tv Mark Dolan Tonight Replay GB News September 3, 2023 3:00am-5:01am BST
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people's channel, britain's news . channel director fay is back. >> greg's in charge . it's going >> greg's in charge. it's going to be a good one. it's 9:00 on tv, on radio and online in the united kingdom and across the world. this is mark dolan tonight . in world. this is mark dolan tonight. in my big opinion, the royal society for the protection of birds make a highly personalised attack on the government. why can't charities stay out of politics in the big story, as the government cracks down on dodgy cosmetic procedure and a woman has her legs extended in germany , has plastic extended in germany, has plastic surgery gone too tar.7 and in my take at ten woke luvvie emma thompson wants to save the planet while cavorting on a £200 million super yacht , complete million super yacht, complete with two massive diesel engines . i'll be dealing with this millionaire actress who deserves an oscar for double standards .
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an oscar for double standards. two hours of big opinion, big debate, and big entertainment. it is saturday night, so by all means, fire up the kettle. but i might let you have something cold and bubbly from the fridge if that takes your fancy . lots if that takes your fancy. lots to get through. a big two hours to get through. a big two hours to come. my big opinion the to come. my big opinion on the way. but the headlines way. but first, the headlines with anne armstrong . with our anne armstrong. >> a very good evening to you. let's get you up to date with the headlines from the gb news room. two men have been arrested in northern ireland by officers investigating a major breach of data police with the data from the police with the suspects aged 21 and 22 were detained under terrorism act detained under the terrorism act following search in the following a search in the portadown area in county armagh . the arrests are linked to last month's freedom of information data breach when the of data breach when the names of around 10,000 and around 10,000 officers and civilian staff were mistakenly revealed online in the psni confirmed . the arrests relate to
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confirmed. the arrests relate to the possession of the data and how it's been distributed rather than the breach itself . the than the breach itself. the condition of some public buildings, including hospitals , buildings, including hospitals, is being described as jaw dropping as concerns grow over their risk of collapse, the chair of the commons public accounts committee is warning the issue of aerated concrete in schools is just the tip of the iceberg. writing in the times dame meg hillier says eyewatering sums of money are being spent on mitigating the risks . labour being spent on mitigating the risks. labour is demanding an urgent audit . the liberal urgent audit. the liberal democrats have labelled it a national emergency, which warrants an immediate cobra meeting . the rmt union says it's meeting. the rmt union says it's hopeful fresh talks next week can bring an end to their long running dispute over pay and conditions . up to 20,000 members conditions. up to 20,000 members at 14 train operators walked out this weekend, causing severe disruption, with 50% of railways closed across the country . closed across the country. meanwhile, members of aslef train drivers union who were on the picket lines yesterday refused to work overtime today.
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the general secretary of the rmt, mick lynch, told gb news a fresh proposal is key to resolving the dispute . resolving the dispute. >> we go into those talks with an attitude and a disposition to try and get an agreement, but there are some serious issues as most people know now, we don't want to be on strike. we'd rather much, much rather be earning a living and running the service for the people who need to use it. so hopefully if we can get a different mindset next week, we can get some progress . week, we can get some progress. >> now, the home secretary has been told not to use policing as a political football. the police federation of england and wales says the government's constantly moving the goalposts , asking moving the goalposts, asking officers to be more involved , officers to be more involved, then wanting them to act like robots . it's after suella robots. it's after suella braverman commissioned a review into activism and impartial reality in the force. she says it can damage public confidence and officers should focus on tackling crime and the bricks from a famous wonky pub have been saved in a padlocking ceremony where it used to stand
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in the west midlands. the crooked house in himley was renowned for its sloping appearance before it burnt down and was demolished last month. organisers of a campaign to save the pub have stored bricks the pub have stored the bricks in containers . they hope it in lock containers. they hope it can be rebuilt and rise from the ashes. it's currently at the centre of an arson investigation . two men been released on . two men have been released on condition of bail. now this is gb news. i'll be back with more in just under an hour's time. now it's back over to . mark now it's back over to. mark >> my thanks to aaron armstrong, who returns in an hour's time. welcome to mark dolan tonight. and a happy to saturday one and all in my big opinion , the royal all in my big opinion, the royal society for the protection of birds make a highly personalised attack on the government. why can't charities stay out of politics.7 in the big story , as politics.7 in the big story, as the government cracks down on dodgy cosmetic procedures and a woman has her legs extended in germany , has plastic surgery germany, has plastic surgery gone too far.7 i'll be asking tv
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star and legend of channel 4, kim woodburn . my mark meets kim woodburn. my mark meets guest is mike green, top entrepreneur and star of channel four's the secret millionaire and author of a brand new book, failure breeds success. and he'll be sharing his success secrets with you shortly. in my take at ten woke luvvie emma thompson wants to save the planet whilst cavort ing on a £200 million super yacht. i'll be dealing with this millionaire actress who deserves an oscar for double standards . would the for double standards. would the late queen be appalled by prince harry's behaviour? that's the view of a top royal insider. we'll cross live to la for reaction with showbiz and royal queen kinsey schofield . we've queen kinsey schofield. we've got tomorrow's front pages at 1030 sharp with three top punst 1030 sharp with three top pundits who haven't been told what to say and who don't follow the script tonight, sevilla curci diddy, david hamilton and chloe dobbs tonight, i'll be
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asking the pundits with speculation the government are going to toughen eco rules around property. should you face prison time for not going green as fitness guru joe wicks removes his child from school at the age of five because he wants to spend more time with her? our homeschooling parents, selfish and as men are increasingly using professionals to help pop the question, have we lost the art of proposing ? plus, the most art of proposing? plus, the most important part of the show your emails, they come straight to my laptop. mark gbnews.com. and this show has a strict golden rule. we don't do boring. not on my watch. i just won't have it. especially on a saturday night. so a big two hours to come. we start with my big opinion . well start with my big opinion. well the royal society for the protection of birds certainly put a cat among the pigeons. this week with some highly political social media posts
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attacking the government. here is the offending tweet liars rishi sunak michael gove . rishi sunak michael gove. therese coffey you said you wouldn't weaken environmental protections, and yet that's just what you're doing. you lie and you lie and you lie . lie again. you lie and you lie. lie again. now that literally reads like keir starmer has taken over their social media accounts . in their social media accounts. in my view, it's very intense brit language for a charity that's there to protect sparrows , there to protect sparrows, finches and hummingbirds. in my view, they've made a blue tit of themselves. now, it's not unusual for a campaigning charity to be critical of government policy, but this highly personal attack on individual isles demonstrates how partisan the charity sector is becoming . with a political is becoming. with a political post on social media demonising the prime minister and two of his cabinet colleagues, the message is clear these concerns of politicians are bad people on their twitter account, the rspb
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described themselves as nature's voice . but this controversial voice. but this controversial post suggests they're more like labour's voice or the lib dems or the greens. and this is a profound mistake because whilst there is no issue with challenging government policy, charities must remain politically neutral . and it's my politically neutral. and it's my view that the rspb , which is view that the rspb, which is a great organisation with a fabulous legacy of campaigning on behalf of nature, has been by a highly partisan social media team . what political agitators team. what political agitators within charities seem to forget is that the donors who pay their wages and keep their campaigns afloat vote for all of the political parties , including the political parties, including the conservatives , which is why they conservatives, which is why they can be immersed in policy. no problem. but must stay out of . problem. but must stay out of. politics now the rspb have apologised for the post, but it's a somewhat empty apology
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given that this blatant piece of political propaganda has still not been removed from the site and has now been seen over 10 million times, they've apologised , but the message is apologised, but the message is clear . sorry apologised, but the message is clear. sorry but not sorry . now, clear. sorry but not sorry. now, as you know, i'm the king of free speech and would not ever seek to censor any individual or any organisation . but charities any organisation. but charities have a very privileged and unique position in society . dodi unique position in society. dodi they enjoy tax free status and are prohibited by law from running political campaigns except that's exactly what they've done with this post. and they've done with this post. and they've played the man , not the they've played the man, not the ball . now they're concerned that ball. now they're concerned that the government have done a u—turn on their promise to uphold eu environmental standards in relation to the construction of new homes and the discarding of certain eu rules in relation to water pollution in will allow an extra 100,000 homes to be built by 2030. so the rspb may have a
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point that the environment could be impacted, but the government elected by the british people must also fulfil their manifesto promise to the electorate to build more homes and to cut red tape. following brexit, there is i'll accept a political tension there, but that's one for the government and the opposition to navigate, not charities for the rspb to themselves behave like a political party and indulge in this tabloid mudslinging brings the organisation into disrepute and needlessly alienates a lot of people . charities should of people. charities should enjoy widespread public support . they're not supposed to be echo chambers of one political worldview , and they shouldn't be worldview, and they shouldn't be participating in these highly personal attacks on individuals in government, which only adds to the toxic nature of political discourse these days. they're not the only ones, of course. greenpeace disgracefully invaded rishi sunaks home in yorkshire ,
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rishi sunaks home in yorkshire, breaching the safety of our elected prime minister and his young family. oxfam have been told off by the charities commission for failing to avoid political bias with their rants about austerity and stonewall, the ultra woke lgbtq+ charity is more or less at war with the government on a daily basis over its transgender policies . now, its transgender policies. now, i'm a passionate supporter of the charity sector in this country. it is world class. but as with so many of our great pubuc as with so many of our great public institutions , it seems to public institutions, it seems to have been infiltrated by a woke cabal of political activists. we're seeing the same in our corporations and the public sector. and frankly , it's scary. sector. and frankly, it's scary. these activists do not enjoy widespread public support, but they behave like they do and they behave like they do and they wield considerable influence and power for charities should get back to what they do best, and that's fund raising and fighting for their causes in a way which is
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entirely non—political . the idea entirely non—political. the idea that what the rspb have done this week is in any way justified or acceptable . all is justified or acceptable. all is for the birds. what do you think? margaret gbnews.com. i'll get to your emails shortly , but first, let's emails shortly, but first, let's hear from tonight's top pundits, comedian and broadcaster, sir geila curci tv and radio legend david hamilton and political commentator chloe lee dobbs. chloe, let me start with you. your reaction to this, because i think that perhaps the rspb have a point in terms of criticising the government what looks to be a u—turn , but the way they've a u—turn, but the way they've doneit a u—turn, but the way they've done it is profoundly wrong for a charity. >> so i think that what they've doneis >> so i think that what they've done is not necessarily illegal. so the charities commission will allow to make comment allow charities to make comment on policies that relate to the cause of their charity . that's
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cause of their charity. that's okay. however, the way that they've done it is really bad taste. it's really unprofessional for a charity, and i hope that their donors who are in favour of free speech and productive debate pull their donation out. >> yes, sevilla it feels like everything is political. these days. >> it is. and it's very interesting monologue and i kind of agreed with that. you know , of agreed with that. you know, charity should be an echo chamber. however our overall i'm going disagree because going to disagree because i think there's wrong with think there's nothing wrong with being depending being political. all depending what is. mean, what charity is. i mean, obviously, charity , the obviously, this charity, the rspb has got more attention . the rspb has got more attention. the most attention is probably heard since i did my project on birds when i was eight. i wasn't asked to do it, but i did it anyway. it was on the tit family. so i think birds important when think birds are important when off hitchcock came out, off when the hitchcock came out, you know, birds. i'm back you know, birds. but i'm back with birds again. and, you with the birds again. and, you know, obviously the environment is so i get is important for birds. so i get that. what the issue is, that. what the issue here is, i think if she sent it out on the charity twitter, then that's an issue obviously you're issue because obviously you're speaking charity. speaking for the whole charity. did have mandate from the
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did you have a mandate from the charity make if charity to say you could make if she puts it out in her own, you know, in her own twitter account? that's absolutely fine. that's individual. account? that's absolutely fine. that's this individual. account? that's absolutely fine. that's this indigone l. on on >> but this has gone out on on the rspb. >> and i think that's where the mistake is. and they're trying to backtrack. think it to backtrack. and i think it would been i think did would have been i think they did apologise, they? but then apologise, didn't they? but then i were just trying to i think they were just trying to cover i think she made cover her. but i think she made a mistake because don't think a mistake because i don't think that she had a mandate the that she had a mandate from the charity that tweet out. charity to put that tweet out. so it's lesson here for so maybe it's a lesson here for charities make sure that the charities to make sure that the people who putting out people who are putting out tweets are only putting out what's specifically for the territory. indeed, you're offering >> well, indeed, you're offering a balance, which is a note of balance, which is fine. i understand where fine. and i understand where you're but you're coming from. but this tweet, which divisive tweet, which is very divisive and highly partisan, is still on twitter. hasn't deleted. twitter. it hasn't been deleted. so was worthless as well. >> it might be like we've got to stand what stand by all stand by. what i stand by all the i've put out. the words i've put out. sometimes know, you look sometimes you know, you look back and think, yeah, i wouldn't think that now, but i did at the time. they're going think that now, but i did at the time. that they're going think that now, but i did at the time. that route.they're going think that now, but i did at the time. that route. iiey're going think that now, but i did at the time. that route. i don't going think that now, but i did at the time. that route. i don't know. down that route. i don't know. but to delete it would also make them look really guilty. so they're stuck in there
