tv Headliners GB News November 2, 2023 5:00am-6:01am GMT
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the prime minister has held talks with the egyptian president late this evening about the situation in gaza and the wider middle east. buses carrying at least 320 foreign passport holders set off from gaza earlier today , the first in gaza earlier today, the first in an initial list of 500 people allowed to leave the enclave. it comes as more than 80 injured people were taken across the rafah crossing in ambulances under a deal mediated by qatar . under a deal mediated by qatar. israel says it killed a second hamas commander in the jabalia refugee camp airstrike . rescue refugee camp airstrike. rescue efforts were undennay this afternoon as paramedics dug through the rubble in a desperate search for survivors. the israeli military says 15 of its soldiers were killed during heavy fighting in its ground offensive into gaza . in other offensive into gaza. in other news, police have arrested a 32 year old man in connection with several incidents in which mice were thrown into mcdonald's
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restaurants in the west midlands this week. they're now searching for 30 year old bilal hussein as part of their public appeal footage shared on social media showed dozens of mice unleashed . showed dozens of mice unleashed. yet in another mcdonald's after two incidents earlier this week , two incidents earlier this week, pro—palestinian activists have reportedly called for protests against mcdonald's after a restaurant in israel donated meals to israeli soldiers and security workers . the us vice security workers. the us vice president was at downing street earlier this evening as several high profile guests attend the world's first summit on al safety at bletchley park. she was greeted by the prime minister, who hopes to put the uk at the centre of global efforts to monitor the technology. earlier kamala harris announced the creation of the us ai safety institute , the us ai safety institute, which will work alongside its uk counterpart. she said the threat it's posed by new technologies are profound . a former top civil
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are profound. a former top civil servant says the former health secretary, matt hancock , secretary, matt hancock, displayed nuclear levels of overconfidence in the early stages of the pandemic. helen mcnamara was deputy cabinet secretary in 2020 and 2021 and played a key role in britain's covid response. she told the inquiry that rules were routinely broken in the daily course of government and the king has called for action. partnership and commitment to combat environmental challenges as his state visit to kenya continues . the king told the continues. the king told the united nations in nairobi he's seen the effects of climate change firsthand before planting a tree to commemorate his visit, his majesty then joined queen camilla on a visit to an elephant orphanage where the queen fed a calf . the monarch queen fed a calf. the monarch also visited an urban forest to highlight the importance of green spaces in our cities . as green spaces in our cities. as this is gb news across the uk on
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tv in your car , on digital radio tv in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news now it's time for headliners . time for headliners. thank you, tatiana. >> hello and welcome to headliners. your first look at tomorrow's newspapers with three top comedians. i'm one of them. i'm leo carson. i'm here with josh howie and francis foster. how are you both doing? >> good, man. >> good, man. >> i forgot to put on my poppy. >> i forgot to put on my poppy. >> oh, you don't respect you. >> oh, you don't respect you. >> don't cancel me. >> don't cancel me. >> you know what? if i stand over here where the poppy is ? over here where the poppy is? >> no, you're stealing . francis >> no, you're stealing. francis is digital. poppy. there it is. you can't share the digital. >> going to do the whole show here, man. >> you look like a creepy man checking me out from behind. >> but glad somebody is, mate. m ate. >> mate. >> i'll sort that out. >> i'll sort that out. >> please don't send any emails in like two creepy men from
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where i was sitting. >> anyway, let's have quick >> anyway, let's have a quick peek in store us peek at what's in store for us in thursday's front pages , the in thursday's front pages, the daily leads with musk's daily mail leads with musk's chilling ai . the chilling alert over al. the telegraph britain's leave telegraph has britain's leave gaza as border is opened. the guardian has pandemic hit brain health of over 50 studies find the mirror has escaped from hell . the express leads with first britain's flee gaza hell and finally the daily star has can we kill covid by blowing a hairdryer up our hooters ? and hairdryer up our hooters? and those were your front pages . and those were your front pages. and let's have a closer look at those front pages. we will be looking at that that thing about the blowing a hairdryer up your hooter. but first, let's have a look at thursday's telegraph. josh, people tuning out? >> just in case? >> just in case? >> don't worry, guys. >> don't worry, guys. >> we'll get to the star. we promise . promise. >> so the first one is. >> so the first one is. >> yeah, daily telegraph, britain's as border britain's leave gaza as border is opened .
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is opened. >> there's been a couple of weeks of tense negotiations between various parties. >> this is the egyptian border, which is the south of the gaza strip. >> and they finally opened up part of the hold—up has been that they wanted not just israel, but egypt as well. everybody wants to make sure the people out are people are getting out are obviously terrorists . yeah. obviously not terrorists. yeah. so two people have got out and that's from england . i don't that's from england. i don't think that includes humza humza yousaf, but they've got 400 in total, 400 in total. >> but the two are out there still checking on humza yousef's mum right to make sure, but this is good news. obviously we want innocent people to be safe and out and certainly british citizens . and also they open up citizens. and also they open up and also lots of people who needed hospital treatment. >> that's also a good sign because it's not to see if getting treatment in a hospital in gaza at the moment because it might get bombed, whether it's by the idf. by hamas or the idf. >> but but the i mean, the refugee, i mean, some some
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people are coming out. those with dual citizenship. but it's interesting that jordan and egypt, the two countries bordering border in israel and egypt, bordering the gaza strip, are very averse to taking any refugees at all. yeah, it is very interesting . and you would very interesting. and you would you could make a very coherent argument for to say that that is actually their moral duty to take in those refugees. >> but egypt has closed the border for a significant amount of time, which has just meant that unfortunate only these people who are on the end of bombarding because hamas use them as human target s are them as human targets are physically trapped there . physically trapped there. >> yeah. and i it's been a long time coming but you have to ask yourself why is it that egypt hasn't done the decent thing and actually screened people as best they can so that they can actually leave a war zone? but i think i mean, the issues is a bit like egypt doesn't want to facilitate the removal of people from the gaza strip and from the
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west bank because that would be almost allowing the area to be when israel made peace with because, you know, in the 1967 war, israel won the whole of the sinai desert like and basically part of the deal with egypt four years later was they would give back the sinai. >> and they said , and you can >> and they said, and you can take gaza strip with you. and the egyptians said no part of the egyptians said no part of the peace deal is you have to take gaza. >> we don't want them. that's how badly they didn't want. >> yeah , that population . >> yeah, that population. >> yeah, that population. >> so this is like a custody battle over a child that nobody wants. yes, that's i mean, that's kind of depressing. but the interesting and what i've seen people touting is that the refugees, you know , the 2 refugees, you know, the 2 million gazan refugees come to europe or come to america or canada and i think if it's not safe for them to live in israeli territory , if israel would say, territory, if israel would say, well, too that's dangerous for us, why is it safe for europe to
