means we could see some slow moving , intense, even thundery moving, intense, even thundery downpours here during the afternoon. temperature wise, again around or maybe below average for the time of year. struggling to get into the low 20s for most places, a dry, sunny start across eastern england during wednesday , but england during wednesday, but then the showers get going again through the day. so again, it'll be of dodging the be a case of dodging the downpours as perhaps not as many, as intense, but still many, not as intense, but still some showers moving some light showers moving through. and again , things on through. and again, things on the cool side in the breeze with temperatures high teens or low 20s at best, the temperatures rising , boxed solar 20s at best, the temperatures rising, boxed solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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channel >> hello. good evening. it's me, jacob rees—mogg on state of the

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