tv Headliners GB News July 27, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am BST
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gb news. >> good evening. i'm tatiana sanchez in the newsroom. the ceo of coutts bank, peter flavel, has stepped down with immediate effect. it's interim boss said the was agreed the resignation was agreed by mutual and the right mutual consent and is the right decision the decision for coutts and the wider says that decision for coutts and the wi the says that decision for coutts and the wi the handling says that decision for coutts and the wi the handling of says that decision for coutts and the wi the handling of nigelays that in the handling of nigel farage's the had farage's case, the bank had fallen standards farage's case, the bank had falpersonal standards farage's case, the bank had falpersonal service. standards farage's case, the bank had falpersonal service. he's|ndards farage's case, the bank had falpersonal service. he's also ds of personal service. he's also said he bears full responsibility poor responsibility for the poor handung responsibility for the poor handling case. handling of the farage case. in response resignation, response to his resignation, farage a matter response to his resignation, fa time. a matter response to his resignation, fa time. follows a matter of time. it follows the resignation ceo resignation of former ceo of natwest, dame alison who natwest, dame alison rose, who could line for a £5 could be in line for a £5 million if british gas million pay off if british gas owner that owner centrica has revealed that earnings at gas and earnings at its gas and electricity earnings at its gas and electri(by 889% £969 million earnings at its gas and el
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miliband says the scale of the profits money profits show that the money isn't reinvested into isn't being reinvested into energy production and is instead being funnelled back to shareholders. being funnelled back to sharehol insists being funnelled back to shareholinsists energy minister insists that energy companies are companies windfall profits are being support being taxed to support consumers, around being taxed to support consuna's, around being taxed to support consuna typical around being taxed to support consuna typical family's around half of a typical family's energy bill. the home office says it's expecting to send an initial 50 people to the uk's first asylum first floating barge for asylum seekers despite seekers on tuesday. despite safety concerns local safety concerns and local opposition. the bibby stockholm, which opposition. the bibby stockholm, whicweek, will around last week, will house around 500 men. government trying last week, will house around 500 m> evans. >> i'm simon evans. >> i'm simon evans. >> tonight >> and joining me tonight to take a look at friday papers, it's headliners permanent fixture fresh fixture leo kearse and a fresh face, darius davis . face, darius davis. >> good evening, gentlemen . how
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>> good evening, gentlemen. how are you.7 all >> good evening, gentlemen. how are you? all right. >> good, thanks . excellent. >> good, thanks. excellent. >> good, thanks. excellent. >> well, let's take a look at the pages. mail the front pages. the daily mail kick off with harry's hacking claim thrown out by court and mick jagger not thrown out, but leaving at 3 am. in a similarly dishevelled fashion. >> metro have coots and co coots and go rather and an image. there of wildfires which seems strangely appropriate to that headune strangely appropriate to that headline guardian era of global boiling has arrived and it's terrifying, says the un chief. and an image there from the women's football the mirror. the real cost of our throwaway fashion. it's all ending up on a beach in africa for an environmental disaster. a boil wash indeed would appear is coming i news the world enters era of global boiling. there it is pictured on fire and the daily star. finally how do you sleep? they want to know. addressing that to those who are
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profiting from this environmental catastrophe. well, those were your front pages as . those were your front pages as. so kicking off the in—depth look into the papers with our favourite, the guardian . favourite, the guardian. >> leo so the guardian is leading with some has been saying decades the end saying for a few decades the end of the world is nigh . of the world is nigh. >> so the era global boiling >> so the era of global boiling has arrived, says the un chief, antonio guterres . as july looks antonio guterres. as july looks set to be the hottest month on record. although i mean, looking at that headline, global boiling, which is 100 c, you'd think , wow, that's that's a big think, wow, that's that's a big increase . it's an increase from increase. it's an increase from like, what about 25 degrees or something or whatever it is all the way up to 100 degrees. but in fact, not 0.2 degrees of an increase. >> 0.2 degrees of an increase. and even if it were to go to the full extent that the man anticipates by the end of the century, it's one and a half degrees hotter , it? degrees hotter, isn't it? >> can't make of >> yes. you can't make a cup of tea temperature. you tea at that temperature. so you could america for the
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could in america for the americans happy with americans would be happy with the can tea the tea. you can make tea because rubbish plugs. >> just put it in they don't >> just put it in and they don't worry. we haven't spoken worry. but we haven't spoken about this before. darius obviously and i are well , obviously leo and i are well, gutierrez is climate changes here? >> it is terrifying and it's just the beginning , gutierrez just the beginning, gutierrez said, looking out the window as it rained . i wish they'd give us it rained. i wish they'd give us a bit of climate change in the uk because it's not been that sunny around here. >> changes . i sunny around here. >> changes. i mean, to be fair, we do get a lot of change here. it's just like it's not necessarily changing in the right direction. has anyone considered possibly pity considered the possibly pity that the photograph on the front page there of naomi ebi and osinachi ohale of nigeria is a clue as to why god is angry with us and punishing us with climate change? >> well, that's a that's a conspiracy theory. you could throw out there. i mean, that'd be interesting . be interesting. >> continue to embrace women's football . football. >> this just this just feels like like project fear more. you know, during covid, they were
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all like, oh, my god, you've got got a face you've got to wear a face mask. you've got to wear a face mask. you've got each got to stay distant from each other. can't anything. other. you can't do anything. don't house. this don't leave your house. this feels like the same thing. i mean, they did that sort of push through rules. you through authoritarian rules. you know, this this feels like they've another thing they've found another thing to make so make us all scared about. so they through they can push through their this final of communism. well, final stage of communism. well, this difficulty , isn't this is the difficulty, isn't it, is that all views seem it, is that all the views seem to so much. to align so much. >> same. people >> it's all the same. people believe in the same things and you is like a you kind of go, this is like a full you just it's so convenient. >> i mean, project veritas just did undercover interview with did an undercover interview with a journalist who just a cnn journalist who just revealed everything. as soon as they think they can get laid. and basically was the guy was and basically it was the guy was like, , this is like, oh, yeah, this is basically programming for basically our programming for the next few years just the next few years is just climate change. we're just going the next few years is just clinonz change. we're just going the next few years is just clinon that nge. we're just going the next few years is just clinon that and we're just going the next few years is just clinon that and it's're just going the next few years is just clinon that and it's notht going the next few years is just clinon that and it's not going ng big on that and it's not going to any difference. nothing to make any difference. nothing you do nothing. >> you do nothing. >> you do nothing. >> anything we going >> anything we do is going to make difference until the make any difference until the chinese , you chinese and the indians, you know, take care of business. >> , if they want to make >> i mean, if they want to make the can do that the one thing we can do that will make a business, make a difference, i suppose, is we could off it. could try and profit off it. >> i mean, conceivably, there >> i mean, conceivably, if there is market for the
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is a huge growing market for the technology that will enable people net zero, people to achieve net zero, that's that's potentially an engineering or a growing market for air conditioners. >> why doesn't dyson bring >> yes. why doesn't dyson bring out of magic air out some sort of magic air conditioner and britain can become , you know, the global become, you know, the global hub for market. for that market. >> what still continues >> what they're still continues to market this to be a big market as this channel's very own neil oliver pointed recently , his pointed out recently, his beachside properties the extremely , the left extremely wealthy, the left leaning celebrities america leaning celebrities in america are still snapping them up. >> yeah , not that they're not >> yeah, not that they're not that yeah i'll tell that scared, no. yeah i'll tell you who's about beachside you who's scared about beachside properties. chef . he's properties. obama's chef. he's gone dark. yeah we'll have a look at the next paper. >> now, this is the. >> now, this is the. >> the. >> the. >> the. >> the financial times , darius, >> the financial times, darius, which is. >> e“- which is. >> the financial times >> yeah. so the financial times leads that peter leads with the story that peter flavel aka flavour flav resigned as the coot's chief after accepting blame for the farage furore services fell below the bank's high standards. so apparently disclosing information to the bbc isn't. that's not what they normally do. they don't normally do that
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. they don't normally lie about their clients . right. and it's their clients. right. and it's triggered an internal inquiry to be that people are upset that this has happened . so flavour. i this has happened. so flavour. i mean, do you think there's any legitimacy to him saying it's fallen below the banks high standards rather have? standards rather than we have? >> have revealed an internal >> you have revealed an internal culture of bias prejudice and you know this is exactly what we've been doing for years. >> we had a committee, we had a specific committee set up to spy on people and gossip about them. but you found out about it. exactly. i didn't think i'd get caught. i didn't i didn't think i'd what if she knew i'd get caught. what if she knew flavour was going to go? >> do you think that rose would have herself? i mean, it have gone herself? i mean, it feels they're resigning in feels like they're resigning in the wrong order, it? the wrong order, doesn't it? >> i don't know. >> i think i don't know. i think. she to. she think. i think she had to. she had had to. and had to go. they all had to. and i people really need i think more people really need to banks not just to go. and the banks not just not kooks, not not just kooks, not just natwest, all banks and all natwest, but all banks and all corporations up corporations need to shake up the they do things because the way they do things because at the moment they've got all this diversity, equity and inclusion stuff. those words mean of what they mean the opposite of what they actually think diversity means.
