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tv   Headliners  GB News  July 22, 2023 11:00pm-12:00am BST

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gb news. >> good evening. i'm rory smith. in the gb news room. sir keir starmer has held talks with london's mayor sadiq khan, after he blamed the expansion of ulez for labour's byelection loss in uxbndge for labour's byelection loss in uxbridge and south ruislip protesters gathered outside the bbc in london today with many expressing anger at the mayor's plans to expand the ultra low emissions zone. the labour leader says that while his party is reflecting on the reasons for the byelection loss, they must show historic levels of effort, discipline and focus. show historic levels of effort, discipline and focus . meanwhile, discipline and focus. meanwhile, a conservative mp who conducted the uk's net zero review says it would be an abdication of responsibility if ministers were to play politics with environmental policies . chris
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environmental policies. chris skidmore says the uk is an international leader in climate action, which has led to billions of pounds worth of investment in green industries . investment in green industries. he warns that jeopardising that would be bad politics as taking action on climate change consistently polls third in the issues that voters care about fire fighters in greece are battling blazes as the country swelters through a heatwave emerged , ac crews continue their emerged, ac crews continue their efforts to bring the wildfires under control . all the areas under control. all the areas affected include parts of athens and the islands of rhodes. greece's climate crisis minister is urging people to remain on guard as temperatures continue to soar over the coming days. well, families going on european beach holidays are being hit by higher prices compared with last summer due to inflation. new figures from the post office show the cost of meals, drinks and beach items have risen year
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on year. puglia in italy was the only location where prices for uk visitors have dropped at the highest annual increases are in bulgaria, turkey and madeira stadium. travel news in the sc is warning of a busy weekend on the roads, with 2.5 million trips expected to be made tomorrow. almost 34,000 passengers travelled through the port of dover today with some people experiencing queues of up to two hours enhanced post—brexit passport checks by french border officials has played a part in the increased processing times . tom jones has processing times. tom jones has criticised a decision to prevent choirs from singing one of his classic songs at a rugby matches . five. i'm i. »- . five. i'm i. >> i love delilah was first cut from choir playlists in 2015 before being officially removed this year due to concerns over
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its references to the murder of a woman. >> sir tom says he will continue singing the song at events tv online , dab+ radio and on tunein online, dab+ radio and on tunein . this is gb news nato time for headliners . headliners. hello >> hello and welcome to headliners . >> hello and welcome to headliners. i'm your host, stephen allen, and i'm joined by some described them on the internet at alt right. leo kirsten alt wrong. lewis schaffer harsh isn't it.7 that gentleman doing well .7 yeah. gentleman doing well? yeah. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> no, of course not. >> i'm never doing well . i've >> i'm never doing well. i've been on the show twice this week and i think this i think the run is over. >> have you run out of stuff to see? >> i've run out of animosity and hatred for you people. well stick around. >> right. let's crack on with the front pages. let's start with the mail. on sunday, a vile
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film claims boris lied about nearly dying of covid is their front page . the sunday telegraph front page. the sunday telegraph net zero can't become a crusade . the mirror says tory toff serves fun flower on pic of cameron the sunday express pm al shot woke banks sounds like the way he speaks the sunday times can't rethink ulez after call from starmer and finally the daily star were all going on a summer holiday and those are your front pages . all right. your front pages. all right. kicking off with the in—depth look at the papers. let's go to the mail on sunday. leo so the mail on sunday leads with gary lineker duped taking lineker being duped into taking part in this documentary that smears former prime minister bofis smears former prime minister boris johnson. >> so i'm trying i'm trying not to look so happy about this, but this is a film that claims it's made by an incredibly biased man , and it claims that boris lied about nearly dying from covid.
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and boris was incredibly sick with covid. he was admitted to hospital. he was in intensive care. he was given oxygen. and bearin care. he was given oxygen. and bear in mind, when he when he caught covid, he was working like 15 hours a day to keep us safe. and obe turned up into safe. and obe obe turned up into the and, know, there safe. and obe obe turned up into the someand, know, there safe. and obe obe turned up into the some sort know, there safe. and obe obe turned up into the some sort of know, there safe. and obe obe turned up into the some sort of work, n, there safe. and obe obe turned up into the some sort of work, manzre safe. and obe obe turned up into the some sort of work, man .e safe. and obe obe turned up into the some sort of work, man . this was some sort of work, man. this guy was really out there, you know, himself on know, putting himself on the line for us and working for us when and gary when we needed him. and gary lineker is so partisan, so biased . he lineker is so partisan, so biased. he didn't lineker is so partisan, so biased . he didn't even think to biased. he didn't even think to question or to be critical about the claims made in this documentary. he just went along with it and it's made by this documentary made by marcus documentary is made by marcus ball, failed ball, who's a failed entrepreneur. apparently aren't we and after being we all? and after being contacted by the mail on sunday, gary lineker refused to endorse the film and demanded his interview be removed. why aren't you just do a bit of due diligence before your. he's like, you know, remember brass eye. he's like the equivalent of hammering a nail in a crab and saying destroyed its gland or whatever . whatever. >> yeah, it's got more in common, more dna in common with
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us, with the crowd than it does humans. that's a fact, but humans. that's not a fact, but it is science or something like that. can turn to that. yeah. louis we can turn to you what pick this you for what you pick on this one. covid dangerous or. one. covid wasn't dangerous or. or couldn't hire or if they couldn't hire lineker, you lineker, they could go for, you know, could have gone for know, they could have gone for me because first of all, i mean, leo speaks with such surety. >> that's the problem with leo, because always right . and because i'm always right. and this is why people always right. this like you in this is why i like you in person. the people out there think too stern. the think you're just too stern. the fact whether fact is, we don't know whether he was sick or not. he he might have how do you have been sick. but how do you know? in the hospital? know? were you in the hospital? did you do. know? were you in the hospital? did there's. know? were you in the hospital? did there's hospital >> there's hospital reports. they don't they log this stuff. you don't just don't just turn up and they don't write anything. >> know what? >> you know what? >> you know what? >> i was there. >> i was there. >> have we seen >> there's have we seen have we seen hospital we seen his hospital records? we have that's not have not, because that's not pubuc have not, because that's not public number one. public information. number one. number two, is there a documentary? he might. he i think might have been think he might have been sick because fat. he's because he was so fat. he's pre—diabetic . probably had gout. pre—diabetic. probably had gout. he had he had arthritis. >> they got any evidence? have you got paperwork? you got any paperwork? >> at the picture, put >> you look at the picture, put up of guy giving up a picture of the guy giving him oxygen . he reeks. him the guy oxygen. he reeks. but they were giving everybody
