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tv   Headliners  GB News  September 1, 2023 2:00am-3:01am BST

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gb news. >> good evening. i'm tatiana sanchez in the newsroom .
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sanchez in the newsroom. pressure is mounting on the psni chief constable who said this evening he won't be stepping down. simon byrne attended a critical meeting with the policing board today. the chair of the police federation said he was disgusted and angered by mr burns statement , was disgusted and angered by mr burns statement, adding that he has to be condemned in a recent court ruling deemed his disciplinary actions against two junior officers unlawful. the decision was reportedly driven by concerns sinn fein might withdraw support for policing, sparking accusations of appeasement from unionists . appeasement from unionists. well, here's mr byrne addressing the media earlier tonight. >> i highlighted that after carefully reviewing the full judgement , i carefully reviewing the full judgement, i sought further advice after consideration, the question of an appeal is now live and further public commentary around this matter is not appropriate at this stage. thank you , chief. thank you, chief. >> do you retain the support of the policing board? >> that's a matter for the policing board. chief constable, have you considered your
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position? i'm not resigning. >> england must >> schools in england must immediately shut buildings made with a type of concrete that's prone to collapse until safety measures are put in place. some schools will have relocate schools will have to relocate children to other teaching spaces. than 100 schools spaces. more than 100 schools are being contacted before the start of the new term. education secretary gillian keegan says the government is keeping on top of doing all it can to deal with the issue . junior doctors and the issue. junior doctors and consultants will be taking joint strike action in england for the first time across september and october. they'll walk out for four days in their long running disputes over pay. the british medical association says consultant ice will strike on september 19th and 20th with junior doctors also walking out on the 20th, followed by strikes on the 20th, followed by strikes on the 20th, followed by strikes on the 21st and 22nd. now, both consultants and junior doctors will strike again on october 2nd and third and fourth. former nhs trust chairman roy lilly told nigel farage this evening. consultants have failed to read the room. i mean , you can't i
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the room. i mean, you can't i can't look a consultant in the eye. >> that's even if they're not doing private work, they're between 80 to 100 grand a year. they are highly educated people . and in doing the jobs they love and want, how they can turn their backs on people in this way and say, oh , it's the way and say, oh, it's the government that's made me do it. it's not the only person that makes them do it. it's the person that looks at them in the mirror when they clean their teeth in the morning, they make those decisions. >> think they grant shapps has >> i think they grant shapps has been appointed new been appointed as the new defence following defence secretary following the resignation ben wallace after resignation of ben wallace after four years in the job. >> says wants to explore >> he says he wants to explore different opportunities and spend with family spend more time with his family . education minister claire coutinho takes over as energy and net zero secretary replace shapps. and net zero secretary replace shapps . this is gb news across shapps. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car , on the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news now it's time for headliners as
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i >> -- >> hello and welcome to headliners. your first look at friday's newspapers . i'm andrew friday's newspapers. i'm andrew doyle and joining me tonight are josh howie fresh from the big apple and nik dixon. >> well—worn from north london. >> well—worn from north london. >> how are you both ? you have >> how are you both? you have beenin >> how are you both? you have been in america. you have been in new york. >> i've been in america. i got back this morning, 1030. >> how does feel? >> how does it feel? >> how does it feel? >> it feels it's like imagine a country just full of louis schaefer's country just full of louis schthat's like a paradise or a >> that's like a paradise or a hell, on your perspective. >> well, he's a lot of fans >> well, he's got a lot of fans out there. yeah. so have you been to new york, nick? no, no. >> and spent my whole day just >> and i spent my whole day just at watching boxing videos. at home watching boxing videos. >> watching uzbek >> i was watching the uzbek versus dubois low blow controversy. basically, controversy. so basically, i've spent days studying spent the last six days studying a ukrainian man's a large ukrainian man's testicles. haven't all? testicles. well, haven't we all? plus, been watching plus, i've been watching the boxing he's back. boxing are very good. he's back. he's you should go to new he's back. you should go to new york the headlines york because then the headlines would big dog in the big would be no big dog in the big apple. absolutely. i've
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apple. yeah absolutely. i've been it's doing gigs been to la. it's hard doing gigs out they're weird out there because they're weird americans, aren't they? they're different. they laugh at stuff. it's they laugh it's very unnerving. they laugh the at the the wrong bits, laugh at the setup. the funny setup. that's not even the funny bit. their bit. they applaud and their enthusiasm and they're nice. we're to it anyway. we're not used to it anyway. we're not used to it anyway. we're going to a look at we're going to have a look at the covers of friday's the front covers of friday's papers, daily mail is papers, the daily mail is leading callous can you papers, the daily mail is leadii g callous can you papers, the daily mail is leadii apologise callous can you papers, the daily mail is leadii apologise if:allous can you papers, the daily mail is leadii apologise if you us can you papers, the daily mail is leadii apologise if you can't] you get? i apologise if you can't see the image there, but believe me, that is what it says. the telegraph has lockdown returns as fears of as schools shut over fears of collapse. guardian is collapse. the guardian is leading school as leading with a school chaos as buildings collapse buildings are shut over collapse fears . and this the recurring fears. and this is the recurring front cover. the has the front cover. the times has the same story. the eye news has the same story. the eye news has the same story. the eye news has the same story , and the express has. same story, and the express has. why it take five years to why did it take five years to shut up? safe schools. those are your pages . as. shut up? safe schools. those are your pages . as . and we're your front pages. as. and we're going to start with friday's guardian. josh, what have they got on the front page? we didn't see them earlier. i hope we can see them earlier. i hope we can see them earlier. i hope we can see them now. here we go. here we go. >> that's what it looks like.
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>> that's what it looks like. >> the technology's image. oh there it is. we've got it. >> there we go. we're back. we're back. chaos as we're back. school chaos as buildings over, buildings are shot over, collapse this is collapse fears. so this is something called aerated concrete . concrete. >> it's like aerated concrete. so it's like arrows. >> know, chocolate aero >> you know, chocolate aero bars. just that. bars. it's just like that. >> concrete, do know, >> but concrete, i do know, because were talking about because we were talking about this the last night, and this on the show last night, and that exactly the illusion that was exactly the illusion that was exactly the illusion that kearse came with. that leo kearse came up with. and always said that you and i've always said that you two alike. two think alike. >> indeed. so now, okay. >> indeed. so now, okay. >> yeah. you your knowledge extends chocolate. yeah, basically. that's. >> that's. >> that's. >> that's. >> that's basically they built this the this stuff back in between the 50s 90s. aerated cheaper this stuff back in between the 5supposedly90s. aerated cheaper this stuff back in between the 5supposedly it's aerated cheaper this stuff back in between the 5supposedly it's aerat 30 cheaper this stuff back in between the 5supposedly it's aerat 30 year)er . supposedly it's got a 30 year life span, 30 year lifespan. yeah. >> and then someone has just done the maths and added 30 years to when they built this stuff. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> a em— e a minute. that's now i >> -- >> so that's. >> so that's. >> you would have thought i would have thought i mean fair enough. you were building enough. if you were building something, you know, like a potting shed. but if you're building those things building a school, those things tend to last. yeah. building a school, those things ten set last. yeah. building a school, those things ten set like. yeah. building a school, those things ten set like aneah. building a school, those things ten set like an alarm clock. >> set like an alarm clock. >> set like an alarm clock. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> 30 years or like, for 25 years. give yourself five years. give yourself the five years. give yourself the five years they've years lead in. but no, they've sort of gone. oh, wait a minute.
