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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  August 7, 2023 5:00am-6:01am BST

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payments. new guidance issued by justice secretary alex chalk comes into effect as of today . comes into effect as of today. it follows the controversy sparked by the jailing of andrew malkinson , who spent 17 years malkinson, who spent 17 years behind bars for a crime he didn't commit. behind bars for a crime he didn't commit . donald trump has didn't commit. donald trump has targeted the federal judge assigned to the case, charging him with seeking to overturn the 2020 presidential election . in 2020 presidential election. in a social media post, trump said there is no way i can get a fair trial with the judge assigned no formal request has been filed with the court. well, it comes as a lawyer for donald trump says that the former president was simply exercising his right to free speech when he asked lawmakers to defy the will of their voters. trump pleaded not guilty in court last week. the health security agency is investigating after at least 57 triathletes fell ill after taking part in swimming competitions off the wearside coast in sunderland. around 2000
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people took part in the uk leg of the world triathlon championship series last weekend. the health security agency says it is asking those with symptoms to send a sample for testing to determine the cause of the illness. north cumbrian water says there have been no sewage discharges at the beach since 2021. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news now though, time for headliners . headliners. >> hello and welcome to headliners . >> hello and welcome to headliners. i'm josh howie. and joining me to go through monday's newspapers is a comic with a podcast, but it's a successful one. frances foster . successful one. frances foster. well done on that mate. and returning to headliners after touring the other side of the world. kerry marks. hey
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world. it's kerry marks. hey i was expecting a big round of applause, forgot that applause, but i forgot that there's no audience. >> one mate. >> there's no one here, mate. they're applauding . >> there's no one here, mate. themakepplauding . >> there's no one here, mate. the makepplaudaudience. >> make up an audience. >> make up an audience. >> haven't >> they don't care. you haven't seen you for a long time. >> haven't of it. >> i haven't been out of it. >> i haven't been out of it. >> across across the other side of the world. >> of other bits >> and a number of other bits and pieces in other countries. >> , antipodean >> you know, antipodean like your open . i can see a your shirt is open. i can see a little chester. your shirt is open. i can see a littimike chester. your shirt is open. i can see a littimike went. ster. your shirt is open. i can see a littimike went. isthad choice. your shirt is open. i can see a litjust ke went. isthad choice. your shirt is open. i can see a litjust worked . isthad choice. your shirt is open. i can see a litjust worked outiad choice. your shirt is open. i can see a litjust worked out that choice. your shirt is open. i can see a litjust worked out that ch> no, nothing's changed. right. >> let's have a look at those front there's a front pages. and there's a little we're little technical snafu. so we're going manually. here going to do them manually. here we go. remote island plan for channel migrants . woohooi let's channel migrants. woohooi let's go to the next one. i don't know. i can't read that. well, bosses who hire illegal immigrants face ruin. woohoo let's go for the next one. mps
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defy anger over second jobs with outside earnings of 10 million. ooh we got how many more.7 oh, here we go. this is a good one. 74% demand action on danger dogs. that's actually something i totally , totally agree with i totally, totally agree with there. and secret labs vaccine plan to prevent bird flu pandemic. yeah, i'm sure we're not going to hear about that one again. and finally, the daily star, logical captain, and star, a logical captain, and that's your front pages . i think that's your front pages. i think we can do it that way the whole time. kicking things off with the daily mail. frances yes. >> so this talks about the conservative government's new new ways for immigration and their new immigration scheme , their new immigration scheme, which is they're going to send illegal migrants to the island of ascension . of ascension. >> and what they're going to do is they're going to send them there. >> and it's pretty much a deserted island. it's about a thousand coast of thousand miles off the coast of
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south america, 1500 the thousand miles off the coast of south ofnerica, 1500 the thousand miles off the coast of south of africa 1500 the thousand miles off the coast of south of africa and) the thousand miles off the coast of south of africa and it's the thousand miles off the coast of south of africa and it's 4000 coast of africa and it's 4000 miles from the uk. and they're just going to place them there before for then deciding where to send them , which is a great to send them, which is a great scheme. interesting >> now, the thing is, there's a slight with this. i slight problem with this. i believe that kerry, you've actually to i've been believe that kerry, you've ac'thely to i've been believe that kerry, you've ac'the island. to i've been to the island. >> it's wonderful. to the island. >> and nonderful. to the island. >> and youierful. to the island. >> and you know , whilst it's >> and you know, whilst it's going from one extreme, rwanda is one extreme to go to. let's send them to a it's a tropical paradise . it is beautiful. paradise. it is beautiful. i mean, there's volcanic rock and then the most incredible tropic, beautiful mountain and so on. it's an island with no insects on it. wow really? let's send them to the insect . i want to them to the insect. i want to live on the insect. i would jump at the chance to live there. there's more mosquitoes at the chance to live there. the beachesrore mosquitoes at the chance to live there. the beachesrore empty. toes at the chance to live there. the beaches lore empty. toes no the beaches are empty. no, no mosquitoes. beaches mosquitoes. the beaches are empty. are beautiful. empty. they are beautiful. there's giant turtles along the beach. there are. can you say the word farting on this program ? and think that's ? and i think that's not too far. are too far. yeah, there are far too rocks. farting rocks. rocks. there are farting rocks. you walk along beach and you walk along the beach and because there's air holes running the rocks , you running through the rocks, you running through. he rocks, you running through the rocks, you running through. and)cks, you running through the rocks, you running through. and it's, you hear this sound. and it's actually fascinating .
