Skip to main content

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

5:00 am
the country. gb news leaving the country. gb news understands that khalifa escaped by clinging to the underside side of a delivery truck leaving wandsworth prison . prison wandsworth prison. prison authorities, we understand , were authorities, we understand, were alerted within minutes of his disappearance . disappearance. >> questions remain, however, about why khalifa was being held in a category b prison in wandsworth, rather than a high security facility. the shadow justice secretary, shabana mahmood, says the government's lost control of the justice system is. >> i think the government has very serious questions to answer. we know that the criminal justice system, after 13 years of tory government is in a state of disrepair where we know that there are huge problems with prisons and prison places in particular there. and as we've seen, there is now a terror suspect on the loose, having escaped from wandsworth prison so big questions for the government to answer. frankly, rishi sunak needs to get a grip, sir keir starmer's claimed
5:01 am
cowboys are running the country as he criticised rishi sunaks handung as he criticised rishi sunaks handling of the school's concrete crisis . concrete crisis. >> earlier, he visited one of the many schools which have been ordered to close fully or partially during prime minister's questions. the labour leader accused the government of cutting corners and carrying out botched jobs . but the prime botched jobs. but the prime minister responded by saying the government has acted decisively in the face of new information . in the face of new information. the us secretary of state has announced a new package of aid for ukraine worth more than $1 billion or £800 million. it comes on the day 17 people died and dozens more were injured by and dozens more were injured by a russian missile strike in the east of the country. the attack hit a busy market in the city of kostiantynivka in the donetsk region near the front lines. hours earlier, anthony blinken paid a surprise visit to kyiv to reaffirm us support for ukraine, the largest electric vehicle sites in the uk. electric vehicle charging site in the uk. i should say, will be opened in birmingham tomorrow . the giga
5:02 am
birmingham tomorrow. the giga hub based at the nec campus, will have 180 charging points , will have 180 charging points, including 30 super fast bays. the number of public chargers has more than tripled in the last four years to more than 45,000 by last month. that's according to the treasury . the according to the treasury. the rolling stones have announced their first album in nearly two decades. mick jagger says hackney diamonds will be released on the 20th of october. it will feature guest performances from lady gaga, stevie wonder and bill wyman, the former stones bass player. the surviving trio during the press conference paid tribute to the band's longtime drummer, charlie watts , who died two charlie watts, who died two years ago. his final tracks recorded with the band, will also be on the album this is gb news across the uk, on tv, on digital radio and on your smart speaker too. now it's time for headliners .
5:03 am
headliners. hello and welcome to headliners. hello and welcome to headliners . headliners. >> i'm josh howie. >> i'm josh howie. >> and joining me to lay down some home truths about thursday's newspaper stories is menopausal comedian louis shaffer and making a welcome return, even though his hair makes me very jealous. >> darius davis is. >> darius davis is. >> how are you doing? >> how are you doing? >> good, thanks. >> good, thanks. >> you i am. why not if i >> you know i am. why not if i am menopausal? >> well, i meant more that your audience menopause . audience is menopause. >> oh, okay. >> oh, okay. >> i'll take what i can get in terms of audiences. >> yeah, well, that's absolutely. >> look, mate, you've got an audience. just. audience. i'm just. >> jealous of >> that's me being jealous of you, essentially. >> what's your audience, darius? have got audience? have you got an audience? menopausal he's talking menopausal too. so he's talking about your mum? basically, yeah. my about your mum? basically, yeah. my right well, my mum. fair enough. right well, look, let's go straight into the front we are to front pages then. we are to going have the daily mail terrorist suspect flees, jailed , strapped under delivery. van telegraph terror suspect escapes jail under lorry. both going with two very different
5:04 am
narratives there. lorry or delivery van guardian undercover police officer deceived woman into 19 year relationship express pm. i'll make uk best place in the world to do business. no you won't i news mortgage relief on way hints bank chief and finally the daily star. it's a bit hot and those were your front pages . now were your front pages. now kicking off an in—depth look into those front pages with the daily mail . daily mail. >> louis yeah, i mean , i don't >> louis yeah, i mean, i don't know which one is more important. terrorist suspect flees jail strapped under delivery van or whether the rolling stones are i don't even know if they'll they'll even be delivered. >> well, that's what i'm saying. look, iranian spies are always escaping. yeah, it's just one of those things that happen . those things that happen. rolling stone is putting out a new album. there's only a handful of those, surely was was this an iranian spy? yes, he was. >> listen, all i've got to say on this is that danny kaye , as
5:05 am
on this is that danny kaye, as i call him, is a good guy. >> he's a nice guy, and he's because he's one of daniel. >> listen, he's not staying with me. true. me. that's not true. >> wherever he is. oh yeah. kelly, are you sure ? i'm just kelly, are you sure? i'm just looking the photo there that looking at the photo there that could. from another could. that's from another newspaper that be you . newspaper. that could be you. have you got a wig on or something? >> is a cool guy. >> and. yeah you think you know, the biggest, the biggest shock that's going to come from is when he goes to try and collect his money from the iranian government. they like pizza, government. and they like pizza, bread and got bread and stuff and he's got no money. not going bread and stuff and he's got no m> he put a fake bomb in a military installation. >> so is that worthy of getting any any kind of i mean, look, he's obviously not, you know, like a leading candidate from the iranian spy school. >> you know, they send those to israel and america, the best ones. israel and america, the best ones . the best ones. zero seven, ones. the best ones. zero seven, iranian zero seven goes to those countries. yeah, they don't end up in wandsworth. yeah. one's worth prison. the best. the
5:06 am
reason you're getting the runt of the litter. but to be fair, they must be pretty happy with him. he, you know, he did some sort bond stuff. he sort of james bond stuff. he escaped on a lorry. that's pretty cool. >> think i think british >> well, i think i think british people movies that, people love escape movies that, you know, the classic escape movies are always british movies , 65, movies are always british movies , as, you know, the great ones . , as, you know, the great ones. >> and the great escape was one. and i think it was that the plot, is it? yes. escape from a prison thing. and then there's another one of escape from colditz . and you know, these are colditz. and you know, these are these are escape movies, i think, because british people, they the idea of you they like the idea of like, you know sneaking from somebody. >> but what when >> but what about when our enemies away from us? enemies sneak away from us? >> this is that's why this is news. >> jamal bond. >> jamal bond. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> well, makes a difference , you >> well, makes a difference, you know, not letting an iranian leave the country as opposed to letting them just come in. >> oh, hello. hello hang on. very good. on that note, what does the telegraph go with in darius? well, telegraph lead with a picture of a very handsome man , but it's the same