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take israeli territory ? take israeli territory? >> i mean, because it's obviously they had their own territory. israel got out in 2005. yeah >> but, you know, as a >> yeah. but, you know, as a neighbour, israel has walls and fences to stop people. neighbour, israel has walls and feanhey, stop people. neighbour, israel has walls and feanhey, they people. neighbour, israel has walls and feanhey, they needed walls. >> they, they needed walls. >> they, they needed walls. >> they, they needed walls. >> they only had the fences. yeah. it's shame that they yeah. it's a shame that they didn't have proper. >> saying if it's >> what i'm saying is, if it's safe for them to come to europe , safe for them to come to europe, why safe for them to go why isn't it safe for them to go into israel? if it's not into israel? and if it's not safe for them to go into israel, why is it suddenly safe for them to europe? it's to come to europe? it's a nonsense. it's a conundrum. anyway moving on to the daily mail, frances, what's in the front page there? so the front pageis front page there? so the front page is elon musk. well, musk's chilling alert over ai and musk has been beating the drum about al , warning us about the future ai, warning us about the future of it. he actually including a number of other tech entrepreneurs a few months back saying and a declaration announcing that they want a moratorium on al, which although i am sympathetic to its sentiments, a reality is you cannot have a moratorium on al. progress has never been stopped
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when it comes to technology . if when it comes to technology. if we're not going to do it, the chinese and the russians are, even though if it's made in china, it will probably be rubbish. however, he's very worried about it. he's coming to the , he's to bletchley the uk, he's coming to bletchley park , which is choice. you know, park, which is choice. you know, it's a good choice, which was obviously the spiritual home of alan turing and the code breaker and he's come here to talk to rishi sunak. but the reality is, is can we actually stop it? can we stop progress? can we stop technology moving fonnard? the reality is we can't know. >> this is the one place in the world you can stop progress. >> so no government minister involved and it'll just grind to a halt and go, well, that is true, actually. look i'll tell you what, let's just put suella braverman in charge of it. she'll mess it up and then we'll. nothing. nothing. will you try and make it work? but the home office and rest of the home office and the rest of the home office and the rest of the blob, the judiciary, the woke blob, the judiciary, everyone's and
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everyone's going to come in and stop well made plans from stop her. well made plans from actually . but, mean, actually happening. but, i mean, can just the ai actually happening. but, i mean, can just the al to can we just send the al to rwanda? possibly. don't know. rwanda? possibly. i don't know. i mean, i to me, this we keep doing this headline. i presents this threat to humanity. it's never actually killed anybody apart from cross border. what's going to be really funny is in like three years time when ai is watching this clip, they are going to be really laughing . going to be really laughing. yeah. are you two like, i will watch gb news, mate. >> of course they will. what? they're going to watch sky . sky. they're going to watch sky. sky. they've got. they've got brazier. cleverest people ever. >> even >> they're going to watch gb >> so they're going to watch gb news. course, of course news. yeah, of course, of course they would. >> that he's >> it's interesting that he's talking about this need for regulation and must use this analogy every sport analogy of it's like every sport has to ensure fair has he wants to ensure fair play. but course the thing play. but of course the thing about what's happened so is about what's happened so far is that some of the teams have already shot way ahead. so it's not even like, you know, the whistle is gone and there's already teams out there doing who knows what, right. >> i mean, the worrying >> i mean, the real worrying thing and tucker thing is eventually and tucker carlson point just carlson made this point and just i agree on everything
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i don't agree on everything tucker however he made tucker says. however he made a very good point with this, saying that the real worry is when they bring driverless cars in, because the driving industry in, because the driving industry in us employs millions of in the us employs millions of people . but in the us employs millions of people. but this is the man in the white coat syndrome . so, i the white coat syndrome. so, i mean, this is this is like when the when the spinning jenny was invented when all of these that's the way. that's not a woman, by the way. that's i don't actually know what it is. some of like a what it is. some kind of like a lady who wokester a specific type of entertainment establishment. she can she can do but yeah, do it very quickly. but yeah, but looms and all these but when looms and all these things when things came came through when the washing machine was invented, everybody like , invented, everybody was like, but will be put out but the laundry will be put out of business. the world somehow the finds a the economy somehow finds a way of those people of repurposing those people as travel which are now travel agents or which are now out of business or travel agents get repurposed as pr consult clients. there's infinity . clients. there's infinity. there's an infinity of nonsensical jobs for people to do. and we still seem to find them for people. anyway, let's have a quick look at the guardian. josh, what have they got on the front cover? >> pandemic hit brainhealth of over study finds. so
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over 50 study finds. so obviously is the ongoing obviously this is the ongoing thing. well, i would say this is actually simultaneous to actually it's simultaneous to the inquiry, but it just the covid inquiry, but it just seems ending seems like there's never ending amounts repercussions that amounts of repercussions that weren't at the time weren't considered at the time of not of course. and it's not necessarily fair to expect our government or the world governments have through governments to have seen through every thing . but this is every little thing. but this is something definitely gone something that's definitely gone through it seems through the cracks. and it seems that cutting people their through the cracks. and it seems that 50s ng people their through the cracks. and it seems that 50s andweople their through the cracks. and it seems that 50s and making their through the cracks. and it seems that 50s and making people wear over 50s and making people wear masks and stopping them see people them exercising people stopping them exercising has decline of has to led a massive decline of brain health. and who knows what ramifications that's going to have in terms of alzheimer in the next which is already terrible enough. it's going to be enough is. so be terrible enough as it is. so i anything, it does i think if anything, it does prove one thing, though, is the need for stimulation, the need to have interaction your to have interaction within your life just shutting everyone life and just shutting everyone away. >> i mean, it seemed obvious at the the people who the time, but the people who said, you've got out said, no, you've got to go out and have dinner. i mean, we were meeting dinner you meeting for dinner and, you know, people breaking the know, people were breaking the rules that social rules and having that social that social. can i resist? he went, do you want to come for
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dinner? what? having haggis. he's having haggis. went, he's having haggis. and he went, i'll pay. i've never known i'll pay. and i've never known leo pay for anything. so leo to pay for anything. so how could covid could i turn that down? covid isn't a worry when you're eating mashed brains in a mashed sheep's brains in a sheep's . yeah, but, you sheep's stomach. yeah, but, you know, knew we knew know, we knew we knew that lockdown obviously to going lockdown was obviously to going be disastrous for be an incredibly disastrous for people's health. and we were described as granny killers . described as granny killers. turns out lockdown is killing granny frances. whoa what? people never talk about is that a couple of months ago, scotland had the highest death rate since 1952. and we don't talk about it. we don't talk about the fact that waiting lists are through the roof. we don't talk about the roof. we don't talk about the fact that because of lockdown, there were many people who had cancer symptoms who simply couldn't get treated and by the time they could get. >> neil oliver show and the time they could get treated, they were already stage four. >> and unfortunately too >> and unfortunately it was too late. lockdown it was a tragedy for a huge swathe of the population, although it has been great for people like us who get
