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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  July 18, 2023 1:00am-2:00am BST

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in the nhs. in the nhs . russia says its used in the nhs. russia says its defence ministry is preparing for a response to the overnight attack that damaged the road bndge attack that damaged the road bridge linking crimea to southern russia. satellite images show the damage which president putin blames for ukraine calling it cruel and senseless . the bridge ukraine calling it cruel and senseless. the bridge is a major supply link for russian troops fighting in ukraine. kyiv has not claimed responsibility . not claimed responsibility. british tourists continue to face extreme heat as global temperatures soar . greece temperatures soar. greece recorded 40 degrees with two wildfires, was raging through coastal towns near athens and forcing residents to flee their homes . meanwhile, in spain, homes. meanwhile, in spain, temperatures could rise to as high as 44 degrees in some regions this week. scientists warn that climate change will make heat waves more frequent, more severe and deadly . and more severe and deadly. and queen camilla celebrated her 76th birthday today . a 41 gun
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76th birthday today. a 41 gun salute by the king's troop . salute by the king's troop. royal horse artillery battery took place in green park to mark the special occasion. it's her majesty's first birthday since becoming queen, meaning it's the first time, the day has been honoured with a military display day tv , online, dab+ radio and day tv, online, dab+ radio and on tunein. this is gb news nato time for headliners . time for headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners . >> hello and welcome to headliners. i'm nik dixon and i'm joined by an impeccably balanced panel. tonight, we have official jewish person josh howie and literal leo kearse. >> that's to according some tweets. >> yes, i envy . >> yes, i envy. >> yeah, sorry about that . >> yeah, sorry about that. >> yeah, sorry about that. >> sorry for those intros, lads, but how are you.7 how >> sorry for those intros, lads, but how are you? how is your lived experience tonight? >> pretty good. yeah >> pretty good. yeah >> good. i always think we should make this section funny at the start. what do you think?
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>> should >> should we should we? >> i think. >> i think. >> let's go anti—comedy. >> let's go anti—comedy. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> awkward. bants. >> just awkward. bants. >> just awkward. bants. >> yeah. yeah with >> yeah. yeah let's go with that. the team that. anyway, it's the a team tonight, guys. og tonight, guys. it's the 0g official headliners. line—up so let's smash it let's just absolutely smash it out and have a out of the park and let's have a look tuesday's pages. look at tuesday's front pages. so mail goes with so the daily mail goes with turning point in fight against alzheimer's. has alzheimer's. as the guardian has clamoured drugs clamoured to approve drugs hailed turning point on hailed as turning point on alzheimer's, the telegraph wallace uk will pay for tanks but not troops. that's ben wallace, of course, defence secretary. the i breakthrough alzheimer's could be alzheimer's drug could be available on nhs by 2025. the times has bbc faces official review of unsustainable licence fee model . fun story there. the fee model. fun story there. the daily star nerds versus aliens. very important story as always from the start . and those were from the start. and those were the front pages . all right. the front pages. all right. let's start with the mail, leo. >> so they lead with this alzheimer's drug, which slows the disease by up to 60, according to this trial. the
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drug is called dawn donelan nick gibb, which i mean, it could be easier to pronounce for people with cognitive decline. >> i mean, the trouble with having alzheimer's, you're going to have trouble actually just buying the i buying it over the counter. i guess prescribe buying it over the counter. i guwhatever, prescribe buying it over the counter. i guwhatever, but prescribe buying it over the counter. i guwhatever, but it prescribe buying it over the counter. i guwhatever, but it gives ibe buying it over the counter. i guwhatever, but it gives people or whatever, but it gives people apparently at a year of apparently at least a year of extra without their disease extra time without their disease progressing . so the drug attacks progressing. so the drug attacks and build ups of a and destroys build ups of a protein called amyloid , and it protein called amyloid, and it paves way for alzheimer's to paves the way for alzheimer's to become treatable like a sort of just an ongoing endemic condition, like like asthma . so condition, like like asthma. so thatis condition, like like asthma. so that is that is amazing. and this trial so they found that people people given the drug in the trial, had had these amazing effects. >> the people given the placebo didn't have these amazing effects. so i feel a bit sorry for them. >> they got it. but the good thing is that you're doing this for science guys. >> yeah, but they're not going to they're a trial, right? >> it's not too gutted. >> it's not too gutted. >> but this is. yeah, it's a massive. it's a huge the massive. it's a huge deal. the other thing that shows massive. it's a huge deal. the othe if thing that shows massive. it's a huge deal. the othe if you hing that shows massive. it's a huge deal. the othe if you get that shows massive. it's a huge deal. the othe if you get to that shows massive. it's a huge deal. the
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othe if you get to anit shows massive. it's a huge deal. the othe if you get to an earlier,ws massive. it's a huge deal. the othe if you get to an earlier, it; how if you get to an earlier, it has a greater impact. also, the good thing is it's going to save money not just because it's such a die of a takes. so many people die of it whatnot and this it and whatnot and have this condition but it condition for years. but also it sort somewhat cures you sort of somewhat cures once you get point the get to a certain point and the these cells the brain go, you these cells in the brain go, you then need to you don't have to keep on taking the for keep on taking the drug for a bit. so least not bit. so at least it's not something have something you necessarily have to ever. it's something you necessarily have to whilst ever. it's something you necessarily have to whilst you ever. it's something you necessarily have to whilst you have ever. it's something you necessarily have to whilst you have the it's just whilst you have the condition. brilliant. i condition. so it's brilliant. i mean, feel little bit mean, i feel a little bit annoyed because the reason i annoyed because is the reason i had lot kids was that i was had a lot of kids was that i was going like future proof going to like future proof myself. now it's of myself. and now it's kind of they're drug is they're useless if this drug is in place. >> right? you wasted a lot of time, that was the sole time, though. that was the sole reason time, though. that was the sole rea�*yeah, i just i then i was >> yeah, i just i then i was guaranteeing someone would, guaranteeing that someone would, like, wipe my bum. >> still other stuff like, wipe my bum. >> can still other stuff like, wipe my bum. >> can go still other stuff like, wipe my bum. >> can go wrong.|er stuff that can go wrong. >> your bum, you might be in >> and your bum, you might be in the placebo group. >> you, you bum like >> josh so you, you bum like your was going to say something about josh's bum, but i'm not sure what it was. >> no, no, there's other things that can wrong with your bum. that can go wrong with your bum. >> well, >> yeah. piles. well, yeah, piles. great tv . piles. okay, great tv. >> right, let's move on. >> all right, so let's move on. >> all right, so let's move on. >> let's retain some viewing figures . >> let's retain some viewing figures. let's do >> let's retain some viewing figures . let's do the >> let's retain some viewing
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figures. let's do the times >> let's retain some viewing figures . let's do the times now i >> -- >> josh yeah. so obviously they've got the alzheimer's story well . so they've also story as well. so they've also got a little story about how how the us treasury secretary was basically spiked in china ate and lots of mushrooms. and there's a video of her like bowing a lot. but the big one is i'm sure that everybody will love get into faces love to get into bbc faces official review of unsustainable licence fee model. this is on the news that after being frozen for last years, the bbc for the last two years, the bbc licence fee is going to go up from £159 possibly to 172. and so there's going to be an official review as to whether this we're going to continue with it. basically half a million people are paying it less now. and i think that part of it is because there are lots of it is because there are lots of reasons. but i do think that the whole netflix model, as people are, obviously there's cost and whatnot, but cost of living and whatnot, but we're used to for media we're used to paying for media now that and also cancelling the media that we don't want. so if we get netflix and it suddenly turns all rubbish, we're like, you know what? i'm going to stop
