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tv   Headliners  GB News  October 8, 2023 2:00am-3:01am BST

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for help. hamas says pleading for help. hamas says israeli captives are being held in secure places, including tunnels . netanyahu said hamas tunnels. netanyahu said hamas wants to murder us all. >> what happened today has never been seen in israel. and i will make sure that it does not happen again. the entire government is behind this decision . the idf will decision. the idf will immediately use all its strength to destroy hamas's capable cities. we will destroy them and we will take mighty vengeance for black day that they for this black day that they have forced on state of have forced on the state of israel its citizens . israel and its citizens. >> dozens of hamas terrorists have been stopped by israeli naval personnel . according to naval personnel. according to israel's defence forces . warning israel's defence forces. warning for those watching on tv, you may find the following footage distressing . earlier this distressing. earlier this morning, the idf pursued dozens of terrorists along the southern maritime area as they tried to enter israeli territory via the water. soldiers opened fire on the militants successfully destroying four vessels. hamas
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terrorists were also stopped as they tried to cross into israel along the southern border . well, along the southern border. well, back here, a significant quantity of what is thought to be cocaine has been discovered off the coast of dorset and hampshire. the national crime agency is investigating thing after a fisherman discovered holdalls containing hundreds of kilos of powder in the sea off purbeck. more washed up on a beach on the isle of wight. the nca say the class a drugs would have originated in south america . they're urging the public to report any similar packages to their local police force. 260 suspected rapists have been labelled as females by police over the last four years. that's according to data from the crown prosecution service, which was obtained by the daily telegraph. the classification comes despite the home secretary urging police not to label rape suspects as women as by law it can only be committed by a biological male. the figures show a further 209 suspects were recorded as sex
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unknown . and finally, boris unknown. and finally, boris johnson's barrister , ex—wife, johnson's barrister, ex—wife, marina wheeler, kc , is set to marina wheeler, kc, is set to become labour's whistleblowing tsar for women. that's according to a report in the independent newspaper for the leading barrister who will help the party with plans to strengthen employment rights to safeguard women from abusive colleagues . women from abusive colleagues. the party reportedly plans to give women who suffer harassment at work whistle blower status to encourage them to come fonnard with complaints without fear of speaking out . this with complaints without fear of speaking out. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. now let's go to those headunes. headlines. >> hello, i'm josh howie and welcome to headliners, the newspaper review show with a difference. >> what we lack in incisive political commentary . political commentary. >> we make up with jokes about
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our traumatic childhoods. and tonight i'm joined by two of the best in their respective fields, cressida wetton and bruce devlin in hello traumatic childhood. >> well, i've seen your act so show barn. oh, indeed . my show barn. oh, indeed. my political. you didn't even need to mention your childhood, but it just comes across fluidly it just comes across so fluidly it just comes across so fluidly it eyes. exactly. it in the eyes. exactly. >> and look at calling each >> and look at you calling each other before the show tonight. obviously matching your outfits, coming dinner party or coming from a dinner party or you're to the theatre or you're off to the theatre or you're off to the theatre or you're off to the theatre or you're of bond or something. >> shall i wear black? on. >> shall i wear black? go on. i never i'll black. >> and then turned up and we >> and then i turned up and we look like the addams family. >> well, i think you look wonderful. >> well, i think you look wonderfulyou. i'm not sure which >> thank you. i'm not sure which one's the beard, though. >> right. >> anyway. right. >> anyway. right. >> look at front pages. >> the mail on sunday don't kill me. sunday telegraph. hamas terrorist as terrorist butcher civilians as stunned suffers 9/11 stunned israel suffers 9/11 moment observer hundreds die and hostages held as hamas assault shocks israel the sun on sunday bgt acts left me suicidal . the bgt acts left me suicidal. the mirror, holly and phil mend rift over kidnap, horror and finally
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the daily star. scream me up , the daily star. scream me up, scotty. and those are your front pages. scotty. and those are your front pages . okay, well, we're going pages. okay, well, we're going to kick off with cresta with the mail on sunday. this is obviously i'm just going to get this out the way. this is something very close to my heart personally. and i think the producers are worried i'm going to go mental just from seeing my onune to go mental just from seeing my online twitter feed all day. >> that would be fair. >> that would be fair. >> but i will maintain my calmness and be a professional broadcaster. please, let's let's get on with the story and we'll talk it. okay talk about it. okay >> the headline is don't kill >> so the headline is don't kill me . me. >> that's petrified plea of >> that's the petrified plea of noah, kidnapped from peace noah, 25, kidnapped from a peace festival terrorists. festival by hamas terrorists. one of israelis, including one of 60 israelis, including children, mothers and old women who've been snatched in a murderous invasion. so we've been seeing clips all day of what's going on in israel . it's what's going on in israel. it's absolutely shocking. i mean , and absolutely shocking. i mean, and this there's so much of it
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available online. it's kind of modern warfare, isn't it, that we can see things that when i was a kid in the 90s, you saw quite sort of sanitised footage of wars, i think. but now it's online, it's on twitter for everybody. and it's hamas who are putting the footage out. >> crazy thing >> well, that's the crazy thing exactly, that they're proud exactly, is that they're proud of it. >> and i totally agree. i mean this i've never seen anything like this before . and this like this before. and this particular clip where this still was taken from the desperation, the horror , this young woman the horror, this young woman being stolen away and so many other clips and old women, you know , grandmas and mothers with know, grandmas and mothers with their children . it's the their children. it's the inhumanity. i mean, this is i think it's a wake up call for the world because as i think some people think , hamas. oh, some people think, hamas. oh, they're they're just trying to get freedom. they're they're a genocidal death cult. and seeing
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this footage is like, you know, and hamas, to be fair, has been prescribed by the uk government in 2021. but you still are seeing some media organisations and certainly a lot of online figures, political figures, whatever, still kind of doing a bit of a whataboutery or still not referring to them as a what they are, which is a terrorist organisation. and trying to do this kind of false equivalence. it's, it's unbelievable. >> terrorism is the right word , >> terrorism is the right word, isn't it? when you get this kind of it invokes feeling of footage, it invokes a feeling of footage, it invokes a feeling of terror. it's really not as much terror as bruce is afraid . much terror as bruce is afraid. >> to come with >> i'm going to come with a question to him about this particular story. but yeah, i've never seen anything like it. and this is young people. this is it's and i don't think people appreciate what a tiny country israel is. and how deeply this is going to impact their their psyche . and the jewish community psyche. and the jewish community around the world. let's move on,
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bruce, to the next one. obviously, the sunday telegraph , if they have, we've got some other news in a second, but they have also they've got a big headune have also they've got a big headline at the top if you want to read it. and >> oh, sorry. yes >> oh, sorry. yes >> hamas terrorist bucha civilians are stunned. israel suffers a 9/11 moment. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and i just want to say one thing. people i guess are going to use these events and this suffering to make their own political points . and i don't political points. and i don't want to be too much of a hypocrite whilst criticising people for doing it. and but i just the way that other media outlets portray this stuff and this morning i was woken up by all these messages and the bbc did not release anything until israel had retaliated . and then israel had retaliated. and then so then their big urgent news update could be israel fires rockets into . that's what they rockets into. that's what they have to go with. it's not you can just call this out in and of itself , and it's people are