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to say, i told you so, which is the most wonderful feeling by the most wonderful feeling by the way, very attractive for the way, and very attractive for women well. made, by the way. women as well. made, by the way. they this article they do start this article by saying 780 million people died and like, by the way, and they were like, by the way, 780 million died during covid. >> and now here's here's how people die . people die. >> it's not like it's not like lockdown immoral. lockdown made people immoral. people died anyway. finally, it was the front cover of the was on the front cover of the daily star, francis it says, can we kill covid by blowing a hair dryer up our huw thomas? and apparently that was during an official inquiry. boris johnson asked this. now i'm going to be honest with you. i don't know if the ask is a joke. i don't know if it was an off the cuff quip. either way, i never want to hear from boris. i never want to see him again . so thank you, boris, him again. so thank you, boris, for joining. tune in. nice. he's forjoining. tune in. nice. he's coming . he's forjoining. tune in. nice. he's coming. he's coming to gb views at 9 pm. he's coming. he's coming to gb news to change that statement. yeah, yeah . nice. statement. yeah, yeah. nice. >> no, it's nice seeing you on the channel next to you soon.
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>> yeah. he's going to be sitting next to me. boris, if you want to. come on. trigonometry mate. you're always welcome. but i mean, this. this doesn't that insane as doesn't sound that insane as a as an for treating covid. as an idea for treating covid. given heat kills viruses, given that heat kills viruses, hair are hot. viruses hair dryers are hot. viruses live in your nose. >> i haven't seen a hairdryer for long time. for a long time. >> maybe it was too on high a >> or maybe it was too on high a setting it for setting anyway, that's it for part one. that's the front page is done. stay with us for the next section where we've got randy red arrows bankrupt councillor guardian councillor and the guardian facing action for defaming facing legal action for defaming a young man . see you in
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radio. >> welcome back to headliners . >> welcome back to headliners. i'm leo carson. i'm still here with josh howie and frances foster . we've got the guardian foster. we've got the guardian now complaining about a lack of diversity in the government. have they seen the government ? have they seen the government? what's going to make them happy? a cabinet form entirely of one legged papua new guinea and trans josh let's give trans lesbians. josh let's give it a go. >> lack of diversity in number
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10 led to women's deaths in lockdown , covid inquiry told lockdown, covid inquiry told they were told by helen mak namara she is the person who hired a singing machine. what are they called? a karaoke karaoke machine for the party. but also she was head of the nudge unit which is somewhat ironic here. bu and her and dominic cummings did not get on. he referred to her in some not very nice terms, but what we have here is a somewhat of a conflation where she is or was trying to sort of argue at the time and go, we need more women, because that's why we're getting these oversights like if we lock down marriage , it's certainly down marriage, it's certainly unhappy marriages, then more people will harmed, people will be harmed, particularly this case women, particularly in this case women, which i'm sure is true for being victims of domestic violence and even murdered . so but i think even murdered. so but i think that's i don't know if it needs a woman to be able to point that out. >> yeah, exactly. and the labour government who assumed the guardian prefer because they're
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more diverse, even though they're actually not more diverse. i don't know, mate. the guardian they don't like keir starmer at the moment. well the, i mean the guardian, the left wing paper labour and wing left wing paper labour and all the lefties wanted a harder lockdown , which would have lockdown, which would have meant, you know, a abused partners being locked inside for longer with their abusers. yeah, but that's progress, as you know. leo. no the left wanted and this is the really tragic element of the left. i've just dropped a poppy here. sorry, everybody. okay, get him out. get him out. yeah. anyway so, no, the really tragic element of covid was the left advocating for positions that actually did directly harmed working class people the most. yeah. when they were saying that businesses should be. should be shut down, who did that affect the most? it affected small businesses when they asked for schools to be closed. that affected working class kids the most . when class kids the most. when they wanted locking their wanted people locking in their homes, had homes, middle class people had a lovely time in their gardens and bottles of shabli whilst working
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class really , class people had a really, really tough time of it. so once again the left are rubbish. okay well, i think the thing that's most in this article is right at the end of it where she basically says , we had one basically says, we had one cabinet meeting where they stuck to the rules and everybody hated it so much that the rest of the time they were like, oh, but the fact that they can remember this one perfect meeting just shows you what the government was like. you what the government was like they one you what the government was likethey one rule for them, >> they were one rule for them, literally, which they followed once the two years. and once in the whole two years. and then everybody else had to follow. >> they followed time >> they followed it one time more than did. yeah look, to more than i did. yeah look, to be honest you, when have we be honest with you, when have we ever government ? when ever trusted government? when have we ever gone? you know who we really trust? politicians, mate . well, there are, mate. well, there are, unfortunately , a lot of people did. >> and, well, i hope you've learned a lesson . learned a lesson. >> see, i told you so. we've got the times now and the red arrows fly without touching each other. sadly the pilots can't manage to do in the ground. francis do that in the ground. francis that's a link . yep, it was that's a good link. yep, it was a good link. well done, leo. red
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arrow treated women as arrow pilots treated women as property in problematic joke. no the red arrows created a hostile and humiliating, humiliating environment for women. and so what happened is there was lots of allegations and also cases where there was some, shall we say, less than desirable behaviour from men to women. a senior aircrew woman was found guilty of battery for smacking the bottom of a 19 year old. i mean, that seems somewhat excessive. obviously we don't advocate that because that's not advocate that because that's not a good thing. but he was. but batteries a bit excessive and he was ordered to pay £818.70. where did they get the £0.70 from? no one knows. but a lot of women have come fonnard and saying it was a humiliating, degrading and offensive environment to work in. so what it seems is that there was a culture where there was a group of blokes who felt they could pretty much do what they wanted. they behaved in in ways that