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turns all rubbish, we're like, you subscriptioni'm going to stop turns all rubbish, we're like, you subscriptioni'm gyeah to stop that subscription fee. yeah which, people have that subscription fee. yeah whichith people have that subscription fee. yeah whichith the people have that subscription fee. yeah whichith the bbc people have that subscription fee. yeah whichith the bbc becausea have that subscription fee. yeah whichith the bbc because it's,/e done with the bbc because it's, it's a bit rubbish. >> so yeah, people would rather pay >> so yeah, people would rather pay netflix. i mean the bbc, pay for netflix. i mean the bbc, they produce they say we produce such wonderful so wonderful stuff. if it's so wonderful, got to wonderful, why have you got to force gunpoint to pay force people at gunpoint to pay this apparently. force people at gunpoint to pay this it apparently. force people at gunpoint to pay this it guns apparently. force people at gunpoint to pay this it guns now?»parently. >> is it guns now? >> is it guns now? >> it third? mean, >> has it gone third? i mean, any state ends with a any state coercion ends with a gun pointed at your head, but a third that are third of women that are convicted for convicted are convicted for non—payment licence fee. non—payment of the licence fee. so they're they're guilty. the bbc misogynist bbc is guilty of misogynist brutality industrial scale. they're attacking andrew tate >> they're attacking andrew tate all time. they're the real all the time. they're the real misogynists, bbc. misogynists, the bbc. >> done, you. >> well done, you. >> well done, you. >> hello. >> well done, you. >> okay. >> well done, you. >> okay . minutes, john. >> okay. minutes, john. >> okay. minutes, john. >> minutes into show. >> minutes into the show. >> minutes into the show. >> so much about today. >> so much about that today. let's that. do let's move on from that. but do you though, my question is you think though, my question is either of the is it either of you that the is it just the anachronistic nature of the licence model the model, the licence fee model versus it versus subscriptions? or is it also bbc also just that the bbc have failed their remit be failed in their remit to be impartial if they really were impartial, do you think people would a chance? impartial, do you think people wotthey a chance? impartial, do you think people wotthey don't a chance? impartial, do you think people wotthey don't representchance? impartial, do you think people wotthey don't represent sonnce? impartial, do you think people wotthey don't represent so many >> they don't represent so many people in population. and >> they don't represent so many peyou're in population. and >> they don't represent so many peyou're a n population. and >> they don't represent so many peyou're a brexiteer ulation. and >> they don't represent so many peyou're a brexiteer oration. and >> they don't represent so many peyou're a brexiteer or ifon. and if you're a brexiteer or if you're, you know , right wing, you're, you know, right wing, where you represented there? where are you represented there? >> maybe they need to of >> maybe they need to sort of branch beat. i have a
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branch off the beat. i have a lot issues with the bbc news lot of issues with the bbc news department, which is very different from what also different from what you also get. other parts of get. there are other parts of the do provide value the bbc which do provide value for money. arguably which of those live at those sports coverage live at the apollo? i mean, the thing is , ali harbi ali, you know, you're making my case. you're not making my case. >> fair enough. i mean, it's an important it's so important story, but it's so great be part of because great to be part of gb because we all the time, we are attacked all the time, but part of the but we are part of the disruption of we are the part. i don't want to too of don't want to sound too grand of the new era of news the dawn of the new era of news media, you're going to see media, but you're going to see an age aquarius. no, but you an age of aquarius. no, but you know, important know, we are kind of important guys especially because guys and especially me, because i'm a quick i'm host. let's have a quick look at your favourite paper, you, guardian. you, the guardian. >> guardian. have >> the guardian. so they have the exposing deep the benefit cap exposing a deep split in labour. >> keir starmer had said he's >> so keir starmer had said he's not going to scrap the two child benefit cap. >> that means that if have >> that means that if you have more children, you more than two children, you don't get extra benefits for those children, which probably means the third child is, is shunned by the rest of the family . family. >> you know, you're the reason we can't go to tenerife. but but yeah, mean, it's kind of
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yeah, i mean, it's kind of i don't know. >> normally i hate anything that involves taxes being given to feckless poor people. >> that's just anathema to me. >> that's just anathema to me. >> you sort of think like a victorian slumlord. yeah, exactly, exactly. >> when you, when you stick it to labour, suddenly you're in a happy for it. well yeah. >> i mean it's causing a schism in the party, but i think keir should agree this is should actually agree this is something i agree with. something that i agree with. >> left of labour on. >> the left of labour on. >> the left of labour on. >> think need more >> i mean, i think we need more children, we need more babies being born this country. children, we need more babies beiiwe've1 this country. children, we need more babies beiiwe've1 thterriblery. >> we've got a terrible population decline. >> facing this demographic >> we're facing this demographic cliff because people aren't having children. right. having enough children. right. >> but is that true? even if they're sort of going to be on benefits and stuff, would you even that if they're not even say that if they're not going contribute going be able to contribute or would still say that? would you still say that? >> the the option is >> well, if the if the option is like, you some from like, you know, some guy from like, you know, some guy from like possibly was an isis like syria possibly was an isis coming across and ripping his coming across and ripping up his passport, know, you passport, you know, versus, you know, having know, a poor person having a baby, it's a tough baby, i mean, it's a tough choice baby, i mean, it's a tough choi:e baby, i mean, it's a tough choi know. i know. that's what >> i know. i know. that's what i was saying. >> i mean, the other important things is, number things to remember is, number one, policy was one, is this policy that was brought get back
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brought in to get people back into work. been proven not into work. it's been proven not to that's the policy to work. so that's the policy doesn't itself . doesn't work in and of itself. and it has it's and number two, is it has it's put like a quarter of a million households in to poverty and poverty isn't poverty in this country. >> poverty is like, oh, i don't have a speedboat. >> he's got a speedboat and another speed. >> well, i think poverty. >> well, i think poverty. >> poverty still ain't a good thing. speed boats. thing. even without speed boats. >> i've on, i've actually >> i've been on, i've actually been on benefits. i am sympathetic. it's very tough being it's very being on benefits and it's very hard to get out once you're on them because of the benefits trap. >> yeah, you'll nick. i'll “in “lu- “lu— wei!— “lu— >> i'll make it one day. but if you have enough kids, can you have enough kids, you can get the benefits trap. get out of the benefits trap. that's true. but the funny thing about it is starmer to about it is starmer trying to deal because he deal with his party because he comes goes, oh, comes up with this, he goes, oh, he's trying to get elected and he's trying to get elected and he's the unions, got he's got the unions, he's got left then he's got left of his party. then he's got the that he needs to get the fact that he needs to get elected. so he a near elected. so he is in a near impossible elected. so he is in a near imfbut ble elected. so he is in a near imfbut b don't think that this >> but i don't think that this is particularly coming from the far they're far left. i'm sure that they're enjoying far left. i'm sure that they're enjoyin a lot of moderate far left. i'm sure that they're enjoyina lot of moderate and there's a lot of moderate and i think it's a it's a strategy choice. they he fixated choice. they he is fixated on showing election showing going into the election with a balanced books that's his big turning
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big fear is tories turning around and you can't pay around and saying you can't pay for but that's not why for this. but that's not why people didn't vote labour people didn't vote for labour last was of to do last time. it was a lot of to do with a lot do with brexit. it was a lot to do with brexit. it was a lot to do with corbyn was and with how toxic corbyn was and also about being also just worried about being seen as spend party gone. >> well, this this also >> well, this this policy also seems communism. seems it seems like communism. >> china had the >> you know, china had the one child feels very similar. >> the two child policy is very similar. better similar. we're going one better than them. >> you f.- f..- >> but you know, you don't get don't get the benefit discouraged. >> all right. let's have a quick look this important look at this very important story look at this very important st0|yeah, nerds versus aliens. so >> yeah, nerds versus aliens. so this is anonymous. know if you remember they sort remember them. yeah, they sort of hack of they've managed to hack church and church of scientology and various corporations and whatnot. they're saying they're going this all this going after all this all this stuff about aliens now and i don't know if you've noticed, but there's definitely been more has recent . and has been coming out recent. and i've got friend of mine who's i've got a friend of mine who's just sending links just constantly sending me links on it's incredibly on on whatsapp. it's incredibly annoying. know. but he's annoying. yeah, i know. but he's just why aren't the media just like, why aren't the media covering i'm covering this? and he thinks i'm somehow in on this question, is it lewis schaefer it is not lewis schaefer would lewis schaefer he would literally they are literally be here. so they are saying that they're now going to go this information.
