tv Mark Dolan Tonight GB News October 21, 2023 3:00am-5:01am BST
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him. should not care. impeach him. he should not be but . welcome to be president. but. welcome to mark dolan tonight. it is 9:00, two hours of big opinion and big debate coming along. first, it's my big opinion after the headunes my big opinion after the headlines with ray addison . headlines with ray addison. >> thanks, mark. our top story tonight, the israeli prime minister's office has confirmed the release of two hostages who were being held by hamas. judith and natalie ronan have been taken to a military base in central israel. well, earlier , central israel. well, earlier, israel military sources gave more information about the estimated 200 hostages take hostage by the terrorist organisation in. they say 30 are teenagers and young children and 20 are over the age of 60. the majority are still alive . prime majority are still alive. prime minister has praised egypt for its efforts in trying to deliver aid to civilians in gaza after
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meeting the country's president, rishi sunak said palestinians are also victims of hamas and expressed his condolences for the loss of lives . he also the loss of lives. he also stressed the importance of opening a safe corridor to gaza . opening a safe corridor to gaza. >> now one thing we have prioritised, consisting is getting the rafah crossing opening . it's been a feature of opening. it's been a feature of all my conversations and i'm very pleased that that will now imminently happen. announced imminently happen. we announced an increase in our funding for humanitarian aid into the region and when i met with president sisi earlier today , he and i had sisi earlier today, he and i had a good discussion about how the uk can provide practical assistance the ground to assistance s on the ground to ensure the sustainability of that through the crossing to that aid through the crossing to the it . the people who need it. >> well, back here, sir keir starmer says former tory voters have put their trust and their confidence in the labour party after overturned after they overturned conservative majorities to win two by elections. the video we're about to show contains some flash photography in tamworth . sarah edwards tamworth. sarah edwards overturned a conserved majority of more than 19,000. meanwhile
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alastair straffen took mid—bedfordshire with a 20.5% swing. the largest labour by—election win since 1945. keir starmer says it's history in the making . making. >> but these are huge victories. these are either of these results would have been extraordinary. both together, they are historic . these are they are historic. these are seats that we've never won before or rarely won before , and before or rarely won before, and we've had swings of over 20% and we've had swings of over 20% and we've now had four by elections with swings of over 20. if you take selby and rutherglen as well. so, you know , that is a well. so, you know, that is a very, very important investing of confidence and trust in a changed labour party . changed labour party. >> west mercia police says a man in his 60s has died after getting caught in fast flowing floodwater in shropshire. he's believed to be the third fatality as storm babet continues to cause severe weather conditions. this afternoon . a passenger plane afternoon. a passenger plane came off the runway at leeds
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bradford airport while landing. emergency services responded as passengers were evacuated. however, there were no reported injuries. earlier, the met office issued a new 24 hour red weather warning in central and north—east scotland, with further heavy rainfall expected . further heavy rainfall expected. 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 get back to . mark get back to. mark >> my thanks to ray addison, who's back in an hour's time. welcome to mark dolan tonight. happy friday. one and all. the weekend starts here in my big opinion. a labour government is coming. be careful what you wish for in the big story. do. israel have a to answer for the have a case to answer for the conflict in the middle east? we'll both sides on we'll hear from both sides on that mark meets guest is that one. my mark meets guest is radio and tv legend pat sharp . radio and tv legend pat sharp. and it might take a turn with the world crisis. we need a the world in crisis. we need a proper in white proper leader in the white house. for biden
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house. it's time for joe biden to impeached on the grounds to be impeached on the grounds of ill health. now, i know impeachment is to with impeachment is to do with breaking the but i don't breaking the law, but i don't care. him out the care. i want him out of the white house. i want proper leadership . also, after shocking leadership. also, after shocking video emerges showing him contradicting himself on israel is keir starmer, the man who would be our next prime minister. a liar ? well, that's minister. a liar? well, that's the view of a strong labour guardian columnist. i'll be asking tonight's newsmaker for her reaction. edwina currie. we've got tomorrow's front pages at 1030 sharp with three top pundits tonight who haven't been told what to say and who don't follow the script. who's in the green room? let's take a look. well, look at that, mike. porky parry, a broadcasting legend, a podcaster, an icon of fleet street, no less. alongside him, the brilliant chloe dobbs , the brilliant chloe dobbs, student campaigner, entrepreneur and all round legend. and how about this? speaking of legend, i've used the l word. nina myskow the queen of fleet street . tonight i'll be asking the
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pundits, should britain have a cap on the number of refugees that it accepts every year? is there still snobbery towards people with regional accents? and should under—eighteens be allowed to have surgery allowed to have plastic surgery procedures ? plus, the most procedures? plus, the most important part of the show your emails, they come straight to my laptop gbnews.com. and laptop market. gbnews.com. and this show has a golden rule. but we're going to introduce that rule in a special way. so new viewers or listeners to the show take note as i received this in the post just a few days ago, the post just a few days ago, the older gb news postroom and i was very happy to tear open the packaging bubble wrapped and inside was a mug and this mug has been gifted to me by one of our wonderful viewers. he's called matthew and it's a personalised mug and it's got the name of the show on it with my ugly mug on the mug. that's right. a picture of me. it says tonight live with mark dolan, weekends, 9 pm. and then on the other side of the mug, it's got
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the show's catchphrase. and if you're having trouble, josh, i know probably quite hard to know it's probably quite hard to see, but don't you viewers see, but why don't you viewers at home just have a squint? the mug says we do boring. not mug says we don't do boring. not on my watch. i just won't have it. so, matthew, thank you so much for the mug. we shall be using this now the using this. this is now the official dolan tonight mug. official mark dolan tonight mug. and let me tell you that i cannot leave the house. i cannot go to the supermarket. i can't go to the supermarket. i can't go for a walk . go to the supermarket. i can't go for a walk. i go to the supermarket. i can't go for a walk . i can't do go for a walk. i can't do anything without being stopped by viewers of gb news, viewers of mark dolan tonight who say they love the show, they find it a breath of fresh air and they always say, keep up the good work. and grateful. this work. and i'm so grateful. this show nothing without you. so show is nothing without you. so as as matthew and the rest as well as matthew and the rest of the gang, let's build a bit of the gang, let's build a bit of a family. let's build a community. and if you're enjoying if you're enjoying the show and if you're enjoying the show and if you're enjoying tell your enjoying the channel, tell your friends. world and friends. tell the world and let's change the world together. we with my opinion we start now with my big opinion . at the next election, the
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tories won't have get brexit done. tories won't have get brexit done . they won't have the done. they won't have the inexorable jeremy corbyn. they won't have boris's boosterism and they won't have nigel farage stepping aside, pulling candidates from marginal tory seats following double by—election disaster for the tories yesterday in seats safer than a night out with mary berry , prime minister starmer looks like a foregone conclusion . and like a foregone conclusion. and who could blame voters fed up with the highest taxes since the war? fed up with inflation, fed up with a new prime minister every ten minutes, fed up with spiralling interest rates, fed up with the almighty economic hangover of those ridiculous and in my view , utterly failed in my view, utterly failed lockdowns . people are fed up lockdowns. people are fed up with illegal migrant crossings and eye—watering levels of legal migration into the country , a migration into the country, a city the size of liverpool. every year, people are fed up with the woke takeover of our institutions, fed up with crime, fed up with nhs waiting lists, fed up with nhs waiting lists,
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fed up with everything . you fed up with everything. you couldn't blame the public for seeking change. part of me thinks it would be very healing for britain to give another party a chance. i do wonder whether the prospect of another five years of tory rule could produce a mild democratic crisis with woke lefties taking to the streets placard in one hand. not my government and a two shot skinny cappuccino from pret a manger in the other with left versus right having participated in a political relay race for the last 100 years, perhaps it's time for keir starmer to carry the baton to maintain the order of the universe. but i'm not so sure you want lower taxes . are sure you want lower taxes. are they going to come down under labour who are planning a spending spree in the already bloated public sector ? keir bloated public sector? keir starmer has got a shopping list longer than kim kardashian at her local gucci. you want inflation to come down? is that going to happen under labour as they offer inflation busting pay
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rises to the union barons who fund their party? you want less of the woke rubbish which is sucking the joy out of life and making it a criminal offence to have your own thoughts and say what you think. but starmer is a prime minister in waiting who still struggles to identify what a even though he's a woman is. even though he's married to one. there was even a rumour floating around unsubstantiated , stated that unsubstantiated, stated that labour could make ms gendering someone criminal in other words, calling an intact biological male who identifies as female a man. imagine that being banged up in prison for stating a scientific biology fact that gives you a potential flavour of the authoritarian dystopian regime. we might live under you want reliable, cheap energy ? is want reliable, cheap energy? is that going to happen under labour? who want to create a 19705 labour? who want to create a 1970s style state energy company with your money betting the house on flaky renewables which have been such a disaster for germany ? do you see the problem? germany? do you see the problem? vote leavers are politically
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homeless. the tories and labour are both terrible. we are between a rock and a hard place , between a rock and a hard place, not helped by my friend and colleague here at gb news richard tice , who is richard tice, who is understandably hoovering up support among disconcerted labour and in particular tory voters as a dominant player. i think reform uk could be an excellent government and richard tice a very fine prime minister. never say never , but given their never say never, but given their minnow status currently it looks like taking a few thousand votes off the tories in key constituencies, which is what happened yesterday, will achieve only one thing a guaranteed labour government. the right of politics in this country appears to be voting for its own extinction and they are cancelling themselves lives. now. i don't think a labour government will be all bad . the government will be all bad. the idea that it's simply time for a change is a compelling one, but at the moment it feels to me like leaving your slightly rubbish boyfriend who's not great for someone even worse, love on the rebound very rarely
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works out that a labour government is coming. be careful what you wish for. i fear britain is about to jump out of the frying pan into the . the frying pan into the. fire what's your view? mark at gb news dot com. let's get to the pundits tonight. tv and radio presenter mike porky parry, political commentator chloe dobbs and journalist and broadcaster nina myskow. nina, let me start with you. the bottom line is that the tories are a terrible boyfriend . labour are a terrible boyfriend. labour even worse , labour are not even worse. >> i mean, anything would be better than the current tory government . 13 years have left government. 13 years have left this country on its knees and we're not talking about woke because that is just mere window dressing and rearranging deck chairs. the real issues are are people better off under the
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tories ? no. are they happier ? tories? no. are they happier? no. are they healthier ? look at no. are they healthier? look at the state of the nhs. do they travel about the country easily and better? no. look at the state of our transport. so we are actually at a stage where we are actually at a stage where we are crying out for a change and you know, the tories are supposed to be the party of law and order. look at the state of the met. look at the state of the met. look at the state of the police forces. we're supposed to be the party of business. look at a year ago. it's just a year ago that it's the anniversary, i think of liz truss resigning isn't it? so the tories crashed the economy a year ago and people are still feeling the pain on young people. never mind can get on the property ladder. middle aged people cannot get mortgages. nobody can get a mortgage. the whole of the property market is stuck . and people, you know, stuck. and people, you know, older people wanting to downsize , they can't do it. people are stuck. and it's just desperate .