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you're of you're not allowed diversity of opinion, inclusion means if you've wrong opinions, you've got the wrong opinions, you've got the wrong opinions, you've excluded. you've got the wrong opinions, you've you excluded. you've got the wrong opinions, you've you noticedi. you've got the wrong opinions, you've you noticed , i mean, >> and have you noticed, i mean, on twitter or social media generally, seems to be generally, there seems to be quite support that quite a lot of support for that idea, which is actually horrifying. banks horrifying. i mean, the banks are one thing, there's loads are one thing, but there's loads of if a of people going, well, if he's a racist, think should racist, i don't think he should be bank account. you be allowed a bank account. you know, proven. know, as if that's proven. for a start . you know, he is, you start. you know, he is, you know, been projected to know, that's been projected to some extent anyway. >> yeah everything so >> but yeah, everything is so tribal, because tribal, it's ridiculous because it's like if they can do it to farage, they can do it to you. the pendulum will back the the pendulum will swing back the other way. the pendulum will swing back the oth however, same of the >> however, the same part of the pendulum too. >> yeah. well, yeah, i'm dangung >> yeah. well, yeah, i'm dangling just below farage. but. but. but. but most of the country have the same opinions of farage. got any of farage. he's not got any outlandish and. and outlandish opinions and. and they all get start your own they all get you start your own private bank, start own and private bank, start your own and start your private social start your own private social network. go go to mastodon with all other elon musk needs to all the other elon musk needs to needs to buy a natwest. he and paypal. >> well, funnily enough, i think there is some talk of a financial wing opening up to
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twitter. but that's another issue. let's have a look at the daily mail . we got harry's daily mail. we got harry's hacking yes hacking claim. yes >> well, harry's harry's hacking claim been thrown out the claim has been thrown out by the courts. this is apparently courts. so this is apparently because because it breached the statute of limitations . right. statute of limitations. right. there's a clandestine deal. according to prince harry or the duke of sussex, whatever he's called now, the artist formerly known prince . he claimed that known as prince. he claimed that there's a clandestine deal between palace courtiers . and between palace courtiers. and how do you pronounce that? and people who work at the palace and newspaper executives and that was the reason he didn't bnng that was the reason he didn't bring his case sooner. so this deal struck in 2012, so he deal was struck in 2012, so he didn't do anything about phone hacking since then. but then, you by law, claimants have you know, by law, claimants have six within which to pursue six years within which to pursue the action. >> yeah . okay. so it's all been >> yeah. okay. so it's all been it's deemed like a wild it's been deemed like a wild conspiracy essentially conspiracy theory essentially that he's, he's, crazy . he that he's, he's, he's crazy. he almost. is that what they're saying that it's implausible that had this kind of that the queen had this kind of set up. >> yeah. and the judge ruled it
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implausible. that was the specific word. so what he's just filed his claim too late. yeah, he probably just got adhd , so he probably just got adhd, so i'll leave it to the last minute then was hard tell i >>i -- >> i get -_ >> i get my memory is , you know, >> i get my memory is, you know, i don't my memories don't shuffle along the conveyor belt quite smoothly as they used quite as smoothly as they used to. long has harry been in to. how long has harry been in this world pain ? i this kind of world of pain? i can't remember. is it six years since been meghan and since he's been with meghan and i mean, how long ago was it that he was happily attending fancy dress in safari gear and dress parties in safari gear and he was like 19 or something? >> something . so. but a long >> something. so. but a long time ago he was he seemed happy when married meghan because when he married meghan because they hadn't fallen with the they hadn't fallen out with the media then. yeah. i mean , to be media then. yeah. i mean, to be honest, the pair of them looked like start fight like they could start a fight in an know an empty room. you know what i mean? have a quick mean? anyway, let's have a quick look at the mirror. mean? anyway, let's have a quick loo we the mirror. mean? anyway, let's have a quick loo we just mirror. mean? anyway, let's have a quick loo we just got ror. to that >> we just got time to do that before break. before we go into the break. >> the real cost of our throwaway fashion and it pitches to children on top of a mountain of clothes that have washed up on the beach. >> there's just like an open air primark. >> i mean, this this , you know,
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>> i mean, this this, you know, upsetting this this is this is an upsetting picture because, first made all of first of all, they made all of those clothes and then they've come to them. the m atter? >> w- matter? >> it's like a slap in >> i know it's like a slap in the face. is there? it's very i mean, i do have quite strong views about this because i like traditional british tailoring. you know, you gentlemen well dressed, you understand. but you know, there's a there's a bit of a sort of horseshoe theory around this because i think, you know, right know, people think of the right wing as being, kind of wing as being, you know, kind of responsible for a lot of the world's ills. but actually, you know, if you buy a decent pair of brogues, get a well tailored suit, your shirts made for suit, get your shirts made for you street , that will you in jermyn street, that will last you for ten. i've got you've got jackets that can be handed for . you've got jackets that can be handed for. down i'm wearing a pair of shoes that are 20 years old look like. pair of shoes that are 20 years old know. look like. pair of shoes that are 20 years old know. absolutely. mean , >> i know. absolutely. i mean, as long as don't try and be as long as you don't try and be fashionable you're fine. as long as you don't try and be fashiona stuff you're fine. as long as you don't try and be fashiona stuff is u're fine. as long as you don't try and be fashionastuff is absolutely, you >> this stuff is absolutely, you know, the like the what do you call it? it's a sort of commodification of adhd. exactly. say , isn't it? exactly. as you say, isn't it? yeah. you know, you buy clothes
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for the weekend and the really cheap, for the weekend and the really chethey're cheap. but >> they're really cheap. but then a couple then you wash them a couple of times they they times and they just they just fall . but, know, fall apart. but, you know, if you, decent shirts , i you, if you buy decent shirts, i mean one. mean not, not like that one. >> japanese but you know, you can wash something like this will withstand loads. i mean i absolutely agree washing is the thing. if you don't wash your clothes, will last you for clothes, they will last you for much another thing. >> that's another thing. we've been talk to you been meaning to talk to you about. >> point taken . well, let us go >> point taken. well, let us go into the into the break off the back of that we've got coming up , a look at the cost of incarceration. a nasty case of victim blaming . incarceration. a nasty case of victim blaming. i incarceration. a nasty case of victim blaming . i wonder if you victim blaming. i wonder if you can who that is and the can guess who that is and the latest on whether destabilisation . we'll see in
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in. basically if you go back can i just say on this though what you live on a. and welcome back to headliners i'm simon evans still joined by leo kearse and danus still joined by leo kearse and darius davis. so leo we kick off with every man's worst nightmare in the telegraph having to pay for something you didn't even