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they're kind of stuck in there between and hard place, really. >> david charities i need to enjoy public support. enjoy widespread public support. they sides in the they mustn't pick sides in the political arena. no i agree with you and i think that you on this and i think that charities should keep out of politics. >> i think there far too >> i think there are far too many politics, many people in politics, including and including politicians. and i think have less, you think we should have less, you know, have less politics know, let's have less politics in almost everything that we can do. far as building do. but as far as building houses concerned, it almost houses is concerned, it almost comes where wildlife comes to a point where wildlife becomes important than becomes more important than people. and, you know, there's so where, you so many examples of where, you know, can't be built here know, houses can't be built here and can't be built there, but unfortunately, they to . unfortunately, they have to. >> well, chloe, that's an important and as i important point. and as i mentioned my big opinion, mentioned in my big opinion, there a manifesto promise there was a manifesto promise to build the build more houses. the government delivering government are delivering a popular mandate with this policy. they have argued that they can mitigate against any possible water pollution and they've it's mainly they've argued that it's mainly farming pollutes rivers farming that pollutes rivers anyway . anyway. >> i mean, i don't know exactly what the legislation says , but what the legislation says, but and we really do need to build more houses in this country. i mean, the state of the housing market is absolutely disastrous
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, but we definitely shouldn't be polluting our rivers more than they already are. it's i mean, i'm a kayaker. i'm on the river every single day. and it is just disastrous. the number of sewage leaks that we get from thames water. so we shouldn't be pushing, keeping our waters clean aside. but i'm not sure exactly what the legislation says. >> i think we should have more building on brownfield sites and all the shops and businesses that are closing. it should become flats and more people. you know that that is not losing all the green belt and all the wonderful countryside that we have. >> well, there you go, folks who do you back? the rspb or the government? let me know. mark at gbnews.com coming up next in the big story, as the government cracks down on dodgy cosmetic procedures and after a woman has her legs extended in germany , her legs extended in germany, has plastic surgery gone too far ? i'll be asking tv legend
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in that type of moon phase. >> welcome back to the show . a >> welcome back to the show. a big reaction to my big opinion monologue. i've got no problem with the royal society for the protection of birds being critical of government policy, where the environment is concerned . but a highly concerned. but a highly personalised tweet attacking the prime minister and two cabinet ministers calling them liars , as ministers calling them liars, as i thought was wide of the mark. but your views are coming in. mark gbnews.com. mark in spite of many attempts and from various experts and interested parties, the rspb has consistently refused to object to planning applications and approvals for the thousands of acres of industrial scale solar sites , either seeking approval sites, either seeking approval or currently being installed across the british countryside . across the british countryside. in spite of the fact that these solar panels are known to damage bird populations , dozens of bird populations, dozens of endangered species such as swallows house martins and swifts, as well as bats , all of swifts, as well as bats, all of which swoop at low levels to catch their foods as well as
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wildlife more generally . why? wildlife more generally. why? so, paul ? they're saying that so, paul? they're saying that the rspb not speaking up for birds by approving solar projects. dennis why don't they worry more about the bird? mincers brackets, wind turbines we hardly see migrating swans here in scarborough . john says here in scarborough. john says mark sunak in your monologue , mark sunak in your monologue, you said he was our elected prime minister. he is not. boris was our first pm. john thank you for putting me right. you're absolutely right. of course, sunak not elected. john malone in edinburgh. old ricky, how are you? john thanks for the email. mark don't forget the rspb get £15 million from the taxpayer. not donations now, john i didn't know that. so thank you for sharing that one with me. and last but not least, jim says, mark, we've removed our contributions from the rspb and will never, ever renew . jim, will never, ever renew. jim, you're entitled to do what you like with your money. i would not withdraw support for the rspb, but i would like them to stay out of politics anyway. keep those emails coming. mark
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gbnews.com. it's time now for the big story. and tonight, as the uk government aims to crack down on the wild west, cosmetic surgery industry , one german surgery industry, one german model has spent £130,000 on making her legs longer, whilst ministers in the uk have launched a consultation into plastic surgery after complaints after botched jobs spiral . old after botched jobs spiral. old 24 year old theresa fisher has been left with huge regrets following an operation to add over five inches to her height. so has plastic surgery finally gone too far? let's get the view of tv star kim woodburn . kim, of tv star kim woodburn. kim, great to have you back on the show. what do you think about this lady that's had her legs stretched by five inches? oh, well , my stretched by five inches? oh, well, my dear, stretched by five inches? oh, well , my dear, she stretched by five inches? oh, well, my dear, she was stretched by five inches? oh, well , my dear, she was five well, my dear, she was five foot, six and a half. >> if you look at a photograph of her, she's a very fragile build. i mean, a 5 or 6 and a half. she was a bit tall. she's got the smallest shoulders, the smallest frame. so to consider
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having those legs increased by five inches. she looks ridiculous . she looks like olive ridiculous. she looks like olive oil. it's as simple as that. look how tiny she is. why would she want those legs? and you know , she said her husband got know, she said her husband got her to do it. no, dear, you don't have to get it done. she's now, what, 31 ish? he was 28 years older than her there. no longer together. she looks a freak. and her tiny little shoulders on a five foot, 11.5 frame. she looks hideous. and she should have known. she does . i don't blame the husband. i blame her. but of course he does make . what does he make? he make. what does he make? he makes some films , doesn't he? he makes some films, doesn't he? he makes some films, doesn't he? he makes he's a film maker, so he's got a few bob in the bank and it's very likely this young girl married him because he's got a few bob idea . yeah. i mean, i'm few bob idea. yeah. i mean, i'm going to be blunt. they marry this old boys for their money and they're back in court. anything to keep you and i could be in the money. the girls are
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fool. she looks terrible. and she went in. she three she went in. she got three inches on legs. she darn inches put on her legs. she darn well goes back and gets two more. i'm a very tall lady, but my shoulders , i've got shoulders my shoulders, i've got shoulders like a prize fighter. i mean, look the size of because look at the size of them because i'm woman and i'm tall and i'm a big woman and i'm tall and i'm a big woman and i'm tall and i'm bill for being tall. but i'm the bill for being tall. but this tiny little frame on those big spindly legs , my dear, did big spindly legs, my dear, did you know what i question also? you know them. are these doctors that would do it? yes. you know, we're talking all this sort of thing, you know, these cosmetic surgeons are fully trained . some surgeons are fully trained. some of them are absolute money grabbing pigs. let's face it. that girl goes to you. you look at her frame and you think, my love, you're 5 or 6 and a half, tiny little that that not short. we will not do it. money change hands 130 grand. they'll do anything . you know, i think anything. you know, i think i blame them as well. they've no ethics whatsoever . oh the ethics whatsoever. oh the trained plastic surgeons are money grabbing beggars . and i money grabbing beggars. and i know i have plastic surgery , and
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know i have plastic surgery, and ispent know i have plastic surgery, and i spent a fortune and nobody made me do it. but by god, these harley streeters are ripping people off terribly . why don't people off terribly. why don't the government do something about that? control some of those prices. they are hideous . those prices. they are hideous. >> now, kim, let me interrupt you briefly, if i can, kim, which is to say that i don't understand why you have plastic surgery, because you cannot improve on perfection . could i improve on perfection. could i ask you what you had done ? ask you what you had done? >> um, well, i'm going to tell you this. look, i'm 81. give me a break, dear. and people say, oh, grow old gracefully. i don't want . wasn't my figure. that want. wasn't my figure. that looks like a sitting over a plate of trumpet steer . i'd want plate of trumpet steer. i'd want to see flesh hanging in between my legs didn't hang the and my arms are waving in the wind now ichoose arms are waving in the wind now i choose got a got a few bob. you got to have a few bob i choose. i'm a long time lying in a coffin rotting and looking disgusting and smelling well i'm on going to do as on the earth. i'm going to do as much i can to look lovely and much as i can to look lovely and unwrinkled. now, i'm not saying
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it's for everybody. for not it's for everybody. it's for not everybody. half everybody. i've had a half facelift, neck lift , eyes facelift, a neck lift, eyes done. oh, god knows this, that and the other. and my love. i'm happy with it. and afford happy with it. and i can afford it. still say it's robbery it. but i still say it's robbery . the government , the government . the government, the government controlled harley . i'm saying controlled harley. i'm saying harley shute as an example . you harley shute as an example. you wouldn't get more people. you get less people going to these untrained salons . get less people going to these untrained salons. i get less people going to these untrained salons . i know, but if untrained salons. i know, but if you speak to those people i know, they say, kim, look , i've know, they say, kim, look, i've got a couple of kids my age to drive me mad. this girl can do them for 250. if i go to harley, she's is 5000 now. i know. maybe she's is 5000 now. i know. maybe she's foolish, but bless her, they trouble her. she shouldn't do it. but the five. come on, it's going to go on while these experts who know their job continue ripping us off because they are ripping us off, you're completely right . completely right. >> and it's very unethical that these plastic surgeons are willing to do these procedures and also, some people are going
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to turkey and coming back minus a kidney. it's truly horrific . a kidney. it's truly horrific. listen, kim, you can be honest with me. we've developed a rapport. you've been on the show now many times . i'd like to ask now many times. i'd like to ask you, do you think there's anything i should have made anything that i should have made bigger ? bigger? >> well, my experience of you, deanis >> well, my experience of you, dear, is that everything is as big as it should be and more than satisfying. that's all i will say . kim than satisfying. that's all i will say. kim woodburn . this will say. kim woodburn. this from here, dear. no complaints at all. you're more than satisfying. and all your parts are big enough. dear, don't start messing with them. i'd be very unhappy if you did. >> and a quick word. thank you for the approbation. one quick word. seconds. if you word. just a few seconds. if you can. amanda holden, a wonderful talent. she's an actress. she's a presenter, reality star, a radio presenter, reality star, and a very beautiful woman. she's middle aged she's got she's middle aged now. she's got kids and she received abuse from the social media influencer andrew tate, who said, you're too old to be posing in a bikini act. your age is what he said. he attacked. he attacked. and
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now she's 52 years of age. she's got kids. your reaction to amanda being attacked by this bloke? well andrew tate, the scum of the earth, dear, is under house arrest in romania for sex trafficking. >> a vile, vile, filthy creature. and i'll tell you something, amanda holden is 52 to her body. is gorgeous, absolute gorgeous, dear. and if i had a body like that, i didn't have a body at 52. like she's got dear now. she looks lovely . got dear now. she looks lovely. and i'd put a bikini on if i had that figure. she looks lovely . that figure. she looks lovely. good luck to you, amanda. keep doing it, dear. yes, kim. >> it takes a beauty to know one. always such a treat to have you on the show. come back and see me soon. see me 500“. >> see me soon. >> don't get the surgery for a bigger bit, dear. i'm more than happy with what you've got . happy with what you've got. >> and quote you on that. >> and i'll quote you on that. the wonderful kim woodburn. lots more to tonight. remember, more to come tonight. remember, we don't boring. not on my we don't do boring. not on my watch. just have it. let
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watch. i just won't have it. let me tell you about what's coming up the show after up in the show straight after the with jonathan . the weather with jonathan. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello there. good evening . >> hello there. good evening. i'm jonathan vautrey. who is your gb news weather forecast provided by the met office. have you managed to enjoy saturday? it will be ending on a relatively fine note for many of us. some late sunny spells to be had and generally of had and generally a lot of dry clear weather into the night as well. we'll allow for some mist and fog patches to develop into the early hours of sunday morning, most extensively morning, though most extensively for areas of for central eastern areas of england further towards the england and further towards the north, band of rain north, we've got band of rain pushing northern scotland. pushing into northern scotland. could heavy at times for could be heavy at times for the isle northern isle of lewis and the northern isles, us will see isles, but most of us will see our temperatures holding up around 14 c as we start off around 13, 14 c as we start off sunday fairly mild sunday morning. so fairly mild start. we'll take little bit start. we'll take a little bit of time for that mist fog to of time for that mist and fog to clear. but eventually it will clear. but eventually it will clear off of us clear its way off and many of us will see a good amount of sunshine throughout day,
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sunshine throughout the day, feeling pleasantly feeling really pleasantly warm in that 26 degree in that high of 26 degree celsius possible across southeastern england. southeastern areas of england. further north, though, further to the north, though, that be lingering that rain will be lingering across the highlands up into the northern so being a much northern isles. so being a much fresher and gales around fresher here and gales around coastal time as coastal areas for a time as well, high pressure will be hanging on into the of hanging on into the start of the new working still, though, new working week. still, though, with that lingering front across the and also the the far north and also the isobars squeezing together across so across the west country. so monday, bit of a monday, generally a bit of a breezier for parts of devon, breezier day for parts of devon, cornwall and definitely some coastal elsewhere, coastal gusts. but elsewhere, winds relatively light winds will be relatively light inland be a decent inland and there'll be a decent amount throughout amount of sunshine throughout much again, once much of the day. again, once that and fog does that early mist and fog does clear we hold on to clear its way off, we hold on to some of sunshine throughout some of that sunshine throughout the rest the week, perhaps the rest of the week, perhaps a little bit more cloud developing more but more towards thursday, but that's our that's also where our temperatures climbing that's also where our temhighestes climbing that's also where our tem highest by climbing that's also where our tem highest by by climbing that's also where our tem highest by by that limbing that's also where our tem highest by by that warm ig the highest by by that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers. >> proud sponsors of weather on . gb news coming up with tonight's pundits with speculation the government are going to toughen eco rules around property should you face
