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tv   Headliners  GB News  September 28, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am BST

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second incident, which took the second incident, which took place on a university campus . place on a university campus. police confirmed a 32 year old man has been arrested . he was man has been arrested. he was arrested at the scene shortly after the building went into lockdown and staff had been instructed to leave immediately. dutch police say the suspect was a student at the university where crews also had to battle fires after the shooting incident made this afternoon. >> we had two shooting incidents , one of them in a house where two people were injured. the shooter then continued to a classroom at erasmus university. he also shot someone there. we don't know who that victim was in the classroom, but what we do know is that the person we arrested is a 32 year old man from rotterdam at rotterdam . from rotterdam at rotterdam. >> well, news here at home, the family of a 15 year old girl stabbed on her way to school has visited the scene where she died as crowds joined a vigil tonight nearby , elian arade dam was nearby, elian arade dam was attacked while she was on her way to school in croydon yesterday morning. a 17 year old
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boy police say was known to boy who police say was known to the victim remains in police custody after being arrested . custody after being arrested. and a statement has been read out church leader on behalf out by a church leader on behalf of family at the edge of the of the family at the edge of the crime scene . crime scene. >> as the family are struggling to comprehend this painful tragedy that has happened to our beautiful daughter and beloved sister , elian , our hearts are sister, elian, our hearts are broken and we are ovennhelmed by sorrow and grief . sorrow and grief. >> the community in croydon tonight . >> the community in croydon tonight. now, sir michael gambon has been remembered as a magnificent trickster and the loveliest of legends. following his death at the age of 82, the dubun his death at the age of 82, the dublin born star of the stage and screen who won four tv baftas , died peacefully in baftas, died peacefully in hospital last night after a bout of pneumonia. he's best known for playing hogwarts headmaster dumbledore in a number of the harry potter films, as well as
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being one of the original members of the royal national theatre alongside laurence olivier. his family say he was a beloved husband and father . now beloved husband and father. now a 16 year old boy has been arrested after one of the most iconic trees in the country was suddenly cut down the tree at sycamore gap, next to hadrian's wall in northumbria was made famous in the 1991 film. robin hood.the famous in the 1991 film. robin hood. the national trust says it's shocked and saddened to see the iconic tree down this is gb news across the uk on tv , in news across the uk on tv, in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying, play on your smart speaker by saying, play gb news. this is britain's news channel . news channel. >> hello and welcome to headliners. yes, we're still here. sorry haters. i'm nick dixon and i'm joined by two of
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the most shaggy of all comedians around six kids. between them, we have the data. it's josh howie . there he is. look at him. howie. there he is. look at him. fine specimen of a man. and leo kearse headliners ogs . how are kearse headliners ogs. how are you doing, guys? >> good. not bad. >> good. not bad. >> yeah. welcome to the people tuning in. regular viewers and of course, the people who are tuning to in notepads their tuning to in notepads in their hands to note down. >> if we say we either want to have sex with someone or not want have sex with someone want to have sex with someone which criminal offence which is a criminal offence these it's been kicking these days it's all been kicking off obviously. off here, obviously. >> gb i don't know how it's >> gb news i don't know how it's to going like air. i've to going affect like air. i've been trying get taxi been trying to get like taxi receipts issue sorted out and i feel like that's put on the back burner for now. >> well, there's always a chance to sacked and not to to get sacked and not have to worry it doesn't worry about it, but it doesn't matter. i'll probably be fine. but one i want to say, but one thing i do want to say, all three of us here, we'll all agree on every issue, and that is the nature impartiality. is the nature of impartiality. like well, i don't is the nature of impartiality. like what well, i don't is the nature of impartiality. like what you'reiell, i don't is the nature of impartiality. like what you're talkinan't is the nature of impartiality. like what you're talking about, know what you're talking about, leo. idea what that means. leo. no idea what that means. let's crack on before get us let's crack on before i get us in and have
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in even more trouble and have a look at the front pages. so the times has tory shift to higher taxes reversed. the taxes may never be reversed. the sounds that one, isn't it? sounds bad, that one, isn't it? the telegraph have to the telegraph have sunak to block mile per hour zones block new 20 mile per hour zones as the guardian sunak puts car drivers new election drivers first in new election battle line. the express pm faces to ditch european faces calls to ditch european courts. the i private schools reveal plan to use loophole to avoid labour vat charge and finally the daily star demon from hell tries to murder sharon osborne. people say we're not a serious channel. those of you front pages, guys . so let's front pages, guys. so let's begin with the front page of the times. >> josh yeah, so there is a lot there are a lot of stories here, some important news, but i just want to talk about the photo of euan want to talk about the photo of elian arade dam, who is the 15 year old who was stabbed to death and i just want to get that out the way because it's incredibly sad. i don't have any , you know, but it's just yeah , , you know, but it's just yeah, it's crazy that such trivial things are the number one news
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story when, you know , this is story when, you know, this is this is obviously a, you know, a horrific it's not just horrific in itself, but it's a sign of a bigger problem across the uk. >> yeah i just you see things like that and it's heartbreaking i >> okay, let's move on to some some the some fun stuff. we're all going to be paying lots of taxes. yes. forever and ever. >> never be reversed. that's just how it's going to be. >> yeah. we've got the highest taxes since world war two. and essentially, this is quite an interesting thing because a lot of people say, oh, because it's because of covid and paying for the lockdown and whatnot. but actually the actually it's because of the baby boomers obviously getting older and we as this is technically a job, isn't it, having to then pay for those people retiring. so this is part when covid could have sorted that problem out for us. there we go. and you will disappear basically . basically. >> yeah. this comes from richard hughes from the office of budget responsibility. it does feel
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like this is where we're going. even on the right now, there's not much appetite for the thatcher right politics. you know, there was things like the national conservatism conference where very about where it was very much about this sort of economic nationalism on the right, you know, the left want a kind of know, on the left want a kind of big solution . so do the big state solution. so do the right this just what big state solution. so do the rigigoing this just what big state solution. so do the rigigoing to this just what big state solution. so do the rigigoing to be this just what big state solution. so do the rigigoing to be like?just what it's going to be like? >> leo yeah, i mean, tax is essentially and essentially evil and counterproductive . essentially evil and counterproductive. mean, essentially evil and counterproductive . mean, the counterproductive. i mean, the idea of paying tax to the state because think that they're because you think that they're to your better to going spend your money better than spend it yourself than you would spend it yourself is ridiculous . i mean, the idea is ridiculous. i mean, the idea that disinterested that some disinterested apparatchik their own wants apparatchik with their own wants and needs is going to is going to spend your money better than you'd is you'd spend it yourself is nonsense . so we'd have much we'd nonsense. so we'd have much we'd have much greater value in the economy if we lessened the tax burden and just let people spend their money themselves. okay? >> libertaria take anything more on that. do want to do this on that. do you want to do this multicultural one? on that. do you want to do this multicuiso al one? on that. do you want to do this multicuiso obviously suella >> yes. so obviously suella braverman gave a speech in washington few ago and by washington a few days ago and by saying multiculturalism has failed, then there's been two
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days of people arguing what multiculturalism technically means, what versus what. most people understand it to mean in common usage . but rishi sunak common usage. but rishi sunak has come out and said that it hasn't failed because he's prime minister and his mum is from leicester and so that proves it. >> yeah. i mean not very helpful because he's, he's, he's, he's playing into the sort of rhetoric of his opponents really, because when suella said multiculturalism has failed once she was merkel. but to she was quoting merkel. but to she was quoting merkel. but to she clearly meant multiculturalism as it's commonly meaning cultures commonly known meaning cultures that distinct within the that stay distinct within the country and don't really assimilate. whereas sunak now use it to mean the opposite, which made it very which has made it very confusing. >> what people argue you >> what most people argue you know, use it to be terms of know, use it to be in terms of the sort of the melting pot, not what i thought it meant. the sort of the melting pot, not whil i thought it meant. the sort of the melting pot, not whil was ought it meant. the sort of the melting pot, not whil was sticking meant. the sort of the melting pot, not whil was sticking methe actual >> i was sticking to the actual definition. yeah what did you think? >> leo well, yeah, it's obvious that, we've got in that, you know, we've got in all european we've got european countries, we've got sort cultures that sort of ghettos of cultures that are that exist in silo silos, and they've got faith schools. no, in germany they no, but i mean in germany they took in so many, so many