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go and find this information. i wouldn't be surprised if they do uncover and wouldn't be surprised if they do uncovwere and wouldn't be surprised if they do uncovwere aliens and wouldn't be surprised if they do uncovwere aliens and and wouldn't be surprised if they do uncovwere aliens and everything there were aliens and everything has hidden for years and has been hidden for years and whatnot, or they could just make stuff up because, i mean, how are tell it's are you to going tell if it's been just been been hacked or if it's just been made up by some nerd? yeah, but i if been prepared i wonder if we've been prepared enough seen enough enough now, if we've seen enough films, been enough films, if there's been enough disinformation out there where suddenly like, oh, suddenly you'd be like, oh, yeah, there's aliens. >> pretty >> so what? yeah i'm pretty certain only time certain there are the only time i the i got suspicious when the pentagon there was, then pentagon said there was, then i was maybe aren't. was like, maybe there aren't. you what i mean? because you know what i mean? because it's whatever they it's kind of like whatever they say. like mainstream say. it's like the mainstream media it's media or whatever they say. it's probably the opposite. yeah. >> going >> do you think we're to going be by be attacked, by the way, by matthew sweet saying that there are aliens? good point. do you know mean? are aliens? good point. do you knolong mean? are aliens? good point. do you knolong meabout are aliens? good point. do you kno long me about how there >> long thread about how there aren't are. which which aren't or there are. which which will with saying? will he go with what i'm saying? >> i don't i think that >> i don't know. i think that i think that far left are kind think that the far left are kind of anti—alien. right. of pro anti—alien. right. if that . that makes sense. >> an anti pro >> so he'll write an anti pro auen >> so he'll write an anti pro alien thread against coming alien thread against us coming up. that's why i mention his up. see that's why i mention his name you're supposed name though. you're supposed to mention beetlejuice. name though. you're supposed to mentio for beetlejuice. name though. you're supposed to mentiofor if beetlejuice. name though. you're supposed to mentio for if there :lejuice. name though. you're supposed to mentio for if there are ice. i know for a fact if there are aliens, i'm going to be paying for them stay like hotels aliens, i'm going to be paying for tbutlins stay like hotels aliens, i'm going to be paying for tbutlins stay we'lle hotels aliens, i'm going to be paying for tbutlins stay we'll get »tels aliens, i'm going to be paying for tbutlins stay we'll get to .s and butlins and we'll get to that the next section.
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that story in the next section. yeah. all that for yeah. all right. that is it for part one. but coming up, lord heseltine keir heseltine marshall. plan keir starmer stonewall plus our starmer meets stonewall plus our obligatory seven trans stories.
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radio. welcome back to headliners. >> i'm nick dixon, still here with headliners ogs, leo curse. there he is in all his glory and josh howie look at that. the original gangster. let's do the telegraph now. and lord heseltine wants to build a big, beautiful wall around europe and mexico is going to pay for it. is that right? josh yeah, something something is that right? josh yeah, somthatg something is that right? josh yeah, somthat. yeah. something is that right? josh yeah, somthat. yeah. beautifulething is that right? josh yeah, somthat. yeah. beautiful wallg yeah >> yeah. >> yeah. >> lord heseltine calls for marshall plan of aid to poor countries to bring down immigration as he points out, if we think we've got a lot of immigration now with more droughts, with famine, we're to going see millions and millions coming over to europe, he , he coming over to europe, he, he says, to fight that. he says , i says, to fight that. he says, i first of all, build like a wall,
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not a literal wall, but essentially a protective barrier. >> what does he mean ? >> what does he mean? >> what does he mean? >> well, he he's saying a physical protective barrier, but he's also talking about another barrier of making the countries around europe so good by giving them so much money that people then won't want to come to the uk. farage and actually, if you think this has been a long term tory plan for the last 13 years to the so rubbish to make the country so rubbish that no one actually then wants to here, they've done to come here, they've done really, well . really, really well. >> are you laughing ironically there? leo i thought it was a decent point. >> the first time i've >> that's the first time i've heard laugh properly . heard you laugh properly. >> it's a very tory laugh . >> it's a very tory laugh. >> it's a very tory laugh. >> it's a very tory laugh. >> i don't know. i thought it was a reasonable point. i mean, what do you think that is, leo? because aid work. because foreign aid can work. i heard it described earlier today, can today, though sometimes it can just in rich just be poor people in rich countries sending money rich countries sending money to rich people are people in poor countries who are corrupt they don't corrupt and they don't distribute thing the people >> this is the thing the people who the people who come across, the people who make to uk poor make it to the uk aren't poor people. people. people. they're rich people. it's can it's only rich people that can afford to pay the people traffickers. thousands afford to pay the people traffickers. like thousands afford to pay the people traffickers. like mythousands afford to pay the people traffickers. like mythousimoise of pounds. like my mate moise
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from . he's like from somalia. he's from like a really well—to—do family really sort of well—to—do family in somalia somalia standards, in somalia by somalia standards, you know what i mean? so apart from the victims of modern slavery, do exist. slavery, they do exist. >> came across did he? >> and he came across did he? >> and he came across did he? >> but i mean, victims of >> yeah. but i mean, victims of modern mean, i don't modern slavery. i mean, i don't know watched the videos know if you watched the videos of coming i don't know if you watched the videos of if coming i don't know if you watched the videos of if people ng i don't know if you watched the videos of if people are i don't know if you watched the videos of if people are getting don't know if people are getting trafficked by the slave vessels or whatever they're re—enacting the atlantic slave trade . that's the atlantic slave trade. that's something else. but but the people that are paying the people, traffickers , they cost a people, traffickers, they cost a lot of money. so they're not they're not poor. >> so can this work then? so you're a bit you're not you're a bit sceptical aid sceptical on the foreign aid part, can the barrier part, but can the barrier i don't understand it don't even understand what it is really. this barrier. but can it work? well, sure about work? well, i'm not sure about the the barrier. >> i mean would probably be >> i mean that would probably be just turkey to, to just be paying turkey to, to take refugee camps and take people in refugee camps and stuff. we've got to stuff. but i mean, we've got to look, people think look, you know, people think that we somehow that if we if we somehow destabilise local markets with with aid, you know, if we flood it aid so people can't it with with aid so people can't sustain themselves with it. well, they tried that already, but matthew sweet other opinions
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covid we don't think that really stuff like that. but it's the culture as an institutions in some of these countries that don't allow prosperity to flourish . so you can't really flourish. so you can't really aid your way out of out of that problem. >> okay. well, fair enough. i think the one positive i would take from this is that people think the one positive i would tak> outs prisoners being leo i know it's disgusting. >> out of risoners being leo i know it's disgusting. >> out of women's being leo i know it's disgusting. >> out of women's jailseing leo i know it's disgusting. >> out of women's jails after moved out of women's jails after the ministry of justice tightened rules to prevent female ila female inmates following the ila bryson was bryson scandal. ila bryson was a double male rapist . it wasn't double male rapist. it wasn't double male rapist. it wasn't double male rapist. it wasn't double male is male. >> it was very male, though . >> it was very male, though. >> it was very male, though. >> yeah, it was very male. definitely male . even when he definitely male. even when he was dressed up in tattoos . yeah. was dressed up in tattoos. yeah. face tattoos, penis , the works, face tattoos, penis, the works, everything you needed to be male . yeah. >> like andrew tate, the whole thing. >> so. so they're moving trans