5:07 am
handsome man, but it's the same guy from the other story. are you sure he's iranian? because he seems to have two eyebrows. yeah. that is. yeah. no that was. that is. maybe a mix . that's how maybe he's a mix. that's how good a spy is. he plucks in good a spy he is. he plucks in the middle. he's dedicating himself they the middle. he's dedicating himslead they the middle. he's dedicating himslead with they the middle. he's dedicating himslead with that they the middle. he's dedicating himslead with that story. ey the middle. he's dedicating himslead with that story. but also lead with that story. but interestingly, there's two other stories page. one stories on their front page. one of a climate change of them is a climate change expert as overhyped. his findings, which i, for one, am shocked that a man being funded to do a report on climate change comes up with the findings they want and also they lead with another story where that great ormond street have said that you're not allowed their staff aren't allowed to use gendered language, so you can't say boys or girls in great ormond street. now, what you're seeing, we've seen various incarnations of that story, but this climate change one is interesting . change one is interesting. there's climate scientist. yeah this is what a lot of people suspected. this is him getting, i believe, a thing about the wildfires that article about the wildfires that article about the wildfires into nature . and he wildfires into nature. and he basically says, look, to get it into it, i deliberately
5:08 am
basically said it was only about climate change as opposed to what have been these other proven factors which are people setting off the fires and also bad forestry management. >> makes thing so >> yeah, it makes this thing so funny actually admitting funny is he's actually admitting that he kind of lied to get the thing into nature, which is i think the largest science magazine in the science publication in the entire world. i think i've read that. i don't know whether that's true, but i have read that certainly if they pubush have read that certainly if they publish it, you can't tell if it's if so, he's it's true. yeah. so if so, he's basically giving a two fingers up to nature magazine because then nature, he's basically throwing nature under the bus bit. >> well, basically they stopped his funding. so now he's like, well, now i'm going to tell the truth until someone pays me different. oh, is that what it is? that's my reading of is? yeah, that's my reading of it. he's going the big oil. it. he's going for the big oil. yeah he's like, hire yeah he's like, come on, hire me. yeah he's like, come on, hire me and truth is, the truth >> and the truth is, the truth is, are beginning to is, people are beginning to realise mean, maybe the realise that. i mean, maybe the climate isn't the thing. just like covid is not a thing. climate change is. i have to
5:09 am
say, it's not that climate change isn't a thing, but it's the impact, as he says here, it's the narrative. >> possibility of >> there's no possibility of providing any kind of counter narrative or or even more so narrative or or or even more so it seems to be what he's saying is they are constantly pushing the excessive narrative . the most excessive narrative. that's what they seem to be. >> they're lying. well, >> yeah, they're lying. well, because if there are other if there are sorry, if there are other reasons why why climate, why, why these fires are happening, not just climate change and you don't include them. that's a lie by omission. nature is lying. we're being lied to every day. we're being lied to every day. we're being lied to every day. we're being lied to by these public actions, by the main. >> the only person telling us the truth is lewis schaefer. >> yes. >> yes. >> i mean, if telling us his truth, it's not just truth. truth, it's not just his truth. >> here's a guy who >> if here's a guy who is accused nature lying, the accused nature of lying, the pubucin accused nature of lying, the public in nature, they lie because he he he knew he could not put in that that these wildfires were set by individuals or because the forests were not being tended properly. >> but , properly. >> but, darius, that doesn't mean, of course, that everybody
5:10 am
is lying, that every climate change scientist has lied for the last 40 years. the problem is the same, similar with covid like obviously it existed and obviously climate change is happening. but when you deliberately withhold certain information, people start getting sceptical and when they're getting lectured to by celebs flying over on a private jet saying, hey, you're the problem when you can barely afford to, you know, you walk everywhere you can't everywhere because you can't even transport. even afford public transport. and saying, no, you're even afford public transport. andone saying, no, you're even afford public transport. andone who'sying, no, you're even afford public transport. andone who's causing. you're the one who's causing all the climate change. no climate change. it's like no one's thought we see it for what it we for what it is. it is. we see it for what it is. this is what i think. only this is what i think. if only there kind of, i don't there was some kind of, i don't know, media where know, news media outlet where maybe we could just openly talk about and see where about this stuff and see where it us. know. we'll it takes us. i don't know. we'll stick with me. moving the stick with me. moving on to the guardian, lewis the guardian. >> okay. the guardian. i mean, this is one of the most amazing stories that it's on the front page of the of the guardian. i mean, you'll have to read it because it's so detailed. >> the telling people by the guardian. >> i'm actually telling them because this this is this is
5:11 am
going a movie. this the going to be a movie. this is the mystery of martin guerre. do you remember yeah, yeah, remember that movie? yeah, yeah, yeah. of yeah. okay. the mystery of martin guerre, obviously one of the great escape movies, one of the great escape movies, one of the never, heard of it, the never, never heard of it, which an undercover police which was an undercover police officer deceived a woman into a 19 he was an 19 year relationship. he was an undercover cop. he had a fake name. told people he wasn't name. he told people he wasn't he told this woman was a businesswoman. he a businesswoman. he was a businessman. woman businessman. he lied to a woman in be with her. he was in order to be with her. he was with her for 19 years, have a kid. they have a kid. and he adopted her kid. so he a step kid . right. adopted her kid. so he a step kid. right. and he adopted her kid. so he a step kid . right. and he wanted to kid. right. and he wanted to marry her after like 16 years of being together. he was so in love with her. but she was not happy. but the point is . happy. but the point is. >> so you're blaming her? >> so you're blaming her? >> i'm blaming her. it's like the same way all women think >> i'm blaming her. it's like the men way all women think >> i'm blaming her. it's like the men liey all women think >> i'm blaming her. it's like the men lie to ll women think >> i'm blaming her. it's like the men lie to them.|en think >> i'm blaming her. it's like the men lie to them. the:hink >> i'm blaming her. it's like the men lie to them. the mother that men lie to them. the mother of used to say of my children, she used to say to louis, you're not the to me, louis, you're not the same man i met in new york. she would say this to me. and. and i would say this to me. and. and i would say, not york. would say, i'm not in new york. i'm i'm like, i'm i'm in peckham. i'm like, i'm like a shark bottom of a like a shark on the bottom of a boat. >> so she lied to you about. she was like, pecos. like new
5:12 am