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millions of refugees and you know, obviously it's great that we offer place, a safe we can offer a place, a safe place for safe harbour for refugees. but if people don't integrate and then take on the values and the problem is british values now sneered british values are now sneered that spat by by british that and spat on by by british people. so you know we're not just we're not just letting people exist in silos. we're also destroying our own culture. >> yes, good point. very sad. let's on and do express let's move on and do the express then. so pm faces calls to then. leo so pm faces calls to ditch courts. ditch european courts. >> the former brexit >> so the former brexit minister, david jones , says minister, david jones, says rishi sunak should use his speech at the conservative conservative party conference to make that he will press make it clear that he will press for renegotiation of the echr. for a renegotiation of the echr. so is the european court or so this is the european court or convention of human rights that stopped the rwanda flight, stopped the rwanda flight, stopped the rwanda flight, stopped the uk dealing with the with the issue of illegal migration, which, you know, people think it's cruel to deal with it, not dealing with it is crueller. it's funding criminal gangs. and people are dying crossing, crossing the channel. so we need to we need to stop it. rwanda was an expensive bit,
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you know, workable plan to reduce it . and apparently reduce it. and apparently illegal immigration is becoming according to the tory mps they speak to here, it's becoming a bigger issue for voters . so this bigger issue for voters. so this is something that needs to be tackled. >> it's sort of part of the real rishi package that's coming out. the tough policies for the election. think, election. what do you think, josh? this isn't he's not josh? well, this isn't he's not he's it. he's not going to do it. >> it's call. it's an mp >> it's a call. it's an mp going. he should do it. but it's the european court of human rights for of us. and rights that's for all of us. and the point of that, they the whole point of that, they basically didn't say it was illegal. the actual policy itself, it was the rwanda was the issue. they find a safe place. they basically said rwanda not a safe place that rwanda is not a safe place that goes against human rights being sending to off an unsafe sending people to off an unsafe place if they a safe place if they found a safe place, everything's all good. >> is safe. >> rwanda is safe. >> rwanda is safe. >> they argue that it's >> well, they argue that it's not. well, they're wrong. >> well, they argue that it's not. well,we ey're wrong. >> well, they argue that it's not. well,we go.> wrong. >> there we go. >> there we go. >> we just settled that argument. and why a european argument. and why is a european court decide deciding this for a debate that we're. yeah, this is i mean, surely the whole the whole sovereign whole point of being a sovereign nafion
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whole point of being a sovereign nation we can make nation is that we can make our own decisions some, you own decisions without some, you know, and know, pencil pusher and strasbourg. >> we have up and >> we have signed up and actually created this european >> we have signed up and actuanf created this european >> we have signed up and actuanf created rights. ropean court of human rights. >> echr rulings >> nearly half of echr rulings are by by countries are ignored by by countries across i think italy one of across i think italy is one of the one of the main people who ignored it. britain actually sticks rulings more sticks to these rulings more often not. maybe often than not. so maybe it's time. maybe it's to go time. maybe it's time to go rogue. time to do rogue. maybe it's time to do what do. rogue. maybe it's time to do whiwell do. rogue. maybe it's time to do whiwell , do. rogue. maybe it's time to do whiwell , it's a good debate of >> well, it's a good debate of the that you find on gb the kind that you find on gb news where totally impartial you see. agree with leo. so see. but i agree with leo. so 2 to 1, what about the guardian, josh? what have they got? >> so we've got a couple of >> yes. so we've got a couple of stories that we're be stories that we're going to be covering but they've got covering later. but they've got interesting of scientists covering later. but they've got interbacked of scientists covering later. but they've got inter backed processed ntists who backed processed food reveal. this sort reveal. so there was this sort of briefing yesterday and reveal. so there was this sort of scientistsig yesterday and reveal. so there was this sort of scientists cameterday and reveal. so there was this sort of scientists came fonnard nd these scientists came fonnard and said, yeah, processed foods, brilliant, and don't brilliant, actually. and don't don't listen to all that stuff that sort makes you fat that it sort of makes you fat and sick. and then it turns out that three the five that three of the five scientists, where they that three of the five scietheirs, where they that three of the five scietheir funding. /here they that three of the five scietheir funding. and�* they that three of the five scietheir funding. and they get their funding. and the scientists have out and scientists have come out and said, totally said, we, but i'm totally impartial. it's just just coincidence. >> yeah, it's absolutely mad to ask the people involved in making processed what
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making ultra processed food what they like they think. it's kind of like asking bbc what they asking the bbc or sky what they think of gb news. you know what i mean? just. just a random example. i mean? just. just a random examplwalso, i mean, what about >> but also, i mean, what about other things? what about climate change? i mean, a lot of the climate change scientists get big from big research grants from institutions vested institutions that have a vested interest climate change being institutions that have a vested in biglst climate change being institutions that have a vested inbig problem. ate change being institutions that have a vested inbig problem. so change being institutions that have a vested inbig problem. so and nge being institutions that have a vested inbig problem. so and peopleng a big problem. so and people have published papers have published, published papers and then said, i had to and then said, listen, i had to i had to juice this up to actually get it into get get actually get it into get it, get it know, it published. so, you know, i think is problem across think this is a problem across science. and we all all science. and we all we all know that money whatever that money can sway whatever your you're trying to your whatever you're trying to do. this is this is do. so yeah, this is this is a problem right across science. >> yeah. i don't trust ultra processed food and i'm worried i'm be forced to eat i'm going to be forced to eat bill gates's meat. bill gates's synthetic meat. that's my concern. that's my big concern. >> hanging out too >> we've been hanging out too much louis schaefer. that's much with louis schaefer. that's the red the problem. so we've been red pilled in the. >> i was going to >> that's true. i was going to say one blessing is that he say the one blessing is that he isn't here today so we don't have lot about this have to hear a lot about this story for about 55 minutes. let's a look at the let's have a quick look at the important story the daily important story on the daily star here. >> a demon from hell tries to
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>> so a demon from hell tries to murder sharon osborne. this is her jack has revealed the her son. jack has revealed the spooky brush with death, which i'm if was i'm not sure if it was successful or not. they might have and rebuilt have reanimated her and rebuilt her discarded her from some discarded lego. but she should have but yeah, she it should have happened because then then happened on tv because then then only people have only 12 people would have seen it. oh, that's right. talk tv. >> fine. it. oh, that's right. talk tv. >> they're e. it. oh, that's right. talk tv. >> they're trying to take down gb and like, whoa, gb news and it's like, whoa, when you when you come back, just you've more than just when you've got more than 300 viewers. >> well, can you add >> yeah. well, josh, can you add to that? do you believe in demonic to that? do you believe in deruh,c to that? do you believe in der uh, it's actually than >> uh, it's actually safer than what talking about. what leo was talking about. >> yeah, i was going to make a joke about something that happened day. happened the other day. >> want to do it? no. >> do you want to do it? no. >> do you want to do it? no. >> do you want to do it? no. >> do it. no okay. >> do it. no okay. >> suddenly i'm scared. >> suddenly i'm scared. >> all right. but too scared to feel all right. come back feel fear. all right. come back for more. comedians censoring themselves after that's themselves after that. that's themselves after that. that's the that is it for the show now. that is it for part but coming up, rishi part one. but coming up, rishi gets councils. police gets tough on councils. police switch body cams and switch off their body cams and we
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>> listening to gb news radio. >> listening to gb news radio. >> welcome back to headliners
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here on britain's most loved channel, i'm still here. nick dixon with josh howie. there he is.look dixon with josh howie. there he is. look at him and lucas. i say that every time to me. anything. all right, let's crack on and do the guardian and rishi sunak will limit the power of councils to kerb car use. finally, the real rishi is coming out. the election should be in the bag now. josh? >> yes. sunak expected to limit power of councils in england. you just said it, didn't you? did. >> i did say a lot of it. >> i did say a lot of it. >> sorry. no, but yeah, it's. this is alarmed travel groups. it's alarmed them. i tell you, they're very alarmed because evil , evil motorists with their evil, evil motorists with their horrible, horrible cars are going to basically not be as penalised as they are . councils penalised as they are. councils raising money revenue through tickets and this 20 mile an hour thing. but also so i think this is obviously this goes back to the by—election where they won by 400 votes. the tories at uxbndge