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actually fascinating. >> so human rights lawyers are going have field day with going to have a field day with the rocks. that the old farting rocks. that sounds like the old farting rocks. that soundzto like the old farting rocks. that soundzto me like the old farting rocks. that soundzto me . like abuse to me. >> well, i can identify then as an illegal migrant. >> i think it's going to. well, you don't need identify. you don't need to identify. we know this this know your past, but this this sounds like it could well backfire. then frances. well, what it looks like is another poorly thought out way shock . poorly thought out way shock. >> i know from the conservatives who just they cannot seem to get it together. they cannot seem to get it together. they can't seem to put together a coherent strategy and the whole thing is a shambles. well, the good news is election is there isn't an election coming next year. coming up in the next year. >> yeah. does monday's >> yeah. what does monday's telegraphthe telegraph tells us >> kerry the telegraph tells us that bosses who hire ill legal migrants and then it puts in inverted commas, face ruin , inverted commas, face ruin, which i assume because it's not part of one sentence. i don't mean they ruin. mean that they will face ruin. they going they mean that they're going to ruin their faces, which i think is a bit bit over the top really . and this is the idea of just fining bosses. so much that it isn't worth their while hiring illegal migrant s, which i think
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would be better to send the bosses to rwanda personally . but bosses to rwanda personally. but but this is the new plan . but this is the new plan. >> so i mean, we i mean, i guess are we talking here about because there's a lot chinese restaurant and indian restaurants. there's a lot of migration used there . is that migration used there. is that does that mean we're going to be paying does that mean we're going to be paying more? >> yeah, we're going to be paying paying more. so i think what we need is we need to look at need to do is we need to look at the illegal migrants and go, right. you good when it right. are you good when it comes doing a curry all sweet comes to doing a curry all sweet and pork because if you are and sour pork because if you are this . oh, there we go. >> there's a telegraph always. no, no. let's stick with the telegraph for a second. don't no, no. let's stick with the telegrit h for a second. don't no, no. let's stick with the telegrit awaya second. don't no, no. let's stick with the telegrit away because. don't no, no. let's stick with the telegrit away because they've no, no. let's stick with the teleanother|y because they've no, no. let's stick with the tele another little ause they've no, no. let's stick with the tele another little ause �*there.e got another little story there. tens to miss. tens of thousands to miss. university offer. is quite university offer. this is quite an interesting thing. carry about great inflation over the last few years, certainly through covid where essentially you grade that you you got the grade that you thought deserved. you thought you deserved. do you think is a you? think this is a good you? >> sorry? what's the reason >> so sorry? what's the reason why missing university? why they're missing university? >> because now they're they don't grades. >> because now they're they doryeah, grades. >> because now they're they doryeah, they're �*ades. have >> yeah, they're going to have to okay because it's to actually. okay because it's actually that. actually higher than that. they're going to miss the university. one. university. i'm not getting one. yeah, loads of people yeah, there's loads of people like haven't been
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like us who haven't even been informed course informed, so. well, of course the effects of lockdown are just coming now and it's going to be years until we see how much damage we did in closing schools . confusing everything. so, yeah , that's just one of the after effects. >> and you know what? the telegraph still coming through with actual news. with yet more actual news. they've got natwest limits access to cash for certain customers. now of course this is on the of what's happened on the back of what's happened with is big deal with farage. this is a big deal and i think people are slowly becoming more aware of the kind of we're walking into this cashless society or or being pushed. well, we all have been signed. >> well, we all been pushed into a cashless society because it seems that more and more, you go to certain companies like pret's or your aldi's, and they don't accept cash and it just feels like we're being denied cash . like we're being denied cash. and if you look at the way that we use cash before the pandemic and after the pandemic , it is and after the pandemic, it is completely different . i haven't completely different. i haven't seen cash since the pandemic.
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>> you haven't seen cash? >> you haven't seen cash? >> no . >> no. >> no. >> do you remember what cash looks like? >> no. can't remember >> no. i can't even remember what don't even get a choice >> we don't even get a choice now people push the card now either. people push the card reader almost immediately reader to you almost immediately . and it's very it's very rare now, even considers you now, someone even considers you might night at the might want to put night at the strip wasn't strip club, wasn't it. >> was a hard time. yeah. >> it was a hard time. yeah. >> it was a hard time. yeah. >> but what's the front of >> but what's the front page of the francis i >> -- >> so the, the front page of the guardian is all about mps second jobs josh howie. so it's basically saying that there's a lot of mps support and surprise tory mps who are claiming a huge amount of for money their second jobs. if you've got people like for instance, geoffrey geoffrey cox, who's been paid nearly . £6 cox, who's been paid nearly. £6 million as a lawyer and you go, well, he's a lawyer, what's the problem that? well the problem with that? well the problem with that? well the problem he's working all problem is, if he's working all those hours as lawyer, how is those hours as a lawyer, how is he serving his constituents ? and he serving his constituents? and i think answer to this and i think the answer to this and this is controversial point, this is a controversial point, and a lot of people don't and i know a lot of people don't like i think we need to pay like it. i think we need to pay our more . i think like it. i think we need to pay our more. i think think
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our mps more. i think i think we need our mps more and need to pay our mps more and then them doing other then ban them from doing other jobs, having jobs, ban them from having a second you listen? second job, do you listen? jacob rees—mogg according to the guardian here, he's paid 29 grand month do this show. grand a month to do this show. >> wow. to do this show. yeah to do his show. this channel. do his show. to do this channel. >> to channel. >> yeah. to do this channel. >> 29 grand. >> 29 grand. >> 29 grand. >> 29 yeah. about 600,000 >> 29 grand. yeah. about 600,000 youtube subscribers says he doesn't have. >> we're all getting £29 for this, >> we're all getting £29 for thiswell , yeah, we're not even >> well, yeah, we're not even gettingcourse , if they i >> of course, if they do. i didn't getting didn't know you were getting £29, 29 second are £29, 29 second jobs. we are going to lose half the presenters here at news. presenters here at gb news. >> say so. it's a positive. >> the guardian say for the >> the guardian does say for the right news channel, they right wing gb news channel, they have wing in have to put the right wing in every they be. every time they just be. i didn't know. no one told me this was have didn't know. no one told me this was it. have done it. >> very frustrating because done it. >> like lery frustrating because done it. >> like they're strating because done it. >> like they're constantly:ause done it. >> like fory're constantly:ause done it. >> like for thisconstantly:ause done it. >> like for this narrative. :ause done it. >> like for this narrative. juste pushing for this narrative. just because you have right wing people on doesn't it people on it doesn't make it right wing, not right wing people right wing, not right wing peopwas it was free >> i was told it was a free speech say speech channel where i can say what i is still true what i like. is that still true or not? >> that's right. or not? >> and 's right. or not? >> and whenever wing i say am >> and whenever wing i say i am in given moment, the biggest in any given moment, the biggest and an interesting stat and here's an interesting stat the you know who the one who owns the most.