york? >> yeah. she said, no, she lied to me. she told me i was going to me. she told me i was going to be big star in this. to be a big star in this. >> well, it right. but >> well, she got it right. but only of 20 years later. oh, only sort of 20 years later. oh, you think? i mean, what do you think this, and think about this, darius? and also, i also, there's information, i think, actually think, that the iopc actually knew this. she didn't knew about this. she didn't know, about seven know, but they knew about seven years ago and didn't her. years ago and didn't tell her. well genuinely well this this is genuinely a crazy story. obviously, my initial reaction is officer deceived woman into a 19 year relationship. that's just a normal relations ship. but but it's so like like lewis said, it's so like like lewis said, it's so like like lewis said, it's so in—depth. it's like, you know, it's a five pages long. but she was happy with it until and she didn't know it was happening. then the police told her he was undercover , finally, her he was undercover, finally, finally. but she didn't have a clue and he'd already left the police, so there was no need for them to rat them out. it was like it was like being found out. you've been cheating on facebook like two years after the like, let the fact. like, give up, let me be. so? years is be. you think so? two years is your limit. is it? yeah. >> don't know. i just think >> i don't know. i just think this guy's committed the role i
5:13 am
>> -- >> he's. he's. he's settled for 19 years. he's had a kid with you. what more do you want? he 19 years. he's had a kid with yoa what more do you want? he 19 years. he's had a kid with yoa realit more do you want? he 19 years. he's had a kid with yoa real methodio you want? he 19 years. he's had a kid with yoa real method actor. want? he 19 years. he's had a kid with yoa real method actor. he'st? he is a real method actor. he's taken it the full, the full. >> but can i tell what the >> but can i tell you what the real story probably is? because there's real story . there's always a real story. because all stories are because all these stories are a bunch of. >> w- w— bunch of. >> real story is what >> well, the real story is what was she she was? was where did she think she was? what he working on? what was he working on? >> the real story is catching. she's some money she's thinking, i got some money out i got out of this. i just got to pretend that i don't like the guy angry at. the guy? guy that i'm angry at. the guy? >> unlike your ex—wife, right. finally, have the finally, we're going to have the daily star, darius daily. daily star, darius the daily. the daily star reports its the daily star reports with its a it's a picture of a bit hot and it's a picture of a bit hot and it's a picture of a donkey sunglasses licking a donkey in sunglasses licking an ice cream. someone's going overboard on the old photoshop. although interestingly, tesco have got a deal on magnums three for £3.25. but using clubcard, £2, that's just, that's just that's just a bargain. that's that's just a bargain. that's that's some good product placement there isn't it . they placement there isn't it. they pay, placement there isn't it. they pay, they that money there. pay, they pay that money there. tesco me and a magnum is 249 tesco pay me and a magnum is 249 calories and i think it's about about 25g of carbs but it has been particularly hot. it has
5:14 am
been particularly hot. it has been a hot day. it has been a hot day. >> are we blaming climate change for that? >> no, we're blaming nature magazine. yeah. okay, then. right that's the front pages. give it a good seeing to come back and join us in a second for the it's rejoining the eu . the uk, it's rejoining the eu. yes. joking or am i? see you there
5:15 am
5:16 am
5:17 am
news radio. >> welcome back to headliners . >> welcome back to headliners. i'm josh howie. my job is to take you through thursday's newspapers . this is take you through thursday's newspapers. this is louis schaefer . newspapers. this is louis schaefer. his job newspapers. this is louis schaefer. hisjob is newspapers. this is louis schaefer. his job is to stop me . and this is darius davis , and . and this is darius davis, and he is here to bring in the under 50s. yeah, first up is an easy one from the times for you, louis as well. trans or not to trans. >> that is the question. according to the times rishi sunak set to drop legal plans to bar transitioning in schools. so schools are for the young people and well done . and well done. >> thank you for that first step
5:18 am
in the story. >> but it's not trans. it's not trans. the no one's trans auditioning. they're not having any surgery there, but they're socially transitioning socially. so they're saying is it okay for kids to come out at school when they're 15 or 10 or whatever age they're 15 or 10 or whatever age they are, primary school, they're talking about primary school and to and to and to be to the be what they whatever they're born one thing and they're born one thing and they're going to be another thing basically to pretend that they're and they're the opposite sex and they're the opposite sex and they pass some they were going to pass some sort law said to them sort of law that said to them that kids couldn't that that kids couldn't transition unless they there was psychiatric or whatever it psychiatric help or whatever it was. but listen, finish ? was. but listen, can i finish? okay. yeah, can you start? okay. yeah, but can you start? but been pressure within okay. yeah, but can you start? but rishi been pressure within okay. yeah, but can you start? but rishi sunak] pressure within okay. yeah, but can you start? but rishi sunak organisation.hin the rishi sunak organisation. it's the government it's called the government governance . like government not governance. like government not to go ahead with this because it reminds too much, too many, too many of what happened. many people of what happened. margaret thatcher and section 28. that time, 28. i wasn't here at that time, but a lot of pushback . it but it got a lot of pushback. it got a lot of pushback. yeah. >> you're you come this >> you're you come to this country was stopped. it country was what stopped. it
5:19 am
wasn't it? yeah. well i mean this is it's a very interesting story. they've been talking about obviously about this, but obviously there's confusion there's massive confusion because if a child transitions at home, first of all, what was happening was that children were going in and transitioning at school, socially transitioning , school, socially transitioning, where they said, suddenly, you can bob and whatever. can call me bob and whatever. and the school weren't telling the parents. so that is not what we're talking about here. that's still out. but they're saying with the parents permission in this schools do have to go along with it. what they haven't fully tied it seems to be, is tied down, it seems to be, is this compelled speech, this idea of compelled speech, because along because if a child comes along and says , actually, i'm they and says, actually, i'm they them. and then there's a teacher who who doesn't believe that who who doesn't believe in that because essentially because it's essentially a religion. it's an ideology . do religion. it's an ideology. do they then have to go along with it will their job be it or will their job be threatened that's not threatened and that's what's not particularly tied down particularly been tied down here. yeah. and makes it much more confusing. >> this keegan woman, who was >> so this keegan woman, who was the woman who cursed the other day, who's head of the department of education, whatever is, education whatever it is, education for now, she she said that the
5:20 am