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at time oxygen, thousands of at the time oxygen, thousands of people killed through people were being killed through overuses of oxygen, no ventilators . the ventilators. ventilators. the ventilators. >> yes, the ventilators aren't oxygen. so, you know, ventilators . yeah. and ventilators. yeah. and apparently people were damaged by. >> yes. so what does what does steve say? >> well, i was just going to say, you've just claimed that we can't that he had covid can't know that he had covid because there. because you weren't there. and yet you've he had gout yet you've claimed he had gout because when because you can tell when someone to everybody. >> yes, i know everybody who is fat gout. they either have fat has gout. they either have gout, they've got type two, they've got anyway , away from they've got anyway, away from they've got anyway, away from the story here, that is the gary lineker. >> can we not. >> the story. the story is we were all possibly we don't know. you know what that guy so ironic most people think the guy's a total liar and yet you believe him on this? i don't believe him on anything. >> why would he lie about this? why? why would he make up the fact he was against fact that because he was against it, he didn't have sympathy for him it, he didn't have sympathy for hin he believe in the >> he didn't believe in the covid . and when he covid narrative. and when he came the hospital, he came out of the hospital, he believed covid navitor. believed in the covid navitor. everybody didn't
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everybody forgot. they didn't forget. trump changed his forget. when trump changed his mind on it . forget. when trump changed his mind on it. right. >> but trump another really hard working man who did have gout. >> i'm basing that on nothing. and that seems to be fine these days. >> but it's interesting that gary know, didn't gary lineker, you know, didn't didn't any of this and didn't question any of this and now wants backtrack the now wants to backtrack from the things in the documentary. >> and have removed from documentary. >> documentary. removed from documentary. >> documentary. refunds,i from the documentary. no refunds, gary. the documentary. no refunds, garlisten , a lot of us a lot of >> listen, a lot of us a lot of us— >> listen, a lot of us a lot of us gigs that we don't know us do gigs that we don't know that about based on that much about based on somebody they come somebody we know. they say come down. know, down. next thing you know, you're on news with people you're on gb news with people are hating me around the world. >> let's move on to the sunday telegraph. what do they go with ? >> 7- >> louis 7_ >> louis this is ? >> louis this is cove 7 >> louis this is cove net zero. can't become a crusade . and he can't become a crusade. and he is he is the levelling up secretary for he's he warns against net zero religious crusade which is interesting because i think i think it is a religious crusade and the levelling up secretary and levelling up secretary and levelling up secretary and levelling up is one of the great ministries of state, you know, historic levelling up. they had
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that in the 17 the foreign secretary, the chancellor of the exchequer and the levelling up secretary. but it says he's for relaxation of green measures. number one is it's a the basic fact is, is this ulez thing, which is basically they don't want us to drive any more. they want us to drive any more. they want to take away our driving and it will kill countryside and it will kill the countryside , let lot of people in , let alone a lot of people in the in borough, 40% of the city. in my borough, 40% of the city. in my borough, 40% of the have cars . the households have cars. they're going to make energy and everything more expensive. everything much more expensive. >> because because net >> i mean, because because net zero fine if you're some zero is fine if you're some metric politician rich labour voter and you know, you can afford you don't mind paying a bit more for some avocado that's actually grown under your house or whatever . you know, actually or whatever. you know, actually avocado example because avocado is a bad example because they're flown from they're all flown in from from mexico. don't mexico. but you know, you don't mind bit more if you're mind paying a bit more if you're if rich, you're poor if you're rich, if you're poor and you're already struggling. we that, you we sort of forget that, you know, few generations ago know, a few generations ago with things eggs , things like protein eggs, cheese, were cheese, chicken. these were things that were really sort of luxury items. yeah. >> so you are right about >> and so you are right about that. and it starts out with
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£12.50 to get into london to drive the car and then it'll go up to 15, 20. and meanwhile, people are to going be bankrupted. >> and you think there's a slight difference just to try and some here, some and get some wedge in here, some pushback surveys. saw pushback this surveys. i saw recently issue of recently saying on the issue of doing something about climate change, you still get like 80% doing something about climate ch people )u still get like 80% doing something about climate ch people in still get like 80% doing something about climate ch people in favour.t like 80% doing something about climate ch people in favour. bute 80% doing something about climate ch people in favour. but on 0% doing something about climate ch people in favour. but on the of people in favour. but on the issue paying to drive, you're issue of paying to drive, you're going in going to go like no people in favour. and is what ulez favour. and this is what ulez is, isn't it? it's seen as tax to drive. >> well, that same, that same poll you poll said, you know, are you worried change? worried about climate change? >> and was like 80% of people >> and it was like 80% of people were not worried, were concerned. not not worried, but about climate but concerned about climate change, mostly they're change, mostly because they're just day in and day out just bombard day in and day out with fear mongering with these fear mongering messages. but on the issue of like, want to taxed like, do you want to be taxed more and give government more and give the government more and give the government more powers to something more powers to do something about like, no , about it? they were like, no, because thing. because that's the thing. i mean, , i'm not denying mean, i'm like, i'm not denying climate is real. i'm climate change is real. i'm denying that giving the government lots of my money and lots of power over me, increasing the power over me is the right way to go about it. that just sounds like a terrible way to deal with anything.