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>> i'm the labour. >> i'm the labour. >> i'm the labour. >> i get a guess. go on. oh from laboun >> labour. w" >> from labour. who's who's the biggest who's the one who coins it for labour. it the most for labour. >> no >> keir starmer. no >> keir starmer. no >> david lammy knight grand knight. >> is that lbc. >> is that lbc. >> oh of course , yeah. >> oh of course, yeah. >> oh of course, yeah. >> oh of course, yeah. >> oh really? yeah, of course. >> oh really? yeah, of course. >> let's put >> yeah. by the way, let's put that in proportion to boris johnson, who's getting about 5 million. that's the guardian. >> here, but >> also a little story here, but your sleep affected your your sleep is affected by your postcode , which is i'll be postcode, which is i'll be looking trying find looking it up and trying to find out affects my out where my postcode affects my sleep or not. i'm probably losing that tonight . losing sleep over that tonight. oh, wow. >> w- w“ >> sorry. it's adding to it more , right. let's , hopefully. right. well, let's finish star . finish with the daily star. >> illogical captain, says >> carry illogical captain, says the daily star and this is a story william shatner has stepped in into the discussion of whether there are aliens visiting us and amongst us, of course. and as an expert who has been there , william shatner says been there, william shatner says no , no. and there's a little no, no. and there's a little cartoon of spock saying little green men , i'm all ears, which green men, i'm all ears, which is a joke about his big ears. if you haven't figured that out. and yeah, this is this becomes become there's been i've
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literally seen physical evidence of him, visual evidence of him talking to aliens . talking to aliens. >> why is he now turning around? >> why is he now turning around? >> he went around the universe and told them about love. i don't could take don't know how we could take that they solved that back. really. they solved most of prime directive . most of their prime directive. >> well, they just want to silence it, aren't they? it's a government scheme, mate. wait. the the for the cat's out of the bag for a long time. >> know well, william >> i know. well, well. william shatner. . i don't shatner. i'm sorry. i don't believe you. that's it for part one. coming in part two, one. coming up in part two, we're looking into police admin moss pockets and some moss deep pockets and some political mudslinging
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welcome back to headliners with me. josh howie joined night by my best friends, francis foster and kerry marks. you guys didn't know you were my best friends, did best find >> best way to find out. >> best way to find out. >> i wanted you >> but i just wanted to let you know. and that's i brought know. and that's why i brought you evening. first you here this evening. first up is news. and francis is monday's news. and francis labour discovered a unique labour has discovered a unique way dealing with the migrant problem. >> whoa . >> whoa. >> whoa. >> absolutely. labour are absolutely smashing it. so they're going to continue short term use of barges to house migrants . a shadow minister migrants. a shadow minister admits it, and that's because it's all very well to be in opposition and to criticise the tories and go, they're evil, they're racist . all of a sudden they're racist. all of a sudden you're going to come in and you're going to come in and you're going to be faced with the bitter reality that this country falling pieces and country is falling to pieces and the infrastructure is a shambles . and so, stephen kinnock, the shadow minister, said the
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reality is that we've got tens of thousands of people in hotels. we need to get them out of and need to get of hotels and we need to get them off the and out of them off the barges and out of them off the barges and out of the military camps then the military camps too. he then threw under a bus, threw the tories under a bus, which is fair enough because they've what they've been in power for what seems years. but seems the last 90 years. but he's basically said that labour are to do everything are going to do everything that they but they can where they can, but they're all going to be on the on the barges. they're all going to be on the on the barges . yeah. on the barges. yeah. >> i mean, what you think >> i mean, what do you think about people about this, carrie? some people would say is being would say this is them being somewhat hypocritical. hypocritical, this them mature. >> whole story here is we >> the whole story here is we haven't a plan either, haven't got a plan either, really, isn't it? i mean, it's we're going to get them out of barge and military camps and not saying what they're getting them into. so you can't get people out of something without planning on what's the next stage. and there is no next stage. and there is no next stage here. they're thinking about getting rid this about getting rid of this contingency measures, but they have no new contingency contingency measures. they talking about the mess the government they're government made. they're not talking up talking about how to tidy it up . really there's no . there's really there's just no actual plan or story there. basically, they are admitting
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they've got the same problem and they're saying we will keep that going we come up with going until we come up with something. going until we come up with sontheylg. going until we come up with sonthey don't have a plan, though. >> yeah, but they've got a plan to sort of get rid the to sort of get rid of the backlog is what they're criticising backlog is what they're criticisibut yes , they don't sort about. but yes, they don't sort of way, when we of say, oh, by the way, when we do with the paradise island than this one. so what do you do next? oh, i mean, bahamas. well, maybe we can have them build canal boats , you know, i mean, even build canals. jesus this is. i'm on. i'm on the right wing gb news. no, but why is that wrong? if my family in trouble and someone says, come and live on my farm, but you've work and you but you've got to work and you can that's can live here, then that's that's not right wing. that's a decent arrangement, right? well, it >> right. >> w- >> build barges. these people are well okay, on are good at boats. well okay, on to the telegraph forget to the telegraph and forget china . china. >> @ new w new villain in >> there's a new villain in town, ran.
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town, kerry ran. >> i'm not sure they're a new villain, but the telegraph telling us that, well, they're sending is now uk's sending us iran is now uk's biggest secure city threat. this is called according to suella braverman, who i presume would know about things like this . know about things like this. she's warned the last year tehran , tehran have been behind tehran, tehran have been behind ten murders kidnaps , kidnap ten murders and kidnaps, kidnap plots. and this year it's gone up to 15. and the method now is because they can't work through the old spying methods ever since what happened with salisbury poisonings and of course, there was the litvinenko course, there was the litvinenko co murder of some years ago, which we live around there, of course, that was in crouch end or he lived in crouch end. i walked past day . walked past it every day. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> really? where? >> really? where? >> i i'm assuming. no, do. >> i do. i'm assuming. no, i do. he he was we discovered he he was killed. we discovered there a spy living just there was a spy living just along road. then along my road. and then just a few days later, i looked out the window tree window and i swear i saw a tree moving the up the road behind moving up the up the road behind a person you took the a person you took at the time you were quite heavily into your psyche. >> f- >> also, kerry, your life. >> also, kerry, your life. >> turned out it was
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>> it turned out it was christmas. was something christmas. it was just something your an book, isn't your life is like an book, isn't it? it really is. so it? yeah, it really is. so anyway, because. because of those the spies who didn't turn out to be anything like we imagined with james they imagined with james bond, they were hopeless with were really hopeless with excuses. children . and as excuses. like children. and as a result, we've closed this loop. so now what's happening is the networks are working through organised gangs because they know what they're yes totally. >> yeah. but i mean, this sort of seems francis like, why has the iranian got guards not been prescribed? that's what i don't understand. >> look, to me, this is just a ridiculous story. >> look, to me, this is just a ridiculous story . they say ridiculous story. they say they're responsible for ten murders. that's less than some 16 year olds in this city, mate. do you know what i mean? well, we do to deal with them, >> we do try to deal with them, but . but. >> no, but we don't. i mean, look , to me, a ridiculous look, to me, it's a ridiculous non—story. we really need to talk about the chinese mate, because they're the ones really. >> this program has become sounds like. >> are you any sounds like. >> are you taking any money from you've got lot iranian you've got a lot of iranian viewers podcast . viewers on that podcast. >> right ? gb >> we do, mate. stream right? gb news interesting .