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itself, and it's people are going to be reading about this. people are going to be learning about it. let's do some other stories quickly because we do have some interesting things that are affecting people closer to home. >> yeah, so there are two things in telegraph. in the sunday telegraph. >> is labour mulls the >> the first is labour mulls the return of grants funded return of student grants funded by richard graduates and the second thing is that sunak is to end sick note culture of fear amid fears amidst fears. >> i should say that gps are too lenient in signing those stories because then you're going to graduate and then you're going to start calling in sick. >> so they don't have to pay for somebody else's i mean, somebody else's loan. i mean, it's amazing, isn't it, the idea that students are that that richer students are going mean, going to pay for other i mean, nobody feels rich when they've laid tuition laid out nine grand for tuition . no. right. one's like, you . no. right. no one's like, you know i could just chuck in know what? i could just chuck in a couple more grand for somebody else. yeah amazing. and of course, people will pay course, richer people will pay higher taxes so an higher taxes anyway, so it's an additional it. additional tax on top of it. >> the problem is that the system we have in the uk system that we have in the uk and obviously you're from scotland , they have a different
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scotland, they have a different system there, not system up there, but it's not working. raising working. we're not raising enough money for our universities. capping universities. they are capping it obviously it because it is obviously incredibly and incredibly unpopular thing and they are trying to work out some kind and just now it's kind of system and just now it's come in, i think people are now going to be paying for 40 years. i mean , that's well, it's really i mean, that's well, it's really just tax , isn't it? just a graduate tax, isn't it? >> it's not like a loan that you're hope to pay you're going to hope to pay back. oh, that's back. it's just. oh, that's that's class you're in now. that's the class you're in now. you this tax. yeah. i mean, you pay this tax. yeah. i mean, why we just have fewer why don't we just have fewer degrees? saying this. degrees? i keep saying this. i don't what do you think? don't know. what do you think? they're useful. don't know. what do you think? theare useful. don't know. what do you think? theare they? ieful. don't know. what do you think? theare they? things like >> are they? things like apprenticeships >> are they? things like appras:iceships >> are they? things like appras opposed to. that as opposed to. >> that would be great. that as opposed to. >> i'mthat would be great. that as opposed to. >> i'm just.vould be great. that as opposed to. >> i'm just. i'm d be great. that as opposed to. >> i'm just. i'm d be wary.. that as opposed to. >> i'm just. i'm d be wary of yeah. i'm just. i'm very wary of anything could come on headlines. >> you don't any kind of >> you don't need any kind of qualification. >> absolutely not. i am a shining know shining example of that. i know nothing. here every shining example of that. i know nothing it's here every shining example of that. i know nothing it's fantastic. here every shining example of that. i know nothing it's fantastic. iere every shining example of that. i know nothing it's fantastic. i feelevery reborn. >> you are the prime vehicle for which i am the warning on the cigarette packet. yeah. cigarette packet. but yeah. and also it's kind of like it's a disincentive. surely to work hard. you're thinking, oh, hard. like you're thinking, oh, i'm to a really good i'm going to get a really good degree we get a first and degree and we get a first and i'm going to get an amazing job because paid.
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because i want to get paid. >> well, no, do you think it's the though, that people >> well, no, do you think it's the throughgh, that people >> well, no, do you think it's the throughgh,'degrees3le going through the degrees thinking get thinking they're going to get the becomes so the good jobs becomes so inherently depressed when they don't they then don't get them that they then have to doctor be have to go to the doctor to be signed off with stress or anxiety. >> a beautiful segway to >> what a beautiful segway to the but you want to not earn >> but you want to not earn anything. want to keep your anything. you want to keep your minimum wage job and then you never pay the graduate. never have to pay the graduate. i know that's one looking i know that's one way of looking at a job. >> it's just been the i've got paying >> it's just been the i've got paying tax now, all these >> it's just been the i've got paying t0( now, all these >> it's just been the i've got paying to buyn, all these >> it's just been the i've got paying to buy my all these >> it's just been the i've got paying to buy my kids all these >> it's just been the i've got paying to buy my kids fruitthese having to buy my kids fruit because know that i can because they know that i can afford it. but yeah, this other because they know that i can afforcaboutit yeah, this other because they know that i can afforc about theeah, this other because they know that i can afforc about the crackdown 1er because they know that i can afforc about the crackdown on story about the crackdown on sicknote is story about the crackdown on sicissue. is story about the crackdown on sicissue. this is is story about the crackdown on sicissue. this is a is story about the crackdown on sicissue. this is a statistic is an issue. this is a statistic here. nine out of ten cases of people, when do go to the people, when they do go to the doctors, the sick note. people, when they do go to the dochhat the sick note. people, when they do go to the dochhat they're the sick note. people, when they do go to the dochhat they're proposing,)te. people, when they do go to the dochhat they're proposing, what but what they're proposing, what are is this are they saying? how is this going cured? what's what going to be cured? what's what are the suggestion are they what's the suggestion for this? >> well, there's going the >> well, there's going to be the government an government are going to have an overhaul they're to overhaul where they're going to make it harder. >> currently, if you get >> so currently, if you get i think it's pip in england and it's disability , an adult it's a disability, an adult disability scotland , disability payment in scotland, you you fill out some questionnaire or you're asked and you have to , i think, get 12 and you have to, i think, get 12
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points and then they will give you the payment, if you see what i mean. okay. >> so you definitely can't get it if you can't read. >> i'm no. well, maybe , maybe >> i'm no. well, maybe, maybe you get more. i don't know. you might get more of your dyslexia. >> it sounds like they are going to be adding more levels , which to be adding more levels, which of is going greater of course is going to be greater costs this system. costs to implement this system. >> to put >> yeah, they're going to put more and but then more criteria in and but then they'll need more people in which do the assessments and which to do the assessments and stuff. all of just stuff. so it's all kind of just let off sick for day. >> by the way, hope nick dixon is better. thanks, mate >> by the way, hope nick dixon isokay better. thanks, mate >> by the way, hope nick dixon isokay well, tter. thanks, mate >> by the way, hope nick dixon isokay well, let'sthanks, mate >> by the way, hope nick dixon isokay well, let's let'szs, mate >> by the way, hope nick dixon isokay well, let's let's move te >> by the way, hope nick dixon isokay well, let's let's move on . okay well, let's let's move on to the observer now. cressida, obviously, again , we have a obviously, again, we have a picture and there dealing with the situation in israel, slightly different way for me, but should i just talk about it because that's how i know. go ahead. no, just because this is what i was just alluding to earlier is just how different papers written and the observer is a different publication to the the way the guardian. but just the way that of hundreds die that they sort of hundreds die and held as it's and hostages held as hamas. it's it when you're decoding this
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stuff, you it when you're decoding this stuff , you know, it's sort of stuff, you know, it's sort of like it's not like 100 is hundreds of israelis are are murdered and whatever they have to both sides it and they have to both sides it and they have to sort of say unverified videos released by hamas. it's like why everything has to be slightly niggled at yeah , some unverified niggled at yeah, some unverified videos i saw today in london of people waving palestinian flags and looking like they were at a party, which this is this is the celebration of that cult of that of a murder cult is it's unbelievable. you know, accidents that have happened historically . and we're going to historically. and we're going to if you start getting back into the history of israel, of course, it's different thing. but this idea this this, this this celebrate nation of death is disgusting to see. and that affects the like you say this these cars driving around. this is in london. this is where i live. this is my family live friends and stuff to see it is shocking, horrible and the last
