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tv   Mark Dolan Tonight Replay  GB News  November 11, 2023 3:00am-5:01am GMT

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making the fabricant, who'll be making the case for britain's most talked about politician . in my take at about politician. in my take at ten, my first full on air reaction to the stunning news that nigel farage looks to be heading to the jungle. i'll not. for the first time, he will prove the doubters wrong . so two prove the doubters wrong. so two hours of big opinion, big debate and big entertainment along the way. lots to get through in my big opinion. next, i'm making the case for suella braverman . the case for suella braverman. i'll explain why after the news headunes. i'll explain why after the news headlines . and my friday buddy headlines. and my friday buddy ray addison . ray addison. >> thanks, mark. good evening . >> thanks, mark. good evening. our top stories tonight, the home secretary has expressed her full backing for the met police ahead of the armistice weekend dunng ahead of the armistice weekend during a meeting with sir mark rowley. suella braverman told the police chief she was confident that any criminality will be dealt with robustly . the
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will be dealt with robustly. the force says an exclusion zone will be in place covering areas, including whitehall and horse guards. effectively guards. parade effectively banning those on propane line marches. they've also admitted it's likely that officers will have to use force. meanwhile counter—protesters will be allowed into the area around the cenotaph , which will have a 24 cenotaph, which will have a 24 hour police presence . while ms hour police presence. while ms braverman's comments come as rishi sunak faces continued calls to sack the home secretary , she defied downing street by writing an article accusing the police of, quote, playing favourites with pro—palestinian protesters . as number 10 said it protesters. as number 10 said it didn't sign off on the article. the police federation , which the police federation, which represents rank and file officers in england and wales, said it was unaware acceptable for ms braverman to publicly attempt to tamper with the operational independence of policing . two teenagers have policing. two teenagers have been charged with racially aggravated criminal damage after free palestine was sprayed onto the cenotaph in rochdale. one
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has also been charged with theft after poppy wreaths were taken from the base. detective chief inspector stuart round said the damage has caused emotional distress in the local community. israel's military says more than 100,000 palestine aliens have moved from north to south gaza in just two days. tens of thousands are thought to have made the journey today after the israel defence forces opened an evacuation corridor . the evacuation corridor. the deadune evacuation corridor. the deadline for that is now over. it's not clear when the next pause in fighting will begin . pause in fighting will begin. natwest has scrapped about £7.6 million in potential payments to dame alison rose over her role in the nigel farage de—banking scandal. the former chief executive had been in line for an exit package of more than 10 million, but the board is now only giving her around 15% of that. dame alison says she's pleased the bank cleared her of misconduct . pleased the bank cleared her of misconduct. but gb news presenter nigel farage says she failed in her duties.
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>> she broke every rule in the financial conduct authority rulebook. she breached my confidentiality , she told confidentiality, she told a complete lie about my financial situation, much to the amusement of my enemies. i was then forced to publish a subject access request which contained a lot of very unpleasant and indeed deeply defamatory comments about me . and i had to do that to me. and i had to do that to prove that the real reason i'd been debunked was because my views did not align with those of the . bank. of the. bank. >> 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 returns in an hour's time. welcome to mark dolan tonight. the weekend starts here. i hope you're going to have a well—deserved break if you're
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still you still working, then i salute you for contribution for your contribution to the economy . lots to get through in economy. lots to get through in the hours in my the next couple of hours in my big sunak must big opinion. rishi sunak must keep his straight talking. home secretary suella braverman , who secretary suella braverman, who speaks for millions of people . speaks for millions of people. if she goes, so does any chance of winning the next election . in of winning the next election. in the big story will suella survive the weekend? i'll be asking her number one fan leading tory mp michael fabricant, who'll be making the case for britain's most talked about politician . my mark meets about politician. my mark meets guest is the hugely popular local radio dj alex dyke, who was axed by the bbc in what he says was a drive for diversity . says was a drive for diversity. as a man of a certain age, he doesn't feel he fits in anymore and he doesn't tick boxes. he tells his shocking story about being dumped by the beeb , like being dumped by the beeb, like so many other older stars, it might take a ten. my first full on air reaction to the stunning news that nigel farage looks to be heading to the jungle. i've been talking to itv insiders and i'll bring you the latest. but