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were less than desirable . so were less than desirable. so basically just behaved like basically they just behaved like politicians during the pandemic. but josh, i mean, this is the military. they're going out there. they're operating these high flights . i mean, you high risk flights. i mean, you never know where you're going to be called in a war and you're going to have to fly in a formation, a diamond formation with streamers behind. >> i don't necessarily think that that's particular excuse for their behaviour. they were obviously 140 obviously arrogant. there's 140 within but within that whole team, but there's like nine these there's only like nine of these actual it like it actual pilots. it seems like it all went a little bit to their head, drinking thinking head, drinking lots, thinking that when you that their superstar is when you have women at a party and they basically system called have women at a party and they bas shark system called have women at a party and they bas shark watch system called have women at a party and they bas shark watch because:alled have women at a party and they bas shark watch because they're the shark watch because they're so can all back each other so they can all back each other up when certain male members of the team are getting too drunk and harassing people. and start harassing people. that's wrong. the only that's just wrong. the only thing is positive about thing that is positive about this is that seems this is that it seems like they're and they're on it now. and this seems like there's only two people of those ten left who are still and obviously still in it. and obviously because report, because of this report, i imagine it's going to be a hopefully fun , less fun place hopefully a fun, less fun place
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to work. >> it sounds more fun for women, but less fun for trying to get it the right way round. yeah it sounds like the uk comedy industry there. josh yeah, you don't know. >> it's never been like that anyway , we've got the guardian anyway, we've got the guardian now with the threat of more councils going bankrupt, how could this be happening? >> the public sector so well >> the public sector is so well run. well, yeah. so 1 in run. frances well, yeah. so 1 in 10 biggest english councils risk bankruptcy over child protection . bill out of control increases in child protection . put1 in 10 in child protection. put1 in 10 councils. that is 1 in 10. and it's been blamed on high inflation increases in kids being taken into care, which is absolutely tragic. and that's unked absolutely tragic. and that's linked to lockdown and that is unked linked to lockdown and that is linked to lockdown and that is linked to lockdown. absolutely. because as one of the things that we don't talk enough about in lockdown there are in lockdown is how there are a lot of people who just about get by and lockdown, by every month and lockdown, unfortunately, sent a lot of these people loose, losing their businesses, losing their jobs. so sent them over the edge. and
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as a result, disintegration of the social structures and communities that hold them together. absolutely. and as a result, they can't look after the kids anymore. the kids end up in the care system, which is obviously awful . and now it's obviously awful. and now it's got to the point that there's so many kids, there's high inflation. they can't the council can no longer even afford to run these homes. so what you've got is this horrible spiral and the victims of it are vulnerable children . yeah. and vulnerable children. yeah. and josh, i mean, some of the some of the costs in here are insane . of the costs in here are insane. it looks like people looks like the government or local council, local governments aren't good at allocating funding. some firms are charging more than £250,000 are charging more than £250,000 a week for a highly specialised children's because they've had to close down a lot of these homes because the government has cut everything to the wick. >> well, it should be cheaper. over the last years. it was over the last 13 years. it was cheaper then they had to close these then they these things down. then they then up. they have then demand goes up. they have to go to private health
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providers those providers orders and those private charge a huge private providers charge a huge whack. so this is the cycle going around and around. someone's going to work out the money and go, wait a minute, maybe we should open some our maybe we should open up some our own and whatnot. and then own homes and whatnot. and then it goes and it'll be it goes around and it'll be cheaper on. so anyway, it cheaper and so on. so anyway, it is, terrible. and but this is, it's terrible. and but this is, it's terrible. and but this is happens after 13 years is what happens after 13 years of a tour, a government two of a tour, a government or two years of lockdown , which under a years of lockdown, which under a tory government which yeah, i mean left, the left are mean the left, the left are fighting for more of a lockdown. >> anyway, we've the times >> anyway, we've got the times now harrowing story of now with the harrowing story of a black man back a young black man fighting back after was ruined by after his life was ruined by a privileged, privileged organisation with its roots in slavery called the guardian. josh very, very good. >> noel clarke can sue the guardian over sexual assault articles . judge rules. noel articles. judge rules. noel clarke he's an actor, he's a director. he's a proper like hustler. i've met him a few times. he's a he's very he's very nice to me at and he did kidulthood out at her and whatnot. anyway, the guardian has released eight articles, a
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few years ago, which essentially made him out to be this sexual predator here. and then then nothing ever happened of it. like they never got he got never got taken to court. the cps , got taken to court. the cps, there's no charges ever brought against him. it destroyed his career, totally destroyed. he had that was like had a tv series that was like pulled immediately. think pulled immediately. i think it was on sky. >> and you end up doing headliners next week. >> actually i've >> this is what actually i've still got his number in my phone, this is this is the phone, but this is this is the funniest part is that the funniest part for me is that the guardian in their defence says and that that no reasonable reader would assume that an allegation is true merely because it had been made. they've they've written eight articles about him being the sexual predator and then nothing. well, no one would actually believe us with a guardian . guardian. >> yeah, i believe them. i read there was so much noise about him in the guardian. i assumed it was. i assumed it was true. when you're, you know, if you're not legal expert, you're not not a legal expert, you're not picking looking for the picking through looking for the thing. just an
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thing. oh, this is just an allegation. oh, this is just. >> you took kid out dvd, >> you took your kid out dvd, dvd the charity shop. i was dvd to the charity shop. i was so burned it upset. so angry, i burned it upset. >> i burned it in a pile. you know? so we work in show business. this is show business. i mean, this is show business. i mean, this is show business. mean, we're wearing business. i mean, we're wearing poppies made megxit more showbiz in i was just in show business. so i was just delighted. more delighted. someone more successful seeing successful than me was seeing their destroyed, i their career destroyed, mate. i mean, the guardian's reporting of this, i don't know if you saw it in the in the times, they say the court has decided that noel clarke can sue the guardian and he was the eight articles defamed him and the guardian. it's reported as a serious setback to noel clarke . it's setback to noel clarke. it's completely subverting. it's almost as if they're still lying . yeah, well, he's. i mean , they . yeah, well, he's. i mean, they must be worried because there's talk that the amount of damages that he can gain from the guardian is £10 million. wow. that won't eat into their trust fund at all. yeah. slave money. trust fund. >> slave money. trust but also are we're going to talk a little bit about russell brand. yes. because well, i mean, that was a big hoo ha. yeah. the police are
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looking into it. maybe they still maybe there will be still are. maybe there will be some that are laid and some charges that are laid and whatnot. but it's gone very quiet all of these huge quiet after all of these huge revelations and are we revelations and whatnot. are we or it going to be that this or is it going to be that this is going to be reading an article about russell brand and one about one of the revelations about charlotte the journalist charlotte waste, the journalist who put the russell brand dossier together? >> previously >> yeah. so she previously defamed a beauty therapist , i defamed a beauty therapist, i think daniel, i can't remember her last name. and was sued. so the daily mail, i think she wrote for the daily mail and the newspaper she wrote for was sued. and they had to pay out, you know, a staggering sum. so she doesn't have the best track record it comes to making record when it comes to making up things about well, up things about people. well, this true. all this is also true. but all i'm going to is all of these going to say is all of these people that we've talked about who have very dodgy sexual who have got very dodgy sexual pasts are josh howie pasts are all in josh howie phone book. >> oh yeah. that is . that's >> oh yeah. that is. that's true. i've got russell's number. >> yeah, you've got russell's number and those numbers. >> do you know who else number i