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stuck. and it's just desperate. >> all of the problems you've outlined absolutely right. outlined are absolutely right. but universe do labour but in what universe do labour fix those problems? inflation and cost of living, energy supply. it's all a disaster. >> it's not a disaster. well, they are inheriting a terrible mess and kirsty starmer and as you know, i don't vote labour so i am not. he's not my hero. he happens to be my mp. but i didn't vote for him. >> but you'd rather have a labour government than a conservative? >> of course i would. i absolutely would, because he has absolutely would, because he has a rachel reeves he is a plan rachel reeves he is a very impressive shadow chancellor he said that mark carney and mark carney was the man who's put us into the financial mess we're in now. former governor of the bank of england, former governor of the bank of england, never did anything interest rates, anything about interest rates, started money. started printing money. >> that's one of the reasons we're in such terrible trouble now, i promise you. absolutely and endorses rachel reeves and if he endorses rachel reeves , it's because they're thinking the way. so we know what's the same way. so we know what's going come rachel reeves going to come rachel reeves is very going to come rachel reeves is verj keir starmer has not promised
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>> keir starmer has not promised any thing like a miracle. >> he hasn't promised anything. >> he hasn't promised anything. >> no, he has said that it's going to take ten years to undo the mess that it is now, except that the labour sponsored public sector will be expecting a bumper pay rise. so they won't. they won't. >> and if they don't get it, there will be a civil war within there will be a civil war within the labour party. >> there will be. >> there will be. >> there will be. >> there has been a civil war and keir starmer has won in. no, he has no he has no he has brilliant. he has cosmetic. the you say it's cosmetic. >> i'm sorry. i'm just jumping >> i'm sorry. i'm justjumping in just a moment. but mike perry, don't worry. chloe is ready to drop the mike wants to hear from you. know, but look, hear from you. i know, but look, the reason why railway the reason why the railway workers doctors workers and the doctors are considered not settling is because they're hoping for a general election that will put labourin general election that will put labour in power, and then they will get cash loads of money given to them by a labour government. that's untrue. >> no, not the reason they're not settling is because the government's policy for the last year has been not to sit round
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the table , has not get discussed the table, has not get discussed . they will not discuss. >> nina, you must have seen angela rayner's speeches , both angela rayner's speeches, both the tuc conference and the labour conference where she promised the workers in this country the earth . she she country the earth. she she didn't promise them the earth. yes she did. >> but what she did do, she did promise more union power, which means more strikes. if labour gets strikes, not more, gets it, more strikes, not more, more, more scaremongering . more, more scaremongering. >> it is not. >> it is not. >> it's not scaremongering, she said it, angela rayner said i'm going to make the working classes more powerful than ever. >> go on strike. >> go on strike. >> are people , people like you >> are people, people like you and me, they are not some two horned brand of devil . they are horned brand of devil. they are people and they have every right to withdraw the labour. and it's i said a repeat . i said a repeat. >> let people die. let people die in hospitals. >> they're striking for better conditions and stop that happening . the reason is this happening. the reason is this does happen. the government has not sat down around the table. a year ago, grant shapps when he was transport minister, one
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before he had all these other jobs since he never sat down with the union, the railway anneliese £100,000 a year. >> hospital consultant that's right. we really should try and give them some money. >> they're worth it when you have more money. >> okay. i did have a heart attack. don't worry. it's been sorted. >> say, you have another >> say, when you have another heart not heart attack, you do not want your local pharmacy to look your local pharmacy guy to look after you want after you. you want a consultant? £100,000. okay. consultant? the £100,000. okay. >> forbid it's >> well, god forbid i fear it's going tonight. going to happen tonight. >> dobbs, to speak >> chloe dobbs, you get to speak for rest of show. for the rest of the show. i wonder whether the tories are terrible, i think terrible, right? but i think that is like that to vote labour is like leaving your rubbish boyfriend for someone worse. for someone even worse. >> think that could be >> yeah, i think that could be the i you know, the case. but i mean, you know, nina has pointed out a very clearly some of the problems that really affecting that are really affecting people's lives, the tories. what distinguishes them that distinguishes them is that they're be party of they're meant to be the party of business, the party that supports home ownership, etcetera, party that's etcetera, and the party that's supposedly is better at safeguarding economy. safeguarding the economy. they've on of those they've failed on all of those things. though labour is things. so even though labour is a big and i think, yes, it a big risk and i think, yes, it might going to the worst might be like going to the worst boyfriend think, well,
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boyfriend people think, well, what we lose? so what have we got to lose? so hence quite likely, hence people are quite likely, would our would it be good for our democracy as well? >> there be something >> would there be something cleansing it just cleansing about it that just a change of hands at the top, perhaps it be good for a perhaps it would be good for a sense our democracy sense that our democracy works well, and well, cleanse your hands and bankrupt country. bankrupt the country. >> at same time, labour >> at the same time, labour governments, have governments, all the tories have bankrupted country . bankrupted the country. >> they've it already >> they've bankrupted it already by commitments of rachel by the commitments of rachel reeves to get obr, the reeves to get the obr, the office of budget responsibility, to always identify whether policies can be afforded when labourin policies can be afforded when labour in government they've committed to obr commitments. >> because so much what committed to obr commitments. >> heard acause so much what committed to obr commitments. >> heard from e so much what committed to obr commitments. >> heard from these|uch what committed to obr commitments. >> heard from these soh what committed to obr commitments. >> heard from these so far, what committed to obr commitments. >> heard from these so far, from we heard from these so far, from these government quangos has turned out to be false. nina also said, oh, we're in terrible trouble business wise . we're trouble business wise. we're doing germany. doing better than germany. germany are in recession we germany are in recession and we are not. we went through brexit, germany and we now perform better than the germans. >> you get last word. >> chloe you get the last word. >> chloe you get the last word. >> look, you might be able >> well, look, you might be able to a few to tell voters we're a few percentage points ahead of germany's but at the germany's progress, but at the end of the day, normal people in britain are feeling britain really are feeling the pinch . they feel like they can't pinch. they feel like they can't
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buy house. they can't afford buy a house. they can't afford their rent. we've got a government that is crashing government that is just crashing the not achieving the economy and not achieving any thing. people are willing to take risk and labour any thing. people are willing to takei risk and labour any thing. people are willing to takei feel sk and labour any thing. people are willing to takei feel very1d labour any thing. people are willing to takei feel very politicallyyour and i feel very politically useless as a conservative supporter , i have no idea who supporter, i have no idea who i'm going vote for. i'm going to vote for. >> back to me, josh >> listen back to me, josh homeless. to what about homeless. back to me. what about that right. homeless. back to me. what about tha chloe ht. a conservative >> chloe dobbs, a conservative supporter who's just thrown in the towel. she's basically left the towel. she's basically left the conservative party on mark dolan tonight at 9:18. >> shocking, poor old rishi. >> shocking, poor old rishi. >> rishi sunak just spat out his diet coke from that expensive flask of his. there you go . are flask of his. there you go. are the tories imploding ? we'll the tories imploding? we'll debate that later. but coming up next in the big story, do israel have a to answer for the have a to case answer for the conflict the middle east? conflict in the middle east? we'll hear from both sides on that that's .
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coming. be careful what you wish for. big reaction on email marketing cbnnews.com producer maria has told me to keep it tight. so here we go. alan has said mark, what financial aid is starmer offering people with the cost of living and energy? sunak has given many , many millions has given many, many millions nothing coming from labour to support them. people have short memories. emily hi mark. these results show that the alternative parties lose alternative parties will lose the tories seats and that labour will get the majority of votes . will get the majority of votes. yes, the tories need to introduce popular policies that voters want . tony. yes, voters really want. tony. yes, mark a pensioner and i am mark i'm a pensioner and i am better off under the conservative lives. and last but not least, richard . hi mark. not least, richard. hi mark. here's coming . the public here's what's coming. the public purse busting wealth hating, woke dystopia together with the great brexit reversal if labour gets in. apart from that, everything looks rosy. we'll keep those opinions coming, especially if you want to be supportive of labour market gbnews.com. because mark dolan tonight it is the home of diverse opinions, so keep them coming. it's time now for the big story. and it's been almost
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two the hamas attack two weeks since the hamas attack on which led to the two weeks since the hamas attack on of which led to the two weeks since the hamas attack on of overch led to the two weeks since the hamas attack on of over 13001 to the two weeks since the hamas attack on of over 1300 civilians and death of over 1300 civilians and the capture of over 200 hostages there has understandably been widespread condemnation of what happened. but the events of the last two weeks have sparked a debate about the root of this conflict, with many palestinians taking to the streets , calling taking to the streets, calling for freedom whilst at the same time jewish people being subjected to the highest level of anti—semitism in many years. so is this a conflict which sees blame on both sides, or do israel have a case to answer for their treatment of palestinians? shortly i shall be joined by digital activist lizzy savetsky. but first, let's speak to war journalist yarra yarra. thank you so much forjoining us. first of all, what is your reaction to what happened on the 7th of october ? 7th of october? >> i think, you know, this is a misleading question because if we want to water down what happened to only what's happening on the 7th of october, it actually ignores what's been happening for the last 75 years.
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i up my whole life in gaza. i grew up my whole life in gaza. when i was 14 years old, i saw people being cut into pieces in front of my eyes. and that's actually why i left. and i went to the uk. so this kind of violence , this kind of massacres violence, this kind of massacres that have been committed, it didn't happen just after the hamas attack on israel. this is not a not this is not an unprovoked attack. what's been happening is been years of ethnic cleansing , years of ethnic cleansing, years of genocide, years of torture and imprisoning children and minors. so we can't talk about what's happening without taking in consideration everything that's been happening since 1948, since the establishment of israel . the establishment of israel. >> and what you've described is truly , truly appalling and truly, truly appalling and absolutely devastating . but do absolutely devastating. but do you condemn in isolation that attack two weeks ago ? attack two weeks ago? >> well, mark, i think you've literally interviewed so many israeli spokespersons and so many israeli , you know, people
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many israeli, you know, people who are in government, even i'm a journalist and i don't see you, mark, asking them to condemn the actions of the idf. i don't see you asking them to condemn the killing of more than 1600 children. did you know that more than 700 children are also stuck under the rubble and they're probably going to be also killed? so i don't understand why this obsession of asking palestinians i'm not a spokesperson for hamas. i'm a journalist. i'm a journalist who had 13 members of my family killed in the last week . my best killed in the last week. my best friend, who is also a journalist . and we were working together on covering the 2022 aggression in gaza. he was killed in cold blood. he was wearing a press vest. he was wearing a helmet and he was killed with alongside at least more than 14 other journalists who have been targeted by israel . so i don't targeted by israel. so i don't think you're asking me about condemnation. is what you should really be doing , because you've really be doing, because you've never done that to other israelis. so what i condemn is
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the israeli actions of killing palestinian civilians and children over and over again, not only since the 7th of october and now yara , i take october and now yara, i take what you're saying on board, but i interviewed the editor of the jewish chronicle last weekend, and i put that point to him about israel's behaviour towards palestine. >> and did the same with >> and i did the same with a former general in the idf. so i certainly have held israeli voices to account and i'll be doing so in just a few minutes. but can you honestly not condemn both the behaviour of what you perceive to be israeli cruelty , perceive to be israeli cruelty, israeli genocide and that of hamas on the 7th of october? can you not agree that that's horrific too, and that it's terror? well as a palestinian journalist and actually not just as a human, obviously the loss of any life is tragic . of any life is tragic. >> but what has been happening has been a genocide of palestinians for the last 75 years. so if we're going to only look at what hamas is doing now, we're ignoring the root cause of
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what's happening. we're ignoring the thousands that have been killed in palestine. we're ignonng killed in palestine. we're ignoring more than 10,000 ignoring that more than 10,000 palestinians have been killed since 2010. no, sorry , since since 2010. no, sorry, since 2000. so if we're thinking about hamas, let's just think for a second about the west bank. let's think about the circumstances in the west bank and how people live there . how and how people live there. how can you justify the killing of children? how can you justify the torture of , you know, the torture of, you know, minors? how can you justify the imprisonment of so many palestinians there? because you're going to ask me about the hostages by hamas. you know, how can you justify the 500 to the 5000 to hundred palestine and prisoners in israeli prisons who are being tortured? day by day? um, you see, i want an answer for that before . for that before. >> well, look, i'm so sorry to hear about your devastating loss. yara and thank you so much for sharing your views on the program. i hope we speak again
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in the near future. my thanks to war correspondent and journalist yara. let's now speak to my yara. i'd let's now speak to my next guest and i'm delighted to welcome digital activist lizzy savetsky. lizzy your reaction to what you've just heard ? what you've just heard? >> uh, i'm not i'm not surprised to hear these messages , packages to hear these messages, packages of propaganda, to say that israel is has been committing a genocide of palestine for 75 years. >> is a complete lie . i just >> is a complete lie. i just want to say that the hamas charter calls calls for the extermination of the jewish people. it is written in black and white. so the only genocide that we should be talking about is the genocide that hamas, hamas wishes upon the jewish people . israel has asked for has people. israel has asked for has presented peace proposals to the palestinian leadership over and over again in every single time
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they have been rejected. so we have wanted peace. we have tried to make peace happen , but we to make peace happen, but we cannot live side by side with people who want to kill us. it is impossible. i wish that there was a way to rectify this situation and eradicate hamas without a loss of life. but unfortunately we are up against a terrorist organisation who is currently holding their own people hostage because they want maximal casualties so that israel will look as bad as possible. also the prisoners that are being held in israel and tortured , as she said, are and tortured, as she said, are terrorists . so we're talking terrorists. so we're talking about people who have come into israel or lived there and tried to kill jews for one reason, because they're jewish. these are not people who want peace. these are not people who want a two state solution. they are terrorists . and that is why they terrorists. and that is why they are jail . are in jail. >> lizzie, would you >> and lizzie, what would you say who that say to those who argue that gaza is an open prison, that
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palestinian ions are second class citizens in the region and that israel is guilty of war crimes itself ? crimes itself? >> i would say that that gaza has been given billions of dollars from nations all around the world so that they could build an infrastructure so that they could build schools, schools, hospitals and a better economic future for the palestinian people who live there. but instead, they've used that money to line the pockets of their leaders and build tunnels of terrors and buy weapons . and so i would say that weapons. and so i would say that whatever living conditions that they're living in are their own making. and it is there's nobody to blame, but they're terrorists . leadership, hamas. >> but but, lizzie, do you not acknowledge any unacceptable behaviour or conduct by the israeli forces over the years as the idf is the most moral army in the world? >> they drop leaflets and warn before attacks they even hacked into the news in gaza to warn
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the civilians there to leave. they went to the great lengths to do that. they have a special bomb that they drop to shake the roof of the building. i don't know another country that has a moral, moral army. so if there are innocent civilians that are being killed, lost, the tragic loss of lives, there , the only loss of lives, there, the only culprit here is hamas , because culprit here is hamas, because they will not let their civil auens they will not let their civil aliens leave. they are keeping them there. they use their children and innocent people as human shields so that israel will look bad and will have maximal casualties . it's just maximal casualties. it's just insane. >> lizzie, my deep thanks to your contribution to the program as well. i wish we were speaking under happier circumstances and look to your return to look fonnard to your return to the program. digital activist lizzy savetsky well, folks , lizzy savetsky well, folks, you've heard from both sides. mark tonight is the home mark dolan tonight is the home of opinion. what is of diverse opinion. what is yours? mark at gb news dot com.