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all these buildings are going to possibly let's possibly fall down. so let's just all kids out of just take all the kids out of school because that's what we just take all the kids out of schoo now, ause that's what we just take all the kids out of schoo now, is se that's what we just take all the kids out of schoo now, is more it's what we just take all the kids out of schoonow, is more kids/hat we just take all the kids out of schoonow, is more kids out we just take all the kids out of schoonow, is more kids out ofe school. >> absolutely. nick, why did no one think of this when they were building? why did they not think to know, this building? why did they not think to might know, this building? why did they not think to might last know, this building? why did they not think to might last this know, this building? why did they not think to might last this mightthis building? why did they not think to might last this might need this might last this might need to last because andrew, britain is and it's now literally is broken and it's now literally falling apart because it's already metaphorically falling apart. we're apart. and i'm glad that we're covering this second night in covering this a second night in a row. we should more stories a row. we should do more stories on concrete because it's on aerated concrete because it's really content. but yeah, really funny content. but yeah, i schools at i say just schools at this point, constantly point, they're constantly shutting pandemics point, they're constantly shutaerated pandemics point, they're constantly shutaerated concrete.andemics and aerated concrete. >> bother you? >> why even bother you? >> why even bother you? >> go online, you can learn everything anyway and you go there. a load of there. you just learn a load of wokester. i think parents will disagree with on this, disagree with you on this, but i'm parent, so can just i'm not a parent, so i can just make assertions. make glib assertions. >> government has said >> but the government has said oh the headmasters and oh to the headmasters and headmistresses or whatever, oh, you for it right? and you got to pay for it right? and already we've got school budgets heavily. >> well, nick, to be fair, it's on the front cover of most of the papers. do have to cover the papers. we do have to cover this. really? it's. i do this. really? but it's. but i do kind of think it. beggars kind of think it. it beggars belief. i cannot and i'm
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belief. ijust. i cannot and i'm not an architect. i have nothing to construction. i don't to do with construction. i don't understand even know understand it. but even i know to use big concrete, concrete, solid bricks and if that don't fall, two weeks with fall, then i had two weeks with the kids. >> have to spend more >> if i have to spend one more day with them, i'm going to go mental. >> by the way, they're planning in future to us rammed in the future to give us rammed earth concrete glass in the future to give us rammed eantwo concrete glass in the future to give us rammed eantwo bad concrete glass in the future to give us rammed eantwo bad for oncrete glass in the future to give us rammed eantwo bad for the 'ete glass in the future to give us rammed eantwo bad for the environment, are two bad for the environment, so we'll in mud in the so we'll be in mud huts in the future. well maybe mud huts will be better in some care as be better in some mud care as long as kids are in school. long as the kids are in school. >> that's that's all i care about. >> going on to the daily mail. so who's got front cover so who's got this front cover of the mail? yes, do the daily mail? yes, i'll do this you. and how this one for you. and how callous you get? is callous can you get? is something been meaning to callous can you get? is somyou ng been meaning to callous can you get? is somyou ng while, meaning to callous can you get? is somyou ng while, me it's|g to ask you for a while, but it's also of the daily also the headline of the daily mail and it's about, of course, the guessing the nhs strikes. i'm guessing that quite against that the mail is quite against them they've it them because they've made it pretty on the cover, but pretty clear on the cover, but it because it is pretty brutal because they're have separate they're going to have separate days strikes and days for consultant strikes and junior so junior doctors strikes. so consultants striking on september 19th and 20th, junior doctors on the 20th, people doctors on the 20th, and people are going to be are saying it's going to be a christmas day level of staffing, which poor. which sounds incredibly poor. and you die and the present is you die basically going basically because they're going to aren't they?
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basically because they're going to yeah, aren't they? basically because they're going to yeah, that's aren't they? basically because they're going to yeah, that's the aren't they? basically because they're going to yeah, that's the thing. they? basically because they're going to yeah, that's the thing. so y? >> yeah, that's the thing. so this is the time that's this is the first time that's ever happened. this is the first time that's eveyeah.)ened. there'sthat. >> yeah. yeah. so there's that. okay, look, i'm one of okay, now, look, i'm. i'm one of those that those who do believe that you should withhold your should be able to withhold your laboun should be able to withhold your labour. you know, i do believe should be able to withhold your laithe. you know, i do believe should be able to withhold your laithe trade know, i do believe should be able to withhold your laithe trade unions. do believe should be able to withhold your laithe trade unions. i) believe should be able to withhold your laithe trade unions. i thinkeve in the trade unions. i think this is important, but i'll see you not not you later. not not. not chatting. not live on chatting. nonsense. not live on earth. paying your wages. >> josh? yes. >> josh? yes. >> one in this job would >> yes. no one in this job would ever dare do it because i'd be like, we'll get someone like, okay, we'll get someone else take knee and then >> just take the knee and then you're all good. you're out. it's all good. >> my problem, josh, this >> my problem, josh, with this is actually isn't there is that actually isn't there an ethical stage ethical point at this stage insofar there are lots insofar as there are lots of people lists people dying the waiting lists are control . there a are out of control. there was a story other about all story the other day about all these people dying because they can't treatment if i were in can't get treatment if i were in that, i might think actually at this going to keep this point, i'm going to keep going with the i've had going with the job. i've had a payoff of 6. yeah, yeah, exactly. >> there's been a i believe a million appointments have million appointments that have been the last yeah >> do you know i'm waiting? no, no, course there is a you no, of course there is a but you see my point? i can still be pro strike in principle, but not in see my point? i can still be pro strikcase.»rinciple, but not in see my point? i can still be pro strikcase. notiple, but not in see my point? i can still be pro strikcase. not ins, but not in see my point? i can still be pro strikcase. not in reality,ot in see my point? i can still be pro strikcase. not in reality, not] this case. not in reality, not in practise. >> people are, like you >> when people are, like you say, dying . yeah.
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say, literally dying. yeah. >> strike, nothing happens. >> if i strike, nothing happens. i you know, the station i mean, you know, the station plummets watches it plummets and no one watches it anymore. what i anymore. but, you know what i mean? like, generally speaking, nothing happens. don't nothing happens. people don't die, do they? fewer witty tweets. that's what happens. >> women, women's rights takes a step back. if you if you were to resign . resign. >> absolutely. and i should just quickly add, they've got the story ness. story about loch ness. but that's important. we're that's so important. we're going to to later in detail. to get to it later in detail. we are hold ness back are going to hold loch ness back because staying up because that's you're staying up for believe me. for loch ness. believe me. right. to to right. we're going to move on to the have they got? >> yes. so they've got some of the stories that we've just talked but they've also talked about. but they've also got defence chief vows got a defence chief shapps vows to fight for the military. >> so is the times. my >> so this is the times. my mistake. >> this times and basically >> this is times and basically shappsis >> this is times and basically shapps is taking over. rishi sunak has has got him in so he's defence secretary now to , to defence secretary now to, to replace ben wallace. who you know, has actual experience in the, in the forces . but you've the, in the forces. but you've got to start somewhere. josh well they've got, they've started way back. >> yeah but shapps has transport experience and the army does
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have trucks and things. >> there need to >> there is the need to communicate, but all that has communicate, but all of that has been forward, transferable been put forward, transferable skills. a senior minister skills. josh a senior minister unnamed, says it's like letting skills. josh a senior minister uichilded, says it's like letting skills. josh a senior minister uichlld into ays it's like letting skills. josh a senior minister uichlld into the it's like letting skills. josh a senior minister uichlld into the nuclearletting skills. josh a senior minister uichlld into the nuclear bunker a child into the nuclear bunker and encouraging him to play well. >> that's mean. i think that's mean. and what about this, claire coutinho, has become claire coutinho, who has become energy secretary? she's actually depicted on the front of the times, i say depicted. it's a photograph. doesn't she sound like a footballer? she sounds like a footballer? she sounds like she should be a footballer. yeah >> catena, just grab her face. >> catena, just grab her face. >> liverpool up front. but yeah , i mean, ostensibly. well, i don't know anything about claire catena, can't. i can catena, so i can't. i can comment shapps ostensibly is comment on shapps ostensibly is a figure and it's a kind of comic figure and it's a kind of comic figure and it's a of crony appointment and a kind of crony appointment and putin's going be scared, putin's not going to be scared, is maybe he good is he? but maybe he is good because it here, because the thing it says here, it's the most effective it's one of the most effective cabinet so maybe cabinet ministers. so maybe the caricature media caricature in the media is wrong. just actually wrong. and he just is actually highly competent. do think highly competent. do you think in of these cases with in both of these cases with claire and also grant claire coutinho and also grant shapps, that they are inheriting kind chalices kind of poisoned chalices at this obviously this point? the army, obviously this point? the army, obviously this bad time to be defence this is a bad time to be defence secretary with ukraine. there's lots of procedural scandals secretary with ukraine. there's lots oon'ocedural scandals secretary with ukraine. there's lots oon'ocedurarmy ndals secretary with ukraine. there's lots oon'ocedurarmy atals secretary with ukraine. there's lots oon'ocedurarmy at the going on in the army at the moment. good. do
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going on in the army at the morthink good. do going on in the army at the morthink that good. do going on in the army at the morthink that this good. do going on in the army at the morthink that this gsomething you think that this is something that maybe not something you think that this is something thémight maybe not something you think that this is something thémight enjoy'be not something you think that this is something the might enjoy because omething you think that this is something the might enjoy because he athing you think that this is something thémight enjoy because he can't| he might enjoy because he can't do well? can he at this point? well i think that no, he can't do well. >> but at same time, it is >> but at the same time, it is arguably promotion. so arguably a big promotion. so i'm sure he's probably quite. >> similarly her, she's >> but similarly with her, she's becoming becoming energy secretary time when she's secretary at a time when she's the first minister of last intake. >> right. or whatever. but i mean, with all the ulez stuff and with the net zero brief, i mean, it's not it's in other words, there are better times to . yeah. and i'm she'll be . yeah. and i'm sure she'll be great years when the great in 14 years when the tories back again. tories get back in again. >> well, that's i think you're probably right. there but you said it with such joy. schadenfreude almost. it's to going be bad, though. i thought it unpleasant. actually. it was unpleasant. actually. we're to move the we're going to move on to the front cover of sun. nik, front cover of the sun. nik, what got? yeah, what have they got? yeah, they've wrong. and this they've got your wrong. and this is here. oh, ben, had is here. oh, ben, i had your back harry back for 15 years, harry and this mcbean, lost his this is ben mcbean, who lost his arm and leg for ben mcbean when he lost his and fighting he lost his arm and leg fighting in point in afghanistan. but the point he's is that harry was he's making is that harry was wrong to criticise the media by saying they support saying that they don't support
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veterans. is veterans. and his argument is they support veterans and they do support veterans and it's little of it's a little bit of self—promotion sun self—promotion from the sun because say hand because he says, i can say hand on that british media, on heart that the british media, especially cover especially the sun, did cover the of veterans. so the stories of veterans. so i don't i don't want to don't know. i don't want to be cynical, quite cynical, but it seems quite convenient for sun that he convenient for the sun that he is very glowing piece about the sun other i think sun on the other hand, i think we in fairness, the we should say in fairness, the sun help sun has always promoted the help for it does for heroes campaign. it does make deal about veterans. make a big deal about veterans. so of course, this guy so and of course, this guy having his limbs and then having lost his limbs and then to have this from to have all this support from the sun, he probably thought this you but this is unfair, you know, but of course, love it . and course, the sun love it. and it's the front cover. yeah. it's on the front cover. yeah. highest sort of liberal highest status sort of liberal elite you elite opinion to criticise you know, things media and know, say things the media and the they're not the gutter media, they're not allowed like allowed to say, you know, like the huw edwards you just the huw edwards saying, you just say, media, but say, oh, it's the media, but it's always the media. say, oh, it's the media, but it's yeah,lways the media. say, oh, it's the media, but it's yeah, but s the media. say, oh, it's the media, but it's yeah, but i the media. say, oh, it's the media, but it's yeah, but i wouldedia. say, oh, it's the media, but it's yeah, but i would argue in >> yeah, but i would argue in this it's because harry this case it's because harry obviously a massive obviously has a massive justifiable, some would say, issue he's issue with the media. so he's looking for issue. but looking out for any issue. but of course, then it feels like it's just gone too far. they're not actually all the not actually all bad all the time, like they're time, but it sounds like they're still mean, of saying >> i mean, he's sort of saying he's still they still get on, he says him some says like he bought him some beer he met family. yeah.
