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tv   Headliners  GB News  August 3, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am BST

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gb news. >> good evening here with jb news and the breaking news tonight is that donald trump has pleaded not guilty to all four counts, charging him with attempting to overthrow the 2020 us presidential election result. he left washington dc tonight and went on his way back home to new jersey . the next court date new jersey. the next court date is august the 28th. mr trump isn't obliged to attend that the former president is accused of conspiracy to defraud the us to depnve conspiracy to defraud the us to deprive citizens of their right to have their votes counted and to have their votes counted and to obstruct and try to obstruct an official proceeding. it's mr trump's third indictment in four months. he's currently, though, the front runner for the 2024 republican presidential nomination . often speaking, nomination. often speaking, before he boarded his plane home, donald trump called it a
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sad day for america when you look at what's happening, sad day for america when you look at what's happening , this look at what's happening, this is a persecution of a political opponent. >> this was never supposed to happenin >> this was never supposed to happen in america , for this is happen in america, for this is the persecution of the person that's leading by very, very substantial numbers in the republican primary. and leading biden by a lot. republican primary. and leading biden by a lot . so if you can't biden by a lot. so if you can't beat him, you persecute him or you prosecute him. we can't let this happen in america . this happen in america. >> donald trump speaking a short time ago. well, in news here at home, the bank of england today raised its interest rate for the 14th time in a row. it's increasing from 5 to 5.25. that's the highest base rate since 2008. the bank says it expects inflation to be halved by the end of the year. and the chancellor jeremy by the end of the year. and the chancellorjeremy hunt, told gb news the government's plan, however, is working well . however, is working well. >> the bank of england forecast today say that we will avoid recession and in a year's time we'll get inflation down to
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about 3, 2.8, i think is the number. so although it's very tough when interest rates go up for families or for businesses that have got loans , what those that have got loans, what those forecasts are saying today is that if we stick to the plan, it is working thing and we will end up with a soft landing and we can avoid a recession . can avoid a recession. >> well, the shadow chancellor, rachel reeves, said the government must take action on a family that's looking to remortgage their property is going to be paying on average more than £200 extra every single month. >> and for some people it's much more than that. the government needs to take responsibility for the fact that inflation in the uk is much higher than it is in comparable countries . comparable countries. >> meanwhile , high street >> meanwhile, high street retailer wilko has warned it's on the brink of collapse , on the brink of collapse, putting around 12,000 jobs at risk . the boss of the homeware risk. the boss of the homeware chain said it expects to go into insolvency after failing to
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secure a takeover. wilko which has about 400 uk stores, has filed a notice of intention to appoint administrators . five appoint administrators. five activists that scaled the prime minister's private home in north yorkshire have been arrested on suspicion of causing criminal damage and being a public nuisance . the protesters draped nuisance. the protesters draped rishi sunak home in black fabric in protest against the new north sea oil and gas licences granted by him . that's your news on gb by him. that's your news on gb news across the uk , on tv, in news across the uk, on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. time now for headliners . headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners . headliners. >> it's the best paper preview show on tv and it's got three comedians going through the next
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day's news. and one of them, i'm leo carson. i'm joined by the father son comedy duo of louis shaffer. he's gb news is martin sheen and jonathan colgan. our answer to charlie sheen. jonathan has tiger blood and louis has tiger would i believe. how are you.7 how louis has tiger would i believe. how are you? how are you both doing? >> just started adderall. so my teeth are like grinding. >> right? why did you decide to start a medication on this show? >> you know, his mother his mother trained him do that. mother trained him to do that. and first of all, i got, you know, something? i being know, something? i enjoy being called because know, something? i enjoy being calle actually because know, something? i enjoy being calle actually has because know, something? i enjoy being calle actually has a because know, something? i enjoy being calle actually has a career,jse know, something? i enjoy being calle actually has a career, not he's actually has a career, not charlie he charlie sheen. martin sheen. he has and he's a has a career and he's a somebody. and i've never been , somebody. and i've never been, you know, somebody your own headliners night. you know, somebody your own heelouis,s night. you know, somebody your own heelouis, you've night. you know, somebody your own heelouis, you've got night. you know, somebody your own heelouis, you've got a night. you know, somebody your own heelouis, you've got a lotight. you know, somebody your own heelouis, you've got a lot tot. you know, somebody your own heelouis, you've got a lot to be >> louis, you've got a lot to be grateful for. >> going to crack on >> anyway, i'm going to crack on and look at the front pages of tomorrow's papers, daily tomorrow's papers, the daily mail how on earth mail leads with how on earth could this be allowed to happen ? they're talking about just stop or greenpeace stop oil occupying or greenpeace occupying sunak roof. the occupying rishi sunak roof. the telegraph. has any chess goes private to end record backlog. >> the guardian leads with latest rise sparks tory calls
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for tax cuts . for tax cuts. >> the mirror has hard up on your bike. the times leads with economy is caught in a trap, says chancellor , and it has says chancellor, and it has trump pleading not guilty to the conspiracy charges . and finally, conspiracy charges. and finally, the daily star has wish you were here and those were your front pages. unless of a closer look at those front pages starting with the times. >> louis good news. the economy is caught in a trap, says the chancellor. that's good news. you know what? it's good news because at least they're doing something. they're raising interest rates. something. they're raising inte it st rates. something. they're raising inte it sorttes. something. they're raising inte it sort of.. something. they're raising inte it sort of suggests the >> it sort of suggests the economy have to chew its economy might have to chew its own leg off get stabilised. own leg to off get stabilised. >> you what? they >> well, do you know what? they got this thing >> well, do you know what? they got now this thing >> well, do you know what? they got now they've this thing >> well, do you know what? they got now they've gotthis thing >> well, do you know what? they got now they've got to; thing >> well, do you know what? they got now they've got to get ng >> well, do you know what? they got now they've got to get out and now they've got to get out of it. what if they print more money? >> that could be a way out. >> that could be a way out. >> just keep printing. >> just keep printing. >> it's not two thousand and seven, just seven, jonathan. we can't just print. can't zimbabwe, print. we can't use zimbabwe, not to out of this. not nomics to get out of this. anyway, also another anyway, there's also another story with picture of story there with a picture of
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trump think also trump that i think is also worth mentioning . mentioning. >> well, this is the saddest story. trump pleads guilty, pleads guilty . important pleads not guilty. important distinction . he is guilty. distinction. he is guilty. everybody knows he's not. >> he's a what? >> he's a what? >> is he going to sue us? is ofcom going to come after us? because i say donald trump is guilty. louis was there on january. are they going to demand balance? i demand something of balance? i made it as a so he's not made it as a joke. so he's not guilty? he's not guilty. >> jury is going is going >> the jury is going to is going to i mean, this to decide. i mean, this this feels like 5,000,000th feels like the 5,000,000th time they've bring donald they've tried to bring donald trump russia collusion trump down, the russia collusion . he was associated with white supremacy, all various supremacy, all these various legal legal things. you paid stormy daniels , which you got a stormy daniels, which you got a great deal for, the way, bill great deal for, by the way, bill clinton paid £850,000 to paula jones. i think donald trump, you know, with like third know, got away with like a third of that. know, got away with like a third of toh, wait, who's jones? >> oh, wait, who's paula jones? >> oh, wait, who's paula jones? >> was who? bill >> paula jones was who? bill clinton was. >> clinton. >> bill clinton. >> bill clinton. >> and a star. it >> and she wasn't a star. it definitely wasn't worth the money. so, you know, donald trump definitely strikes a better deal. >> you know what? you talk >> you know what? you can't talk like >> you know what? you can't talk uke the >> you know what? you can't talk like the here's what like that. the here's what happens that donald trump is
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happens is that donald trump is being attacked. knows being attacked. everybody knows he's everybody knows he's a bad guy. everybody knows they're can't they're all bad guys. you can't say that donald donald trump is a low brow in terms of a is a low brow in terms of actual criminal . he is. that is actual criminal. he is. that is that joe biden was collecting bags of money from from chinese people and the ukrainians and now we're at war with ukraine. so basically basically this he he was bought out to fight this war. well, indeed. >> i mean, the house oversight committee investigated joe biden's connections and biden's family connections and the money that they were receiving. talking receiving. we're talking millions from romania, millions of pounds from romania, from china, various sort of from china, from various sort of nefarious overseas interests. you wouldn't want having you really wouldn't want having an influence at the top level, top levels of american politics. and like everything and it feels like everything that being taken to that trump is being taken to task for the mishandling of classified documents . yes or not classified documents. yes or not accepting election results. it's all stuff that's been done by hillary clinton . didn't accept hillary clinton. didn't accept the election results straight away. when donald trump was elected , joe biden mishandled elected, joe biden mishandled classified documents. it all feels like there's a two tier justice system in america where