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will. >> i will take mm;- >> i will take what he says and go one step further. i basically don't believe in climate change. i'm don't i'm sorry. i'm sorry. don't invite me party, let invite me to the party, but let me say this, climate me just say this, that climate change considered be change is considered to be a green issue. but the is, green issue. but the truth is, increase gases makes the increase in co2 gases makes the planet greener. so by increase in co2 gases makes the planet greener . so by cutting planet greener. so by cutting back on co2 , make the planet back on co2, make the planet greener because plants eat it, plants eat it, and they export it, the oxygen that comes out of it, the oxygen that comes out of it when there's more co2, we have a greener planet . so this have a greener planet. so this and i've never heard this mentioned, but but apart from if c02 mentioned, but but apart from if co2 does interact with photons trap heat into the planet, you increase temperature, you get rid of liquid phase water. >> and i guess the plants would die. >> you're talking about i listen, i don't follow it that closely . but listen, i don't follow it that closely. but in listen, i don't follow it that closely . but in the listen, i don't follow it that closely. but in the but we're not seeing the greening of areas that were previously. >> i just said no it's not just it's not just temporarily. >> it's a long term thing. higher co2 and there were huge penods higher co2 and there were huge periods huge co2 back in the periods of huge co2 back in the day the dinosaur period. day during the dinosaur period. >> we're actually very like historically very co2 historically very low co2 levels. >> great for plants and bad for
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animals . animals. >> so co2 is not a green issue. >> the sunday times now and something everyone something that everyone loves ulez . ulez. >> leo yes. oh, can't rethink ulez after call from starmer. so he said, he said a call from the boss and the boss has said you're ulez plan lost us the election because we're the by elections and labour are expected to trounce the tories in uxbridge and south ruislip. unfortunately for labour, people were actually more incensed about sadiq khan, the mayor of london. his plan to expand the ultra low emission zone out to uxbndge ultra low emission zone out to uxbridge and ruislip, which is a ridiculous place to have a low emission zone. it's right out in the suburbs. there's loads of green space. there aren't there's not problem with it. there's not a problem with it. if there, the air is if you go there, the air is beautiful and free and clear. you don't need to worry. it's not being at piccadilly not like being at piccadilly circus. know, circus. and also, you know, over the years, we're the next ten years, we're phasing petrol diesel phasing out petrol and diesel vehicles. everybody's going to be driving electric . so there's be driving electric. so there's no need for this. what it is, is a cash grab because of sadiq khan's catastrophic
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mismanagement of london. and he now tax the people now needs to tax the people within his his boundary as much as he possibly can. so this would be £12, 50 every time somebody drives off the driveway to go to the shops or whatever. and bear in this a and bear in mind, this is a suburb. know, people suburb. so, you know, people have they need cars, have cars, they need cars, they've . and so, they've got families. and so, yeah, i mean, this is ridiculous. wonder ridiculous. no wonder it's unpopular voters. unpopular with voters. >> originally brought by unpopular with voters. >> johnsonnally brought by unpopular with voters. >> johnson .3lly brought by boris johnson. >> yeah, well, i mean, all these ideas, same . i ideas, they're all the same. i don't want to call them all the same because that stops same because that that stops people from voting from one side or but but yeah, and or the other. but but yeah, and it's, it's and a right it's, it's left and a right issue. like where in issue. it's like where i live in beautiful nunhead in south—east london. want to they london. they want to have they want traffic want to have low traffic neighbourhoods. they want to take off street by take the cars off the street by and basically they want to get take the cars off the street by and out. cally they want to get you out. >> lewis don't they? >> lewis don't they? >> that's what all they >> that's what it's all they want. they want to want. they want they want to keep you in. >> let's quickly try and >> and let's quickly try and do this want to get this one, because i want to get your on this. the daily your take on this. the daily star sunday. lewis we love to talk star sunday. lewis we love to taliyeah, big break. wash out, 55 >> yeah, big break. wash out, 55 mile storms. we're all going >> yeah, big break. wash out, 55 mile all storms. we're all going >> yeah, big break. wash out, 55 mile all going;. we're all going >> yeah, big break. wash out, 55 mile all going;. we're ealljoing we're all going to we're all going a holiday. it's going on a summer holiday. it's britain. the weather's
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britain. it's the weather's horrible here. it it used to keep the riff raff out . the bad i >> -- >> are we at risk of doing that classic thing of going climate change? can't be real because it's cold right now, which is like humans aren't it's cold right now, which is like taller.mans aren't it's cold right now, which is like taller. look aren't it's cold right now, which is like taller. look aten't it's cold right now, which is like taller. look at that. getting taller. look at that. warwick like warwick davis yeah, but like last , last june we warwick davis yeah, but like last, last june we had last, last month in june we had a hot june, the hottest june ever something like ever or something like that. >> it was look, this is proof. >> this is proof that climate change is real, global warming is it's so hot and stuff. >> it's so hot and stuff. >> it's so hot and stuff. >> this month it's like the >> then this month it's like the coldest and coldest one ever. and everybody's all the everybody's gone quiet. all the signs everybody's gone quiet. all the sig|no no one's hot then? >> no one. no one's hot then? no. in europe, it's no. elsewhere in europe, it's all cold. well, it's. it's it for one. coming up in part for part one. coming up in part two, nigel farage is like the modern day martin lewis and we found out how lesbians can get pregnant. don't google we'll pregnant. don't google it. we'll see shortly
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radio. welcome back to headliners. >> i'm here with two men who would sing delilah and then probably recreate the music video with bobby's. it's leo
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kearse and louis schaefer. let's move on to the mail on sunday, leo bank for the elite . it leo and bank for the elite. it isn't very inclusive. >> yeah. who'd of thought so? nigel farage is today escalated his coots in the bbc his battle with coots in the bbc over the closure of his bank account a formal account by lodging a formal complaint with the information commissioner, has the commissioner, which has the power hit coutts bank with power to hit coutts bank with fines of up to £17 million. us and also the bbc has been dragged into it because apparently lee simon jack the business editor, editor of the bbc who leaked the story , bbc who leaked the story, saying, well, coots, a source at coots has said that that nigel farage just didn't have enough money to have the account and that's why he was his account was cancelled, which became the sort of the lefty narrative and was a lie was then revealed to be a lie when nigel farage did the data subject access request and got the dossier that coots had on it. so somebody leaked it to him. but it turns out it was probably the probably the ceo of coots, dame alison rose, who's
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sitting next to him at a dinner the night before. so that's i mean, that's a that's a breach of client confidentiality. i don't know if as an excuse she might say, well, yeah, but it was a lie. so no, i didn't breach any data because i lied. but, this is terrible but, i mean, this is terrible for coots because data subject access cost a lot of access requests cost a lot of money to process . you've got to money to process. you've got to have paralegals and lawyers sifting redact any sifting through to redact any other people's names. >> why that ? >> and why is that? >> and why is that? >> because. >> and why is that? >> andiuse. >> and why is that? >> and how do know that information? >> because my wife's a lawyer. so i know. i know this stuff. but they cost you know, tens but yet they cost you know, tens of thousands of pounds each to process. should imagine process. and i should imagine everyone with an account at coots right now is like, what were saying me ? what were they saying about me? what did did they call me a did they did they call me a racist? were they racist? did they were they looking social media? looking at my social media? did they retweeting they see me retweeting ricky gervais joke? >> i suppose gervaisjoke? >> i suppose that gervais joke? >> i suppose that is likely to be bigger this 17.5 be a bigger cost than this 17.5 million, which one of their million, which is one of their accounts, probably. it's not a huge cost when you imagine how rich the have be. rich the clients have to be. they're this is the they're do you think this is the irony is it meant to be irony is, is it meant to be trying be reputational