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prison time for not going green as fitness guru joe wicks removes his child from school at the age of five because he wants to see more her are home to see more of her are home schooling parents selfish? >> as men are increasingly >> and as men are increasingly using professionals to help them p0p using professionals to help them pop the question. have we lost the art of proposing ? plus, in the art of proposing? plus, in an exclusive mark dolan tonight people's poll we've been asking has plastic surgery gone too far? the results are in. i will reveal all
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . well more emails coming radio. well more emails coming in in response to my big opinion. >> i think the royal society for the protection of birds have gone too far in their very politicised tweets criticising government ministers in particular. however, chris does not agree with me. chris says, mark your rant against the rspb was embarrassed pro tory and anti free speech as a predominantly tory voter of 40 years, it has become blatantly clear that we're fed a torrent of lies and broken manifesto
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pledges by politicians of all parties in a period of 2 to 3 months viewing it is disappointing. i feel the channelis disappointing. i feel the channel is trotting out a lame anti—government narrative on an almost daily basis . news that almost daily basis. news that should be balanced for all viewers is respectfully, chris. chris, thank you so much for that. this show is as much about those that agree as those that don't. and i'm really pleased that decided to share that you've decided to share your views. keep them your views. so do keep them coming. be like drop me coming. be like chris, drop me a line you might just get line because you might just get on air. mark at gbnews.com. now in first of tonight's mark in the first of tonight's mark dolan tonight polls we've dolan tonight people polls we've been the government been asking as the government cracks cosmetic cracks down on dodgy cosmetic procedures a woman has procedures and after a woman has her legs extended in germany has plastic surgery gone too far? how about this for a result, 95% say yes and 5% say no . so, look, say yes and 5% say no. so, look, we ought to put this to the punst we ought to put this to the pundits tonight. so, faye, i don't know if you can give me one of those wide shots, but i've got a 36 inside leg. i don't know if it's long enough or not. what do we think about
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that? are these legs long enough? david hamilton, enough? did he. david hamilton, what do you think you could have been a tiller girl. >> i probably could. >> i probably could. >> do you want to. do you want to try stretching my legs to just try stretching my legs a bit? suella and see if you can get fantastic. get any fantastic. >> you go. oh god, yeah. >> there you go. oh god, yeah. i've be honest with you, i've got to be honest with you, i'm here tonight because i'm only here tonight because i heard there leg heard that there was leg lengthening going on. well, that's lengthening going on. well, tha well, got say, >> well, i've got to say, sajeela has made me bigger just sajeela has made me biggerjust by by watching presence in by by watching her presence in the last couple. >> for don't know the >> for me, i don't know the world is her oyster. >> as you might have noticed, reacting big stories of reacting to the big stories of the tonight's top pundits, the day. tonight's top pundits, comedian sajeela comedian and broadcaster sajeela qureshi, leg stretcher supreme. also radio and television legend david hamilton and top political commentator chloe dobbs . now, if commentator chloe dobbs. now, if you're a property owner, do you know epc from your weight? know your epc from your weight? well, some tory ministers reportedly landlords who reportedly want landlords who don't have the correct energy performance certificate to face prison and receive hefty fines with speculation that the government are toughening up eco rules in a bid to meet net zero targets, should you face prison time for not going green.
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>> david well, this is ridiculous , isn't it? i mean, ridiculous, isn't it? i mean, the prisons are overflowing anyway, and lots of people who should be going to prison aren't going to prison. and then you're talking about sending people to prison for something like this. you know? i mean, come on. and what a £15,000 fine. it's way over. >> oven >> but is it perhaps that's carrot and stick. and if people are not afraid they will are not afraid that they will have their collar felt, they won't do these improvements? >> don't and i don't >> i don't know. and i don't know anybody is going to know how anybody is going to enforce just think enforce it. but i just think that, know, all values are that, you know, all values are out now. we're out of the window now. we're just getting you know, it's getting stupid , real getting really stupid, real crime we really worry crime that we really worry about, like, you know, burglary and things like that. nothing gets done about it. can't disagree about banging these people. >> i cannot disagree , sir. >> i cannot disagree, sir. i cannot agree with you more. absolutely. now for many parents, home schooling is a thing of the pandemic past. however, joe wicks is continuing with it. the fitness coach has decided pull his five year decided to pull his five year old daughter out school for old daughter out of school for at least a year. ulrika johnson has defended decision,
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has defended his decision, calling heartwarming , saying, calling it heartwarming, saying, but the question are but it begs the question are homeschooling selfish ? homeschooling parents selfish? suella you've got children. you've got a son, haven't you? >> yeah, i do have a son. and i would never, ever, ever homeschool because i'm never home. right. and also because my son is an adult now. but to be honest, i just think this is ridiculous. like, can we stop telling people what they can and can't do with their children? we're just talking earlier and saying certain people saying there are certain people that i don't think should have you know, we to homeschool you know, we want to homeschool and and he just and stuff. and he was just saying, you shouldn't saying, no, you shouldn't actually have any children at all. that's all. right but then that's that's it's down to that's all. if it's all down to whether harmful for the whether it's harmful for the child. they, know, if child. so if they, you know, if it's not harming the child and joe, just wants to have another year kid, she's only year with his kid, she's only five. think that's five. so i don't think that's like anything well like anything terrible. well i wonder she's going to wonder i mean, she's going to miss out on a year of interaction the age of to interaction from the age of 5 to 6, you know, developing relationships, becoming confident. mean , i confident. yeah. but i mean, i mean, i don't see what harm we can some countries can do. some. some countries have starting older, so
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have school starting older, so don't. have school starting older, so dont. you have school starting older, so don't. you think he's don't. don't you think he's effectively chloe damaging when they're a bit older. >> you were an anti—lockdown campaigner don't think campaigner don't you think joe wicks locking his own wicks is locking down his own daughter? know, in past, daughter? you know, in the past, i would have been quite against homeschooling because, as you say, it's really important for the social and emotional development of child have development of the child to have lots of friends and see them on a regular basis. >> but i'm starting to think that in today's day and age, i would be worried about sending my to school my child to school because i look at what's happening look at look at what's happening in our schools, gender, ideology , being down children's , being forced down children's throats , so, so being so sort of throats, so, so being so sort of primary school kids being told you might a boy, you might be you might be a boy, you might be a yes, exactly . it's a girl. yes, exactly. it's really bad in america. but we are it happening now. are seeing it happening now. i've horrifying clips. i've seen some horrifying clips. i've seen some horrifying clips. i've several clips of i've seen several clips of students being told need to students being told you need to go different school you go to a different school if you think only two think there are only two genders, wants to send their genders, who wants to send their children there. >> of course, in school, >> and of course, in school, we're seeing some quite contested being we're seeing some quite contestin being we're seeing some quite contestin relation being we're seeing some quite contestin relation history taught in relation to history and aren't we? and race as well, aren't we? >> exactly . what is the point in
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>> exactly. what is the point in history class? they're not teaching properly anymore. teaching it properly anymore. i think that i might be better at teaching a child at home and in america, especially in california . it's crazy. now, the california. it's crazy. now, the stuff that's happening , children stuff that's happening, children are being transitioned and not just socially, but often also given hormones and behind their parents back . the schools don't parents back. the schools don't tell the parents. and as they say, when america catches a cold, britain sneezes eventually. >> there you go . you know, i >> there you go. you know, i mean, sajeela, this is a strong argument. a lot of people in america are actually arguing for homeschooling because schools now are so woke . now are so woke. >> yeah, don't know what's >> yeah, i don't know what's happening school system, happening with school system, but they're not going but if they're not if not going work, also crumbling. so work, they're also crumbling. so that's if that's the other thing. so if you if you are a history, how about learning the history about the long ago it the school of how long ago it was thought concrete was thought made what concrete crumbling forget about crumbling you forget about ofsted. about that. crumbling you forget about ofstlike about that. crumbling you forget about ofstlike crumbling about that. crumbling you forget about ofstlike crumbling schools,hat. crumbling you forget about ofstlike crumbling schools, you it's like crumbling schools, you know, i think i'd be homeschooling that homeschooling on that basis because to be because i don't want to be suggesting that people don't go to at all and that they to school at all and that they just schooled home. just stay schooled at home. >> what we're saying? well. >>
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e i think well. >> i think joe wicks is >> well, i think joe wicks is perhaps just going to keep his daughter home for year or daughter at home for a year or so. but but there seems be an so. but but there seems to be an increasing movement increasing homeschool movement and that and some people think that schools indoctrination schools are now indoctrination centres and therefore you'd be better kids at home. >> i think the question is the age, isn't it the age at which they should begin school? and we're about we're talking here about about a five old that may be too five year old is that may be too young. perhaps it should be a year later. don't know. my year later. i don't know. my children are very grown up, so i long long time ago for me, long a long time ago for me, i know find that hard to know you find that hard to believe. >> find it hard to believe. >> i do find it hard to believe. >> i do find it hard to believe. >> i do find it hard to believe. >> i do. >> i do. >> what do you think about this? do think home schooling, do you think home schooling, home way to go, home education is the way to go, folks, me look, i told folks, let me know. look, i told you. send me an email, go you. you send me an email, go straight to my laptop. it goes straight to my laptop. it goes straight on tv. and from straight on tv. and this from angela 60s ago . dear mark, home angela 60s ago. dear mark, home educating is not selfish. it is freedom of choice . i chose to do freedom of choice. i chose to do it and my daughter was very happy and her friends wish that they were. she's now a head teacher at primary school. angela did an angela you obviously did an excellent well done. you
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excellent job. well done. you keep those emails coming. mark at cbnnews.com . coming up next, at cbnnews.com. coming up next, well, we've lots of things well, we've got lots of things mark meets, but my take at mark meets, but in my take at ten woke lovey emma thompson wants save the planet whilst wants to save the planet whilst cavorting on a £200 million. superyacht you couldn't make it up. i'll be dealing with this millionaire actress who deserves an oscar for double standards, but next up, it is my mark meets guest. it's mike green. top entrepreneur, star of channel four's the secret millionaire and the author of a brand new book, failure breeds success. and he'll be sharing his success stories with you . that's
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next welcome back to mark dolan tonight . right. and the second tonight. right. and the second of tonight's mark dolan tonight people polls. we've been asking , are home schooling parents selfish ? well, 62% say no. and selfish? well, 62% say no. and 38% say yes. they are. so a majority for those home schoolers . okay. well, coming up schoolers. okay. well, coming up
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in my take at ten. emma thompson , talented actress. absolutely. but the world's biggest eco hypocrite . i'll be dealing with hypocrite. i'll be dealing with her shortly. you won't want to miss it. but first, mark means and this evening, one of the most successful entrepreneurs in the country and the star of channel four's, the secret millionaire, man millionaire, mike green, a man who's put all his knowledge and expertise about the world of business into a best selling new book, failure breeds success and i'm delighted to say that mike green joins me now. mike, great to have you on the show. >> it's a pleasure to come. thank you for inviting me. do you need to have qualifications to be successful? absolutely not. i'm doctor of not. in fact, i'm a doctor of education by anglia education awarded by anglia ruskin. proud that. ruskin. i'm very proud of that. and a of work with and i do a lot of work with schools. but but what i find is sometimes people get really sometimes if people get a really good education, they to good education, they go to university. they get a good university. if they get a good degree, tend to get a good degree, they tend to get a good job. that actually stops job. and that actually stops their going to a place their mind going to a place where they might consider
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getting and a getting a business. and i have a podcast success podcast called success as a system that interviews people like mullins dave like charlie mullins and dave potts, ceo of potts, who's the ceo of morrisons. who morrisons. neville wright, who founded now worth founded kiddicare, and now worth £200 these are people £200 million. these are people who left school at 15 or 16. lord balfe no degrees. yeah no qualifications at all. >> and steve jobs. the list is endless. the successful but uneducated entrepreneur as well. >> uneducated in the sense that they didn't pass an exam that ticked it. they a lot of them went on and what they realised was education wasn't a one time thing. was weed throughout thing. it was weed throughout their whole life, their whole career. many of went career. many of them went back. did they got did they release or they got people to mentor them, people in to mentor them, teach them, they all understand the them, so they all understand the importance of lifelong education as opposed to a one off hit. but it's not necessarily all academic. and actually, i think schools are getting so focussed away from the academic and into political and wogan all sorts of things. now that i was listening to your session earlier about education and it worries me. it's not evolved at all from 200 years ago in so many ways.