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if you're on the right, you get punished full if you're on punished the full if you're on the capitol riot picnic, the full force of the law is levelled on, you know, this thing all started with the impeachment of bill clinton . impeachment of bill clinton. >> and before that, americans , >> and before that, americans, the american political system was relatively balanced. but they went after bill clinton . he they went after bill clinton. he did a bad thing. he did the thing in the white house. and he did, wasn't sex did, you know, it wasn't sex scandal. sex scandal in scandal. it was a sex scandal in the white house. >> standards , it does. >> but ever since that, every other year there's been an impeachment thing. and now this is coming. we're headed is what's coming. we're headed for we're heading for global disaster to be disaster for america used to be the country in the the greatest country in the world. going the world. now it's going to be the greatest country in the world for of trials. for these kind of trials. >> i still believe in the >> well, i still believe in the american dream. you >> the american >> yeah. what is the american dream? >> yeah. what is the american drearthink hard work. hard work >> i think hard work. hard work gets you there. anyway, moving on. what have got in the on. what have they got in the front of the telegraph? front cover of the telegraph? john the daily telegraph are >> so the daily telegraph are leading private to leading with nhs goes private to end record backlog. now this is actually complex actually quite a complex story and bumped into kwasi
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and we bumped into kwasi kwarteng, was in the studio kwarteng, who was in the studio earlier him to earlier and i asked him to explain it me and he explain it to me and he just carried on walking on. so it might be might be a bit of trouble when he was chancellor. >> yeah, kwasi. >> yeah, like kwasi. >> yeah, like kwasi. >> but no , no joy there. so >> but no, no joy there. so basically what's happened is there's such a huge as so many of our viewers will know, there's backlog to there's been a huge backlog to there's been a huge backlog to the patients trying to get appointments with nhs. you know, you call them up. it's a nightmare. >> it's really quite and you've got to call between 8 am. and 8 or am. yeah i like that one. or1 am. yeah i like that one. >> but yeah, but the problem is there's as i understand it, there's as i understand it, there's quite a lot of space in these private hospitals. now these private hospitals. so now these private hospitals. so now the with them the nhs are teaming up with them to co—opt space to essentially co—opt that space and go see private and get people to go see private physicians, but not pay for it. >> is that right? so the nhs is going to pay the bill. basically you'll treated private you'll be treated in a private hospital, probably a more hospital, probably have a more comfortable bed and better food and the nhs will pay the bill. i mean outsourcing, but mean this, this outsourcing, but they've doing that for years. >> they did that during covid when had i my when i had my when i had my prostate and then he prostate checked and then he went to the doctors and, and so,
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so there's a stepladder to measure it. >> this could be a slow descent into eliminating the nhs. also it's prostate. i don't know. i don't know if it's that. if the news is that positive of. yeah, i mean this is this is how china has basically eliminated or grew into free market economy . and into a free market economy. and they allowed the hospitals or they allowed the hospitals or the factories in their case that were more productive to do more, to produce more and sell sale at the free market. gradually, the market market just took over. and i think the nhs, you know, to tap into that free market, the the free the efficiencies of the free market makes sense. i market really makes sense. i mean, understand your medical mean, i understand your medical care be free at the care should still be free at the point access, mean, if point of access, but i mean, if the private sector can deliver it effectively , i mean, for it more effectively, i mean, for example, get the example, you wouldn't get the nhs to manufacture its own ambulances. so you'd let a private company manufacture the ambulances and then the nhs buys them. but we're not dealing with them. but we're not dealing with the medical care should be. >> so all of the mental care should privatised the should be privatised in, in the sense yeah, wouldn't sense like, yeah, you wouldn't make ambulances. so we make their own ambulances. so we want don't the doctors
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make their own ambulances. so we wa be. don't the doctors to be. >> how you mean how would it >> how do you mean how would it and who's pay for it and who's going to pay for it and who's going to pay for it and is it going to be paid? and how is it going to be paid? >> it going be paid >> how is it going to be paid for? just let private for? so just let private hospitals up the slack. hospitals take up the slack. >> think it's going to >> i don't think it's going to be more expensive. >> paid by states. the >> paid for by the states. the states think pays for nhs states you think pays for nhs care it's going the same thing. >> there's going to be no difference because at the end of the like, that's the medical. >> the private sector make >> the private sector will make it more efficient. it more, more efficient. >> is that the >> the problem is, is that the demand medical services have demand on medical services have gone because gone through the roof because the so the british people are so unhealthy come on, this is enough. >> slamming british people. >> slamming british people. >> no, but same thing in america. >> let's go to the front page of the daily mail. lewis, what have they got there? >> front of the daily >> the front page of the daily mail is. hold on second. is mail is. hold on a second. is this is shocking, shocking, shocking . how on earth could shocking. how on earth could this be allowed to happen as eco protesters occupy the roof of the prime minister's family home and they and drape stuff? so they got into the they got in. isn't it protected ? isn't it at least one protected? isn't it at least one policeman? know what? protected? isn't it at least one pol in man? know what? protected? isn't it at least one pol in mari'm know what? protected? isn't it at least one pol in mari'm reallyw what? protected? isn't it at least one pol in mari'm really surprised >> in my i'm really surprised that can walk up to the that you can just walk up to the prime house. you prime minister's house. do you
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know climb roof . know what? climb on the roof. >> tessa jowell when she >> yeah. tessa jowell when she lived in my. in my little borough of nunhead is they had policemen outside of policemen stationed outside of her oh, really? they did. her house. oh, really? they did. they they had they had with guards. they had guards outside house. so guards outside her house. so they. guards outside her house. so they . we should start shooting they. we should start shooting people and killing them. and dead, dead, dead . we. well, is dead, dead, dead. we. well, is that too much ? is that too much? that too much? is that too much? >> be too much. we'll >> it might be too much. we'll find when the ofcom. this greenpeace wanting >> this is greenpeace wanting a piece of justin boyles action. they're jealous. they're getting jealous. they're like, they're getting jealous. they're like they're they're getting jealous. they're likethey're like, how come you >> they're like, how come you say is like motley crew >> this is like motley crew bringing a grunge album in bringing out a grunge album in 1994, and they motley crew. >> these are and what about friends the earth? >> these are and what about friethere's:he earth? >> these are and what about friethere's:he eart of these. >> there's tonnes of these. these been these organisations have been around think around forever and do you think it's too far for it's a step too far for greenpeace just to be targeting a residence? a private residence? >> we've seen, you know, >> i mean, we've seen, you know, politicians targeted politicians getting targeted before when david amess, you know, of ultimate know, the sort of ultimate example was targeted by an islamist and sadly killed by him . but this i mean, i feel like, you know, fair enough, you know, target, target, public, public spaces. but to target somebody's
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home, it does feel like a line has been crossed. >> yeah. and you know, obviously, they weren't doing anything but the fact anything violent, but the fact that what they that you're. what if they were you know, know who you know, you don't know who someone on your someone who's climbing on your roof brought on. roof and but you brought it on. >> it on. the people >> we brought it on. the people out brought out there brought it on themselves believing themselves by believing in this climate bill and also by not by not owning guns and by not not owning guns and also by not going. well, that's true. >> this is an america you'd have a dead greenpeace people >> this is an america you'd have a the dead greenpeace people >> this is an america you'd have a the roof.d greenpeace people >> this is an america you'd have a i'mroof.d greenpeace people >> this is an america you'd have a i'm not d greenpeace people >> this is an america you'd have a i'm not in greenpeace people >> this is an america you'd have a i'm not in favour.3ace people >> this is an america you'd have a i'm not in favour. i'm people >> this is an america you'd have a i'm not in favour. i'm not.)le >> i'm not in favour. i'm not. i mean, i was obviously i wasn't making a joke, but i wasn't being they should being serious that they should shoot they should. shoot people. but they should. i mean, somebody going to mean, if somebody is going to invade minister's invade the prime minister's home. be shot dead. >> okay . i'm dead. >> okay. i'm glad dead. >> okay . i'm glad you dialled >> okay. i'm glad you dialled back that comment. anyway, just let's let's try and salvage this section with the daily star. jonathan yeah , this story is a jonathan yeah, this story is a bit more relaxed. >> so holidaymakers was warned. actually it's not great holiday makers warned too much sun is turning all into slapheads so turning us all into slapheads so the report here is that if you spend too long outside the spend too long outside in the sun, your hair will essentially react to that and it will fall out so it can be sun damaged.