now, she said she said that the state they wanted to let state they they wanted to let the kids do what they want to do because they didn't want to be seen to the wrong side of seen to be on the wrong side of history, basic . only history, which is basic. only them saying given up them saying we've given up transitioning is coming. there's no stopping it. >> well, no, the point is there is something stopping it. this is something stopping it. this is an ideology and the danger is that by by encouraging this and also you're having like these schools who are being taught that there's 100 different genders and pushing through this ideology as they get confused, they want go on the they then want to go on the hormones then they are on hormones and then they are on the path to medical transition and their lives essentially are can be destroyed from can be really destroyed from that point because a lot of them then detransition and later on. >> yes, but that's not it's going on the path. >> yeah but this is that's like saying oh you know give them allow them to have like chocolate or whatever chocolate cigarettes or whatever it because they're not cool. it is because they're not cool. i them was a kid and i had them when i was a kid and i had them when i was a kid and i don't but do think, i don't smoke, but i do think, you know what, i think the way to this now to kind of get around this now is, you say, it's kind of
5:21 am
is, like you say, it's kind of like an ideology or religion. i think separate think we should just separate like should be the this is like there should be the this is an school. if you want an lgbtq+ school. if you want to adhere that, can send adhere to that, you can send your there. this your kids there. and this is like regular school. so like normal, regular school. so it's like, you know, you've got jewish schools, you've got catholic schools and you've got muslim you you can muslim schools and you you can choose send your choose where you send your children and can to children and you can choose to be. unfortunately, some people don't option. is don't have that option. this is an interesting we've got an interesting idea. we've got to on. just want to move on. i just want to say that i am fully aware that the chocolate analogy was chocolate cigarette analogy was properly . what's properly rubbish. okay, what's this ? in thursday's times, this? in thursday's times, danus this? in thursday's times, darius seems like the uk are once again trendsetters . yeah, once again trendsetters. yeah, that's right. the eu members seek uk reward model to fix the asylum crisis. so so 1 million migrants are expected to arrive in europe this year. and there's some pushback within the within the eu , surprisingly enough , the eu, surprisingly enough, classic austria broke ranks and demanded that the eu follows the controversial british model of processing claims in rwanda . processing claims in rwanda.
5:22 am
when the birthplace of hitler was a shock . when they're was a shock. when they're backing out. okay. hey, england . england have got it right. but also denmark, poland and the netherlands and denmark. actually, had a similar actually, they had a similar kind of deal with like britain had.so kind of deal with like britain had. so they could actually could implement but they could implement it, but they they retracted it. they went through after the elections. they retracted that . they they retracted that. they rewound the plan. yeah. they got scared. so they pulled up on it. but it's becoming a very divisive issue now. so like poland and netherlands are now, you know, campaigning on this in their upcoming elections. most of immigrants are from of the immigrants are from afghanistan and syria that are that are arriving in europe . so, that are arriving in europe. so, i mean, if i was polish, i could understand like, hey, we didn't invade those countries. why are they coming to our country? and you bringing here? you know, bringing it in here? so, it's going to be so, i mean, it's going to be it's basically people are, you know, where know, like you said, where britain treads others follows. so have turned. so how the tables have turned. well, other thing, louis, is well, the other thing, louis, is that mean, it every that i mean, we see it every night the news cover night on the news and we cover it here, certainly about people coming boats. but coming over on the boats. but when look at the numbers
5:23 am
when you look at the numbers that seem going that we seem to be going crazy about to a million about compared to a million people into europe , i people coming into europe, i mean, it's a much larger problem over there. >> well , the whole thing is just >> well, the whole thing is just basically we've we've europe we're part of europe. same thing's happening in america. we're basically the world we're basically told the world just come. we're not going to do anything about it. and what what what is trying to say is what austria is trying to say is we need some kind of penalty. and what we were trying what britain trying to say is britain was trying to say is that need some kind that we need some kind of penalty deterrent, deterrent penalty deterrent, a deterrent which is we'll send them to a quote unquote, horrible place . quote unquote, horrible place. but but the shocking thing is, is that the eu signed a deal with tunisia to pay them ,1 billion to keep people out. it's like we're paying people money, not tunisia has a lot of human rights issues. >> yeah. so i mean, there is a hypocrisy like we'll drop our morals when it comes to helping us, that it just shows sheer impotency. >> we're like , we're like paying >> we're like, we're like paying what is what is the term called blood money? is it paying,
5:24 am
paying blood money? is it paying, paying people off or whatever. >> did >> but actually, darius, i did want problem is want to ask this problem is surely going be getting worse surely going to be getting worse over the coming decades, assuming that climate change is real. you read nature, yeah, real. if you read nature, yeah, that's a cool back. ofcom, by the way . then we are going to the way. then we are going to see more movement of people as they are escaping lands that are in drought and whatnot. so the arguments are like, this needs to be kind of even though the problem is escalating now, it's going to get even worse. surely well that's that is well well, that's that's that is the as they see it. and the problem as they see it. and the problem as they see it. and the eu countries like i said, they're they're pushing more to they're they're pushing more to the right now because there's too many people coming in belgium traditionally refugee friendly have refused to provide shelter for single men seeking asylum . so they've been asylum. so they've been condemned by the council of europe of a human rights watchdog. so it's just like there's there needs controlled immigration is good, but now there's too much immigration and you know, people are just come descending on the country and europeans are like they've had
5:25 am
enough. >> and let it be noted, can i just say that i'm really glad that you got in? that you two got in? >> yeah, but he sees it. >> yeah, but he sees it. >> born immigrants. >> he's born immigrants. >> he's born immigrants. >> he's born here. >> he's born here. >> all right, the guardian and louis, i don't give louis, i don't want to give your elderly a heart attack, elderly fan base a heart attack, but we're rejoining eu too. but we're rejoining the eu too. >> um, we're mejo in one little sense. we're rejoining the eu. there's this $85 billion scheme for called the horizon science research program, where all of europe has 150 excuse me, £85 billion us and it gets divided out and we put 2 billion in and we got back a billion. so we thought that was a really good deal thought that was a really good deal, right? i think it was 950 million and it's a science. it's like all these miscellaneous science programs, you know , science programs, you know, they're all ridiculous. these science programs as they are all they're all going to be involved with climate change or covid or like there's one maybe like helping climate change, maybe finding the next technological development that's going to cure everyone billions everyone and make us billions of pounds. yeah and change