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time something happened in israel, you had the same thing. you had cars driving through north london with with shouting out death threats , rape threats out death threats, rape threats to jewish women . and they were to jewish women. and they were arrested , but they never went to arrested, but they never went to jail. nothing ever happened to them. okay, let's move on to the next story and then we won't talk about it anymore for today i >>i -- >> i don't know if i believe you, starmer warns labour don't get giddy over prospect of election victory. so that's. that's the spirit. starmer. he's he's saying, hey guys, chill out. we haven't got it yet. in fact they've even the party's got a ban on introducing him as the next prime minister at their conference. >> it's is kind of like it's a very american thing isn't it? that's what they do. they're like gentlemen, please like laser. gentlemen, please welcome. but he's just trying to be way the be so the english way or the british should british way. sorry, i should say. guys. i mean, this say. is hi, guys. i mean, this guy doing right. we'll guy is doing all right. we'll see what happens. guy is doing all right. we'll seesay,t happens. guy is doing all right. we'll seesay, say ppens. guy is doing all right. we'll seesay, say after;. guy is doing all right. we'll see say, say after the set, see >> say, say after the set, see how it goes first. >> oh, yeah. don't >> oh, yeah, yeah. don't introduce brilliant. introduce them as, as brilliant. >> dichotomy is the >> suppose my dichotomy is the word geddy and starmer in the same sentence because he doesn't
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really get elated all really seem to get elated all too often . no. too often. no. >> so don't get elated >> so people don't get elated about him? >> that's thing. >> well, that's the thing. i don't he's at home buzzing don't think he's at home buzzing out of tights, thinking who out of his tights, thinking who ? and fagin ? machiavellian and like fagin and and all and rubbing his hands and all that stuff. yeah one that kind of stuff. yeah the one thing that did find endearing thing that i did find endearing about that bought about him was that he bought a patch his mum so she patch of land for his mum so she could donkeys. yeah. patch of land for his mum so she couwhich donkeys. yeah. patch of land for his mum so she couwhich was 1keys. yeah. patch of land for his mum so she couwhich was the s. yeah. patch of land for his mum so she couwhich was the bigeah. patch of land for his mum so she couwhich was the big famous >> which was the big famous gotcha. i think it was gotcha. the day. i think it was the like starmer the daily mail. like how starmer owns land and then it turns out that it was for donkeys for his mum . yeah, exactly. it was mum. yeah, exactly. it was massively backfired . but i think massively backfired. but i think that it's a clever call because, i mean, we saw that in previous elections where it looked like the opposition was going to win . british people . but i think british people just get very turned off by that kind of attitude and they're absolutely and it's sort of the worst thing. it's like, oh, you think great, do you? well think you're great, do you? well i'm going to show you. >> just won't have it, will >> we just won't have it, will we? your place. we? we'll put you in your place. >> exactly . and go to >> no, exactly. and let's go to the star. let's finish on the daily star. let's finish on that one. >> yeah, i'm glad i've got quite a serious story contribute. a serious story to contribute. yeah scotty.
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yeah so scream me up, scotty. this is to do with patrick from star trek, who played jean—luc picard . patrick stewart. that's picard. patrick stewart. that's it . my greatest actor. it. my greatest actor. >> our greatest living actor. >> our greatest living actor. >> do you think he is ? well, i >> do you think he is? well, i thought that was maggie smith. no but yeah, maybe male. >> male , actor. oh, bald actor . >> male, actor. oh, bald actor. >> male, actor. oh, bald actor. >> oh, right. okay. okay. it all comes out. that's fair enough. that could be maggie. we don't know a wig, you know know if that's a wig, you know what i mean? to me when i what i mean? cut to me when i say bald. >> director. >> please, director. >> please, director. >> anyway, angeles >> so, anyway, his los angeles home gone back on the market home has gone back on the market because haunted by an because it was haunted by an angry just ghost, angry ghost. notjust a ghost, but he said but an angry ghost. and he said that back in one night that he came back in one night and was in his bedroom, which and he was in his bedroom, which was different floor, and was on a different floor, and his with his nostrils were filled with the something the smell of something roasting in the in the oven, which was the below. it the floor below. so it was a culinary it could be a chef that perhaps was trapped between two worlds, screwdriver whizzing past. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and he went down there, but he found his son and the son was like, oh, all these books are on. it must be a ghost. as opposed to. yeah, because it was his just messy and had
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his son is just messy and had a big party. >> that's what it sounds like to me, throwing his boots so i don't if was don't know if it was an intellectual ghost as say, intellectual ghost or, as i say, a culinary ghost. >> i what it was, it was a >> i think what it was, it was a ghost. fan of the ghost. it was a fan of the original star trek series. fair enough. that's if you know your geeky right? that's geeky stuff there, right? that's the covered. but the front pages covered. but join a few
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>> gb news radio. >> gb news radio. >> welcome back to headliners. for me josh howie and one of these comics is chris de wet and these comics is chris de wet and the other one is bruce devlin. but i'm going to leave it up to you to guess who is who. now let's head first to the observer and at point an and cresta at this point is an even worth the election i >>i -- >> i don't know . the tories >> i don't know. the tories definitely don't know . poll definitely don't know. poll predicts landslide labour election victory was 12 cabinet ministers losing their seats. so it's looking very dramatic . it's looking very dramatic. they're not just going to go, they're going to go badly. so they're going to go badly. so the modelling is currently telling us this is going to be like 1997 all over again . i
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like 1997 all over again. i don't will dream get back together for this. >> are they still with us? young to know that's true actually . to know that's true actually. >> he was a four year old child. >> he was a four year old child. >> well, yes. >> well, yes. >> there was a catchy >> well, there was a very catchy p°p >> well, there was a very catchy pop don't know. yeah. so pop song. i don't know. yeah. so they're predicting all that all over again . one of the things it over again. one of the things it says, that the tories says, though, that the tories have got up their sleeve is that they can go they still believe they can go after because the after starmer because the british haven't accepted british public haven't accepted him. believe in him just him. so they believe in him just slightly more than he believes in himself, not i in himself, but not much, i think. in himself, but not much, i thir exactly. in himself, but not much, i thirexactly. well i mean, that's >> exactly. well i mean, that's the thing, bruce. i mean, is there that sunak can there anything that sunak can do? came up with some do? i mean, he came up with some policies this week, a—levels is changing. no smoking and whatnot. but is that going to make any dent, any impact? >> i'm not necessarily sure to be perfectly honest with you. going back to the starmer thing, though, i appreciate people's view of him, but he has remained a constant in that party. when how replaced months have we how many replaced months have we had in conservative party had in the conservative party and all that kind of stuff? i think should maybe think sunak should maybe stop banging about climate change banging on about climate change
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and his private jet. >> there are some some weird things that have happened. and the other thing is , i think one the other thing is, i think one of the dilemmas with the tories have at the moment is when to call this election, because even six months ago they were saying, do it now. whilst they don't hate much and it seems hate us that much and it seems to me they're like, they keep on like then it was going to be pushed back to the spring russian roulette. yeah, well, exactly. when's exactly. it's like, when's the when's optimal when's the most optimal time? and hoping the and they're sort of hoping the more push it back, the less more we push it back, the less we're mess up. but they we're going to mess up. but they keep these things keep on. >> home, rishi keeps >> i think at home, rishi keeps playing that dream song and thinking things going get thinking things are going to get better. just better. let's just, just not take going take the balloons going up and up. let but other up. rishi let go. but other people saying, hang on. people are saying, no, hang on. there's a bit of even the conservatives quite agree. >> analogy. like that. >> good analogy. i like that. >> good analogy. i like that. >> yeah, but seems to be >> yeah, but there seems to be quite a lot of infighting going in the conservative party. i mean, the other day mean, did i read the other day that truss is thinking about that liz truss is thinking about making a challenge the making a challenge for the leadership you're leadership again and you're like, down, that's great. >> t n fi- great. >> i don't think it's >> yeah, no, i don't think it's the of living, it? the cost of living, isn't it? that's what everyone is upset about. >> well, this is it. the two