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and then you're telomeres. no, that's you're that's your genetics. you're something follicles, something else. follicles, that's the one. they won't grow and the cycles get quicker and quicker . but and the cycles get quicker and quicker. but think they just quicker. but i think they just don't to get because don't want us to get sun because that's charge chakras that's how we charge our chakras and they don't want to us charge our chakras. >> you our chakras. >> what? >> that's it. you know what? you know learned know what? you've learned something over the years. i didn't you it, but didn't make you say it, but that's exactly he makes that's exactly true. he makes the my perennial. you know the sun my perennial. you know what? perennial? you know, you know what you know something. is that what you know something. is that what you know is know something? there is a direct between getting know something? there is a dire�*on between getting know something? there is a dire�*on your between getting know something? there is a dire�*on your yourtween getting know something? there is a dire�*on your your whatever. ing know something? there is a dire�*on your your whatever. your sun on your your whatever. your lower yeah. lower cavities. yeah. yeah. i'm not do it, but not saying you should do it, but you do we be. you should do it. we should be. we. the sun is one of the most important. we food. we important. we need good food. we need sun, we need grounding. what i think we what about sleep? and i think we also need hair. >> and you two both have a fine head hair. obviously runs head of hair. obviously runs in the that's for the family anyway, that's it for part one. coming up, we've got expense oxfam, going, expense of food, oxfam, going, walk and macron being accidentally racist. don't go away
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welcome back to headliners. i'm leo kyrees and i'm still here with the comedians louis schaefer and jonathan colgan. happily with their clothes on now. anyway, kicking things off with this section, we've got the guardian it like guardian and it looks like deliveroo will only to deliveroo will only deliver to properties louis. >> yes, it's this is a little story in the in the guardian says over 50s could deliver takeaways say works and pensions secretary so the secretary of state for works and pension his name is mel stride he at least can walk a stride . he can't can walk a stride. he can't really he was the central devon devon mp at and he says basically that that they should that old if you're old you should go get a job at deliveroo going upstairs and going on your bicycle to keep you active, to keep you active and, and to keep some money rolling in. and the one thing i know know for one thing i know i know for myself that there's nothing that can me bicycle can make me makes me bicycle faster the fact that i've got faster is the fact that i've got to go pee . at my age, you've to go pee. at my age, you've always just got to go pee. >> don't want to have >> i don't want to have a deliveroo driver who needs to
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pee half hour. i don't pee every half hour. i don't want somebody to hand a curry want somebody to hand me a curry knowing peed knowing that they've just peed in a bush. >> smell my hands saying, smell my hands. >> your house and use >> come into your house and use your toilet. >> yeah, says. >> yeah, but it says. >> yeah, but it says. >> in there for 20 >> it says in there for 20 minutes. >> delivery. deliveroo has said that. it recorded a 62% that. it says it recorded a 62% increase in in delivery people over the age of 50 in the last two years. yeah, but from what? from exactly? from what? that was my point. can i make my point? >> yes, you can make your point. but i'd rather hearjonathan's point. >> well, my dear, sweet mama is over 50, and she's tried to use a deliveroo app, it has a deliveroo app, and it has taken time . is that going taken a long time. is that going to of deliveries to mean all of our deliveries are to come cold? and are going to come cold? and that's what i'm worried about. it's complicated use. it's a complicated thing to use. satnav an a to z, satnav she still uses an a to z, although she might feel so bad that lovely that she she cooks a lovely roast dinner, which would be better. >> yeah, >> so yeah, swings and roundabouts. anyway, the telegraph like roundabouts. anyway, the telephrase like roundabouts. anyway, the telephrase cheap like roundabouts. anyway, the telephrase cheap as like roundabouts. anyway, the telephrase cheap as chips like roundabouts. anyway, the telephrase cheap as chips will; the phrase cheap as chips will have to retired. jonathan the phrase cheap as chips will have tactuallyred. jonathan the phrase cheap as chips will have t actually re< phrase han that's actually a phrase for people who haven't tried truffle oil. >> leo so, right. britain's era of says of cheap food is over, says economists . the scoop is
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economists. the scoop is britain's era of cheap food has come to an end, economists have said. as the bank of england warned, grocery price inflation will in double digits will remain in double digits until year. until the end of the year. so this is bad news for anyone who eats , which is most of us, eats, which is most of us, especially me. if you've seen that clip we just put out, especially poor people, because it's mostly going to affect own brands, going hit brands, they're going to be hit the hardest. absolutely. mean, brands, they're going to be hit tilot ardest. absolutely. mean, brands, they're going to be hit tilot arcthese bsolutely. mean, brands, they're going to be hit tilot arcthese recentzly. mean, brands, they're going to be hit tilot arcthese recent sort mean, brands, they're going to be hit tilot arcthese recent sort ofean, a lot of these recent sort of economic , shall we say, economic, shall we say, phenomena have affected the i guess, the working classes and the least the fewer earning populaces the hardest. so all the ulez stuff and we won't get into that now. but the problem is for inflation food is going up and up and they don't want us to eat and that's no food to eat and that's it. no food for peasants. for the peasants. >> that's exactly. he's >> well, that's exactly. he's exactly right about this thing. but has been so exactly right about this thing. but in has been so exactly right about this thing. but in terms has been so exactly right about this thing. but in terms ofhas been so exactly right about this thing. but in terms of the been so exactly right about this thing. but in terms of the percentage cheap in terms of the percentage of spend on compared of how much we spend on compared to, you know, a couple of generations ago. yeah, it's nothing. and this nothing. and butter and all this stuff is like relatively stuff is like is like relatively dirt spend on average dirt cheap. we spend on average 44. british people, not 44. we british people, not me, not british people spend
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not you, british people spend £44 a week on food, which is i think that's divided by seven. that's about £8, £8 a day. and for £8 a day you can eat louis schaefer's diet, which is steak and eggs. >> how do you get steak for £8 a day? >> you buy, you buy a brisket and you cut it yourself and you cut it yourself. it's not it's not wrapped up, especially it's $9 to £11. >> you ever had raccoon steak? leo well, connor imports it from idaho , but i mean, this is this idaho, but i mean, this is this is related to factors such as the war in ukraine, which , you the war in ukraine, which, you know, russia's just suspended the black sea deal, which under which it allowed ukraine to export grain via the black sea. >> and that's a&e . so that's >> and that's a&e. so that's that's sent wheat prices up, which then affects, you know, other food well. which then affects, you know, oth they1d well. which then affects, you know, oth they will well. which then affects, you know, oth they will always find >> they will always find something at the end the day, something at the end of the day, at end of day, it's at the end of the day, it's covid. it's they started. and not just covid. it's in two thousand and seven, like you said, during the last banking crisis , they just started to crisis, they just started to print money. well, it's near zero european zero as well across the european