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news interesting. >> yeah. okay. >> yeah. okay. >> okay. well, no , i mean, >> okay. well, no, i mean, there's also another story that came out week. if came out this week. i dunno if you the jewish you saw that the jewish chronicle unveiled the chronicle unveiled about the same organisation, the iranian guards , islamic revolutionary guards, islamic revolutionary guards, islamic revolutionary guards , basically giving talks guards, basically giving talks on our campuses saying it's time to end the era of jews and whatnot. well, there's two on this channel right now . good this channel right now. good luck. right? monday's daily mail will fade. >> so it doesn't like to and i look it so i keep it down token jew and i'm being outed monday's daily mail next and the met has lost some sex offenders probably find a few if they start looking within france's absolute and on the london comedy circuit so at least names you want to say yeah there's lots of them mate. >> anyway . well, they can't >> anyway. well, they can't afford me, it be afford to sue me, so it would be fine anyway, at least 500 fine. so anyway, at least 500 convicted are convicted sex offenders are missing in the with police missing in the uk, with police admitting it has lost nearly half of them. so they've lost track more than 500 committed track of more than 500 committed sex which is sex offenders, which is absolutely horrendous number. these include and rapists and
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not just in the london metropolitan police alone. i think it was 238 and missing. wow which is obviously a horrifying number. but this was something else that this article brought to light and that do you know if you're a sex offender, you're allowed to change your name ? yeah. name? yeah. >> carrie, i'm glad you carried on sentence . on that sentence. >> know. you know if >> i didn't know. do you know if you're ? yes, you're a sex offender? yes, i do, original name is bob, >> your original name is bob, isn't yeah isn't it? yeah >> bob daniels . >> bob daniels. >> bob daniels. >> i didn't call myself bob the sex offender. i had to change the. i changed the surname because that was the give on the circuit. it's weird, isn't it? it's . i think how we treat it's. i think how we treat offenders, says a lot about us and who we are as a country. but still, with this one, i think poke their eyes out and chop their legs so they can't run their legs off so they can't run away. they can away. what do you mean they can change and not change their names and not report in? that even report in? how's that even possible ? but use our possible? but use our technology. we've got nowadays. if you back up your car, it starts to kerbs starts beeping to say the kerbs close you . can we give close behind you. can we give them something that does that when they're near a child or
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just like you do with when they're near a child or ju dog? like you do with when they're near a child or ju dog? well, like you do with when they're near a child or ju dog? well, whye you do with when they're near a child or ju dog? well, why can't do with when they're near a child or ju dog? well, why can't we? nith a dog? well, why can't we? >> yeah, that was one of the sacha sketches when sacha baron cohen sketches when he was it with a with he was doing it with a with a politician . he oh, we've politician. he said, oh, we've developed alarm. developed this special alarm. and time it got close and then every time it got close to because had slept to because this guy had slept with woman and it was with a young woman and it was very funny. this very it was very funny. this is embarrassing, isn't embarrassing, though, isn't it? >> embarrassing. >> i mean, it's embarrassing. >> i mean, it's embarrassing. >> embarrassing >> i mean, it's embarrassing. >:that embarrassing >> i mean, it's embarrassing. >:that journalzmbarrassing >> i mean, it's embarrassing. >:that journal ismarrassing >> i mean, it's embarrassing. >:that journal ism torssing is that it takes journal ism to uncover stuff opposed to uncover this stuff as opposed to the doing job. the police doing theirjob. yeah, shouldn't surprised. yeah, i shouldn't be surprised. but read but still, when you read this stuff crazy, has stuff, it's crazy, right? has musk finally found a way to bankrupt himself in this story from guardian? from the guardian? >> moss , musk has offered >> carry moss, musk has offered to pay the legal bills of people who put anything onto twitter, which is now called x. >> the cat that gets them, say, fired from a job and so on, which if he's actually going to do this, it is going to cost a fortune and it's going to be a crazy idea. so what it was was twitter has now become x, which i understand him doing that he wants his authority wants to stamp his authority on the . it looks awful . it's terrible. >> it looks like a night nightclub in essex, doesn't it?
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x yeah, yeah . x yeah, yeah. >> but i suppose it goes, you've got to speak from experience. >> it goes this space thing >> it goes with this space thing i suppose, and it's and he's got these him who these executives below him who are ex executives if are now ex executives and if they , they're ex they get fired, they're ex executives . executives. >> we haven't heard a joke on headunes >> we haven't heard a joke on headlines for quite a while. so a joke. >> i'm not sure it was but yes. >> so twitter is an x bird, seems to be an and now so i don't know how this works. if you write something on twitter and it gets you fired. so if i put on twitter tonight that elon musk is an idiot or i'm going to kill him and then this program fires me, he now has to give me the money to fight a court case to be allowed to say that about him. is that right? >> doesn't do >> no, he doesn't have to do anything, carrie. >> said he will. >> he said he he said he will. he has to. >> he. >> he. >> it's written down in the garden. >> he will do it. >> he will do it. >> yeah, seen the tweet . he >> yeah, i've seen the tweet. he doesn't anything. it doesn't have to do anything. it wouldn't surprise me elon was wouldn't surprise me if elon was sitting on the john he just sitting on the john and he just went, what? that sounds went, you know what? that sounds like idea. fire like a good idea. i'll just fire that everybody's like a good idea. i'll just fire that gone everybody's
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like a good idea. i'll just fire that gone in everybody's like a good idea. i'll just fire that gone in and everybody's like a good idea. i'll just fire that gone in and just ferybody's like a good idea. i'll just fire that gone in and just gone.dy's like a good idea. i'll just fire that gone in and just gone. yep. just gone in and just gone. yep. elon is definitely going to do this. are you saying got no principles? >> are you saying are saying >> are you saying are you saying elon mate, >> are you saying are you saying elorsaying mate, >> are you saying are you saying elorsaying he mate, >> are you saying are you saying elorsaying he fired mate, >> are you saying are you saying elorsaying he fired off mate, >> are you saying are you saying elorsaying he fired off a mate, >> are you saying are you saying elorsaying he fired off a tweet, i'm saying he fired off a tweet and now he's probably thinking that was a bit wrong. you're saying that's all he fired off. >> i mean, he's doing this, of course, is to course, to the idea is to protect free speech or to draw attention do think it attention to it. do you think it will that way? will have an impact in that way? because when will have an impact in that way? bec.hita when will have an impact in that way? bec.hit threaten when will have an impact in that way? bec.hit threaten suing when will have an impact in that way? bec.hit threaten suing in when you hit threaten suing in america? that's the thing that makes an impact. and we have seen with arguably seen that with arguably detransitioners now suing their doctors. >> well , i doctors. >> well, i think what musk is actually trying to do is he's what he's trying to do is to get to build twitter into being this all encompassing platform where you it's to going be having all different types of content . so different types of content. so you're going to be having written articles , you're going written articles, you're going to having video articles , and to be having video articles, and it's an all it's going to be an all encompassing thing, hub, as it were. me , this is just were. and for me, this is just another him to publicise another way for him to publicise this hub. >> that is that. but >> i think that is that. but then the reality of it then but the reality of it though, shouldn't there some though, shouldn't there be some consequences i consequences for free speech? i mean, plenty places
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mean, there's plenty of places on internet people say on the internet where people say everywhere, we need to point them . them out. >> all right, move that. >> all right, let's move that. and on and we haven't even got to on like whatnot like hate speech and whatnot before go break, does before we go to a break, does this express story explain why some will not be seen some products will not be seen within the upcoming break? france's. >> yes. >> yes. >> so this is in the daily express , two directors of express, two directors of a campaign group that pushes advertisers on diversity issues has made light of nigel farage being de—banking shock, horror . being de—banking shock, horror. one of them has described nigel as being a fascist fascist. and i bet if you asked this person and asked them to define what fascism actually is, they would have no way of explaining it to you. and this is a problem, you know, in that when this case with with nigel happened and there are so many people on the left, so many people who were progressives, who saw it as a good thing because they disagreed with his views on benoh disagreed with his views on benoit and not realising that