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prisoners from female prisons to male prisons. >> i don't know why there's an obvious solution here. >> just move them to male prisons as female prisons that identify as female prisons. then prisons. good point. then everybody's happy . everybody's happy. >> yeah, yeah, i mean, >> yeah, but yeah, i mean, i love bryson. >> really sort of, you know, showed the issue with men being able to abuse the rules for self identification and say that they're trans and sort of fake it. so you know there's, there's genuine trans women and then there's like there's fakers and there's like there's fakers and there's a statistic that what is it that a it says that men jailed for sexual offences are twice as likely to identify as trans women than men jailed for other of offences. trans women than men jailed for oth so of offences. trans women than men jailed for oth so it's of offences. trans women than men jailed for oth so it's clearlyances. going >> so it's clearly a scam going on. ministry of justice on. and the ministry of justice here well, look, 90% here says, well, look, 90% of transgender custody are transgender women in custody are held men's prisons. it needs held in men's prisons. it needs to 100, doesn't it? josh well to be 100, doesn't it? josh well , identified 168 , well, they've identified 168 legally male women in legally male trans women in prisons across. >> yeah. so the fact that they are now putting these people who've committed crimes who've committed violent crimes into the male prisons from female prisons, biological males by the way, and when people some
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people think trans, they people think of trans, they think of women, they think think of trans women, they think of who've surgery, of people who've had surgery, who hormones, 97, who have been on hormones, 97, i think , haven't been on hormones, think, haven't been on hormones, haven't any surgery. they're haven't had any surgery. they're intact with the same intact males with the same committing offences rate as as biological men, if not greater. and so it's like the government are going, oh, well done, they expect a pat on the back for doing this, which this situation shouldn't have happened. >> i agree with josh, let's give him a pat on the back. >> well, they expect a pat on the back. and the fact is this happened under a tory government and and and this is it's wrong. and for them around go. oh, them to turn around now, go. oh, now doing now we're finally doing something about it. it's like, yeah, under yeah, but this happened under your that's kind of how >> yeah. that's kind of how i feel. i feel like this is a win, but kind of sad that but it's also kind of sad that this is a win we're at the this is a win that we're at the stage hey, can take men stage of, hey, can we take men out female prisons? we're out of female prisons? and we're like, the culture like, yeah, win for the culture war in yeah >> so they're going straight back women's prisons. >> so they're going straight back i women's prisons. >> so they're going straight back i mean,nen's prisons. >> so they're going straight back i mean, ifen's prisons. >> so they're going straight back i mean, if you prisons. >> so they're going straight back i mean, if you think, ;. so yeah, i mean, if you think, i mean, if this i we mean, if this is, i think we should cherish every every little win it won't be any crime under little win it won't be any crime uncdon't about it. >> don't worry about it. >> don't worry about it. >> of let's >> well, speaking of that, let's
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get nicking. let's get nothing worth nicking. let's do the next story then, which is about met about keir starmer, and he's met the stonewall the head of stonewall for a lovely women's lovely chat about women's penises. guessing. >> keir starmer >> yeah. with keir starmer unable woman unable to define what a woman is, stonewall is is, no wonder stonewall is targeting labour's top team. so this daily they've this is the daily mail. they've done report done a sort of double report across stonewall, across two days into stonewall, across two days into stonewall, a big sort of investigation . and a big sort of investigation. and in this part of it, they revealed how so? it seems like most people would accept that. it seems like labour are going to be getting into the next government are government and stonewall are making effort to making a concerted effort to attach themselves to labour. one of the chairs of stonewall actually was like a long standing, standing member of the conservative party and their their business champion or whatever . so the fact that whatever. so the fact that they're sort of now going after labouh they're sort of now going after labour, the question is to what end is this going to happen ? end is this going to happen? because we've seen how stonewall has become organisation. has become this organisation. now fighting for gay rights, which are arguably see an equality which were achieved with equal marriage and whatnot. then they needed something do then they needed something to do and they people say and that's why they people say
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they this trans thing i >> -- >> the original founders of stonewall, like simon fanshawe, >> the original founders of stc says|ll, like simon fanshawe, >> the original founders of stc says it's.ike simon fanshawe, >> the original founders of stc says it's driftedion fanshawe, >> the original founders of stc says it's drifted way anshawe, >> the original founders of stc says it's drifted way out1awe, >> the original founders of stc says it's drifted way out of /e, he says it's drifted way out of its out of its the original rainbow. >> absolutely. so now they're going for it and they're pushing through stuff like self id, they're pushing through stuff in our schools. yeah. the question is, just of is, is starmerjust kind of meeting them just out of politeness will this actually politeness or will this actually make think he still make an impact? i think he still doesn't get it. yeah, he still doesn't get it. yeah, he still doesn't get it. yeah, he still doesn't get how important this issue and sort of issue is. people try and sort of fog it off as this like culture wars and it doesn't matter. this matters. more matters. people and the more people that people hear the insanity that this the west at this country and the west at large has gone down this path that we sort of blindly that we have sort of blindly walked down or be led down over the last ten years at and the last five, ten years at and the last five, ten years at and the more people sort of go, the moral wrongness of male rapists and female prisons is of women's sports and all the other stuff. >> yeah, that's why i'm worried, as leo said about labour government, because it's going to much potentially government, because it's going to these much potentially government, because it's going to these muchof potentially government, because it's going to these muchof p(issues.ly on these kind of social issues and the fact that they haven't clocked the clocked this. i mean, the stephen credit stephen nolan bbc report credit to have ended to the bbc should have ended
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stonewall, there, exposed stonewall, right there, exposed it as complete scam. but it as a complete scam. but somehow and the fact somehow it hasn't. and the fact that they're in government that they're in 47 government bodies , they're in bodies and quangos, they're in the the treasury the home office, the treasury department for digital culture, media environment media and sport environment agency, commonwealth and agency, foreign commonwealth and development office. it goes on and as labour, and on as well as labour, as well england. we well as the bank of england. we found other how found the other day. how have they this? they done all this? >> amount money >> and the huge amount of money of taxpayers money they get. >> they money from >> i mean, they get money from from as well, >> i mean, they get money from fron know, as well, >> i mean, they get money from fron know, publicly as well, >> i mean, they get money from fron know, publicly traded; well, you know, publicly traded corporations. in 2021, corporations. but the in 2021, stonewall received £2.1 million of taxpayers money. >> i don't mind taxes getting paid on things like kidney dialysis machines for people with rubbish kidneys, but spending it on absolute gender nonsense to indoctrinate children is just seems what's what's the point? >> what's the benefit? what are we getting out of it as a society? >> yeah, absolutely . all right. >> yeah, absolutely. all right. well, we all agree on that one. so let's on and one so let's move on and do this one in times. believe . and in the times. i believe. and labour may migrant barges labour may keep migrant barges if they win the next election, but presumably they'll be kinder, barges . kinder, more inclusive barges. >> exactly. the >> leo yeah, exactly. the rebrand . they'll have rebrand them. they'll have a black sticker on black lives matter sticker on the or something, but yeah,
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the side or something, but yeah, so labour, looks like labour so labour, it looks like labour are migrant are to going keep the migrant barges so migrants could still be housed on barges and there's 170,000. there's a backlog of 170,000. there's a backlog of 170,000 and yvette cooper has said they're going to be housed in barges and military sites while that backlog is cleared. >> says she'll fast track >> she says she'll fast track it. will she really fast track it? >> what she'll do is just rubber stamp. they'll be like, you know, through like know, just going through like and say say they're and they say they say they're going applications going to fast track applications and people from safe countries like albania, they'll expedite the person's removal people don't they don't turn up saying, oh, i'm from albania, i'm from a safe country. what they do is they rip their passport up, throw in english channel. throw it in the english channel. they're to by ngos and they're advised to by ngos and human rights activists say they're then they're 14 years old and then they're 14 years old and then they say they're 14 years old. they're terrible they're from some terrible country persecuted country where they're persecuted and i'm a christian and they say, i'm a christian and they say, i'm a christian and i'm gay or whatever it is. so can't send me back so you can't send me back because i'll get persecuted. and yeah, they get to yeah, so then then they get to stay. what she's stay. so basically what she's saying is anybody who comes