5:26 am
pounds. yeah and climate change with climate change. no, no. it's just about spending money. there's this one program called the plasma generator that the novel plasma generator that could used in cancer could be used in cancer treatment. they don't they won't even admit what causes cancer. so it's impossible . all right. so it's impossible. all right. at least i admit that cancer exists. >> yeah, yeah, yeah , fine. well, >> yeah, yeah, yeah, fine. well, that's a that's a big step for you. you've really grown over the last year, darius. surely this is a good thing. even the people, even the most ardent brexiteer could look at this and go. actually, yes , this is. this go. actually, yes, this is. this is good. the actual scheme is meant you put 2 billion meant to be. you put 2 billion in, you basically get that in, but you basically get that money it's kind of money back. so it's kind of money. you're not really spending but you're spending money, but you're involved interesting involved in this interesting scientific research. but because we the eu, not we left the eu, we're not getting as much back as we've done. so renegotiated done. so they've renegotiated the that it works better the deal so that it works better for us. so actually it's a win for us. so actually it's a win for britain. well, is a win for britain. well, it is a win except the fact that we used except for the fact that we used to put in 200 to sorry, 2 billion and we used to get 2.5 billion. so we're basically we've lost 500. yeah. but now we're try and get back
5:27 am
we're going to try and get back up but now up to those levels. but now we're win. now we've we're just the win. now we've negotiated you can negotiated to say, hey, you can pay negotiated to say, hey, you can pay paid. pay us what you paid. >> was wrong with the >> was that wrong with the numbers? it's fine. numbers? no, it's fine. >> concern in mirror, >> any concern in the mirror, lewis, this might lewis, that this move might antagonise friends? antagonise our best friends? russia? we're going to go straight today. yeah. straight to trade today. yeah. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> wagner. max wagner. >> wagner. max wagner. >> it wagner or wagner? the >> is it wagner or wagner? the russia's to be russia's wagner group to be declared terrorist organisation by government. and this is by uk government. and this is this is that group that was led by. yeah, that guy. that guy who got who got killed . well, maybe got who got killed. well, maybe you didn't get killed or maybe his yeah. yeah his plane crashed. yeah. yeah >> writing about it in nature, basically what this group was and is , is a tool of and still is, is a tool of russian imperialist ism. >> it's like it's russians military force around the world. but it has maximum deniability from putin because it was these other guys. so putin can say it's not me. >> yeah, they're drinking vodka. yes. but they just happened speaking russian. >> yes. they call me every day. and so it's along with hamas and boko haram. it's this they're
5:28 am
saying that these people are terrorists. >> well, let's ask darius. why aren't we? first of all, as lewis said, bogosian, he's dead now. so that's why. well, yeah, that's why they were waiting to see if the coup worked and then they would have they would have been freedom fighters. but since it failed, now the terrorists is slightly ridiculous to this. slightly ridiculous to do this. now arguably power is now when arguably their power is on don't know on the wane. we don't even know if going survive as if they're going to survive as a group, whereas arguably something the revolutionary something like the revolutionary iranian something like the revolutionary irararound something like the revolutionary irar around the world something like the revolutionary irararound the world doing something like the revolutionary irar around the world doing these are around the world doing these terrorist acts. good guys. yeah are they not? and they and they are they not? and they and they are not proscribed at all. so it seems a ridiculous thing. >> i think the reason why now it is, is bye bye bye bye. this failed coup and putin said to the wagner group you belong to us now . and as soon as he said us now. and as soon as he said that , as soon us now. and as soon as he said that, as soon as he said that, it basically he associated the two totally together for and because we're at war with them, with the ukraine or the other narrative might be that the
5:29 am
tories are just massively behind. >> yeah i think that might be that one as well. right we're at the halfway tipping point to madness. make sure you come back for of procreation. it for the end of procreation. it turns the internet can turns out the internet can actually be bad you and actually be bad for you and china clothes . see you in china bans clothes. see you in a sec . sec. >> sec. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello again. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office. with the gb news forecast, it's a warm, sultry night to come. for many of us, more hot sunshine into thursday. a small chance of thunderstorms developing towards western and south western areas in particular as low pressure sends heat and humidity northwards across the uk. now any thunderstorms that do develop will be very hit and miss, quite isolated, mostly towards western areas overnight out. but there is the chance that these thunderstorms will contain frequent flashes of lightning. so they could be quite visible in the night sky where they do
5:30 am
occur some low cloud creeping occur. some low cloud creeping into east. warm night into the east. it's a warm night for mid to teens and for many mid to high teens and in places no colder than 20 in some places no colder than 20 or 21 celsius. so some patchy fog about first thing thursday. some of this misty low cloud in the east, but that will tend to retreat to north sea coasts. and for many it's a fine day, but we've still got that potential thundery activity moving north into northern ireland and parts of scotland. by the afternoon . of scotland. by the afternoon. so it's very warm or hot day so it's a very warm or hot day in places 29 to 32 celsius in the south, 28 celsius for northern scotland . so the heat northern scotland. so the heat is extensive across the uk and it's a warm start to friday again , some of that misty low again, some of that misty low cloud in the east. again, the threat of thundery showers towards the west and southwest, but otherwise it's just a case of sunny skies and the temperatures continue to rise up to 33 celsius in places by. saturday >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of
5:31 am
weather on gb news
5:32 am
5:33 am
5:34 am
radio. >> well, thank you for that therapy session, louis. welcome back to headliners and straight into thursday's son darius. is this the death of love? it's a phrase that i came up with myself and i have trademarked that phrase death. you ever heard it before? that's my phrase. no, no, no. i've been doing death of love for 20 years now. i'll just do the headline . now. i'll just do the headline. scientists grow human . an embryo scientists grow human. an embryo in the lab without sperm egg or a womb. so scientists have created a synthetic human embryo that can survive outside the womb using stem cells. the embryo model was made in a lab without the need for sperm or eggs and behave like the real deal eggs and behave like the real deal. after two weeks, israeli scientists said. so we're literally be playing god right
5:35 am