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trying to not be reputational damage and look what damage for them? and look what it's some people it's done. yeah, some people have never heard of coots before, well see he's before, but well you see he's you're focusing coots. before, but well you see he's youthis)cusing coots. before, but well you see he's youthis is|sing coots. before, but well you see he's youthis is natwestzoots. before, but well you see he's youthis is natwest natwest owns >> this is natwest natwest owns coots and was the woman who was alison roche's of natwest . alison roche's head of natwest. natwest has to according nigel farage a show thousands , tens of farage a show thousands, tens of thousands of people have had their accounts cancelled quietly. but because they weren't doing weren't nigel farage he's doing an by doing this. an amazing thing by doing this. i myself have. i would take out all the money i have in natwest, but i don't have any money there. but i have an account. i haven't pay the have an account. >> well that's that's so you can stop yourself getting cancelled. just be overdrawn permanently then. can cancel yeah. >> they would have they >> they would have to, they would have to say we owe you. it's loan the it's now a loan and but the point, point of the point, but the point of the thing is, is that is that the is that i think obviously need that i think obviously we need the banking sector to be strong . but lessons need to be taught . and i think if we if the people do a bud light on natwest and even destroy their market
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value by 1% or 2, it would do an incredible amount. it would make them think twice about doing this to somebody else. >> it also seems like it shouldn't be a left right issue because it's not impossible for if this becomes normal for if this becomes the normal for banks posh people run banks as if posh people who run banks as if posh people who run banks much suddenly banks could very much suddenly decide like poor people. decide to not like poor people. and wouldn't a bank and then i wouldn't get a bank account anyway. >> they could that. but >> they could do that. but they're going it. it they're not going to it. it is a left right issue because people on bless on the left today, god bless them, people, they think them, lovely people, they think it will never happen them it will never happen to them because than because they're holier than thou. because we're in thou. we know because we're in league devil . you league with the devil. you pretend that you're not. steve but we are going to get cancelled for being holier than thou. >> i was amazed to see comedians like rosie holt, dara o'brien, like rosie holt, dara o'brien, like smart comedians, like both of them . but they were tweeting of them. but they were tweeting basically in defence of coots , basically in defence of coots, you know, standing up for the for the multi multi—billion pound bank . for the multi multi—billion pound bank. but like so myopic to not see like there are people who mock the government. so if
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you mock the government, what do you mock the government, what do you think if there's a change in government, if there's a new regime do you think regime comes in, do you think they might use rules to they might use these rules to cancel your account when you're mocking the government? the first thing like other authoritarian regimes do when they take power is cancel comedians and journalists and people who question them. >> yeah, cancel i was >> yeah, cancel the show i was on. that's why that's why on. yeah, that's why that's why i do that that i don't do that anymore. that got cancelled straight away. the sunday and what sunday telegraph. leo and what has ever done us has england ever done for us apart and the apart from maths, bread and the wisdom confucius ? i'm on the wisdom of confucius? i'm on the wrong sorry. wisdom of confucius? i'm on the wroso, sorry. wisdom of confucius? i'm on the wroso, lee sorry. wisdom of confucius? i'm on the wroso, lee anderson, our >> so, lee anderson, our esteemed at news esteemed colleague at gb news and also tory mp, said that everything that is good in the world in britain. he's world starts in britain. so he's in trouble for spitting some facts here. he cited the industrial revolution, railways, football and william shakespeare as some of the uk's contributions to the world and he said he's proud to be a british person and even prouder to be an englishman. this is where he comes unstuck because all the good stuff that the uk provided actually invented provided was actually invented by scots antibiotics. the telephone, engine, telephone, the steam engine, genetic cloning , the mri
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genetic cloning, the mri scanner, refrigerator , which we scanner, refrigerator, which we don't even need. so we're so good at inventing. we're even inventing things we don't need the hypodermic syringe. we do need use a lot in need that. we use it a lot in glasgow, toilet , glasgow, the flushing toilet, even the television that's being watched right now. it was all invented in scotland. >> what i said, many >> and what have i said, many times? greatest times? what is the greatest thing that britain has created , thing that britain has created, which is the united states of america ? i, as an american dyed america? i, as an american dyed in the wool 100% greatest country in the world, but britain created america. britain is the judy murray is the judy murray of maybe that's not a good example, but who's like who's like djokovic's dad or mom orjudy murray is probably a better example than djokovic. right? because she should get all the credit for the andy murray tennis school onto the i. >> louis should mps take extra paid work? and before you answer , if they didn't, you might have your own show on here by what number are up to. number are we up to. >> i'm so lost here. i didn't put in order. put i didn't put this in order. oh. god. this the worst
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oh. oh my god. this is the worst show i've ever done. okay. show that i've ever done. okay. yeah. this big, fat guy named lord pickles. think fat. lord pickles. i think he's fat. i picture. he's. i didn't see the picture. he's. his is pickles. he's his name is pickles. but he's definitely definitely definitely low. he's definitely high carb. he's just. he's a fat quy- high carb. he's just. he's a fat guy. eric, he's the guy. lord eric, he's the chairman of the. i'm lord chairman of the. i'm sorry. lord pickles says rules on new jobs for ex ministers useless after bofis for ex ministers useless after boris johnson's mail column controversy, where boris johnson goesin controversy, where boris johnson goes in half an hour before he speaks to start his new thing and tells a cobra, which is the advisory committee on business appointments, that he's got a new job starting in 30 minutes. that's the that's what the rules require . and so they made it require. and so they made it seem like like john said had broken some rule but according to this you'll have to tell me whether this right that whether i read this right that they johnson didn't they said boris johnson didn't break and it said it break any rules and it said it said that he that lord pickles appeared to suggest he would not have required a sanction according to this. so i don't they're going to have to change they're going to have to change the rules. >> yeah. they want to introduce like a six month waiting period. so when you when you leave
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office, being office, when you stop being an mp, wait six mp, you've got to wait six months before you can start getting some payback from all months before you can start gettcompanies�*ayback from all months before you can start gettcompanies�*aybehelped| all the companies you helped out when were an mp. when you were an mp. >> but says, it says, but >> but he says, but it says, but the guy said that going to a non same sector position then wouldn't merit penalties or do you think that's why he's not written about politics yet he's been writing about cheese in his car. >> yeah, because it was a weird first column wasn't it, about injection and because he's got type 2 diabetes and gout. >> the observer, leo and the nhs fertility department has got some face, so. some egg on its face, so. >> oh, my god, that's a that's an unpleasant thought . somebody an unpleasant thought. somebody sneezed during a during an exam , but married lesbian couple who launched a landmark legal case after the nhs , after they after the nhs, after they against the nhs , have claimed against the nhs, have claimed a victory for equality after the local health service group agreed to change its fertility treatment for same sex couples. so up until now, the nhs would fund ivf or there is a bit of a
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postcode lottery. so it depends what part you're in. but the part they were in would fund ivf , which is very expensive. it's up to 25 to £30,000 for 12 rounds of fertility treatment. they'd pay for it for heterosexual couples, but not for same sex couples. well which would be lesbian couples would imagine, because it doesn't really work on men . yeah, i really work on men. yeah, i mean, you can try and have some fun, but yeah , but. and it's fun, but yeah, but. and it's been seen as a as a gay tax by campaigners . so yeah, i mean campaigners. so yeah, i mean this seems this seems absolutely correct. you know, there's nothing to , to stop. in fact, nothing to, to stop. in fact, i think a child raised by two mums probably does better than a child raised by a mother and me or lewis. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> what's your take on this? lewis i'm guessing you don't need ivf, just eat more meat and all sudden eggs will all of a sudden your eggs will be, splendid . be, well, splendid. >> i that i believe that >> i think that i believe that for men and women, the problem with lesbia is having children for men and women, the problem withatesbia is having children for men and women, the problem withat there's having children for men and women, the problem withat there's no ring children for men and women, the problem withat there's no sperm. ldren for men and women, the problem withat there's no sperm. soen for men and women, the problem withat there's no sperm. so of is that there's no sperm. so of course they're going to have they're going to have not hard to come by. isn't hard to