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do a case to answer do israel have a case to answer for the conflict in the middle east? okay, those rather noisy pundits are hitting the sofa in a couple of minutes and i'll be asking should britain asking them should britain have asking them should britain have a number refugees a cap on the number of refugees that it accepts every year? is there snobbery towards there still snobbery towards people regional accents and people with regional accents and should under—eighteens be allowed to have plastic surgery procedures ? fireworks are going procedures? fireworks are going to absolutely explode on that one. looking fonnard to it. dunng one. looking fonnard to it. during the break, going to during the break, i'm going to enjoy branded mug enjoy this lovely branded mug from my viewers. cheers
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radio. >> now listen to big reaction to the big story debate. do israel have a to case answer for their conduct in the middle east and the ongoing conflict? conduct in the middle east and the ongoing conflict ? well, a the ongoing conflict? well, a quick one from chris mark. israel needs to reverse all settlements built on palestinian land in direct contravention of one of a number of un laws , as one of a number of un laws, as mike says , it goes back to
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mike says, it goes back to biblical days, the history of the middle east, not 1948. there you go. well, look, it is a complex and rather distressing issue and clearly one that's not going to go away. any developments from israel or gaza , we will bring them to you straight away . but for now, straight away. but for now, let's back the other big let's get back to the other big stories day with tv and stories of the day with tv and radio star mike parry , radio star mike parry, co—founder of talksport no less. also the brilliant political commentator and broadcaster chloe dobbs and fleet street legend, the queen of showbiz journalism. for many decades, journalist and broadcaster nina myskow. now, according to the home office, by january 2025, an annual cap will be put in place on the number of refugees allowed to live in the uk. local authorities will be able to set authorities will be able to set a limit on welcoming asylum seekers coming by legal routes according to their capacities , according to their capacities, as campaigners have ridiculed the government for passing on the government for passing on the baton to underfunded councils should britain have a cap on the number of refugees
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that it accepts every year? and what might that number be? let me know your thoughts. mark at gbnews.com. chloe dobbs. what do you think? >> i mean, surprised that >> i mean, i'm surprised that there already a cap. how there isn't already a cap. how on earth can can it be the on earth can we can it be the law that just anyone and everyone , no matter number, everyone, no matter what number, can we've can come in? obviously we've spoken earlier in the spoken about earlier in the show, in a country now show, we live in a country now where if you're having a heart attack, won't turn attack, the ambulance won't turn up now 45 up for the average now is 45 minutes. way , and you minutes. by the way, and you can't a house. i mean, we're can't get a house. i mean, we're in. you know, i know you've heard many times. broken heard it many times. broken britain. can we britain. and how on earth can we just have unlimited numbers coming in? but i wouldn't say that putting a cap on refugees solves whole problem , which solves the whole problem, which is the invasion of our southern border . yeah, obviously would border. yeah, obviously it would be if we are able to stop be better if we are able to stop people who are coming across who are just economic migrants and offer more to refugees that offer more help to refugees that genuinely help. but genuinely need our help. but it shouldn't numbers. shouldn't be unlimited numbers. absolutely way. so i think absolutely no way. so i think the cap absolutely necessary. the cap is absolutely necessary. all right. >> what that figure >> and what might that figure be, think? be, do you think? >> if overall >> i mean, if overall net migration country,
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migration into the country, including refugees, what's what's reasonable figure, do what's a reasonable figure, do you think? last year legal net migration was over 600,000? you think? last year legal net migwelln was over 600,000? you think? last year legal net migwell , was over 600,000? you think? last year legal net migwell , definitely 500,000? you think? last year legal net migwell , definitely nowhere? you think? last year legal net migwell , definitely nowhere near >> well, definitely nowhere near that. maybe 200,000, something like you and i kindred spirits because i suggested 200,000 just two weeks ago on the show. >> but mike, what do you think would a reasonable number of would be a reasonable number of for start refugees to welcome every year? >> i think the whole >> well, i think the whole issue has in the has been raised again in the last hours by humza yousaf, has been raised again in the last leaderurs by humza yousaf, has been raised again in the last leader of by humza yousaf, has been raised again in the last leader of the humza yousaf, has been raised again in the last leader of the snpza yousaf, has been raised again in the last leader of the snp standing the leader of the snp standing up at a conference and saying, right, we've got to start bringing people here now from gaza. bringing people here now from gaza . i was going to say hamas, gaza. i was going to say hamas, but gaza , they're not but gaza, they're not necessarily hamas people . necessarily hamas people. they're palestinians. some could be hamas supporters. this is the problem . we don't know who we're problem. we don't know who we're letting into our country. do we, when a group of able young men sometimes home office is therefore to interview them. but you can't when a group of 50 young men with no women or children get into a boat, come across the channel, get off in folkestone, walk up the beach, we don't know anything about
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them. away the them. they've thrown away the phones away their phones and thrown away their passports had one. we passports if they had one. we don't we're letting in. don't know who we're letting in. so i totally support what chloe has you've got to have has said that you've got to have a more beneficial eye on who's coming here. as for caps , yes, coming here. as for caps, yes, i totally agree with chloe. again are those who need help. we help and those who are trying to scam it as economic immigrants . this it as economic immigrants. this should be singled out and sent back to where they came from. but that's a big process. >> do you want to break down the numbers as you're quite keen on a spreadsheet? mike a bit a spreadsheet? mike you're a bit of magnate. you know, of a property magnate. you know, you're about bottom you're all about the bottom line. per line. yeah how many refugees per year and how many overall legal net migration would the net migration would you say the problem is? >> legal net migration now is about 600,000, isn't it? >> and that's 2018. it was 333,000. so it's gone. it's almost doubled. >> and that's people from afghanistan and from hong kong and from ukraine. okay. and these are people that we know desperately need our help . desperately need our help. that's the problem. >> it's not just that . it's not >> it's not just that. it's not just that. and can i just say ,
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just that. and can i just say, i'm glad you used the word refugees because people just talk illegal migrants. talk about illegal migrants. there refugees and there are genuine refugees and but not all nina. you but they're not all nina. you know, they're not. i know that. i that talked about the i know that we talked about the albanians, many of them were albanians, and many of them were economic and economic migrants, migrants. and we a deal with albania, and we did a deal with albania, and now they back. so that's now they go back. so that's fine. but what i'm saying is the bulk of the of people that come here are not on boats or stowed away in lorries. the big how can you have it's not 606,000. these are the these are the people who come here legally and it's not just hong kong, it's not just just hong kong, it's notjust afghanistan. and it's not just ukraine. it is many students , ukraine. it is many students, many chinese students who add an enormous amount to the economy . enormous amount to the economy. if you cut down on on the visa, the number of visas for students that you universities would go unden >> what about places? >> what about places? >> what about housing? i agree. what about roads? >> i agree completely, but i agree with you. >> if people come in and they've got something to offer to the
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economy, many people do. well, thatis economy, many people do. well, that is fantastic , nick. but get that is fantastic, nick. but get them working . as marx just them working. as marx just pointed out, one of these days we're going to run out of water. we're going to run out of land to build houses. we're going to run doctors so run out of doctors surgeries. so you've have much control. >> you need a better government. that's you need vote that's why you need to vote laboun that's why you need to vote labour. up labour. i think we're mixing up refugee status with people seeking make better life seeking to make a better life here. absolutely. seeking to make a better life here. aiyothely. seeking to make a better life here. aiyou can't identify with >> but you can't identify with refugees they're going to refugees if they're going to make to the make a contribution to the country or not. you would hope they but many cases they will, but in many cases that happen. that doesn't happen. >> cases in most >> and in many cases in most cases does. i mean, cases it does. i mean, the number briefly are number of visas that briefly are granted . yeah. granted. yeah. >> look, i'm i'm actually i'm actually very pro immigration in the long term, but i recognise that it needs to be a gradual process. i would like more people better life people who want a better life and want to move to britain who are to able to are going to be able to contribute, able to move contribute, to be able to move here. just the here. but you can't just set the snap fingers, have snap of the fingers, have hundreds hundreds, okay. hundreds and hundreds, okay. >> keir starmer once more. >> okay. well, can i have a number then? >> good number? >> nina, what's a good number? >> nina, what's a good number? >> 75,000 backlog for the home
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office to process, which is ridiculous. if the home office processes them. >> we wouldn't. but let's. >> we wouldn't. but let's. >> get down >> let's. let's get down to brass what's a good brass tacks. what's a good number, overall for number, an overall number for legal including legal net migration, including refugees . would you refugees per year. would you keep 600,000? keep it at 600,000? >> i don't cap. >> i don't have a cap. >> i don't have a cap. >> politicians answer from nina meissner. no, i would not. >> i thought shoot from the >> i thought you shoot from the hip. would not. hip. no it would not. >> i would the bomb. >> i would have the truth bomb. i not. give me number. i would not. give me a number. >> it's million, say it. >> if it's a million, say it. >> if it's a million, say it. >> if it's a million, say it. >> i wouldn't. i wouldn't want. who would want million? you're who would want a million? you're exaggerating, not exaggerating, but i would not have life happens exaggerating, but i would not hav(mike's life happens exaggerating, but i would not hav(mike's gone life happens exaggerating, but i would not hav(mike's gone for. life happens exaggerating, but i would not hav(mike's gone for. because ens and mike's gone for. because life happens. life happens and death happens. and to deal with it, as and we have to deal with it, as do accents. >> now, from yorkshire to cockney to geordie, we cockney scouse to geordie, we have patchwork of have a wonderful patchwork of regional our regional accents throughout our country. doesn't just country. diversity doesn't just stop point of our stop at the point of our accents, though. there's a rich variety of different dialects, ranging affectionate ranging from the affectionate ben of ben in god's own country of yorkshire to the loving barb in birmingham . but are we still birmingham. but are we still prejudiced towards those with regional accents in society? i'm trying to think who the most regional is. and it's probably you, isn't it? i think you, porky, isn't it? i think it's chloe from cornwall. oh,
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you see. >> but the problem i feel that. >> i feel that she's. she's very sort of posh. cornish feel sort of very posh. cornish feel you've it flattened out a you've had it flattened out a little bit. >> just avoided getting the >> i just avoided getting the accent whole life. but to accent my whole life. but to be honest, it's it's honest, i think it's like it's like cornish meets queen elizabeth. people in elizabeth. the people in cornwall an are cornwall that have an accent are just the farmers and the just kind of the farmers and the people who just stay in their bubble people have bubble and the people who have had past had you know, five past generations theirfamily. generations of their family. there's those there's nothing wrong with those people, most people, normal people, most normal cornwall don't normal people in cornwall don't have normal people in cornwall don't havall right. >> all right. >> all right. >> i don't think i don't think that chloe's got strong that chloe's got a strong accent, she? accent, has she? >> but no, i'm >> she hasn't. but. but no, i'm not talking about when you've had drink. but then had a drink. yes, but then cornwall hardly normal. get cornwall is hardly normal. get a drink. cornwall is hardly normal. get a dnnk. so cornwall is hardly normal. get a drink. so invade drink. cornwall is. is so invade . we're talking about refugees. so invaded in the middle class by middle class people . the by middle class people. the beaches are a nightmare of beaches there are a nightmare of red wearing red trouser wearing parents and catalogue. >> i know all about all without it . gail's patisserie . it. gail's patisserie. >> so i watch poldark. i know about cornwall . about cornwall. >> what do you think, mike? i
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mean, you're from cheshire, aren't you? >> i'm from chester. chester? aren't you? >> oh, from chester. chester? aren't you? >> oh, forgive1ester. chester? aren't you? >> oh, forgive me. tr. chester? >> oh, forgive me. >> oh, forgive me. >> town of cheshire. >> county town of cheshire. whoops >> county town of cheshire. thwhat's your view on accents? >> what's your view on accents? >> what's your view on accents? >> well, i like accents . i like >> well, i like accents. i like the geordie accent. actually. i work for years up in work for three years up in newcastle evening newcastle on the evening chronicle. started your chronicle. news. started your career, yeah. well career, isn't it? yeah. well i started chester started on the chester chronicle, the weekly started on the chester chronit no, the weekly started on the chester chronitno, not the weekly started on the chester chronitno, not there. le weekly started on the chester chronitno, not there. buteekly started on the chester chronitno, not there. but i. kly started on the chester chronitno, not there. but i. ily paper. no, not there. but i. i love geordie land. anyway it's almost like a nation of its own, you know what i mean? they they're so proud of their heritage and all that. i like the accent. i worked in birmingham quite a bit of birmingham and i quite a bit of brummie in the way i speak and people sometimes think i'm from there, but i love the regional accents and you know, it's almost like going on holiday when you go to another city in this country because for instance, i went to the university of the trent. it's actually called trent polytechnic in those days. but when people when you ordered a dnnkin when people when you ordered a drink in a bar and somebody said, what do you want me, doc? you know, and those sort of, you know, regional twists, mid—walk and, and all that kind of stuff
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and, and all that kind of stuff and all of that. >> i love all the accents you hearin >> i love all the accents you hear in london, which come from around the world. >> that's what like >> that's what i like best. there you go. >> there you go. a bit of diversity. who doesn't love it? look what you what's look what do you think? what's the best mark at the best accent? mark at gbnews.com. have you been prejudged against for your accent take prejudged against for your acwten take prejudged against for your acwten with take prejudged against for your acwten with the take prejudged against for your acwten with the world take prejudged against for your acwten with the world in take prejudged against for your acwten with the world in crisis, .ake at ten with the world in crisis, we a proper leader in the we need a proper leader in the white house. it's time joe white house. it's time for joe biden the biden to be impeached on the grounds ill health. but grounds of ill health. but first, my mark guest is first, my mark meets guest is radio legend pat sharp. first, my mark meets guest is radio in legend pat sharp. first, my mark meets guest is radio in an legend pat sharp. first, my mark meets guest is radio in an exclusive pat sharp. first, my mark meets guest is radio in an exclusive mark1arp. first, my mark meets guest is radio in an exclusive mark dolan plus, in an exclusive mark dolan tonight people's poll, i've been asking , should britain have a asking, should britain have a cap on the number of refugees? the results are in? i shall reveal all .