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beer or he met his family. yeah. so it's not it's not like he wants him, but wants to have a go at him, but he's just saying, yeah, but, but he's just saying, yeah, but, but he's wrong in this case. >> he's wrong. and maybe that's nothing wrong with saying that. >> harry is wrong nothing wrong with saying that. >> all harry is wrong nothing wrong with saying that. >> all cases harry is wrong nothing wrong with saying that. >>all cases everything.rong in all cases on everything. exactly. friends you exactly. and friends tell you when wrong, you're just angry. >> he's not bringing any >> he's not bringing you any barrels >> he's not bringing you any barwell, i don't drink beer, but >> well, i don't drink beer, but i wouldn't from i wouldn't accept them from harry anyway. no, i wouldn't go that all right. he'll harry anyway. no, i wouldn't go théall all right. he'll harry anyway. no, i wouldn't go théall right. all right. he'll be all right. >> you wouldn't accept it, but you ebay. you sell on ebay. >> sell it. >> i'll sell it. >> i'll sell it. >> he move on and just, >> he needs to move on and just, you say meghan you know, say that meghan is brainwashed him. then i'll be fine. that's the view fine. okay well, that's the view of not the station, of nick dixon. not the station, not just but not the station, just nick. but anyway, part anyway, that is it. for part one. join us in two for one. join us in part two for a pubuc one. join us in part two for a public apology in life, public apology in real life, call we'll out call of duty and we'll find out what party has
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>> you're listening to gb news radio. earlier on gb news radio show. >> so starting with the daily mail, leo, welcome back to headliners. your first look at friday's newspapers . i'm still friday's newspapers. i'm still andrew doyle and i'm here with josh howie and nick dixon kicking things off this section with friday's daily mail and
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what's this about tweeting , what's this about tweeting, getting ornithologists into trouble? josh do you know? >> yes. rspb boss apologises for tweet branding. rishi sunak, michael gove and theresa coffey liars over plan to scrap water pollution rules for new homes. right? so what this is the largest nature conservation charity is very angry because the government said, look, we're definitely going to be we're not going to be changing these eu laws, which are about basically water neutrality , which is that water neutrality, which is that anything that is added bad to water supplies like fishes and whatnot, by building homes is going to be offset. and that basically they're now literally watering that down in that instead of the housebuilders having to pay for it. yes, the basically we're going to be paying. >> and why does that affect the rspb? >> because they basically are calling liars because cause calling them liars because cause that's their job is to maintain the environment or whatever. so but specifically birds? >> no , no, no, no, no, no. >> no, no, no, no, no, no. >>— >> no, no, no, no, no, no. >> this is they started with birds, but it's bigger. it's.
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yeah, it's the big intended. >> just. just they branched out from birds. birds their from birds. the birds in their name with. but name and they started with. but that the century. that was in the 19th century. >> like big >> but now they're like big they're for they're big environmental for everybody. the thing everybody. so the thing about this these this is it's one of these tweets where, the it's not a where, you know, the it's not a company, institution has company, but the institution has tweeted rishi sunak, michael gove. >> theresa coffey liars , you >> theresa coffey liars, you lie, you lie and you lie again. now doesn't sound like an now that doesn't sound like an official tweet. that like official tweet. that sounds like some overzealous. some intern being overzealous. is that what's happened? it was just of with just a picture of them with liars top it liars across the top of it. it was not particularly in the political world. it wasn't that harsh. than harsh. it wasn't any worse than most know most labour adverts, you know what not bad. what i mean? it's not that bad. so really care about so i don't really care about that the apology. care that or the apology. what i care about how hard it is to build anything. >> so when you want build >> so when you want to build 100,000 new homes, which is nowhere solve our nowhere near enough to solve our problems, and problems, they still try and block problems, they still try and blo and least it's going ahead >> and at least it's going ahead now. difficult to do now. but it's so difficult to do anything without like affecting now. but it's so difficult to do anyta ng without like affecting now. but it's so difficult to do anyta bird'shout like affecting now. but it's so difficult to do anyta bird's feathere affecting now. but it's so difficult to do anyta bird's feather oriffecting like a bird's feather or something. isn't something. yeah but that isn't the issue here. >> personally, actually >> it is. personally, i actually think were right, but think that they were right, but they were right also to apologise for the rhetoric that was right. so not was right. so they're not apologising got it apologising because they got it wrong. but you're right, there
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needs homes. this needs to be more homes. but this isn't why still isn't the reason why it's still going have gone going ahead. it would have gone ahead. is now ahead. the difference is now we're the ones who are footing the it not and because the bill for it not and because of that, because of this announcement government announcement from the government , share prices , , now, all of the share prices, shareholders of all the housebuilding companies have all all their shares have increased. yes. whatever. basically yes. and whatever. so basically , the ones who are getting , we're the ones who are getting it. we're going on to the >> okay. we're going on to the express has express now. penny morden has some you've got some big ideas. nick, you've got this. mordaunt backs this. yeah. penny mordaunt backs plans for 16 year olds in britain to enrol national britain to enrol in national service. that and service. and you hear that and you go, oh, that's quite interesting. we'll be like interesting. maybe we'll be like greece. have like year interesting. maybe we'll be like gricompulsoryiave like year interesting. maybe we'll be like gricompulsory national year interesting. maybe we'll be like gricompulsory national service of compulsory national service and then and it'll toughen kids up. then you find out it's two weeks. it's compulsory. you to it's not compulsory. you have to opt into it. not an opt into it. it's not even an opt into it. it's not even an opt you to actually opt out. you have to actually say, this. so it's say, i want to do this. so it's kind and nothing. kind of pointless and nothing. and it's come from the think tank it's tank onward. i'm not saying it's bad, think it's bad, but i don't think it's really do anything. we really going to do anything. we should not it's should clarify. it's not it's not conscription. they're not like conscription. they're talking two civic talking about a two week civic exploration trip. and that's what civic what i said. it's a civic exploration and only exploration trip and it's only opt anyway . it's like a field opt in anyway. it's like a field trip. that field trip might want to what is it like
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to do. so what is it like picking litter that's the thing. >> building homes. >> building new homes. >> building new homes. >> know why >> okay. i don't know why they're it national they're calling it national service. service is the they're calling it national servi of service is the they're calling it national servi of where rvice is the they're calling it national servi of where if ce is the they're calling it national servi of where if you; the they're calling it national servi of where if you said kind of thing where if you said to teenager, to me, you know, as a teenager, you to the army, you have to go to the army, i hated it. but as adult and hated it. but as an adult and seeing our country has seeing how our country has morally declined, advocate seeing how our country has myeary declined, advocate seeing how our country has myeary dnational advocate seeing how our country has myeary dnational service.ivocate seeing how our country has myeary dnational service. butate a year of national service. but this regular announcement. >> is basically like, >> this is basically it's like, you know, the first sort of sparrow when you know, the first sort of spa when when you know, the first sort of spa when tories when you know, the first sort of spa when tories thisn the when the tories make this announcement, you know, that there's election coming. right? >> i see. that's what it is. >>— >> i see. that's what it is. >> it's like a regular thing. >> it's like a regular thing. >> josh, that >> do you think, josh, that there should be conscription? i think there to be think that there needs to be something more for in terms of this idea of some kind of civic , whether it's a course , whether , whether it's a course, whether it's some some extracurricular is a really good idea because because we need and you've got teenagers, myopic teenagers need to understand that they are part of something larger. >> and you've got many kids >> and you've got so many kids we army. we could rebuild our army. >> our housing. >> exactly. and our housing. >> exactly. and our housing. >> well, you know, penny morden makes know, makes the case that, you know, young people need to find a sense of purpose, a sense of meaning, that actually a meaning, and that actually a yearin meaning, and that actually a year in the army would do them some good. and also, of course,
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most are sort of meeting most of them are sort of meeting on tiktok to up sports on tiktok to smash up jd sports . so i think some time in the army would be good the other army would be good and the other from more wing from a sort of more left wing perspective. good perspective. it's quite good having conscription because politician does then get nervous about engage in wars overseas because they know their own kids are going to have to fight in them. and i think that's kind of an interesting approach. >> here. yeah, an interesting approach. >mean, here. yeah, an interesting approach. >mean, we here. yeah, an interesting approach. >mean, we could here. yeah, an interesting approach. >mean, we could be here. yeah, an interesting approach. >mean, we could be movingah, an interesting approach. >mean, we could be moving into i mean, we could be moving into that where you can get the thing where you can only get the right if you have become right to vote if you have become a a bug. a citizen once you kill a bug. >> yes , i'm just saying >> yes, i'm just saying that could something if we could could be something if we could kill bugs in studio. kill the bugs in the studio. >> yeah, well, in the future, we'll be bugs instead of we'll be eating bugs instead of killing your but >> well, that's your view, but i'm vegetarian, i'm not i'm a vegetarian, so i'm not going into that. we won't going to buy into that. we won't have a choice. unfortunately, going to buy into that. we won't havtbe choice. unfortunately, going to buy into that. we won't havtbe attached nfortunately, going to buy into that. we won't havtbe attached nfoyour,tely, it'll be attached to your, you know, credit and your know, social credit and your digital that what know, social credit and your digi'believe? that what know, social credit and your digi'believe? isiat what know, social credit and your digi'believe? is just hat you believe? which is just what's well, we you believe? which is just what' find well, we you believe? which is just what' find out well, we you believe? which is just what' find out if well, we you believe? which is just what' find out if nostradame.l, we shall find out if nostradame miss dixon is correct. join miss nick dixon is correct. join us 12 years time and we us again in 12 years time and we shall but first, friday's shall see. but first, friday's times. something more times. josh, something even more valuable all to our carers than clapping money. yay >> gp average salaries rise by a