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>> and what needs to happen in education? how can the uk breed the next generation of entrepreneurs? because i think our politicians seem to have forgotten . we wealth forgotten. we need wealth creators . creators. >> no, i completely agree. and i think we can start to talk about one of the things we do at school. if you get good exams, you'll get a good job. if you go to university, you get good to university, you get a good degree, a good job. degree, you'll get a good job. we about what would we should talk about what would you if you had you like to do if you had a business, if you could do anything, what's passion? anything, what's your passion? find give them find their passion. give them a fire in their belly to follow that they can become that passion so they can become amazing. things amazing. but one of the things i say a lot is if we look at communication from the early days of sort of grunt into talk into writing letters that would go and delivered go by horse and be delivered months now we can send months later. now we can send a tweet. it's across the world in a millisecond . and, know, if a millisecond. and, you know, if we architecture from we look at architecture from single ages and single storey cottage ages and things, now building things, we're now building cities we look at cities on water. if we look at can't build schools, but you can't build schools, but you can't have well , exactly. but can't have well, exactly. but most our lives, the areas, most of our lives, the areas, the sectors have transformed, they are completely different.
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but 200 years ago, if you went to school, you were probably 20 or 30 people sitting in front of a board watching a person listening to somebody for 20, 30, 50 day. and it hasn't 30, 50 a day. and it hasn't changed. and i think we need to revolutionise, not evolve, but revolutionise, not evolve, but revolutionise education and take a ground root view of it completely. >> right? i mean, why are we making 12 year olds who are not interested in science, do chemistry? you know, that's the thing. you've got to like, obviously focus on their strengths and then them strengths and then push them to fulfil what about fulfil their talents. what about your did you ever your talents then? did you ever a head start in life? were you born with a silver spoon in your mouth? >> no, no. in fact, my dad left when we were four. we'd been on houday when we were four. we'd been on holiday my nan in a caravan holiday with my nan in a caravan in norfolk. and when came in in norfolk. and when we came back, sold everything. so back, he'd sold everything. so the house dad left you when you were there's me my were four. there's me and my brothers sisters, he brothers and sisters, and he sold everything sold sold everything up, sold everything lived in a everything up. so we lived in a hospice months because hospice for six months because there houses. we there were no council houses. we lived a hospice, then lived in a hospice, then a caravan, then then council caravan, then then a council house. i shared a bed, bed house. i shared a bed, a bed with two brothers till i was 11 and a bedroom i left
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and then a bedroom till i left home. certainly not a silver home. so certainly not a silver spoon, but learnt about work. spoon, but i learnt about work. now someone said, some people say me, do you think say to me, where do you think the comes from? and the work ethic comes from? and i say, well, you know, starvation will do that for you kind of thing. realised, thing. but what i realised, whatever the driver was, if you can get people working, they realise i do a day's pay, realise i can do a day's pay, i'll get some money. they realise i work harder, realise if i can work harder, i get some more. if i can work smarter, i get some more. and if they're willing learn and they're willing to learn and evolve, can grow. was evolve, that can grow. and i was having exactly conversation having exactly this conversation with charlie mullins of pimlico plumbers of ago, plumbers a couple of weeks ago, and same hunger. so and he got that same hunger. so his passion look at not his passion is to look at not just driving everyone to uni, but people into but getting people into apprenticeships they can apprenticeships so they can work, earn a wage, feel what that feels like, they can evolve. learning and maybe evolve. there learning and maybe set their business. it set up their own business. it doesn't have to be this kind doesn't all have to be this kind of route, which doesn't doesn't all have to be this kind of everybody.ich doesn't work for everybody. >> it's a production line, >> no, it's a production line, isn't it? and some of those billions that towards billions that go towards subsidising university go subsidising university could go to training to apprenticeships. training exactly. and placements , exactly. and work placements, all the rest of it. so what about your book if i've about your book then? if i've
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got viewers and listeners watching and listening and they feel their life is not feel that their life is not where it wants to be where it where it wants to be and they're they're they're stuck and they want change. they want more money. they want security. success. security. they want success. what's is the best first step? >> well , know, people >> well, you know, most people lead quiet desperation lead lives of quiet desperation . you know, they're . often, you know, they're sitting home. know they sitting at home. they know they want have this want more. they have this feeling in their belly that they want step is want more. the first step is thinking, i had the perfect thinking, if i had the perfect next what would my next three years, what would my life look like? set some goals. most people spend much time most people spend so much time firefighting that they firefighting today that they don't ever take any time to think in the future. so a lot of the i with individuals the work i do with individuals or businesses is about saying, the work i do with individuals or b|muchses is about saying, the work i do with individuals or b|much time about saying, the work i do with individuals or b|much time areyut saying, the work i do with individuals or b|much time are you aying, the work i do with individuals or b|much time are you going to how much time are you going to focus where you want be in focus on where you want to be in a a year? three years? is a month, a year? three years? is 10% fair? they say, yeah, 10% is fair. half a day, a fair. i say that's half a day, a week, 10% of your time is half a day, a week. most people spend less than half a day a year thinking their future. if thinking about their future. if you it, it ain't you don't plan it, it ain't happening. if you get in a car and and drive with no and try and drive with no destination, where are you going
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to end up? you could end up anywhere. lock anywhere. once you lock a postcode a satnav, you're postcode into a satnav, you're going get there directly going to get there as directly as as you as you can. as you, as you as you can. >> and why your book called >> and why is your book called failure breeds surely failure breeds success. surely failure you're a failure is bad and you're a success, a failure. success, not a failure. >> well, listen, my wife >> yeah, well, listen, my wife and i became homeless. went >> yeah, well, listen, my wife and when me homeless. went >> yeah, well, listen, my wife and when mwas meless. went >> yeah, well, listen, my wife and when mwas 27. less. went >> yeah, well, listen, my wife and when mwas 27. we. went >> yeah, well, listen, my wife and when mwas 27. we built/vent >> yeah, well, listen, my wife and when mwas 27. we built it nt bust when i was 27. we built it back from there. >> so we money. >> so we had money. >> so we had money. >> and lost it? yeah, >> and you lost it? yeah, exactly that. exactly. i had a business. we was doing really well then myself well and then spread myself too thin. didn't realise the importance cash but importance of cash flow, but what realised in that process what i realised in that process and we were delivering and then we were delivering pizzas a couple of pizzas on mopeds for a couple of years to the library years and i went to the library and i started reading books by branson and different people. what that all of what i realised was that all of them failed failure is them had failed and failure is not opposite of success. it not the opposite of success. it is ingredients to is one of the key ingredients to success. is not a success. if there is not a successful person i've ever met that hasn't in that success that hasn't had in that success weaved with failure, if weaved through with failure, if weaved through with failure, if we avoid we if we constantly avoid failure , we're never going to be failure, we're never going to be successful. that doesn't mean to say we aim for it, but accept say we aim for it, but we accept that to happen. that it's going to happen. sometimes and at what sometimes and we look at what have learned from it, how do have we learned from it, how do we get from it? and know,
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we get up from it? and you know, i love the saying, if you're going through hell, keep the hell know, why would hell going. you know, why would you so you fail, you stop there? so if you fail, you stop there? so if you fail, you are not a failure. it is just a passing you are not a failure. it is you are not a failure. it is just a passing phase towards your destination. and i insisted actually that it was called title. that's about success or that's about development. that's about self development. and accept that and i said, until we accept that it is a key part of everything we do from from the first stages of walking, up, fall of walking, we get up, fall down, up, dowh, of walking, we get up, fall down, up, down, up, down, get up, fall down, get up, fall down, up, fall down. we fall down, get up, fall down. we don't oh, clearly not meant don't say, oh, clearly not meant to walk. i'm going to sit on my bum rest my life. we bum for the rest of my life. we keep on trying because our desire to do what other people are so big. if we can are doing is so big. if we can create that desire and that destination what to destination of what we want to do and achieve, can change do and achieve, we can change the did you ever the world. did you ever hear back dad? you know, we back from your dad? you know, we didn't from him for 20 didn't hear from him for 20 years. and then when my sister had first she wanted had her first baby, she wanted him that he had him to know that he had a grandchild . and at point, grandchild. and at that point, he had daughters who found he had four daughters who found out had four brothers and out they had four brothers and sisters. found out had
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sisters. and we found out we had four sisters. and had a whole four sisters. and he had a whole different what was really different life. what was really hurtful expect hurtful and i didn't expect anything was that did go anything back was that we did go through challenges . my mum through those challenges. my mum worked a slave , but his worked like a slave, but his kids horses and all sorts , kids had horses and all sorts, so was a bit sad. so it was a bit sad. >> do you forgive him for what happened? >> i do forgive him, but actually, just when people say your dad i had a stepdad who was quite violent, i respect him quite violent, but i respect him more. dad was real dad was more. my dad was my real dad was more. my dad was my real dad was more a sperm donor. and there more of a sperm donor. and there were a lot of sperm donors out there. not a lot of dads. >> that note, let's get the plug for book. it's called for in the book. it's called failure breeds success. it's by mike green. out now. okay mike green. it's out now. okay lots more to come. first, here's your weather . your weather. >> looks like things are heating up. boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. sponsors of weather on. gb news. >> hello there. good evening. i'm jonathan vautrey, who of your gb news weather forecast provided by the met office. have you managed to enjoy saturday? it will be ending on a relatively fine note for many of
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us. some late sunny spells to be had and generally a lot of dry clear weather the night as clear weather into the night as well. allow for some mist well. we'll allow for some mist and fog patches to develop into the hours of sunday the early hours of sunday morning, most extensively morning, though most extensively for eastern areas for central eastern areas of england. the england. further towards the north, of rain north, we've got band of rain pushing northern scotland. pushing into northern scotland. could at times the could be heavy at times for the isle of and the northern isle of lewis and the northern isles, most of will see isles, but most of us will see our holding up our temperatures holding up around 14 c as we start off around 13, 14 c as we start off sunday morning. so fairly sunday morning. so a fairly mild start. we'll take a little bit of time for that mist and fog to clear, but eventually it will clear, but eventually it will clear its way off and many of us will a good amount of will see a good amount of sunshine throughout day, sunshine throughout the day, feeling pleasantly feeling really pleasantly warm in 26 c. possible in that high of 26 c. possible across southeastern areas of england. north, england. further to the north, though, rain will be though, that rain will be lingering across the highlands up the northern so up into the northern isles. so being here and being a much fresher here and gales coastal areas gales around coastal areas for a time well, pressure will time as well, high pressure will be hanging on into the start of the new working week. still, though, lingering though, with that lingering front north front across the far north and also isobars also the isobars squeezing together west country together across the west country . a bit of . so monday, generally a bit of a day for parts of a breezier day for parts of devon. cornwall, definitely some