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things that really care things that people really care about. and cost of about. exactly. nhs and cost of living. maybe living. so sort that out. maybe that might help. that might be. that might help. all right. on to the sunday times, bruce. and is it time for the snp to start running scotland? and i don't mean into the well , this is the thing the >> well, this is the thing the snp have urged humza snp figures have urged humza yousaf independence yousaf to pause independence push now obviously with them being a nationalist party that cause will never be away, that will off table. it will never be off the table. it is considered opinion that they should maybe be focusing on other . and you'd mentioned other stuff. and you'd mentioned about cost of living crisis and all that kind of thing. and a lot of people wondering why lot of people are wondering why they european they still have european and international all over international offices all over the world and all this kind of stuff. and know what's stuff. and i don't know what's happening the camper van. happening with the camper van. i don't know if they're going to be using that kind of be using that in any kind of electoral moving around . so the electoral moving around. so the thing i think humza, who thing with i think humza, who currently resides in broughty ferry with his wife, which is a posh dundee , still has a posh part of dundee, still has a seat in glasgow . so i think he's seat in glasgow. so i think he's trying to change that. but word on the street is as well that a lot of well, it's in dispatches
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that a lot of snp mps are going to stand down at the next election. so maybe they know something i don't know about the polling and all that kind of thing and whatever, but i think there are a lot of people in scotland, particularly when you had contest had the leadership contest and there on there was so much focussed on there was so much focussed on the you beliefs the leaders, you know, beliefs on people or the religion as on gay people or the religion as opposed to what you're doing about the roads. you know, what are about mid beds? are you doing about mid beds? what people what are you doing about people that all that kind that can't eat and all that kind of stuff? so i don't know what the future holds. >> say, bruce, i am >> i gotta say, bruce, i am incredibly how incredibly impressed with how knowledgeable of knowledgeable you are of scottish someone scottish politics. for someone who's from northern ireland, i think . think that's so true. >> from welsh parents. yeah, exactly. >> but they're talking here. are they are they going to get rid of humza for 2026? because that's the election they're also worried about because it's going to be the scottish parliamentary elections. if they sort of written off the. >> he's got to go, hasn't he? everyone just he's silly. everyone just thinks he's silly. he's asking , where are he's always asking, where are the when they're at the men when they're clearly at war and making gaffes? and i
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mean, don't think time mean, don't you think his time is up ? yeah. is up? yeah. >> but is it is it his time that's or is it the snp? that's up or is it the snp? >> that's a good point. >> well, that's a good point. maybe mean, you maybe it's both. i mean, do you get point where you think, get to a point where you think, come on, you've had your referendum it. when, when referendum isn't it. when, when will over. it's like referendum isn't it. when, when willfootball over. it's like referendum isn't it. when, when willfootball isn't er. it's like referendum isn't it. when, when willfootball isn't it. it's like the football isn't it. it's never but exactly right. >> thing now with >> but the thing is now with this come up, even >> but the thing is now with this you�*ome up, even >> but the thing is now with this you haveup, even >> but the thing is now with this you have people1 >> but the thing is now with this you have people that because you have people that want don't want to rejoin the eu, don't you? i do believe at you? so when and i do believe at some point in the future, scotland will become independent, i think there's too many kind root many kind of grass root children, voters of nationalist parents that want to carry that on, you see what mean. but on, if you see what i mean. but then you'll immediately have a fraction would need to fraction that like would need to rejoin uk. this is just rejoin the uk. so this is just going ping pong pong going to ping pong and ping pong like the eu thing keep us employed . employed. >> telegraph next and chris skudder. amazing new skudder. what's this amazing new tactic the have where tactic the police have where they where crime occurs? they go to where crime occurs? >> pretty much police to target antisocial hotspots after trials cut crime by 24. so yeah, it turns out if you put police in the areas where crime is happening, you see a reduction in crime. that's good.
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>> this is crazy. >> this is crazy. >> this is like some sherlock holmes type stuff going on. >> funny. research >> it's really funny. research from essex showed 40,000 hours of extra patrols resulted in 50, 55% reduction in which is 40,000 hours, isn't it? >> from what it was? and are these exactly with it? >> with it being an essex and having seen the only way is essex. so these crimes against fashion and are they actually violent. >> well i think i think to be a crime against what was that? >> against natural tanning, against natural tanning. >> oh, i love people from essex. >> oh, i love people from essex. >> gateway crime , a gateway >> gateway crime, a gateway gang, £1 million to get some software to identify local crime hotspots. >> i mean, what's wrong with a pin in a map? and she did not say, well, actually, never mind a pin in a map. >> why don't they just walk around on the beach? surely you'd up stuff to you'd pick up some stuff to increase that. >> no, it's >> no, no, no. it's the interesting statistic for me, bruce, how this doesn't just bruce, was how this doesn't just reduce have such a large impact on antisocial crime. but this has also been proven to have an
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impact on on all crime and sort of it seems to be a direct evidence that when you when you when you make a difference to anti—social crime, that has a knock on effect . knock on effect. >> but then is that not what the police are meant to do? like i don't understand. i don't want to quote another panel saying the is saying this is a to quote another panel saying the story, is saying this is a to quote another panel saying the story, butaying this is a to quote another panel saying the story, but i'ing this is a to quote another panel saying the story, but i justthis is a to quote another panel saying the story, but i just woulda to quote another panel saying the story, but i just would have non story, but i just would have thought of the thought that the fact of the matter yeah, if you matter is that, yeah, if you tackle all serious crime, it's a kind effect, isn't it? kind of ripple effect, isn't it? so that in new york in so we saw that in new york in the 90s and that was part of their policy. >> but no, mean, i totally >> but no, i mean, i totally agree as you're reading agree with you as you're reading this like, duh. this article, you're like, duh. yeah come on, what are you doing ? this is it. it's. it's so frustrating, isn't it? >> we used to have this headmaster that made us all stand up when we came into the room, which we all thought was really silly because we were kids want to do kids and we didn't want to do it. and then we got a new headmaster who didn't care, and the behaviour went downhill. well go. well there we go. >> police wow. they >> really? police wow. they employed obvious employed you yet more obvious fallout and the fallout from lockdowns and the observer that observer cresta. not that i'm not impartial, obviously. >> of covid generation >> thousands of covid generation
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under exclude from schools in england . so this article is england. so this article is claiming that the lockdowns have caused children little children to be going to school, caused children little children to be going to school , still to be going to school, still needing nappies , but that does needing nappies, but that does mean they had lots of time at home with their parents, so surely they should have been getting potty trained at home. i mean, that's never been a teacher's job, has it? >> but i think at home, no , >> but i think at home, no, that's true. but the point is that's true. but the point is that not they're not that they're not they're not spending time outside. they spending much time outside. they haven't other haven't acclimatised with other children necessarily. there's also massive language differences problems in differences like problems in terms of being able to communicate and also understanding words. so it's not just i wear a nappy . just potties. i wear a nappy. i'm not ashamed. >> but that's when i first >> no, but that's when i first read this. i thought, are they taking proverbial because , taking the proverbial because, as they were in as you say, they were in lockdown. what was child lockdown. so what was the child just in corner of the just stuck in a corner of the room left alone? while room and left alone? while i don't were enjoying don't know, they were enjoying some you're some sparkling. perry you're talking about maya parenting. >> answer right? >> yes. is the answer right? >> yes. is the answer right? >> your on youtube. >> heard about your on youtube. >> heard about your on youtube. >> but this is a very serious thing here because what we have