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across the english channel gets to . to stay. >> i mean, she doesn't really say that. what she says is she hasn't at all. what hasn't said that at all. what she she's to deal she says is she's going to deal with what she with the backlog. what she didn't was that she would didn't say was that she would definitely barges. so definitely cancel the barges. so the headline is labour may keep . right. >> basically didn't comment >> she basically didn't comment on because >> yeah. and this is because labour moment just labour at the moment just don't want a commitment want to make a commitment to anything that's essentially what they're exactly . they're doing. yeah, exactly. because win the because they want to win the election, are serious election, but they are serious about dealing with us. they recognise it's a problem. they are up with ideas to try are coming up with ideas to try and fast track it. they recognise that the cost of housing migrants has gone from £14 under government to £90 £14 under this government to £90 ahead. talking we're ahead. we're talking we're spending half a million, £90, £90 per night, per night, per night . we're spending half a night. we're spending half a million a day just on empty hotel rooms. this is all again under the tory government. i don't see how a labour government is going to do worse than that. government is going to do worse tha that's all. well, that's >> that's all. well, that's that's a challenge and if they are, i'll the to call are, i'll be the first to call them out. >> but the fact is the tories are just doing absolutely
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terrible. some are just doing absolutely terribideas some are just doing absolutely terribideas making some are just doing absolutely terribideas making theie are just doing absolutely terribideas making the two good ideas about making the two departments like the foreign office home office work office and the home office work together and like together better and having like a middle department, there's stuff here actually stuff in here that actually makes sense. yeah, but makes a lot of sense. yeah, but let's not forget that a of let's not forget that a lot of the migrant crisis caused by let's not forget that a lot of the previouscrisis caused by let's not forget that a lot of the previous labour caused by let's not forget that a lot of the previous labour government going and going into the middle east and messing a royal scale. >> you know, killing so many hundreds of thousands of civilians or, know, civilians or, you know, persecuting this war that led to to led syria, arguably we wouldn't have this if labour if tories had actually gone into syria and stopped assad gone forever. >> but we've got to do the break. that is it for part . break. that is it for part. two. but coming up, the nhs spends. 40 million on obese patients .
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40 million on obese patients. germany gets its own . germany gets its own. gb news and the guardian explains comedy to . to. us yayi see you in a minute i >> -- >> that 5mm >> that warm . feeling inside >> that warm. feeling inside from . boxed boilers. proud from. boxed boilers. proud sponsors of weather on .
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sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hi there. it's aidan mcgivern . here from the met office with the . gb news forecast. today's the. gb news forecast. today's showers
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listening to gb news radio show i >> welcome back to headliners. let's start with tuesday's independent and esther mcvey has said schools should remain open in national emergencies. a great idea . just three years too late. idea. just three years too late. >> yeah, exactly . well, that's >> yeah, exactly. well, that's what's so frustrating about it. mcvey schools and universities should in national should remain open in national emergencies. a former cabinet emergencies. as a former cabinet minister, she's also gb news
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minister, she's also a gb news presenter. and obviously presenter. and it is obviously nice to hear this stuff. more affirmation as to what a mistake it was. how children's mental health issues, but also their learning. how behind they are absences from schools. well, it's so frustrating to hear people now go , oh yeah, it was people now go, oh yeah, it was a mistake. and that was the advice we got. well, i'm sorry you had a moral imperative here, and people were pointing out at the time and actually anybody who did point out like, somehow did point out was like, somehow you wanted kill your you wanted to kill your grandparents god forbid grandparents because god forbid you your children you wanted your children to actually to and actually be able to read and write. yeah, there's some there's to. write. yeah, there's some the but to. write. yeah, there's some the but was to. write. yeah, there's some the but was coincidence. >> but that was coincidence. >> but that was coincidence. >> some moment when, >> there's some moment when, like everybody just suddenly decided sort more decided this sort of more blob that everything decided this sort of more blob that listens everything decided this sort of more blob that listens to. everything decided this sort of more blob that listens to. forything decided this sort of more blob that listens to. for some everybody listens to. for some reason, they suddenly change from being like, you're an evil. you're not wearing face mask, you're not wearing a face mask, you're evil, you're evil oh, you're evil, you're evil to oh, we we made mistakes. and we all we all made mistakes. and we all we all made mistakes. and we were acting on incorrect advice. just advice. well, let's all just move the gaslighting. >> i mean, and at gillian >> i mean, and look at gillian keegan here saying schools were not shut during lockdowns. i'm sorry, i mean, sorry, what was that? i mean, was hallucination?
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was that a hallucination? >> losing voice >> i remember losing my voice from screaming at my children how a works. yeah, yeah. how a clock works. yeah, yeah. i think just sure. but think she just pretty sure. but basically want to put basically they want to put essentially or essentially a law in or a guidance that parliament guidance that only parliament can close. university at school. i good idea. they i think that's a good idea. they should get on it. >> it'll be classed as essential infrastructure. >> they should have closed the hospitals. think would hospitals. i think that would have worked take. hospitals. i think that would havthey're d take. hospitals. i think that would havthey're d tethat now, so >> they're doing that now, so it's yeah it's fine. yeah >> i mean, the thing that >> yeah. i mean, the thing that bothers that people have bothers me is that people have at learnt on the schools at least learnt on the schools that this was a terrible idea, but they haven't learnt in general about you general about lockdowns. you know, thing know, this is the one thing though where people to though where people seem to agree was terrible agree that was a terrible mistake happen. mistake and must not happen. let's see what happens next time, what happens next time, see what happens next time. let's do times. and time, see what happens next timinhs let's do times. and time, see what happens next timinhs hass do times. and time, see what happens next timinhs has spent times. and time, see what happens next timinhs has spent £40nes. and time, see what happens next timinhs has spent £40 milliond time, see what happens next timinhs has spent £40 million on the nhs has spent £40 million on equipment for obese patients and apparently mainly apparently it's mainly just massive they've got >> leo yes, so they've got special beds, they've got stretchers. that's a machine that stretches people. so that stretches fat people. so they're not then their bmis aren't scale anymore. aren't the same scale anymore. it's the it's like charlie and the chocolate you chocolate factory. you might have it in documentary have seen it in that documentary , but cheers is basically , but yeah, cheers is basically anything that is a fat person
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can sit on is what they're spending the money on. but £40 million, i mean, that would buy a lot of doughnuts and yeah the nhs this seems ridiculous because it's the nhs that makes people fat. people know that the nhs is there to get their heart started and look after them and wipe their bum and stuff so they don't bother looking after themselves. i've never heard that thing of nhs chicken. >> chicken and the egg. that thing of nhs chicken. >> if|icken and the egg. that thing of nhs chicken. >> if you n and the egg. that thing of nhs chicken. >> if you go nd the egg. that thing of nhs chicken. >> if you go to the egg. that thing of nhs chicken. >> if you go to ale egg. that thing of nhs chicken. >> if you go to a country that doesn't have nationalised health care as, know, care such as, i don't know, ethiopia or somewhere like that, people don't us. people don't get us. >> what the united states >> what about the united states where are absolutely where people are absolutely massive don't nhs massive and don't have an nhs type thing? >> probably some >> they've probably got some sort care that is sort of health care that is completely sorry to destroy completely i'm sorry to destroy your want sentencing order, >> they want sentencing order, but mean, do you think, josh, but i mean, do you think, josh, do you think like body do you think like the body positive movement will finally die because these stats die down? because these stats are of hard to ignore. are kind of hard to ignore. they'll yeah. yeah yeah, they'll die. yeah. yeah yeah, there that. it's just they'll die. yeah. yeah yeah, there that. it'sjust so there is that. it's just so obviously you and then obviously bad for you and then bad you individual. bad for you as an individual. >> bad for us as country. >> it's bad for us as a country. we're spending 6.5 billion a year on it. we have sort it