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union, western world, union, across the western world, they're the of they're reducing the amount of they're reducing the amount of the shutting farms and getting rid livestock because they rid of livestock because they say it produces carbon dioxide. >> but it also produces food that we need. and if we don't have of food is to have it, the price of food is to going we're not going have enough the enough food for everybody in the bank of england. >> print food. >> just print more food. >> just print more food. >> only it could. they'd >> if only it could. they'd probably moving probably print too much. moving on, telegraph probably print too much. moving on, this telegraph probably print too much. moving on, this time telegraph probably print too much. moving on, this time with egraph probably print too much. moving on, this time with some1 again, this time with some good news. poverty are news. starvation and poverty are officially . well, assume officially over. well, assume anyway, oxfam got anyway, given that oxfam got time to the economics time to complain, the economics is racist and sexist. >> well, is that going to be one of your tweets tomorrow? what what else is sexist or racist? >> racist? >> racist? >> which racist is . but you >> which racist is. but you know, it it says off, off, off, off, fam whenever i see that aukus come off the office of office of famine office of familiarity office. anyway oxfam, i'm having a stroke. i am brands , gdp, gdp , which is gross brands, gdp, gdp, which is gross domestic product, which i didn't think they used anymore. basically gdp . yeah, they do. basically gdp. yeah, they do. they do as colonial as
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antifeminist because it measures the sort of output, the economic output of a nation. yes, of a nation. they say, you know, nation. and they say, you know, there's lots of people doing stuff that give them stuff that we don't give them credit and they're stuff that we don't give them credit they and they're stuff that we don't give them credit they said,\nd they're stuff that we don't give them credit they said, wait hey're stuff that we don't give them credit they said, wait aey're stuff that we don't give them credit they said, wait a second, saying they said, wait a second, leo. they're saying that don't jump leo. they're saying that don't jump saying jump in yet. there saying they're that, you know, they're saying that, you know, you maybe they should you know, they maybe they should start besides worrying about people, what what housework they do, should let do, they should they should let women wear shoes. well they say that gdp because it that the gdp because it measures, you know, factory work , you know, anything that's got a economic output , you know, anything that's got a increases economic output , you know, anything that's got a increases value �*nic output , you know, anything that's got a increases value for output that increases value for a nation, it excludes domestic work, which is mainly done by women, they say, although not not in my household . not in my household. >> but the thing is, domestic work doesn't generate wealth. it's just stuff you got to do. like you clean the kitchen . like you clean the kitchen. there's no you're not generating any wealth for the nation. that's ridiculous. cleaning that's ridiculous. and cleaning the something the kitchen is just something you it. not you just have to do it. it's not work. i it is work, but work. i mean, it is work, but it's it's work where it's not. it's not work where it's not. it's not work where it's like me saying i wipe my bum. this is be measured as bum. this is to be measured as gdp it's work. it's gdp because it's work. it's like, no, you just got do it.
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like, no, you just got to do it. >> but the interesting thing >> but but the interesting thing is they're is that this what they're planning oxfam planning on doing, what oxfam doesn't british women or doesn't affect british women or american women because there's such so messy. and such pigs, there's so messy. and i and you can say to me, lewis, lewis, you have no right to say that i've lived in this country 22 years. i know many, many women in many women , and a women in this many women, and a lot of them house. the house proud is not is not a word you could use to describe the british. >> i've noticed there's a correlation, jonathan. you'll probably agree with this. the more his mother, more more his mother, the more a woman knows how the world should be run. the less she knows how to run. >> i totally agree. but the thing is, with oxfam is when have you ever heard good news have you ever heard a good news story them? in the last story about them? in the last ten to ten years, i actually used to work the day. work for oxfam back in the day. really? yeah. i was a guy who organised all prostitutes organised all the prostitutes when boo boo. when they were on oh boo boo. >> that's funny. really >> that's funny. that is really funny . >> that's funny. that is really fun that's good joke. anyway, >> that's a good joke. anyway, the now and miss the the times now and i miss the days morality days when bankers morality stopped is good. >> jonathan yeah, this is a this is a fun one. so bankers guide to inclusive language bans black market. first of all, i've
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market. so first of all, i've just learned what annual leave is apparently is and that apparently comes from having to take time from bankers having to take time off in case they're doing fraud. that's learned. that's that's what i learned. that's what used to work at what my friend used to work at goldman told me today. goldman sachs told me today. i don't if it's true or not, don't know if it's true or not, but they are not a moral industry. traditionally speaking. yeah. so the is speaking. yeah. so the story is bank the bank leaders have called for the banning including banning of words, including black market and male and female, order make the female, in to order make the profession progressive. female, in to order make the profes so n progressive. female, in to order make the profes so there's progressive. female, in to order make the profes so there's a'ogressive. female, in to order make the profes so there's a listzssive. female, in to order make the profes so there's a list ofive. yeah, so there's a list of words, but this actually sounds like a like a hacky parody of like a like a hacky parody of like back in the day. it's so hack. it'sjust like back in the day. it's so hack. it's just like, oh, you can't say coffee anymore. can't say black coffee anymore. but you can't but now literally you can't say black it really sounds black market. it really sounds like a like old hacky joke. like a like an old hacky joke. >> and what could say? could >> and what could you say? could you like green with envy? you say like green with envy? you say because it's you can't say that because it's offensive to kermit the frog. dumas blue, which dumas or feeling blue, which goes smurfs . goes against the smurfs. >> i mean, the list of words they've got is crazy. yeah, they've got is crazy. so yeah, you say sanity check, you can't say sanity check, which is a term for software testing. you know, i meant to say test instead of say functional test instead of credit . oh, you know, i credit score. oh, you know, i meant to stragglers loot box meant to say stragglers loot box instead of direct deposit. you meant to say raw doggy debt down
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instead of direct deposit. you mean'of» say raw doggy debt down instead of direct deposit. you mean'of these aw doggy debt down instead of direct deposit. you mean'of these may)ggy debt down instead of direct deposit. you mean'of these may bey debt down instead of direct deposit. you mean'of these may be made down instead of direct deposit. you mean'of these may be made up,vn some of these may be made up, but i mean, they're they're no worse than the replacements. >> they've come up with. i mean, because replacement because the replacement for mail and in in it for and female so used in in it for example it connectors instead of that instead of male and female, they say male male, alternative or female alternative. it's not they say male male, alternative or fsame alternative. it's not they say male male, alternative or fsame thing. ative. it's not they say male male, alternative or fsame thing. you've t's not they say male male, alternative or fsame thing. you've just ot they say male male, alternative or fsame thing. you've just made the same thing. you've just made it complicated. yeah the same thing. you've just made it c1are1licated. yeah the same thing. you've just made it c1are1lica'alternative mean? >> i don't know. >> i don't know. maybe >> i don't know. maybe it's transitioning i transitioning top and bottom. i don't know. whatever. yeah don't know. but whatever. yeah just political correctness gone mad. >> e we've $- e we've got the >> moving on. we've got the times now and france's president macron is promoting the racist stereotype that ethnic minority children don't have. fathers >> louis well, in a roundabout way, at least he's recognising it. emmanuel macron. macron blames children of single parents for french riots . and parents for french riots. and this is interesting. he says a three quarters of the children prosecuted over the summer's riot were from single parent families or in social care . he families or in social care. he doesn't mention the ethnicity of these people because it's sort of against the law in france to do that, to mention the ethnicity. do that, to mention the ethnicit everybody saw the pictures. >> they saw the pictures. but