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quarter in a decade, so no, they are . they've risen 23% to a are. they've risen 23% to a record basically 118,000 £120,000 a year . that's the £120,000 a year. that's the average salary. yeah. so it ranges from i think if you're on a basic salary, it's like 70 grand and it can go up to like 150 men supposedly earn more than women, but that's because they're they're they're working more. if they're doing childcare , so they're doing less childcare, so they're better people. >> doing so they're >> so they're doing so they're doing to see a male gp doing insist to see a male gp when you go in. >> yeah, because the >> yeah, that's because the nature problems, nature of my problems, they're doing well financially, but you know, train to be a doctor , know, to train to be a doctor, it's a big commitment. >> years and years in >> years and years and years in university, lots of cost, two years, two years. why shouldn't they get the big bucks? yeah. especially if you're staffing your running own your own, running your own practise. point out here practise. as you point out here thatis practise. as you point out here that is obviously very costly. so that? only so do you get that? the only thing is it's strange because they appointments thing is it's strange because they up, appointments thing is it's strange because they up, ap|know,ents thing is it's strange because they up, ap|know, 1.3,; have gone up, you know, 1.3, 6 million from 1.2, 4,000,000 in 2022. but the average experience of consumer seems to be that of the consumer seems to be that it's very hard to get an appointment and yet they're claiming through the stats here
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that it's actually all getting better. really better. but it's not really the feeling ground, it? better. but it's not really the feeliidon't ground, it? better. but it's not really the feeliidon't theyjround, it? better. but it's not really the feeliidon't they elevate it? better. but it's not really the feeliidon't they elevate nurses why don't they elevate nurses salaries similar rate ? salaries at a similar rate? >> um , because they don't do >> um, because they don't do seven years of study. all of that. >> but they know so much and they are so valuable. >> and so now i think they absolutely should and absolutely should get more. and i they take it i think that they should take it directly salaries . directly from the gp salaries. >> should of have them >> we should sort of have them fight , fight out, like fight, fight it out, just like the were. the way you were. >> so careful because no one can take anti nurse stance. it's take an anti nurse stance. it's like popular thing. take an anti nurse stance. it's like my popular thing. take an anti nurse stance. it's like my motherr thing. a no? well my mother in law's a nurse, so i'm just thinking about lunch. about sunday lunch. >> them. i'm just >> i'm against them. i'm just going balance, going to just for balance, you're don't you're against nurses just don't like okay, like nurses. sorry. yeah. okay, let's on to the daily mail let's move on to the daily mail now . nick, there's nothing worse now. nick, there's nothing worse than your family showing you up, is ? i've always said that. is there? i've always said that. andrew. ex antoinette andrew. this is ex mp antoinette sandbach threatens to sue cambridge university, saying her privacy has been invaded after academics award winning research showed her ancestor made his fortune indies slave fortune out of west indies slave plantations. and that's such a long it's basically long headline. it's basically the but what's the entire story. but but what's happenedis the entire story. but but what's happened is malik al nasir has published this research and it's
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kind of embarrassed her and more than embarrassed, really. it's kind of made her feel vulnerable because it that she's tied because it says that she's tied to historically, you know, her family are tied to slavery. and, of problem with of course, the problem with that is is sort of is and she now is sort of vaguely , can you is and she now is sort of vagu ity , can you is and she now is sort of vagu it down? , can you is and she now is sort of vagu it down? you , can you is and she now is sort of vagu it down? you ki'iow,i you is and she now is sort of vaguit down? you know, andi take it down? you know, and obviously, if you're a public figure the way activists are figure and the way activists are so now on social media, so rabid now on social media, yes, of course, you might want so rabid now on social media, yes, to course, you might want so rabid now on social media, yes, to happen.(ou might want so rabid now on social media, yes, to happen.(ou migcourse,t that to happen. but of course, with freedom, i don't with academic freedom, i don't really that's really see how that's practicable. look, i think practicable. i look, i think ultimately we're related ultimately we're all related to some of work . if some nasty pieces of work. if you back far enough, there's some nasty pieces of work. if yotway back far enough, there's some nasty pieces of work. if yotway back my enough, there's some nasty pieces of work. if yotway back my dadigh, there's some nasty pieces of work. if yotway back my dad .1h,there's some nasty pieces of work. if yotway back my dad . buthere's some nasty pieces of work. if yotway back my dad . but there's no way that my dad. but there's that, there's that . so how? that, there's that. so how? well, i don't know. your father , but, you know. do you know what i mean, though? think what i mean, though? i think it's unfair her it's a bit unfair to smear her just because she has. i mean, when back that far, 400 when you go back that far, 400 years whatever, wasn't years or whatever, wasn't everyone a bit a wrong'un? yeah. >> yeah, absolutely. but also the number of ancestors you have, increases have, it sort of increases exponentially so might have exponentially. so she might have the but she's also the same name, but she's also got 1000 people. that's got 1000 other people. that's true tree, we? true of her tree, aren't we? >> probably related if you >> probably all related if you go back far enough to her, you know, i mean, it just becomes know, so i mean, it just becomes meaningless a certain point
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i >> -- >> yes, exactly. >> yes, exactly. >> my ancestors are nice. so no, i did some research. you are related to dr. crippen . really? related to dr. crippen. really? yeah. sorry about that. well i condemn slavery. i mean, can i just say that she's also condemned slavery? just say that she's also condemrbraveivery? just say that she's also condemrbrave .'ery? >> very brave. >> very brave. >> said it's appalling. and that is a tough stance today. isn't that. isn't that incredible that people to express people feel the need to express their to slavery their opposition to slavery because my expectation because my default expectation is everyone is opposed to is that everyone is opposed to slavery. right? i'm to be slavery. right? i'm going to be just she's just i'm just for balance. she's just i'm going be pro slavery and anti going to be pro slavery and anti nurse just provide a helpful nurse just to provide a helpful balance. was some balance. well, there was some there the bbc saying there saying the bbc are saying that she described it that she might she described it as slavery , but she as abhorrent slavery, but she seemed suggest that was seemed to suggest that there was a between the a similarity between the treatment african slaves and treatment of african slaves and the treatment victorian the treatment of victorian housewives. very quickly, how can sue for this? like, can she sue for this? like, surely if people want to sort of do some historical delving about someone's family, you can't sue if it's a fact, you can't sue them. and that's probably the answer, is that she probably can't. you probably can't, but she's anyway. well, she's going to try anyway. well, good appears to good for her. she appears to have threatened legal action, it says, and as says, which is very, very and as
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he says, this is you he rightly says, this is you can't he rightly says, this is you cant uke can't demand censorship like on that we're to that scale. okay, we're going to finish section off with the finish this section off with the guardian. bills guardian. josh some big bills for labour party. yeah. for the labour party. yeah. >> costs pass £500,000 in >> labour costs pass £500,000 in heanng >> labour costs pass £500,000 in hearing over leaked anti—semitism report. so when keir starmer got in, finally they were going to it was all going to come out. the anti—semitism crisis about labouh anti—semitism crisis about labour, the ehrc were basically reported that labour broke the law. they discriminated against jews and as the former labour leaders were leaving, corbyn and seamus milne, who was his director of communications, and carrie murphy and whatnot, director of communications, and carrie murphy and whatnot , they carrie murphy and whatnot, they basically or allegedly he put out this report or leaked this report, and it was essentially like to cover their butts. >> what was the report that they leaked, though? not not that. not into anti—semitism. >> was it was basically. >> no, it was it was basically. yeah. they sort yeah. but they were sort of using it as their own internal report anti—semitic ism. report into anti—semitic ism. and trying to and really, it was trying to sort the whistleblowers , sort of tar the whistleblowers, the original whistleblowers of anti—semitism and to bring anti—semitism and try to bring them waters and them and muddy the waters and all of this stuff. and it did