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by 400 votes. the tories at uxbridge and this is this is their this is the total party of rishi sunaks election gamble is like i'm going to go with the motorists on this. >> it's kind of embarrassing. this is our red meat. leo it's more like a sort of bit of chicken salad. it's pretty weak, isn't it? i mean, it's already such a high level of slavery when you have 20 an hour, when you have 20 miles an hour, it's like arguing over the 20 miles an everyone miles an hour. everyone i've spoken drivers and spoken to taxi drivers and everyone 20 mile an everyone hates the 20 mile an houn you everyone hates the 20 mile an hour. you think? hour. what do you think? >> well, yeah, mean, 20 miles >> well, yeah, i mean, 20 miles an hour. i understand it in city centres, there are some centres, but there are some roads the middle roads where you're in the middle of basically nowhere and you've still crawl along at 20, still got to crawl along at 20, 20 miles an hour trying to stop your it's your car from stalling. it's ridiculous. and if we look at male suicide and depression and things what's things like that, i think what's causing this nitpicky, causing it is all this nitpicky, oh, you drive faster than oh, you can't drive faster than 20 hour. there's 20 miles an hour. oh, there's cameras there's all cameras here. oh, there's all these everything. and these rules and everything. and it's death thousand it's just death by a thousand cuts. driving people, just cuts. it's driving people, just grinding people into the ground. >> the most interesting >> that is the most interesting segway ever heard >> that is the most interesting segany ever heard >> that is the most interesting segany channel ever heard >> that is the most interesting segany channel ever. ler heard on any channel ever. >> this is about >> no, this is about masculinity. josh well, suicide
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is caused by this there is caused by this point. there is caused by this point. there is as a man you can is very little as a man you can do in this culture. i sort of see the point. women drive women a very well, yeah, but leo a very, very well, yeah, but leo was talking about himself. i think meant he think he meant that he can't just drive his bugatti as fast as can drive. as he can drive. >> we can park. >> and we can park. >> and we can park. >> but is this a so is it an election winning thing? i mean, he's done the inheritance tax. well, he might well, hinted that he might reduce the 40% rate. he's hinted well, hinted that he might redu hethe 40% rate. he's hinted well, hinted that he might redu hethe 40�*scrape. he's hinted well, hinted that he might redu hethe 40�*scrap hs2,s hinted well, hinted that he might redu hethe 40�*scrap hs2, what's:i that he might scrap hs2, what's supposed excited. and supposed to be very excited. and he's said that he'll he's and he's said that he'll moderate the net zero targets. so this is part of that attempt to win some votes. to actually win some votes. >> yeah, that's strange that politicians would want to do that, only it just that, but they only do it just before the election, don't they? >> don't anything 13 >> they don't do anything for 13 years. trouble is, oh, years. and the trouble is, oh, we'll change inheritance tax 10s before the election. >> is he's flip >> and the trouble is he's flip flopping that sort flopping on things that he sort of a position on before. so of had a position on before. so and that's making people think, well, stand for? and well, what do you stand for? and also things also it's messing things up a bit because, you people bit because, you know, people put place for the put investment in place for the green and all that green revolution and all that kind of stuff. yeah maybe. >> it's >> i mean, it's still it's better he's doing this than
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better than he's doing this than not doing it. from my perspective though, i have to say, oh, one's yeah, say, oh, this one's great. yeah, i'm sure any policies can i'm not sure any policies can rescue tories it's rescue the tories because it's a perception of incompetence and sort vague corruption. sort of vague corruption. that's the problem anyway. it looks like all we can of like we've got all we can out of that. let's move on and do the guardian and suella braverman is under remarks under attack for some remarks she made. just generic she made. that's just a generic line. and line. i have ready to copy and paste into basically show. line. i have ready to copy and pas leo lto basically show. line. i have ready to copy and pasle01to suellaly show. line. i have ready to copy and pas leo lto suella braverman )w. line. i have ready to copy and pas leo lto suella braverman claim line. i have ready to copy and pas lenethnicity la braverman claim line. i have ready to copy and paslenethnicity la grooming] claim about ethnicity of grooming gangs to gangs was false. according to a regulator. mail on regulator. ipsos so mail on sunday was forced issue sunday was forced to issue an apology piece by apology over an opinion piece by the claiming apology over an opinion piece by the almost claiming apology over an opinion piece by the almost child :laiming apology over an opinion piece by the almost child grooming apology over an opinion piece by the alwere child grooming apology over an opinion piece by the alwere british.d grooming apology over an opinion piece by the alwere british. pakistaniig apology over an opinion piece by the alwerthe�*itish. pakistaniig apology over an opinion piece by the alwerthe�*itish. pakidoesn't now what the guardian doesn't really deal with is the fact that almost all that she said almost all grooming british, grooming gangs are british, pakistani, and that's that's wrong. huge wrong. but there is still a huge overrepresent presentation. so they point that, you they make the point that, you know research by the home know, research by the home office showed office in 2020 showed that offenders most commonly offenders are most commonly white and come from a diverse backgrounds , but you'd expect backgrounds, but you'd expect them to be most commonly white in a country that's 86% white. it really the issue is that we've got this tiny proportion of the population that is that is responsible for i mean, you only need to look at the mug shots to see that they're
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responsible for a huge disproportion, of disproportion, a huge amount of this particular type of child grooming and obviously all child grooming and obviously all child grooming sexual exploitation grooming and sexual exploitation is horrific. if you look at psy ops, the child exploitation , ops, the child exploitation, onune ops, the child exploitation, online protection, their stats show that for where ethnicity data is available , 30% of data is available, 30% of offenders were white, while 28% were asian. so i mean, that shows the scale of the problem. i think for the guardian to sort of minimise it instead of, say, saying like, look, she she maybe embellished it or overexaggerated but it's overexaggerated it, but it's still problem. bad still a huge problem. is bad reporting . reporting. >> yeah, it seems like a confusion of two different things really. there's this very specific gang problem. things really. there's this very speci'there's gang problem. things really. there's this very speci'there's generalvroblem. things really. there's this very speci'there's general sexual . then there's the general sexual crimes done by white people. they're sort of it's two different things being merged together. that's thought then. >> it's responsibility to be >> it's her responsibility to be much clearer in her language . much clearer in her language. and when they publish it in the daily mail mail on sunday or mail on sunday, then then then that falls down to them . you that falls down to them. you know, i'm not saying that there isn't absolutely you're
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isn't absolutely what you're saying incorrect , but it's saying isn't incorrect, but it's got very, very clear got to be very, very clear about this stuff. >> it's kind of like the multiculturalism thing all over again. and we can't agree on a definition anything. again. and we can't agree on a defandnn anything. again. and we can't agree on a defand also,anything. again. and we can't agree on a defand also,anyihave thought, >> and also, i'd have thought, you know, a good defence the you know, a good defence for the mail that, you mail on sunday is that, you know, well home know, well the, the home secretary said this, so surely she's ultimate on she's the ultimate authority on this stuff. she's the ultimate authority on thisyeah. stuff. she's the ultimate authority on thisyeah. because it had been >> yeah. because it had been thoroughly so not thoroughly checked. so it's not really it was, their own >> but it was, it was their own department which came up with the said that they the report that said that they weren't whatever weren't the majority or whatever it was unclear yeah. it was unclear language. yeah. should have been written better. >> the >> but even i mean, the home office know how office is, you know, we know how systemic walk it is. so i'm not even sure that i trust their reports . reports. >> no, it's not the massive slam dunk. guardian i dunk. the guardian wants, but i get point. do the get the point. let's do the telegraph and police telegraph then. and police officers their officers are switching off their body but body cams. you can't help but think might be captured think that might be captured somewhere, a on a somewhere, perhaps on a on a body cam. josh, i don't know. am i i wrong? layman here? >> yeah, they're deleting the footage >> yeah, they're deleting the footagthis inquiry uncovers 150 finds this inquiry uncovers 150 reports of the misuse of equipment in england and wales. i don't i mean, look, there are privacy concerns , arguably, but privacy concerns, arguably, but at the same time, the point of them is that when you wear them,