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got. >> who. yeah. >> who. yeah. >> listen, wait a minute. both of them. >> this is a face you can trust me. it's the epstein files. that's it. for part two. coming up, we've got tory party privilege tests. a drug cop failing his drug test, and failing his own drug test, and what woman? we're going to
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>> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> welcome back to headliners . >> welcome back to headliners. we've got the telegraph now and the conservative party have been forcing interns to undergo privileged tests . i miss the privileged tests. i miss the days when they'd all gather around a biscuit with their trousers down instead. francis yeah. so do i. but anyway, this is what the conservative party are doing now. doing are doing now. they're doing privilege if you don't privilege walks and if you don't know what privilege is, know what privilege walk is, it's where you get all your employees and you quiz them on their race, gender, sexuality and disability. so their race, gender, sexuality and disability . so basically, and disability. so basically, i'll ask you a question like are you male? take a step fonnard. are take another step are you white? take another step fonnard . and the people who end fonnard. and the people who end up at the very, front are up at the very, very front are the most privileged. yeah,
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exactly . and here's the thing exactly. and here's the thing thatis exactly. and here's the thing that is meant to increase cohesiveness and morale amongst their staff . is this cohesiveness and morale amongst their staff. is this going to increase cohesiveness and morale, like dividing everybody, making everybody focus on their immutable characteristics? because the tories party, they basically they all went to private school and they all end up at the end together and they 9°! up at the end together and they go, we've had a great time. we're number one. oh, so they're celebrate privilege, which is a great thing to do. we should be we aspiring to be we should be aspiring to be privileged. >> we'll end up like three miles down the yeah first of down the road. yeah first of all, wasn't done this year. all, it wasn't done this year. it over the last couple it was done over the last couple of not that of years. i'm not saying that that's a thing, but do that's a good thing, but i do think it's thing it's not think it's a good thing it's not happening this year. but also they do the same training for they do the same training for the providers do the same people. providers do the same people. providers do the for the labour the same training for the labour party, it understand party, but yeah, it understand it for the labour party, it for the for the labour party, they're in all this. there's but i do want to say that as someone who grew up with immense privilege, to privilege, that what happened to it. well, exactly. it. yeah, well, exactly. first of you want get rid
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of all, if you want to get rid of all, if you want to get rid of privilege, just send a couple of privilege, just send a couple of years on the open mic circuit. yeah that'll destroy you. there's doubt. you. yeah but there's no doubt. and somewhat and i thought i was somewhat streetwise it's streetwise or whatever. it's like, are like, you like, no, you are like, you can't appreciate the bubble that you're in a public school and you're in in a public school and you're in in a public school and you out and you just you get out there and you just think, yeah, well should think, yeah, well people should just you can't. just work hard and you can't. all things that you just all these things that you just take. yeah but, but the point is, appreciate the, is, you don't appreciate the, the realities of the world by any means . the realities of the world by any means. so. so the realities of the world by any means . so. so people go to any means. so. so people go to state school and i think that people should work harder. i agree people agree with you. people should work the point is, you work hard. but the point is, you can out into the world, go can come out into the world, go to university with the same people come blinkered into people and come blinkered into the for the workplace, go and work for the workplace, go and work for the party. the whole the workplace, go and work for the you ’arty. the whole the workplace, go and work for the you actually the whole the workplace, go and work for the you actually have whole the workplace, go and work for the you actually have no ole the workplace, go and work for the you actually have no clue time you actually have no clue about reality. okay, that's my that's all i'm saying. >> well, we've got the meal now and a policeman has been hoisted by his own petard. but by the sounds it, that's not the sounds of it, that's not the only thing that got him high. josh yes senior met josh hi. hi. yes senior met police officer who dropped forces. >> anti —drug forces. >> anti—drug strategy is sacked for refusing to take a cannabis test. we seen this. i think
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we've probably done this story three this is the story three times. this is the story where lost his where he actually has lost his job. finally which the first thing that indicates is how long it takes for police men and women get fired or to women to get fired or to actually lose their they get on suspension . and that's you've suspension. and that's you've got hundreds police got hundreds of these police officers it seems officers on suspension. it seems like through like they're working through it. there's irony there's obviously a great irony here that the person who drew up all anti—drug legislation here that the person who drew up all himself-drug legislation here that the person who drew up all himself airug legislation here that the person who drew up all himself a itg legislation here that the person who drew up all himself a it doesn'tation here that the person who drew up all himself a it doesn't prove was himself a it doesn't prove that he did drugs, but the fact he wouldn't do thought that would him good at the job. would make him good at the job. he also oversaw a lot of panels like 70 for police misconduct heanngs like 70 for police misconduct hearings involving 90 officers over for two years, where a lot of those officers lost their jobs. so if he really was on drugs that time, that's kind of messed up. >> i think you'd have to take drugs to fire that many people. i mean, this is this could i mean, this this is this could be case a poacher turned be a case of a poacher turned gamekeeper. i mean, it sounds like he might have been using drugs. and that's i'm drugs. and that's possibly i'm just that's just speculate saying that's why he the drugs test he refused to do the drugs test and lost his job. it might well
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be, you know, but to me, he sounds bit of a legend, sounds like a bit of a legend, mate. you think but yeah, mate. you think so? but yeah, no, look, he's obviously he's been working there 1976 or been working there since 1976 or something. he's 1976. something. he's1976. >> point is, in >> no, no. the point is, he's in his 50s, and then it talks his 50s, 60s and then it talks about flatmate who's got about his flatmate who's got flatmate who he obviously does . flatmate who he obviously does. >> spending it on drugs. >> spending it on drugs. >> yeah , that's his drug money. >> yeah, that's his drug money. is that flatmate did allegedly you know it's a great joke by the comedian jeff innocent stole my pen yeah where his daughter says him daddy have you ever says to him daddy have you ever taken cocaine? >> and he goes, my darling, why do you think we've always lived in accommodation ? yeah. in rented accommodation? yeah. and there's the joke by ian ian cognito. yeah. said i don't, i don't like cocaine. i just like the smell of it. yeah, that's very good. the express now and scientists have developed a new and innovative way stop us and innovative way to stop us enjoying francis well enjoying ourselves. francis well , scientists because you , indeed. scientists because you know what? life isn't difficult enough at the moment. there's not enough division, there's not enough misery. you what? enough misery. so you know what? let's put warnings on meat.