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the truth is, is fact that the truth is, is the fact that the truth is, is the fact that the french love to riot, their nafion the french love to riot, their nation got started by a riot when they rioted over the best deal when they rioted over the best deal. they stormed the best deal . so the fact is, the immigrant community now rioting community is now rioting shows that now fully that they're now fully assimilated into french culture. >> great, great stuff. louis >> great, great stuff. louis >> well, i mean, first of all, if emmanuel macron wants less , if emmanuel macron wants less, you know, single parent households, he should start wearing condoms. but basically, i don't i don't know what the correlation there it correlation is. there because it does a if does seem to be a thing if you're raised in a single parent family, is a proclivity family, there is a proclivity towards crime and stuff. so what's just to focus what's the answer? just to focus on family unit, that's like on the family unit, that's like the thing i've ever the most dumas thing i've ever said. think could have said. but i think we could have governments with governments in the west with more policies to more pro—natal policies to encourage people to have families and keep those families stable. >> i don't think i don't think a single parent i'm the product of a single parent household and i don't you're necessarily, don't think you're necessarily, you you have two you know, you have to have two parents end up . sami all parents to end up. sami all right. but i mean, what was interesting in france is that the riots, the rioters were
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clearly immigrants, you know, second and third generation often . but, you know, the often. but, you know, the children of immigrants and we could see this in the pictures and the media obfuscated this . and the media obfuscated this. they said, no, this this isn't true. but it's like and even macron himself is trying to divert away from it. he's saying, no, no. this is saying, no, no, no. this is there's there's no there's no there's no link there. is just because they there. this is just because they don't have they're not allowed to say that. they're not they're literally to say literally not allowed to say they're allowed they're really not allowed to say. see they say. people can see it and they will replace government with will replace the government with a listens a government that listens to them basic logic and reason. >> but the interesting thing about it and is that is that the demographic shift is so extreme there that most of the young people are from immigrant communities. so if even if the other people rioted, it still wouldn't be enough . it would wouldn't be enough. it would still be predominantly immigrant communities . okay. and can i communities. okay. and can i just say this? can i just say that i am i i'm from a single household, single parent household. my mother thought i
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was jesus and that's it for part two. >> coming up, we've got lizzo responding to accusations . is responding to accusations. is bud light going bust and the bbc suggesting the wrong side won world war two. find out what it's about right after the weather. that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers >> proud sponsors of weather on gb news news. >> i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. some wet and windy weather heading for in friday night and saturday, but for many, friday will dry and a day will be a dry and a bright day with perhaps a bit more sunshine than had of late. the wet than we've had of late. the wet and for saturday and windy weather for saturday coming of low coming from this area of low pressure. it, though, pressure. ahead of it, though, a ridge is trying ridge of high pressure is trying to move in. it's not completely across the uk though, so still some heavy showers around this evening overnight. evening and indeed overnight. we'll some going we'll keep some going over eastern and eastern eastern scotland and eastern england. the odd one further west, but many places will become overnight with some become dry overnight with some clearer spells and temperatures
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dipping to down about 11 14. dipping to down about 11 to 14. in most towns and cities. so to on friday. and as i said, many places will be dry and bright, certainly west, places will be dry and bright, certainly west , across certainly in the west, across these counties of these eastern counties of england and indeed across much of probably be of the midlands, probably to be quite and there quite a cloudy start. and there will be further outbreaks of rain northeast england. rain over northeast england. and then afternoon heavy showers rain over northeast england. and then breakernoon heavy showers rain over northeast england. and then break out on heavy showers rain over northeast england. and then break out because' showers could break out because lincolnshire, east anglia and the south—east, many western the far south—east, many western areas looking dry and areas though, looking dry and bright, a bit more sunshine than we've seen of late. light winds as pleasant as well. so feeling pleasant if we get some sunshine. but we do get some sunshine. but temperatures still only high, teens low 20s look at this teens low 20s and look at this deep of low pressure deep area of low pressure bringing windy weather bringing wet and windy weather swinging across the country on friday night. and spreading more widely saturday. northern widely during saturday. northern scotland will generally stay dry and bright and it may brighten up the south—west, but here up in the south—west, but here we'll strongest we'll have the strongest winds. we office warning we do have a met office warning in for winds here in place for those winds here and the heavy across and for the heavy rain across northern more details and for the heavy rain across no those more details and for the heavy rain across no those warningsails the on those weather warnings on the met website that warm met office website that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. >> proud sponsors of weather on
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gb news. >> welcome back to headliners kicking things off in this section with the meal and hiring dylan mulvaney to advertise beer seems to be helping bud light transition to bankruptcy. jonathan yeah, this is a story for the ages, so anheuser—busch lost a staggering $390 million in second quarter as bud light sales to retailers plunged 14% in wake of a brand's partnership with transgender influencer dylan mulvaney . dylan mulvaney. >> so this has almost become a little microcosm of the whole , little microcosm of the whole, in quotes, culture war. so as many of you guys will know , the many of you guys will know, the company behind budweiser and bud light, they hired dylan mulvaney and made a limited edition can based on a year after her transition and everyone just blew up about it. it went kind of both so a lot of people of both ways. so a lot of people who didn't like dylan or didn't agree with it , they had they
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agree with it, they had they stopped buying it and the sales massively dropped. and also people tending to be on the left who dylan. they were who were pro dylan. they were annoyed with bud light company for not sticking dylan. for not sticking up for dylan. so everyone stopped. everyone was annoyed. it just they jumped right of it and right into the middle of it and just decimated and thank you just got decimated and thank you for using dylan's correct pronouns he is a woman. pronouns because he is a woman. >> yes, louis, what do you make of i of it is like that's >> i make of it is like that's an interesting mean, an interesting point. i mean, how woman how can a woman how can a woman how can a woman transition? well it's a it's a failure transition . failure transition. >> i mean, actually, the most convincing of dylan convincing part of dylan mulvaney's transition was the fact bud light. fact that he drinks bud light. yeah, it's terrible beer. it's 3.5. >> well, most beer in america is bad, but i think i think the problem with this is, is that this is not going to go away because there's greater forces out there that that don't care whether anheuser—busch makes money. they don't care . what money. they don't care. what they want to do is they've got this agenda, whether it's vanguard or blackrock or blackstone or whoever these companies are or berkshire hathaway, they don't care.