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it would protect police it would protect the police officer because there are officer from because there are a lot of improper complaints made about the police for stuff they didn't do wrong or whatever. there are people who play that system, play that game, and it would innocence system, play that game, and it vibutd innocence system, play that game, and it vi but also innocence system, play that game, and it vibut also it innocence system, play that game, and it vibut also it protects innocence system, play that game, and it vibut also it protects the nocence , but also it protects the pubuc , but also it protects the public well. so when there public as well. so when there are these incidents here of police officers switching in the middle of an arrest or in the middle of an arrest or in the middle of an incident, and then switching off their camera at that point, i would if i would be start being very polite to the police officer. yeah it's going off now. >> let's see the real police . >> let's see the real police. yeah, that's a bit worrying. i mean, i've. i mean in general, leo, guidance to the police leo, the guidance to the police is woke, but the is horrifically woke, but the police officer on the ground, i have a of sympathy have a lot of sympathy for. we've case we've just seen the case recently they in recently where they handed in their you're making their guns saying, you're making our i do have ourjob impossible. so i do have some for this and i can some sympathy for this and i can see on the see why. if you're on the ground, you might bend the rules see why. if you're on the g|bit.d, you might bend the rules see why. if you're on the g|bit.d, y(whatght bend the rules see why. if you're on the g|bit.d, y(what do bend the rules see why. if you're on the g|bit.d, y(what do youd the rules see why. if you're on the g|bit.d, y(what do you think? ules a bit. but what do you think? yeah and made yeah and tech has made the police accountable. police much more accountable. >> interviews >> i mean, police interviews used without used to be conducted without without being recorded. so, you know, can imagine the sort know, you can imagine the sort of the temptation there to, i
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don't know, like twist someone's arm like metal, of don't know, like twist someone's arm like metal , of course. but arm like metal, of course. but now , you know, everybody now, you know, everybody everybody has cameras . everybody has cameras. everybody's got a phone. so we're seeing with you know, with george example , he george floyd, for example, he was by by a bystander. so was filmed by by a bystander. so this isn't going to get the police out of every situation. not that, you know, the police are doing this routinely. i think it's being done think it's just being done occasionally. sharing occasionally. also, the sharing the footage on whatsapp. but i mean, you were involved in mean, if you were involved in some sort of fight had some sort of fight and you had the footage, you'd it with the footage, you'd share it with your mates on whatsapp. i don't really that. >> e says that. >> says social media, >> some of it says social media, that worries me a more, that worries me a bit more, you know just know what i mean? you just just kicked some you've know what i mean? you just just kickon some you've know what i mean? you just just kickon the some you've know what i mean? you just just kickon the body ome you've know what i mean? you just just kickon the body cam you've know what i mean? you just just kickon the body cam straight�*ve got on the body cam straight on x tagging elon musk. you know what x tagging elon musk. you know whilnformation be free. >> information wants to be free. where have you got that from? >> sounds like just a >> that sounds like just a standard just not sure standard line. you just not sure what added to it. but what that's added to it. but yeah, information wants to be free, but not criminal free, but perhaps not criminal video the day . video recordings from the day. wasn't it marshall mcluhan? yeah. okay. all right. yeah. classic okay. all right. well, that's that story nailed. let's do the mail. and a boy has been iconic been arrested after an iconic sycamore tree was cut down. do
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we do more to axe we need to do more to tackle axe crime, so a 16 year old boy crime, leo? so a 16 year old boy was arrested today on suspicion of causing criminal damage after one of britain's most photographed trees was mysteriously overnight as mysteriously felled overnight as the much loved landmark mark at sycamore gap to next hadrian's wall in northumberland, which was made famous in kevin costner's film. costner's 1991 film. >> robin hood prince of thieves. i can't believe they caught the kid quickly. they need get kid so quickly. they need to get these officers on the madeleine mccann just they mccann case. this is just they turned of turned it around in a matter of hours. apparently used he hours. and apparently he used he used a for a 16 year old. used a huge for a 16 year old. it chainsaw it seems like a huge chainsaw and it was cut through with one stroke, which means that the blade have about blade must have been about two metres guess that metres long. i guess that explains why the why they caught him. that in his pocket. >> does a philosophical >> it does raise a philosophical question. a is chainsaw >> it does raise a philosophical quest im. a is chainsaw >> it does raise a philosophical quest in thea is chainsaw >> it does raise a philosophical questin the night is chainsaw >> it does raise a philosophical quest in the night and hainsaw >> it does raise a philosophical quest in the night and no 1saw >> it does raise a philosophical questin the night and no one's down in the night and no one's there hear is it still there to hear it, is it still vandalism? nice. vandalism? josh very nice. >> are really upset >> yeah. people are really upset about rightly about this and rightly so. >> beautiful dream, >> it was a beautiful dream, beautiful >> it was a beautiful dream, betwell.l >> it was a beautiful dream, betwell. l take >> it was a beautiful dream, betwell.l take local, as well. when you take local, not heritage, not just local heritage, national heritage. >> is legislation >> and there is legislation and they prosecuted under they could be prosecuted under they could be prosecuted under the crime legislation the heritage crime legislation for doing this. no one knows
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why. why someone would do this. and as you say, the idea that this person acted alone with this person acted alone with this huge tree, there's a white line which supposedly indicates that would be like that it would be like a professional lumberjack . that's professional lumberjack. that's the thing that they the kind of thing that they would are would do. but again, people are asking it's just so did asking why. and it's just so did you see the news? >> some people want >> some people just want to watch burn. is it one watch the world burn. is it one of mean, did the of those i mean, did you see the new for hs2? new route for hs2? >> so it's going through that that gap. >> what it nice >> that's what it is. nice clever link together. >> that's what it is. nice cle'twoink together. >> that's what it is. nice clei two stories. ther. >> that's what it is. nice clei two stories. people at >> that's what it is. nice cle'two stories. people at home >> two stories. people at home will be laughing at that. and will be laughing at that. me and josh because. >> yeah, thanks for leaving me hanging this side. >> yeah, thanks for leaving me hari ing this side. >> yeah, thanks for leaving me hari got this side. >> yeah, thanks for leaving me hari got it this side. >> yeah, thanks for leaving me hari got it slightly this side. >> yeah, thanks for leaving me hari got it slightly t001is side. >> yeah, thanks for leaving me hari got it slightly too late de. >> yeah, thanks for leaving me hari got it slightly too late to >> i got it slightly too late to laugh, but then i got it. you know, i was thinking about other stuff. >> i was thinking robin stuff. >> i vprince1king robin stuff. >> i vprince1ki|thieves. robin hood. prince of thieves. >> film. right? yeah. >> i was thinking about my sorrow, about the sycamore gap. you that scene, the focus sorrow, about the sycamore gap. yo actually :hat scene, the focus sorrow, about the sycamore gap. yo actually :ha the ene, the focus sorrow, about the sycamore gap. yo actually :ha the wrong |e focus is actually in the wrong place. >> the character >> so the. the character who's talking and it's talking is out of focus and it's focussed stuff behind really. >> for the nerds there. >> one for the nerds there. yeah. right. well, we have yeah. all right. well, we have just break just time before the break to fit in a horrific story here. let's and dutch fit in a horrific story here. let's have and dutch fit in a horrific story here. let's have arrested and dutch fit in a horrific story here. let's have arrested aand dutch fit in a horrific story here. let's have arrested a man)utch police have arrested a man in rotterdam after a fatal
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shooting. josh >> yeah, i mean, that really is the story. i mean, that that that's it. so far, we don't have any more information than that. no, there's more. >> in a university >> it was in a university hospital so a hospital classroom. so it's a strange place to go on a shooting spree . not that shooting spree. not that there's, you know, normal places , but i'm not familiar with the dutch. >> yeah, but but he was wearing combat style clothes. black hair, carrying a backpack beyond that, we what can we say , leo? that, we what can we say, leo? >> anything else? i just want to know. >> i'm not paid to say stuff, but i can't. >> no, no, it's not much more. you can no. you can say no. >> i mean, we're sort of >> i mean, we're just sort of waiting out it was, >> i mean, we're just sort of waitknow, out it was, >> i mean, we're just sort of waitknow, due out it was, >> i mean, we're just sort of waitknow, due tot it was, >> i mean, we're just sort of waitknow, due to any t was, >> i mean, we're just sort of waitknow, due to any particular you know, due to any particular ideology or if he was, you know what it was. >> okay, well, we'll have some more light—hearted stories in the coming the next section because coming up, floods into up, we have cocaine floods into europe . rupert, rupert murdoch up, we have cocaine floods into europe aboutert, rupert murdoch up, we have cocaine floods into europe about playing art murdoch up, we have cocaine floods into europe about playing formurdoch up, we have cocaine floods into europe about playing for the:ioch thinks about playing for the other team. and gary lineker might tweeting might have to stop tweeting about politics. oh, no. see you
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news radio.