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year on it. we have to sort it out. you know, it's the food out. and you know, it's the food that available. it's the that we have available. it's the cost of that food because it's usually the cheapest food is the worst for us. need and worst for us. and we need and it's a problem that's to it's a problem that's going to get it's always going to get worse. it's always going to be eat, a less of be cheaper to eat, a bit less of that food. >> yeah, yeah. was ill the >> yeah, yeah. i was ill the last week and i just didn't eat lost weight. who knew? but yeah, it a problem. i mean, it's it is a problem. i mean, it's 6.5 billion annually. it costs and productivity. and it reduces productivity. 1 to they can't move to 2% because they can't move about. >> we need to reintroduce. >> we need to reintroduce. >> my little joke at >> that was my little joke at the that good? let's the end. wasn't that good? let's do telegraph and protest by do the telegraph and protest by hardline a national hardline muslims pose a national security words. security threat. not my words. i'm the headlines. i'm just reading the headlines. >> if i can get >> well, let's see if i can get cancelled on this one. protests outside schools and cinemas by hardline national hardline muslims pose national security is a think security threat. this is a think tank. the henry jackson society. if go if anybody wants to go and protest it's a 69 protest against them, it's a 69 page britain's new page report. britain's new blasphemy police. and we have seen few things, very seen a few things, very disturbing saw the disturbing things. we saw the teacher grammar teacher at the batley grammar school who essentially showed and class , you warn and said to the class, you warn them what he was to going show a picture cartoon. explain picture of the cartoon. explain why. yet now this person is
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why. and yet now this person is still the run for their life. still on the run for their life. two years later, you have the picture huw edwards what picture of huw edwards that what it was? >> yeah, the context doesn't seem to matter now, does it? >> then also the >> and then you also have the cinema that was showing a film that was made by muslims, by the way, was the wrong kind way, but it was the wrong kind of for another group of of muslims for another group of muslims. and so they were protesting outside. and so what this that we this report is saying is that we that companies and institutions in this country need to grow a backbone. and the most shameful thing, had an autistic thing, you also had an autistic 14 old who had in wakefield 14 year old who had in wakefield . quran. there was . yeah, the quran. there was this press conference this shameful press conference where the mother and the kid there apologising. they're basically it's almost like they're begging for their lives next to police. are next to the police. there are the well, going along the police as well, going along with it. instead of saying, you've threatened this kid, you do going do a death threat, we're going to in jail. they're to throw you in jail. they're like, no, no, they're like, oh, please the please forgive us. and the ultimate blaming the ultimate victim blaming the police actually punished the child. >> they punished this 14 year child. >> autistic nished this 14 year child. >> autistic schoolboyi 14 year child. >> autistic schoolboy for year child. >> autistic schoolboy for and old autistic schoolboy for and it his fault. and it wasn't even his fault. and they gave him non—crime hate they gave him a non—crime hate incident that's going to follow him his life.
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him for the rest of his life. the who made the death the people who made the death threats absolutely threats against him absolutely nothing. point is, we, we or >> and the point is, we, we or this country does need to stand up to because don't live up to this because we don't live in sharia law. we don't live in a system. don't we don't live a system. we don't we don't live in theocratic state. and we in a theocratic state. and we have stand these have to stand up these institutions. there's another clip of poor clip out there of this poor cinema manager in front cinema manager standing in front of protesting muslims of 100 protesting muslims because this other film, that because of this other film, that which is what the muslims i mentioned, that they didn't like. this guy , no like. and this poor guy, no police and he's having police around. and he's having to them and saying, to appease them and saying, we're cancel. i'm we're going to cancel. i'm sorry, because person was sorry, because that person was fearful. person was fearful. that person was intimidated. there should have been go , go. you been police there to go, go. you can protest, but you cannot intimidate. yeah. >> well, some >> okay. well, i hope some people listen report. people listen to the report. let's telegraph now. and let's see the telegraph now. and germany its version of germany has its own version of gb news. this a chance gb news. is this a chance for louis schaefer to spread misinformation to an entirely new demographic? misinformation to an entirely new de|possibly c? misinformation to an entirely new de|possibly so. this this >> leo possibly so. this is this is reichelt, who was is julian reichelt, who was a popular broadcaster , but he popular broadcaster, but he got or a tabloid editor , he got or a tabloid editor, he got fired over over sex scandals , fired over over sex scandals, which should imagine in germany there's glass there's going to be a glass coffee involved. coffee table involved. it's going to be i've seen some
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videos is all i'm saying. so they're launching this. it's onune they're launching this. it's online only. they're saying it's the equivalent gb news. the equivalent of gb news. >> never >> they'll never work. >> they'll never work. >> gb news goes out in >> gb news gb news goes out in the tally. so it's the real tally. so it's pronounced news, but it's spelt news. >> but news. yeah that's >> but it's news. yeah that's the correct pronunciation. the so an analyst at enders analysis says german german uses notoriously centrist , consensual notoriously centrist, consensual and a bit boring. >> i mean the trouble with this they say it's centrist people would the bbc is centrist. would say the bbc is centrist. it's not at all. it's not at all. it's overwhelmingly got a left left leaning i mean, left left leaning bias. i mean, 98% comedians who a 98% of the comedians who have a political opinion on there is of a left wing opinion. >> doesn't this show, josh, >> but doesn't this show, josh, this is a western widespread thing that mainstream news is failing people. absolutely >> because as it as he says here, it's industry wide here, it's an industry wide omerta reporting about omerta on reporting about certain so we find certain topics. and so we find ourselves in a position now. and it started brexit, but it's it started with brexit, but it's also the gender ideology debate. there's all these other things that haven't commented on, that haven't been commented on, also schools for also criticising schools for closing, for example , to show closing, for example, to show these alternative views. that's
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exactly why gb news is being successful as much as people onune successful as much as people online want to just keep on trying to bring it down because the fact is people haven't felt listened to . and it's as simple listened to. and it's as simple as that. now i'm on the left when this channel was announced, i was excited. i tuned in from day one because i knew that i was excited. i tuned in from day owasecause i knew that i was excited. i tuned in from day owas stuff e i knew that i was excited. i tuned in from day owas stuff that new that i was excited. i tuned in from day owas stuff that we! that i was excited. i tuned in from day owas stuff that we weren't there was stuff that we weren't heanng there was stuff that we weren't hearing from the bbc and from sky. it doesn't matter. it's sky. so it doesn't matter. it's not issue. it's not a left right issue. it's about these things not being covered and there's a space for them. >> the market and i love this guy slept on a camp bed in the office. so military camp bed, so german. but let's should we move on and do this guardian one quickly because it's about comedy. so basically the guardian guardian guardian have gone full guardian and explaining the guardian have gone full guardian and comedyxplaining the guardian have gone full guardian and comedy islaining the guardian have gone full guardian and comedy is kind|g the guardian have gone full guardian and comedy is kind and the best comedy is kind and inclusive. me now, basically. >> yeah. kind inclusive and unfunny. up how british unfunny. punching up how british comedy and more comedy became kinder and more inclusive losing inclusive without losing its edge. that's sort of edge. there's that's the sort of misnomer without losing its edge. actually from a edge. this is actually from a book that someone's written. david starkey different times the history of comedy. >> stubbs, their twitter >> david stubbs, their twitter profile. a face profile. he's wearing a face mask his twitter profile.