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its job. basically gave away its job. it basically gave away for all the cranks on the left to hey, look at this. to go, hey, look at this. there's all this weird stuff here. a tweet out here. and they sent a tweet out about and all this about diane abbott and all this whatever. but didn't actually whatever. but it didn't actually deal the real crux of the deal with the real crux of the anti—semitism that had existed in under corbyn. in labour under corbyn. >> so not just that this is >> so it's not just that this is absolutely riven the labour party whole thing. it's party into the whole thing. it's also them a hell of also costing them a hell of a huge money. huge amount of money. >> this case is >> so what this case is specifically about is labour are basically present labour basically the present labour leadership trying to get to the bottom leaked this bottom of who leaked this document because , because keir document because, because keir starmer got in, didn't want it to because he saw this to come out because he saw this document for exactly what it was, was a thing to just was, which was a thing to just appease cranks. but they appease all the cranks. but they leaked it anyway. and now he's they're basically to they're basically suing to essentially get bottom of it. >> nick, any thoughts here? well, i bother preparing well, i didn't bother preparing for knew they'd well, i didn't bother preparing for little knew they'd well, i didn't bother preparing for little time (new they'd well, i didn't bother preparing for little time to w they'd well, i didn't bother preparing for little time to talk ey'd be very little time to talk after and tackled after josh and tackled anti—semitism in labour, which after josh and tackled anti—ffavourite in labour, which after josh and tackled anti—ffavourite topic. our, which after josh and tackled anti—ffavourite topic. but which is his favourite topic. but i will i will say is great will i will say this is great because out that this because it points out that this is labour because is terrible for labour because they're airing their dirty laundry election. laundry just before an election. and because and that's good because because labour be for labour are going to be awful for the but
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the country. so yeah, but it's not, don't it's going to not, i don't think it's going to stop getting well, stop them getting in. well, it's not, but you can try. >> but there concerns >> but also there were concerns how was to going how much this was to going even possibly bankrupt labour, but actually it's only 500,000. but this is added onto because because in report because the people in the report who were mentioned, these whistleblowers. they've whistleblowers. yes. they've managed because managed to sue labour because their personal information was given and that's why. given out there and that's why. so labour, several million given out there and that's why. sthere labour, several million given out there and that's why. sthere could r, several million given out there and that's why. sthere could be everal million given out there and that's why. sthere could be multiple llion , there could be multiple lawsuits . lawsuits. >> is more than 500,000. >> this is more than 500,000. >> this is more than 500,000. >> labour's finances are >> but labour's finances are doing fine because they are going to get in. >> shall see. another >> we shall see. another prediction this time from josh howie. that's it part two. howie. that's it for part two. join after the for mps join us after the break. for mps defending stoners, the health benefits of vaping and trump's latest antics. see you in a minute . minute. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> good evening. i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. a bit of a mish mash tomorrow. a misty, murky start. some places will
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see a few showers, but some spots will see some warm sunshine too . it's a messy sunshine too. it's a messy situation because we've got an old low pressure hanging old area of low pressure hanging around and weather fronts around and these weather fronts have cloud and have been bringing cloud and rain across many areas through the the possibility of 1 or the day. the possibility of 1 or 2 showers just in the far 2 heavy showers just in the far south—east through the night, staying fairly damp and murky , staying fairly damp and murky, murky and misty over parts of northern england. and some of that light rain trickling into southern scotland as well. northern staying northern scotland staying dry and quhe northern scotland staying dry and quite chilly. and clear and quite chilly. temperatures well down into single a single figures. further south, a pretty night. temperatures pretty mild night. temperatures holding in teens for holding up in the mid teens for some into friday. as i said, a bit of a mish the bit of a mish mash. the midlands, england parts midlands, northern england parts of scotland, fairly of southern scotland, fairly drab for much of day, drab for much of the day, actually. overcast pretty cloudy, too, for northern ireland. some light rain and drizzle here there, drizzle here and there, especially the of the especially to the east of the pennines. further south, something sunny something a bit brighter, sunny spells, also be a spells, but there will also be a sprinkling showers, mostly spells, but there will also be a spri overg showers, mostly spells, but there will also be a spri over northern vers, mostly spells, but there will also be a spri over northern scotlandtly spells, but there will also be a spri over northern scotland ,y spells, but there will also be a spri over northern scotland , 20 dry over northern scotland, 20 degrees here, 23 possibly in the south, with some sunshine. a cool feel, though , with that cool feel, though, with that more over more persistent cloud over northern england, 16 or 17 here.
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so today may also start a bit misty . there'll be 1 or misty. there'll be 1 or 2 isolated showers, but for most of us, saturday looks pretty good. if you're after dry and bright weather, decent bright weather, some decent spells sunshine turning spells of sunshine and turning warmer with temperatures more widely 20 c. and sunday widely over 20 c. and sunday also set fair with some warm, sunny spells. goodbye .
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this about trash talk in the states? you're quite good at trash talk , aren't you? yeah. trash talk, aren't you? yeah. i'm going to take you down, mother . welcome back to mother. welcome back to headliners. your first look at friday's newspapers . we're going friday's newspapers. we're going to get back into it with the telegraph. and, nick, you're all about forgiveness, aren't you? everyone should given everyone should be given a second chance. yes, i am. though everyone should be given a seciini chance. yes, i am. though everyone should be given a seciin thisince. yes, i am. though everyone should be given a seciin this case,(es, i am. though everyone should be given a seciin this case, no. i am. though everyone should be given a seciin this case, no. i sort though everyone should be given a seciin this case, no. i sort ofough not in this case, no. i sort of am. cocaine and cannabis am. this is cocaine and cannabis users not be prosecuted users should not be prosecuted for possession offences. for first possession offences. mps say, it's cross—party mps say, and it's a cross—party committee of mps. the home
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affairs committee with a lot of tories in there, sort of , affairs committee with a lot of tories in there, sort of, i was going say surprisingly, but going to say surprisingly, but not really surprisingly, because modern libs, modern tories are just big libs, aren't basically it's aren't they? but basically it's about it's about not having about now it's about not having about now it's about not having a record. you just a criminal record. if you just have, know, one charge and have, you know, one charge and you to avoid you should be able to avoid a criminal record. i get that and i approve of that really, because you don't want be because you don't want to be saddled criminal record because you don't want to be sadlikei criminal record because you don't want to be sadlike a criminal record because you don't want to be sadlike a minor:riminal record because you don't want to be sadlike a minor cannabisacord for like a minor cannabis offence. wrong, offence. where this goes wrong, though, that drugs though, is it claims that drugs should as health should be treated as a health problem. this a hippy problem. and this is a hippy idea never and idea that's never worked and even should even suggests they should have safe consumption centres safe drug consumption centres which up like which ends up like the hamsterdam wire , a kind hamsterdam and the wire, a kind of hellish area of just of like hellish area of just like drug taking. do you not do you that addiction you not believe that addiction is factor here and that is a factor here and that addiction kind illness? addiction is a kind of illness? i is a disease. >> i believe in. >> i believe in. >> i believe in. >> i believe in old fashioned things prevention through things like prevention through disincentives, old fashioned things that used to work. and i've never believed that addiction is a disease. no one's been to prove what been able to prove that. what do you josh? been able to prove that. what do youyeah, josh? been able to prove that. what do youyeah, ijosh? been able to prove that. what do youyeah, i totally disagree. >> yeah, i totally disagree. well, but obviously, well, obviously. but obviously, you things do you know, some things i do sometimes. >> you agree? believe it or >> do you agree? believe it or not, thing yes, we do
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not, the one thing yes, we do agree of yes, on first >> first of all, yes, on first case offences, this the first case offences, this is the first time not time someone gets caught, not the first time ever do it, the first time they ever do it, but it's like sort but yeah, like it's like a sort of a speed awareness course. yes, speed. okay yes, but we've speed. okay >> and on principle, do you think it's a good idea? >> yes, because it isn't like the which greatest the wire, which is the greatest tv ever apart from tv show ever made apart from this one. it's we're talking about one a safe room, so about one room a safe room, so that don't owed . the that people don't owed. the other is, it's so other thing is, it's so few people commit many people who who commit so many crimes like in one city they're talking about like million pounds worth of damage from a handful of people. so it's deaung handful of people. so it's dealing with them and dealing with these mental health issues. dealing with them and dealing witireading nental health issues. dealing with them and dealing witireading nereally ealth issues. dealing with them and dealing witireading he really good issues. dealing with them and dealing witireading he really good books. i'm reading a really good book called realm of called in the in the realm of hungry ghosts by gabor mate. he's a canadian guy. and it's just lot evidence from just a lot of evidence from different places around the world that dealing different places around the worlithese that dealing different places around the worlithese underlying dealing different places around the worlithese underlying mental with these underlying mental health issues and the reason why people take drugs are people take drugs and are addicted to drugs has a massive impact. i mean, in a way, nick, isn't that along your lines of prevention? >> like deal with the >> like if you deal with the mental health issue, you prevent the crisis with that and the drug crisis with that and you're talking about the guy