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actually the weapons that are used against your enemies will invariably be after a period of time, be used against you. but sadly , they are so morally sadly, they are so morally righteous that they feel that they are on the right side of history and they can never be in the wrong. >> yeah, i mean , kerry, there is >> yeah, i mean, kerry, there is something ironic here about someone trying to shut down other people's voices for wrongthink like calling other people fascists . people fascists. >> yeah, absolutely. yeah. and these people are the conscious advertising network. can they've thrown in the word conscious. what's, what's an unconscious advertising the word conscious is only there so they can call it can right i'm sleeping and i just mentioned spaghetti hoops in my sleep . in my sleep. >> yeah exactly. >> yeah exactly. >> i think this whole de—banking is going to become one of those new words that will go in the dictionary isn't and dictionary soon, isn't it? and we're seeing the birth of it because i don't think it's been around think around before, has it? i think it's something very new as a thing and to see banks being the new moral guardians of society is just bizarre. >> it's bizarre , isn't it? like >> it's bizarre, isn't it? like whoever looked at a group of
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bankers and thought , you know bankers and thought, you know what, mate? you're the people who who should be actually lecturing about how to live lecturing us about how to live our lives. >> banker em- em— our lives. >> banker. act like e banker. act like it. our lives. >> yeah, banker. act like it. our lives. >> yeah, exactly.ar . act like it. our lives. >> yeah, exactly. whent like it. our lives. >> yeah, exactly. when you'ret. >> yeah, exactly. when you're stumbling out of stringfellows at 3:00 the morning with at 3:00 in the morning with a nosebleed done at 3:00 in the morning with a nos�*much, done at 3:00 in the morning with a nos�*much, charlie. done at 3:00 in the morning with a nos�*much, charlie. actuallyione too much, charlie. actually that's what i think of when i think of the words. what would jesus think of the words. what would jes|yeah, your ideal nightclub based. >> yeah , it is, well, you based. >> ye you it is, well, you based. >> ye you employ well, you based. >> ye you employ a well, you based. >> ye you employ a hipell, you based. >> ye you employ a hip young| know, you employ a hip young comedian, mate. that's what you're going to on a sunday. comedian, mate. that's what youi e going to on a sunday. comedian, mate. that's what youi e gand to on a sunday. comedian, mate. that's what youi e gand confess>n a sunday. comedian, mate. that's what youi e gand confess toa sunday. comedian, mate. that's what youi e gand confess to my|nday. comedian, mate. that's what youi e gand confess to my banker >> i go and confess to my banker everything and see what they think. >> very good. it for part >> very good. that's it for part two. join for part three when two. join us for part three when we'll about forgotten we'll be talking about forgotten people. shrinking people. the bbc's shrinking budget and some powerful online content do not go away . content do not go away. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> good evening. my name is rachel ayers and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast brought to you by the met office. so we have seen quite a few showers across the uk . for
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few showers across the uk. for many today, it been many today, though, it has been dry for some. and we dry for some. and as we look towards the new week, this area of high pressure will just come across the uk very briefly, bringing some settled weather across the south. but back to tonight's weather and showers will slowly ease becoming more confined to northern and western areas. clear spells elsewhere combined with light winds will make for quite a cool night tonight. so temperatures in rural areas dropping into mid or even low single figures . it will even low single figures. it will make for a fresh but bright start to the new week with plenty of sunshine around , plenty of sunshine around, though, we will start to see that cloud bubbling up, allowing showers to develop through the morning. showers will be mostly across northern areas. they might into east might just creep into east anglia for time with that high anglia for a time with that high pressure keeping things mostly dry across the south. we're feeling pretty pleasant in the sunshine with highs of 22 or locally, 23 in the southeast . locally, 23 in the southeast. now as we go into tuesday, an area of low pressure moves in
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from the west. nothing as developed as what we saw on saturday, but will bring quite a bit of cloud rain and drizzle, especially to western areas, a dner especially to western areas, a drier and brighter day across the north and as we look towards midweek, that drier and more settled weather looking to stay around with those temperatures on the rise . on the rise. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, proud sponsors of weather on
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gb news welcome back to headliners and let's get straight into it with monday's news and kerry is labour trying to eat its gender woo woo cake and eat it? >> i like that . i like the fact >> i like that. i like the fact you tried it and almost achieved it. this is anneliese dodds, the shadow equalities minister , shadow equalities minister, saying that labour wants to tackle indignity for trans people and protect women's spaces, protecting women's spaces, protecting women's spaces is now this new idea of the 21st century of where we've reached that labour have come across as of course for a while. there's been an ideology that has been railroading through society and an like a mad train that smashed into a wall of pubuc that smashed into a wall of public opinion in scotland and is now doing the same here. and we're seeing that train sort of going back on, back on the track a little bit. and how dare you
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say that? how dare i? >> two time male rapists be a woman . woman. >> there's a bigot. yeah. so really, we're seeing us all winding back from labour now, as we did from the snp of once again finding it difficult to find policy that will separate themselves from the tories. but it's interesting that they're having reiterate what having to sort of reiterate what they so ago. they did a week or so ago. >> . i mean, they're sort >> francis. i mean, they're sort of backtracking and of they're backtracking and they're but what's interesting of they're backtracking and they' me ut what's interesting of they're backtracking and they' me ,t what's interesting of they're backtracking and they'me , reading interesting of they're backtracking and they'me , reading thisresting of they're backtracking and they'me , reading this isting of they're backtracking and they'me , reading this is the is to me, reading this is the way and the way they way and also the way they originally kind of originally sold their kind of their this, is their u—turn on this, which is a welcome u—turn, arguably , of welcome u—turn, arguably, of course. they're sort of course. but they're sort of saying, we're trying help you saying, we're trying to help you trans people. trying trans people. we're trying to and women's and we're protecting women's spaces. it spaces. like they're just it does like there is does feel like there is a complete fudge. >> josh they know that the vast majority of people don't buy into this nonsense. there's only two sexes. there's men and women and women spaces need to be protected . covid and they need protected. covid and they need to be protected in law. and everybody knows and understands that for reasons which don't need to be explained. >> it took them a long time to
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get right? right. >> it took them a long time to get but right? right. >> it took them a long time to get but it's ght? right. >> it took them a long time to getbut it's still right. >> it took them a long time to getbut it's still aight. >> it took them a long time to get but it's still a fudge >> but it's still a fudge because they're still going on and using this kind of kind of language about indignities and so on and so forth and whatever else . else. >> nothing wrong with fudge. >> nothing wrong with fudge. >> what they're trying to do is they're trying to have common sense whilst appealing to the loons at the far left of the labor party who thinks there's a trans genocide. >> there we go, which they have to an extent, though i mean, well, this preaching to the choir is something which choir thing is something which both right? choir thing is something which bot you've right? choir thing is something which bot you've rkeep choir >> you've got to keep the choir singing you do. he's got it. singing so you do. he's got it. he's playing a very difficult role he's got to role right now and he's got to court that hard left as well to an understand an extent. so i can understand a bit of i if actually bit of it. i think if actually he's being he's impressively managing to put his foot down on a issues and a whole load of issues and facing a great deal of criticism from many from his party, too many analogies going on me. analogies going on for me. >> now analogies going on for me. >> a now analogies going on for me. >> a plot now analogies going on for me. >> a plot for now analogies going on for me. >> a plot for the now analogies going on for me. >> a plot for the next. now analogies going on for me. >> a plot for the next. carry»w and a plot for the next. carry on nurse frances . on nurse frances. >> absolutely. now, this was i mean, i was going to say unbelievable. but let's be fair. it's it's completely it's 2023. so it's completely believable . hospital and this is