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coastal gusts, but elsewhere, winds relatively light winds will be relatively light inland and there'll be a decent amount sunshine throughout amount of sunshine throughout much of the day. again, once that mist fog does that early mist and fog does clear way off, we on to clear its way off, we hold on to some that sunshine throughout some of that sunshine throughout the rest week, perhaps the rest of the week, perhaps a little more cloud developing little bit more cloud developing more thursday, but more towards thursday, but that's our that's also where our temperatures climbing that's also where our temhighestes climbing that's also where our tem highest by climbing that's also where our tem highest by . climbing that's also where our temhighest by . by climbing that's also where our temhighest by . by looks|bing that's also where our temhighest by . by looks like| the highest by. by looks like things are heating up. >> boxed boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news coming up of weather on. gb news coming up in the 10:00 hour. >> tomorrow's papers hot off the press with live reaction from tonight's top pundits. and in my take at ten woke lovey emma thompson wants to save the planet whilst cavorting on a £200 million. super yacht. i'll be dealing with this millionaire actress who deserves an oscar for double standards
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it's 10:00 on two. it's10:00 on television, on radio and online in the united kingdom and across the world. this is mark dolan tonight in my take a ten woke lovey. emma thompson wants to save the planet whilst cavorting on a £200 million super yacht . i'll £200 million super yacht. i'll be dealing with this millionaire actress who deserves an oscar for double standards as also , for double standards as also, would the late queen be appalled by prince harry's behaviour? that's the view of a top royal insider. will head to la and the queen of royal and showbiz is reporting in the us. kinsey schofield . plus tomorrow's schofield. plus tomorrow's newspaper front pages and live reaction in the studio from tonight's top pundits . so tonight's top pundits. so a packed show, lots to get through, but first, the headlines. yes it's the news with aaron armstrong . on with aaron armstrong. on >> a very good evening to you, aaron armstrong here in the gb newsroom. two men have been
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arrested in northern ireland by officers investigating a major breach of data from the police . breach of data from the police. the suspects, aged 21 and 22, were detained under the terrorism act following a search in the portadown area in county armagh. the arrests are linked to last month's freedom of information data breach when the names of around 10,000 officers and civilian staff were mistakenly revealed online. the psni have confirmed the arrests relate to the possession of the data and how it's been distributed rather than the breach itself . ministers are breach itself. ministers are facing calls for transparency over the scale of aerated concrete in public buildings, with the condition of some, including hospitals, being described as jaw dropping. writing in the times, the chair of the commons public accounts committee, dame meg hillier, is warning the problem in schools is just the tip of the iceberg. labouris is just the tip of the iceberg. labour is demanding an urgent audh. labour is demanding an urgent audit . the labour is demanding an urgent audit. the lib dems have labelled it a national emergency, which warrants an immediate cobra meeting . rail immediate cobra meeting. rail passengers are being warned of
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further disruption tomorrow morning as a result of strike action by the rmt . up to 20,000 action by the rmt. up to 20,000 union members at 14 operators walked out earlier , forcing walked out earlier, forcing services to start later and finish. earlier members of the train drivers union aslef , who train drivers union aslef, who were on picket lines yesterday refused to work overtime today . refused to work overtime today. general secretary of the rmt mick lynch says he's hopeful for next week's negotiated . next week's negotiated. >> as we go into those talks with an attitude and a disposition to try and get an agreement. but there are some serious issues as most people know now. we don't want to be on strike. we'd rather much, much rather be earning a living and running the service for the people who need to use it. so hopefully if we can get a different mind mindset next week, we can get some progress . week, we can get some progress. >> yes, policing shouldn't be used as a political football, a warning for the home secretary after she accused officers of partisanship on controversial issues. the police federation of england and wales says the government keep changing the
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goalposts and wanting officers to be more involved while simultaneously acting like robots . suella braverman has robots. suella braverman has commissioned a review into activism and impartiality in the force labour says that demonstrates her political obsession with the issue. the liberal democrats have accused her of using the police as a weapon in her culture war and bncks weapon in her culture war and bricks have been salvaged from a pub at the centre of an arson investigation in himley in the black country. organisers of the save the crooked house, which was destroyed by fire last month, held a ceremony as they stored the bricks in locked containers. they hope the bricks can be used to rebuild the pub. two men have been released on conditional bail after being arrested on suspicion of arson with intent to endanger life . with intent to endanger life. this is gb news. we'll have more just after 11:00, but that's it for me now it's back over to . mark >> thanks, aaron. see you in an houn
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>> thanks, aaron. see you in an hour. welcome to mark dolan. tonight, would the late queen be appalled by prince harry's behaviour? that's the view of a top royal insider. we will head top royal insider. we will head to la in california. and the queen of us, showbiz and royal reporting, kinsey schofield . reporting, kinsey schofield. plus, tomorrow's newspaper. front pages and live reaction in the studio from tonight's top pundits. sir gina curci diddy, david hamilton and chloe dobbs. and there'll be nominating their headune and there'll be nominating their headline heroes and back page zeros of the day. so a packed hour and those papers are coming. 1030 sharp. you can set your watch to it. but first, my take . at ten millionaire take. at ten millionaire socialist emma thompson, famous for playing the ugly nanny mcphee on the big screen , showed mcphee on the big screen, showed her own ugly hypocrisy this week, cavorting on a vast gas guzzling 300 foot mega yacht owned by a billionaire media
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tycoon . not out of character for tycoon. not out of character for these duplicitous stars, thompson seems to have left her politics to one side in accepting the invitation, the said media tycoon is barry diller , the co founder of the us diller, the co founder of the us conservative news channel. fox news, whose right wing output , news, whose right wing output, i've got no doubt she detests us. but what she doesn't detest is the chilled champagne and caviar served up on this opulent vessel. caviar served up on this opulent vessel . yes, it's got a couple vessel. yes, it's got a couple of sails if you're lucky enough to get a wind up. but this vast boat built for pleasure only it's exclusively a holiday yacht relies on two enormous diesel engines plus fossil fuel powered generators presumable only to power the jacuzzi . cruising on a power the jacuzzi. cruising on a superyacht . it comes with a superyacht. it comes with a carbon footprint the size of texas. carbon footprint the size of texas . of course, none of this texas. of course, none of this would matter if it wasn't for thompson's previous finger wagging pronouncements about the state of the environment. she's
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given her backing to extinction rebellion on one occasion, flying in a massive aeroplane from la to offer her support . from la to offer her support. and ironically, she wound up on a pretend pink boat in the middle of town, which caused traffic misery for thousands of londoners . now you can be traffic misery for thousands of londoners. now you can be an traffic misery for thousands of londoners . now you can be an eco londoners. now you can be an eco campaigner like greta thunberg, who, to be fair, is very consistent in both her words and her actions. but you can't have it both ways . you can't sit on it both ways. you can't sit on board a £200 million super yacht and say yes, to which you and i could only get by working as a waiter on board or hiding in one of thompson's louis vuitton suitcase cases whilst telling the great unwashed that they've got to take fewer flights, eat less meat, and spend 20 grand on a new boiler. now, i'm a huge fan of emma thompson, a gifted writer and actress. she is a true british national treasure . true british national treasure. but i'm afraid that if you enter the political arena, you will be called out for any hypocrisy you
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display . and i'm afraid to say display. and i'm afraid to say that she's got that in spades with a jet set lifestyle and homes all over the world. but it doesn't buy you happiness, apparently , despite owning a £3 apparently, despite owning a £3 million house in hampstead, nonh million house in hampstead, north london, she famously called england a rainy corner of sort of europe, a cake filled , sort of europe, a cake filled, misery laden, grey old island. let me tell you, there isn't much grey misery to be found in the bustling boutiques of hampstead village. so what was the nature of this cruise that she was she was taking this week? did she board this vessel in order to spread her message about human rights abuses, inequality or global warming? far from it. dame emma was in italy to attend the diana von furstenberg awards , which furstenberg awards, which recognises and supports extraordinary women who are dedicated to transforming the lives of other women . well, lives of other women. well, she's certainly dedicated to
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transforming her own life , isn't transforming her own life, isn't she? meanwhile she and her husband have become honorary citizens of venice after they fled england to their house in the picturesque city to spend the picturesque city to spend the covid pandemic in the italian sun . isn't that nice italian sun. isn't that nice idiots had to stay here in the uk. what did she call this place again? a cake filled, misery laden grey old island . poor old laden grey old island. poor old us. now i've got no doubt that emma thompson has genuine concerns about the environment, and i'm sure that she does her bit to help the cause and indeed the plight of people less fortunate than her. she is a good egg , but whether it's the good egg, but whether it's the sussexes us climate change guru john kerry or private jet dwelling leonardo dicaprio , eco dwelling leonardo dicaprio, eco hypocrisy has become standard operating procedure for these pampered stars who tell us to live a diminished life whilst they themselves party like it's 1999. emma thompson is a
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successful and highly decorated actress with two oscars to her name , but the only award she name, but the only award she merits these days is world's biggest hypocrite . who is diana biggest hypocrite. who is diana von furstenberg? do you know who thatis? von furstenberg? do you know who that is? furstenberg diana von furstenberg . it's like clearing furstenberg. it's like clearing your throat, isn't it? apparently, mrs. dolan tells me she's a fancy designer , and mrs. she's a fancy designer, and mrs. dolan would like a diana von furstenberg bag . and i've told furstenberg bag. and i've told her we can't afford it . anyway, her we can't afford it. anyway, get your views across to me, mark at cbnnews.com . let's get mark at cbnnews.com. let's get the view now of my top pundits, comedian and broadcast sajeela khurshid tv and radio legend diddy david hamilton and political commentator chloe dobbs. chloe, first of all, can we just clear something up? who is diana von faux pas? i have absolutely no idea. >> mark. and i definitely can't pronounce it either.