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that session you're talking about the guy that prince session you're talking about the guy that prince and ession you're talking about the guy that prince and he'sn with prince harry and he's interesting. honest interesting. but let's be honest , probably resources , it's probably a resources problem. they don't have the resources these people resources to punish these people if but andrew, if they're honest. but andrew, i'm to be convinced i'm never going to be convinced that coke is a health that doing coke is a health problem. okay. problem. i'm sorry. no okay. fair enough. we're going to move on to the telegraph. more on now to the telegraph. more news about the great health benefits of vaping. josh, i've never really got this because i thought vaping was just water basically . what do they call it? basically. what do they call it? water vapour . water vapour. >> yeah, but with nicotine is the idea. so the nicotine is the problem. so, so it doesn't have all the cancerous chemicals all of the cancerous chemicals that go along with it. but what they're saying here is and this is, as lewis would say, a non article in that, well, let me read the headline boys who smoke or vape teens risk or vape in early teens risk damaging future for children's genes. there is evidence that genes. so there is evidence that the evidence following the the only evidence following the science is that actually smoking cigarettes has led to changes in the genes , which is epigenetic the genes, which is epigenetic changes which are like which will. so when you have kids , will. so when you have kids, you're passing on those bad genes like it's going to make
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your worse. and that your genes worse. and so that kids can like obese or have kids can be like obese or have asthma. there's no evidence asthma. but there's no evidence that who vape that that kids who vape that that that's what i'm confused about, because the article says that the experts themselves, the researchers think researchers said they think it's likely vaping could. >> but there's no evidence. well, then why even why are we even talking about vaping? >> a totally misleading >> it's a totally misleading thing, interesting to >> it's a totally misleading thinthat interesting to >> it's a totally misleading thinthat smokingting to >> it's a totally misleading thinthat smoking cigarettes >> it's a totally misleading th evidence smoking cigarettes >> it's a totally misleading th evidence becauseig cigarettes >> it's a totally misleading th evidence because they arettes >> it's a totally misleading th evidence because they pointed is evidence because they pointed before and they've said, oh, that people where that people who's who where their fathers smoke, the kids will have worse health outcomes. and you might that it and you might argue that it would reasons if would be for societal reasons if they smoke, they're likely they smoke, they're less likely to maybe have of the to maybe have some of the advantages or have a healthy diet these other things. diet and all these other things. but they're now saying is but what they're now saying is there's down to the to actually goes down to the to your genes. >> that's very interesting . but >> that's very interesting. but i mean, vaping people do seem down needlessly . it does down on it needlessly. it does look quite silly. it looks silly . yeah, that from an . yeah, i get that from an aesthetic of view. i'm aesthetic point of view. i'm with them. smells great, but it smells lovely smells good. come in. a lovely fruity your kids in six fruity flavours your kids in six generations. well yeah, but they're going to be dead anyway. >> or eating cockroaches.
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>> or eating cockroaches. >> is fascinating. how much >> it is fascinating. how much is talking is genetic? i was talking to simon this on simon evans about this today on our coming simon evans about this today on our soon, coming simon evans about this today on our soon, it coming simon evans about this today on our soon, it is coming simon evans about this today on our soon, it is fascinating ing out soon, but it is fascinating how is genetic because when how much is genetic because when you that route, you get you get down that route, you get into very areas as into some very dodgy areas as well get very upset well where people get very upset when you suggest everything is genetic. surely genetic. but what also surely anything eat as anything that you eat as a parent kind of parent will have some kind of genetic know, impact on your genetic you know, impact on your offspring. this is why we offspring. so this is why we shouldn't too this shouldn't worry too much. this is when they're really young themselves, isn't it? >> that's >> yeah, that's that's the difference. thing difference. the other thing is there's evidence it's there's no evidence that it's there's no evidence that it's the smoking same the mother. smoking has the same impact in the genetics. so smoke away advice from josh howie. >> then we're going to move on to the ai now. what's mason greenwood been up to, nick well, mason greenwood's ousting from man united prompted rise in misogynistic posts facebook misogynistic posts on facebook and claim . um and of and is the claim. um and of course he's just left man united because all controversy because of all the controversy he was never charged but there was much controversy he was too much controversy so he just or the just decided to leave or the club but i'm club has decided. but i'm sceptical of these claims because see these claims sceptical of these claims beca hate see these claims sceptical of these claims beca hate speech these claims sceptical of these claims beca hate speech thes risen. �*ns that hate speech has risen. we've mariana springs say we've seen mariana springs say things like this at the bbc. we've james clayton claim we've seen james clayton claim this and
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this to elon musk and he couldn't it it's couldn't back it up. it's all anecdotal , it's all anecdotal. anecdotal, it's all anecdotal. and hey, and of course, and what is hey, and of course, twitter and x, as it's now called, are of awful things called, are full of awful things that say. but you know, that trolls say. but you know, the solution is not the online safety bill, which is what they're mentioning here. they've added an amendment to online safety bill and they're saying, well, of well, this is why, because of things you things like this. but as you say, i'm much say, it's anecdotal and i'm much more worried about the suppression i'd be suppression of that. and i'd be saying saying that saying that i'd be saying that whoever being attacked, whoever was being attacked, not just it a just women, even if it was a systemic, oppressed like systemic, oppressed group like straight white men, i'd be saying it's much more saying it because it's much more dangerous. censorship is more dangerous. censorship is more dangerous annoying. dangerous than some annoying. i mean, isn't mean, this is the point, isn't it, well, firstly, it, josh, that well, firstly, facebook x aren't facebook and x aren't responsible for misogynistic comments. misogynists are comments. the misogynists are responsible for misogynistic comments, they? comments, aren't they? >> yeah there's a few >> of course. yeah there's a few things that are interesting about one is like again , about this. one is like again, it comes down to what the examples and they're also going to say like who's going to police what is misogynistic. now, posts now, one of the one of the posts that a man on that they quote is as a man on take 23 hours fear women and take 23 hours to fear women and use hour to drink water. use one hour to drink water. now, what that now, i don't know what that means. like i would
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now, i don't know what that meainick, like i would now, i don't know what that meainick, please ke i would now, i don't know what that meainick, please explain jld now, i don't know what that meainick, please explain your like. nick, please explain your message. i was going to mention that one. >> pretty funny that, >> it is pretty funny that, isn't >> it is pretty funny that, isn'what mean? when you >> what do you mean? when you wrote well, was trying >> yeah, well, i just was trying to humorous, josh, mean, to be humorous, josh, i mean, it sounds confucian proverb. sounds like a confucian proverb. yeah, . yeah. and sounds like a confucian proverb. yeahit's . yeah. and sounds like a confucian proverb. yeahit's proverb . yeah. and sounds like a confucian proverb. yeahit's proverb . . yeah. and sounds like a confucian proverb. yeahit's proverb . i . yeah. and sounds like a confucian proverb. yeahit's proverb . i mean, and sounds like a confucian proverb. yeahit's proverb . i mean, that now it's proverb. i mean, that is silly, isn't it? they shouldn't used example shouldn't have used that example because they've undermined their own to fear own case. 23 hours to fear within one to or i'd within one hour to drink. or i'd get down ten minutes to get it to down ten minutes to dnnk i get it to down ten minutes to drink i mean, but that's. >> yeah, i mean, but that's. >> yeah, i mean, but that's. >> right. >> you're absolutely right. there's of there's the subjective notion of what misogynistic anyway. what is misogynistic anyway. yeah. which is of course there is absolutely misogyny online and can anything on and you can find anything on twitter, you can find the most horrendous absolutely no horrendous things. absolutely no one's but also use but >> but but they also use but then other thing that then the other thing that they're models, they're using, which models, models, little models, water here a little bit is they keep using the word is they keep on using the word engagement. they says that engagement. so they says that that that that we just that tweet that that we just talked whoever had 3500 talked about, whoever had 3500 engagements an engagement engagements now an engagement could of people could be a bunch of people going, i don't understand your tweet rubbish or tweet or it's rubbish or fighting it's not fighting against that. it's not proof itself proof that that leads in itself to hate. >> moving on to friday's telegraph, what's the latest on trump, josh trump pleads not guilty and waives georgia
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arraignment, which still surprises me because after the big hurrah with him getting that beautiful picture last week, i would have thought he would like a he could raise more money if >> he could raise more money if he'd gone in had this he'd gone in and had this arraignment. he'd gone in and had this arraignment . yes. but he's arraignment. yes. but he's obviously decided to. obviously decided not to. he said guilty . and this is said not guilty. and this is just a a placeholder just a bit of a placeholder story before we actually start seeing some trials. but the interesting thing is that georgia , the georgia governor georgia, the georgia governor who brian kemp, who is a republican himself, has also basically dismissed any demand to have impeachment proceedings against ms willis, who is the prosecutor . prosecutor. >> now, i imagine, nick, you're of the opinion that all of this is weaponized legal system going on. how dare you , andrew? that on. how dare you, andrew? that happens to be exactly what i think a lucky guess. think. but it was a lucky guess. >> and that's why don't >> yeah. and that's why i don't even details even worry about the details because even worry about the details beciuse even worry about the details beci mean, you had bill clinton, >> i mean, you had bill clinton, for example, lost the nuclear codes. this guy, sandy codes. he had this guy, sandy berger, cutting berger, who admitted to cutting up classified documents and he got a $10,000 fine. that's all he got. he could have got a much