now . yeah, which is good because now. yeah, which is good because it's done in the holy land. so it's done in the holy land. so it's the right place for them to be doing it. but this is this is you can more or less now just magic. a baby out of nowhere, which obviously i mean, this this is so that's never happened with jesus kind of basically but how dystopian there's so many like at the moment it's just presented oh, this is to help, you know, we're only 14 days as a limit and it's not it's not an actual embryo. it's an embryo model . so actual embryo. it's an embryo model. so it's kind of like vaping compared to smoke ing and it's like, oh, there's chocolate cigarettes bringing chocolate cigarettes, bringing that one back. works cigarettes, bringing that one back.but works cigarettes, bringing that one back.but this works cigarettes, bringing that one back.but this throws works cigarettes, bringing that one back.but this throws up works cigarettes, bringing that one back.but this throws up wymany now, but this throws up so many ethical questions and then deeper than that, more dystopian questions, because now, you know, you can just create a baby out of nowhere and we can just create life. this is the first step to that. it's just, well, well, lewis is shaking his head. i mean , do you think there are i mean, do you think there are no more don't create a baby. >> created a 14 day embryo >> they created a 14 day embryo which has like cells which has like maybe 28 cells or something. okay and it's hardly
5:36 am
a baby . a baby. >> but can it continue to develop ? develop? >> no, it says it mimics. it says it releases the same hormones . it's not a it's not hormones. it's not a it's not a real embryo. it's like an embryo . so it's not even an embryo. it's just a mass of cells. >> i'll be honest. i don't even know what an embryo is, but that's not the point. the point is the point is that this is this is the start. and it's not got the right hormones. now but they could have make it to have they could have make it to have the right. >> exactly. yeah. >> exactly. yeah. >> that one can't. but it's like this is today in two years time they'll be able to do they'll be able set it on way in two able to set it on its way in two years time. >> maybe i'll have a career in comedy . i mean, really, this is comedy. i mean, really, this is one those i call these camp one of those i call these camp stories. it could maybe , stories. it could be maybe, possibly not. could be. it's happening. it's happening today. >> it's happening . >> it's happening. >> it's happening. >> it's happening. first >> it's happening. first of >> it's happening. first of all, they're scientists , so they're they're scientists, so they're natural liars . these are the natural liars. these are the lying people on earth. >> okay. thank you very much there, lewis the independent next. suddenly everything next. and suddenly everything
5:37 am
you sense. you say makes sense. >> yeah, it does make sense. oh this is about the internet study discovers between the discovers link between the internet use and dementia. this is another complete non—story because they did they basically looked at people as they were getting older and they said, who's getting dementia? and they find out that the it makes it seem like there's a link between internet use cause and dementia. but the truth is, according to this study that they did by the university of michigan's health and retirement study, is that people who who who were on who are on the most use the most internet had the least dementia. right and the people who used it not at all. had the most dementia. >> okay. now the thing is, you have literally just given me dementia. yeah. from that explanation, darius says, so this is actually a really weird story too. honestly, it does give me dementia as well. it says, however, the researchers have pointed out a caveat. there
5:38 am
appeared to be a correlation between excessive usage between excessive internet usage and development of dementia and the development of dementia as s0 and the development of dementia as so the internet can as well. so the internet can stop dementia and gives you dementia if you use. >> so this story is so poorly written and it's in the independent, which is not even a newspaper. we shouldn't even be cover i mean, that's why. cover this. i mean, that's why. >> because internet, >> because it's on the internet, which the person we've which is why the person we've spent time include spent too much time we include the the new york times. >> they have a they have a website or the wall street journal, gb news. yeah, but this is gb. this is called headliners. no headliner headliners. there's no headliner in well, there is a headline there. if you go to the shop, you will not the you will not find the independent. okay. >> a headline there and >> there is a headline there and the headline is basically totally essentially what totally wrong. essentially what the is saying is if you the story is saying is if you use you're use the internet as you're getting older, it will help to stave dementia . stave off dementia. >> no, they are not saying that i >> -- >> they are not saying they don't that because they don't say that because they don't say that because they don't provide any they don't provide any proof. they say right. say all right. >> are not saying if you >> they are not saying if you use causation . this use it, that's causation. this is story. it's about is a coral story. it's about correlation. it's about association ation. it's about risk of it's about linking. it's
5:39 am
saying how many other words do you got there? i'm just i made it an acronym. it's called coral. i think very, very good. >> we said that to me just before we went on. he was like i say single watch say it every single show. watch me into my next me work this word into my next story, because this is one of those lewis schaefer those things that lewis schaefer bingo think. bingo thing, i think. >> the >> congratulations, lewis the independent a story about independent has a story about yeah, china not yeah, yeah, about china not wanting to hurt people's feelings. >> perhaps they might start with the uyghurs . the uyghurs. >> and the thing about >> yes. and the thing about think about china is that china , they're banning clothes that hurt feelings of the chinese nation, of the chinese people, of the chinese state. so it's like the state has feelings. yes. right and that's very scary when a state has feelings. but basically it comes down to xi jinping . and he's he's he's jinping. and he's he's he's losing control over his country. his country is completely he's losing. this is why i was going to say, darius, surely there's a
5:40 am
sign of this kind of stuff backfires when you try and stomp down on freedom to that level, to the point of what people wear. >> you know, what we're kind of looking at this and we're laughing. this can never laughing. ha this can never happenin laughing. ha this can never happen in this country. so here's example. gave here's an example. they gave a woman detained last year woman was detained last year in a shanghai for wearing a city near shanghai for wearing a city near shanghai for wearing a l a city near shanghai for wearing a , right as that was a kimono, right as that was a traditional japanese attire. that's offensive to chinese, right . so we'll ha that's funny right. so we'll ha that's funny that they make but here we do exactly the same. oh, exactly the same. we say, oh, that's cultural appropriation . that's cultural appropriation. you kimono. it you can't wear that kimono. it would same thing. would be the same thing. so we're doing thing. we're doing the same thing. we're with under we're just doing it with under a different wording. it's not be safe. cultural appropriation and you that's offensive to us. it's exactly the same thing of see it's a bit you know, they're probably saying you can't wear, you know, rubbish clothes like lewis wears but as well. but thatis lewis wears but as well. but that is offensive to my feelings. but is he is he serious ? serious? >> i'm wearing this. this toy is a zenga. how much did that cost 7 a zenga. how much did that cost ? if you go to google it, it's about £100 thai. okay. i mean i got in a charity shop, but that
5:41 am