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>> i think. >> i think. >> julia you'll know because you're a bit of a clotheshorse, aren't you? >> yeah, i am. i am a clotheshorse on vintage. um, i don't know who she is, but i want to be her friend because she's got a yacht and i want to go in the yacht. and i was just thinking, okay, i kind of thought i was funny, oh and thought i was funny, but. oh and she's a national treasure. yeah. and can i just say, she was in venice on a friend's yacht where is venice? and how do you get around in venice? by boat. so she didn't have any choice but to go by boat. i don't think she's a hypocrite. she did that many years ago. she lent her name to a charity as a lot of famous people do. um and i don't. i don't think she's a hypocrite. i think she's. you can do. you can. you can be on a friend's yacht and also still put your name to extinction rebellion if you want. sorry. no, that's not the you no, that's not the answer you wanted to hear from me. >> i never expect answers. >> remember my pundits haven't been to say. and who been told what to say. and who don't follow that's don't follow the script. that's what it's all about. but i'm afraid this does reek double
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afraid this does reek of double standards chloe, she's standards to me. chloe, she's gone yacht, is gone on this yacht, which is owned by the co—founder of fox news, a network that in principle, she would absolutely detest . but she doesn't care detest. but she doesn't care because enjoys champagne detest. but she doesn't care bececavian enjoys champagne and caviar. >> yeah, i think this is the age of hypocrisy now. and all these people have got all this wealth and they want to flaunt it and enjoy it. good to but enjoy it. good luck to them, but stop telling rest of us what stop telling the rest of us what to do. i think that's the thing, isn't it? >> i think what's happened there to emma thompson , chloe, is that to emma thompson, chloe, is that she's fallen into the harry and meghan trap, which which is do as i say, not do as i do. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i will give her a little bit of benefit of the doubt in that i just to be an of benefit of the doubt in that ijust to be an activist of benefit of the doubt in that i just to be an activist for something doesn't mean that you have to be absolutely perfect . have to be absolutely perfect. >> i care about the environment, but that doesn't mean that i have to never fly on a plane, never eat an avocado. it means that i reduce the number of times i fly, reduce the number of times i eat avocados. all right. if you occasionally go on
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a nice yacht, that's okay. but from the sounds of what you've described, mark, she really does have the jet setting lifestyle . have the jet setting lifestyle. >> well, indeed. i mean, she's got homes all over the world. and here's the thing. suella greta , to her credit, greta thunberg, to her credit, would not be seen dead on a superyacht . yeah but you know, superyacht. yeah but you know, emma thompson on emma thompson. >> she's like a legend, you know, she's like you. another fellow legend . you're going to fellow legend. you're going to diss another legend. >> i've only got one yacht. >> i've only got one yacht. >> oh, you've only got one yacht. yeah, well, i just want to go on the yacht. can i just go? david trump. whatever her name is. can i go on your yacht, please? >> david. david, do you mind looking at the camera? because you're such a handsome devil i want see. i want to see that want to see. i want to see that full look in your full james bond. look in your face. david, i mean, look face. and david, i mean, look really giles' and. and chloe, really st giles' and. and chloe, don't agree with they don't don't agree with me. they don't think hypocrite. why is think she's a hypocrite. why is she you're talking she a hypocrite? you're talking to me. >> yeah. david. >> yeah. david. >> yes. i have trouble. sometimes trouble hearing sometimes i have trouble hearing you in another you because you're in another
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room. correct. room. yeah correct. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> apologies for that, david. >> apologies for that, david. >> we're going we're going to >> we're going to we're going to get faye to up the speaken >> but. but is your two colleagues disagree with you? why hypocrite? why is she a hypocrite? >> somebody somebody is a >> well, somebody somebody is a hypocrite. they do thing hypocrite. if they do one thing and you to do and then tell you to do something , you know, if something else, you know, if they are pursuing one particular course in life but lecturing you , you mentioned earlier about harry and meghan. you know, we've we've had rank hypocrisy from them . that's a good example from them. that's a good example of hypocrisy where, you know, they do one thing jetting around they do one thing jetting around the world, all the stuff that they're doing and then start preaching. we don't want to be preached to anymore, you know, we'll live our own lives. they've got all this money. good luck to them. >> there you go. okay. well, look, do you think? is emma look, what do you think? is emma thompson or not? thompson a hypocrite or not? margaret up, margaret gbnews.com coming up, would have been would the late queen have been appalled by prince harry's behaviour here? that is the view of a top royal insider. i will reveal their identity next and we'll reaction from the we'll get reaction from the queen of us showbiz royal and
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speed past a camera, i tell the kids to smile. speed past a camera, i tell the kids to smile . all i'm a fan of kids to smile. all i'm a fan of emma thompson, but she's an eco hypocrite. >> that's the theme of my take at ten. a flood of emails. john in yorkshire. hi, mark. a lot of celebrities, especially actors and actresses, are narcissists or sociopaths. arguably you have to be one to be successful . oh, to be one to be successful. oh, good evening, mark, says wendy. great show. and may i say, you're looking very handsome this evening. my goodness, wendy, thank you for that. you need out that site of need to check out that site of yours. but thank you. i'm sick and tired of multi—millionaire woke celebrities. what an woke eco celebrities. what an embarrassing . these embarrassing shower. these hypocrites are preaching to us about climate change whilst they travel over the world on travel all over the world on private jets and super yachts. briefly, because greg's told me private jets and super yachts. br crack3ecause greg's told me private jets and super yachts. br crack on.|use greg's told me private jets and super yachts. br crack on. doe greg's told me private jets and super yachts. br crack on. do you g's told me private jets and super yachts. br crack on. do you nottold me private jets and super yachts. br crack on. do you not know1e private jets and super yachts. br crack on. do you not know who to crack on. do you not know who diana furstenberg is? says diana von furstenberg is? says margaret. she's a clothes designer and has a perfume line.
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jeez, you need to get out more often. well, you're right about that. often. well, you're right about that . and audrey says mark, she that. and audrey says mark, she designed the wrap dress. well, i'll wear one of those, i'll never wear one of those, let me tell thanks for let me tell you. thanks for that. keep those emails coming. margaret gbnews.com. it's time now with the queen now for us news with the queen of american showbiz royal and political kinsey political reporting. kinsey scale , sheffield kinsey , tell me scale, sheffield kinsey, tell me about prince harry and what the queen would have made of his behaviour in the last year. >> okay, but first, i'm going to tell you how much i missed you and how i'm glad you're back. oh, we missed you so much. so good to see your face. >> missed you massively to fit kinsey. >> thank you. thank you, sir. >> thank you. thank you, sir. >> this. this is new intel from gyles brandreth, who i've read just very recently . spent the just very recently. spent the day with the queen consort, camilla, doing a book event, doing a poetry event . this camilla, doing a book event, doing a poetry event. this is a man that has the access all of the access. and clearly , the the access. and clearly, the royal family feels comfortable with him. clearly clearly, he knows a few secrets. i don't
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knows a few secrets. i don't know if you remember, he wrote a beautiful book not only about the queen but about prince philip as well . and their philip as well. and their friendship . but he said that the friendship. but he said that the queen would be appalled by prince harry's book, that the queen wasn't necessarily worried about it because, you know , she about it because, you know, she just come to terms with the fact that harry was you know, he was going to he was insistent on telling his side of the story. she'd accepted that. but but, you know, he did say that now that he's seen the inside of it, he does believe that the queen would be appalled. and he also says prince william infuriated that some of that private information was shared in spare about fights between the brothers. but mostly upset over the fact that catherine, the princess of wales , was dragged princess of wales, was dragged in think think most of in it. i think i think most of us expected that as well. but william, repeating infamous william, repeating that infamous line recollections may vary, adding in this instance, they most definitely do privately , most definitely do privately, however, harry has been partying i >> -- >> tell me more .
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>> tell me more. >> tell me more. >> i mean, has he really, mark? he looked he looked quite sad . he looked he looked quite sad. prince harry doria, meghan and abigail spencer last night with a couple more friends. we're in a couple more friends. we're in a suite for doria's birthday at the beyonce concert in la . harry the beyonce concert in la. harry looked absolutely miserable and appeared to be wearing a women's blazer . some appeared to be wearing a women's blazer. some fans came to his defence as it was the day after his mother's passing, but but he also, mark might have been blue over the fact that heart of invictus has failed to crack netflix's top ten in the states . but seriously, just a glum look on his face. yeah >> i mean, what was your verdict on heart of invictus? i thought that the soldiers were very inspire ing. but there's something about harry now. he seems to sort put his name to seems to sort of put his name to something and adulterate it slightly . slightly. >> you know, you're absolutely right. the vets were compelling . i wish that's that was it. you know , i would be much more know, i would be much more excited about it if that was it. but you know, harry is obsessed with this victimhood narrative. and he's got to remind us every
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time we see him that bad things have happened to him and he's he's past. had it he's stuck in the past. had it not had we had any of that, not had we not had any of that, i would doing cartwheels over i would be doing cartwheels over hean i would be doing cartwheels over heart invictus. but heart of invictus. but unfortunately, you know, harry had some unnecessary comments. >> kevin costner mackenzie is one of the biggest stars in the world. he's been in so many very popular films, hasn't he? la confidential ? well, he's on confidential? well, he's on loads of westerns and that kind of stuff . i mean, just hit after of stuff. i mean, just hit after hit the bodyguard and he's a huge star, isn't he? but he's got he's got some personal problems, as i just was waiting. >> i was going to be i was going to cry if you didn't say the bodyguard, because that's my personal favourite. you've and i've talked about this before, uh, that prenup, has uh, that prenup, he has a prenup, tight prenup. and prenup, a very tight prenup. and what is a prenup with his ex? a prenup? is where you're. prenup? here is where you're. before you marry somebody, you sign something saying that you're walk away you're going to walk away with only or and you're only this or that, and you're only this or that, and you're only entitled to this or that. it's an agreement saying, i'm going to marry you, case
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going to marry you, but in case of divorce, accept the fact of divorce, i accept the fact that this is the only thing i walk from. so they did have walk away from. so they did have this very prenup. the this very tight prenup. the wife, ex wife contested that wife, his ex wife contested that prenup. so they had this lively showdown in court yesterday . it showdown in court yesterday. it was just visually insane , jane, was just visually insane, jane, to watch his ex broke down on the stand describing christmases when they would hire all the animals from the stable in bethlehem for the children to ride. as she tried to convince this judge that she needed over $250,000 a month in child support , kevin claimed she was support, kevin claimed she was just patting the bill with things like plastic surgery for herself. ultimately, a judge did side with kevin awarding his ex only about over $60,000 a month. but he's so sweet. marc. kevin spoke out after their courtroom showdown saying this is a horrible place to be. we're talking about somebody i love on the other side. so, you know, in the other side. so, you know, in the end, he does look like a sweet, sweet , good man. and she sweet, sweet, good man. and she kind of looks greedy . mark. kind of looks greedy. mark. >> yes. it's not a great look , >> yes. it's not a great look, is it?
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>> let's talk about politics finally in terms of not a good look. mitch mcconnell, a very senior republican , often has senior republican, often has trouble a press conference. trouble at a press conference. it's not only seemingly the president that's losing his marbles. take look. your marbles. take a look. your thoughts on running for re—election 2026. re—election in 2026. >> am i thoughts about what >> what am i thoughts about what running re—election in 2026? running for re—election in 2026? >> that's. did you hear the question, senator? >> running for re—election in 2026? yes . 2026? yes. >> now, kinsey, he's the minority leader of the united states senate . he's a republican states senate. he's a republican and he's not a well man. >> 81 years old. that's right, mark. mitch mcconnell, he's repeatedly struggled to speak in pubuc repeatedly struggled to speak in public recently. this isn't the first time this has happened. in fact, they're calling him mitch mcconnell over here. president biden political biden defended his political rival, it was part of rival, claiming it was part of his recovery from a recent concussion. obviously these incidents have started a valuable dialogue with americans
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on both sides of the aisle wanting congressional term limits. we've also got on the democrat side, senator dianne feinstein, nancy pelosi , i'm feinstein, nancy pelosi, i'm sure she was like 142 when she finally stepped down. but we've got a lot of elderly people over here, and we're not certain that they're able to actually function properly. >> america is a great country. it deserves better. kinsey, i missed you, too, and we'll see you in a week's time. >> thank you . >> thank you. >> thank you. >> the brilliant kinsey schofield. check out her excellent website to di for daily and her podcast of the same name. um. okay. well, tomorrow's front page is on the way. but first, here's your weather . weather. >> a brighter outlook with boxt solar are proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello there. good evening. i'm jonathan vautrey who is your gb news weather forecast provided by the met office have you managed to enjoy saturday? it will be ending on a relatively fine note for many of us. some late sunny spells to be
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had and generally lots of dry clear weather into the as clear weather into the night as well. for mist well. we'll allow for some mist and fog patches to develop into the early hours of sunday morning, extensively the early hours of sunday mo central extensively the early hours of sunday mo central eastern extensively the early hours of sunday mo central eastern e)ofnsively for central eastern areas of england . further towards the england. further towards the north, got of rain north, we've got band of rain pushing northern scotland. pushing into northern scotland. could at times the could be heavy at times for the isle of lewis and the northern isles, of will see isles, but most of us will see our holding up our temperatures holding up around as start off around 13, 14 c as we start off sunday so a fairly mild sunday morning. so a fairly mild start. we'll take a little bit of time for that mist and fog to clear, but eventually it will clear, but eventually it will clear way off and of us clear its way off and many of us will see a good amount of sunshine throughout the day, feeling really pleasantly warm in degree in that high of 26 degree celsius across celsius possible across southeastern england. southeastern areas of england. further though, further to the north, though, that be lingering that rain will be lingering across highlands the across the highlands up into the northern isles. being a much northern isles. so being a much fresher here and gales around coastal areas time as coastal areas for a time as well, high pressure will be hanging of the hanging on into the start of the new week. still though, new working week. still though, with lingering front across with that lingering front across the also the the far north and also the isobars together isobars squeezing together across so across the west country. so monday, a bit of a monday, generally a bit of a breezier day for parts of devon, cornwall, definitely some coastal elsewhere, coastal gusts, but elsewhere,
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winds relatively light winds will be relatively light inland be a decent inland and there'll be a decent amount of sunshine throughout much day. again, once much of the day. again, once that mist fog does that early mist and fog does clear we hold on to clear its way off, we hold on to some of that throughout some of that sunshine throughout the week, perhaps the rest of the week, perhaps a little bit more cloud developing more towards thursday, but that's our that's also where our temperatures climbing. temperatures will be climbing. the by by a brighter the highest by by a brighter outlook with boxt solar. >> proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. >> coming up, tomorrow's newspaper front pages and live reaction in the studio from tonight's top pundits . and tonight's top pundits. and they'll be nominating their headune they'll be nominating their headline heroes and back page zero's of the day papers on the way. see you
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listening to gb news radio show i >> -- >> well the subject of my big opinion was the rspb , the birds opinion was the rspb, the birds charity who have become very political this week with a tweet attacking the government on a personal level . personal level. >> marion has said tonight, i've cancelled my membership of the rspb as a charity. they have