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believable. hospital and this is from the telegraph hospital council. my surgery after i complained about a transgender nurse. this is an awful nurse. and this is an awful story. as this is actually story. and as this is actually not in nhs hospital, this is not in an nhs hospital, this is in a private hospital in central london. the princess grace . and london. the princess grace. and it referred to a lady called miss steele. >> and the hospital actually specialises in women's health. that's the other mental thing, bird to , health you know, to be, bird to, health you know, to be, you it's correct name you know, it's correct name right actually happened right and what actually happened was is she specified that she wanted it to be a single sex wanted it to be on a single sex ward with single lavatory , ward with single sex lavatory, single sex bathrooms. >> et cetera . et cetera. >> et cetera. et cetera. >> intimate care by by by biological women. >> yeah, by biological women. because she's a massive terf. and she ended up getting an email in response from maxine green. now there's someone who never went to a comprehensive school. the hospital ceo, who says, we do not share your beliefs and not able to adhere to your requests and therefore the operation is cancelled, right? so this poor lady from i don't know , some some posh part
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don't know, some some posh part of country . of country. >> i've never even heard that accent before . but. right. accent before. but. right. >> and then as a result, this poor lady had her had her operation cancelled as a result of that. her condition has been exacerbated. it's she only now had the operation in february of this year, so she had to wait for months to have it. but she is actually said, look , if you is actually said, look, if you promise for this never to happen again , i will not sue you. well, again, i will not sue you. well, i feel that that's an incredible reaction to this. >> it is because it's she wants the problem solved so that women in the future have the right in these hospitals. it's also first, we're told that the trans a tiny minority and next to the hospital can't find a non trans nurse to treat her amazing but there's certain times whenever people feel in this issue, there's certain times in life where it's not considered sexist to state a sexual choice. >> it's always considered there is certain times it is definitely not considered a sexist whilst having a body
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search. >> you can say you want a man or >> you can say you want a man or a >> you can say you want a man or a woman to do it on a on a dating site. and you're dating site. and when you're having procedure , a having an intimate procedure, a medical procedure of some kind, that of course that doesn't mean of course you can. always. can't can. you can always. i can't request woman to do my request a woman to do my intimate procedure. apparently it has to be a man in that case. intimate procedure. apparently it h'have be a man in that case. intimate procedure. apparently it h'have be atried in that case. intimate procedure. apparently it h'have be atried ?1 that case. intimate procedure. apparently it h'have be atried ? ithat case. intimate procedure. apparently it h'have be atried ? i haven'ta. but have you tried? i haven't tried, this up tried, but i will back this up at some point. i even find the term woman term biological woman just ridiculous that we're using that now. women who now. i mean, are there women who aren't just aren't biological? yeah just trans women. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> okay. so if you're not biological, that's logical robot, isn't it? >> it's like saying a human woman. >> okay, some bbc fun now from the express carry. you're another, aren't you ? biological another, aren't you? biological man ? man? >> i'm a biological man. yeah. where are we now? yeah oh, okay. so this is just a silly. the bbc have been mocked over a missing option. in a survey they sent out to their staff asking people they wanted to find out which sexual orientation an members of their staff are and they asked, are gay , lesbian or other
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are you by gay, lesbian or other ? which i thought othering people was was supposed to be bad now, but apparently that's perfectly so. what they would have with their survey have found out with their survey is people, the is that most people, the majority of people are either now. yes. it's an odd one to leave out. i mean, look, it was it was a mistake. but someone's put here correctly that , you put here correctly that, you know, there's all this money spent on diversity officers and they overlook that some people are straight . it's just remarkable. >> some people are straight deal with it. >> but actually, there's an argument that it's telling argument that it's quite telling because it seems like heterosexuality being heterosexuality is being absorbed by queer ideology where you have a bunch of people like we have that comic sophie hagen , who sort of says, queer, , who sort of says, i'm queer, but she's never kissed a girl or been interested in in a homosexual relationship, but she just wants to be interesting by her own admittance. >> . and i her own admittance. >> .and i mean, her own admittance. >> . and i mean, that is the >> yeah. and i mean, that is the whole part of this is i actually find genuinely distasteful because gay people over men many, many, many years have had to face some awful, awful ,
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to face some awful, awful, horrendous bigotry, violence from you, from you, from me, mate. and it's just banter. why can't they handle it? but and then all of a sudden, you have these coming these people coming along essentially doing what? you know, queer face and going, oh, yeah, i identify as gay. >> yeah, well, you should. >> yeah, well, you should. >> why not just identify, identify interesting, solve identify as interesting, solve the problem in the first place? >> one >> i tried that, mate. no one believed me. >> interesting phenomenon. believed me. >> iaction ing phenomenon. believed me. >> iactioning pitheirnenon. believed me. >> iactioning pitheir bestn. bbc action from their best buddies. the daily mail. frances? indeed. frances? yes indeed. >> bbc face a mass revolt >> so the bbc face a mass revolt from tv viewers with 2.8 million claiming they no longer need to pay claiming they no longer need to pay tv licence fees. so that's 2.8 million people. and that has meant that the bbc has now lost revenue of 59 million. and obviously this then gives rise to a lot of people saying , well, to a lot of people saying, well, we need to defund the bbc, we need to get rid of the licence fee. we need to scrap it. it's no for purpose . et no longer fit for purpose. et cetera. cetera. but i don't cetera. et cetera. but i don't think if i'm being honest and fair to the bbc, this is a
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problem affecting the bbc, fair to the bbc, this is a pthink.1 affecting the bbc, fair to the bbc, this is a pthink.1 iszecting the bbc, fair to the bbc, this is a pthink.1 is actually|e bbc, i think. what is actually happening is tv is haemorrhaging. viewers because the reality is, is why would you sit down at 8:00 on a tuesday evening to watch whatever programme when you can watch it on catch up or you can watch it on catch up or you can watch it on a number of streaming platforms? and why would you watch substandard badly made comedies when you can go on other platforms and watch much better ones? >> well, there we are. i mean, what do you think, carrie? >> i think the bbc is know, >> i think the bbc is you know, i'm for all its faults, i think it provides a quite remarkably good service most of the time. but at the same time , it's about but at the same time, it's about time to become a subscription service. there's no reason why this it says people this isn't like it says people are claiming they no longer need to pay. of course they don't are claiming they no longer need to pa'to )f course they don't are claiming they no longer need to pa'to pay.urse they don't are claiming they no longer need to pa'to pay. if;e they don't are claiming they no longer need to pa'to pay. if you're don't need to pay. if you're not watching shouldn't watching it, you shouldn't have to if you to pay for it. if you if you know, watch , i rarely know, i don't watch, i rarely watch all. so watch television at all. so people who pay want to people who do pay don't want to have it. have to pay for it. >> pe and still >> 44 pe a day and it still seems popular than all seems it's more popular than all the other services combined.