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don't someone don't care. we need someone strong white house. but strong in the white house. but first, my mark meets guest is radio tv legend pat sharp . radio and tv legend pat sharp. yes indeed. broadcasting legend pat sharp , who got his first big pat sharp, who got his first big break on radio one at the age of just 20. he still looks 20, by the way. there followed loads of presenting gigs on top of the pops, the coveted mid—morning slot on radio and on tv. slot on capital radio and on tv. pat really made his mark with the cult tv hit funhouse on itv. look at that. >> look at that. >> look at that. >> look at those strides . pizza >> look at those strides. pizza delivery man. eat your heart out. and what about that barnet? we'll talk about that shortly. oh it's all been shorn off. he also wowed audiences on i'm a celebrity and won the weakest link raising a fortune for charity. plus, he's one of the most in—demand live djs in the country. always relevant, always youthful and always fun. pat sharp is a british institution who joins me now . pat, great to who joins me now. pat, great to see you. >> thank you, mark. >> thank you, mark. >> great to see you, too. >> great to see you, too. >> and that's such a nice
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welcome. i don't know how to follow it, but thank you. >> you've had lot of >> listen, you've had a lot of success of staying success and a lot of staying power. do you put that down power. what do you put that down to? you've to go to? because you've managed to go across generations across several generations in terms base. terms of your fan base. >> i suppose. >> yeah, i suppose. >> yeah, i suppose. >> right place, right time. >> right place, right time. >> started, you >> when i started, you know, i got break. got a pretty good break. >> at radio one when i >> i started at radio one when i was 20 and i'd never actually done radio show. it's quite done a radio show. so it's quite bizarre show bizarre that the first show i ever was sitting in for ever did was sitting in for steve wright the afternoon. steve wright in the afternoon. i'd never even been on hospital radio, was right. radio, so that really was right. >> that about? >> how did that come about? >> how did that come about? >> i say, right >> oh, just as i say, right place, right time. my manager >> oh, just as i say, right place give |t time. my manager >> oh, just as i say, right place give this1e. my manager >> oh, just as i say, right place give this guyiiy manager >> oh, just as i say, right place give this guyiiy shot. rger >> oh, just as i say, right placegive this guyiiy shot. he's said, give this guy a shot. he's never done but you like never done anything but you like his so let's see he his demo, so let's see how he goes. and they said, yeah, go on then. the afternoon. then. put him in the afternoon. he's a week. he's away for a week. >> amazing. was it one >> that's amazing. was it one show or a week show? it was a show or a week of show? it was a whole week, yeah. what were whole week, yeah. and what were your emotions for that first show? for me. >> me. » m me. >> m know, me. >> odd, know, being on >> very odd, you know, being on handing over to peter powell and all who ended all these legends who ended up working you know, working with and, you know, tony blackburn and so blackburn and kid jensen and so on and so they all became on and so forth. they all became my in my friends. so i suppose in a way, nervous excited. way, nervous but excited. >> reached about 10
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>> you probably reached about 10 million your million listeners in your first week broadcasting at first minute. >> yeah, we're doing now >> yeah, like we're doing now well right? well to you, right? >> working on >> absolutely. we're working on it getting there. it and we're getting there. listen pat, that's amazing that you that's how you you did that. and that's how you started. these started. what about these live shows this what shows where you say this is what you and you've got you do now and you've got a massive following, haven't you? you venues. massive following, haven't you? you i'm venues. massive following, haven't you? youi'm really venues. massive following, haven't you? youi'm really lucky, nues. massive following, haven't you? youi'm really lucky, mark, >> i'm really lucky, mark, because nostalgia popular. because nostalgia is so popular. so most of living so basically most of my living in present made from the in the present is made from the past based on me doing past, so it's based on me doing dj but with personality . dj sets, but with personality. so i don't mix. i don't stand there just being all cool and you never hear me speak. everything's done with the mic. everything's done with the mic. everything's way everything's done in a in a way that makes dj set really that makes the dj set really come alive. and i'm doing gigs that are just uplifting and make people feel good. and i play all over the world. i'm playing in dubai next month. i've just played in nonnay. i'm playing at butlins . there you go. butlins tomorrow. there you go. >> it's absolutely amazing . you >> it's absolutely amazing. you could maybe some discs for could maybe spin some discs for us wouldn't us tonight. it wouldn't mind a bit the show. do you bit of music on the show. do you have choreograph the evening ? have to choreograph the evening? is of taking them is it about sort of taking them up, them down again? is up, bringing them down again? is it very sort of it is it all very sort of carefully planned, the set?
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carefully planned, the dj set? >> it's planned all. it's >> it's not planned at all. it's based the crowd on the night based on the crowd on the night at and i will at that moment. and i will literally change what i'm doing at that moment. and i will liter look:hange what i'm doing at that moment. and i will liter look outge what i'm doing at that moment. and i will liter look out and'hat i'm doing at that moment. and i will liter look out and decide doing at that moment. and i will liter look out and decide .:ioing at that moment. and i will liter look out and decide . sotg as i look out and decide. so i could something lined up could have something lined up completely i'm completely, change what i'm doing all music. doing and stop all the music. and then just suddenly go out and a bit of banter right? and do a bit of banter right? >> kind of think, oh, >> so you kind of think, oh, candle really candle in the wind is really killing crowd killing the crowd here. i better, go up tempo. better, i better go up tempo. >> i haven't got with me. >> i haven't got that with me. so yeah, it's all up. all so yeah, it's all up. it's all up. surprise up. that doesn't surprise me. >> doesn't me. >> it doesn't surprise me. listen you've done so much in radio was reminding you radio just was reminding you before on that before you came on air that actually a very junior actually as a lowly, very junior producer, to you producer, i used to watch you coming to do smooth radio and coming in to do smooth radio and the worked the channel we both worked at nine three liberty nine six, three liberty as well when starting out. when i was just starting out. how the media changed in how has the media changed in your time? what do you make of radio and these days radio and tv these days >> it's obviously >> 2024 well, it's obviously changed, made things evolve and they change in a way that if i was, say, for example, to go on the radio tonight and do the show that i did on capital radio in 90s, people would show that i did on capital radio in what's 90s, people would show that i did on capital radio in what's this 90s, people would show that i did on capital radio in what's this ?0s, people would show that i did on capital radio in what's this ? you)eople would show that i did on capital radio in what's this ? you know, would show that i did on capital radio in what's this ? you know, mylld go, what's this? you know, my voice was bathed in echo and i was at the top of the tower and
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it was just a completely different ball game. but what i did and what i created at the time, of people have loved time, a lot of people have loved and said they got into radio because of that. it's because of that. however it's a different know , different game now. you know, it's differently and it's programmed differently and you to you have to speak when told to speak. you have to speak when told to speak . and there's talk speak. and there's a talk element, know . yeah, much element, as you know. yeah, much like now. >> is it a bit corporate now? >> so is it a bit corporate now? you know, imagining in the you know, i'm imagining in the 80s have a pile of either 80s you'd have a pile of either carts and you'd choose carts or cds and you'd choose the tracks that you'd be playing to the nation, whereas now it's all algorithm decides who's all an algorithm decides who's next. taylor swift, followed by taylor swift, knows who, right? yeah more taylor swift, ed sheeran, if lucky . yeah. sheeran, if you're lucky. yeah. so that much so there isn't that much freedom. the you say, freedom. the djs, as you say, it's very sort of programmed. >> absolutely. things are >> absolutely. yeah. things are programmed because they've got >> absolutely. yeah. things are progtechnologyecause they've got >> absolutely. yeah. things are progtechnologyeca do they've got >> absolutely. yeah. things are progtechnologyeca do theyandjot the technology to do that and they whether a song they can work out whether a song should played certain should be played a certain amount not, and amount of times or not, and indeed whether dj should indeed whether a dj should be speaking amount speaking a certain amount of times but either way, it times or not. but either way, it is is. and radio is is what it is. and radio is still still a great listen, still it's still a great listen, let me reassure you, gb news is not programmed. >> at it's absolute chaos. >> at best, it's absolute chaos. but listen , let's have a look.