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>> welcome back to headliners. let's get straight into it with the mail. and gary lineker will no longer be allowed to share his views social his political views on social media. no . guess i'll have media. oh, no. guess i'll have to go elsewhere hear why the to go elsewhere to hear why the eu is good and the tories are bad. >> leo yeah, so the bbc is bringing new guidelines and bringing out new guidelines and following gary lineker's comments about he compared suella bravermans migrant boats crackdown and rwanda plan to the policies of germany, which obviously isn't . it's just, you obviously isn't. it's just, you know, all hysterical left wing commentators tried to try to do that. so he's brought the less competent probably the bbc have brought out guidance for their for their stars so they don't influence unduly influence political issues while they're on air. but gary lineker's political tweeting is actually very important to him because it allows him to reduce his tax bill. he was sued by hmrc for five, nearly £5 million. and because they said, well, you're basically you're an employee of the bbc, so you should pay taxes if you're an employee. and he said no , look all the
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said but no, look at all the political do via my political activism i do via my tweets. so he managed to dodge a massive bill which is great massive tax bill which is great for him because i mean, instead of spent kidney of it being spent on kidney dialysis machines for poor kids , it gets spent on whatever gary lineker wants. >> i have heard that claim. is that legally that definitely legally true? i have that claim. that's have heard that claim. that's why. is officially true? why. is that officially true? >> i'm going to start >> it is. i'm going to start tweeting more xingu it's tweeting more xingu now. it's called, course, xingu hosting called, of course, xingu hosting on it's not good, it? you >> it's not as good, is it? you have to say that. mean, have to say that. yeah. i mean, so is a two week window. so there is a two week window. so allowed to post so he's not allowed to post about the about political things while the shows there's a two shows are on. but there's a two week before and after the week window before and after the series and can post series and you can still post about sort other things. he's passionate. >> it's weird like that's that's the then get the headline. and then you get into and doesn't into the article and it doesn't really element of really get into that element of it. and like why that would it. and also like why that would make difference like make a massive difference like is tv at that moment. is he's on tv at that moment. that's his greatest influence. but suddenly two weeks later, people haven't heard of him. it's confusing rules. it's slightly confusing rules. >> the it's a bit like an election campaign. >> the it's a bit like an elewbutl campaign. >> the it's a bit like an elewbutl cam do gn. >> the it's a bit like an elewbutl cam do say >> the it's a bit like an elewbutl camdo say during >> but they do say during election people election campaigns, people aren't anybody isn't meant to sort of come in with with who
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they prefer. and the other thing they're saying is actors it's fine actors. comedians can say what they want , fine actors. comedians can say what they want, but fine actors. comedians can say what they want , but they also what they want, but they also say the guidance for say that the guidance for everybody works the bbc everybody who works for the bbc should there shouldn't be offensive, aggressive language when with the public when you engage with the public debate, you don't attack individuals you disagree with, don't colleagues in don't criticise colleagues in public, do not promote lawbreaking and i'm just like, well, what are you going to tweet about? >> what's i have to say >> or what's left? i have to say it'd nice to not criticise it'd be nice to not criticise colleagues but yes, colleagues in public, but yes, there various rules. and do there are various rules. and do you have any specific examples? no, it's just a general no, no, it's just a general thing, i think. so. about thing, i think. so. how about this? be very this? i mean, let's be very fair to lineker. like be to gary lineker. we like to be very tweeted very fair here. he has tweeted or already and said this is or xt already and said this is all very sensible. so seems all very sensible. so he seems fine been worked all very sensible. so he seems finewith been worked all very sensible. so he seems finewith him, been worked all very sensible. so he seems finewith him, presumably, ed all very sensible. so he seems finewith him, presumably, and out with him, presumably, and i don't think you should agree with opinion. right. with his opinion. all right. i should be very impartial. we look, bbc takes look, we know the bbc takes impartiality seriously. impartiality very seriously. we know look newsnight >> just look at newsnight exactly what do you mean? >> we know that? absolutely and but, leo, can you really police everything? this is everything? because this is where going. we're where we're going. we're going for more policing.
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for like more and more policing. ofcom bill so ofcom online safety bill and so on. whereas you just on. whereas what if you just went you get rid on. whereas what if you just wethe you get rid on. whereas what if you just wethe licence you get rid on. whereas what if you just wethe licence fee, you get rid on. whereas what if you just wethe licence fee, right? get rid of the licence fee, right? because that's the part of the licence fee, right? beceputs that's the part of the licence fee, right? beceputs thebackie part of the licence fee, right? beceputs thebackie p.they that puts people's back up. they have and then you have to pay for it. and then you just do what want. >> but that's the i mean, >> but that's the thing. i mean, when you're paid by the licence fee, which is basically state fee, which is basically a state mandated a levy on people mandated tax, a levy on people and so and it's a regressive levy, so poor people have to pay the same amount as rich people. then if people are paying through this tax for this state propaganda broadcaster , then surely it broadcaster, then surely it should be beholden to some rules. it shouldn'tjust should be beholden to some rules. it shouldn't just be a bunch playboys swanning rules. it shouldn't just be a bunch dodging/s swanning rules. it shouldn't just be a bunch dodging taxwanning rules. it shouldn't just be a bunch dodging tax and|ing rules. it shouldn't just be a bunch dodging tax and tweeting around, dodging tax and tweeting willy nilly . willy nilly. >> everybody's trying to get everybody shut down. >> yeah, shut down the bbc. >> yeah, shut down the bbc. >> i like the bbc when it when it is impartial and when it does its you of its job. but if you got rid of the licence fee, help them the licence fee, you'd help them as well because that would relieve them lot lot of relieve them a lot of a lot of the burden of having to be impartial. and lineker could post away to his heart. >> and also because the >> exactly. and also because the bbc sure bbc is so great, i'm sure it would money would actually make more money in market. yeah, we in the free market. yeah, we love the bbc. >> i've always >> that's what i've always said. let's the let's have a look at the telegraph then. and rupert murdoch's switch murdoch's uk papers could switch allegiance murdoch's uk papers could switch alle they're definitely going like they're definitely going to
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win in win the election. now, in football terms, that's football fan terms, that's called glory hunter. called being a glory hunter. >> josh yeah, so rupert murdoch's could switch murdoch's uk papers could switch allegiance at and but allegiance to labour at and but he resigned last week. so this is his biographer has basically said , no, no, he's not really said, no, no, he's not really resigned. it's all for show . but resigned. it's all for show. but essentially if it looks like labouris essentially if it looks like labour is going to win, then that's what he's going to do. he's going to going be that's what he's going to do. he follow; to going be that's what he's going to do. he follow the going be that's what he's going to do. he follow the path going be that's what he's going to do. he follow the path of ng be that's what he's going to do. he follow the path of his be that's what he's going to do. he follow the path of his self> go follow the path of his self interest and put the sun and the times and whatnot out to just like they did with labour, with tony blair. it seems like a misnomer. i don't imagine going through the next election cycle sort of going along with the tories and losing and then having to spend all of that time. yes also keir starmer unfortunately is there's very little to dig up on his past. yeah, to make it donkey sanctuaries and watch . sanctuaries and watch. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> but also there's no difference between labour and the tories at this point. >> i mean, we're both as the inheritance tax, possible reduction . it's a 20 mile an reduction. it's a 20 mile an hour thing. yeah. there's a
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there's a, there's a little bit of tinkering around edges, there's a, there's a little bit of tiyou'reg around edges, there's a, there's a little bit of tiyou're gettingi edges, there's a, there's a little bit of tiyou're getting the edges, there's a, there's a little bit of tiyou're getting the samels, but you're getting the same basic socialist high tax government wherever you vote. >> anybody can be. the >> if anybody can be. the interesting is when interesting thing is that when people like, don't let people are like, don't let there's two arguments here. one argument is they're basically the same. and there are other people don't labour the same. and there are other pe because don't labour the same. and there are other pe because they're t labour the same. and there are other pe because they're going abour the same. and there are other pe because they're going to jur in because they're going to destroy the country. well, it's those two arguments are not well , they are consistent. >> if you say the tories are already destroying it, but labour are going to destroy it a bit more. that's my take is on social issues, wokester. social issues, on wokester. that's they're going to do that's why they're going to do it less . i'm actually amazed. it less. i'm actually amazed. you just want the you just want to slow the decline down. yeah, i'm suppose you could labour seriously you could vote labour seriously because going so because they're going to be so woke, things like woke, you know, on things like the know the trans issue and i don't know man safety man ofcom online safety bill >> i feel he listens as >> i feel like he listens as they are learning. we'll see really keir starmer listen, i believe is this your first time voting? >> but anyway, murdoch's done this before. as you said, it was it was a sun backs blair 1997 1992. they claimed it was a sun . what won it with john major on the other side so they have an