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>> and in fact, we can see with with companies that lose market share, they lose sales after doing something egregiously woke. we can see, you know, ben and jerry's and wix and every loads of companies seem to be doing it. they lose sales, but then their credit from vanguard or blackrock or one of these super woke investment companies becomes cheaper. so they're actually saving money they actually saving money on they they pay a cheaper interest rate on their loans. so yeah, their credit facilities actually improve, right? >> i would say we need to >> so i would say we need to boycott costa and natwest in this country to teach them a lesson, but it may not work like that from what you're saying. it may not work. >> yeah. okay. well, moving on. we've got the eye next. and lizzo says accusations of lizzo says the accusations of sexual harassment against her are wrenching . i didn't know are gut wrenching. i didn't know they made wrenches enough to they made wrenches big enough to wrench loose. wrench that gut loose. >> yeah, well, i guess. guess what goes around comes around. and in her case, it comes a long way around . is that lizzo way around. is that lizzo statements. the star calls
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sexual harassment allegations false and too outrageous to be addressed. and i guess i guess this is what happens . this is this is what happens. this is what this is what they do . what this is what they do. people when they want to get at you, they attack your stock and trade. lizzo was supposed to. wait, i'm not i haven't wait, wait. i'm not i haven't said anything. i haven't said anything. lizzo cares. she's supposed care for heavy supposed to care for heavy people , for fat people. and and people, for fat people. and and then she accused them. and then she's accused of this . it's like she's accused of this. it's like with me. it's like when they want to get at me, when people want to get at me, when people want to get at me, when people want to attack me, they don't. they. they attack me for eating, being weetabix being caught eating. weetabix i saw you eating cheerios. >> yeah, eating cheerios. >> yeah, eating cheerios. >> getting back to getting >> but getting back to getting back to lizzo, also might back to lizzo, who also might eat cheerios. >> i mean, certainly >> i mean, she's certainly eating something, but she she was of body shaming. was accused of body shaming. >> to leave >> well, we need to leave lizzo alone. a on her alone. she's got a lot on her plate. okay on. plate. okay come on. >> can't sugarcoat it. you >> you can't sugarcoat it. you can't this message. can't sugarcoat this message. jonathan because you'll that jonathan because you'll eat that as well. >> em- 5 these are >> but these are all these are all right? there's all allegations, right? there's you know, is she's let her be you know, is it she's let her be taken to court let a jury of taken to court and let a jury of her or not her peers decide whether or not this allegations .
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this is true. this allegations. but also then again, she is quite like quite a, you know, like a representative of like the girlboss, like i'm such a good person. and then it's always it's always the good people on tv end up being horrible people. >> but but but the big issue here, really the big issue is thatis here, really the big issue is that is that being overweight is really unhealthy . and my gut really unhealthy. and my gut feeling is , is they have to feeling is, is they have to promote lizzo because they need people. she's lost all gut feeling. they need people to be to be fat because the pharmaceutical companies so they can still have i mean, and the thing is, people are getting fatter and they want they want to look , look, at tv and to look, look, look at tv and see people who represent them. >> i can understand why >> so i can understand why lizzo's i'm i'm lizzo's popular. but i'm i'm surprised. and some some the surprised. and some some of the stuff know a lot of the stuff i don't know a lot of the sort sexual harassment claims sort of sexual harassment claims and get these and things that you get these days. a dancer days. you know a dancer apparently felt pressured she apparently felt pressured so she felt pressured to eat a banana out of a prop suit in amsterdam. but you know, it's 4 am. in the morning. you're twisted on drugs with a celebrity. you know,
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you're going do something you're going to do something like then maybe like that. and then maybe the next you're going to wake up next day you're going to wake up and oh, i feel and be like, oh, i feel bad about that. you know, well, about that. but you know, well, i go night out. i mean, let's go on a night out. >> i'm it. that's let's >> i'm up for it. that's let's go get some bananas. >> you bring the bananas. okay. moving got the moving on. we've got the telegraph it looks like telegraph now and it looks like the radio the success of gb news on radio is hurting jonathan is hurting the bbc. jonathan i actually found out were actually just found out we were on radio. >> know. right? did not >> i didn't know. right? did not know. so wore shirt for know. so i wore a shirt for nothing. more than a million nothing. so more than a million tune out of radio two after ken bruce's following bruce's exit following mysterious circumstances, i added that bit. so bruce, bruce bruce left his radio two show in march for a new job on greatest hits radio, ending a 40 year association with the bbc. and when he left, his show had 8.2 million listeners . and three million listeners. and three months april june , the months from april to june, the audience to 6.9 million. so audience fell to 6.9 million. so he was clearly a big draw, bringing a of people. he bringing in a lot of people. he left. people move on and then, yeah, fans move people all yeah, fans move with people all the time. >> that's it's only a million or so. i mean, they still have 6.9 million people watching it, so. i mean, they still have 6.9 millio is)eople watching it, so. i mean, they still have 6.9 millio is unbelievable,|g it, so. i mean, they still have 6.9 millio is unbelievable, listening which is unbelievable, listening to listening to it. to it, listening to it. >> at the end, watch the
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radio. >> well, at the end of the day, at the end of the day, it's the bbc. and people have no idea what is. it's state what the bbc is. it's state propaganda network. it's the government, it's government government, it's the government radio, course. of course. radio, of course. of course. their meat fingered. the their meat fingered. it's the government. when government. back in the day when they when there was they had one, when there was just bbc one and bbc two people had to to it and had to listen to it and i remember those days. yeah, do remember those days. yeah, i do remember those days. yeah, i do remember remember in remember it. i remember in america there like america when there were like three now there are three stations and now there are hundreds. yeah. >> but also i mean, we're >> but we're also i mean, we're sort past point you sort of past the point of, you know, the 80s, the know, in the, in the 80s, the 90s, there or 5 tv 90s, there were 4 or 5 tv channels. so, you know, shows would would get huge would get would get huge ratings. with ratings. same same with radio. there that radio there weren't that many radio stations. on a stations. you did twist it on a little instead of pressing little dial instead of pressing buttons. now there's an insane shows have the shows everyone would have the same celebrities. shows everyone would have the sanit celebrities. shows everyone would have the san it was brities. shows everyone would have the sanit was a'ities. shows everyone would have the sanit was a ites. shows everyone would have the sanit was a it was a real thing >> it was a it was a real thing to be on tv back then. not like whatever this. >> yeah you're still important to me. both of you. anyway, moving we've mail moving on. we've got the mail now some for news other now with some bad for news other tv that have the tv stations that don't have the same presence as gb same huge digital presence as gb news louis. >> yeah, well, this is first, we discussed radio and now this
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discussed the radio and now this is tv. it's is this the is the tv. it's is this the beginning of the end for traditional viewers? switch traditional tv viewers? switch off bbc and itv as they turn to snackable tiktok content and all you can eat broadcasting buffet , quote unquote on streaming rivals like netflix and disney. i mean , is this this is a non i mean, is this this is a non news story. we know that nobody's interested in tv . nobody's interested in tv. >> previously, it's been younger people who've switching people who've been switching over to streaming services. now it's older people. they've worked out to how do it. >> yeah, well, young people are the early adopters of technology and eventually that catches up through generations. through the other generations. i mean, no wonder this is mean, it's no wonder this is happening because so happening because it's so compulsive, addicting, as we all know, youtube know, like tiktok and youtube and everything. just and everything. it's just infinite content now, whereas tv, just got to tv, you know, you've just got to wait. there's wait. there's adverts, there's weather with adverts, and at the end of the day, people are beginning to realise that the bbc provide the bbc did not provide the information that was needed dunng information that was needed during the covid pandemic or what's with the climate what's going on with the climate scare climate scam , whatever scare and climate scam, whatever it was. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> really believe that covid sort of broke people's trust in, in in our institutions such