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want. yeah for 17 years as well. >> man who is wrongly >> so this man who is wrongly jailed have to pay jailed for rape may have to pay for his prison accommodation and food costs even though he wasn't . i mean, essentially . i mean, he's essentially kidnapped for 17 years. he says he's sickened by the idea that he's sickened by the idea that he would have for his he would have to pay for his for his and also he was his kidnapping and also he was because he stuck to his guns and said he was innocent, protested his innocence the whole way through in longer. he through the kept in longer. he would sooner through the kept in longer. he w i mean, this just sounds like the most ridiculous. this must be some kind of glitch in be some kind of weird glitch in the can't be the league. this can't be an intentional thing to make him pay intentional thing to make him pay it. it be pay for it. it must be some weird . no, this. pay for it. it must be some weithis\io, this. pay for it. it must be some weithis\io, thappened before. so >> this has happened before. so people have been being cleared. if get compensation, if you get compensation, if you're by the state. you're compensated by the state. but think the but i don't think the compensation is that much you know, you're compensated by. i
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can't remember exactly how much, but it's based on how much you would or something. but it's based on how much you wotyeah. or something. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> which should be >> which you should be compensated millions compensated like millions and millions . just like they stole millions. just like they stole his . it's absolutely his life. it's absolutely horrific . horrific. >> it's like the worst airbnb ever. >> it's like the worst airbnb ever . oh, it's an easyjet. ever. oh, it's an easyjet. >> ryanair level scam . >> ryanair level scam. >> ryanair level scam. >> it's like baldrick. maybe. maybe the plan is that, you know, they say , okay, we owe you know, they say, okay, we owe you this compensation , but you this in compensation, but you owe us this in board . so owe us this in board. so actually you can you pay the difference. so you owe us money. >> you expect that from lawyers from the state, do you? yeah actually, i do. >> i expect it from the state. >> i expect it from the state. >> it is a horrific story. obviously as our sympathy. i would , he's got, would imagine, though, he's got, you if he finds the you know, if he finds the right ghost—writer writer, will you know, if he finds the right ghorthatriter writer, will you know, if he finds the right ghorthat book. riter, will you know, if he finds the right ghorthat book. you, will you know, if he finds the right ghorthat book. you should will you know, if he finds the right ghorthat book. you should be ll buy that book. you should be doing right out of you seem doing all right out of you seem like a quite a compelling like a like a quite a compelling speaker and stuff. watched speaker and stuff. i've watched him well hope him a bit today so. well i hope he puts it back together again somehow, because we stay somehow, darius, because we stay in next story in in clink for the next story in the telegraph. yeah. >> bizarre story. the >> this is a bizarre story. the daily with daily telegraph leads with boiled sweets in prison are not
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a human right. the court of appeals rules. so basically , a appeals rules. so basically, a quadriplegic, disabled offender is suing the prison carers who are denying him humanity and dignity because they're not allowing him to have boiled sweets. so he's quadriplegic . sweets. so he's quadriplegic. he's put them in his mouth. yeah. yeah but i mean, the real the real elephant is like , how the real elephant is like, how is he a quadriplegic serving? yeah. what crime did he commit? he's the stephen hawking of crime . like he's the stephen hawking of crime. like he's being he's the stephen hawking of crime . like he's being carried crime. like he's being carried over to commit the crimes. and now all he wants is a boiled this happen ? this to happen? >> maybe he's developed motor neurone disease or something since since he was jail . since he since he was in jail. but is something really but there is something really weird it he's weird about it. it says he's like he's been on a hunger strike, surviving on fluids apart from some custard apart from some cake, custard and cream. in may last year, and ice cream. in may last year, this quite an odd i don't know. it's quite grotesque . i don't it's quite a grotesque. i don't want the guy, but want to laugh at the guy, but there's weird about want to laugh at the guy, but thelike weird about want to laugh at the guy, but thelike on weird about want to laugh at the guy, but thelike on hunger about want to laugh at the guy, but thelike on hunger strike it. like going on hunger strike because he's not getting boiled sweets. but occasionally breaking down some some breaking down some cakes, some custard . custard. >> yeah, if boiled sweets >> yeah, yeah. if boiled sweets are choking because
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are a choking hazard, because that's what they're saying. they're a choking they're saying it's a choking hazard he's he hazard because he's he can't he doesn't control . but doesn't have full control. but then he's saying, well i love then he's saying, well i love the you know, the sweets. so much. you know, kind just this bit of kind of just have this bit of joy kind of just have this bit of joy the joy and, you know, i'll take the responsibility for choking it. well, the most well, that's the most they should you should give him a lick, you know, ponies have know, like have ponies have where like be where you're just like be licking big boiled rig, licking a big boiled sweet rig, some like a robot some sort of arm like a robot arm that when he presses a button, maybe maybe button, it can maybe one, maybe tesla could provide him with one of implants . of those implants. >> so i don't know. that >> so i don't know. but that would carers could be at >> but his carers could be at risk of prosecution for gross negligence manslaughter. negligence and manslaughter. so thatis negligence and manslaughter. so that is why. so just eat that is why. yeah. so just eat tangfastics you'll be fine . tangfastics you'll be fine. >> yeah, absolutely. all the stuff that tangled, you know, explodes on the tongue. >> i like that. his hunger strike cake, custard >> i like that. his hunger strikice cake, custard >> i like that. his hunger strikice that. custard >> i like that. his hunger strikice that is ustard >> i like that. his hunger strikice that is ,;tard >> i like that. his hunger strikice that is , hed and ice cream. that is, he should do a show at the edinburgh fringe festival. >> kind of fat harvesting. >> sophie hagan over the daily mail. >> leo and the latest on our favourite story at the moment , favourite story at the moment, nigel farage and the banks, of course . coui'se. >> course. >> so emily maitlis, the former bbc journalist, is accused of victim blaming after she claimed
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that nigel farage provoked a culture war by complaining about natwest closing his bank account in a banking row. people always say, oh, you're you provoked a culture war like nigel farage didn't close his own. you know, he bring this him all he didn't bring this on him all the wing the time. you know, right wing people told, you're people are told, oh, you're provoking this culture war. no, we're reacting to something . we're reacting to something. >> why you hitting >> that's why are you hitting yourself constantly yeah. >> that's why are you hitting youit'sfconstantly yeah. >> that's why are you hitting youit'sf corsomebody'eah. >> that's why are you hitting youit'sf corsomebody wants to >> it's like somebody wants to show to show their testicle to schoolchildren and we're like, no , please don't do and no, please don't do that. and then why ? why then people are like, why? why are you this culture war? then people are like, why? why are like this culture war? then people are like, why? why are like not1is culture war? then people are like, why? why are like not a culture war? then people are like, why? why are like not a culture�* war? then people are like, why? why are |we not a culture�* war? then people are like, why? why are |we idon'tculture�* war? then people are like, why? why are |we idon'tculturthisar? war. we just don't want this crazy stuff to happen. >> is obviously the case that >> it is obviously the case that he internally he was internally being discussed at as a as a problem from that point of view. right. they have not. he she did, to be fair , i watched a podcast. she fair, i watched a podcast. she did she almost credited him really playing the game. so really with playing the game. so like tactically . well, yeah. like tactically. well, yeah. which i suppose to be fair he has done and if you treat it as an objective, he's a smart mission. yeah, exactly. but it's not even a game game to play because a game to play suggests there's like a route he could