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behaved disgaea gracefully on eco hypocrisy from celebrities like emma thompson. this from eddie who says mark name me someone that's not a hypocrite and i'll go out and say a prayer for him. and that's a quote from bob dylan. nicely put and thank you for that, eddie. jackie says, hi, mark. why does anyone give these hypocrites, celebrities the time of the day? stop listening and reporting on the they only the drivel they spew. they only do it for publicity. emma thompson. a legend? no, thompson. a living legend? no, a living. seeking living. attention seeking hypocrite worshipper . hypocrite money worshipper. you're not pulling your punches . it's you're not pulling your punches .wsfime you're not pulling your punches . it's time now for this. you're not pulling your punches . it's time now for this . yes, . it's time now for this. yes, it's . it's time now for this. yes, wsfime . it's time now for this. yes, it's time for the papers. we start with the independent, big money donors desert. the tories and switch to labour . a major and switch to labour. a major tory party donor has said he will open his wallet to labour in the run up to next election. the latest sign that support is ebbing away from the prime minister, mohammad amersi, who with his partner, has donated a
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three quarters of £1 million to the tories, revealed he would give money to labour politicians as he warned large parts of the uk were suffering from huge problems in including crime and joblessness as sunday telegraph now sunak defies net zero ban on new airports . rishi sunak will new airports. rishi sunak will face down the government's climate advisers over demands for ministers to halt the expansion of airports in one of the most significant moves yet of the prime minister's shift to approaching net zero in a proportionate and pragmatic way, the government will reject the climate change committee's formal advice that all airport expansion must be halted and sporting new kit to the games the king wears a new kind of tartan during his visit to the braemar royal highland gathering. let me say he's dressed very well there and i find our king to be a very elegant man. i've always thought, as prince of wales as well, that this guy knows how to wear a suit free nhs staff,
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teachers and police from red tape , says jeremy hunt, the tape, says jeremy hunt, the chancellor pupils face years of misery over concrete and can's ulez target will never achieve its aim that, according to the telegraph. now let's go to the observer. a whistleblower reveals culture of complacency on school safety and ukraine. general claims decisive breach of the russian line . also of the russian line. also mohamed al fayed turmoil that drove the ultimate outsider. he has died yesterday, 94 and we'll get a response dance to the passing of mohamed al fayed from david hamilton, my pundit tonight who who knew the man well? a sunday mirror now security secrets leaked mod hit by hackers . russia linked cyber by hackers. russia linked cyber criminals put details on the dark web military bases listening post and airfield targeted . the sunday times. targeted. the sunday times. wallace threatened us that he would cancel for order chinook
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helicopters . ben wallace, helicopters. ben wallace, outgoing defence secretary, was accused of causing a diplomatic incident with the americans after threatening to cancel an order of american made military helicopters intended for use by britain's special forces. he issued the warning directly to his counterpart in the pentagon in the pentagon months before an agreed position had been reached. asbestos fears in crumbling buildings , collapse of crumbling buildings, collapse of aerated concrete could release deadly fibres in schools, hospitals and offices. chill in line for phase £1.7 billion fortune and the bank staff who failed to swipe in for three days a week could lose bonuses . days a week could lose bonuses. sunday express charles taylor's cost of living pledge . i'll cost of living pledge. i'll halve inflation this year, says jeremy hunt and the daily star. sunday ricky hatton i was on 20 pints a day plus shorts and cocaine . meanwhile, woman who
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cocaine. meanwhile, woman who falls in love with roller coasters finds a new funfair. fella i found my mr ride , a fella i found my mr ride, a woman who's split from her roller coaster lover after being banned from the fun park has found romance again with another big dipper. congratulations to her. those are your front pages. let's get full reaction now from my top pundits this evening. i'm delighted to welcome the award winning comedian and broadcaster, actor, writer , broadcaster, actor, writer, impresario sir curci radio and television legend david hamilton, and political commentator, somebody that first came to my attention during the pandemic as a very brave and very articulate anti—lockdown student campaigner because stewart c young people were treated very badly during the pandemic. chloe dobbs well, she's lost none of her fire. and let me ask you , chloe, about let me ask you, chloe, about this story in the telegraph. rishi sunak defies net zero ban on new airports .
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rishi sunak defies net zero ban on new airports. his rishi sunak defies net zero ban on new airports . his message to on new airports. his message to the eco campaigners is build baby, build. your reaction. i'm not impressed with sunak on this , to be honest. >> we know that flying emits an obscene amount into the atmosphere and it makes an obscene amount for the economy . obscene amount for the economy. well, perhaps . but you know, we well, perhaps. but you know, we can focus more on staycations. we fly a lot already. do we really need to fly? but don't we want britain? >> i mean, i hear what you're saying about the environment. of course, that cannot be. i mean, the amount of emissions from planes is absolutely outrageous, which private jets are which is why private jets are such but a busy such a scandal. but a busy airport, lots of runways , that airport, lots of runways, that is a sign of a very functional economy a lot of economic economy of a lot of economic activity, people coming into the country doing business here, investing here. and surely that's essential given the nature of our finances at the moment . moment. >> it is essential, but we're not talking about shutting down all airports and stopping flying altogether, which some of the eco warriors may want. i'm not
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that extreme , but when it comes that extreme, but when it comes to achieving a our environmental goals, we need to look at what harms working britain in working people in britain the least. and things like the ulez expansion on that really harms people and makes a very small difference. whereas reducing flights even a little bit because they emit so much , which might make a big much, which might make a big difference, but do you want heathrow airport to be replaced by i don't know, jfk or lax or the main airports in dubai and singapore? >> i mean, we are in competition with other cities, other countries, aren't we? and, you know, i mean, i just wonder how many extra digits you'd get of economic growth if heathrow had that third runway. >> i'm not sure exactly what the figures are. it'd be interesting to some predictions as to to see some predictions as to what the economic impact of this will so that can compare will be so that we can compare it to the potential environmental gain and then go
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from there. need to know from there. we need to know more on this. from there. we need to know more on and look, i hear chloe >> and look, i hear what chloe is saying. >> suella, but i've got to say, particularly since the pandemic and smashing of our economy, and the smashing of our economy, i policies need to be i think all policies need to be economy first. now, i think the way that it's affecting everyday people , everything we do and people, everything we do and i've been saying this before, i always i always go down to the like, you know, who is it going to affect the most? >> and it is the ones with the least their pocket. and even least in their pocket. and even though i'm pro like, you know, let's make the atmosphere cleaner and ulez principle cleaner and ulez in principle i'm but it's how i'm agreeing with. but it's how it affects the pocket because it's jobs that the it's all the jobs that the airlines create . it's, as you airlines create. it's, as you say, the tourism industry, which i think has had a little bit of a knock as well. definitely. and we need that tourism to come in and sort of pay for a lot of what the expenses we've do. >> we want entrepreneurs to come into the country to do business here, make deals here, to here, to make deals here, to invest britain. invest in britain. >> and actually, can i just say
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alternative alternative like the other than flying, i tried in europe. i was like touring europe. i was like touring europe and i thought, well, i'm not going to fly. i'm going to take coaches. oh my god. it was the worst thing i ever did. i thought i'd died and had gone to hell, and these people were just like, you know, it was awful. i've never been anything so. but they need to improve they need to we need to improve those kind ways mode of those kind of ways of mode of transport. great that we've transport. it's great that we've got eurotunnel, eurostar, got the eurotunnel, eurostar, but that's really but even that's really expensive. flight sometimes expensive. so flight sometimes is maybe is the cheapest option. so maybe we look at making other we need to look at making other ways . going back to the i used ways. going back to the i used to go to france on a boat, leave the country by boat. but i do think overall it creates jobs. and think got to kind of and i think we've got to kind of be mindful of not like and shutting us down in the in the country. >> w- w— >> david's we've got four and against. your about against. what's your view about more runways and more airports, more runways and i think people who are wise now go from smaller airports and all the reports that i hear of the good airports and the ones to travel from in this country are the small ones like bournemouth
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and places like that. >> less hassle, more reliable. and, you know , avoid the and, you know, avoid the heathrow's and the gatwick's and the others. if you can. >> should we be curtailing air travel to save the planet? because my concern is that we can make these laudable steps and i understand where chloe is coming from, but china won't do that. coming from, but china won't do that . russia do that. that. russia won't do that. america do that. america won't do that. >> well, ours is just literally a drop in the ocean, isn't it? you the pollution that you know, the pollution that comes from country is comes from this country is nothing compared with the countries that you're talking about if they're not about. so if they're not prepared do anything, you prepared to do anything, you know, you could say, well , you know, you could say, well, you know, you could say, well, you know, why should we be? it's is a real problem, isn't it? i mean, it's the same thing with ulez, as you were saying. yeah. this this is how we operate. we drive cars. we need vans that deliver things. you know , that deliver things. you know, that sort of traffic has to come into capital cities . wonderful idea capital cities. wonderful idea that everybody goes around on a bicycle. but at the end of the day, not actually practical. well, you know, there is still
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to business be done. >> indeed . so, look, it's >> indeed. so, look, it's a debate that will no doubt rumble on asbest fears in crumbling buildings , say the sunday times. buildings, say the sunday times. chloe it's actually it was the lead story in all of yesterday's papers and it's in most of the front pages tomorrow as well. whistleblower reveals culture of complacency on school safety. it seems that this cheap concrete was very popular about 30 years ago. i'm hoping that they stop using it pretty sharpish , but using it pretty sharpish, but we're stuck with a devastating legacy . legacy. >> it is absolutely devastating and i think it is criminal how they have left this until right before schools go back on monday to announce that they're going to announce that they're going to be closed in schools, all of a sudden chucking kids back into online, learning back into uncertainty after years and years since 2020 of disruption, which you campaigned against. >> sorry, which you campaigned against, you know, school closures, you were a student
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dunng closures, you were a student during the pandemic when your education was curtailed. yes. >> was horrible . it's such a >> it was horrible. it's such a crucial time in your life, your education that determines your future significant degree . future to a significant degree. we can't be treating children like this. and i could sympathise with them if they literally only just found out that this concrete is dangerous. but that's not the case. they've known about the dangers of this for years and as we can see on the abc over whistleblower reveals culture of complacency on school safety. they knew about this for a long time, but they were more interested in saving money than resolving the problem. and now children have to price for government to pay the price for government incompetency. once again. >> why wasn't this done during the school holidays? >> why are the moment that the kids back school? kids are going back to school? you talk about doing now it's far, late, isn't it? far, far too late, isn't it? >> most certainly is. can we >> it most certainly is. can we talk about mohamed al fayed? he >> it most certainly is. can we talofibout mohamed al fayed? he >> it most certainly is. can we talof course,ohamed al fayed? he >> it most certainly is. can we talof course, the ned al fayed? he >> it most certainly is. can we talof course, the father fayed? he >> it most certainly is. can we talof course, the father of yed? he is, of course, the father of dodi fired who was killed in a car crash with princess diana in 1997. died at the age of 1997. he's died at the age of 94. former owner of harrods and
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former chairman and owner of fulham fc and of course , you fulham fc and of course, you were the chief announcer at fulham fc for many years. david so you was his man on the microphone, his man on the microphone. you knew him. you knew him quite well. i knew him very well. >> i used to introduce him to the crowd. was the only the crowd. he was the only football club know football club chairman i know who came out and did a lap of honour before the kick off. and he'd come out waving his black and and and white fulham scarf. and there we are. that's me chatting to him on the on the pitch side there. and he was was a great there. and he was he was a great character . and the crowd character. and the crowd absolutely loved him . and absolutely loved him. and there's nobody at fulham who would have a bad word to say about mohamed al fayed. i was actually sacked at one point by actually sacked at one point by a suit who said that i was not whipping up the crowd enough into 40. miss fulham and fired gave me back my job and he called me up to the boardroom at harrods and i went up there and he asked me what had happened to me and i explained to him, so
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and i said, i bought a couple of season tickets. so he gave me an envelope full of cash. so i said, bearing in mind the neil hamilton case that had happened before that, i said, i don't think i should take cash from you with a name like hamilton . you with a name like hamilton. so he said to me , hamilton, so he said to me, hamilton, hamilton . that was his favourite hamilton. that was his favourite word. he said , why am word. he said, why am i employing somebody called hamilton? i said, you know, i've got the sack. he said, i want you back tomorrow. and he said, here's your here's your rise. and take these . and he gave me and take these. and he gave me a box of fire grip pills, which obviously he thought was going to stiffen up the back for me . to stiffen up the back for me. >> i certainly did. to stiffen up the back for me. >> i certainly did . apologies if >> i certainly did. apologies if there are any children watching these these tv and radio legends are very hard to control . are very hard to control. listen, we've got lots more to come. more newspaper front pages and live reaction in the studio from tonight's top. very naughty pundit. plus, you won't want to miss this . they'll be nominating miss this. they'll be nominating their headline heroes back their headline heroes and back page zeroes of the day. who's
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next let' s next let's catch up on your all important emails. let's catch up on your all important emails . market important emails. market cbnnews.com. hi mark. the current effort of achieving net zero co2 levels by 2050 is vacuous. it's completely useless to impose financial obligations to impose financial obligations to businesses and people to force them to make changes to their current functions. why? because in 27 years, the energy production and use will be totally different from that of today. in regards to airports. should we build more airports ? should we build more airports? as steve says, mark, don't worry too much about airports. we'll be closing all regional airports, leaving heathrow, glasgow and belfast. maybe not policy yet, but it's in the mix. kevin . mark 95% of the kevin. mark 95% of the population don't give a about the climate. wake up . we just the climate. wake up. we just want to live our lives . cause want to live our lives. cause that's from kevin and last but
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not least, peter says hi mark. how do airports contribute to national wealth? i'm struggling to think of anything. peter thank you for that. keep those emails coming. mark at gbnews.com let's have a look now at the mail on sunday. hot off the press and we have this headune the press and we have this headline tesco boss, our staff need body cameras to end attacks. the head of the country's biggest supermarket chain tells the mail on sunday of a drastic move to tackle crime epidemic sweeping , broken crime epidemic sweeping, broken britain, a devastating story and an important piece of journalism . now another story floating around . marriage is about two around. marriage is about two people coming together to declare their love. well, it used to be weddings are costing couples thousands of pounds. and now the proposals are to men are hiring proposal planners costing up to £5,000. whatever happens to getting on one knee and saying, will you marry me? so
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have we lost the art of proposing? who do i ask first? well you're happily married, of course, with mrs. hamilton at home. >> well, years ago i used to propose to a lot of people, and it was back to my job at fulham. no back to my job at fulham. where at half time, very often, people would ask me to read out a wedding proposal. oh, that's wonderful . and then about five wonderful. and then about five minutes later, i'd get a reply saying yes . usually they said saying yes. usually they said yes. and the crowd would always sing. you don't know what you're doing. >> that's just brilliant. >> that's just brilliant. >> which is normally a line reserved for the manager. but now it's for the for the for the young man. >> every time you could guarantee they would you guarantee they would sing, you don't know. guarantee they would sing, you doryou1ow. wonderful irony, >> you just wonderful irony, isn't >> you just wonderful irony, isn'and the humour of these >> and the humour of these football crowds is unparalleled isn't it? the wit . isn't it? the wit. >> they had a great song about fayyad, fayed. whoa fayyad, which is al fayed. whoa al fayed whoa . he wants to be al fayed whoa. he wants to be a brit and qpr. thank you very much. >> that's brilliant .