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let's . let's not forget that. >> they used to send let's not forget that. >> those they used to send let's not forget that. >> those letters used to send let's not forget that. >> those letters warning send let's not forget that. >> those letters warning people out those letters warning people that worst that some of the worst threatening letters ever were worse. worse than the chain mail was, was these warnings that we know what you're to, you're know what you're up to, you're watching going watching us and we're to going get mean, it was get you. yeah, i mean, it was always get you. yeah, i mean, it was alehere is look, it's the daily >> there is look, it's the daily mail. it mail. they've obviously got it in it really in for the bbc. does it really come a cost of come down to just a cost of living as well? living crisis as well? >> yeah, also but look, >> yeah, and it also but look, and one of the things i find sad about this whole story actually is i have a great deal of affection for the bbc, as i think everybody does , who's think everybody does, who's sitting around table. they sitting around this table. they produce amazing programmes. if you think about attenborough, the wildlife documentaries, you think amazing comedies , think of the amazing comedies, the past what you're >> it's past tense. what you're saying. yeah, it is. >> tense, >> it is past tense, unfortunately, because the quality isn't there anymore. >> well, with headliners >> well, stick with headliners then. that's the end part then. that's the end of part three. part four three. join us for part four when we'll discussing matt when we'll be discussing matt hancock's to hancock's latest plans to look after us. male beauty tips and yuppies . remember them. see you yuppies. remember them. see you
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in two. welcome back to headliners. and let's get straight into it in monday's mirror and a new role for john prescott . for john prescott. >> francis indeed . so the matt >> francis indeed. so the matt hancock has come out and he said something else and what he said he does that. yeah, he does that. >> it's crazy that way. yeah. he's saying stuff. >> he really has a thing or two to say. >> he's just a maverick, mate. to say. >> it'ss just a maverick, mate. to say. >> it's howt a maverick, mate. to say. >> it's how he maverick, mate. to say. >> it's how he mave his, mate. to say. >> it's how he mave his life.te. >> it's how he lives his life. so hancock has come out and so matt hancock has come out and said he wants everyone in parliament to get self defence lessons. yeah, yeah, exactly . lessons. yeah, yeah, exactly. >> because racist? i don't know. >> because racist? i don't know. >> yeah . i don't know. no. >> yeah. i don't know. no. >> yeah. i don't know. no. >> when you it. yes >> when you do it. yes >> when you do it. yes >> i think matt >> yeah. but i think matt hancock is saying that you know the things have got a little bit heated the moment he's heated at the moment and he's never known things to be so bad but is it just him? i think it may be him, by the way. >> i don't really like you calling hancock. he's calling him matt hancock. he's known a celebrity. known now as i'm a celebrity. matt hancock everything
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matt hancock in everything everywhere , where he's written everywhere, where he's written about you missing his first name. >> you one tv thing that name. >> ytakes one tv thing that name. >> ytakes over tv thing that name. >> ytakes over your|ing that name. >> ytakes over your whole that name. >> ytakes over your whole career now takes over your whole career and part carry marks. >> yeah, yeah. totally >> yeah, yeah, yeah. totally >> yeah, yeah, yeah. totally >> what you think >> i mean, what do you think about ? mean, it is about this? i mean, it is actually, there serious actually, there is a serious point that point here that this is sad that we've this level we've reached this level of discourse, discourse . discourse, political discourse. s where and this because s where and this is all because he was physically attacked. >> look , he may need self >> look, he may need self defence classes more than he might be. sort of. yeah. just assuming this and other people. but happened. murdered but that has happened. murdered and it does. does and of course it does. it does happen. and do happen. and so and also i do nofice happen. and so and also i do notice , i notice that i think notice, i notice that i think it's a product of the internet, but i see people talk about politicians way than i think they murderous way than i think they used is it always, i want used to. is it always, i want to punch person, this punch this person, kill this person ? and i don't think has person? and i don't think it has always as much, at always been not as much, at least as these days . but least as i see these days. but you about the you think about it, the politicians, what what guy politicians, what what the guy who him on a train and who attacked him on a train and said that he'd be murdering people of the pandemic people because of the pandemic and politicians are constantly having to make decisions that involve people dying, whether either way, with the pandemic,
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they would whether it was lockdown or not lockdown, they would have been accused of killing have to killing people. they have to make with war make decisions to do with to war refugees , abortion and so on. refugees, abortion and so on. and so it's always possible. it's possible for people it's always possible for people to say that to get angry and say that they're people. so they're killing people. so that's mean , we'd all that's not i mean, we'd all there's all all got there's all we all got a politician we'd love to punch, but don't it's to but i don't think it's okay to do they do do so. and i think maybe they do need self—defence lessons and maybe even we could get them into ring and start fighting into a ring and start fighting each than all this each other rather than all this blah they keep doing so. 50. >> so. >> yeah, potentially. potentially but you do make a very good point, kerry. and when we look at things like the murder david amess and murder of sir david amess and also cox, you actually also jo cox, and you actually start to think that how long will it be before mps actually get their own protection units ? get their own protection units? >> and then you see also you see greenpeace going to the home of the prime minister. yeah, absolutely mental. >> but also we get the security reviews then and they do offer better security for the for the mps, we're paying mps, but then we're all paying for you know, so it's , for that, you know, so it's, it's no better right time to
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bnng it's no better right time to bring out your yuppie bring out your old yuppie material . material. >> now for the telegraph piece, kerry okay. >> telegraph is i don't not >> the telegraph is i don't not really sure i much follow this story, but where this has come from, the yuppies weren't all bad, despite what have virtually virtual signalling say. virtual signalling puppies say. and what i understand is that there's a new generation who are now being called yuppie puppies because they're the children of the yuppies, they're the yuppies, which they're not. they're grandchildren the yuppies, which they're not. they'r