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have down that wrong. have gone down that was wrong. >> telling >> and he's only telling the truth that what actually happened happen to happened and could happen to anyone. even a it anyone. yeah, it's not even a it shouldn't even be ideological shouldn't even be an ideological right thing. should right left thing. a bank should not have the ability to dictate who choose what you. if i disagree with that, we're going to ban your banking, your bank , to ban your banking, your bank, your ability. this comedian, we're going to ban your banking. and also at the start , says, and also at the start, she says, if one side the if you put to one side the leaking confidential leaking of customer confidential charity. yeah. if we put charity. yeah. if we if we put the to one side, the crime to one side, it suddenly looks much better, doesn't you know, mean . doesn't it? you know, i mean. yeah, that's what i to my yeah, that's what i said to my ex invasion. but ex girlfriend. the invasion. but it's a one side. i've been a pretty good boyfriend. >> invasion of ukraine >> but the invasion of ukraine to one side , right, leo? there's to one side, right, leo? there's a nice balance to the bad news about the climate . the guardian about the climate. the guardian also have the more cheerful tidings that shell have made a decent profit in the last. >> yeah, they're not happy about it obscene. it though, so shell is obscene. $5 billion profit. i don't know why the guardian is reporting profits in dollars . when? when profits in dollars. when? when we're in britain, it makes it a bigger number. it makes it a
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bigger number. it makes it a bigger number. it makes it a bigger number. yeah, but they say reignites amid bigger number. yeah, but they say climate tes amid bigger number. yeah, but they say climate crisis amid the climate crisis and campaigners have criticised the plan increase oil and gas plan to increase oil and gas production extreme heat production despite extreme heat in europe. well, we need gas and oil energy to fuel all the air conditioners that we're going to need. was going to getting need. i was going to say getting hotter. but it's not i hotter. yeah but it's not i mean, not that mean, it's not even that much money. they're saying it's an obscene actually obscene profit. it's actually less less less than hoped for and less than expected by shareholders and led to the share price dropping . i'm going to push back dropping. i'm going to push back on this , leo. oh, 5 billion is on this, leo. oh, 5 billion is not that big profit . it not even that big a profit. it does depend how many shareholders it spread across . shareholders it spread across. >> i mean, i don't know, they're probably to probably still good shares to have, like have, but it's not like 5 billion. you know, everyone's like throwing coins in here. i mean , the thing is, they made so mean, the thing is, they made so much money off of the ukraine and russia and just put all that the money up when happened the money up when that happened that it put the put price up i >> -- >> yeah. well i don't like it responded to their responding to the market you know the price of gas and oil has gone up actually it's come back down quite a lot but so obviously they're doing
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more exploration, doing more , more exploration, doing more, pumping, more gas and oil because we need it, because we're not using russian oil and gas well, and also gas anymore. well, and also their down. their profits are down. >> half of >> they're less than half of what were same three what they were in the same three months obviously months last year when obviously the massive the ukraine was having a massive impact. nevertheless, that's impact. but nevertheless, that's just guardians work, isn't just how guardians work, isn't it? so. darius we have it? i guess so. darius we have the telegraph people on benefits telegraph reports, people on benefits with anxiety or depression could claim subsidised cars. >> so there is a scheme, part of the pip scheme that you can get a car using the motor mobility charity and you can get a car worth up to £40,000 if you suffer from certain disabilities . and two of those that will now come under that will be anxiety or depression in and i'm depressed. i don't drive a 40,000 car and i'm anxious about it. so i think this is a great a 40,000 car and i'm anxious about it. so schemethis is a great a 40,000 car and i'm anxious about it. so scheme .1is is a great a 40,000 car and i'm anxious about it. so scheme . um, a great a 40,000 car and i'm anxious about it. so scheme . um, no, reat a 40,000 car and i'm anxious about it. so scheme . um, no, but a 40,000 car and i'm anxious about it. so scheme . um, no, but ii great scheme. um, no, but i mean it's obviously, it's ripe to be exploited, but i mean , how are exploited, but i mean, how are you to prove if someone's you going to prove if someone's got they're. got anxiety or if they're. i mean, wouldn't depressed if mean, i wouldn't be depressed if i happy after with . i will be happy after with. that's he's happy i will be happy after with. th get he's happy i will be happy after with. th get back he's happy i will be happy after with. th get back off. he's happy i will be happy after with. th get back off. yeah. s happy i will be happy after with.
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th get back off. yeah. he's»py to get back off. yeah. he's depressed again . yeah, but you depressed again. yeah, but you could like, new could get, like, a brand new alfa so people alfa romeo tenali. so people like, we think maybe they're , like, we think maybe they're, you know, needs to be some more checks in this. checks and balances in this. >> as soon as >> so whenever, as soon as there's this, there's a scam like this, there's a scam like this, there's opportunity there's a massive opportunity for abuse, isn't there? obviously >> and even the sort of the bafic >> and even the sort of the basic idea that, if these basic idea that, oh, if these people have anxiety or depression, then they're immobile , they need car get immobile, they need a car to get around. cheer up if they around. they cheer up if they walk, fresh air, you walk, get some fresh air, you know, out in know, straight out in the glorious british july, damp, three things work, fresh air, a shot of scotch before you go out. >> and ideally a plunge into some cold water like the sea or a lake or a pond or something. so you're recommending fresh air, then alcoholism and then swimming while drunk? >> yes, exactly . it's colloquia i >> -- >> it is crazy. you're absolutely right, though. i mean, the idea that just getting in the car and going for a drive. cheers you up, that's from you immediately from the 1950s. you immediately get more angry. you're a get more angry. now you're in a car . and get more angry. now you're in a car. and you're car. yeah. and as you're actually you need to actually trying to, you need to get mean, if you get somewhere. i mean, if you want or want to go from you know, 50 or 60 in towns,
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60 miles away, but in towns, that doesn't cheer anyone up. well cheer you that doesn't cheer anyone up. welwell, cheer you that doesn't cheer anyone up. welwell, the cheer you that doesn't cheer anyone up. welwell, the way cheer you that doesn't cheer anyone up. welwell, the way this:heer you that doesn't cheer anyone up. welwell, the way this scheme] up. well, the way this scheme actually works is that in order to get the car, you have to give up whole disability payments. so you get that. instead, you >> so you get that. instead, you don't payment . and don't get a payment. and the car, don't get a payment. and the can so car, it's one or the other. so there is that kind of thing. but it's still the fact that you can say you've got anxiety or depression. think the depression. i think that's the thing. gamble really. >> so you've got that , but do >> so you've got that, but do you put it all the you want to put it all on the card you the money >> well, you can take the money or you can get the car, but the car good deal because it's car is a good deal because it's fully you insure fully serviced. you can insure three drivers and can drive three drivers and you can drive everyone, want. >> could w“ w" >> you could become an uber dnven >> you could become an uber driver, . possibly. driver, i guess. possibly. >> badge, you've driver, i guess. possibly. >> your badge, you've driver, i guess. possibly. >> your badge. badge, you've driver, i guess. possibly. >> your badge. badgeje, you've got your badge. badge just because because because of your anxiety, because i'm anxious. i've the badge i'm anxious. i've lost the badge . that's it. >> part two. coming up in >> for part two. coming up in part three, we have stolen groceries, the late list on why we should be concerned about robots . sounds like those could robots. sounds like those could be stories. see you in be connected stories. see you in a minutes . a couple of minutes. >> that feeling inside made >> that warm feeling inside made from boxt boilers is proud sponsors of weather on . gb news.