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is a generation of children with a terrible start in their school career and accumulates over time. and not only that , it's time. and not only that, it's going to affect the other children as well because of all these resources to try to get those kids to catch up. we are talking about a massively impacted general ocean here. >> absolutely. it was a friend of my sister. i think a friend of my sister. i think a friend of theirs had a baby during lockdown. and then all these people got together and it was the first time the babies had seen other. yeah. they the first time the babies had seen fascinated�*. yeah. they the first time the babies had seen fascinated because they were fascinated because obviously they weren't they weren't at all. but weren't used to it at all. but i have a friend that had two lockdown children they were lockdown children and they were all potty trained, you know, not i believe not. i've never had a child . child. >> i think one of the thing is having siblings and i think my five year old, that was a massive help having older brothers sisters did help brothers and sisters did help them with all of those impacts. but also it's just things like masks stuff. kids, babies masks and stuff. kids, babies need to see faces. that's how they learn about expressions and
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whatnot. so i guess maybe the most frustrating thing is that this kind of stuff was highlighted at the time. yeah. and ignored. and now we're going to see the impact on it. >> and 100. yeah, very, very annoying. >> write the telegraph here cresta with labour pushing a policy that i don't they policy that i don't think they actually with actually come out with particularly vows particularly well, labour vows to force political parties to disclose data about diversity of candidates on the surface does sound a bit racist, doesn't it? >> the way they've phrased it there you've got to list everybody by their their. yeah, by their identify and characteristics. so anneliese doddsis characteristics. so anneliese dodds is saying that labour would fall on. yes. man yes. if you. >> i'm just giving. you. >> i'm just giving . that's how >> i'm just giving. that's how they would do it. >> i thought that was an impression of anneliese dodds. >> how much that helps. yeah. well, she's, she's saying that the tories got the guts the tories haven't got the guts to this . no. firstly they've to do this. no. firstly they've had some female prime ministers so you there's that and so you know there's that and we've recently she's been we've just recently she's been talking about life sentences for, for sexual murder and she's
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implying that the tories have got no interest in women's issues and i just don't think that that's i don't know and i don't think it's just talking about women here. >> and of course, there is hypocrisy, because hypocrisy, bruce, because this is a party that's is coming from a party that's never female leader. never had a female leader. >> this is the whole thing. >> but this is the whole thing. why nandy in why aren't rayner or nandy in the top job? >> rayner, i understand, >> well, rayner, i understand, but nandy, i voted for nandy, although i think keir has actually been all right. but that choice was lisa that was my choice was lisa nandy. i think she's incredibly impressive. don't agree with impressive. i don't agree with her on everything before people start , but that start tweeting me, but, but that is who i originally went for. but the other thing that i mean, first of all, number one, reading this was that this information has already been put out there. there's already a law that this this information is put there. secondly, i don't put out there. secondly, i don't know they think this is going know if they think this is going to impact it that they to have the impact it that they think it will. people can go, oh, this party has got this much representation and this much diversity . first of all, we see diversity. first of all, we see this is a sub clause. we see the conservatives with seemingly a
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much more diverse leadership in terms of ethnicity and gender for well , i was terms of ethnicity and gender for well, i was going to terms of ethnicity and gender for well , i was going to say for well, i was going to say that, but then i thought, well, no, because i don't know what their personal opinions are. >> reject idea, you know. >> i reject this idea, you know. oh, well, we've got all the colours must fine. it's colours so it must be fine. it's like, you know, but then she's obviously, mean, i obviously, i mean, anneliese, i believe scottish. believe is scottish. >> stage had >> and at one stage we had scottish labour kezia scottish labour leader kezia dugdale, be a out dugdale, who happens to be a out proud woman. i'm in the proud gay woman. i'm in the cabinet in scotland. there's pam duncan clancy who happens to be because they want disabled mp. she happens a wheelchair. she happens to use a wheelchair. the now is a man i'm not the leader now is a man i'm not sure is he muslim ? and so if sure is he muslim? and so if think so , scottish labour has think so, scottish labour has everything that she's looking for. but you know obviously down here then she seems to be bereft i >> but here's a crazy thing. why don't we just vote for the people who we think are going to be the best job? madness right? we're the halfway point, but we're at the halfway point, but join us for harassment, join us for sexual harassment, genden join us for sexual harassment, gender, beast. gender, apartheid and a beast. drivers didn't drivers you can't say we didn't
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warn
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radio. welcome back to headliners. >> let's go straight to the mail on sunday, which even though they've got it in for the bbc are the bbc helping them out here? >> bruce well so it's revealed that question time audience member described member who fiona bruce described as, i quote, the black guy as, and i quote, the black guy breaks his silence and says. presenter called him to say sorry, but he still wants to know why the bbc deleted the clip. i lot of clip. now, i know a lot of people in their droves don't watch anymore. watch question time anymore. you can live when it's can watch it live when it's being recorded on iplayer . being recorded on iplayer. >> stop talking about the competition. >> this competition. this competition. and this comment was made in that. competition. and this comment was made in that . but when they was made in that. but when they put the programme out, they'd edited it now i do think edited it out. now i do think it's odd. i happen to like fiona bruce know lot of people bruce and i know a lot of people on sunny well, no first on the same sunny well, no first name anyway , i'll continue name anyway, i'll continue talking and thank you . i would talking and thank you. i would like to point out that she had fallen off a horse and she'd broken her hand. not that i'm
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saying that that's an issue racist, but it's the first time that she's ever referred to someone. she would either say the in glasses or someone. she would either say the blonde in glasses or someone. she would either say the blonde haired glasses or someone. she would either say the blonde haired glasslt'sor the blonde haired woman. it's the blonde haired woman. it's the i think she's the first time i think she's ever anything to pertaining the first time i think she's evthe anything to pertaining the first time i think she's evthe colourthing to pertaining the first time i think she's ev the colour ofng to pertaining the first time i think she's ev the colour of someone'sining the first time i think she's ev the colour of someone's skin to the colour of someone's skin . then the funny . yeah. so and then the funny thing the guy had got just thing is the guy had gotjust happens to black who happens happens to be black who happens to indeed. then to be black. indeed. and then the guy is roberto the guy his name is roberto gorgon , i'm 35. he'd got in gorgon, i'm 35. he'd got in touch to say, why did you edit the clip out if you didn't think there was anything wrong with it? saying it regards the guy in the blue sweater? >> yes. well, an >> yes. well, it's an interesting thing, caressa because she but because she has, but she's called apologise . called him to apologise. >> so she's called to >> so she's called in to apologise, but i her apologise, but i think her excuse is a bit weird because she sort of says that she couldn't see any other identifying features. she was like, oh, i was blocked. i'm like, oh, i was blocked. i'm like, what? you literally just saw his head. you didn't see the colour of his shirt. and yeah, exactly. she just saw like tiny thing . and then also then thing. and then she also then says i wanted because says that. but i wanted because i'm almost like she implies