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influence . influence. >> yeah i i think that >> yeah i think i think that influences tv so much, obviously. but yeah , no, you don't know. >> but yeah, no, you don't know. >> but yeah, no, you don't know. >> mean, those 200 people >> i mean, those 200 people could be swayed. >> i mean, those 200 people coulyeah, be swayed. >> i mean, those 200 people coulyeah, i be swayed. >> i mean, those 200 people coulyeah, i mean, be swayed. >> i mean, those 200 people coulyeah, i mean, ie swayed. >> i mean, those 200 people coulyeah, i mean, i don'tyed. >> i mean, those 200 people coulyeah, i mean, i don't think but yeah, i mean, i don't think i don't think papers of the same influence they as gb news influence as they did as gb news yeah. gb news he's got such a big we win the election in this room. >> gb news got such a big social media presence as well as the sort viewing presence, sort of linear viewing presence, people are so people obsessed that are is so obsessed what we obsessed with me is what we should saying. carey should be saying. brian carey said mean, come on. >> on. >> all right, let's have a look at telegraph update at the telegraph with an update on phenomenon . on the gamestop phenomenon. >> gamestop meme king >> leo so the gamestop meme king has been named the company's new chief executive. this this chief executive. this is this guy, ryan cohen. the shares have jumped 10. he makes the shares jump jumped 10. he makes the shares jump a so in 2020, i don't jump a lot. so in 2020, i don't know if anybody can remember, but had but during covid, everybody had their checks their sort of lockdown checks and nothing to do. so people started investing in meme stocks. gamestop was stocks. and this gamestop was was one of them. and it's shares ran up . they jumped 1,500, ran up. they jumped 1,500, i believe. and they did it to squeeze to cause a short squeeze. so big hedge funds were
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were shorting the stock because when you borrow the shares to then sell at a later date when they've gone down and you make money on difference. so by money on the difference. so by making the shares go up, you're forcing the people then buy forcing the people to then buy them later date. them at a later date. >> robbie did it in >> when margot robbie did it in a bath yeah, yeah. >> when margot robbie did it in a b but yeah, yeah. >> when margot robbie did it in a b but i'llah, yeah. >> when margot robbie did it in a b but i'll takeeah. >> when margot robbie did it in a b but i'll take the leo kearse >> but i'll take the leo kearse version of it explaining. >> yeah, she was talking about the subprime mortgages technically, a technically, but it was still a good joke. >> you actually paid attention good joke. >>that actually paid attention to that bit? >> yeah, yeah. >> oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. >> oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. >> don't >> no, i don't. i don't care about women. >> we don't. >> we don't. >> we don't dislike women . >> we don't dislike women. >> we don't dislike women. >> that's the safe answer. >> that's the safe answer. >> yes. thank you that. >> yes. thank you for that. >> yes. thank you for that. >> just minds . >> yes. thank you for that. >> just minds. so >> i just see the minds. so anything you want to add? >> yeah. >> josh yeah. >> josh yeah. >> so this is coming out as a film ? yeah, it is. film? yeah, it is. >> it is coming out giving away the ending, dumb money with paul dano. >> he was good. played brian >> he was good. he played brian wilson. in little miss sunshine. >> very oh, yeah. >> very good. oh, yeah. >> very good. oh, yeah. >> in prisoners as well. >> he was in prisoners as well. >> he was in prisoners as well. >> could be the new short >> could be the new big short also there will be blood. also in there will be blood. >> should we just do welcome to listing this is all listing paul dano. this is all we talk without we could talk about without getting we could talk about without get they've got . they've really >> they've got. they've really sold have seen paul
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sold out. have you seen paul dano new film? dano in this new film? >> really content. >> what else can we do, guys? nightmare. right. let's have nightmare. all right. let's have a at the daily a look at the daily star. really? the star in middle really? the star in the middle of show. it seems like of the show. and it seems like there's a plot to flood europe of the show. and it seems like therea a plot to flood europe of the show. and it seems like therea a plofto flood europe of the show. and it seems like therea a plof cocaine. europe with a glut of cocaine. i suppose europe's been flooded with a glut of cocaine. i suppworse rope's been flooded with a glut of cocaine. i suppworse things. )een flooded with a glut of cocaine. i suppworse things. josh, looded with a glut of cocaine. i suppworse things. josh, sorryd with a glut of cocaine. i suppworse things. josh, sorry , with worse things. josh, sorry, i couldn't help so sorry . i couldn't help it. so sorry. twitter slash x deadly coalition of 20 cartels united and plot to flood europe with a glut of cocaine. >> this is in ireland. cocaine. >> this is in ireland . they >> this is in ireland. they they've seized . £136 million they've seized. £136 million worth of cocaine in and they're saying that it must have been a bunch of people coming together and i don't know what's happened to prices of cocaine since we left the eu . and i'm surprised left the eu. and i'm surprised that they don't cover this in the us or the financial times. no one told me. i tried to look into it and this has been one of the worst travesties of the whole eu. well the cocaine gets stuck guilty for giving it a mark. >> the cocaine gets stuck at the in the northern ireland border .
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in the northern ireland border. yeah. so, yeah, there's a lot of papennork now. yeah, it's difficult, but no, actually one of cocaine purity has gone of the cocaine purity has gone up, but it's going up around the world producing world because they're producing like it's like loads of cocaine. it's supply demand any supply and demand like in any market. mean , cocaine purity, market. i mean, cocaine purity, that's people that that's a group of people that only do cocaine. >> like i will i'm a pure >> that's like i will i'm a pure god . sorry. god. sorry. >> no, that's it. that's it. yeah. it's a horrible drug . it's horrible. >> it is horrible. it is bad. you talk talk a load of nonsense on it. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> turns you into us, and no one would do it here, obviously. >> no, it's drugs are bad. kids is my. that is my genuine message. hate got away with that one. barely drink. and one. i barely even drink. and i'm a christian. let's move i'm a christian. so let's move on. got to be so on. and i've just got to be so safe. paul dano is blooming safe. and paul dano is blooming good. what, let's good. i'll tell you what, let's do guardian and the do the guardian now and the benefits pretending to read benefits of pretending to read books. plants or books. leo so plants or bookcases as backdrop on video bookcases as a backdrop on video calls impress people. >> according to the study by durham university, where the researchers found that researchers also found that novelty backgrounds such as, i don't know, baboons or whatever lowered of trust and lowered perceptions of trust and competence . so, you know, i'm
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competence. so, you know, i'm glad they they did this research because we wouldn't worked because we wouldn't have worked that own. you know that out on our own. you know what inspire confidence what doesn't inspire confidence behind on call, behind somebody on a zoom call, a framed degree from durham university. it shows they've done this kind of research. this is nonsense. i can't is this is nonsense. i can't believe they're this. believe they're doing this. we still haven't cured cancer and they're as research, they're doing this as research, you inspires people you know, inspires people the most at background. most at the background. >> huh ? >> huh? >> huh? >> oh, yeah. then it's like, get this, get this is your background. >> and people will be like, oh yeah, that's truth, right? >> i mean , of course >> absolutely. i mean, of course people are walrus front of people are walrus in front of an iceberg. that's iceberg. of course, that's not going confidence in going to inspire confidence in a board meeting, is you've got board meeting, is it? you've got to you've got to have some books. you've got to have some books. you've got to careful, not to be careful, especially not if it's it's a shipping company. it's if it's a shipping company. >> you special books >> do you have special books laid out? >> well, i my real books >> well, i hide my real books before do . they'll have before i do. they'll have special books that come out, you know, like, oh, why i love caitlin moran or the guardian or whatever it is you're supposed like, hate men, all these like, why i hate men, all these kind then you kind of things. and then you know, real views. know, put away my real views. >> all my stuff in >> i have to do all my stuff in my daughter's bedroom. so i've got is only got all of this is the only quiet place the flat, right?
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quiet place in the flat, right? so you, they'll so when they cancel you, they'll show and say, we were right show that and say, we were right about him and thought about that. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> yeah, you got it. careful. you got to think of it all. okay so that's. that's pretty so that's. i mean, that's pretty much. that's unless you have anything mean, that's much. that's unless you have ardiding mean, that's much. that's unless you have ardid kick mean, that's much. that's unless you have ardid kick duringean, that's much. that's unless you have ardid kick during the. that's it did kick off during the. >> actually >> oh, there is actually something interesting. >> oh, there is actually somethivery interesting. >> oh, there is actually somethivery clear1teresting. >> oh, there is actually somethivery clear1teresabout >> oh, there is actually somnthey ary clear1teresabout >> oh, there is actually somnthey showed '1teres about >> oh, there is actually somnthey showed the esabout >> oh, there is actually somnthey showed the 72|bout >> oh, there is actually somnthey showed the 72 photos to how they showed the 72 photos to 18 white men and 18 white women. and i'm not sure i'm sorry. of 18 white men and 18 white men. so that's how they did the experiment. they took. they showed they had photos of showed like they had photos of 18 white men, 18 white women, and the only reason i'm saying white, it's just because they really making a big deal out of it. in the article, i suppose they controlling for the they were controlling for the controllables and whatnot. >> right so they want it to >> yes. right so they want it to be just all about whether you had a picture of a war. it's not race. so i guess that's why they note it's white anyway, note that it's white anyway, we have just have to be very careful, just get things but get all these things right. but that par three, that is it. the par three, but coming in the final section, coming up in the final section, astronauts get stuck in space. tinder introduces a controversial feature controversial new feature and share is accused of kidnapping her miss her own son. how can you miss
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that?