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but listen, let's have a look. let's have a look at another of your classic hits. and that was the fun house on itv. take a look at this fun house. hold on. >> tonight . look at this fun house. hold on. >> tonight. it'll be fun. it's a real crazy show where anything can.fun real crazy show where anything can. fun house. we . is real crazy show where anything can. fun house. we. is a real crazy show where anything can. fun house. we . is a race can. fun house. we. is a race for me. what you think? use your body and your brain. if you want to play the game, it's time for fun. house wacky contestants , fun. house wacky contestants, messy games, the fun car, grand prix a chase to prix race and a crazy chase to win of prizes. now here's prix race and a crazy chase to win guy of prizes. now here's prix race and a crazy chase to win guy who rizes. now here's prix race and a crazy chase to win guy who puts now here's prix race and a crazy chase to win guy who puts thew here's prix race and a crazy chase to win guy who puts the funere's prix race and a crazy chase to win guy who puts the fun into the guy who puts the fun into fun pat sharp . fun house pat sharp. >> absolute tv gold. those were the days i got to say . that the days i got to say. that looks so brilliant. you in a banana yellow car? >> yeah. with curtains for hair. well, yeah . well, yeah. >> first of all, fun house itself . it was a phenomenon. itself. it was a phenomenon. i think it ran for a decade. >> it did? yeah. probably the one of the most successful children's shows of all time on any channel there was. i'm any channel there was. so i'm very to have done it very blessed to have done it myself. and melanie, martina, we did show from beginning to end. >> you e-m end. >> you in touch with
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>> are you still in touch with the cast? >> yep, yep, yep. me and the twins are still good is twins are still good friends. is that right? >> brilliant. listen, >> that's brilliant. listen, that's what that's an amazing thing. what about on, let's about the barnet? come on, let's talk it's all talk about the hair. it's all gone back and sides. gone very short. back and sides. you like you could you look like you could be a businessman now. well i. >> i be. i could be a >> i could be. i could be a human being to that. human being compared to that. look horrendous. look at that. that's horrendous. >> did it take? >> how much work did it take? how cultivation on? how much cultivation on? >> oh, that's my first radio 1 shot. one. that's. that's >> oh, that's my first radio 1 sho first one. that's. that's >> oh, that's my first radio 1 sho first ever e. that's. that's >> oh, that's my first radio 1 sho first ever promo. s. that'sall my first ever promo. look at all that potential. >> could they say no? >> how could they say no? >> how could they say no? >> well, centre parting. >> well, centre parting. >> not love. >> what's not to love. >> what's not to love. >> are. >> yeah. oh there you are. >> yeah. oh there you are. >> the highlights >> almost got the highlights there. the hedgehog look. >> almost got the highlights the right. the hedgehog look. >> almost got the highlights the right. yeah.> hedgehog look. >> almost got the highlights the right. yeah. that'szhog look. >> almost got the highlights the right. yeah. that's just. look. >> right. yeah. that's just. i don't know. i just went through a things and now i'm just a lot of things and now i'm just me. know, natural me. just. just you know, natural colour, of grey coming on. yeah. >> here's lovely. it's gorgeous. >> here's lovely. it's gorgeous. >> right. >> here's lovely. it's gorgeous. >> and t. still it. which >> and you still got it. which is main thing. i've got some is the main thing. i've got some hair. look, it hair. but i mean, look, it became trademark, right? it became a trademark, right? it was a great thing. i mean, you had fun it. had fun with it. >> this day, i >> yeah. and to this day, i mean, there's a mullet calendar >> yeah. and to this day, i mearandzre's a mullet calendar >> yeah. and to this day, i mearand i'm a mullet calendar >> yeah. and to this day, i mearand i'm the. ullet calendar >> yeah. and to this day, i mearand i'm the. i'mt calendar >> yeah. and to this day, i mearand i'm the. i'm the. endar >> yeah. and to this day, i mearand i'm the. i'm the. i'mar now, and i'm the. i'm the. i'm the it. you know, this the king of it. you know, this this christmas, were you ever offended comments offended by people's comments about obsession about your hair, their obsession with no. it's with your hair? no, no. it's all good as as it's just
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good fun as long as it's just in. sort of, i in. good, good. sort of, as i say, just you just say, just you know, just brilliant and listen, career brilliant and listen, the career continues you're still continues as you're still broadcasting, continues as you're still bro you're ng, continues as you're still bro you're doing broadcasting? >> and bobs. >> yeah, i do bits and bobs. >> yeah, i do bits and bobs. >> absolutely. this >> absolutely. including this very with you. very fine moment with you. >> well, listen, i do hope you come should offer you come back. we should offer you a regular i'll be honest, i'm regular gig. i'll be honest, i'm not afford you, not sure we could afford you, but worth every penny. not sure we could afford you, but is worth every penny. not sure we could afford you, but is next worth every penny. not sure we could afford you, but is next for rth every penny. not sure we could afford you, but is next for you?yery penny. not sure we could afford you, but is next for you? what'smy. not sure we could afford you, but is next for you? what's on what is next for you? what's on your do you want to your list? what do you want to achieve? i know that you achieve? because i know that you know you've got massive know you've got this massive following world now following around the world now live. there job live. but is there one more job in really fancy in you that you really fancy a crack at? >> well, it's connected to what i do, mark, and what we are planning working planning and what we're working on a 30 piece on is to take a 30 piece orchestra and an orchestra and do an 80 orchestral show tour not orchestral show and tour it not only the uk but also only across the uk but also across into uae. across europe and into the uae. >> listen, would pay to >> wow. listen, i would pay to see if you're interested in see that if you're interested in seeing live, don't seeing this man live, why don't you his website? it is you head to his website? it is pat sharp. .co.uk i knew him 20
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away. it's10:00 on tv, on radio and online in the united kingdom and online in the united kingdom and across the world. this is mark dolan tonight. happy friday. one and all the weekend starts here. why don't you go and a cold beer from and grab a cold beer from the fridge a glass of fridge or maybe a glass of something fizzy and french or perhaps get the kettle on and tear open the custard creams. we've got a busy hour come tear open the custard creams. we mygot a busy hour come tear open the custard creams. we my take busy hour come tear open the custard creams. we my take athy hour come tear open the custard creams. we my take at ten, iolii' come tear open the custard creams. we my take at ten, with come tear open the custard creams. we my take at ten, with thewme in. my take at ten, with the world in crisis, we need a proper leader white proper leader in the white house. it's time for joe biden to impeached first, on the to be impeached first, on the grounds health. also grounds of ill health. also after shocking video emerges showing him contradicting himself on israel is keir starmer, the man who would be our next minister. liar ? our next prime minister. a liar? i'll be asking tonight's newsmaker, edwina currie . plus, newsmaker, edwina currie. plus, tomorrow's newspaper , front tomorrow's newspaper, front pages and live reaction in the studio from tonight's top pundits. mike paul coyte , parry, pundits. mike paul coyte, parry, chloe dobbs and nina michkov. so a packed show. lots to get through. you will not want to miss my take ten. i'll be deaung miss my take ten. i'll be dealing with joe biden and i'm not pulling my punches . us first not pulling my punches. us first the news and real listen .
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the news and real listen. >> thanks, mark. good evening. our top stories tonight, israel's prime minister's office has confirmed the release of two us hostages who are being held by hamas . judith and natalie by hamas. judith and natalie rhiannon have been taken to a military base in central israel. well earlier, israeli military sources gave more information about the estimated 200 hostages taken by the terrorist organisation . they say 30 are organisation. they say 30 are teenagers and young children and 20 are over the age of 60. the majority are still alive. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu has said he is not giving up efforts to free all captives . the prime minister has captives. the prime minister has praised egypt for its efforts in trying to deliver aid to civilians in gaza after meeting the country's president, rishi sunak said palestinians are also victims of hamas and expressed his condolences for the loss of
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lives . he also stressed the lives. he also stressed the importance of opening a safe corridor to gaza . corridor to gaza. >> for one thing, we have prioritised consistently is getting the rafah crossing opening. it's been a feature of all my conversations stations and i'm very pleased that that will now imminently happen . we will now imminently happen. we announced an increase in our funding for humanitarian aid into region . and when i met into the region. and when i met with president sisi earlier today, he and i had a good discussion about uk can discussion about how the uk can provide practical assistance on the to ensure the the ground to ensure the sustainability of that aid through the crossing to the people who need it . people who need it. >> sir keir starmer says former tory voters have put their trust and confidence in the labour party after they overturned and conservative majorities to win two by elections. the video were about to show you contains some flash photography in tamworth. sarah edwards overturned a conservative majority of more than 19,000. meanwhile, alastair streatham took mid—bedfordshire with a 20.5% swing. that's the largest labour by—election win since 1945. well storm babet
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continues to cause major problems across the united kingdom. in suffolk, only essential travel is advised and children have been forced to shelter in schools following severe flooding. now this afternoon , a passenger plane afternoon, a passenger plane came off the runway at leeds bradford airport while landing. emergency services responded as passengers were evacuated. however, there were no reported injuries in scotland , some roads injuries in scotland, some roads and small bridges have been reportedly have reported collapsed. three people have died as a result of the storm. most recently, a man in his 60s who was swept away in shropshire and in breadsall in derbyshire. there are also flooded streets, homes and businesses , homes and businesses, firefighters have been tackling a huge blaze in the whiteley area of east kilbride . those area of east kilbride. those watching on television can see eyewitness footage of the fire, which has reportedly consumed several homes in the area . the
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several homes in the area. the eye witness described the scene to gb news as unreal. police scotland have closed several roads as they deal with the emergency . this is gb news emergency. this is gb news across the uk on television in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. now let's get back to . mark well, play gb news. now let's get back to . mark well , rmt play gb news. now let's get back to . mark well, rmt mark dolan to. mark well, rmt mark dolan tonight after shock video emerges showing him contradicting himself on israel is keir starmer , the man who is keir starmer, the man who would be our next prime minister >> a liar. i'll be asking tonight's newsmaker, edwina currie . plus, tomorrow's currie. plus, tomorrow's newspaper front pages and live reaction in the studio . so from reaction in the studio. so from tonight's top pundits , who's tonight's top pundits, who's with us in the green room as well, we have tv and radio presenter mike porky parry, a man who made his name in fleet street, of course, co—founded talksport radio entrepreneur, you name it . talksport radio entrepreneur, you name it. plus the brilliant campaigner and presenter and journalist chloe dobbs and the
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doyen of showbiz reporting , an doyen of showbiz reporting, an icon of media, nina michkov. they'll be nominating the headune they'll be nominating the headline heroes and back page zeroes . plus, let me tell you, zeroes. plus, let me tell you, at 1030, i'll be making a statement ant about andrew bridgen , the mp, formerly bridgen, the mp, formerly conservative mp , now an conservative mp, now an independent in the house of commons. he started a debate about about excess deaths in this country, which are worryingly high. no one attended. the place was empty . attended. the place was empty. you could hear a pin drop. why the silence? i'll be making a statement about the issue of excess deaths at exactly 1030. it's a short statement , but i it's a short statement, but i don't think you'll want to miss it. and you won't hear the kind of comments i've got to make anywhere else . that's andrew anywhere else. that's andrew bridgen my statement at bridgen and my statement at 1030. andrew bridgen, by the way, now representing the reclaim party. so a packed hour to come. those papers are on the way, but shall we sort out joe biden? here's my take . at ten.
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biden? here's my take. at ten. history teaches us that when times are tough, you need great leadership. joe julius caesar. abraham lincoln. winston churchill. martin luther king. margaret thatcher. nelson mandela. mikhail gorbachev. ronald reagan. un fortunately, as the world descends into crisis with the powder keg of the middle east about to erupt, who do we have in post? as the leader of the free world, the commander in chief of the biggest military the planet, biggest military on the planet, slo mo. himself . joe biden, slo mo. joe himself. joe biden, a man so decrepit he wouldn't even make it into the cast of dad's army on the grounds of age and infirmity. now let's be honest with this mad ramblings . honest with this mad ramblings. he delivers more comedy clips than you've been framed. here are just a couple from the last 24 hours. >> we will defend every inch of nato, which would treaty requires and calls for more. we'll have something that we do
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not seek. make it clear we do not seek. make it clear we do not seek. make it clear we do not seek. we do not seek to have american troops fighting in russia . virtually every . russia. virtually every. free mass shooting , every mass shooting, every circumstance . where large number circumstance. where large number of people have been victimised and lost is very sad and worrying, to say the least . worrying, to say the least. >> let's have a look at the president's in—tray, shall we? at home? crumbling cities, lawlessness as a public health crisis caused by obesity epidemic levels of drug use, a government mired in so much debt , it makes bernard madoff look positively prudent and race relations at their lowest point since the 1950s. what about his challenges abroad ? well, challenges abroad? well, vladimir putin's invasion of ukraine, which is spiking energy and food prices, costing lives
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and food prices, costing lives and destabilising the region. there's a hot mess that is afghan yarn from which biden exited america in the most ignominious and expensive way, leaving billions of dollars worth of military equipment in a mineral rich country which is now run by effective gangsters. yeah, the disastrous departure from afghanistan happened on slow mo joe's watch. there's the growing power economically and in military terms of china who look set to overtake america in both departments in the years to come. joe biden has to work out what to do as an increasingly belligerent beijing cast its avaricious eyes over taiwan, and then there is the middle east with the worst terror attack on jewish people since the holocaust and a death cult in the form of hamas, whose supporters pervade the middle east with the dangerous iranian regime . among its biggest regime. among its biggest cheerleaders . perhaps it wasn't cheerleaders. perhaps it wasn't such a great idea for joe cheerleaders. perhaps it wasn't such a great idea forjoe biden such a great idea for joe biden to pump billions into iran after all, in what is a dark time for
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america in the world, we need great leadership in the white house. instead, we've got a guy that gets lost on his way into that gets lost on his way into that famous building saying, of course, it's not joe biden's fault that he is in cognitive decline, but it's an existential problem for the west . would the problem for the west. would the botched afghanistan exit or vladimir putin's invasion of ukraine have happened under strong leadership? let's be honest. putin is hardly afraid of biden, is he ? in my view, of biden, is he? in my view, having this confused doddery kid sniffer in charge is an open door to all tyrants to have a go and try their luck . door to all tyrants to have a go and try their luck. his supporters say that his health doesn't matter. he's got good people around him apparently is that how democracy works? did the american people vote for a bunch of interns, backroom boys and policy wonks, to actually run the country? do you remember the good old days, like under reagan when the president was actually in charge? joe biden's tenure in the white house is an accident waiting to happen. it's
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bad news for america and it's bad news for america and it's bad news for the world. joe biden must be removed from power on the grounds of ill health. these are dangerous times. america deserves better. the world deserves better. joe biden shouldn't be sat in the oval office . he should be. he should office. he should be. he should be sat in a care home, nursing a lukewarm cup of tea, watching reruns of the golden girls who look sprightly teenagers look like sprightly teenagers compared to this mumbling, incoherent bag of bones . if joe incoherent bag of bones. if joe biden is actually running the country, then i'm a spice girl posh spice. obviously sometimes scary. this is an emergent see slo mo joe has got to go . now. slo mo joe has got to go. now. i'd like him impeached. slo mo joe has got to go. now. i'd like him impeached . you i'd like him impeached. you can't impeach him because he hasn't broken the law. but somebody has just got to send the men in white coats in and get him out. but what do you think, cbnnews.com .