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to come by. it isn't hard to come but but you first come by. but but but you first you it. it's not two you need it. so it's not two lesbians having a child. it's two lesbians. plus it's a man who's maybe not in the picture. so it isn't it isn't trying to get two people. you can get a donor once you've eaten that, you can go and find a man. >> i don't know. >> i don't know. >> i don't know. >> i mean, i don't want to talk about this because this is why you put your twitter address on. >> pretend it's not you're available. >> available. i have a >> i'm available. i have a girlfriend, but i'm still available every she available because every time she listens this, listens to me talk like this, she horrible she thinks i'm a horrible person. i don't think i think that they that they set this rule that we're going rule that says we're not going to lesbians or gay guys, to help lesbians or gay guys, whatever also whatever lesbians. but they also say no one above 38 can get say that no one above 38 can get in vitro fertilisation therapy or whatever it is. and that's sort of there's less chance of it working, much chance. it working, much less chance. yeah, doesn't matter. yeah, but that doesn't matter. >> yeah, they've >> but there's yeah, they've got to cost benefit to weigh up the cost benefit i guess. >> well the cost benefit here is people just babies people should just have babies just babies when you're just to have babies when you're like you're young, like like when you're young, like not, you know, yeah. >> you know, when you're >> 12 but you know, when you're in your whatever, you're,
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in your 20s or whatever, you're, you have have babies, you know, have, have babies, they're great. nobody tells you this, but babies are actually really hard really great. they're not hard to after i've had fans to look after. i've had fans that were harder to look after than my baby . than my baby. >> do know what this is? how >> do you know what this is? how old child? old is your child? >> months, exactly. >> nine months, exactly. >> nine months, exactly. >> him a >> early days. send him a message and say how hard it is and horrible it's going to be. >> that's it part two. and >> that's it for part two. and coming a kiss that caused coming up, a kiss that caused problems kuala problems in malaysia, kuala lumpur. her. lumpur. he never touched her. and himars. stick around and also himars. so stick around . that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> good evening. my name is rachel ayers and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast brought to you by the met office. so it's been quite a dull and gloomy start to the weekend. things do look a little bit brighter for on sunday, bit brighter for some on sunday, but all this unsettled weather is due to this area low is due to this area of low pressure moving eastwards across the uk, throughout this weekend. now, looking at the detail for tonight's weather and across
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much of scotland, it will be dry with some clearer so with some clearer spells. so a cool night to come here, but elsewhere, plenty of cloud around and some strong winds, too , especially for english too, especially for english channel coasts where we could see local coastal gales. so temperatures for many tonight not dropping out of the teens as so another dull and cloudy start to sunday morning for much of england, wales and northern ireland with heavy rain across northern england and into northern england and into northern parts of wales. that could bring some localised disruption on either side of this, some bright spells and the odd shower to but temperatures faring a little bit better tomorrow compared to today with highs of 23 in the southeast . highs of 23 in the southeast. but now looking into the new week and that band of rain from tomorrow will continue to sink its way southwards but cooler , its way southwards but cooler, fresher and drier conditions following in behind. so a little bit of a better start to the new week. but as we go towards the middle part of the week, more rain moving in from the west and
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those temperatures not looking like they're going get much like they're going to get much above . above average. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. proud sponsors of weather on .
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listening to gb news radio. >> welcome back to headliners to the observer. lewis and i've never done a kiss so shocking it stopped a festival, but i did upset a funeral once. >> yeah, well , why was it a upset a funeral once. >> yeah, well, why was it a dead person? you kissed? >> that's the just leaving the mental image for people see. mental image for people to see. >> sorry, sorry, sorry. i >> okay. sorry, sorry, sorry. i actually mental image. actually got the mental image. okay is in the guardian. okay this is in the guardian. malaysian halted after malaysian festival halted after matty healy criticises the anti lgbtq+ laws. and this is the this this matty healy guy is in the band the 1975 which i've never heard . i've heard of it. i never heard. i've heard of it. i thought it's an interesting name
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to call a band in 1975. but he said he was on stage and he was protesting in malaysia which is a very muslim country about lgbt rights and it was just another typical example of some westerner coming to some other country. and basically trying to force ideas on another force their ideas on another country. he said he said he country. and he said he said he he actually was quoted on stage as saying, i made a mistake when we were booking shows. i wasn't looking into it. i don't see the blank point right. i do not see the point of inviting the 1975 to a country then telling us who we can have sex with and then he was he was disinvited and they closed down the festival. so what is the lesson in the closed down the fest ? they closed down down the fest? they closed down the entire festival at another day or something to go. this is interesting because my friend reza and by the way, i respect matty healy for doing this. >> so many artists just take the money and run like beyonce went >> so many artists just take the monperform un like beyonce went >> so many artists just take the monperform forlike beyonce went >> so many artists just take the monperform for gaddafi'sice went >> so many artists just take the monperform for gaddafi's son,ent and perform for gaddafi's son, like most evil , the most
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like the most evil, the most blood soaked money. you could possibly get. and she doesn't even need it. you know what i mean? healy probably needs mean? matt healy probably needs it needs a bit more than her. and, know, she took the and, you know, she took the money just, you know, money and just, you know, doesn't, doesn't care. doesn't, doesn't doesn't care. >> you know, he the money? >> where is he? you know, took a stand. he was like, what? malaysia, googled malaysia, like finally googled what malaysia was found out. you know what you can and can't do there. but interesting is there. but what's interesting is there's of becoming more there's sort of becoming a more islamic country. they're becoming sort of intolerant becoming more sort of intolerant of free expression and stuff. they're becoming more like middle eastern countries as so they've got like a sort of virtue police. so my friend rizal, who runs crack house comedy in kuala lumpur, his club was down and he was was shut down and he was arrested because an open mic night , arrested because an open mic night, somebody did something that considered offensive, that was considered offensive, blasphemy, blasphemous . she was blasphemy, blasphemous. she was wearing a burqa and she took the bark western clothes bark off and had western clothes on was on underneath. and that was basically and that was basically the joke. and that was seen as horrifically offensive . seen as horrifically offensive. so worries me that you know, so it worries me that you know, these places like malaysia that