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welcome back to headliners. let's crack on and do the telegraph . and scientists have telegraph. and scientists have proved that levitation is not possible. finally, a story with some gravity. josh science artists find gravity proof levitation is not possible . oh. levitation is not possible. oh. oh, sorry. i know. i'm saying them i'm saying them to them because i'm saying them to get my punchlines in was gravity. >> yes . >> yes. >> yes. >> thought it might get a laugh at carry on. at the second time. carry on. >> . cern experiments show >> yeah. cern experiments show antimatter affected by gravity as predicted by einstein. a century ago. and. and i knew it. i called it. i've been saying it. i tell people this all the time. like i'm, you know, antimatter is affected by gravity . and we've long gravity. and we've long suspected that. no, i knew it. i mean, i knew it. and so finally i've got proof and there's a lot of people i'm going to be rubbing faces in it. yeah, rubbing their faces in it. yeah, this exciting news. this is very exciting news. gravity both matter and gravity pulls both matter and antimatter downwards in the same
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way. >> yeah. this is breaking news, but against this, leo is david blaine. i've seen him do it. he levitates. and those yogic flyers who are there sitting cross—legged and they go right up in the air. that's not science. that's magic. >> about birds ? see >> what about birds? you see birds sky. they're not birds in the sky. they're not standing on anything. do standing on anything. how do they get up there? >> great point. >> great point. >> from their government, >> great point. >> reallyn their government, >> great point. >> really adequately rnment, drones really adequately explained bee. explained the bee. >> flies. it doesn't seem explained the bee. >> also flies. it doesn't seem explained the bee. >> also governmentsn't seem explained the bee. >> also government drone. em it's also a government drone. it's government art. okay. hey, louis actually thinks that. >> oh, yeah . >> oh, yeah. >> oh, yeah. >> so? >> so? >> well, i am. i am a bit against levitating. we've had enough suspension . enough suspension. >> there is. there is actually something a little bit wider here, is the fact. here, which is the fact. >> sorry . it was good. come >> oh, sorry. it was good. come on, on. >> oh, sorry. it was good. come on, they'll n. it later at home. >> they'll get it later at home. carry i'm not carry on. okay. i'm not repeating >> okay. >> okay. >> they basically said, look, >> is they basically said, look, we always suspected this we always suspected this. this is a big experiment. they've actually getting actually carried out by getting anti nitrogens or whatever , anti nitrogens or whatever, however they did it. but the point is they were like, look, however they did it. but the pointjust|ey were like, look, however they did it. but the pointjust assume like, look, however they did it. but the point just assume something however they did it. but the pointjust assume something . however they did it. but the point just assume something . you don't just assume something. you actually sometimes have just don't just assume something. you actan ly sometimes have just don't just assume something. you actan experiments have just don't just assume something. you actan experiment to 1ave just don't just assume something. you actan experiment to actuallyust do an experiment to actually prove thing true . prove the thing to be true. yeah, and that's a good
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yeah, okay. and that's a good way of seeing the world like prove your ideas. prove try and prove your ideas. >> well smash that >> okay. well smash that exciting story. let's do the guardian. and some astronauts have returned to after have returned to earth after getting in space, which is getting stuck in space, which is even than getting on even worse than getting stuck on a with a left wing a car journey with a left wing open leo. that open mic comic leo. i did that joke for you , joke literally just for you, like no one would get it. like no one else would get it. >> had some >> yeah, yeah. no, i've had some terrible journeys people terrible journeys with people eating crisps brand new eating crisps in my brand new audi. astronauts audi. anyway astronauts and cosmonauts , which is a russian cosmonauts, which is a russian astronaut, returned to earth after getting stuck in space for more than a year. so our nasa astronaut returned earth cosmonauts returned to earth on wednesday stuck wednesday after being stuck in space a year. space for just over a year. american rubio set american frank rubio set a record longest us record for the longest us spaceflight. they had to stay longer on the international space station after after their original return capsule hit original return capsule was hit by junk pollution. there's by space junk pollution. there's a well, yeah, there's an increasing amount of in increasing amount of junk in space there's concerns that space and there's concerns that it you know , sort of go it could, you know, sort of go in this chain reaction. i can't remember the remember what it's called, the knopfler . knopfler effect or something. interestingly, to talking interestingly, i was to talking a russian about and we're discussing yuri gagarin . i was discussing yuri gagarin. i was like, you know, russia got the
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first man in space, yuri gagarin , and he was like, he wasn't the first man in space. he was the first man in space. he was the first man in space. he was the first man who came alive. first man who came back alive. so that's that's the joy of communism. just keep communism. you can just keep sending people there you sending people up there and you don't die or not. don't care if they die or not. >> is perhaps not the >> yes, joy is perhaps not the right get right word, but. exactly. get your closest to joy- >> you'll get in communist society. >> true . what do you think, >> true. what do you think, josh? junk. having stay >> true. what do you think, josifor junk. having stay >> true. what do you think, josifor agesjunk. having stay >> true. what do you think, josifor ages long. having stay >> true. what do you think, josifor ages long. apollo stay >> true. what do you think, josifor ages long. apollo 13, stay out for ages long. apollo 13, slash the martian. yeah. >> yeah. marsha and i was saying gravity maybe well, but in gravity maybe as well, but in both data , yeah, but when both data, yeah, but when they're up there they, they travelled 157 million miles and they, they, they circled the world 6000 times. so you know that famous shot of like you circling the world and then the sun, you see the sun appearing over the they must have over the horizon. they must have really been sick that. by the really been sick of that. by the end 6000 times. hey, end of that 6000 times. hey, guys , come no. guys, come on. oh, no. >> also, would aged >> also, they would have aged slightly to slightly different rate to people because the people on earth because the theory of relativity. yeah that's a good point. >> the crazy about going >> the crazy thing about going up be realising up in space must be realising that is flat anyway that the earth is flat anyway and hollow .
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and hollow. >> welcome to gb views. so let's do the times, the jokes guys. >> some of these are jokes. let's do the times. some just some of them, but some we definitely meet and share. there some of them, but some we defirare.’ meet and share. there some of them, but some we defir are. that's and share. there some of them, but some we defir are. that's those1are. there some of them, but some we defir are. that's those to 3. there some of them, but some we defir are. that's those to sharere they are. that's those to share has been accused of hiring men to slightly to kidnap her son slightly changes the meaning of i got you, babe . you, babe. >> i was thinking of do you believe in life after love? right because this is all about her. oh, yes. right because this is all about herafteryes. right because this is all about herafter es. right because this is all about herafter . yeah. >> after. yeah. >> after. yeah. >> cherokees have hired to >> cherokees have hired men to kidnap blue kidnap her son, elijah blue allman, to maybe change his name . maybe that was part of it. but yeah, is her yeah, essentially, this is her son's wife. or ex wife or to be ex wife . they were trying to ex wife. they were trying to work it out. they their something quite interesting. they were going to break up and they locked themselves in a hotel room 12 days work hotel room for 12 days to work it the and then on it out is the idea. and then on the their wedding the day of their wedding anniversary, four blokes just turn marched off. turn up and marched them off. and then she got kicked out of the family home. it turns out she wasn't at the wedding, so it seems like cher's never really liked this person. maybe i got that and that vibe, the vibe of it. and she's owed money in the car and
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all of this kind of stuff. and yeah, she's basically trying to get some dosh. >> well, if true , i mean, i >> well, if true, i mean, i think as far as i can see, it's only an accusation. maybe she just cared about her son just really cared about her son leo didn't you know, just really cared about her son leo thoughtl't you know, just really cared about her son leo thoughtl't personl know, she thought this person was a nightmare or something. >> or maybe maybe the >> or maybe the son maybe the son get out of son just wanted to get out of being a room being trapped in a in a room with his with his wife for 12 days, 12 he you days, for 12 days. so he you know, elaborate know, they staged this elaborate thing. smollett . thing. did itjussie smollett. so, know. but it so, yeah, we don't know. but it does. i mean, i don't know, but let's throw random let's throw around random accusations. does hang accusations. cher does hang around hells angels and around with hells angels and stuff a documentary about stuff. i saw a documentary about her and so she she her called mask. and so she she knows the people that could do this. >> good point. yeah paul dano was in that it's everyone likes chenl was in that it's everyone likes cher. i feel i just feel cher. i feel like i just feel like everyone likes her. >> she's but her >> yeah she's nice but not her daughter or ex—daughter—in—law. >> and not. yes. and >> true. true. and not. yes. and not they not the kidnappers. well if they didn't don't know. didn't get paid, we don't know. let's do the telegraph. only let's do the telegraph. and only mark take mark zuckerberg could take an item cool item as inherently cool as sunglasses and make nerdy. sunglasses and make them nerdy. >> so, mark >> leo yeah. so, mark zuckerberg's meta has unveiled a £300 pair of sunglasses with an inbuilt intelligence inbuilt artifice intelligence assistance assistant that can