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think, mark? at cbnnews.com. we'll get to your email shortly, but top but let's hear from my top pundits, and radio presenter pundits, tv and radio presenter mike porky parry, political commentator dobbs and commentator chloe dobbs and journalist and broadcaster nina myskow . listen, mike, let me myskow. listen, mike, let me start with you. slo mojo, he's got to go . got to go. >> well, he should never have been there in the first place, to be honest. and the problem is, as you just highlighted there in your in your speech, is that we don't know who's making the decisions inside the white house anymore. i don't think it's joe biden. i'm sorry. i don't think biden because don't think it's biden because as i still speak to people of in america, i lived there and worked there for quite a long time in journalism. he is apparently pieces of apparently handed pieces of paper before every time he makes a statement to camera and he sometimes gets the words on this piece of paper and sometimes he doesn't. but there seems to be no link between one thing he says and another, if you see what i mean. says and another, if you see whati mean. if says and another, if you see what i mean. if it's literally a series of sort of, you know,
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bites to a camera and it doesn't seem to have any coherent , seem to have any coherent, coherent pattern as to how the president of the united states is thinking about how to run the western world. it's very , very western world. it's very, very frightening, in my view. and the other frightening thing is, if not biden, is it going to be trump? we're in a bit of a mess, aren't we, in terms of leadership in the western world? >> well, indeed, chloe dobbs joe biden not just a problem for biden is notjust a problem for america . he's a problem for the america. he's a problem for the world, especially the free world here in the west . here in the west. >> yes, absolutely. mean, he's >> yes, absolutely. i mean, he's a liability. it's an a huge liability. it's an absolute joke that one of the most powerful countries in the world is being run by a dementia patient string patient who can't string a sentence together. and i'm sure many of you have seen , if not many of you have seen, if not look up, picture of joe look it up, the picture of joe biden accidentally flashing an instructor card that had to be given him by his team given to him by his team to attend an important meeting where literally where the instructions literally say take a seat, you make say you take a seat, you make brief comments, you thank participants , you exit your seat
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participants, you exit your seat and leave the room . i mean, he and leave the room. i mean, he needs to have it spelled out to him he's definitely him that simply he's definitely not making the .key not making any of the .key decisions. he needs have decisions. if he needs to have that given and you know, that given to him. and you know, at when we've got serious at a time when we've got serious conflicts going on in ukraine and now israel, we need strong leaders in the western world. we really don't need joe biden . but really don't need joe biden. but he was voted in as seen as, you know, just the better of two evils. thought that trump evils. people thought that trump was racist, was scary was racist, who was a scary figure have in power. so then figure to have in power. so then they for joe biden. figure to have in power. so then they forjoe biden. but i they voted for joe biden. but i don't think he's been much better. don't think he's been much betwell, indeed. i mean, >> well, indeed. i mean, nina, can liberal can you imagine the liberal press america and here in the press in america and here in the uk newspapers like the guardian, how they'd reacting if this how they'd be reacting if this mad confusion came from donald trump? but because it's joe biden, no one says anything. well the thing is, mark, that joe biden, for all the things that you've said are wrong with america, you talked about the obesity crisis. >> they've had an obesity crisis for years. can't blame for 50 years. you can't blame that joe biden . they've got that on joe biden. they've got inflation at 3.7, which we'd dearly love to have. and fewer
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than 4% of americans are unemployed. so what he calls his biodynamics and whoever is putting that together, whatever team is working in that well, he's borrowed a lot of money. >> that debt ceiling is going up, up, up. it's higher than ever . ever. >> ?- even >> but but america, can >> est yes, but but america, can you trump and you you imagine under trump and you talked putin, you know , talked about putin, you know, putin and trump, trump is in putin's pocket. i mean, trump wants to come to this country to fight a court case because of the allegations about his alleged behaviour in in russia. so you know, it's not that it's not that simple. and i agree with you . it is very sad to see with you. it is very sad to see joe biden diminish in this way. but he is a man of he was a man of great intellect , huge of great intellect, huge experience . and that's still got experience. and that's still got to be in there somewhere. you mentioned all these wonderful world leaders, ronald reagan , world leaders, ronald reagan, and very sadly ended his life with alzheimer's . so he wasn't
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with alzheimer's. so he wasn't actually firing on all cylinders himself, but he was someone he was in the white house. >> yeah. i mean, when he was in the white house, he was on the whole not the whole time he was in the white house. >> very >> i thought he was very articulate. there were articulate. but yeah, there were some allegations towards end some allegations towards the end he'd wobbly. what he'd gone a bit wobbly. but what do think, should he be removed? >> no, he shouldn't be removed. but. >> oh, nina, for goodness sake, the man's sentence together. >> he needs to. a liability. >> help! he's. liability. >> yes,l! he's. liability. >> yes, he e's. liability. >> yes, he should. he should be in home. in a home. >> okay. >> okay. >> and i just one. >> and i just take one. one issue there was issue with you. there was a phrase in in there that that i think was beneath you. you called him kiddie sniffer. and called him a kiddie sniffer. and i think i really object to that. and in a week when we've seen steve coogan brilliantly portraying jimmy savile in a big drama, he's just got a strange habit of smelling children's hair and telling teenage girls that you've got to wait till you're 30 before having a permanent boyfriend. >> he's a creep . >> he's a creep. >> he's a creep. >> that implies all sorts of things. he's he's a very fine family man , man. family man, man. >> well, he smells children's hair, and i don't really fancy
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that. >> i do. listen i do think own. >> i do. listen i do think own. >> i do. listen i do think own. >> i will. i will grant you. sniffing hair is not against the law, but i don't think it's becoming as well. becoming a family man as well. >> i mean, his son >> family man. i mean, his son is embroiled in some of the most scandalous accusations ever made to a member of a president's family. >> exactly. >> exactly. >> the fact the fact is that he still loves his son and tries to help him makes him a family man, for heaven's sake. it'd be completely cast him out. he would not be a family man. >> look, i don't think there's anything dodgy about joe biden, but think his behaviour but i just think his behaviour around just and around minors is just creepy and inappropriate, but inappropriate, that's all. but listen, you, donald listen, i'll grant you, donald trump angel himself. trump is no angel himself. now, earlier on twitter, we asked you, should britain have a cap on number of refugees that you, should britain have a cap oracceptsnber of refugees that you, should britain have a cap oraccepts every)f refugees that you, should britain have a cap oraccepts every year ugees that you, should britain have a cap oraccepts every year the as that it accepts every year the results are in and 93% say yes. and 7% say we should not. it's interesting stuff, mark dolan tonight is the home of diverse opinion. get yours in mark at gbnews.com coming up, after shock video emerges showing him contradicting himself on israel is keir starmer, the man who
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would be our next prime minister. a liar ? are we asking minister. a liar? are we asking tonight's newsmaker , edwina tonight's newsmaker, edwina currie? plus, tomorrow's front pages with instant reaction from my brilliant pundits tonight, edwina currie is next. she's not happy. edwina currie is next. she's not happy . see happy. see
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radio. >> i'll get to your email shortly. >> mark gb news.com. shortly. >> mark gbnews.com. but would you believe it? following his double by—election success yesterday , sir keir starmer has yesterday, sir keir starmer has got himself in a bit of hot water, apparently with two positions on whether israel can cut off water and electricity suppues cut off water and electricity supplies to gaza . in the first supplies to gaza. in the first interview with my old friend nick ferrari on lbc, he said yes and to itv , he said no. take and to itv, he said no. take a listen . listen. >> i'm very clear. israel i must have that does have that right to defend herself. >> a siege is appropriate. cutting off power, cutting off water secure. >> i think that israel does have that right. i was saying israel
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had the right to self—defence . had the right to self—defence. and when i said that right, it was that right to self—defence. i was not saying that israel had the right to cut off water, food , fuel or medicines . , fuel or medicines. >> watch him wriggling on the line. >> yeah, but no, but yeah, he's basically politics is answer to vicky pollard. well, the guardian columnist owen jones is not having any of it going on twitter to say this is a straightfonnard lie by who to believe. you turns is one thing, but outright dishonesty . perish but outright dishonesty. perish the thought . let's get the views the thought. let's get the views now of former government minister and radio and television broadcaster edwina currie. edwina great to see you on the program. has sir keir got caught with his pants down this time , do you think ? time, do you think? >> um, actually not in the way that owen jones is saying. in my humble opinion. i that owen jones is saying. in my humble opinion . i mean, it's not humble opinion. i mean, it's not a lie to express yourself . not a lie to express yourself. not as well as you would like every politician at some point in their life express themselves
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less competently than they would like. actually, mark a few presenters do that as well . that presenters do that as well. that doesn't make you a liar. it just doesn't make you a liar. itjust makes you occasionally just not quite as competent as you would like to be. owen jones , on the like to be. owen jones, on the other hand, is a joy to all tories. owen jones is an absolute straight up idiot who is a propagandist for a pattern of viewpoints that really most of viewpoints that really most of the electorate don't want. he's been attached to labour for a long time. the noisier he is, the more people like me, like it and i'd never cancel you. >> not on my show. but that's intemperate language, isn't it? idiot um , maybe it's a little idiot um, maybe it's a little unkind to other idiots . unkind to other idiots. >> um. owen jones has actually blocked me on twitter for a very long time . so blocked me on twitter for a very longtime. so did nadine dorries long time. so did nadine dorries . i regard both of those as badges of honour. i have to say , badges of honour. i have to say, if you were to block me, i would feel myself in deep trouble and i would probably apologise profusely, actually what profusely, but actually what keir starmer is, is doing is
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saying quite clearly that israel has the right to defend itself , has the right to defend itself, if of course it does, and that usually means by whatever means you've got at your disposal, usually means by whatever means you've got at your disposal , not you've got at your disposal, not least if you're trying, not to kill people in large numbers , kill people in large numbers, which the israelis clearly are not. and the longer that continues, the more i'm in favour of that . they also favour of that. they also clearly have the ability to reduce the amount of stuff that's going into gaza, and that makes actually persuade the people in gaza whatever label they carry to let those hostages go that were seized now over a week ago. wouldn't it be nice if keir starmer and owen jones agreed on that? and we might actually then get a to resolution the crisis that's been happening there , which is been happening there, which is the priority? >> absolutely . yeah. look, i >> absolutely. yeah. look, i don't think owen jones is an idiot. i don't often agree with him, but perhaps he should appear on the show with edwina and they can have a right old ding dong it will be easier ding dong and it will be easier for talk him on for edwina to talk to him on this on twitter,
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this show because on twitter, she's blocked outrageous. she's been blocked. outrageous. now, , no doubt keir now, edwina, no doubt keir starmer will brush off this latest drama . is he going to be latest drama. is he going to be britain's next prime minister >> well, he's facing a much more complex and deep seated problem, which is labour at the last election in 2019 had their worst election in 2019 had their worst election result for many, many decades. for two generations. yeah. and they did so because they adopted this rather purist left wing view that was was well expressed by people like owen jones and of course, jeremy corbyn. now corbyn is still in parliament. he is . he's been parliament. he is. he's been readmitted to the labour party, though he has not yet got back. the parliamentary whip . he is the parliamentary whip. he is still the mp for islington and i note that the labour party has note that the labour party has not selected his replacement yet. so we're all expecting that actually the left wing of the labour party will be appeased by allowing corbyn and by proxy owen jones to be spokespeople
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for their party in future. the problem that keir starmer faces is that will make them unelectable again. they will have snatched defeat from the jaws of victory . and it's not jaws of victory. and it's not beyond the labour party to be actually so ill disciplined as to be like that. starmer very much wants to be prime minister. he's not a good campaigner. the results yesterday were not brilliant for labour either. they may look so on paper, but actually with a 35% turnout rate and hardly any move in their own vote, it wasn't anything to shout about. in reality . mark shout about. in reality. mark and i think starmer knows that he's not a stupid man and i don't think he's a bad man. he's a big improvement on corbyn, which is about all you can say for him. of course, keir starmer would argue that his success yesterday demonstrates that b ritai n yesterday demonstrates that britain wants a labour government . government. >> last but not least, edwina , >> last but not least, edwina, the tories lost votes to refer form uk and my friend richard tice are the right canny selling
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themselves . themselves. >> well, that's a very good question and i'm surprised you call him your friend, because actually what we really need is actually what we really need is a tory government . we need a a tory government. we need a tory government and a tory government is put in some jeopardy when some people drift off to the right , jeopardy when some people drift off to the right, give themselves fancy names , get themselves fancy names, get themselves fancy names, get themselves a lot on gb news. i mean, who on earth would dream of doing that? and in the end they persuade people. they persuade some voters and some activists that purism is better than actually the broad brush polity acas that get people elected into government in this country. we have a first past the post system . i know richard the post system. i know richard tice is very much against that, but we've had a referendum on it. we're not going to have another one. we have a first past post system. we've past the post system. we've had it thousand years and the it for a thousand years and the outcome that is if want outcome of that is if you want to elected into government, to get elected into government, you with some you have to work with some people whom you don't