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because i'm so anti racist . i because i'm so anti racist. i wanted to make sure that his voice was heard. so i thought i'd be a little bit racist or maybe people don't think it's racist at all just to go, oh, excuse me, gentlemen. the black gentleman in the middle. is that racist? >> well, i didn't think it was when watched clip back, when i watched the clip back, i thought , when i watched the clip back, i thought, fair enough. i certainly wouldn't be offended if i were in a row of women of other colours if i was the only white person. and they said the white person. and they said the white woman. then , you white woman. but but then, you know, what people know, who knows what people have experienced life? experienced their entire life? exactly. not be place exactly. it may not be my place to but certainly the tone to say, but certainly the tone of it was i mean , i don't know. of it was i mean, i don't know. and once you start getting into , oh, well, i fell off a horse, it's like, no, no, look, just say, oh, she wasn't using that as an excuse . as an excuse. >> it's just you. oh, it was just me. see, thing is, just me. see, the thing is, madonna off horse once. just me. see, the thing is, ma(to na off horse once. just me. see, the thing is, ma(to going off horse once. just me. see, the thing is, ma(to going see horse once. just me. see, the thing is, ma(to going see herorse once. just me. see, the thing is, ma(to going see her nextonce. just me. see, the thing is, ma(to going see her next week. i'm to going see her next week. more that the break. more of that after the break. and everyone thought had more of that after the break. aifacelift. veryone thought had more of that after the break. aifacelift. izryone thought had more of that after the break. aifacelift. i see. e thought had a facelift. i see. >> madonna. >> madonna. >> yeah, she'd fallen off a horse to kind of cover it. if you see what i mean. so. >> okay, well, i feel we've
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>> okay, well, i feel like we've really that one. well, really done that one. well, i don't know where we went off. congratulations. taken don't know where we went off. congfrom itions. taken don't know where we went off. congfromitionlewis taken don't know where we went off. congfrom ition lewis schafferi over from the lewis schaffer segway over from the lewis schaffer seg nor over from the lewis schaffer seg no observer next. >> no observer next. >> no observer next. >> and bruce, what is gender apartheid and how do we stop south doing it? yes. south africa doing it? yes. >> nobel peace winner joins >> so nobel peace winner joins calls for un to criminalise gender apartheid. now, we were talking about this before the show. one, we were we were talking at her. no, i wasn't . i talking at her. no, i wasn't. i wasn't. we're purely collaborative . we're purely discussion. >> i was saying how this is feminism where it's needed . it's feminism where it's needed. it's my take. i thought we were doing a story tonight about labour's plans about sexual harassment at work . but i've got that coming work. but i've got that coming up. we've got that coming up. okay, we'll get to so okay, so we'll get to that. so it's very interesting to me how different parts of the world are driving feminism different driving feminism in different ways. argue this is ways. and i would argue this is entirely appropriate , right? entirely appropriate, right? because because the clearly the taliban are enacting some kind of gender apartheid. if they're not allowing women to have education, that's not on, in my opinion. no no. >> i mean, it's is it the right
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type using the word apartheid is obviously a very evocative and it's used by people certainly in israel. they try and claim it's an apartheid, even though people in israel. hey, did bring it in israel. hey, i did bring it back. lied. but even though back. i lied. but even though arabs , arab israelis have full arabs, arab israelis have full equal rights with with israelis, jewish israelis . but so i'm not jewish israelis. but so i'm not sure how helpful that is. but of course, there is a state where, you know, in afghanistan, you have the taliban. what they have is this in iran as well, and various other countries around the world, the way that women are treated and but trying to get this put through the human rights un human rights council. i mean, when you've got china on the board and you've got these other countries , human rights other countries, human rights abusers, kazakhstan , the uae, abusers, kazakhstan, the uae, these are not all pakistan , not these are not all pakistan, not always great places to be a woman, arguably, no. >> and there is also this argument not being argument about not being subjugation, but instead protection. and we would have said this country until said that in this country until not ago .
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not that long ago. >> so there's that there is that . all right. well, look, let's do what were going talk do what we were going to talk about. now, krista, about. independent now, krista, what rules does labour want you to start following? what rules does labour want you to slabourlowing? what rules does labour want you to slabour reveals plans >> labour reveals new plans to clamp on harassment clamp down on sexual harassment at . so yeah , there you go. at work. so yeah, there you go. the labour party has unveiled new plans to clamp down on sexual harassment in the workplace, as figures show almost five 5 million women experienced such behaviour at work each year. and with these stories about sexual harassment, we never get a definition of what sexual harassment means and wot]. >> won. >> and yeah , well, that's it. >> and yeah, well, that's it. >> and yeah, well, that's it. >> this is it though, isn't it? is that. i bet there are people who would see who would see that as sexual harassment. and i would say to them, no it's not. as sexual harassment. and i wo we say to them, no it's not. as sexual harassment. and i wo we don't) them, no it's not. as sexual harassment. and i wo we don't getem, no it's not. as sexual harassment. and i wo we don't get a|, no it's not. as sexual harassment. and i wo we don't get a definition not. so we don't get a definition which no , no, no, which is yes, sorry, no, no, no, we don't get a definition. >> sorry. i just thought of something. yeah. >> sorry. i just thought of son classic yeah. >> sorry. i just thought of sonclassic interrupting. >> classic interrupting. >> classic interrupting. >> holly willoughby or. >> holly willoughby or. >> no, no, no, no. i told you i wanted in because i know wanted that in because i know about that. but you know, relevant to it is relevant relevant to this, it is relevant to this because judy murray, andy she came andy murray's mother, she came out was
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out recently saying she was a victim of sexual harassment or sexual assault. and it was to do with someone putting a hand on her leg. i think now i don't know about you. i get my backside felt up at gigs constant from i don't even know, honestly, but i do. and i'm not saying it's right, but i'm not necessarily sure i would determine that. but then who am i to say whatever anyone is going through, if you see what i mean. it could lead more. mean. it could lead to more. >> i rape is carried out >> i mean, rape is carried out by sexual attacks, and by men sexual attacks, and there's rocketman can't be attacked. there is a huge difference the men difference between the way men and sexual and women receive sexual advances . advances. >> i completely accept that. if anything, don't think we make anything, i don't think we make enough of that because that's the oftentimes enough of that because that's the realise oftentimes enough of that because that's the realise what :imes enough of that because that's the realise what they're men don't realise what they're doing upsetting women. doing is upsetting women. so there's that and i mean, what else can we say about this? they the latest data from the government. i'm still interested in these figures. it reveals that 3 in 10 women currently in work suffered some form of sexual harassment in the last yean sexual harassment in the last year. and i just we never get a
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definition. and i personally don't think i've ever been sexually harassed in the workplace. so i constantly get this diet of these stories. and i i don't know what to say i just i don't know what to say about well, i'm not going >> okay. well, i'm not going to say anything now. i'm just going to on quickly because there to move on quickly because there are that came to move on quickly because there are my that came to move on quickly because there are my moving at came to move on quickly because there are my moving on:ame to move on quickly because there are my moving on toie into my brain moving on to telegraph woman's only telegraph where a woman's only shelter needs change name i >> chris skudder women only homeless agrees to take homeless shelter agrees to take in trans people who self—identify . so this charity, self—identify. so this charity, glassdoor, i mean , they're a glassdoor, i mean, they're a homelessness charity now. previously there was no they're making the point that they didn't have separate gender accommodation for homeless people. so i just think that's worth knowing. at the beginning of the story. but they've then come and created woman's come in and created a woman's space specifically said space and specifically said they'll women in they'll allow trans women in there and course, amazed there and of course, i'm amazed that they're not a bit more with the times because this is currently the stuff is all kind of unravelling. these are the most vulnerable and it's most vulnerable women and it's totally inappropriate to have biological males in these spaces because bruce actually part of equality law is that there is a protection in there for these