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answer questions and translate foreign languages on the go. so they're an attempt by meta to try and restimulate interest in the metaverse. the metaverse is a sort of online virtual reality world that meta pumped billions or pumping $10 billion a year into this thing and it generated zero money and zero interest because it's rubbish. the graphics look like a sort of early version of the wii and early version of the wii fit and nobody wanted to wanted in nobody wanted to wanted to go in it. nobody wants to go in a virtual world. >> wasn't quite ready. people >> it wasn't quite ready. people eventually will definitely live in a virtual matrix thing, in a virtual world matrix thing, but weren't quite but maybe they weren't quite ready. zuckerberg did it in but maybe they weren't quite re kind zuckerberg did it in but maybe they weren't quite re kind of zuckerberg did it in but maybe they weren't quite rekind of zuchay.rg did it in but maybe they weren't quite rekind of zuchay.rg did it iyou think? >> well, the they're doing it with ray—bans. >> is a geek's >> it's like that is a geek's idea cool sunglasses. idea of cool sunglasses. >> well, i saw the photo >> yeah, well, i saw the photo of him. he managed to make them look that's what i was look nerdy. that's what i was thinking that's. what >> yeah, but that's. that's what his his. that's his. that's his. that's his brand. gift. it's brand. his gift. it's also facebook. people facebook. like people all the next and whatnot. next early adopters and whatnot. they're not on facebook. it's not i he's other not about i know he's got other companies that but £299 that seems like a sort of that's an affordable amount. but then a bunch ended bunch of people ended up buying
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their version and their previous version and supposedly , like practically supposedly, like practically none of them are used. 1 in 10 are still using these glasses they last came out with. yeah, look knows what's to look, who knows what's going to happen future, whether happen in the future, whether you they do seem like you need this. they do seem like there first there are some this is the first time. it's like hooking up with al sort of ai and then it could sort of read for you and point out read text for you and point out different images and whatnot and what they are that marks the bit i did. >> like, was it translating for you? we were right not to bother to learn languages. let's very quickly do the independent and tinder handy tinder have added a handy new harassment feature. josh yeah, this . this is crazy. >> tinder's new £3,000 feature could drive harassment of women. campaigners which is bad. campaigners warn, which is bad. which is bad. i was joking before. >> i've learnt a lot since then . very good. five seconds ago i've grown and yeah, they i've grown and yeah, if they if you get this you pay 5000 a year you get this ultra premium. >> the whole tinder >> now the whole point of tinder is believe i was with is i believe because i was with my before it all happened, my wife before it all happened, all online stuff. but all that online stuff. but you swipe and then swipe left or right and then you find who you both to find someone who you both are to mutually attracted to. but the idea is this is you can buy if you're enough, you can you're rich enough, you can bypass this. basically, this
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bypass this. so basically, this is service rich, ugly is a service for rich, ugly people to be able to access women or men who are interested in rich, ugly people. >> okay. leo 10s on this man. >> okay. leo 10s on this man. >> if you pay for tinder , if you >> if you pay for tinder, if you pay >> if you pay for tinder, if you pay for tinder, especially, this is five grand a year, then people know you're a loser and they to go out with they don't want to go out with you. tinder the you. paying for tinder is the worst. rich. it's the worst. no, you're rich. it's the most can do. >> nailed it. great >> all right. nailed it. great show, the is pretty show, lads. the show is pretty much lads, the show much like, say, lads, the show is pretty much over. but let's have let's have another good look. let's have another good look. let's have look at friday's have a quick look at friday's front so the times has front pages. so the times has tory to shift higher taxes may never be reversed and the telegraph soon to block new 20 mile per hour zones. the guardian has sunak puts car drivers first in new election battle line the express. pm faces calls to ditch european court's the i private schools reveal plan to use loophole to avoid labour vat charge and of course the daily star demon from hell tries to murder sharon osborne . and those were the osborne. and those were the front pages. that's it for tonight's thanks josh tonight's show. thanks to josh and back and leo. headlines is back tomorrow the host
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tomorrow with leo in the host chair . and if watching at chair. and if you're watching at 5 stay tuned for 5 am, then stay tuned for breakfast. but for now, it's good morning. and breakfast. but for now, it's g00(bless morning. and breakfast. but for now, it's g00(bless . morning. and god bless. >> evening. alex deakin >> good evening. i'm alex deakin . this is your latest weather update from met for update from the met office for gb most of us will get wet gb news. most of us will get wet overnight. some downpours overnight. some heavy downpours moving from to east. some moving from west to east. some gusty also picking up for gusty winds also picking up for a time. all thanks to this little area of pressure little area of low pressure could some very heavy little area of low pressure coulover some very heavy little area of low pressure coulover partssome very heavy little area of low pressure coulover parts of1e very heavy little area of low pressure coulover parts of south' heavy little area of low pressure coulover parts of south wales' rain over parts of south wales and particular. so we do have a met in met office, yellow warning in place parts of place here, but also parts of the midlands and extending up towards lincolnshire and across the midlands and extending up towcambridgeshire re and across the midlands and extending up towcambridgeshire and|d across the midlands and extending up towcambridgeshire and norfolk; the midlands and extending up towcambridgeshire and norfolk in to cambridgeshire and norfolk in line for some quite heavy downpours , especially through downpours, especially through the further north the early hours further north and west. it will turn little and west. it will turn a little drier with exception being drier with the exception being north—west where north—west scotland, where it will with further will stay blustery with further showers as skies clear temperatures dip to single temperatures may dip to single figures, most and figures, but most towns and cities will stay in double digits . cities will stay in double digits. friday is, by and cities will stay in double digits . friday is, by and large, digits. friday is, by and large, a fine day, early on there digits. friday is, by and large, a fir beiay, early on there digits. friday is, by and large, a fir be some early on there digits. friday is, by and large, a fir be some rainrly on there digits. friday is, by and large, a fir be some rain still1 there digits. friday is, by and large, a fir be some rain still overre will be some rain still over east anglia in the south—east of england away fairly england should scoot away fairly smartly . plenty of showers smartly. plenty of showers packing highlands in packing in over the highlands in the western isles and the northern where it'll stay
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northern isles where it'll stay blustery. or 2 showers will northern isles where it'll stay bluinny. or 2 showers will northern isles where it'll stay bluinn on or 2 showers will northern isles where it'll stay bluinn on the! showers will northern isles where it'll stay bluinn on the breeze rs will northern isles where it'll stay bluinn on the breeze elsewhere, feed in on the breeze elsewhere, but a and but for most it's a bright and breezy friday. spells of breezy friday. good spells of sunshine in the south that'll feel pleasant with feel quite pleasant with temperatures up to celsius, temperatures up to 21 celsius, mostly 16 to 18 elsewhere. saturday starts a bit chilly, but mostly starts fine and bnght but mostly starts fine and bright and many central and eastern parts will stay that way . however, out west cloud and rain will start to move in to northern ireland. parts of north and west wales and then into northwest and west northwest england and south west scotland, wet scotland, as well as tending wet here, more turn here, it will once more turn very gusty again, temperatures for in the mid to high for most in the mid to high teens, but 20 celsius in the sunny south—east
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away . away. and a very good evening. >> welcome to farage on gb news. it's my last evening standing in for nigel this week he's back on monday but we have a full on action packed, slightly
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controversial show for you. knife crime is it time for mandatory sentences for just carrying a knife? i think it may well be. then we move to , on of well be. then we move to, on of course, to working from home. the big debate, their productivity collapsing. but what about childcare costs? if you go to the office and then why is football hooliganism on the rise again, i thought we'd sorted all of that stuff and you will not want to miss the what the farage. i thought we'd left the european union. we've done brexit, but guess what? the european court of justice is still fining us. but first, it's the news with polly middlehurst . richard thank you. >> good evening. well, we start with the news that at least two people have been killed following a double shooting in the dutch port of the dutch port city of rotterdam. police say a gunman killed teacher and a local killed a teacher and a local woman after opening fire in a classroom at a university hospital campus. a 32 year old
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man has been arrested at the erasmus medical centre . the erasmus medical centre. the other attack, we understand, took place at a nearby flat . took place at a nearby flat. it's unclear if the two incidents are linked . dutch incidents are linked. dutch police are saying the suspect was a student at the university where the shooting took place . where the shooting took place. there were fires as the incident progressed . also in the news progressed. also in the news today, tributes are pouring for in liliane andam after she was stabbed to death in south london. the 15 year old was attacked while she was on her way to school in croydon yesterday morning. her family say their hearts are broken by the senseless death of their daughter . she was the light of daughter. she was the light of their lives. they say. a 17 year old boy who police say knew the victim remains in custody after being arrested yesterday . roads being arrested yesterday. roads and local minister transport transport minister richard holden told gb news earlier what is being done to tackle knife crime . crime. >> no new legislation has been brought in. sentences are being strengthened, which is vitally
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