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profile. he's wearing a face mask on. twitter profile. oh, come on. >> a face mask. that is funny. he's still wearing that. >> doing ironically. >> if he's doing ironically. >> if he's doing ironically. >> not, because matthew >> no, it's not, because matthew sweet is not wearing a face mask anymore. read this article anymore. i read this article and it matches somebody who'd it matches with somebody who'd wear it matches with somebody who'd wetwow. so it's all about how >> wow. so it's all about how we're kind of now. it's not a comedians to be kinder. comedians job to be kinder. it's a comedian's be funny. a comedian's job to be funny. >> yeah . and also, he hasn't met >> yeah. and also, he hasn't met these behind the scenes. these people behind the scenes. they're even yeah, they're not even kind. yeah, they're horrible. they're pretty horrible. >> people don't really >> but the people i don't really want to get to about this because that's how that work on twitter. >> what do you think? >> what do you think? >> yeah, i'd like to get as >> liam yeah, i'd like to get as well, but it's darius's well, but yeah, it's darius's law of the nicer the law of comedy. the nicer the more benevolent kind more sort of benevolent kind somebody the more somebody is on stage, the more of rebel, horrible, of a hot rebel, horrible, narcissistic, vindictive person. they stage. they are off stage. >> all this stuff about >> i know all this stuff about punching up and down is nonsense. comedy is not about being it's about being being moral. it's about being funny. yeah. and we've got to go at the break, but that is it. for part three. but coming up in the final section, zombie cells and see you in a and french poo. see you in a
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welcome back to headliners . welcome back to headliners. let's get straight into it with the male and women are tired of being asked whether they're on their period. better their period. it's better just to are. leo well, to assume they are. leo well, apparently so. >> 1 in 5 women who have had a mental crisis, mental mental health crisis, mental health have been asked if health crisis have been asked if they're period. they're on their period. according this survey. the according to this survey. so the correct number is the 3 in 5 that are having a mental health crisis are on their period. i don't know. but it's made some women angry who are probably on their period. but yeah, respondents cited the following triggers for mental health body image , loneliness, relationship image, loneliness, relationship issues , money worries and 1 in 5 issues, money worries and 1 in 5 women reported being told that they were being dramatic , whilst they were being dramatic, whilst a third were asked if they were overthinking things. so there is some good advice out there for them, which is well, i actually empathise because i get asked if i'm overthinking all the time. >> it's not just men and women thing. >> oh yeah. if you're a >> oh yeah. and if you're a woman, i'd think you're constantly your period.
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constantly on your period. >> you that. josh >> nick thank you for that. josh any less awful thoughts? >> nick thank you for that. josh any no. s awful thoughts? >> nick thank you for that. josh any no. i awful thoughts? >> nick thank you for that. josh any no. i mean, thoughts? >> nick thank you for that. josh any no. i mean, the ghts? >> nick thank you for that. josh any no. i mean, the thing is, it >> no. i mean, the thing is, it doesn't say who is asking. is it the a family member who's asking if they're the is it if they're on the period? is it boyfriend gp, or is it boyfriend husband, gp, or is it the psychiatrist, so the psychiatrist, whatever. so the psychiatrist, whatever. so the don't, you the fact that they don't, you know, you're asking if know, yes. if you're asking if they're going to in seek medical attention, think it's a attention, you think it's a medical issue? >> on your period >> are you on your period because they're do an operation. >> let's not kid ourselves. i mean in been a long mean i'm in i've been a long term relationship. when women are their period, things are on their period, things can get of get a bit squiffy in terms of who i'm just my relation . who i'm just like my relation. >> so i love how delicate you were dealing with that until the impression thing. >> trying work >> i'm just trying to work out if already or not. if she's in bed already or not. yeah, yeah, yeah. >> record this. >> she'll record this. >> she'll record this. >> then afterwards you >> no, but then afterwards you sort of like, you know, my sort of go, like, you know, my wife. yes. she goes a bit insane when on her and when she's on her period. and then woods sort of go, then after woods i sort of go, you know, you sort of say, is it are you? i don't say, are you. but know, i know that's what but you know, i know that's what the problem is. yeah and then after you after i say, remember what you were like there for like, just can you remember next time that
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you're period, that you're on your period, that that's makes you feel. that's how it makes you feel. and can talk about it. and so we can talk about it. >> but to be fair, it's not their fault. they're ruled by their fault. they're ruled by the should we move on and the moon. should we move on and do the independent and only do the independent and i only glanced but glanced at this one, but i believe it's about zombies which have been eliminated. josh it's a new drug. yeah eliminates old >> new drug. yeah eliminates old zombie lead to zombie cells may lead to anti—aging so anti—aging breakthroughs. so this new molecule this is there's a new molecule that it's zombie that eliminate it's these zombie cells stay in our cells that we that stay in our body they're bad not just body and they're bad not just for existing but they congregate with other zombie cells. they for existing but they congregate with turn' zombie cells. they for existing but they congregate with turn healthy cells. they for existing but they congregate with turn healthy cells into �*y even turn healthy cells into zombies, starts and zombies, starts cancers and whatnot. and it shows also whatnot. so and it shows also that doesn't drug that it doesn't this drug doesn't harm the healthy cells. so really is quite a huge so this really is quite a huge story, really . i mean, if it story, really. i mean, if it keeps people looking young because these cells, these zombie cells are what eventually make you look older and all the other ailments that come with you.soif other ailments that come with you. so if they are essentially being wiped out from your body, then , yeah, you're to stay then, yeah, you're going to stay young. with a bit a gut, young. and with a bit of a gut, could they actually end ageing because like aubrey because people like aubrey de grey , who's a scientist, he grey, who's a scientist, he thinks ageing and thinks they could end ageing and it's damage.