doesn't mean . that's right. doesn't mean. that's right. >> finally in this section , the >> finally in this section, the guardian gives a reason, guardian gives us a reason, darius, to take the bus . well, darius, to take the bus. well, yeah, so the headline is from sex life to politics, car driver day to grab presents, privacy nightmare. these studies . so nightmare. these studies. so basically all these car manufacture workers are now grabbing your data. so nissan includes sexual activity in the data it collects and kia notes that it can collect information about your sex life in their privacy policy. that sounds like a sort of an advert, isn't it, for the car in that they're saying if you buy a kia or a nissan, you will get to have sex? well, no. so imagine being called a virgin by your car and bullied by your car. you're a virgin. yeah, i know. i'm driving a kia. obviously, a driving a kia. obviously, i'm a virgin. is this virgin. right? how is this a thing? is just thing? but this is just like more and they're taking more and more, they're taking all information we all your information that we just click on terms just give. we click on the terms and . but needs. and conditions. but it needs. but what's interesting, but here's what's interesting, right? joking . kia right? not just joking. kia privacy policy states it may process special categories of data , including information data, including information about your race or ethnicity,
5:42 am
religious or philosophy , religious or philosophy, beliefs, sexual orientation , sex beliefs, sexual orientation, sex life and political opinions. why does your car need to know who you vote for ? why does your car you vote for? why does your car need to know who you sleep? well, it's whether you veer to the left or right, i guess. >> but you know what's funny is like i was tesla has like cameras inside the car and they're you with these they're watching you with these cameras. oh, it used to be you used to have to drive to some secluded and secluded dogging location. and now you can just go speaking from experience, you can just go in the car and just and you know that year that somebody year this information out a lot of information came out a lot of tesla workers had downloaded these footage of people these this footage of people naked or in their garages and whatnot . whatnot. >> i mean it is terrifying how much information you are. right. of course, there is like, why would all this would they need all of this stuff? because want to stuff? is because they want to make out us. now, make more money out of us. now, something make more money out of us. now, somedo ng make more money out of us. now, somedo the same kind of data they do the same kind of data harvesting, arguably it's a free service and that's how they make their good chunk of their their a good chunk of their money. you're paying , you money. when you're paying, you know, thousands of know, tens of thousands of
5:43 am
pounds for car, would hope pounds for a car, you would hope that they made their money. that they had made their money. they can turn off your car, they can turn off your socks. everything's a subscription . everything's a subscription. everything's a subscription. everything's to own. everything's not yours to own. you pay road tax. you don't pay your road tax. your tesla will drive you to the government agency , too. it's too government agency, too. it's too much. should this internet much. they should this internet of things. i remember when it came it was it was funny did came out it was it was funny did a it. but now the a joke about it. but now the more you see you're more and more you see you're connected every point you're connected at every point you're monitored, you're seeing, you're tracked. say the tracked. and if you say the wrong things like, sorry, your car's working you car's not working because you misgendered now you misgendered someone, now you can't get to work now you can't vote. it's like this is information . car companies have information. car companies have no right. the incident . the only no right. the incident. the only good actually about that good thing actually about that is interesting the only is interesting is the only company that who will delete your information was renault and dacia because they're owned by the same company and that's because they come the because they come on the european law, gdpr , so they have european law, gdpr, so they have to delete it. otherwise all these will collect your information and that's it. done. well, we need to back into well, we need to move back into the don't you think you should? >> don't you think you should? >> don't you think you should? >> no, we're going to
5:44 am
>> no, no, no. we're going to go. for this section. go. that's all for this section. but on final part, but coming up on the final part, we've origin of elbows we've got the origin of elbows eating need eating elephants and women need to having with men.
5:45 am
5:46 am
5:47 am
in two. welcome back to headliners . and welcome back to headliners. and kicking off with thursday's express, louis. isn't this how you came over here? >> yes. good. thank you for saying that. man arrested in us in us now off the coast of us trying to cross the atlantic to london in human sized hamster wheel. this is an express, and it just shows that at least the americans are doing something about britain's migrant crisis . about britain's migrant crisis. >> so, yeah, joining in, like stopping them, coming, hoping they're stopping. >> that's a that's a proper joke. yeah. one joke at night. anyway he's he's a he's a nutcase . he's a nutcase. he's nutcase. he's a nutcase. he's tried three other times to have this kind of hamster wheel. >> why is he a nutcase? because he's choosing to come over here. is you're saying? is that what you're saying? >> he's tried three
5:48 am
>> no, because he's tried three times. this is his time. times. this is his fourth time. and they on and each time they keep on stopping him and each time he says he says there's in says he says there's a bomb in the in my hamster wheel. the in my in my hamster wheel. >> he didn't want to get the name of your edinburgh show. that's a bomb in my hand. >> the coastguard is >> and the coastguard is stopping and got he's stopping him and he's got he's got he's got one of those got a very he's got one of those names of people like it sounds like an iranian. like he's an iranian. >> baluchi 44. you think >> reza baluchi 44. do you think he's just an escaped? he's probably version . yeah. he's probably version. yeah. he's probably version. yeah. he's probably they're defunct spy as well trying to escape. think well trying to escape. i think the funny thing also about this is says he's trying raise is he says he's trying to raise money coastguard, but money for the coastguard, but he's probably much money he's probably cost so much money to because was to the coastguard because it was like standoff couple of like a standoff for a couple of days. want know, is the days. i want to know, is the journey was is 4500 miles. and he found 70 miles off the he was found 70 miles off the off the coast. so how long did that him? i want to kind of that take him? i want to kind of work out how long he envisioned the journey he would have taken. yeah how long did that respect? well luck the next try. well good luck for the next try. some the some science news next in the metro. elbow your way metro. darius to elbow your way into yes. human into it. yes. human elbows evolved as break saving. evolved to act as break saving. our ancestors from theft. so
5:49 am
they did some research into chimpanzees and monkeys. and apparently elbows. what they're actually meant to be used for is when you're running, you just go on your ground and you skid like that. and that's a big new development that's come out from researchers at dartmouth college. said that college. and they also said that with this new found with this with this new found information, goodyear have released a new tire based on elbows, which will help like really slow down cars . louis, really slow down cars. louis, did you happen to read the story or are you making it up? >> i did read the story and, well, not not the full story. no one's going to read the full story like this, but it has to do with apes. they evolve 20 million years ago and apes. they do with apes. they evolve 20 milli