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>> that's brilliant. >> that's brilliant. >> i just love it. i can't get enough of it. nothing irritates me more than asking crowds to let behave themselves and be censored from, you know, sort of raucous language. surely singing songs exactly. being songs. well, exactly. and being i mean, of course, you know, you don't want to have anything nasty, it's delilah. nasty, nasty, but it's delilah. it's that the point of a football match. you go there and you've a hard week and you you've had a hard week and you have of beers you have a couple of beers and you vent a little bit vent your spleen a little bit and that's what this and hopefully that's what this show about yes what show is about as well. yes what do you think about proposals you've proposed least once? >>i once? >> ihave once? >> i have been proposed more than once, actually. did i say i only said you've only said yes once and said once. yes. once and you said once. yes. once. but was amazed once. yes but no. i was amazed that there's some guy who basically £5,000 to go and basically spent £5,000 to go and got private boat to propose. got a private boat to propose. may you need spend £5,000 may if you need to spend £5,000 to like, you know , propose to like, you know, propose because you haven't got the imagination to think of something romantic to do yourself, then you're not an aduu yourself, then you're not an adult and you deserve to adult and you don't deserve to get stop don't get get married. stop don't get married. if you need to spend £5,000, be like, spend that £5,000, i'd be like, spend that on ring. add that to the on the ring. add that to the
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ring ring. ring on the ring. >> a ring on says st >> put a ring on it, says st giles' akashi. and of course, it doesn't have to be the guy proposing, it? chloe proposing, does it? chloe >> doesn't have be, but >> it doesn't have to be, but either way, i think that these super expensive are super expensive proposals are ridiculous. the ridiculous. i mean, it takes the magic away. just completely magic away. it just completely commercialises but also, commercialises it. but also, i cannot think of anything more horrible than to be in a situation where a guy asks me in front of loads of people and after spending thousands of thousands of pounds and maybe i don't actually want to say yes, how do you say no in that scenario, if you're not quite ready, they've popped the question a bit too early, but they've spent all this money. what supposed to do? what are you supposed to do? especially crowd? especially when there's a crowd? i you people would do i mean, you said people would do it at fulham. ipp very difficult to say no in a crowd. >> i think maybe worse. >> i think maybe it's worse. >> i think maybe it's worse. >> maybe it's probably >> i think maybe it's probably the most crushingly embarrassing answer. now to answer. well, let's get now to our and back our headline heroes and back page heroes of the day. so who's your headline hero today? >> muhammad al fayed. he's >> it's muhammad al fayed. he's a migrant that came here and did well, ran the biggest corner
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shopin well, ran the biggest corner shop in the world, which i worked in when i was a student. you worked in harrods? yeah, in the perfumery department. >> is it the greatest shop in the world? >> oh, my god, it is. and i love it. and so does my son. and for years he said, is my real dad. al fayed. because then i get to inherit harrods, which is terrible thing to say, right? oh, yeah. terrible thing to say, right? oh,and1. terrible thing to say, right? oh,and by way, family, >> and by the way, the family, i mean, it's very sad that he's passed the very passed away, but the very handsome family, think there's passed away, but the very hanc5)me family, think there's passed away, but the very hanc5 kids,amily, think there's passed away, but the very hanc5 kids, they'll think there's passed away, but the very hanc5 kids, they'll be. nk there's 4 or 5 kids, they'll be. >> it's for kids. no, it's not. it's three. they'll be sharing £1.7 billion. it's three. they'll be sharing £1.7billion? it's a very nice >> billion? it's a very nice man. very, very nice. very controversial. >> 7 billion. and i hope there's a film of him, because i a film made of him, because i think story, to riches, think his story, rags to riches, is incredible. >> on a egyptian >> and i worked on a egyptian perfumery bit for his perfume that he was friend. and it was very, very nice. so. >> so you met him and he was he was nice to you? >> yeah, it was nice to be on the shop floor. yeah. >> there you go. >> there you go. >> well, there you go. may he rest in peace. how about your rest in peace. so how about your headune rest in peace. so how about your headline here? >> got mohamed al fayed >> yes, i got mohamed al fayed as well. know, i totally
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as well. and you know, i totally agree. an enormous amount agree. he did an enormous amount for charity. and as far as fulham football club is concerned, the team concerned, which is the team that supported many that i've supported for many years, wasn't for al fayed years, if it wasn't for al fayed be sure of this, that would be a block of flats today that wouldn't be there . so thanks wouldn't be there. so thanks to him, still have that him, we still have that wonderful picturesque football ground on banks of the ground on the banks of the thames. and i hope that the next home match, which is saturday week luton town, there will week luton town, that there will be most thunderous applause be the most thunderous applause for mohamed al fayed. >> i've got no doubt that there will be. chloe, your headline hero. >> so my headline hero is jaden, who is a 12 year old boy from a school in colorado who's gone viral this week after he refused to take a don't tread on me patch or gadsden flag patch. otherwise known as off his backpack at school. and there's a video that went viral where his parents were called in after they banned him from attending class, saying that the flag had links to slavery and that it was too dangerous to have it in front of other kids, which was historically wrong. >> the school were wrong to
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criticise the flag. >> the school there complaint was wrong about the flag. yes i think that they just didn't like was wrong about the flag. yes i thiniheiat they just didn't like was wrong about the flag. yes i thinihe had1ey just didn't like was wrong about the flag. yes i thinihe had ay just didn't like was wrong about the flag. yes i thinihe had a more didn't like was wrong about the flag. yes i thinihe had a more rightt like was wrong about the flag. yes i thinihe had a more right wing that he had a more right wing flag than their woke agenda and he stood his ground even though his school were threatening to stop him from having an education. this is a kid who was getting straight a's, not a troublemaker. disgusting stood his ground. it went viral. he's been shapiro, charlie been on ben shapiro, charlie kirk and we need more fighters. there you go. in school, i've only got time for the names now. >> back page zero. >> back page zero. >> park conservative in >> so park conservative club in cardiff to hold cardiff are refusing to hold a christening party for child christening party for a child from an traveller family. from an irish traveller family. there you go. from an irish traveller family. thethat's go. from an irish traveller family. thethat's bad. the air >> that's bad. the air controllers who their computer crashed air traffic for most people's holidays every couple of seconds. >> gillian keegan and the department for education for the disaster that we've already spoken , that is the spoken about, that is the aerated concrete in schools. >> love my pundits . tonight on >> love my pundits. tonight on tomorrow's show, neil parish , tomorrow's show, neil parish, annunziata and sir annunziata rees—mogg and sir jeffrey clifton—brown brown and widdecombe headline is next.
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>> the temperature's rising boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. on. gb news. >> hello there. good evening. i'm jonathan vautrey. who is your gb news weather forecast provided by the met office. have you managed to enjoy saturday? it will be ending on a relatively fine note for many of us. late sunny spells to be us. some late sunny spells to be had and generally a lot of dry clear weather into the night as well . we'll allow for some mist well. we'll allow for some mist and fog patches develop into well. we'll allow for some mist andearlyyatches develop into well. we'll allow for some mist andearlyyatchesof develop into well. we'll allow for some mist andearlyyatchesof sundayp into the early hours of sunday morning. extensive morning. though most extensive for areas of for central eastern areas of england, further towards the north, got a band of rain north, we've got a band of rain pushing into scotland. pushing into northern scotland. could at times could be heavy at times for the isle of and the northern isle of lewis and the northern isles, most of will see isles, but most of us will see our temperatures holding up around as we start off around 1314 c as we start off sunday morning. fairly mild sunday morning. so a fairly mild start. we'll take a little bit of time that and to of time for that mist and fog to clear, but eventually it will clear, but eventually it will clear off and of us clear its way off and many of us will see a good amount of sunshine throughout the day, feeling really pleasantly warm in 26 degree in that high of 26 degree celsius possible across southeastern england.
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southeastern areas of england. further though, further to the north, though, that lingering that rain will be lingering across highlands the across the highlands up into the northern being a much northern isles. so being a much fresher around fresher here and gales around coastal time as coastal areas for a time as well, high pressure will be hanging on into the start of the new working week. still, though, with front across with that lingering front across the also the the far north and also the isobars together isobars squeezing together across so across the west country. so monday, bit a monday, generally a bit of a breezier parts of devon. breezier day for parts of devon. cornwall, definitely some coastal elsewhere, coastal gusts, but elsewhere, winds will be relatively light inland and there'll be a decent amount of sunshine throughout inland and there'll be a decent amount ithejnshine throughout inland and there'll be a decent amount
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gb news. >> good evening to you. it's 11:00. i'm aaron armstrong in the newsroom. at. two men have been arrested in northern ireland by officers investigating a major breach of data from the police. the suspects , aged 21 and 22, were suspects, aged 21 and 22, were detained under the terrorism act following a search in the portadown area in county armagh. the arrests are linked to last month's freedom of information data breach when the names of around 10,000 officers and civilian staff were mistakenly revealed online. the psni have confirmed the arrests relate to the possession of the data and how it's been distributed rather than the breach itself . than the breach itself. ministers are facing calls for transparency over the scale of aerated concrete in public buildings with the condition of some, including hospitals, being described as jaw dropping. writing in the times, the chair of the commons public accounts committee, dame meg hillier, has
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