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that's what we're going to do. that's what we're going to do. that's what we're going to do. that's what scientists so they want to put cigarette style warnings. josh howie on me . warnings. josh howie on me. >> chicken vindaloo. yeah exactly. >> pictures of diarrhoea. >> pictures of diarrhoea. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> eating meat contributes to climate change. oh, no. yeah. so that's what they want to put, you know, they'll say, oh increases, you certain increases, you know, certain types of diseases. so we've got a picture here. this is a, i guess an artist's mock—up of what it could look like. so instead of having, you know, obviously on cigarette packets, they've you know, they've got, you know, disgusting charred disgusting illnesses, is charred lungs, like that. lungs, things like that. this isn't unless this is isn't something unless this is the of somebody's the underside of somebody's foot. is a charred forest. foot. this is a charred forest. this shows how eating meat can cause a mad max style wasteland . cause a mad max style wasteland. but but this is a problem. i have with this. well, there's many problems . we get british many problems. we get british beef. i bought british beef. that doesn't look like britain to me. that was britain that looked like birmingham centre. did did i? i've done did he actually did i? i've done gigs in birmingham. >> there are no trees or stumps. >> there are no trees or stumps. >> oh, yeah. and no hope. so if
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you're in birmingham unlucky and you're in birmingham unlucky and you need to flee because it's a war zone. yeah but the interesting thing about this is it's shown that with alcohol and smoking, these warnings do have it's shown that with alcohol and smimpact:hese warnings do have it's shown that with alcohol and smimpact .ese warnings do have an impact. >> there are about 10% or so, but what's interesting is that climate change was had the biggest opposed to biggest impact as opposed to photos health issues. i would photos of health issues. i would have thought if you see a picture of your colon rotting or whatever it is, not speaking, i mean, just just a mirror. >> just a mirror up at home. >> just a mirror up at home. >> john, i'll show you then. i would have thought that that would have thought that that would be more likely to make you not buy the meat that makes, i'll be honest with you, that makes complete sense to me, particularly makes complete sense to me, partihavely makes complete sense to me, partihave been fed diet that who have been fed this diet that we are going to the world is going to end . going to end. >> we're all going to burst into flames couple of years. so flames in a couple of years. so anything that can defer that or stop that from happening, of course, they're going to do it. and i think being fed those ideas more than ideas is far more dangerous than being fed a bit of meat, which is absolutely made me want to go to and good you to mcdonald's. and good for you anyway. independent now and
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anyway. the independent now and some been some feminists have been told what a woman is men. the what a woman is by men. the patriarchy back, baby. patriarchy is back, baby. i mean, josh, for feminist campaign loses legal campaign group loses legal battle definition of word . battle over definition of word. >> woman is for women >> woman this is for women scotland. they've lost a legal battle and the gist of it is we actually covered a similar story where wales were trying to push through a shortlist for women nominees for the synod or synod or whatever it's called, synod . or whatever it's called, synod. i don't know. anyway, point is , i don't know. anyway, point is, this is a similar thing here where they're conflating two different laws and women now legally in scotland still means someone with a grc certificate. now that's not all bad news. >> the gender recognition, which isn't necessarily a bad thing because at least there's no self—id laws, because then it would have been like anybody could just a steer. could just get a steer. >> but to get it you stand >> but to get it you got stand in send off a stamped in a queue, send off a stamped addressed envelope, and doctor addressed envelope, and a doctor will you know what, leo? >> you're a woman. >> you're a woman. >> the point is, it's not just wearing a wig or going on.