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the attitude towards yuppies. >> there was >> i thought there was a particularly one particularly there was one person in here who across person in here who came across very well. josh howie, 47, decided not to follow in his mother's footsteps and became a stand comic and is now an stand up comic and is now an actor and a pundit right actor and a pundit for the right wing outlet. news. wing outlet. gb news. >> , the right wing again. >> yeah, the right wing again. >> yeah, the right wing again. >> the telegraph . >> and this is the telegraph. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> well, we should just put >> yes. well, we should just put right wing gb news on all our logos. >> indeed. indeed. it's interesting. i gave this interview last week. someone called up i'm doing called up and said, i'm doing this yuppies. called up and said, i'm doing this i yuppies. called up and said, i'm doing this i actually yuppies. called up and said, i'm doing this i actually yuppi
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the to buy their own the opportunity to buy their own house, had their opportunity house, who had their opportunity to make a good of money for to make a good deal of money for themselves . it was age aspiration. >> yeah . and even point, >> yeah. and even at that point, the discrepancy between the highest and the lowest highest earners and the lowest earners not the chasm that earners was not the chasm that it is today. >> yeah. no of course not. but every generation rebels against the last generation. and you know the generation know, and the next generation were rebels. so y and z were already rebels. so y and z rebelled against rebellion . rebelled against rebellion. >> you your gb news >> how do you like your gb news mum ? hey. hey. right, so . so mum? hey. hey. all right, so. so next. and it seems the taliban really have no shame. >> france's. no, those boys have doneit >> france's. no, those boys have done it again. >> yeah. yeah they've. they've been upsetting everyone, mate . been upsetting everyone, mate. the furious taliban use international treaty as your loophole to avoid paying more than £125,000 in uk parking tickets. and so what they've done these diplomats are said to have regularly left vehicles on double yellows with disgusting, disgusting mate forget they're not allowing women to attend school . school. >> yeah, they made music illegal. they've been burning instruments. they gas school
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girls . they stopped school girls instruments. they gas school girls going stopped school girls instruments. they gas school girls going st> no, mate, i've never had. no. >> but do you know, it's just a
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way obviously >> but do you know, it's just a wayhad obviously >> but do you know, it's just a wayhad that obviously >> but do you know, it's just a wayhad that . obviously >> but do you know, it's just a wayhad that . i'm viously >> but do you know, it's just a wayhad that . i'm notisly >> but do you know, it's just a wayhad that . i'm not even going not had that. i'm not even going to you . to say you. >> i came the age where >> i came from the age where they telling us look they kept telling us to look natural. know , like how natural. and, you know, like how you they changed it you look. then they changed it and you've done it. >> i don't know. >> i don't know. >> it. >> they liked it. >> they liked it. >> good for you, right? the show is over. >> good for you, right? the show is over . so let's take is nearly over. so let's take another monday's another quick look at monday's front pages. the daily mail remote island plan for channel migrants telegraph bosses who hire illegal migrants face ruin. the guardian mps defy anger over second jobs with outside earnings of £10 million. mirror 74. demand action on danger dogs. good. i news secret labs vaccine plan to prevent bird flu pandemic being there done that and finally , the daily star and finally, the daily star illogical captain and those were your front pages . that is all we your front pages. that is all we have time for. thank you very much. my guest, francis foster and carrie marks. i'll see you both taxi home. andrew both in the taxi home. andrew doyle tomorrow at doyle will be back tomorrow at 11 pm. with leo kearse and nick dixon. and if you're watching at 11 pm. with leo kearse and nick d am, and if you're watching at 11 pm. with leo kearse and nick d a.m, stay if you're watching at 11 pm. with leo kearse and nick d a.m, stay tuned re watching at 11 pm. with leo kearse and nick d a.m, stay tuned forvatching at 11 pm. with leo kearse and nick d a.m, stay tuned for breakfast. 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. thanks for joining bye .
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thanks forjoining us. bye. >> 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. >> good evening . my name is >> good evening. my name is rachel ayers and welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast brought to you by the met office. so we have seen quite a few showers across the uk . for few showers across the uk. for many though, has been many today, though, it has been dry for some. and we dry for some. and as we look towards the new week, this area of high pressure will just come across the uk. very briefly, bringing settled weather bringing some settled weather across the south. but back to tonight's weather and showers will slowly ease , becoming more will slowly ease, becoming more confined to northern and western areas. clear spells elsewhere combined with light winds will make for quite a cool night tonight . so temperatures make for quite a cool night tonight. so temperatures in rural areas dropping into mid or even low single figures. it will make for a fresh but bright start to the new week with plenty of sunshine around, though, we will start to see that cloud bubbling up, allowing showers to develop through the
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morning showers will be mostly across northern areas . they across northern areas. they might just creep east might just creep into east anglia for a time that high anglia for a time with that high pressure keeping things mostly dry across the south. so feeling pretty pleasant in the sunshine with highs of 22 or locally, 23 in the southeast . now as we go in the southeast. now as we go into tuesday, an area of low pressure moves in from the west. nothing as developed as what we saw on saturday, but will bring quite a bit of cloud rain and drizzle, especially to western areas . a drier and brighter day areas. a drier and brighter day across the north. and as we look towards midweek, that drier and more settled weather looking to stay around with those temperatures on the rise . temperatures on the rise. >> looks like things are heating up. but next, boilers proud sponsors of weather on .
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asylum seekers to be housed on the bibby stockholm barge could arrive in the coming days. >> critics of the vessel a death trap. whilst other residents in portland have expressed anger over the impact it will have on their local community. >> elsewhere, the home secretary has announced plans to clamp down on landlords and businesses who take on illegal migrants. but do we have the police resources to follow through with the proposals ? the proposals? >> and a pub landlord is accused animal rights group peta of wokery after they demanded he change the name of his boozer from the old bulldog to the old mutt due to health concerns surrounding the breed of the dog i >> -- >> in sport arsenal claimed the first silverware of the season by beating manchester city at wembley on penalties to win the

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