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sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hello there. i'm jonathan vautrey . who is your latest vautrey. who is your latest news? weather forecast provided by the met office. that's been a fair amount of cloud around today and we are holding to today and we are holding on to that into the overnight period today and we are holding on to thewell) the overnight period today and we are holding on to thewell .the overnight period today and we are holding on to thewell . ae overnight period today and we are holding on to thewell . a lotvernight period today and we are holding on to thewell . a lot of night period today and we are holding on to thewell . a lot of cloudyeriod today and we are holding on to thewell . a lot of cloudy skies, as well. a lot of cloudy skies, some clear spells trying to poke their way through. but the cloud definitely dominating definitely the dominating weather variable . the will weather variable. the cloud will be some be thick enough for some outbreaks throughout be thick enough for some outinight. throughout be thick enough for some outinight. some throughout be thick enough for some outinight. some thr
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this pressure that's this area of low pressure that's going slowly its going to be slowly pushing its way the north—west. so way in from the north—west. so things unsettled things turning more unsettled again, those occluded fronts bringing of showers our bringing bands of showers our way. those could turn way. some of those could turn heavy hail and heavy with some hail and thunderstorms in the mixture, perhaps for perhaps more persistently for northern ireland, parts of northwest on saturday. northwest scotland on saturday. still some spells in still some sunny spells in between those showers, but the breeze picking up for breeze will be picking up for all of us. quite blustery breeze will be picking up for all do js. quite blustery breeze will be picking up for all do js. remaininglustery breeze will be picking up for all do js. remaining unsettled day to come, remaining unsettled throughout the rest of the weekend and the of weekend and into the start of the new working week as well. enjoy bye . enjoy your evening. bye bye. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. proud sponsors of weather on .
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antisocial behaviour in its stores, including one in poole in dorset, which h which had a ram raid mean it seems a bit over the top to use, you know, like a 4x4 a ram, a co—op the next some scones. but i feel bad for them. >> i mean i used the co—op in hove , which is not a million hove, which is not a million miles from poole, and it's a nice little local friendly store by it's not like some massive i mean, maybe there are bigger ones and poole that's like one of wealthiest near of the wealthiest that's near sandbanks. most sandbanks. it's like the most expensive real estate in the country. >> san francisco . it's the san >> san francisco. it's the san francisco of the uk now. yeah literally. >> you're right. exactly that. you're probably right. yeah. >> it's the same sort of thing in mean, like in america. i mean, crime like this basically being this is basically being decriminalised the decriminalised because the police will only up if it's police will only turn up if it's over amount. even over a certain amount. even people who work store and people who work in the store and it's make that much from it's hard to make that much from the if really mean. the co—op if you really mean. yeah. although i mean a co—op in poole, it's going to be easier there than the in there than like the lidl in edmonton. that's true. so but yeah, the won't yeah, because the police won't turn and staff even
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turn up and staff are even or even penalised if they report it to the police . yeah. so there's, to the police. yeah. so there's, there's just i mean just see there's just i mean you just see footage of people brazenly footage of people just brazenly filling bags and walking of shops. >> the weird thing is and because there's always this kind of conflict , acting narratives of conflict, acting narratives andifs of conflict, acting narratives and it's quite easy to produce video evidence that gets your heart racing, oh my god , we're heart racing, oh my god, we're about to descend into what, that film series, you know, whatever . yeah. and then on the other hand, they say, well, actually, year has been year on year theft has been falling. you know, the police claim in total, that's because the police aren't turning up. >> they don't write down in >> so they don't write down in their book that turn up. their little book that turn up. the said they were the staff just said they were misgendered being misgendered as they were being oh, swat teams. suddenly there surrounded banks and all come . surrounded banks and all come. >> maybe it is best to just let these people take what they want. as you say, quite seriously. i mean, what seriously. i mean, co—op, what are take are you going to take and irresistible of english irresistible range of english sparkling is probably irresistible range of english sparklasi is probably irresistible range of english sparklasi as probably irresistible range of english sparklasi as itrobably irresistible range of english sparklasi as it sitably irresistible range of english sparklasi as it sit outside about as much as it sit outside the memorial for a bit. the war memorial for a bit. anyway, we wish the co—operative staff well. darius, the
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telegraph has a story that surprises no one. surprises no one. >> surprises no one. >> yeah, women are more likely to be replaced by by ai than men . well, obviously . sex robots . well, obviously. sex robots managed mint consultancy said women will be more affected by companies replacing staff with chat bots. i mean, personally , i chat bots. i mean, personally, i find it rude to call women chat bots, but whatever because they are more likely to hold lower wage jobs. i mean, let's be honest, it's because you're more likely to hold, you know, you're not manual labour. no not doing manual labour. no woman who's going down the suez is going replaced by ai. is going to get replaced by ai. so they're saying jobs heavily represented by women, including customer services and secretaries, are also in the firing line. yeah, but not all secretaries, just the ugly ones . so let's be honest about it . . so let's be honest about it. the interesting weather . the interesting weather. >> i will develop the kind of husky voice range and so on as well . i think husky voice range and so on as well. i think it is quite interesting though, which jobs are going because hasn't been are going because it hasn't been entirely i entirely predictable, has it? i mean, were mean, ten years ago people were saying it was going to be drivers and reality think drivers and in reality i think drivers and in reality i think
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drivers probably drivers are still probably feeling fairly secure. and as you say, people like you to you say, people like you used to work call centres, people who work in call centres, people who may help you sort of may be used to help you sort of talk a you know, the talk you through a you know, the first could first 15 checks that you could go washing go through in a broken washing machine whatever kind machine or whatever those kind of also of jobs are going. but also things that now things like radiography that now like some high powered like some quite high powered jobs in the medical service. you know i it's like know what? i mean? it's like it's like taking out it's like it's like taking out bites it's like it's like taking out bhes and it's like it's like taking out bites and you're bites of the apple and you're never sure what's coming bites of the apple and you're nev next. sure what's coming for next. >> p- p— e that scans, you >> anything that scans, you know, , you know, know, large data sets, you know, to recognise patterns. i mean , i to recognise patterns. i mean, i can do that humans you can do things that humans you either take a absolute subject matter expert or take loads of time. i can do it, can do it really quickly like the police maybe. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> they've developed an ai bot that can stay in the police station eating doughnuts and not doing anything. it's amazing . doing anything. it's amazing. >> anyway, listen, i think we're going to have to start dealing with this soon. i i do with this soon. i mean, i do think going to have to think they're going to have to come up with some. i don't know, reorganisation the tax code reorganisation of the tax code or that if you've or whatever, that if you've got a of working a certain amount of ai working for , you know, get for your firm, you know, you get taxed if was employee taxed as if it was an employee or and gets or whatever. and that gets
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redistributed , well, isn't redistributed to, well, isn't this of the whole this kind of part of the whole bigger are bigger thing where people are saying universal basic saying about universal basic income ai is going to income because ai is going to put everyone out of a job? >> so then we're to get to >> so then we're going to get to the going >> so then we're going to get to the relying going >> so then we're going to get to the relying ubi. going >> so then we're going to get to the relying ubi. so |oing to be relying on this ubi. so actually, yeah, but they've actually, yeah, but then they've said that about previous leaps forward and forward in automation and actually there seems be actually there still seems to be plenty of work people do. plenty of work for people to do. i comes from i don't know where it comes from . the thing, . well, this is the weird thing, isn't right, course . when >> you're right, of course. when they when the they said when they when the horses came they horses and carts came in, they said drivers in said that the cab drivers in those know, those would be, you know, all those would be, you know, all those be lost. and those jobs would be lost. and those jobs would be lost. and those learned those people learned how to drive cars. however, not quite so horses around these so many horses around these days, know, and that's days, you know, and that's that's possibly the future there are in in this lasagne find us horses . as leo calamy shocked horses. as leo calamy shocked jordan henderson's rainbow laces proved no match for saudi money. >> yeah so jordan henderson , the >> yeah so jordan henderson, the footballer, is no longer an lgbtq+ ally after his move to saudi arabia, says hitzlsperger thomas hitzlsperger. thomas hitzlsperger that sounds like he's got his own syndrome . yeah.