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someone's say so. so no, it's not great. but at the same time, at it's at least not at least it's at least we've not where have been at the where we could have been at the moment. where we could have been at the mo so nt. slightly better than >> so it's slightly better than awful. yeah, it is awful. francis yeah, it is slightly better than awful. so but look, scottish women are beautiful. they're like isla bryson that's favourite bryson. that's my favourite scottish woman . she wouldn't do scottish woman. she wouldn't do a vicious slab of some murder mystery novels, i believe. yeah. no isla bryson was. was the two time the winner of britain's got talent? yeah. no, she is a two time rapist . talent? yeah. no, she is a two time rapist. but who . who talent? yeah. no, she is a two time rapist . but who . who raped time rapist. but who. who raped people with her penis? yeah. and was sent to a women's prison . was sent to a women's prison. oh, of course. because she's a woman. she's a woman with a beautiful feminine face tattoo. >> well, at least now that she can. what she . she is. yeah, can. what she. she is. yeah, technically, she can go on a pubuc technically, she can go on a public board or something. >> yeah, exactly. talk about what it's like to be a bird. okay, well, the guardian now and a leading tory says the lgbt ikea plus plus two x, y, z group stonewall has been denied. i
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apologise deeply to the asexuals and mono asexuals out there. it's been taken over monosexual as somebody who has sex with themselves, francis so? well, that's me. yep. that's a lot of us has been taken over by left. the stonewall has been taken over by leftist ideas. presume ably. she'll also tell us where bears like to defecate. francis yes, indeed. so. kemi badenoch claims stonewall has been taken over by leftist ideas as she, as you said . and look, this is this you said. and look, this is this is what we know. you know, stonewall were an organisation that did a lot of great work for gay rights in the 60s and 70s and the 80s. aids 90s and even in the 90s, but particularly dunng in the 90s, but particularly during the tapered off a bit. yeah yeah. and particularly dunng yeah yeah. and particularly during the aids pandemic and now they've ended up going absolutely mental. there is a very famous line which is every course starts out as a movement but turns into a business and ends up as a racket. and that is very much what has happened to stonewall because they've got no more fights left in the uk
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because we are one of the most tolerant countries in the world. so instead of going places so instead of going to places i don't like iran and don't know, like iran and fighting gay people there, fighting for gay people there, they'll just they'll think no, let's just talk how women don't exist talk about how women don't exist , well, to be honest, , right? well, to be honest, i mean, bit safer mean, that sounds a bit safer than to and fighting than going to iran and fighting for there. but for gay rights there. but i mean, josh, the stonewall started out as as a lesbian, gay and bisexual movement. that's to do sexuality. and it's do with sexuality. and it's obvious measurable. it's obvious it's measurable. it's clear now they've sort of metastasised into this movement that focuses on on transgender issues. and queer issues, which issues. and queer issues, which is far more nebulous and ideologically, a woman who thinks she's queer because she's tall and like it's basically, yeah , one is to do with yeah, one is to do with sexuality and everything. >> and as someone i saw on a clip, like everything else is just people are playing pretend. it's not that trans people don't exist, but that's got nothing to do and certainly they do with it. and certainly they then these things are they might feel like it's a choice, but feel like it's not a choice, but it's an ideology. it's not the same. what's interesting is stonewall here and set in comment. have professed comment. we have never professed to advice and it's
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to offer legal advice and it's important to represent our work accurately. and i'm sorry, i'm just disagree with just going to disagree with that. there's lots of that. they have there's lots of documents doing exactly documents of them doing exactly that, offering their legal advice. in deed presenting advice. and in deed presenting the something different the law as something different to what it actually was . yeah, to what it actually was. yeah, that's crazy. okay. well, that's part three done. >> coming up, we've got camilla's cashflow crisis . camilla's cashflow crisis. goldie hawn touched by an alien and what your phone is doing to your sperm count. you in a
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welcome back to the final section of headliners. we've got the mail now with the worrying news that your phone is affecting your sperm count and not just because you're watching too much hentai on it. >> josh, could your phone be making you infertile alarming study on plunging sperm count sparks warning for men to be conscious of using their mobile phone much . it turns out the phone too much. it turns out the average has dropped. so it's the average has dropped. so it's the average was 99 million sperm per
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millimetre has gone down to 47 million. i've been measuring it's more than half was measured recently . i'm at million. recently. i'm at 2000 million. million sperm per millimetre that lewis schaefer bought in a machine on. >> and you've got five kids. so i mean this must not worry you. >> it's all good. but yeah, it doesn't really make sense because the idea is there's also talking about is 21% of lower sperm because of the sperm concentration . i wonder if it's concentration. i wonder if it's because you're on twitter and that sends them all a bit doolally it's a little bit strange because you would think that it out of your that taking it out of your pocket, if it was radiation that did the more you're on your did it, the more you're on your phone or more you got it phone or the more you got it here. >> it's a way from europe. >> it's a way from europe. >> it's a way from europe. >> it's from the gonads. >> it's a way from the gonads. you gonads? you say gonads? >> ofcom think so. you are. >> ofcom i think so. you are. it's a scientific term. okay fine. >> gonads. yeah, but actually, it seems like it's more also affected about like 2g, 3g . so affected about like 2g, 3g. so all those people who are like, oh, don't put 5g, it's got a oh, don't put up 5g, it's got a chip . actually is saving chip. no, actually 5g is saving us. saving our lives. >> well, there you go. but you
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would that because you're would say that because you're controlled saying controlled opposition by saying 5g life . the one thing 5g is saving life. the one thing that it didn't really talk about , is very interesting, is , which is very interesting, is microplas sticks. there's lot microplas sticks. there's a lot of who believe of people who believe that microplastics is actually one of the things that is causing infertility because microplastics causes is the production of the female hormone, because it's an article about phones and micro microplastics are the tiny little fragments of plastic that we eat all the time. and apparently we eat enough microplastic each week to make a credit card. i mean, it won't work, but i sometimes actually eat a credit card. >> yeah, just if i missed out, maybe that's why. >> that's where the stack >> maybe that's where the stack came but i mean , so. came from. yeah, but i mean, so. so you're saying there's chemicals in the plastic that mimic oestrogen? yeah. the mimic oestrogen . and is one of the oestrogen. and is one of the things that people think is not only affecting sperm counts, but also lowering testosterone as well . and isn't it linked to well. and isn't it linked to obesity as well? because people are obviously a lot fatter than they used to be. certainly