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in our, in our institutions such as the bbc. >> it broke people. and i think people i don't know i can't speak. happen have an speak. i happen to have an oscar. know basically , i oscar. i know basically, i wonder i won award and oscar. i know basically, i wondean i won award and oscar. i know basically, i wondean award won award and oscar. i know basically, i wondean award from award and oscar. i know basically, i wondean award from this1vard and i won an award from this station. did you swim most of com complaints. lewis schaffer yeah, that's the lewis schaffer we do not just like to see if any ofcom people are watching. >> we do not relish or glorify in number of complaints we in the number of complaints we get lewis does. moving on, get just lewis does. moving on, we've telegraph and get just lewis does. moving on, we"bbc telegraph and get just lewis does. moving on, we"bbc seem telegraph and get just lewis does. moving on, we"bbc seem to .egraph and get just lewis does. moving on, we"bbc seem to thinkh and get just lewis does. moving on, we"bbc seem to think that and get just lewis does. moving on, we"bbc seem to think that the|d the bbc seem to think that the wrong world war ii. wrong side won world war ii. jonathan i'm not going to lie. that's pretty bizarre for the bbc. >> yeah, it's a bit of a bit of bbc. >.strange it's a bit of a bit of bbc. >.strange stance it of a bit of bbc. >.strange stance to )f a bit of bbc. >.strange stance to take. it of bbc. >.strange stance to take. sof bbc. >.strange stance to take. so the a strange stance to take. so the bbc apologises presenter bbc apologises after presenter calls raid infamous. calls dambusters raid infamous. so bbc have apologised after so the bbc have apologised after a presenter called the second world war dambusters, infamous on anniversary in may. on his 80th anniversary in may. so think the reason why they so i think the reason why they called it infamous and i'm not completely sure it's completely sure why, it's because civilians were because a lot of civilians were killed as well, or a lot of people there's lot of i people died. there's a lot of i know own pilots were killed, know our own pilots were killed, as it . not everyone as i understand it. not everyone made back. and when they when made it back. and when they when they the dams, the and
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they blew up the dams, the and i think it killed a lot of prisoners of war. >> british prisoners of war as well. >> so there's a lot of casualty there. okay. mean, there. okay. so i mean, i wouldn't necessarily call it infamous. say was wouldn't necessarily call it in had>us. say was wouldn't necessarily call it in had lots say was wouldn't necessarily call it in had lots of say was wouldn't necessarily call it in had lots of tragic say was wouldn't necessarily call it in had lots of tragic elementss it had lots of tragic elements to it. yeah, strange, to it. yeah, it's a strange, strange choice of words. i mean, heroic would be a i mean heroic would be a better i mean and the sort of the and it summoned the sort of the essence ingenuity essence of british ingenuity that's the tide for the that's turning the tide for the war, that's turning the tide for the wari absolutely, you this >> i absolutely, you know, this way you we developed way of, you know, we developed the bomb then the special bomb and then the flight itself, the flight itself to actually deliver bomb was to actually deliver the bomb was incredible. be incredible. it had to be done incredibly carefully. and it turned the tide, as you say, turned the tide, as you say, turned tide of war. turned the tide of the war. >> and what's >> absolutely. and what's interesting is it's prompted two viewers complain to ofcom. so viewers to complain to ofcom. so two viewers, we've got that today. two viewers, we've got that today . yeah. today. yeah. >> yeah. but but you know what? i they made a great i story and they made a great movie of it. but at the end movie out of it. but at the end of the day and this is the end of the day and this is the end of is that the is that of the day is that the is that she the word infamous she used the word infamous wrong. don't think she meant it. >> she didn't mean she's a journalist. should surely journalist. she should surely know what mean. know what words mean. >> she is not a journalist. she works for the state propaganda network. you cannot be you can't
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call yourself a journalist when you work for the state. you're you're you can be well, you can't in russia, in russia, you can't. >> anyway, we're moving on. that's for three. and that's all for part three. and the section, we've got the final section, we've got aliens, the destruction of the uk heaviest beast that uk and the heaviest beast that ever walked the earth or swam and swam in the earth's seas. see of minutes .
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welcome back to headliners, the metro. now and the government has been up all night making a list of things that will destroy us. do you think the government is feeling okay? louis, this is nuclear explosion and runaway viruses among uk's greatest threats to life. >> there's no mention about not being able to find a dentist or the fact that, you know , people the fact that, you know, people are swallowing corn and it's not being digested. it basically says it basically, it's the you
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it's the british government collecting a list and they only came up with 89 problems in the world. and the fact is they should maybe hire a jew or two like myself to come up with maybe we could just, you think a jewish mother would be able to find more, more existential threats to life? >> i mean, this is this is things that could wipe out humanity. there talking about another pandemic, obviously, that easy to the no that was an easy one to the no imagination. they're planning volcanic ash, asteroid, nuclear war asteroids. >> that's what i'm worried about because as all know, an because as we all know, an ancient civilisation was wiped out ago the out 12,000 years ago in the youngen out 12,000 years ago in the younger, driest impact. look it up. >> yeah . velikovsky basically , >> yeah. velikovsky basically, that's true. and you know what i find? and this is the thing i carry around a list. i actually have a list. i didn't bring it in with me of like 7 million things that i'm worried about, including being hit a truck including being hit by a truck and hit ice ice and being hit by ice and ice using your list, maybe an air conditioning coming down conditioning unit coming down and on the and and hitting me on the head and the more worry about, the the more you worry about, the less happen. less those things happen.
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>> worry. fends them >> it's a worry. fends them off. anyway, times now anyway, we've got the times now and has a dope and every office has a dope whose only because he's whose only there because he's the boss's son. it's great to see again, jonathan. but see you again, jonathan. but nepotism more obvious nepotism is a bit more obvious in international athletics. >> is wild >> jonathan yeah, this is a wild story. so in the times, somalia suspends athletic boss over slowest 100 metre runner. slowest ever 100 metre runner. so somalia has suspended a senior athletics official after one of his runners clocked a new 100 metre sprint record, the slowest ever. we've got the video. all right, let's play. let's . not let's. not >> so you already . let's. not >> so you already. had the high your your the girabola . your. your your the girabola. your. high . high. >> all xiangshui turopolje show buju three skip at the end.
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>> that was a somalian runner at the end coming in late. >> that was a somalian runner at the end coming in late . yeah. it the end coming in late. yeah. it was after the other runners was 10s after the other runners which a lot in 100m because which is a lot in 100m because last ten i can beat that. >> i reckon i could possibly squeeze across line. believe squeeze across a line. i believe you. and she got the job. >> i mean and she got the job. she got the place in the athletics 100m athletics team running 100m because or uncle because her dad or her uncle or someone somalian athletic boss. >> yeah. i mean you can't really cheat your way in athletics. no you can't. it becomes quite apparent that, you know, 20s after you started running 100m, but god bless her for the audacity, the absolute audacity. yeah. >> i mean, she got a free trip to wherever that was. >> think it was a promotion of >> i think it was a promotion of the somali people because they were once heavy , starving, were once heavy, starving, hungry people . and she's hungry people. and she's obviously not suffering, not suffering from that. >> we've got the medal. no and it looks like the government might release evidence of aliens. i guess it depends if they cover up the they need to cover up the epstein client list. >> well, this from >> louis well, this is from harvard university, which means i it . i will not read it. >> well, got to read it. >> well, you've got to read it. do i have to it? you have do i have to read it? you have to just i just.