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he's got his own syndrome. yeah. far, far right. he's got his own syndrome. yeah. far, far right . and partly far, far right. and partly uncontrollable salutes . and uncontrollable salutes. and yeah, he's getting criticised and he does the salute and he doesn't know why everyone's upset. >> that's not funny . but yeah, >> that's not funny. but yeah, this guy . i >> that's not funny. but yeah, this guy. i apologise. yeah. >> this guy's getting criticised for previously wore the rainbow laces and all that sort of stuff. and now he's moving to saudi arabia. but surely if there's one place change there's one place he can change hearts it's saudi arabia. >> well, there is a there is a tiny of truth to that, tiny degree of truth to that, isn't bit like tiny degree of truth to that, isn't fellow bit like tiny degree of truth to that, isn't fellow was like tiny degree of truth to that, isn't fellow was saying that fellow nick was saying a few days it was i can't few days ago, it was i can't remember who it was. was it johnny mercer or somebody had been about afghans ? khan been saying about afghans? khan that, shouldn't that, you know, we shouldn't just like completely them just like completely cut them out of society. you have to try and do business with these people and gradually change their minds. think there's an their minds. i think there's an element that. i honestly i'm element of that. i honestly i'm not even that big a football fan, does seem to have fan, but it does seem to have the actually kind of the ability to actually kind of bndge the ability to actually kind of bridge divides in bridge a lot of divides in society and let's society. that and let's be honest, of the clubs in the honest, most of the clubs in the uk now owned by saudi oil
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uk now are owned by saudi oil companies anyway, or worse, aren't they? yeah, yeah . is it aren't they? yeah, yeah. is it really worse than really that much worse than playing newcastle? really that much worse than playing guess astle? really that much worse than playing guess it'sz? really that much worse than playing guess it's just it's >> well, i guess it's just it's just another example of like the hypocrisy of these. yeah it's all for show. so when they did his club that he signed for in saudi arabia have done a video montage and wearing montage and he's wearing the rainbow captain armband. so they just his video black and just made his video black and white that little bit . white just for that little bit. so can't so you can't see the you can't see the armband. but 700 k a week and he just has to run through walls for the team. i mean i mean i mean push walls over people for the team. 700 k a week. yeah that's why it's nuts this is surprising . it's nuts this is surprising. it's like yeah i'm, i'm an lgbtq+ ally and i believe in them. 700 k a week. i'm their. ally and i believe in them. 700 k a week. i'm their . yeah k a week. i'm their. yeah i don't know what it was so long rainbow . rainbow. >> i mean he was the captain at liverpool right. he's been a fairly player would liverpool right. he's been a fairly been player would liverpool right. he's been a fairly been playequite would liverpool right. he's been a fairly been playequite avould liverpool right. he's been a fairly been playequite avoulas have been worth quite a bit as well. they're not. >> saudis are just there >> no. the saudis are just there is they're just is sportswashing. they're just throwing money it. so throwing so much money in it. so he like maybe 200 grand he was on like maybe 200 grand at liverpool , right? and now and
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at liverpool, right? and now and now the twilight of now he's like in the twilight of his career they've offered his career and they've offered him so thomas, him 700,000. yeah. so thomas, i'm willing to learn how to play football i'll half football. yeah, i'll take half that. >> do you know what messi's getting at? miami? >> do you know what messi's getting a'he viiami? >> do you know what messi's getting a'he basically owns half >> well, he basically owns half part of the league, and apple have basically brought him over now as part a deal. and now as part of a tv deal. and he's like a stake that. he's got like a stake in that. so league grows with him, so as the league grows with him, yeah , but that was a big yeah, but that was a big controversy he was controversy because he was sponsored saudi arabia . so sponsored by saudi arabia. so they thought he was going to go over . so then when over there. so then he went when he miami , he chose to go to miami, obviously, because he a obviously, because he got a large community, caused large latin community, caused a big with all his sponsoi's. >> sponsors. >> interesting . i was going, it >> interesting. i was going, it sounds like you do know about this. is this. and just for one second is like , as they will call like soccer, as they will call it in america, is that being elevated by the increased number of central and south american people origin because it used to be like a very minority sport, but there's been a lot of i think i think it's a combination of that. >> but actually, think >> but actually, i do think the premier so premier league is growing. so so, so big around the world, especially in america now. the sport's growing there and also
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the nfl's are the sports like nfl's are growing over here because we've got nfl here. so they're got the nfl here. so they're talking a 39th game in talking about a 39th game in america. like the premier america. so like the premier league will play match over league will play a match over there maybe. right. so there maybe. right. okay. so hands across the ocean. >> darius rival tv station was now the guardian seems something called itv is struggling to get. yeah well, itv , itv warns it is yeah well, itv, itv warns it is in the worst ad recession since financial crisis. >> so earnings fell 52% to 152,000,000in total. adverts rising revenues fell 11% in the first half of the year. but interestingly, it's the advert dunng interestingly, it's the advert during the programming. but the sponsor ship of programmes. so like coronation street, for example , is going up and example, is going up and increasing . so they're in it's increasing. so they're in it's basically not many people are now watching television linearly like they used to. so that's watch it with your thumb on the fast forward. exactly and that's actually they say that exact thing they that here thing they say that exactly here
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that watching with that people are watching with their but despite weaker their phone but despite weaker earnings in the first half, itv said it was looking for an improved performance in the final six of 2023 because final six months of 2023 because of large sporting of a number of large sporting events such as the women's world cup, which is underway and the rugby world cup, which kicks off in autumn. so suppose the in autumn. so and i suppose the great thing with sporting events is advertising in on is you put the advertising in on the that surround the on the banners that surround the on the banners that surround the pitch and everything. >> can be like logo >> it can be like a little logo floating mid—airthroughout. floating in mid—air throughout. you it. you can't get away from it. you're not having to wait. yeah, but those is doing but which one of those is doing the heavy lifting? >> question i said sadiq >> yeah. question i said sadiq khan's advert. he apparently the women's euros were were great. >> they were great. >> they were great. according >> they were great. according to the realistic the realistic badinage . badinage. >> listen , i'll be honest with >> listen, i'll be honest with you. i don't watch much football. i do have a couple of mates warm to it mates who gradually warm to it a little you know, grudgingly little bit, you know, grudgingly . mean, think it, you . i mean, i still think it, you know it's obvious if you put know, it's obvious if you put the sides up against one the two sides up against one another. but that's the weird thing , isn't talked about thing, isn't it? we talked about this . you were to