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single—sex spaces. >> , there is, but for many >> well, there is, but for many years , the importance of keeping years, the importance of keeping men women's shelter has men out of women's shelter has been such that any person who enters, plumbers and enters, including plumbers and electricians, female. so electricians, must be female. so with that is one of the kind of mission then, yeah . mission statements then, yeah. does that not fly in the face of this new policy? >> yeah, no, of course it does. but they're going going but then they're going going along with this in 2020. they talk about a woman being raped in a mixed sex shelter. this is exactly why you have it in. in one of the things that first enlightened me to this, what was going on with ideology going on with gender ideology was been a woman's was there's been a woman's shelter in montreal that has been sued for the last eight years and lost all its funding to they've been trying to get them to force them to allow men identifying as women into it. and they actually finally just, i believe, won their case. but it seems like it's like prisons and whatever. you have very vulnerable people here they vulnerable people here and they need to be protected in those spaces and it's not about trans
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women being young. it's about men. yeah. anyway, whatever . men. yeah. anyway, whatever. right? one more section to go. it's a doozy . dead birds who it's a doozy. dead birds who exhibit and the death of the pork pie. let's go out
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welcome back to headliners and kicking off with the telegraph cresta and does this development mean i should finally leave my space? it might be time does ad free instagram mean the era of data harvesting is over ? data harvesting is over? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> talk to us about data harvesting. >> does it mean that. well, it turns out that if you're sexy data harvesting , so am i allowed data harvesting, so am i allowed to say that? >> i don't know. i'm not sure. >> i don't know. i'm not sure. >> after me, i don't think you should be harvesting sexy data personally. you can when personally. you can anyway. when we facebook and things like we use facebook and things like that, we if we're not paying, we are the guys . yeah. are the product guys. yeah. that. you're not paying that. no, you're not paying you're the product your
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attention because. yeah. because they we're they can sell you stuff so we're worth a fortune. but if we pay for like instagram or for things like instagram or whatever, we won't get advertised at. so i think that sounds like a really good solution. they're talking about £11 a month to use meta facebook. would pay £11 not to facebook. i would pay £11 not to use facebook these days, but you can do that for free. >> i've never used it. you've never used facebook? no, i've never used facebook? no, i've never used facebook? no, i've never used facebook. never used facebook? no, i've nevyou sed facebook. never used facebook? no, i've nevyou on facebook. never used facebook? no, i've nevyou on instagram or any of >> you on instagram or any of the other stuff. yeah okay. so i mean, with mean, do you get bombarded with all adverts and also when all the adverts and also when they kind they take they kind of like they take those little bits, it's incredible. i know everyone jokes about it talks about jokes about it or talks about it. you mention a song it. it's like you mention a song or god, i'm doing or oh my god, i'm, i'm doing some and then suddenly i'm some diy and then suddenly i'm still getting for still getting adverts for bathrooms and had mine bathrooms and i've had mine done, see what mean. bathrooms and i've had mine dorand see what mean. bathrooms and i've had mine dorand i've see what mean. bathrooms and i've had mine dorand i've tried vhat mean. bathrooms and i've had mine dorand i've tried tort mean. bathrooms and i've had mine dorand i've tried to getnean. bathrooms and i've had mine dorand i've tried to get in an. >> and i've tried to get in touch with them and say, i've got it, i'll show you photo of got it, i'll show you a photo of it. have to stop showing me it. you have to stop showing me this. i'm beginning to go off instagram. needy instagram. it's a very needy thing minute you thing because the minute you follow follow these thing because the minute you follow but follow these thing because the minute you follow but watch )llow these thing because the minute you follow but watch how these thing because the minute you follow but watch how you se thing because the minute you follow but watch how you talk people, but watch how you talk to you reply to them. you know, if you reply to them. you know, if you reply to in a remember to someone in a dm, remember this a supportive place and this is a supportive place and
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it's tell the hmrc it's like, well, tell the hmrc that you the that because when you phone the hmrc, point to this. hmrc, there is a point to this. they're like our staff are allowed to without being allowed to work without being screwed and screamed at. and it's i'm also it's like, well, yeah, i'm also allowed not off and allowed to not be cut off and tutted them heavy tutted at and hear them heavy breathing. so it works both ways. no, i'm done with ways. but no, i'm done with instagram. it's annoying. ways. but no, i'm done with insibutim. it's annoying. ways. but no, i'm done with insibut it's it's annoying. ways. but no, i'm done with insibut it's also annoying. ways. but no, i'm done with insibut it's also a annoying. ways. but no, i'm done with insibut it's also a bit|noying. ways. but no, i'm done with insibut it's also a bit ofying. ways. but no, i'm done with insibut it's also a bit of ang. >> but it's also a bit of a class thing in it. if have class thing in it. if you have to pay get to not be hassled to pay to get to not be hassled by other thing by adverts. and the other thing that they're talking about is in the have come the eu, the laws that have come through now, they're not allowed the eu, the laws that have come th|collectow, they're not allowed the eu, the laws that have come th|collectow, tdatae not allowed the eu, the laws that have come th|collectow, tdata a not ally so 5d to collect that data anyway, so they're you they're like, hey guys, you could just pay for it. >> us if they're not allowed to collect will we see collect data, will we not see any repeat? >> i think it's like it's >> no, i think it's like it's all a bit general, like they're just going to take the very basic years old, basic data you're 47 years old, so you're going to get a lot of prostate stuff. that's life. prostate stuff. that's my life. >> a month? but >> but a £11 a month? yeah but then twitter's now paying for youtube premium. >> did youtube premium. that? i know what >> what's that? i know what youtube oh, right. well youtube is. oh, right. well actually, that makes sense. i spare you. it's to do with kylie minogue. >> we'll move on observer next and bruce, a very short sequel here hitchcock's the birds. yes. >> i like hedren when >> i felt like tippi hedren when i reading it. yes. at least
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i was reading it. yes. at least a thousand birds have died from colliding one chicago colliding with one chicago building in one day. now, this is mccormack place, is our is mccormack place, which is our convention centre here. so if you think of somewhere like the excel or earls court, but it's all glass, all glass and it's absolutely poor absolutely massive and the poor birds flying it. stupid birds are flying into it. stupid birds are flying into it. stupid birds . are they stupid? birds. are they stupid? >> well, dead . >> well, they're dead. >> well, they're dead. >> that's lived >> that's their lived experience. don't know what experience. we don't know what brought that. maybe brought them to that. maybe there trauma in there was childhood trauma in their fine their nest. fine >> but a thousand birds or thousand? >>a thousand? >> a lot of birds ? yeah, a lot >> a lot of birds? yeah, a lot of birds. i love that this is somebody's job to study this. i'm saying that with a smirk. i actually do think this really sad. >> lot of nuggets >> there's a lot of nuggets there, it? sorry. that's. there, isn't it? sorry. that's. i be crying as well. i should be crying as well. >> do you know, though, it was it was in the last ten years that said, don't that mcdonald's said, don't worry, the nuggets are made of breast they made breast meat. what were they made of tendons and of before? like tendons and claws? beaks. >> i've seen on on the >> no, i've seen it on on the facebook should be paying for. facebook i should be paying for. so don't see this kind so i don't have to see this kind of thing. >> yeah, but it says but >> okay. yeah, but it says but they i've never heard about this before where before but they chicago where this have the this has taken place have the