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people with whom you don't entirely agree with, whom you are not entirely friends, but who have more or less the same values and principles and objectives at heart and that certainly can't be said for the reform party in the labour party, at least not in this country. so i would say to all those who are thinking of drifting like that, get drifting off like that, get real. there's election real. there's a general election coming. a new government coming. there's a new government coming, and it ought to be one that's led by us. >> always great to have you on the show, edwina. a good the show, edwina. have a good weekend. we'll catch up soon. now, coming up, tomorrow's newspaper live newspaper front pages and live reaction in the studio my reaction in the studio from my pundits . reaction in the studio from my pundits. don't go reaction in the studio from my pundits . don't go anywhere
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . papers are on their way radio. papers are on their way before we continue, a quick word on andrew bridgen mp . on andrew bridgen mp. >> you can agree or disagree with his comments about the covid 19 vaccine, but it's absolutely right to debate the ongoing issue of excess deaths in this country and in other
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parts of the world. after much pushback, he finally made it happen today in the house of commons. sadly the chamber was almost empty, with just a handful of mps present, including gb news star philip davies . in the speech he pointed davies. in the speech he pointed out a particularly devastating statistic that we've experienced more excess deaths since july 2021 than in the whole of 2020. and that was the height of the pandemic . given the total pandemic. given the total preoccupation with the covid death toll during the pandemic, daily updates no less. when more people are dying than should be in this country across various age groups, why aren't we talking about it earlier in the yean talking about it earlier in the year, excess deaths were approaching pandemic levels, and according to the british medical journal, are currently 5% higher across 2023 than they were in 2019 before covid struck, 5% higher this year alone , more higher this year alone, more young people are dying than
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should be, as well as a worrying spike among 50 to 64 year olds. what a sick joke, therefore, that parliament should be all but empty for this important issue. the same parliament that signed off lockdowns other signed off lockdowns and other debateable measures for which we are now paying a huge economic and societal price, a broken economy, a mental health tsunami, a generation of damaged kids and an nhs waiting list of 7.6 million people. parliament was full when legislating that madness . but now it's empty. you madness. but now it's empty. you could hear a pin drop excess deaths. why the deafening silence ? let me know your silence? let me know your thoughts. mark gbnews.com. it's time now for the papers . just time now for the papers. just gone 1030. time for the papers and we have the daily express. always a cracking read. stay at home voters deliver double by—election defeat for rishi. angry tories say only true blue
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values can woo back votes. furious tory mps demanded a return to true blue values in the hope that the party can win back voters after labour snatched two by elections . snatched two by elections. telegraph now terrorist attack in uk linked to gaza and asylum seeker bent on avenging deaths in gaza has carried out a suspected terror attack in britain. an exclusive from the telegraph. the public has not been told that the man who came to the uk in 2020 told police he'd done it for palestine. mps said the public had a right to know amid warnings that demonstrations this weekend could encourage so—called lone wolf terror attacks . some rare wolf terror attacks. some rare good news amid the fighting in the middle east. mother and daughter hostage are freed. an american mother and daughter became the first hostages to be released by hamas last night. that was tonight . tomorrow's that was tonight. tomorrow's papers tonight in a sign of goodwill, they were identified by the israeli military as
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judith rhiannon, who is believed to be in her 60s and her 17 year old daughter , natalie. welcome old daughter, natalie. welcome home to them both. also mp teeth back in sorry, pm maybe in a year he'll just be an mp . pm year he'll just be an mp. pm considers tax cuts for high earners in election bid . downing earners in election bid. downing street is considering a tax cut for 5 million high earners next year to galvanise tory voters after suffering historic by—election defeats in two safe tory seats . the threshold for tory seats. the threshold for paying tory seats. the threshold for paying the 40% higher rate of income tax could be raised. raised in an effort to plot a path to re—election. despite polls predicting a labour victory . the mirror now. horror victory. the mirror now. horror in the middle east. deadly wait tanks ready for invasion as hamas frees two hostages stricken palestinians still wait for aid stuck at border . daily for aid stuck at border. daily mail. writing in a daily mail, bofis mail. writing in a daily mail, boris johnson america is freedom's last best hope and
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israel at war as troops get ready to invade. one young woman conscript, conscript, tells the mail. two weeks ago, i was working in an ad agency . now mail. two weeks ago, i was working in an ad agency. now i'm about to fight for my nation's survival . all the times now , survival. all the times now, james blunt pop star. looking back, i want to punch myself in the face. i was terribly harsh sentiment. i think he's oh, that's unkind. i think he's absolutely cracking songwriter and brilliant on twitter or x , and brilliant on twitter or x, really funny on twitter. >> great sense of humour and a genius of a singer. >> i'm putting it out there. i love james blunt. there you go. i'm the king of unpopular opinions, aren't i? how about this? hamas frees kidnapped mother and daughter and tories plot stamp duty cut to win over voters . iweekend hostage , mother voters. iweekend hostage, mother and daughter are released. also in politics, tory mps turn on sunak as they lose hope of avoiding historic defeats . and avoiding historic defeats. and last but not least, the daily star 100% legit theory from cleverest thing in the world. einstein chatbot that humans are
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all aliens . the world's biggest all aliens. the world's biggest brained chat bot says we could all be aliens from another galaxy ruled by tesla boss elon musk . we never doubted it did musk. we never doubted it did you ask the daily star ? those you ask the daily star? those are your front pages . reaction are your front pages. reaction now from mike parry. chloe dobbs and of course, nina meshkov . so, and of course, nina meshkov. so, folks, lots of stories to sink our teeth into . mother and our teeth into. mother and daughter hostages are freed over 200 at the moment have been kidnapped by hamas. but for two to come home is good news. nina it's absolutely wonderful. >> and you just wish that hamas would just release all the hostages and everybody would stop and that would be the end of everything and no more civilians. >> then they'd get all the services back gaza because services back into gaza because they've give the they've said, give us the hostages and you can have your electricity your water and electricity and your water and the will back. so the power will come back. so it's equation. it's quite a simple equation. you know, come back, the hostages and we'll restore your facilities. >> yes. i mean, israel have
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intelligence and they have military power. but hamas have civilians. that's their main weapon. >> is it? yeah, of course it is. and some of the civilians are the palestinian people who live in gaza because they are as much a prisoner of hamas as the hostages who've been kidnapped and taken there . and taken there. >> are you sympathetic to the view of some who are out there marching for palestine that what happened on the 7th of october was appalling, egregious and shocking, but a reaction to years of bad behaviour by the israeli state? >> no, not nothing can explain or justify the blowback behaviour of savage jews, because that's what it was. it was savage mediaeval retribution against a people who they simply believe shouldn't be allowed to exist. how can you make any allowance for that whatsoever? yeah correct. >> that would be like, i don't know, taking to the streets after waving flags for after 911 and waving flags for osama bin laden, wouldn't it? >> exactly . i think >> chloe yeah, exactly. i think whichever of debate you whichever side of the debate you
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are pro—israel,pro—palestine are on pro—israel, pro—palestine , are on pro—israel, pro—palestine i , are on pro—israel, pro—palestine , i understand it's a very complex issue. and not going complex issue. and i'm not going to an expert, but to pretend to be an expert, but no what side you're on, no matter what side you're on, you there's just no justification for the murder of innocent children and mothers and civilians. yes. beheadings i mean, there is just no way that you can celebrate that. i mean, it's quite worrying that we live in a society where the people of britain who i used to think were quite reasonable, but clearly not, are, know, filling the not, are, you know, filling the streets, the road, streets, marching down the road, celebrating death, celebrating the death, beheading, of innocent beheading, murder of innocent people. it's horrifying. what did you make of thunberg, did you make of greta thunberg, the eco campaigner, photographed on instagram with a free palestine banner ? as i said, palestine banner? as i said, look, it's a complex issue. i understand people have different sides . i'm understand people have different sides. i'm not an understand people have different sides . i'm not an expert understand people have different sides. i'm not an expert on it. if she is in favour of palestine, okay, but if she is selling creating children , being selling creating children, being murdered is just unacceptable . murdered is just unacceptable. >> is there a difference? there's no way that she is celebrating children being murdered. >> i mean, there .
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>> i mean, there. >> i mean, there. >> no, no. it's a bit insensitive at this time in the history of the world to be waving around a palestinian flag. >> isn't it is it an insult to jewish people? >> well, in a way, i can see why it is . but on the other hand, it is. but on the other hand, there are factors on the other side that that are mitigating in some way . so m e way. >> some way. >> no, nothing. >> no, nothing. >> explain if you if nothing justifies nothing. i agree. nothing justifies it. and it was completely grotesque in in human barbaric. all those things completely grotesque in in human barbyou all those things completely grotesque in in human barbyou all “that things completely grotesque in in human barbyou all “that thiishould that you should that you should say. but the innocent people of palestine, of palestine are suffering and have and suffering and have suffered. and that's you know, you have to throw that into the mix and have been abandoned by most of the rest of the arabian world. >> egypt don't want them in sinai, jordan don't want them. so you say to yourself, the enormous wealth which is generated in the middle east, the richest countries in the world, should surely they've got the ability, they've got the resources, they've got the
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technology to solve the problem of finding a palestine. but they're not interested in the people they say are their own . people they say are their own. and i find that remarkable. >> it is remarkable, isn't it? let's have a look now at rishi sunak. are we in the final days of rishi sunak? chloe dobbs as pm considers tax cuts for high earners in election bid and tories plot stamp duty cut to win over voters? that's the telegraph and the times respectively . this sounds like respectively. this sounds like deckchairs. deckchairs on the titanic, doesn't it? >> oh, absolutely . i mean, they >> oh, absolutely. i mean, they know that they're to going go so they can announce whatever policy they want. i find it quite interesting how a lot of the policies they're announcing at things at conference are things that will years time will happen in a few years time when obviously not going will happen in a few years time wibe obviously not going will happen in a few years time wibe in viously not going will happen in a few years time wibe in powerl not going will happen in a few years time wibe in power . not going will happen in a few years time wibe in power. but not going will happen in a few years time wibe in power. but it not going will happen in a few years time wibe in power. but it soundsing to be in power. but it sounds like which one of these articles here is that the pressure for tax cuts is not actually coming from rishi. it's coming from other politicians are saying other politicians who are saying , look, we need to do something . , look, we need to do something. we need to do something to show that we conservatives, that that we are conservatives, that
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we different to the labour we are different to the labour party. whilst the chancellor and the pm say that they're constrained, they can't cut taxes. >> do the true blue. >> do the true blue. >> they're talking about the true blue values can woo back. now the true blue tories are the ones who voted in liz truss. may i point that out to you? so thinking you're going to go to the right and go into the into . the right and go into the into. >> boccolini wrong. let's trust bonkers. >> luna is not going to do it because people the general pubuc because people the general public do not want that . public do not want that. >> well, because i don't agree with that. you go on, make you see. she got it. liz truss got it. mechanically wrong. she had the theory right, but she just executed it so badly . but i'm executed it so badly. but i'm not as doom laden about this. if you look at these, um, you know , you look at these, um, you know, midterm results by—election results, right? so what did you expect in mid beds ? nadine expect in mid beds? nadine dorries abandon the constituency about eight months ago when she thought she was going to the house of lords and then boris
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said, i can't do it now. i'm sorry. she just flounced off, left the house of commons, didn't go back to see her constituents. >> i know, but she's also a true blue tory. she's a true story. she's not anymore on the right. she's not anymore on the right. she's not anymore on the right. she's not anymore. mate of boris i >> she's so she is one of the people that you're saying she should be there . should be there. >> she's drama queen now. i >> she's a drama queen now. i didn't didn't into the didn't i didn't get into the house lords and she flounces house of lords and she flounces off. >> now, i agree. she should never been in position never have been in the position she was. >> she's reading the arts. >> she's reading the arts. >> hitchens has been >> peter hitchens has been writing and peter writing today, and peter worked with and with me at the express and i used send him to by elections used to send him to by elections and a brilliant political and he was a brilliant political reader of situations and always said , no, by—election said to me, no, by—election result means anything. what so even result means anything. what so ever, because it's always where people get rid of their grudges. it's a protest and a protest and put it back. >> i know that. we know that. but i mean, i believe i listen to peter curtis, who is a well known peter, john, john curtis, john curtis, a well known polling pollster. and he said