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this in sport. if you were to watch ten men like county championship sprinters racing against each other, it could be an exciting race. it would only be when you introduce the world champion you realised that champion that you realised that they're not really fast . they're not really that fast. yeah, you know what mean? and yeah, you know what i mean? and you with you get that same feeling with football, you get that same feeling with fo you ll, you get that same feeling with fo you , , you get that same feeling with foyou , if you overcome your if you, if you overcome your innate against the innate prejudice against the fact that they're women, we could just be watching nissan micra's . famously, the under micra's. famously, the under 15th played women's women's us team and beat them like 7—0 some under 15 team and the wrexham side . did you see that as well? side. did you see that as well? the wrexham. and they like the wrexham. and they were like the wrexham the wrexham. and they were like the ryan wrexham the wrexham. and they were like the ryan reynoldsexham the wrexham. and they were like the ryan reynolds and�*n is owned by ryan reynolds and another film star or something is owned by ryan reynolds and anothe' film star or something is owned by ryan reynolds and anothe lined star or something is owned by ryan reynolds and anothe lined upr or something is owned by ryan reynolds and anothe lined upr or s0|they ng and he lined up aside, they played and it was just an played them and it was just an embarrassing that's embarrassing defeat. but that's it. as embarrassing defeat. but that's h. as dont it. as long as you don't introduce any men onto the, the illusion survives . himars the illusion survives. himars the end of part three. no going to bed just yet. join us in the final section for unusual houday dodgy final section for unusual holiday dodgy memories holiday ideas. dodgy memories and diy diy goth diy that'll put your teeth on it. don't diy in
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welcome back to headliners for our fourth and always most exciting segment. so twitter news now leo and unsurprisingly musk's new name for the site has problematic associations. >> so elon musk's chaotic rebrand of twitter has hit another stumbling block after it emerged that his new x web domain, which you can access twitter with now x.com , was twitter with now x.com, was blocked in parts of asia under anti laws . i guess, you know, anti laws. i guess, you know, because x x. x is, i'm told, commonly used in sites. so it reminds me of when scunthorpe's tourist marketing website was blocked by firewalls because it contains a word and canal houday contains a word and canal holiday as well. >> it now i always have that i
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had i have a like load of tabs open you know on the on the browser sometimes and they they all have that x if i've opened a new twitter because i want to read a later. so open read a thread later. so i open a new looks like new twitter and it looks like i've of open . it i've got loads of open. it really kind of gives off that vibe, you know. honest your honour. yeah, vibe, you know. honest your honour . yeah, exactly. honour. yeah, exactly. >> yeah. no the tentacle as well. >> that's. that's just like a friends reunite kid. >> that happens to me too. but it is just. oh, mine. >> that happens to me too. but it is just. oh, mine . what do it is just. oh, mine. what do you think about x? >> i mean, i don't like it. i've got to be honest. i broadly speaking, i've been behind musk's overhaul. he's made a few missteps. you know, but his intentions good. that intentions are good. but that feels me. like, so. feels weird to me. like, so. >> so first of all, they're saying for x.com it's been bannedin saying for x.com it's been banned in indonesia . yeah. i banned in indonesia. yeah. i can't think that that's a market. they're going to miss that lucrative indonesian market. a lot of millions. all right. i retract what i just said . hinckley but he's trying said. hinckley but he's trying to change it into like the wechat of it's going to be not
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just twitter, it's going to be like a in china, they've got wechat and you can do everything with social media with this one app. social media buying and selling everything video and he wants to do that. and this is the first step on video and he wants to do that. and way. s the first step on video and he wants to do that. and way. so 1e first step on video and he wants to do that. and way. so thisrst step on video and he wants to do that. and way. so this is step on video and he wants to do that. and way. so this is allp on video and he wants to do that. and way. so this is all part of that way. so this is all part of a, you know , a bigger plan. a, you know, a bigger plan. >> what would that like? >> so what would that be like? tiktok also like in china, tiktok and also like in china, they use i flew via china and you can't do anything without this app. >> you literally go on to the store and your phone just scans it, scans all the code to buy sell. it's very kind of dystopia . but you can do everything that you can do , right? so you could you can do, right? so you could go all your social media book, your flight book, your train, all from app. all but all from one app. wow. so and if you're not on that app in china, that's kind of like google because if you if you know calendar , it also know google calendar, it also knows if you've been invited to something mail, not something by google mail, not really, because it's like, imagine all your banking, everything in 1 in 1 place and all under one brand. so nigel farage can get kicked off in one
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with one button, extinguish snuffed out in one tiananmen square turns out that gb news is part of it as well, and he no longer appears. but that's actually a that's actually a big concern. yeah and that is happening in china. social credit score system china is credit score system in china is unked credit score system in china is linked up to that as well. yeah. yeah. and you can't travel if you bad . you got bad. >> reaching over the >> reaching over to the telegraph now darius, good news for travellers who can for ambitious travellers who can only few months off work . only get a few months off work. >> daily telegraph >> well, the daily telegraph reports nuclear rocket will reports that nuclear rocket will cut journey time to mars in half. so travel to mars is going to be halved due to nuclear power rocket that's being developed by nasa . what's developed by nasa. what's interesting to me is this story comes out a after we've comes out a day after we've revealed that there's alien life . so just as we find out there's aliens, we start firing nuclear rockets at them. that's a good idea . let's push them over the idea. let's push them over the edge. but yeah, they've been working on this, so it will now take about four months to get to mars, isn't it? >> i mean, that's okay. i could probably imagine taking a
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journey of that length. yeah. >> is the of the solar >> this is the hs2 of the solar system , but without the meadows system, but without the meadows and you know, protecting rotters. yeah, yeah. wreaking less environmental damage in the middle of the asteroid belt, the elizabeth land. >> i like the idea. the thing i liked about it was that it's got such a powerful nuclear fission reactor that it can't be turned on while the rocket is still inside the atmosphere. so the rocket gets out of the earth's atmosphere by conventional means. relative means. yeah. relative conventional, not an internal combustion engine. and then and then in with the nuclear then kicks in with the nuclear ones who can't like we see you know spacex's shaft blowing up. >> i mean a tesla not tesla, but spacex. challenger yes . yeah. spacex. challenger yes. yeah. the challenger. yeah. and you know , so, so rockets aren't know, so, so rockets aren't they're like 100% guaranteed know, so, so rockets aren't they'reblow.ike 100% guaranteed know, so, so rockets aren't they're blow up. 100% guaranteed know, so, so rockets aren't they'reblow up. and6 guaranteed know, so, so rockets aren't they'reblow up. and ifjuaranteed know, so, so rockets aren't they'reblow up. and if thisinteed not to blow up. and if this thing blows up, it's carrying nuclear will blow thing blows up, it's carrying nu> the up the main thing. » mm yeah. >> make sure what were they >> make sure the. what were they called? rings wasn't it. called? the rings wasn't it. that went on the. yeah actually