5:50 am
trees where you need like this when you have your when you descend, you have your extend but they also extend your thing. but they also put pliers on their elbows. okay, time's next. it seems like eating elephants is a good idea. louis photos your twitter. >> t- e is this is this is >> well, this is this is this is in the times and how we're eating the elephants for stone age humans to innovate and but they're saying is and this is at some university or something they said they said the university something. university of something. >> prestigious >> it's a very prestigious affair. you know what? affair. well, you know what? >> it's another one. it's this miki tel aviv uni. and she's like famous for all these kind of fakakta stories . but of fakakta stories. but basically but they basically what they're saying is when there were no elephants for them to eat, which they could kill with a with a brick or simple tools, simple tools that man had had to get smarter for and started develop tools , tools to started develop tools, tools to kill the smaller animals. right. so their brains got bigger when the truth is the truth. is it was eating all that meat that got all those brains so smart
5:51 am
and the human brain has lost about 15% of its volume in the last 10,000 years since we've started to eat grains. you can look that up. okay. >> wonderful. thank you so much for that. i want to sort of try this now and see. i'm going to use this very blunt tool to see to this big elephant over to kill this big elephant over here. and then i'll use this little was scared for a second. fair enough . daily star now with fair enough. daily star now with an article from lewis's ex—wife , women should stop sex with men. it's extremely problematic and unenjoyable . okay, that's and unenjoyable. okay, that's verbatim. lewis. yeah, that was in your divorce proceedings, right? all our partners agree. feminist academic holly lawford smith says women having sex with men is problematic and 90% of women don't enjoy it . but the women don't enjoy it. but the men do. and that's what counts . men do. and that's what counts. yeah. so of course, a joke. heterosexual women should stop having sex with men because it's extraordinarily male centred the
5:52 am
bulk of the time in penetrative sex is spent on him like masturbating. good morning, everybody. tuning . in to say everybody. tuning. in to say that your job is to stop him that yourjob is to stop him from going. >> i haven't even said anything i >> -- >> just reading what? just reading. basically a woman who really doesn't like men very much says that other women should also not like men and not have sex with them. that's basically it. >> no one about the >> but no one talks about the fact that fact that there are things that men do that are extremely problematic and unenjoyable. so maybe men should stop fixing women's plumbing or stop fixing women's plumbing or stop mowing their lawns. >> so you see it as a sort of trade off. >> yeah, well, you know what it is? >> this is what i'm thinking. we should go on strike, men. >> i think no one's not >> okay, i think no one's not me. >> i can't fix those things. but. looking >> i can't fix those things. butguys looking >> i can't fix those things. butguys do looking >> i can't fix those things. butguys do those looking >> i can't fix those things. butguys do those things. ing for guys to do those things. >> think if you're the of >> i think if you're the type of woman who would be influenced by feminist academic lawford woman who would be influenced by feminitelling emic lawford woman who would be influenced by feminitelling you: lawford woman who would be influenced by feminitelling you: haveyrd smith telling you not to have sex with a man you would never have with man anyway. so have sex with a man anyway. so it's we go. it's irrelevant. there we go. the is nearly over. so the show is nearly over. so let's quick look at
5:53 am
let's take another quick look at thursday's front pages as the daily mail terrorist suspect flees. jailed, strapped under delivery van telegraaf terror suspect escapes jail under lorry guard . an undercover police guard. an undercover police officer deceived woman in 19 year relationship express pm. i'll make uk best place in the whole world to do business. i news mortgage relief on way. hints. bank chief hint hint and finally the daily star. it's a bit hot and those are your front pages. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, lewis schaffer and darius davis. we're back tomorrow at 11 pm. with with nick dixon, paul cox and nicholas de santo. if you looks like things are heating up, boxt boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. of weather on. gb news. >> hello again. it's aidan mcgivern here from the met office. with the gb news forecast, a warm, sultry night to come for many of us, more hot sunshine into thursday. a small chance of thunderstorms developing towards western and southwestern areas in particular
5:54 am
as low pressure sends heat and humidity northwards across the uk. now, any thunderstorms that do develop will be very hit and miss, quite isolated, mostly towards western areas overnight . but there is the chance that these thunderstorms will contain frequent flashes of lightning. so they could be quite visible in the night sky where they do occur. some low cloud creeping into the east. it's a warm night for many mid high teens and for many mid to high teens and in some places colder than 20 in some places no colder than 20 or 21 celsius. so some patchy fog about first thing thursday. some of this misty low cloud in the east, but that will tend to retreat to north sea coasts. and for many it's a fine day, but we've still got that potential thundery activity moving north into northern ireland and parts of scotland by the afternoon. it's a very warm or hot day in places 29 to 32 celsius in the south, 28 celsius for northern scotland . so the heat is scotland. so the heat is extensive across the uk and it's a warm start to friday again , a warm start to friday again, some of that misty low cloud in the east. again, the threat of
5:55 am
thundery showers towards the west and southwest . but west and southwest. but otherwise it's just a case of sunny skies and the temperatures continue to rise up to 33 celsius in places by saturday. >> looks like things are heating up. boxed boilers, proud sponsors of weather on .
5:56 am
5:57 am
5:58 am
5:59 am
news with eamonn holmes and ellie costello. leading the news this morning. >> well, there is a hunt on for a terrorist suspect and former army soldier, british army soldier daniel carlyle , who soldier daniel carlyle, who escaped from wandsworth prison
6:00 am
yesterday. gb news home affairs and security editor mark white is at the scene for us. mark, good morning . well this was an good morning. well this was an audacious escape. >> daniel caliph clinging to a delivery truck as it left wandsworth jail, passing through the main gate right under the noses of prison staff . today noses of prison staff. today there is a nationwide hunt to find this terror suspect . find this terror suspect. >> new research shows 2 in 5 voters think child care will be a key issue in the next general election. what does that mean for the government? we'll be putting that to spokespeople . putting that to spokespeople. >> prince harry is back in the uk to present an award for a charity that he's patron of. but the million dollar question , the million dollar question, where is meghan? we have the latest on the duke and duchess carlos alcaraz has defeated alexander zverev in the quarterfinals of the us tennis open . open. >> can he go all the way? paul coyte with the latest sports
6:01 am
news. >> yes,

16 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on