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were previously sort of quite benign islam , you know, were previously sort of quite beni it's islam , you know, were previously sort of quite beni it's becomingam , you know, were previously sort of quite beni it's becoming a] , you know, were previously sort of quite beni it's becoming a lot'ou know, were previously sort of quite beni it's becoming a lot less. tow, now it's becoming a lot less. well, change. well, things change. >> is, you don't >> but the point is, you don't go somebody else's country. go to somebody else's country. and you and then while you're there, you don't their money and then don't take their money and then and then make poo poo, and then make a great poo poo, literally you're doing literally what you're doing right now. >> em- e that's true. >> yeah, well, that's true. >> yeah, well, that's true. >> you know what i was >> that's you know what i was thinking is i'm on this. thinking that it is i'm on this. i'm on this channel. what am i going to say here and complain about going know about what's going on? i know what's everybody else what's going on. everybody else knows on. a knows what's going on. it's a bit too for i'm not bit too late for me. i'm not going here. you know, going to sit here. you know, after they fire me, i'll say, oh, i was there. oh, i can't believe i was there. >> right on to the mail on sunday, leo and someone has nicked your catchphrase so literally everything is racist how. >> now. >> it's true. i mean, i do a thing on twitter, like every day i post a thing like, what's racist today? because there's something there's something every day there's racist and what's racist today? this jason aldean song, he's a country and western artist or maybe just country. i don't know if he does the western, but he's got this song called try that in a small town, which which in the video he's performing in front of footage of blm and antifa
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of the footage of blm and antifa rallies, businesses getting burnt down and stuff, which was obviously defended by the left at the time because it was perfectly just to destroy private property and businesses that people have built up over decades. says , you know, decades. and he says, you know, try that in a small town. see where it you. and intoning where it gets you. and intoning that you're going to get that it's you're going to get stopped by the people because they they band together and they've got some moral background backbone as opposed to in cities who just to people in cities who just allow it to happen. so it's been people said this is people have said this is glorifying vigilante violence and calling for lynching. and it's absolutely not he's just saying don't do it in a small town and he's quite right. if you in small town, you did it in a small town, people stop you. also, people would stop you. also, there's much to burn in there's not that much to burn in a small town. >> louis, your on this one? >> louis, your take on this one? >> louis, your take on this one? >> on this that is >> my take on this is that is that sounds good. it's like , that it sounds good. it's like, look, the fact is that look, the fact is, is that people living in small are people living in small towns are like the rest of the opposition . if you call them the opposition, have no energy whatsoever. so that is not going to happen. they probably let him
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come it. the most come in and burn it. the most shocking this story shocking thing about this story was, as watched video shocking thing about this story was, donald natched video shocking thing about this story was, donald trumpi video shocking thing about this story was, donald trump was video shocking thing about this story was, donald trump was donald where donald trump was donald trump jr, the big man and he he was totally imitating his dad. he was sounding like his. i can't believe i, i don't do imitation. >> was he doing it as badly as that? >> yes, basically. but you could see he was imitating his dad and you just felt sorry for him because he's like the loser kid of a great kind of like of a great man, kind of like robert kennedy kind of like robert f kennedy jr kind of like that. bush. you know what that. george bush. you know what i yeah i don't know if i mean? yeah i don't know if that's a good example. the sunday louis, but sunday telegraph, louis, but soft light through yonder soft what light through yonder window soft what light through yonder wintis/ soft what light through yonder wintis the shine off a. >> tis the shine off a. >> tis the shine off a. >> yeah . this is a man in a >> yeah. this is a man in a suit. was allowed to roam a theatre with children present. and this wasn't part of the part of shakespeare. i don't think shakespeare had a guy in a shakespeare had a had a guy in a gibson . but you don't know gibson. but you don't know because he wrote practically everything. >> pursued by everything. >> and was at the >> and this was at the shakespeare and shakespeare globe theatre, and people very unhappy that people were very unhappy that a guy, a is like a leather thing with a ball. and i think it's
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like a mouse, a mask that he's wearing. very scary at. and. and so people were saying, you've got to kick the guy out because it's just a guy in a suit wearing. but i find people wearing. but i find people wearing masks is even scarier nowadays. >> it's more erotic . >> it's more erotic. >> it's more erotic. >> it's more erotic. >> it's a tricky one, isn't it, leo? because if you do try and like manhandle him and throw him out, he'd love it. yeah. >> yeah, absolutely. i don't really see the problem here. it's only sexual get it's only sexual if you get aroused looking him. so aroused while looking at him. so i unless it was so tight i mean, unless it was so tight that you know , that it revealed his, you know, his appendages , i don't think his appendages, i don't think there's much of a problem. i just, you know, these suits. i mean, i don't know if you've ever worn leather trousers , but ever worn leather trousers, but getting off like getting them on and off like doing that for a whole body suit , god, you'd be , like, oh, my god, you'd be there day with talcum powder. >> i struggled try and get >> i struggled to try and get a bin in the sometimes bin liner in the bin. sometimes the trying to get big the idea of trying to get a big thicker yeah yeah. thicker 1—1 over me. yeah yeah. the reason i'm not doing the only reason i'm not doing it. the sunday mirror. leo and there's a reason why in women's football, there's a reason why in women's footbalshirts. versus shirts. >> pubs is this story. have
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>> so pubs is this story. have i missed ? i've missed one. where missed? i've missed one. where is it? oh sorry. yeah, right. oh, yeah. so this is. this is. sorry steal your catchphrase, but this is a non story. so ian wright, who's an england football legend, he saw some people holding up signs asking for shirts from the for football shirts from the players , and he doesn't like it. players, and he doesn't like it. he tweeted that he doesn't like it. that is entirety of it. and that is the entirety of this story. yeah this two page story. yeah >> and then there's a and so somebody and so he tweeted that and somebody tweeted back says i was i had we had the sign on asking for a shirt and it was my daughter a young girl. she asked. so it wasn't some dude ian wright making paintings like some creepy guy like louis schaefer . like that's what schaefer. like that's what something that i mean , it is something that i mean, it is something that i mean, it is something i have done. something that i have done. yeah. guy, he's yeah. the guy, he says he's holding his daughter, but. >> yeah, but he's not going to smell that shark. >> actually guy's >> this was actually the guy's daughter. think and daughter. and i think and i think probably nothing think it was probably nothing personal a lot of people like women's football, but it probably enlivened the day . it probably enlivened the day. it probably enlivened the day. it probably made the day possible
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until the mail on sunday >> louis and you can't just name something after the late queen unless it's one of her grandkids, great grandkids in america. >> yeah, yeah. well, this is funny because i didn't realise this because why can't you name something after the after the queen pubs wishing to name themselves after queen elizabeth ii must have a an appropriate reason, end quote . for reason, end quote. for government, for with government . understood. to be working hard on official national memorial for the late monarch. so they're saying if you want to name it the queen elizabeth house maybe and shakespeare's globe theatre . yeah, you can't name it. you have to ask the government. and so basically they're saying that the that the government that the queen continues to own the land, own the name queen elizabeth. >> yeah. i mean it's our name, i suppose, and the royal family is sort of like a thing. it's like our head of type thing, our head of state type thing, right ? i want andrew right? i want prince andrew erotic holiday island. yeah, that's the that's the theme park
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i'd open with the royal name, but blackgang chine in isle of wight they should rebrand that one. >> got a low level, but actually the whole of britain could just >> got a low level, but actually thenamed of britain could just >> got a low level, but actually the named of b|instead uld just >> got a low level, but actually thenamed of b|instead ofi just >> got a low level, but actually thenamed of b|instead of like be named that instead of like great britain just prince andrew. >> erotic holiday island. >> erotic holiday island. >> but you can see somebody in america you there's america, you know, there's somebody named queen somebody in america named queen elizabeth some small town. >> love it. they love it . try >> love it. they love it. try that small town. that's it for part three. but coming up in the final section, we're talking with small brained humans . we're with small brained humans. we're talking humans talking about small brain humans . and we are about to find out where you can get cocaine . more where you can get cocaine. more pubuc where you can get cocaine. more public service broadcasting .