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to read it just because i just. >> slave. were fired from >> slave. you were fired from harvard claim will >> slave. you were fired from harva if claim will >> slave. you were fired from harva if alien claim will >> slave. you were fired from harva if alien exists.3im will >> slave. you were fired from harva if alien exists. aliens will know if alien exists. aliens exist in days and it's this game. dr. avi loeb. he's an astrophysicist , which means he astrophysicist, which means he knows nothing . those people are knows nothing. those people are the. the. of all the scientists in the world, the astrophysicists know the least when we're talking about aliens. so they're probably the ones who know the most about aliens. >> and what does he say about aliens? >> oh, i'm getting there. i'm getting there. >> we've got we're >> but we've only got we're getting end of the getting near the end of the show, skip a story. show, so we so we skip a story. >> the big deal? i want >> what's the big deal? i want an award. >> oh, there's a story i really want to do. just tell us this story. >> story. the story @ story. the story is. >> the story. the story is. i got tell you what the story got to tell you what the story is. the story is that they found that was asteroid that that there was an asteroid that landed went and picked that there was an asteroid that lanthe went and picked that there was an asteroid that lanthe pieces went and picked that there was an asteroid that lanthe pieces at went and picked that there was an asteroid that lanthe pieces at the it and picked that there was an asteroid that lanthe pieces at the bottom icked that there was an asteroid that lanthe pieces at the bottom ofed up the pieces at the bottom of the they were a the ocean. and they were a mixture titanium and mixture of titanium and something was something else. and it was an off world material. it off world material. it was it was they'd never seen any of this material ever. was this material ever. it was moving known moving faster than any known asteroid so the thing it's >> right. so the thing it's plausible. it's flight to the navigator style alloy. >> it came from else
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>> it came from someplace else because is, is that the because the fact is, is that the is our solar is that the planets in our solar system are all kind of related to each other. so when something gets knocked off of saturn, it's on the earth because. >> so the asteroid had a cup holder, is quite suspicious. >> just think this technology >> just think of this technology . we could we could use it anyway . finally, we've got the anyway. finally, we've got the daily with heaviest daily star with the heaviest animal ever exist. louis not animal to ever exist. louis not louis, but louis talking heaviest animal, average existence. >> so this is the daily star, and it is not boris johnson . and and it is not boris johnson. and it is not. >> we've got a picture of say, we've got a picture of it is oh, that's horrible. >> can i just say terrible? can i just say something? i'm going to say what i mean. i'll tell you why. this show was horrible for me because i haven't defended against that. for me because i haven't defehorrible. against that. for me because i haven't defehorrible. everybody ;t that. it's horrible. everybody is fat in country, just women in this country, not just women and not just lizzo. everybody is no, everybody is. want us no, everybody is. they want us to made easy to be fat. they've made it easy to be fat. they've made it easy to so there's no shame to be fat. so there's no shame in being fat. i was fat. i'm like, you look at pictures on my twitter being thin because we shouldn't you. you know what? that's absolutely not true. no
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one shames men. they i was not shamed. i didn't even know that i was fat until i laura beddow if we could go back to the actual. >> it's a fossilised whale that's been found. a that's been found. there's a picture the whale. picture of the whale. >> i'm shaming another picture of the whale. >> i'mleo.ming another picture of the whale. >> i'mleo. i'm; another picture of the whale. >> i'mleo. i'm; anyour picture of the whale. >> i'mleo. i'm; anyou for paleo, leo. i'm shaming you for shaming lizzo. >> look at his funny little noise. it's cute. >> reason things were >> the reason why things were bigger back in the day. because the and he knows this. the earth was and he knows this. my the earth was and he knows this. my that the my son knows this is that the earth smaller back then. and earth was smaller back then. and because nonsense, the blue because this nonsense, the blue whale. blue whale is actually >> the blue whale is actually longer than this . this is longer than this. this is heavier, the blue whale heavier, but the blue whale is longer than this. >> and that's heavier, although we don't know. >> show nearly >> anyway, the show is nearly oven >> anyway, the show is nearly over. another over. so let's take another quick at friday's quick look at friday's front pages. daily mail leads with pages. the daily mail leads with how earth could this be how on earth could this be allowed to happen? the telegraph has goes private to end has nhs goes private to end record backlog. the guardian leads with latest rise sparks tory calls for tax cuts. the mirror has hard up on your bike . the times has economy is caughtin . the times has economy is caught in a trap, says chancellor , and trump pleads not chancellor, and trump pleads not guilty to conspiracy. and
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finally, the daily star has wish you were here . and those were you were here. and those were your front pages. and that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, lewis schaffer and jonathan colgan. and back jonathan colgan. and we're back tomorrow with lewis tomorrow at 11 pm. with lewis schaffer paul cox and schaffer and paul cox and myself. watching myself. and if you're watching at stay for at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. see you tomorrow night. >> we have to stop fat shaming . >> we have to stop fat shaming. >> we have to stop fat shaming. >> looks like things are heating up . boxed boilers , proud up. boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on gb news . sponsors of weather on gb news. i'm alex deakin and this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. >> some wet and windy weather heading for friday and heading in for friday night and saturday, many , friday saturday, but for many, friday will and bright day will be a dry and a bright day with bit more sunshine with perhaps a bit more sunshine than we've had of late. the wet and weather for saturday and windy weather for saturday coming from this of low coming from this area of low pressure. ahead it, though, pressure. ahead of it, though, a ridge high pressure is trying ridge of high pressure is trying to not completely to move in. it's not completely across the uk though, so still some showers around this some heavy showers around this evening overnight. evening and indeed overnight. we'll keep some going over eastern and eastern eastern scotland and eastern england, the odd one further west, but many places will become overnight with some become dry overnight with some clearer and temperatures
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clearer spells and temperatures dipping down to about 11 to 14 in most towns and cities. so onto friday and as i said, many places will be dry and bright, certainly in the west across these eastern counties of england. and indeed across much of probably to of the midlands, probably to be quite . and there quite a cloudy start. and there will be further outbreaks of rain northeast england. and rain over northeast england. and then the afternoon showers then the afternoon heavy showers could because could break out because lincolnshire, east anglia and the south—east, many western the far south—east, many western areas though, looking dry and bright, more sunshine than bright, a bit more sunshine than we've seen late. light winds we've seen of late. light winds as feeling pleasant if as well. so feeling pleasant if we get some sunshine. but we do get some sunshine. but temperatures still only high, teens, low 20s. and look at this deep low pressure deep area of low pressure bringing and windy weather bringing wet and windy weather swinging the country on swinging across the country on friday spreading more friday night and spreading more widely during saturday. northern scotland will generally stay dry and bright and it may brighten up but here up in the south—west, but here we'll strongest winds. we'll have the strongest winds. we office warning we do have a met office warning in place for those winds here and the heavy across and for the heavy rain across northern details and for the heavy rain across no those details and for the heavy rain across no those weather details and for the heavy rain across no those weather warningsails and for the heavy rain across no those weather warnings ails the on those weather warnings on the met . met office website. >> looks like things are heating up. boxed boilers , proud
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up. boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news. >> good evening. i'm going to bnng >> good evening. i'm going to bring you the latest on my saga with with natwest, which took a turn for the worse today. we'll also get some very interesting comments. the chancellor, jeremy hunt has made to gb news his liam halligan don trump is due to appear in court in washington , dc at 9 pm. uk time facing four serious charges . and four serious charges. and joining me tonight on talking pints, star of radio and tv pat sharp will be here. but before all of that, let's get the news with polly middlehurst .
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with polly middlehurst. >> nigel, thank you. good evening. the top story tonight from the gb news room is that the bank of england has raised its interest rate for the 14th time row . it's increasing time in a row. it's increasing from 5 to 5.25. that's the highest base rate since 2008. the bank says it expects inflation to be halved by the end of the year. that's one of the government's key targets. the increase puts pressure on borrowers , mortgage holders and borrowers, mortgage holders and households struggling with budgets. the chancellor, jeremy hunt , told the hunt, told gb news the government's plan, though, is working well. >> the bank of england for cast today say that we will avoid recession and in a year's time we'll get inflation down to about 3, 2.8, i think is the number. so although it's very tough when interest rates go up for families or for businesses that have got loans , what those that have got loans, what those forecasts are saying today is that if we stick to the plan, it is working and we will end up

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