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bird buildings bird safe buildings act so they're on they're really getting on generally i'm not a big fan of more legislation this is one you can get behind. >> well pretty isn't it? >> they also they also have a huge pollution huge amount of light pollution from chicago, and from buildings in chicago, and that's affecting the quality of the wee birds. that's affecting the quality of the wen have s. that's affecting the quality of the wenhave learnt a lot with >> we have learnt a lot with that story. >> ornithologist . >> we're ornithologist. >> we're ornithologist. >> very good. more with >> oh, very good. more with birds. no more observer action. now, cresta, and this is my sunday with the kids sorted . sunday with the kids sorted. >> brilliant. >> it's brilliant. like something from back of animal poo exhibition opens in london. i don't know if we've got any photos for this, but even if we haven't, you can imagine it. i can do a live. it looks exciting. no, but that's the only hasn't done so only one. she hasn't done so this zookeeper this lady, she was a zookeeper and enormously fond of and she was enormously fond of the animals. i can imagine that you them. you would become fond of them. then her favourite then one day, her favourite elephant taken away. oh and elephant gets taken away. oh and as a souvenir, she decides to keep a poo as you do, and she dries it out and nobody questions her mental health. there's no got a couple of exes. well, she's she's now got well, she's so she's now got this collection of this enormous collection of animal poos and she thinks i know than
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know what i'll do rather than seek help, turn it into an seek help, i'll turn it into an exhibition and does make exhibition an and she does make the doesn't have the point that she doesn't have any faeces. so if want any human faeces. so if you want to volunteer you it's to volunteer you so it's not really is complete the collection. >> what do you think? >> what do you think? >> well, i love the title, the origin of faeces poo at the zoo. origin of faeces poo at the 200. i think that's catchy and i think that's really catchy and well, is the thing because well, this is the thing because over children have over a thousand children have already see which already booked to see it, which just proves, as we would say in scotland, juniors love a jobby. >> well you know what? >> well they do. you know what? i this as of biological i see this as sort of biological version histories or something. >> yeah, i think it's funny. >> yeah, i think it's funny. >> they've got a wombat that does a square poo who knew? >> well, exactly. >> well, exactly. >> is very , very interesting. >> also, there's a vikings stool in that museum in york, a big fossilised and klopp know about that. >> wow . >> wow. >> wow. >> i know. >> i know. >> wow. well, yeah, kids will love it. of course they will. >> why not? i'm looking fonnard to it. mail sunday has an to it. mail on sunday has an interesting here, bruce. interesting story here, bruce. instead can we instead of jurassic park, can we have ? park? have park? park? >> how the sycamore gap >> well, how the sycamore gap a tree could rise again. scientists claim they will have the technology to grow an identical the felled
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identical copy of the felled tree at hadrian's when the tree at hadrian's wall. when the sycamore gap tree fell on september the 28th and it was cut down in its hundreds of years of british history, fell with it . so what they're going with it. so what they're going to do is they're going to do what barbra streisand did with her favourite sugar and her favourite dog, sugar and clone they're going to clone clone it. they're going to clone it clone it. they're going to clone h bnng clone it. they're going to clone it bring it back. it and bring it back. >> yeah, and i'm looking fonnard to tree 300 years. >> yes . >> yes. >> yes. >> presumably it's still going to grow at tree speed. yeah. >> yeah, of course. >> yeah, of course. >> you'll signed >> do you think you'll be signed off by then off with depression by then because you've been alive for so long? >> no, i'm very happy. right. we're to do final we're going to do one final story. is death of story. this is the death of british culture telegraph. >> pork pie supply >> britain's pork pie supply at risk rising costs bite . oh, risk as rising costs bite. oh, my god. so this is really where where it hits britain's pork pie supply could be hit by a slowdown after leading food, uk manufacturer warned it could scale back production because there's all difficult there's been all these difficult things happening . you know, things happening. you know, we've obviously had all the covid disruption. there's been all of the of the all this cost of the cost of the pork is going up, is it the pork
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and not the pastry . and not the pastry. >> it's all of it. >> it's all of it. >> and it also revealed this is a strange note. it also a strange side note. it also revealed it suffered a £5 million shutting million hit from shutting revolution a plant revolution kitchen, a plant based free. based subsidy free. >> so it was fake pork . >> so it was fake pork. >> so it was fake pork. >> no, no. it's just it's a big food company. right. >> that seems to be concerned , >> that seems to be concerned, your confusion, because there's >> that seems to be concerned, y(lotconfusion, because there's >> that seems to be concerned, y( lot corconfusioncause there's >> that seems to be concerned, y(lotcorconfusion here, there's >> that seems to be concerned, y(lotcorconfusion here, too.'e's a lot of confusion here, too. why exactly it to why they're exactly it feels to me they're threatening us. me like they're threatening us. it personally . i'm it feels not me personally. i'm not that bothered, but threatening you guys. and they're like, going they're like, we're going to stop you better stop making them. so you better buy now. and hoard them up buy them now. and hoard them up or whatever. >> it's maybe to do with the butter you butter as well. because you remember had to put remember when they had to put things because it things on the lurpak because it was so expensive. was so expensive. >> was so expensive. >> is nearly over. let's >> show is nearly over. let's take another at take another quick look at sunday's front it's true. take another quick look at sunlmail front it's true. take another quick look at sunlmail froisunday, it's true. take another quick look at sunlmail froisunday, it's tkill the mail on sunday, don't kill me. telegraph. hamas me. sunday telegraph. hamas terrorists civilians has terrorists butcher civilians has stunned 9/11 stunned israel suffers 9/11 moment and obviously we thoughts and prayers go to them. observer hundreds die and hostages held as hamas assault shocks israel. the sun on sunday bgt acts left me suicidal . the mirror, holly me suicidal. the mirror, holly and phil mend rift over kidnap,
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horror and finally the daily star. screw me up. scotty. those were your front pages. that is all we have time for. thank you very much. to my guest, cressida wesson and bruce we are wesson and bruce devlin. we are back tomorrow p.m. wesson and bruce devlin. we are back tomorrow pm. with back tomorrow at 11 pm. with andrew doyle daniels and andrew doyle victor daniels and louis schaefer and if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. have a great weekend
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by late. >> good evening one and all.
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it's 9:00 on television and on radio and online in the united kingdom and across the world. this is mark dolan tonight in my big opinion, as the police give to in gender madness, let's be clear . there is no such thing as clear. there is no such thing as a female rapist. my mark meets guest has gained thousands of fans online by travelling to the most dangerous places in the world. he's even met the taliban and lived to tell the story. he's risked life and limb to pursue his crazy adventures, and he joins us before the end of the hour . in he joins us before the end of the hour. in the big story. we'll bring you the latest on the tragic scenes of violence playing out in israel with voices in the field and top analysis closer to home. it might take at ten the irish premier leo varadkar says britain is disengaging from the world. well, i'll be putting this eu stooge right and disengaging from his absolute nonsense as . look, it's going to
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nonsense as. look, it's going to be a hard night. there are some awful stories to report on, but we'll usually bring you what we can in terms of the mix on mark dolan tonight. the big opinion , dolan tonight. the big opinion, big debate and a touch of entertainer along the lots entertainer along the way. lots to through . i'll be dealing to get through. i'll be dealing with the woke police straight after with ray addison after the news with ray addison i >> thanks , mark. good evening. >> thanks, mark. good evening. here's the latest from the gb news newsroom and our top story breaking in the last hour, prime minister benjamin netanyahu says israel will take mighty vengeance against the terrorist organisation hamas after more than 200 israelis were killed and 1100 injured due to a surprise attack . nearly 200 surprise attack. nearly 200 palestinian boys have also subsequent died after hamas fired thousands of rockets and gun crossed the border. local news reported. israeli civilians in border towns barricading themselves in their homes and

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