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around my parts, they are . and around my parts, they are. and that's that affects the amount of testosterone you produce. and it affects the amount of testosterone. the more fat that you have in your body, the more oestrogen that you produce. obviously, this is terrible. if you're and it means that you're a man and it means that you're a man and it means that you're suffer you're more likely to suffer from depression and vote labour. so need to eat lean and lift so you need to eat lean and lift lots of weights anyway, eat me , lots of weights anyway, eat me, eat lift weights. we've got the meal again and it seems like rishi sunaks father in law would make a more conservative leader than rishi sunak france, which is not very difficult. yeah, rishi billionaire father in rishi is billionaire father in law. sparked outrage in india law. he sparked outrage in india after saying that young people should work 70 hour weeks to help the country . he said that help the country. he said that work productivity in india is one of the lowest in the world. he said unless we improve work productivity, we're not to going be able to compete. but the reality is, is that the state of the world is so bad and everybody is so lazy, particularly in the west. indians only have to do the bare minimum they'll be minimum and they'll be absolutely from what i've
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absolutely fine from what i've found quite interesting about this . so he was this article. so he was he was lamenting productivity . but i lamenting productivity. but i think india is booming at the moment, isn't it? yeah. and it's got the it's beating china in the population crisis. so it's population is still growing, whereas china's economy has definitely been affected by covid and whatnot. >> i think that's part of what they're talking about. >> but i mean, everybody says i mean, no, sure. mean, no, no, sure, sure. >> but just saying that >> but i'm just saying that there trying to the there trying to boost the economy. yeah. he's saying that if more, that's what's if you work more, that's what's going up that going to make that make up that difference. i mean yeah difference. but yeah i mean yeah 70 hours that would mean i'd need to work another 63 hours a week. >> yeah. but i mean it's not that much. so seven hours a day for ten days week. yeah, for ten days a week. yeah, exactly. do the maths. yeah. he's busy. entrepreneur and filmmaker screwvala. i filmmaker ronnie screwvala. i mean, don't know what films mean, i don't know what films ronnie makes, but i can have a guess. but he's saying that boosting productivity isn't just about working on longer hours. it's getting better at what you do positive do upskilling, having a positive work and fair pay work environment and fair pay for the work done. you hear
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that? gb news as well. wait, wait, sorry. >> i just want to just quickly say something about it's just the, you his daughter, who the, you know, his daughter, who is wife of prime is the wife of our prime minister. she secret minister. she said her secret success hard work, humility success is hard work, humility and ness. and having a and selfless ness. and having a dad a billionaire. dad who's a billionaire. >> yeah , look at the marino and >> yeah, look at the marino and robert de niro, whose most famous you talking to famous line is, you talking to me? you talking to me ? not me? you talking to me? not because he's hard of hearing now. still raging bull at now. he's still a raging bull at the 80. josh sure is furious. >> robert de niro shouts at his former assistant in court during explosive trial . he's 80 years explosive trial. he's 80 years old. his assistant, who was getting grand a year, which getting 300 grand a year, which is like, mate, i'll shout at me for 300 grand a year. i'll be totally i mean, i you know, i get ten grand a year for simon to shout at me. so but yeah, supposedly he'd , you know, asked supposedly he'd, you know, asked her to scratch his back twice and just terrible. she's trying to get $12 million in in damages . it's insane. and he lost his temper and that's fair enough. >> although, i mean, she's accusing him in court of being an abusive like losing his
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temper and he's lost his temper in court in front of judge , in court in front of the judge, which best. look. no, which isn't the best. look. no, it's but also it's not the best look. but also as you would lose your as well, you would lose your temper if you were 80 years old and someone was suing you for being basically cantankerous being basically a cantankerous old so—and—so >> $12 million. yeah, i, i, i want that job. >> i want him to shout at me, me to have a breakdown and me to get 12 million bucks out of it. all fairness, he's countersuing her. this is a countersuit against him. he was previously suing to her reclaim three years worth and they said worth of money. and they said that her defence is that he's that her defence is saying suing her for that he's that her defence is sayipublicity suing her for that he's that her defence is sayipublicity . suing her for the publicity. >> is the guy ? yeah. he >> this is the guy? yeah. he just wants to get a few more like facebook followers. >> publicity >> and this is the publicity he's getting. >> you can't handle the truth. >> you can't handle the truth. >> completely no. the >> no, that's completely no. the news that goldie hawn was touched by an alien, they really need to finish building that border wall. frances yeah, exactly. an alien touch my exactly. an an alien touch my face, says goldie hawn . she face, says goldie hawn. she claimed that she once had an alien experience which alien experience in which triangular headed beings touched
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her face. she must have been back to alabama. anyway. she so that was it. she said it felt like the finger of god. it was. i mean, where did it on her face? yeah, exactly. insert your own jokes . she was working as own jokes. she was working as a as a dancer at the melodyland christian centre where probably makes sense that she got touched somewhere and yeah. and so but what she said well here's a really interesting bit. she previously revealed she was sent to a psychologist after using cannabis in the 60s around the same time she says she encountered aliens. >> did i feel like touching? >> did i feel like touching? >> well, this was she was stargazing, mate . she was stargazing, mate. she was stargazing. and she'd been thinking about aliens and smoking weed. like she might have just drifted off to sleep and had a little dream about auens and had a little dream about aliens because she'd been thinking them all. she was thinking about them all. she was smoking. you so cynical? >> why are you so cynical? >> why are you so cynical? >> yes. well, the show is nearly oven >> yes. well, the show is nearly over. let's take another over. so let's take another quick at thursday's front quick look at thursday's front pages of daily mail. has pages of the daily mail. has musk chilling alert over ai . the
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musk chilling alert over al. the telegraph leads with britain's to leave gaza as border is opened and the guardian has pandemic hit. brain health of over 50, studies show the mirror has escaped from hell. the express has first britons flee gaza. express has first britons flee gaza . hell, and finally the gaza. hell, and finally the daily star has can we kill covid by blowing a hairdryer up our hooters? we can't by the way, justin hooters? we can't by the way, just in case you're wondering. and those were your front pages. and those were your front pages. and that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, josh howie frances foster, nick howie and frances foster, nick dixon will here tomorrow at dixon will be here tomorrow at 11 some other people . 11 pm. with some other people. we're who they are. and we're not sure who they are. and if you're watching at 5 am, do stay tuned for breakfast. i've been leo kearse, thanks for watching. headlines it's on every night at 11 pm, repeated at 5 am. have a great sleep . at 5 am. have a great sleep. bye bye
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feminin isabel. >> and here's what's leading the news this morning. this danger to life warning as storm kieran batters parts of britain closing schools grounding flights and plunging communities undennater. >> water in parts of england. commuters have been advised to work from home and there could be much more to come. as high winds and heavy rain head north. aidan mcgivern has the latest for you. >> storm kieran is currently beanng >> storm kieran is currently bearing down across southern parts of the uk. i'll have the full details on this storm in the forecast coming up in the computer at the moment, that's what i'm. >> the first tranche of british nationals have crossed the rafah border into egypt, but the war rages on. the united nations now says the bombing of an established refugee camp could be a war crime. >> the eye summit continues today at bletchley park. world leaders, including the united
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