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i think it was musk involved in it. i can't remember. ah. anyway so fine news now we stay with sci fi news i guess. the daily star says real life inception though this sounds more like total recall to me . this is you. total recall to me. this is you. i think . i think. >> leo yeah, it's a real life inception as humans successfully implanted with fake memories using ai vids, it's not quite like the real life inception, so you don't get like, you know, hollywood stars going into your brains and acting out, you know, some really amazing inception. it's like, oh, the power of the imagination. you could have anything. oh, so we're to going imagination. you could have anytraig. oh, so we're to going imagination. you could have anytra b—grade we're to going imagination. you could have anytra b—grade 80s'e to going imagination. you could have anytra b—grade 80s bond|oing imagination. you could have anytra b—grade 80s bond movie. have a b—grade 80s bond movie. yeah skiing around and shooting people. but but yeah, basically they play deep fake videos to people. so there was one that had will smith as the star of star of the matrix . and then star of the matrix. and then they asked people later, who was haven't they seen so they basically deepfake someone actor into like the will smith instead of brad pitt. and they show it to these but haven't to these people but haven't these the these people already seen the film ? yeah, but this
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film originally? yeah, but this confused so confused confused them so it confused their what is the their memories. so what is the iq level? someone needs to check who's getting confused. how much 7 who's getting confused. how much ? how much do know? i mean ? how much do you know? i mean neo we that neo is neo in the we know that neo is not. well, you thought he was brad you . i brad pitt. you thought you. i didn't get confused. keanu reeves but said and reeves. but they said neo and they they they they they said they they they replaced with jack nicholson. >> i get i get confused with neo and nemo i had with my kids the other day finding neo right. and nemo i had with my kids the other day finding neo right . and other day finding neo right. and but no, this is a thing about memory isn't it. is that the way it works is every time you remember something, it's updated and that becomes the new version of memory . so if and that becomes the new version of memory. so if you update and that becomes the new version of memoryy . so if you update and that becomes the new version of memory thato if you update and that becomes the new version of memory that bradou update and that becomes the new version of memory that brad pittipdate and that becomes the new version of memory that brad pitt was e your memory that brad pitt was in shining. yeah he will in the shining. yeah he will have been the shining for you have been in the shining for you from then on. >> and get comedians >> and you even get comedians convincing themselves they convincing themselves that they wrote jokes that they can write . that's happened to like, . that's happened to you. like, yeah , yeah, yeah. yeah, yeah, yeah. >> persecuted >> oh indeed. persecuted barristers as well i believe on twitter. quite sure . twitter. quite sure. >> what's this. and also you get i mean when people give evidence in court, it's quite often revealed be absolutely true. revealed to be absolutely true. >> the memory is not reliable .
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>> the memory is not reliable. well, the show nearly over. well, the show is nearly over. let's take another look let's take another quick look at friday's pages. the daily friday's front pages. the daily mail and harry's hacking claim thrown out by court and mick jagger celebrating his 80th metro has coots and go and the wildfires from global boiling guardian has the era of global boiling and of women's football. they've both arrived and they're both terrifying, says the un chief. the mirror. both terrifying, says the un chief. the mirror . the both terrifying, says the un chief. the mirror. the real cost of throwaway fashion. terrible beach degradation. the i news world enters era of global boiling and daily star. how do you sleep to the oil companies ? you sleep to the oil companies? well, those were your front pages. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, leo kearse davis . we're kearse and darius davis. we're back at when leo will be back at 11 pm. when leo will be joined by jonathan kogan and louis schaefer. it'll be a riot. see soon. care. good see you soon. take care. good night . night. >> temperature's rising in >> the temperature's rising in boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news.
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weather on. gb news. >> hello there. i'm jonathan vawter. here with your latest gb news weather forecast provided by the met office . that's been a by the met office. that's been a fair amount of cloud around today and we are holding on to that into the overnight period as a lot of cloudy skies, as well. a lot of cloudy skies, some spells trying to poke some clear spells trying to poke their through. but cloud their way through. but the cloud definitely dominating their way through. but the cloud definitelvariableminating their way through. but the cloud definitelvariable in1ating their way through. but the cloud definitelvariable in the1g their way through. but the cloud definitelvariable in the cloud weather variable in the cloud will be thick enough for some outbreaks throughout will be thick enough for some outinight. throughout will be thick enough for some outinight. some throughout will be thick enough for some outinight. some thr
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this area of pressure that's this area of low pressure that's going to be slowly pushing its way north—west. way in from the north—west. so things more unsettled. things turning more unsettled. again, occluded fronts again, those occluded fronts bringing bands of showers our way. those could turn way. some of those could turn heavy hail and heavy with some hail and thunderstorms mixture. thunderstorms in the mixture. perhaps persistently for perhaps more persistently for northern ireland. parts of northwest on saturday. northwest scotland on saturday. still some sunny spells in between those showers, but the breeze will be picking up for all quite blustery all of us. and quite a blustery day, too, remaining day, too, come remaining unsettled rest of unsettled throughout the rest of the weekend the start the weekend and into the start of the new week well. of the new working week as well. enjoy your evening by. by of the new working week as well. enjoy your evening by . by the enjoy your evening by. by the temperatures rising boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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>> it's thursday night and this is farage at large. live from barrie. please welcome your host, nigel farage. well, we're here in bury greater manchester with a very as classic audience. >> it's going to be a great show. a lot to talk about the kooks. >> we're going to be joined by some great guests. i'll be joined by the local conservative member of parliament, james daly i >> -- >> i'll be joined by john raftery, one of the men to help save bury football club . save bury football club. >> and joining me to talking pints, it's going to be big ron atkinson . but before all of that atkinson. but before all of that , let's get the news with tatiana sanchez . tatiana sanchez. >> nigel, thank you and good evening. this is the latest from the newsroom. the ceo of coutts
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bank, peter flavell , has stepped bank, peter flavell, has stepped down with immediate effect. its interim boss said the resignation was agreed by mutual consent and is the right decision for coutts. and the wider group. mr flavell says that in the handling of mr faraj's case the bank could fallen below the high standards of personal service. he's also said he bears full responsibility for the poor handung responsibility for the poor handling of the farage case. in response to his resignation, farage says it was only a matter of time. it follows the resignation of former ceo of the natwest group, dame alison rose, who could be in line for a £5 million pay off if british gas owner centrica has revealed that earnings at its gas and electric supply arm have soared . by 889% supply arm have soared. by 889% to £969 million in the six months to june. shadow climate secretary ed miliband says the scale of the profit showed that the money isn't being reinvest ed into energy production and is instead being funnelled back to
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