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next welcome back to the final part of headliners. let's get to it. the observer . leo, were early the observer. leo, were early humans intelligent ? they didn't humans intelligent? they didn't spend a lot of their time on social media, so they might have
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had them. had something about them. >> yeah, and this is early. humans back time. humans like going back in time. not waking up in the not just like waking up in the morning my morning when i'm probably at my thickest. asked. they thickest. so they asked. they basically months ago basically found a few months ago they like new species they found this like new species of human that us, like of human that predates us, like wherever we are sapiens. i think . i think we're sapiens. so it's from a quarter of a million, a quarter of a million years before humans at a tiny before modern humans at a tiny brain the size of a chimpanzee , brain the size of a chimpanzee, the a chimpanzee's brain the size of a chimpanzee's brain , not the size of a chimpanzee, because that be a large brain. but the claimed its artistic can make tools buries its dead . but make tools buries its dead. but now they're like, where's the evidence ? because i mean i guess evidence? because i mean i guess it's so long ago they don't know and kind of it but and that's that's kind of it but how did they it ? how deep did they bury it? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> how 5 how how do they >> yeah. >> how how do they know >> i mean how how do they know if they buried their people, if they're already going they're already they're going to be this stuff they're already they're going to be came this stuff they're already they're going to be came after. this stuff that came after. >> there's a lot of bones and they're. a cave, they're. they're deep in a cave, so just assumed that. that so it's just assumed that. that they brought to they were brought in there to die. found their die. or maybe they found their way cave and couldn't way in the cave and couldn't find their way out. possibly. maybe they lot of food maybe they ate a lot of food and they fat because there
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they were too fat because there was got out. they was a time they got out. they got this, they had got fat like this, but they had small our brains got small brains and our brains got smarter, got bigger, and bigger and and and larger and larger and larger and larger up time that up until the time that agriculture was developed at about and about 10,000 years ago. and our brains, are are brains, our brains are even are smaller now they were then. smaller now than they were then. no smaller. yeah. no way. about 15% smaller. yeah. i made that up. >> we all fell for it due to the small brains . small brains. >> think it's true? >> think it's true? >> i think it is true. >> i think it is true. >> the sunday times then lewis . >> the sunday times then lewis. and they're giving us longer to cross the road, which we're meant to be getting more exercise. is what i say . exercise. harvey is what i say. >> yeah. make him walk faster. how pedestrians cross how did the pedestrians cross the slowly they the road more slowly than they used the times used to? according to the times 7 used to? according to the times ? they people are ? and they say that people are walking and slower and walking slower and slower and that 80, 90, 76, a huge percentage of the population was 65 older. men and women 65 years older. men and women don't make it across in time for the green man , but they don't the green man, but they don't call it the green man anymore. they call it a green person. they call it a green person. they according to this. yeah, it's called the green person. yeah yeah. and so what they want is the department of
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transportation has new guidelines saying give people more of a chance. i say they should just eliminate green lights, lights , whatever lights, red lights, whatever that and just to zebra that is, and just go to zebra crossings because people walk faster across zebra crossings because they might run over because they might get run over by zebra well, do. by a zebra. well, they do. >> this beauty of the >> this is the beauty of the pelican crossing is that it pelican crossing is that when it goes amber light goes from red, the amber light flashes being same as a flashes being the same as a belisha so it's belisha beacon. so it's temporarily zebra crossing temporarily a zebra crossing right ? temporarily a zebra crossing right? right. temporarily a zebra crossing right ? right. that's so you right? right. that's so you don't you don't need to get across the green man's on. across when the green man's on. >> places have done away >> some places have done away with kind of thing with this kind of thing altogether. like road in altogether. and like the road in the all one thing. the pavement is all one thing. and apparently people drive more safely because you don't know where are or where the where you are or where the people and the people walk people are and the people walk more safely because are more safely because there are cars. >> yeah. and also the thing like when i used to live in la. before it was a hellhole and i used to live in la. and if you stepped in the road, a car had to stop for you. yeah, it had to stop. whereas in new york they just you over, to hit just run you over, have to hit you, have hit it's you, they have to hit you. it's when they're automatic when they're all automatic electric cars with sensors and
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stuff for self—driving cars, they're stop they're going to have to stop because they're going have to stop. >> yeah. people going stop. » yeah. >> yeah. and people are going to mob apparently you mob these cars apparently you can already bully tesla, self—driving teslas . if you're self—driving teslas. if you're in a regular car, you just drive at it and you can cut it up and it'll have the sensors will make it'll have the sensors will make it brake and move out the way. >> this is exactly how skynet forms, though. eventually the oppression gets to it. let's move on the leo beach move on to the metro leo beach combing. just got a bit more fun. oh yeah. >> is . this is brilliant. >> this is. this is brilliant. so people scouring so young people are scouring a beach ireland after of beach in ireland after bricks of cocaine up on shore. cocaine have washed up on shore. so this is in case anybody wants to know where to go . it's horn to know where to go. it's horn head near to dunfanaghy. i think that's how you pronounce it in county donegal and package is worth more than £34 million. that's a lot of cocaine . 60kg of that's a lot of cocaine. 60kg of cocaine is before , you know, cocaine is before, you know, your london drug dealers have mixed it with coffee and all that kind of stuff . so these that kind of stuff. so these youths were seen scouring the beach for these packages when confronted about what they were doing on a farmer's land , they
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doing on a farmer's land, they said they were just trying to help the search operation. help with the search operation. i technically correct. i mean, technically correct. yeah, but i don't know if they were going it over to were going to hand it over to the yeah, we're anti—litter. >> so we just thought we'd tidy up. mean, there's this a good up. i mean, there's this a good price, lewis? know. well price, lewis? i don't know. well it's interesting. >> why this is a news >> i mean, why this is a news item. the is the irish item. the fact is, is the irish and cornwall lions and the and the cornwall lions and the devonians, they've been scouring the beaches forever for when a ship crashed into it because they used to mess up the lights to get the stuff. and so this is cocaine , which is only it's paid off. >> yeah. the observer, lewis self—scan barmaids. now are you going to flirt with. well this is good news. >> good news? yeah. end >> good news? yeah. the end of the according to the the bartender. according to the guardian, the uk vending machines pouring pints the machines pouring pints for the masses . i mean, why not? i've masses. i mean, why not? i've been. they've got these been. and they've got these installed this company. i'm installed in this company. i'm not going mention the name of not going to mention the name of the company because this is just. this is non it's just. this is a non news it's a pr basically. it's pr piece, basically. it's saying, used to it. it's saying, get used to it. it's coming. i mean, to crystal coming. i mean, i go to crystal palace. that's my team. the eagles go eagles and um, and if