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this is all of those things about by elections and it's always, you know, revenge. it's this it's that there's not a big turnout but he was saying historically if you look at the way this is the result and the numbers, this is actually all turning into what came before. but but again, tony blair, again, when you say the result, look at the numbers, although the percentages sound huge in terms of the swing, the actual numbers between labour and tories who came second in both are quite marginal in in both constituencies . constituencies. >> the if people didn't vote for 20, it's the numbers who voted . 20, it's the numbers who voted. if people if you look at the numbers in both of these by elections if people didn't vote for richard tice party the conservatives actually would have won them. that's right. so absolutely . you know, there is absolutely. you know, there is some nuance to add to this, that part of this is the blue vote being split in two. yes that's right. saying tories
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right. i'm not saying the tories are doing amazing, but we need to add a bit of context to this. >> labour didn't add a lot of people to their support, did they? >> and turnout was low. if the tories go to the right voters, they finished for decades. they are finished for decades. >> the tories go to the >> if the tories go to the right, finished decades. >> they're finished because >> no, they're finished because labour then will give the vote to olds and to 16 year olds and impressionable youngsters between the age of 16 and 18 will go round voting for all sorts of left wing cranks. >> all right, well, listen, the tories are indictment of young people. tories are crisis, people. tories are in crisis, right? they need smash the right? they need to smash the glass now get the emergency glass now and get the emergency hammer. does look hammer. so what does that look like? need to hear like? what do you need to hear from sunak change your from rishi sunak to change your mind about backing labour instead? market gbnews.com. i'll be asking my pundits as well what is the emergency lever that rishi sunak to pull? rishi sunak ought to pull? because he's still at number 10. he's still got a year to go. coming up, of tomorrow's coming up, more of tomorrow's front pages, including the guardian, a couple of other papers well, plus my pundits papers as well, plus my pundits will be nominating their headune will be nominating their headline and page headline heroes and back page zeroes of the day. plus we've
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n ext next now, earlier today i asked you is there still snobbery towards people with regional accents? the results are in and look at that. 74% say yes, there is still snobbery towards regional accents . 26% say no. there is accents. 26% say no. there is not. now, i told maria that i wouldn't do emails, but listen, i've actually got to i've actually obliged to quickly do because i realise i've saved a couple from earlier about which is the best accent and how about this? frank says , oh no, that's this? frank says, oh no, that's not frank. sorry. forgive that. john, says mark. when i came to leicester 26 years ago with my cockney accent, there was a leicester city football fan at work who gave it to me every single day . and when i got to
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single day. and when i got to london or when i go to london now, i get talk a now, i get told i talk like a northerner. john. he can't northerner. poorjohn. he can't win. maria no, let's have a look. adrian says mark. by far the best accent is the geordie accent. lovely people we are as well. howay the lads . elizabeth well. howay the lads. elizabeth says the best accent by far is the west country , including the west country, including bristol and gloucester. very sad that young things like chloe think it's some kind of dig. i love it. and wish gb news had more of it . james says the most more of it. james says the most unacceptable accent are the eton and harrow forced speech. let me give a shout out to producer maria and the lovely yorkshire accent. look at that biggest county in england . yup. right. county in england. yup. right. i'll stop right there. now reacting to the big stories of the day, we have mike parry , the day, we have mike parry, chloe dobbs and nina michkov. what a dream team. now we may have been able to ban under eighteens from freezing their foreheads and filling their lips here in england . but it's not
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here in england. but it's not illegal for youngsters to receive such treatment in wales, scotland and northern ireland. that's why ashton collins , a that's why ashton collins, a campaigner for safe plastic surgery this week, warned that young people are dodging the ban on botox in england by heading to neighbouring nations . so to our neighbouring nations. so should underage teens be banned from cosmetic procedure ? from getting cosmetic procedure? us nina absolutely. >> i mean , some of them are >> i mean, some of them are ugly. >> maybe it's an improvement. >> maybe it's an improvement. >> the thing is, i know some right wingers. no, the trouble is they seem to go for the lips and while want to have lips and while they want to have lips like know, they like cops, i don't know, they look awful. they like look awful. they look like baboons look awful. they look like babo don't get it, frankly. >> i don't get it, frankly. >> i don't get it, frankly. >> i don't see how they're. >> i just don't see how they're. >> i just don't see how they're. >> very dangerous as well. >> it's very dangerous as well. >> it's very dangerous as well. >> it's very dangerous as well. >> it's like the thing is, it is dangerous. and there's many dangerous. and there's so many things and your things can go wrong. and your face you face is actually still, you know, 60 or 70, what's know, if you're 60 or 70, what's the difference between a botox know, if you're 60 or 70, what's thladifference between a botox know, if you're 60 or 70, what's thla 14:erence between a botox know, if you're 60 or 70, what's thla 14 year:e between a botox know, if you're 60 or 70, what's thla 14 year old atween a botox know, if you're 60 or 70, what's thla 14 year old and en a botox know, if you're 60 or 70, what's thla 14 year old and just botox in a 14 year old and just brushing hair and giving brushing their hair and giving them a bath? >> improvement, isn't >> well, it's improvement, isn't it? you're improving them. >> reversible and one >> no one's reversible and one potentially term damage. potentially long term damage. you're into you're injecting poison into your face. >> that's what that's what botox
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is. course, god knows is. of course, you're god knows we the help we can get. we all need the help we can get. and i will take all sorts of bucket need any bucket loads of makeup. need any help? no, i do. but i draw help? no, i do. i do. but i draw the line that. and certainly the line at that. and certainly for young people, it they should be protected from themselves . be protected from themselves. just influenced social media. just influenced by social media. >> i totally agree with nina there. one most worries there. the one that most worries me is these young girls who want to get a derriere like kim kardashian, who go around having things pumped into them . and it things pumped into them. and it is literally very. what about . is literally very. what about. >> okay, mike, what about this, though? right? >> about year 16, 16 year >> what about year 16, 16 year old girl? nice pair of boobs for her what's to not like? >> well, lots of disgraceful sort analogy. that could be sort of analogy. that could be her . her dream. >> well, might be her dream. >> well, it might be her dream. a new rack for your 16. it's16. my dream was a my dream was to be a millionaire, doesn't come true. >> what if it's what she wants ? >> what if it's what she wants? >> what if it's what she wants? >> no, it doesn't matter what she wants. >> self—conscious about her appearance. >> self—conscious about her appeare no. . >> self—conscious about her appeareno. it's16. >> self—conscious about her ap|:you no. it's16. >> self—conscious about her ap|:you don't�*s 16. >> self—conscious about her ap|:you don't really know self >> you don't really know self consciousness. >> wants catch the eye of >> she wants to catch the eye of an eligible gentleman like mike paul most eligible bachelor. >> have to join a very
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>> she'd have to join a very long on social media long two idiots on social media influenced by social media. what do you think about this, chloe? >> look, look, i've been a teenage girl not that long ago, and i myself partly, but girls around me much more were extremely insecure about their bodies. i had so many friends with horrible eating disorders , with horrible eating disorders, so many girls who just feel they're skinny enough, they're not skinny enough, they're not skinny enough, they're enough. they're not pretty enough. they desperately want to change themselves. you only make themselves. and you only make that worse by giving that problem worse by giving them access to treatments like this. you know, i think i think it's okay if you're in your 50s plus whatever then make a plus whatever you then make a reasonable decision to get some botox to calm your wrinkles down or something someone or something like someone who someone teenager and someone who's a teenager and they they're not at that they just they're not at that age ready to make a good decision. develop that decision. you develop that self—confidence and acceptance of yourself over those teenage years and your 20s. it takes fair enough. >> starting from 16, what are you to going look like by the time you're 40? exactly >> let's be honest. >> let's be honest. >> you're going to be smoking hot, aren't you? >> seen it so many >> oh, you've seen it so many
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times, probably not times, it's probably not collapsing. i do. >> jess. and i made >> i do, jess. and i made a documentary about it. and actually, what happens when women and women get plastic surgery and men? makes them look men? it actually makes them look older. and also when older. and then also when they have they have too much of it, they look a bit odd as well. so i certainly would recommend it. would not recommend it. >> faces around. >> so many odd faces around. it's listen , it's just sad. well, listen, nina, let's get now to some positives, which is your headune positives, which is your headline hero of the day, who's caught eye today , sarah caught your eye today, sarah everard, who's the new labour mp for . for tamworth. >> and congratulations to her. >> and congratulations to her. >> congratulations to her and the that stood up and the fact that she stood up and immediately she immediately said that she commanded rishi sunak suggested he five over to the palace he drive five over to the palace to king charles, resign and call a general election immediately . a general election immediately. i'm for that woman. >> bit of a mic drop. brilliant stuff. how about your headline hero today, chloe? >> little bit different. it's >> a little bit different. it's the uk dementia research group who made an amazing who have made an amazing breakthrough after years and years of not being able to find a cure for alzheimer's and dementia, they've developed dementia, they've now developed headsets that will send electrodes into the brain,
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create a electrical field in the brain to improve your memory. and i lost my grandmother to dementia, sadly. and it's a slow killer that just degrades you for years and years. and yeah , for years and years. and yeah, i've got more hope for the future now, for when i get old. now that this has been developed. >> well, that is the great shout. is, isn't it, mike? >> and it is, isn't it, mike? the grail of all medicine. the holy grail of all medicine. a cure for alzheimer's and dementia. >> yeah. >> yeah. little >> yeah. little holes >> yeah. little holes your >> yeah. little holes in your brain, isn't it? that's what happens. brain happens. and your brain cells disappear. sad. yeah, indeed. >> well, you're not lacking brain who has brain cells, mike. and who has caught today? your caught your eye today? your headune headline hero, coleen rooney. >> that amazing. mean, >> i love that. amazing. i mean, she's of four boys. she's a mother of four boys. she's bringing up got she's bringing up she's got wayne as her husband with wayne rooney as her husband with all problems that that all the problems that that bnngs all the problems that that brings you she got brings you along. she got attacked by a fellow wag, rebekah vardy , although rebekah rebekah vardy, although rebekah vardy didn't know she was being tracked by coleen rooney, who was very clever about it. and now coleen rooney has emerged from huge high court case, from a huge high court case, produced a documentary and given us the full story. do you know
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that coleen rooney, on the night that coleen rooney, on the night that her husband, wayne rooney, played for played his first game for england, still young she england, was still so young she couldn't watch it because he was in school play? in the school play? >> yeah. no, she seems to >> yeah. no, she she seems to always last laugh. always have the last laugh. she's wealthy woman she's a very wealthy young woman now she's a very wealthy young woman nov mike well, in her own right, >> mike well, in her own right, but also, of course , you know, but also, of course, you know, wayne rooney himself is £160 million the sunday times. million in the sunday times. rich, really amazing, course, rich, really amazing, of course, started your started all at everton, your beloved . beloved. >> folks, only got >> look, folks, i've only got time. for just your time. apologies for just your nomination and a reason why. for back page zero. >> peter bone, tory mp is suspended for six weeks. one of those posh , condescending tories those posh, condescending tories who is no better than anybody else. >> now peter bone vehemently denies the allegation , but of denies the allegation, but of course you're entitled to your view and chloe, briefly, if you can, you're not a specific individual, but the eu because it has taken them until we've had two terror attacks in the eu this this week for them to actually recognise that something needs to be done about illegal migration and france has now finally called them out. >> week said that
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>> this week and said that they've naive about they've been naive about the link illegal migration link between illegal migration and terrorism. yeah and it's something needs to be done and it's a shame that people have had to die in order for it to for the eu to actually take notice. >> a couple of seconds, mike, back page zero. absolutely. >> manchester wants in show >> manchester wants in the show already. nadine dorries an absolute a former absolute disgrace as a former tory mp, good riddance. let's not see you back again. >> thank you for your company. >> thank you for your company. >> my brilliant pundits and the team headliners is next and i'll see you tomorrow nine. can't
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>> good evening. i'm ray addison. in the newsroom, headunesis addison. in the newsroom, headlines is coming up next. but first, some breaking news. a photo has been released by the israeli government showing two us hostages who have now been released by hamas . the picture released by hamas. the picture shows judith raanan and her daughter, natalie holding hands alongside israel's lead hostage negotiator , retired brigadier
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negotiator, retired brigadier general gal hirsh. they've been taken to a military base in central israel . earlier, israel central israel. earlier, israel military sources gave more information about the estimated 200 hostages taken by the terrorist organisation . they say terrorist organisation. they say 30 are teenagers and young children and 20 are over the age of 60. the majority are still alive. israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu has said he is not giving up on efforts to free all captives . the prime free all captives. the prime minister has praised egypt for its efforts in trying to deliver aid to civilians in gaza . after aid to civilians in gaza. after meeting the country's president, rishi sunak said palestinians are also victims of hamas and expressed his condolences for the loss of lives. he also stressed the importance of opening a safe corridor to gaza . opening a safe corridor to gaza. >> i've prioritised consistently is getting the rafah crossing opening . it's been a feature of opening. it's been a feature of all my conversations and i'm very pleased that that will now imminently happen. we announced an increase in our funding for
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