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bigger fine. he could have got prison but they're prison time. but they're going after trump. prison time. but they're going after know trump. prison time. but they're going after know this. trump. prison time. but they're going after know this. trijust and we know this. and not just trump. look trump. they've gone after look at people who've been at the people who've been arrested early arrested or raided in the early hours steve hours of the morning. steve bannon, roger peter bannon, roger stone, peter navarro , rudy giuliani. navarro, rudy giuliani. so it's like scene where like a goodfella scene where they're just like a montage where whacking them all. >> so you agree that they are gangsters, then? >> agree biden is >> i agree that the biden is behaving gangster, behaving like a gangster, whackingyeah, he's he's the because, yeah, he's he's the corleone of the corleone at the end of the godfather taking them out the godfather taking them out of the baptism. it's baptism. and i just think it's so shortsighted pulls so shortsighted because it pulls america as a country. it america apart as a country. it creates anger resentment and creates anger and resentment and it creates an amazing mug shot from everyone from trump that everyone just loves the loves anyway. i mean, that's the fact that he's raised 7 million for campaign. fact that he's raised 7 million for you:ampaign. fact that he's raised 7 million for you couldign. fact that he's raised 7 million for you could argue that trump >> you could argue that trump was america apart anyway was pulling america apart anyway by a legitimate by denying that a legitimate election took place, which i don't think he did. >> you see, and it's they've never before. it's never done this before. it's just so but no one's been as brazen him in the past. well, brazen as him in the past. well, i don't know. i think this is i think whichever the think whichever side of the political this political aisle you're on, this is and is good news for trump. and i think the democrats should have maybe thought a little more carefully it's carefully about it. it's obviously they're obviously assuming they're going to elections. to have fair elections. it's obviously playing in his favour
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anyway. going for anyway. that's going to do for part final part three. in the final section, looking section, we're looking at biohazards monsters and finding out couples should never do out what couples should never do in bed. don't go away .
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welcome back to headliners . your welcome back to headliners. your first look at friday's newspapers . let's get straight newspapers. let's get straight back into it with friday's times and racial language. never acceptable. josh, what's this ? acceptable. josh, what's this? >> indeed? bank manager unfairly sacked for using the n word tribunal rules. so this is a lloyds bank manager. this is dunng lloyds bank manager. this is during a training session. and in the process of this training session, he said the n word in full. so he said the full the proper. >> but he wasn't . apparently >> but he wasn't. apparently they found he wasn't saying he wasn't saying it as a slur. >> using example >> he was using it as an example because was session because this was a session deaung because this was a session dealing with these kind of issues and there in the this is
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in the court, they're basically saying that because he's dyslexic, he couldn't verbalise himself well enough. so said himself well enough. so he said the word , yeah, i've got the word, yeah, i've got dyslexia, i can still say dyslexia, but i can still say just the i'd rather you didn't. >> a natwest because this >> it was a natwest because this was barclays. say the was barclays. so they say the word natwest . now, the thing word natwest. now, the thing about it almost about this, nick, is it almost as though when it comes to this particular racial there is particular racial slur, there is context is completely irrelevant in of the way that it's in terms of the way that it's treated. there was a story in america academic quoted america where an academic quoted a of a james baldwin piece of work which word . it was in which used the word. it was in quotations a literary class quotations in a literary class and still got fired . now, this and still got fired. now, this seems to me mad. and still got fired. now, this seems to me mad . well, i might seems to me mad. well, i might argue the opposite. that context is relevant the point is hyper relevant to the point of neurotic ism, i.e. if you're a rapper saying it in a song, you can say it as much as you like, you're the like, or if you're of the correct classic example was correct race classic example was kendnck correct race classic example was kendrick someone kendrick lamar brought someone on sang his on stage to rap. she sang his lyrics and he suddenly stopped it off because she it and told her off because she was so this is absurd was white. so this is absurd thing group say thing where one group could say a massive amount another a massive amount and another group sacked group will get sacked and destroyed once. destroyed if they say it once. so very tense. so it's kind of very tense. it's about surely. about about intent, surely. it's about intent got the but.
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intent. it's got to be the but. exactly. but the things exactly. but the two things are also mental about this story is the first thing is look, and it's a terrible word. >> right. but the person who is leading this this training session supposedly said, first of all, that to speak freely and to learn and to be clumsy . so to learn and to be clumsy. so this was like invite it and then the moment that he said it, not this. this person then took five days leave to recover. now i'm of an ethnicity. if people say certain words to me, i've heard it can be upsetting. but you don't need to take five days. and she launched a vitriolic attack on him and in turn on him. >> but he apparently just blurted things to his blurted things out due to his dyslexia. thing i'm dyslexia. the only thing i'm don't thought don't understand. i thought that was don't. was tourette's, so i don't. but he problems just he had problems with he just can't well. he had problems with he just can't yeah. well. he had problems with he just can't yeah. so well. he had problems with he just can't yeah. so very well. he had problems with he just can't yeah. so very harsh. yeah. yeah. so it's very harsh. all right. we're going to move yeah. yeah. so it's very harsh. allto;ht. we're going to move yeah. yeah. so it's very harsh. allto;ht. mirrorgoing to move yeah. yeah. so it's very harsh. allto;ht. mirror now. to move yeah. yeah. so it's very harsh. allto;ht. mirror now. thisiove yeah. yeah. so it's very harsh. allto;ht. mirror now. this is'e on to the mirror now. this is not very romantic or is not a very romantic story. or is it? some would it the death it? some would call it the death of i think the of love. i think the exact opposite. doctor of love. i think the exact opposicouples doctor of love. i think the exact opposicouples never doctor of love. i think the exact opposicouples never to doctor of love. i think the exact opposicouples never to share tor of love. i think the exact opposicouples never to share ar warns couples never to share a bed urging sleep apart bed urging them to sleep apart instead. so because instead. and i'm so glad because it's impossible to sleep with someone room. i'm so
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someone in the room. and i'm so glad being acknowledged. glad this is being acknowledged. >> a girlfriend >> you don't have a girlfriend that's the first problem. >> if do, have >> but then if you do, you have to another room to banish her to another room andifs to banish her to another room and it's science because it's heteronormative. >> boyfriend. yeah. heteronorm ative. >> he'sriend. yeah. heteronorm ative. >> he's saying'eah. heteronormative. >> he's saying'eah. people >> he's saying that people you won't you won't get sleep sleep you won't get proper sleep or might. depends on or you might. it just depends on youh or you might. it just depends on your, your habits . your, your your, your habits. it's snoring. it's also it's not just snoring. it's also body heat. a lot of women do snore , though, don't snore, though, and they don't admit after . admit it after. >> lot of women have body >> and a lot of women have body heat. heat stops you >> the heat also stops you cooling it stops cooling down so it stops you going sleep the going to sleep and also the snoring and all of it. and the thing people act like thing is, people people act like you're absolutely mental. if you say shared say this, but look at who shared a room. queen, our a separate room. the queen, our beloved queen elizabeth, the second separate rooms second she had a separate rooms and people the and you know why people the thing why people started thing i read why people started sleeping in the same was sleeping in the same bed was that industrial that it was the industrial revolution wasn't revolution and there just wasn't enough queen enough space. so if the queen has rooms, it's has separate rooms, but it's poverty that forces people together, the cooler together, which is the cooler one. about we had huts >> what about when we had huts and uke >> what about when we had huts and like that? are you and stuff like that? are you telling had telling me that these huts had we separate separate we had separate huts, separate separate we had separate huts, separate separatijosh, problem >> no. josh, the problem with this though is this is, even though there is now medical they're now medical i mean, they're saying there are saying here that often there are people chronically sleep people who are chronically sleep depnved people who are chronically sleep deprived because they're sleeping their partner. but