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you want to drink during half time it's forever . so this you time it's forever. so this you don't you know this will make it faster. it'll make it faster. so good on you and also a hit it in bars we're like because beer is slow enough to pour but people have cocktails. >> you've got to wait while somebody shaves a kumquat and like, sets fire to like a pineapple over this drink. and it's like, why are you bothering? two bothering? there's only two types in the world. types of cocktail in the world. there's creamy one and there's the creamy one and there's gives you there's the one that gives you heartburn. have a bucket heartburn. so just have a bucket of and like, scoop some of each one and like, scoop some out, in a school out, like you're in a school cafeteria . cafeteria. >> right. finally, >> hell, yeah. right. finally, we to the mail on sunday. leo we go to the mail on sunday. leo and seeing as panel is made and seeing as the panel is made up carnivore someone up of a carnivore and someone from let's if you from scotland, let's see if you disagree fruit is bad from scotland, let's see if you disyou.�* fruit is bad from scotland, let's see if you disyou. so fruit is bad for you. so >> oh, well, according to this, it is. there's the of super it is. there's the rise of super sweet fruit . so growers are sweet fruit. so growers are modifying , strawberries modifying grapes, strawberries and cherries and basically all kinds of fruit to make them so sugary. they're either selectively them selectively breeding them to make using make them sweeter or using actual genetic modification to make them super sweet. so
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they've got way more sugar in them than they did, you know, 50 years ago. and they're really bad for you because because of all the sugar, they even like animals in zoos. they kind of all the sugar, they even like anirfruit in zoos. they kind of all the sugar, they even like anirfruit anymore “hey kind of all the sugar, they even like anirfruit anymore because of all the sugar, they even like anirfruit anymore because itf the fruit anymore because it gives them tooth decay. so you're better off eating a mars bar. >> this is not a this is a >> this is not even a this is a non story from 3400 years non news story from 3400 years ago, 500 years ago. humans ago, 500 years ago. the humans have constantly been trying to manipulate fruit to make it sweeter. and the fact is, is that bad for you . it's that fruit is bad for you. it's high and i don't high in fructose and i don't care what they say about the fibre fibre is not good for you and it isn't good for you and it's got high in fructose which raises your uric acid levels, which not just gout which gives you not just gout but gives you diabetes and type 2 diabetes and kills you. and we've got ofcom the other we've got ofcom on the other line you can say that i'm line and you can say that i'm full of it. do not eat fruit. it's fruit is an it's just fruit is an accelerant. it's what the animals eat to transport the seeds from one from one place to another. and the trade off is the sweetness which makes us fat, which makes us prepared for the winter for hibernation. do
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not eat fruit. >> some fruits like pineapple have other uses, but that's not necessarily going to that. i'm just saying, you know, it might make you fat, but it has some beneficial effects. what is the other news was that it sells. >> what you mean? other uses >> what do you mean? other uses 7 >> what do you mean? other uses ? don't know. ? i don't know. >> look that. it on >> oh, look at that. put it on your head. >> if you're baddiel in 1997. >> i'm not familiar with. i know there's something to explain that the nearly over. that the show is nearly over. >> so let's explain this. a quick sunday's quick look at sunday's front pages. the mail sunday goes pages. the mail on sunday goes with film claims boris lied with vile film claims boris lied about nearly dying of covid sunday telegraph. net zero can't become a crusade . the mirror become a crusade. the mirror tory toff serves fun flour on pic of cameron the sunday express pm i'll shut woke banks . the sunday times says khan to rethink ulez after call from starmer and finally the daily starmer and finally the daily star goes with we're all going on a summer holiday as the front pages. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guests, leo kearse and louis schaefer, for going through the papers . i'll going through the papers. i'll be tomorrow at 11:00 with
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be back tomorrow at 11:00 with leo victor daniels, who will leo and victor daniels, who will be you watching the be here. if you are watching the 5 stay tuned for breakfast. 5 am. stay tuned for breakfast. it's on the way for you next. whatever you get up to, enjoy yourself and we see you yourself and we will see you tomorrow do it all over again i >> -- >> what about pineapples? >> what about pineapples? >> temperature's rising. >> the temperature's rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> good evening . my name is >> good evening. my name is rachel ayers and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast brought to you by the met office . so it's been quite a dull and gloomy start to the weekend. things do look a little bit brighter for some on sunday day, but this unsettled weather but all this unsettled weather is due this area of low is due to this area of low pressure moving eastwards across the uk throughout this weekend . the uk throughout this weekend. now, looking at the detail for tonight's weather and across much scotland, it will dry much of scotland, it will be dry with clearer spells. so a with some clearer spells. so a cool night to come here, but elsewhere, plenty of cloud around and some strong winds, too , especially for english too, especially for english channel coasts where we could see local coastal gales. so
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temperatures for many tonight not dropping out of the teens as so another dull and cloudy start to sunday morning for much of england , wales and northern england, wales and northern ireland with heavy rain across northern england and into northern england and into northern parts of wales that could bring some localised disruption. either side of this, some brighter spells and the odd shower too. but temperatures faring a little bit better tomorrow compared to today with highs of 23 in the southeast . it highs of 23 in the southeast. it now looking into the new week and that band of rain from tomorrow will continue to sink its way southwards but cooler , its way southwards but cooler, fresher and drier conditions following in behind. so a little bit of a better start to the new week, but as we go towards the middle part of the week, more rain moving in from the west and those temperatures is not looking like they're going to get much above average . get much above average. >> the temperatures rising, boxt solar, proud sponsors of weather on .
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good evening truth seekers and good questioning types. welcome along to neil oliver live once again. coming up tonight on the show, we'll be wading into the climate debate and i'll be talking to, amongst others, ben powell, co—founder of climate debate uk and ben has some questions of his own about the climate orthodoxy . i'll be hearing from orthodoxy. i'll be hearing from journalist donnacha mccarthy, the director of the climate media coalition , who says we media coalition, who says we should be extremely worried about the future of our planet. also, i'll be speaking to fossil hunter jamie jordan, who has
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