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thinks they could end ageing and it's you damage. thinks they could end ageing and it's you can damage. thinks they could end ageing and it's you can end 1age. thinks they could end ageing and it's you can end itge. thinks they could end ageing and it's you can end it and eventually >> you can end it and eventually end which up end death, which i'm up for. >> some scientists believe that we're already at the stage where people are terminal escape people who are terminal escape middle they've they've middle aged now they've they've reached escape velocity. they'll never die. it could never, never die. and it could be because because science will outpace ageing, basically. yeah. and could be the thing that and it could be the thing that means we have such a means we don't have such a democrat demographic cliff facing us. but i read a book need children, which is like essentially that's what happens. >> then essentially they >> and then essentially they find have find out they basically have to start everybody because start killing everybody because too many people were was this a textbook this was a science textbook or this was a science fiction mr louis schaefer ? fiction by mr louis schaefer? >> love the way his middle >> i love the way his middle initial that b. s initial is. s louis that b. s heffer, wouldn't it? all right. well, all right. sounds like we've finished that we've sort of finished that story. let's do the mail story. but let's do the mail then. and why qatar is good for you. sort one of you. this is sort of one of those pressing deadline type stories. someone had file stories. someone had to file something. >> reason . this is >> there's a reason. this is story 17. i like this story number 17. i like this story. neuroscientist has revealed how time spent by the coast helps you think with more clarity. apparently there are ions in the air. it sounds like
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a up thing to me and the a made up thing to me and the neuroscientist. it's amazing what they can with science what they can do with science these days. says a trip to these days. says that a trip to these days. says that a trip to the beach give you the beach can also give you a positive sense of awe and wonder. wow. well worth getting wondeh wow. well worth getting that can also that phd for that you can also build sandcastle. you can you build a sandcastle. you can you can have an ice cream. i mean, that's it really . that is it is that's it really. that is it is nice. i think going to the beach is nice. >> no, but the fact that there's some scientific evidence to back it up and i know about you, but going on. well, you're going to find for yourself. going on find out for yourself. going on family you're doing find out for yourself. going on familycoastal you're doing find out for yourself. going on familycoastal walks you're doing find out for yourself. going on familycoastal walks and�*re doing find out for yourself. going on familycoastal walks and allioing find out for yourself. going on familycoastal walks and all theg these coastal walks and all the kids but the kids are complaining. but the fact does actual there's fact is, it does actual there's medical evidence now it medical evidence now that it does. looking up to does. good for you looking up to realise we're one with the realise that we're one with the universe see the grand scope universe to see the grand scope of things. >> did you really a peer >> did you really need a peer reviewed that reviewed document to know that going to the beach is nice? >> leo follow science. okay. >> yeah. the only part that bothered me is it says if you feel you don't belong or you're not part of something, you don't produce oxytocin. i was like, maybe wrong with me. >> also, the bit that annoyed me after the whole article because
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i it was you get i really enjoyed it was you get to end and then it just to the end and then it just turns out to be one of those stupid ads. for some. we just go advert for go jauntily be sued. come on. >> right, well, let's do >> all right, well, let's do this one in guardian then. this one in the guardian then. it's kicking off in the it's all kicking off in the world camping. josh captured world of camping. josh captured the caught to the public zeitgeist, caught to hear appeal against england wild camping is an actual >> again. this is an actual important story because we have to have access to land. to have access to the land. and what's landowners to have access to the land. and what'been landowners to have access to the land. and what'been putting landowners to have access to the land. and what'been putting up|ndowners to have access to the land. and what'been putting up these iers to have access to the land. and what'been putting up these signs have been putting up these signs over 50 years or so, over the last 50 years or so, and we have lost a huge swathe of this country to rich people, essentially. and this is the fight where land fight back where this land owner in is in dartmouth, i think is dartmoor national park essentially banned a bunch of people and now they he the initial finding was that he got to keep the land and keep these people off and now this has gone to appeal. and 35,000 people, not 35,000 sorry, 3500 people turned up to do this wild camping in protest. it does matter out there. once we lose this. right, it's gone. it's important. and it's nice to see that there are out there that there are people out there who taking this to be as
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who are taking this to be as important as i it is. important as i think it is. >> see, i'm from the country and i still don't care about this. but people got to but people people got used to rambling, there's rambling, didn't they? there's like rambling tradition rambling, didn't they? there's like thisnbling tradition rambling, didn't they? there's like this isling tradition rambling, didn't they? there's like this is like tradition rambling, didn't they? there's like this is like anti tion rambling, didn't they? there's like this is like anti rambling. then this is like anti rambling. so now they're hitting. >> the trouble is you get some people and take all people who camp and take all their and you their stuff with them and you get people who who who get other people who who who stay clean up their stay and don't clean up their rubbish. i don't i don't want to name group. name the demographic group. i don't to get in trouble. don't want to get in trouble. but but yeah, so not everybody. my but but yeah, so not everybody. my not everybody, my family, not everybody, not everybody that everybody treats the land that they with the same they camp on with the same respect and scotland, we've got no i think. no no trespass laws. i think. well, never got trouble. no well, i never got in trouble. no we're always going camping up the and stuff. but then we the hills and stuff. but then we don't it was, it was don't have it was, it was grazing rather than arable grazing land rather than arable land. weren't land. yeah. so you weren't crushing suppose crushing any crops, i suppose your of keeps your heroine sort of keeps people the cities. your heroine sort of keeps peookay. the cities. your heroine sort of keeps peookay. ihe cities. your heroine sort of keeps peookay. i wonder;. your heroine sort of keeps peookay. i wonder why we didn't >> okay. i wonder why we didn't lead the. lead on the. >> i watched trains, peter. >> i watched trains, peter. >> we kept the difference between grazing land and arable land of the show land at the end of the show because that could have kept some people watching. let's finally express. finally do tuesday's express. and france has had and a man in france has had enough polio. enough of polio. >> this is great. so
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>> this is this is great. so there's a mean obviously in france you've got more of a problem with dog poo on the pavement the and pavement than in the uk and human and explains the human poo and explains the smell. so a mirror of a french town who he's he's had town who said he's he's he's had enough. snipers enough. so he's putting snipers on no he's not on tower blocks. no he's not he's actually making dogs he's he's actually making dogs undergo dna sampling. so then undergo a dna sampling. so then they saliva test is a kind of covid test. you can match the and any committed and also if any dogs committed a crime in the 70s, you can resolve paternity suits. >> find out who did the >> yeah. find out who did the deed and they'll be able to find out who did the poo. >> so you'll get arrested or the owner of the dog will get arrested. >> i think but they >> i think it's good. but they deliberately actually held deliberately they actually held this of civil this back because of civil rights, civil rights , a rights, like civil rights, a civil rights violation. dogs. civil rights violation. it dogs. it's authoritarianism gone mad in . in france. >> classic oh, really ? >> classic europe. oh, really? >> classic europe. oh, really? >> interesting. are you going to do a podcast? >> taken the other on >> i've taken the other side on it we've got like it just because we've got like 10s go with the other side. 10s to go with the other side. >> all right, why don't you do a demonstration of the poo? how the dogs. >> that next >> all right, we'll do that next time. we've got to go to the papers. guys, thanks so much. the nearly but the show is nearly over, but
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let's look let's have a quick look at tuesday's front pages. so the daily mail has turning point in fight alzheimer's. there fight against alzheimer's. there it guardian has clamour fight against alzheimer's. there it approveiuardian has clamour fight against alzheimer's. there it approveiuardiahailed:lamour fight against alzheimer's. there it approveiuardia hailed asnour to approve drugs hailed as turning alzheimer's. turning point on alzheimer's. the telegraph, wallace, uk will pay the telegraph, wallace, uk will pay but troops. pay for tanks but not troops. the alzheimer's the ai breakthrough alzheimer's drug available on nhs drug could be available on nhs by has bbc faces by 2025. the times has bbc faces official review of unsustainable licence fee model and the daily star nerds versus aliens classic daily star. and those are the front pages. that is it for tonight's show. thanks so much tonight's show. thanks so much to josh and leo. we're back tomorrow at 11 pm. there they are. and if you're watching at 5 am, then stay tuned for a.m, then stay tuned for breakfast. but for now, it's good morning. and good night. good morning. and god bless . god bless. >> temperature's rising . a >> the temperature's rising. a boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hi there. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office. with the gb news forecast, today's showers ease overnight. clear and cool conditions for many, but more rain in places by dawn. that rain arriving from the west. a small frontal system, a
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slack area of low pressure ahead of it , actually a ridge of slack area of low pressure ahead of it, actually a ridge of high pressure helping to kill off monday's showers in many places , clear spells widely across england, wales and scotland. overnight, few showers overnight, just a few showers continuing for the north of scotland. a different for scotland. a different story for northern ireland as well as eventually parts of wales and towards the southwest here, clouds thicken 12 or 13 celsius by dawn, but towards the north and the east, sheltered spots getting off to a cool start eight, nine celsius in 1 or 2 places, as well as plenty of sunshine. we'll keep the sunny skies for northern scotland as well as the south and southeast of england during the morning in between, a lot of cloud outbreaks of rain . that rain outbreaks of rain. that rain pushing north into central scotland, affecting much of northern england , wales and northern england, wales and eventually the far south—west the rain most persistent across parts of northern ireland and under the wet weather, it's going feel on cool side. going to feel on the cool side. now of that pulls away now all of that pulls away dunng now all of that pulls away during morning. during wednesday morning. we keep a cloudy swathe, i think through northern england into
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the midlands, parts of wales and east anglia. showery rain through of the day here, through much of the day here, elsewhere , mixture sunny elsewhere, a mixture of sunny spells showers, driest spells and showers, driest towards south—west. but towards the south—west. but we'll showery we'll keep the showery conditions thursday and conditions on thursday and friday, and all the while it is going to turn a bit cooler. the temperature is rising, boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> hello. good evening. it's me , jacob rees—mogg on state of the nation . tonight, it's death the nation. tonight, it's death and taxes. life's two inevitables, the latter of which is the worst of the two. but what about when the two come together? death duties. the most brutal, inefficient and
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