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sleeping with their partner. but you still couldn't that you still couldn't have that conversation, could you? let's sleep rooms , darling. >> i know a friend of mine, they sleep in separate rooms because they but they both snore, actually. but no, i can't. but my wife has that thing where you wake up screaming like, you know, she wakes screaming , screaming like, you know, she wakes screaming, i want you wakes up screaming, i want you married to josh, i want a divorce. a divorce. yeah, divorce. i want a divorce. yeah, that's the dream. >> a friend of mine's girlfriend woke night and tried woke up in the night and tried to the face with to stab him in the face with a pair scissors. yes. does pair of scissors. yes. does that fit category of fit into this category of disrupting a night? yes. that's the they the kind of thing they do, andrew. so that's the who's they ? >> 7- >> soi 7- >> so i was ? >> so i was hoping 7 >> so i was hoping to ? >> so i was hoping to get away with that. >> so i was hoping to get away with ththing is i'm moving into >> my thing is i'm moving into a two there'll loads two bedroom. there'll be loads of i'll of hot chicks, but i'll be telling to sleep the telling them all to sleep in the other i've them other room after i've told them all podcast. how all about my podcast. that's how it's gonna work. >> a date with nick dixon ? yep, yep- >> talking about podcast, >> talking about his podcast, calling chicks. sure, calling them hot chicks. sure, that'll go down really well . the that'll go down really well. the times story about times now a story about fatherhood . so obviously i've fatherhood. so obviously i've got to to on this . got to go to josh on this. >> yeah, yeah. new dads who've lost should lost that loving feeling should have second so you've have a second child. so you've had many ? had how many? >> five. are very fecund, >> five. you are very fecund, aren't >> five. you are very fecund, areithank you. and very happy. so
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>> thank you. and very happy. so there . maybe they're on to there. maybe they're on to something. they basically this is in germany. they took average scores of happiness and they were at their peak before they had a kid. just for the had a kid. this is just for the men. and then when they had men. yes. and then when they had a went way down. a kid, it like went way down. it goes then when goes down. but then when they had second kid, it went way had the second kid, it went way back up. >> but is that just in comparative because >> but is that just in compahgote because >> but is that just in compahgot so because >> but is that just in comparigot so they've because >> but is that just in comparigot so they've bithisse they've got so they've got this screaming then screaming in the house and then they realise they also have a child and have child child and they have the child and realise, well, child and they have the child and have realise, well, child and they have the child and have another se, well, child and they have the child and have another se, vtoh, it's we'll have another one. oh, it's not the first one. not as bad as the first one. therefore i think i'm happier than i before we had any than i was before we had any that be it. that could be it. >> i say think >> but can i just say i think it's because of the two kids after is two years, after this is after two years, like when the child like when the second child is two. what happens is two. yeah. then what happens is the and then the kids start playing and then you deal with them. >> yeah, look at the numbers. andrew after andrew is completely right after that. it that. after the second kid, it climbed 18, but it climbed back up to 18, but it still anywhere near 20.3, still wasn't anywhere near 20.3, which was their score before having they having any children. so they were before children. having any children. so they werei before children. having any children. so they werei advocate fore children. having any children. so they werei advocate wee children. having any children. so they werei advocate we neediren. having any children. so they werei advocate we need higher now i advocate we need higher birth rates. i'm just saying they miserable. they make you miserable. >> is as a male, >> true happiness is as a male, you realise that you you have to realise that you are now secondary to the children and as soon you accept that,
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and as soon as you accept that, then great. and as soon as you accept that, then accepted that your >> i've accepted that your secondary secondary . secondary job i am secondary. i'm moving on to i'm fine with it. moving on to the now, nick this the telegraph now, nick has this give you an appetite for a spot of camping ? oh, this one? of wild camping? oh, this one? yeah. glencoe . yeah. so this is glencoe. visitors turning parts of scottish spot scottish beauty spot into biohazards toilet waste. biohazards with toilet waste. it's classic tourist stuff. i mean, we have this problem up in the lakes. it's peat rich , low the lakes. it's peat rich, low level soils. andrew and they're a great topic for comedy on a comedy show. they campfires are damaged . glens peat rich, damaged. the glens peat rich, low level soils and stuff low level soils and also stuff happens the waste i don't happens with the waste i don't know don't go and ruin it. >> they say take your they're saying take your with you saying take your waste with you in sealed container. yeah. so in a sealed container. yeah. so basically tupperware basically take tupperware to scotland a grim scotland and this is a grim story i'm bringing. and also they've much fried they've got so much deep fried food that's the food up there. that's the problem. maybe stop frying problem. maybe stop deep frying everything. so everything. it won't be so because by this because i'm so disgusted by this story going move on >> we're going to move on finally one. this is in finally to this one. this is in the telegraph and i think now we've hard evidence the we've got hard evidence that the monster . monster exists. >> this new loch ness monster sighting . this is chai kelly sighting. this is chai kelly took these photos in 2018, but
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she was ashamed to reveal them. and now has revealed what and now she has revealed what can only look like a big poo . can only look like a big poo. >> no, looks like a monster >> no, it looks like a monster to we have a look. to me. come we have a look. >> a monster poo. >> a monster poo. >> there it is. >> there it is. >> i've >> there it is. >>-i've one. >> look, i've done one. definitely look that. definitely that look like that. >> no, josh, that is a prehistoric beast. reclining and swimming. and i think she shouldn't have been ashamed. i think she should released think she should have released this straight away. i'm convinced that there is a monster my toilet. >> no, it's definitely real. >> no, it's definitely real. >> what think, nick? we >> what do you think, nick? we haven't got much time. do you think monster think the loch ness monster is real? think this real? and do you think this proves it? you do? yes, and this proves it? you do? yes, and this proves they find proves it. they can't find it because they do things like forget the recording forget to turn on the recording equipment, this equipment, which is in this story. it's real. story. but yes, it's real. >> okay. well, then, >> well, okay. well, then, matthew going clip matthew sweet is going to clip that you that one up. ofcom, are you allowed to say. >> i think we're allowed >> i think i think we're allowed to in loch to say we believe in the loch ness monster. i think that's fine. that all we've got time fine. that is all we've got time for. i'm afraid because of a technical glitch, look technical glitch, we can't look at for the end at the front covers for the end of show. apologise of the show. i apologise for that, thank to my that, but thank you anyway to my guests. josh howie and to nick dixon, fact, is dixon, nick dixon, in fact, is back with josh back tomorrow at 11:00 with josh howie , but also with nicholas de howie, but also with nicholas de santo . and if watching
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santo. and if you're watching the please stay the 5 am, repeat, please stay tuned because it's time for breakfast. >> 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, i'm alex deakin. this is your latest weather update from the met office for gb news. a bit of a mish mash tomorrow. a misty, murky start. some places will see a few showers, but some spots will see some warm sunshine too . it's a messy sunshine too. it's a messy situation because we've got an old area of low pressure hanging around and weather fronts around and these weather fronts have cloud and have been bringing cloud and rain through rain across many areas through the day. the possibility of 1 or 2 heavy showers is just in the far south—east through the night , staying fairly damp and murky , murky and misty over parts of northern england. and some of that rain trickling into that light rain trickling into southern scotland as well. northern staying dry northern scotland staying dry and chilly. and clear and quite chilly. temperatures well down into single further single figures. further south, a pretty mild night. temperatures holding for holding up in the mid teens for some into friday. as i said, a bit of a mish mash. the midlands, northern england parts
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bit of a mish mash. the misouthern orthern england parts bit of a mish mash. the misouthern scotland,|gland parts bit of a mish mash. the misouthern scotland, fairly parts of southern scotland, fairly drab for much of the day, actually. overcast or pretty cloudy, too, for northern ireland. some light rain and drizzle here and there, especially east of the especially to the east of the pennines. further south, something a bit brighter, sunny spells, will also be spells, but there will also be a sprinkling of showers, mostly dry scotland , 20 dry over northern scotland, 20 degrees here, 23 possibly in the south, with some sunshine. a cool though , with that cool feel, though, with that more cloud over more persistent cloud over northern england, 16 here. northern england, 16 or 17 here. so today may also start a bit misty . there'll be 1 or misty. there'll be 1 or 2 isolated showers, but for most of us, saturday looks pretty good. if you're after dry and bright weather, some decent spells sunshine and turning spells of sunshine and turning warmer temperatures warmer with temperatures more widely 20 c. and sunday widely over 20 c. and sunday also set fair with some warm, sunny spells. goodbye . sunny spells. goodbye. >> looks like things are heating up. boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on .
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>> no spin, no bias, no censorship. i'm dan wootton tonight based on bogus science forced on people undemocratically is ulez the new lockdown on the independent scientist who endorsed sadiq khan's hated scheme has been exposed as a paid stooge and i'll continue to shine a light on one of the biggest deceptions in recent british political history . even if the msm won't. history. even if the msm won't. that's in my digest next before my superstar panawagan. and tonight , i'm my superstar panawagan. and tonight, i'm joined by allison pearson. she's shaun bailey and amy nicholl turner breaking tonight, a huge blow in the fight to slash nhs waiting lists and save lives as selfish junior doctors and consultants prepare to join forces. in his historic strike action next month , former strike action next month, former conservative minister and shadow health secretary ann widdecombe slams the medics holding the
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government to ransom shortly .

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