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if he does go in, not for the first time, nigel will prove the doubters wrong . is britain now doubters wrong. is britain now in the grip of religious extremism ? and will the extremism? and will the authorities be dealing with these marches for the foreseeable future? i'll be asking the formidable political commentator christine hamilton , commentator christine hamilton, who is, of course, my brilliant newsmaker tonight. christine was in the series of celebrity . i'm in the series of celebrity. i'm a big brother, whatever you call it, i'm a celebrity and who knows? i don't watch these shows, she was the first shows, but she was on the first one. give verdict on one. she'll give her verdict on how fare in australia how nigel will fare in australia . we've got tomorrow's front pages at 1030 sharp with three top say top top pundits and i say top tonight, the pedigree, the quality. for you. they quality. we have for you. they haven't been told what to say and don't follow and they don't follow the script. and script. this evening, tv and radio presenter mike parry , radio presenter mike parry, showbiz journalist stephanie techy and author and campaigner chris wild . whilst my name wild chris wild. whilst my name wild by nature , tonight i'll be by nature, tonight i'll be asking the pundits , how far asking the pundits, how far should the police go to protect the armistice day memorial tomorrow ? and joining the
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tomorrow? and joining the punst tomorrow? and joining the pundits to discuss that will be former top cop kevin hurley. plus, the important part of plus, the most important part of the show. what is the most important part of the show? well, this . it's my laptop well, it's this. it's my laptop containing your emails, mark, at gbnews.com. and this show has a golden rule, a very strict golden rule, a very strict golden rule, a very strict golden rule, especially on a friday night. golden rule, especially on a friday night . we don't do friday night. we don't do boring, not on my watch. i just won't have it. so a big two hours to come. nigel farage at ten. but we start with my big opinion . what are the worst opinion. what are the worst crimes imaginable? burglary assault, murder. crimes imaginable? burglary assault, murder . yeah, well, assault, murder. yeah, well, that's nothing compared to speaking the truth and expressing views shared by millions . expressing views shared by millions. enter stage expressing views shared by millions . enter stage left millions. enter stage left a straight talking home secretary in suella braverman , who faces in suella braverman, who faces the sack for daring to point out the sack for daring to point out the wild inconsistency of the police's treatment of protesters
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in a times newspaper article. not approved by number 10, which means it's worth reading. she draws a comparison between how cops handle people who went on to the streets during the pandemic to object to lockdowns and the treatment of people out marching for black lives matter, a now discredited and corrupt organisation underpinned by a hellish dystopian marxist ideology . lockdown protesters to ideology. lockdown protesters to whom history has been rather kind. let's be honest. well, they were grabbed , manhandled, they were grabbed, manhandled, seized and bundled into the back of police vans. meanwhile police rolled out the red carpet for blm protesters, even taking the kneein blm protesters, even taking the knee in what was to become the shape of things to come. partisan policing . police danced partisan policing. police danced along with extinction rebellion and wore the rainbow flag as they brought london streets to a standstill whilst women out protesting over the murder of sarah everard were treated like terrorists . if only cops had terrorists. if only cops had done the same over the last four
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weekends with demonstrate murders in the capital and elsewhere calling for actual terror acts. now i love our police. i think they're the best in the world and they have a very hard job. and plus, i don't think they get paid enough . and think they get paid enough. and they've be social they've now got to be social workers and medics, counsellors. you it. but whilst the you name it. but whilst the likes of the met police were declared in institutionally racist in 1999, british policing is now institutionally woke as proven by their handling of the pro—palestinian marches, some of which are now provably linked to hamas cops have stood idly by as protesters have called for the elimination of israel and the effective extermination of jews, british policing has a cultural problem. it picks and chooses its causes and seems to side with the progressive agenda . with the progressive agenda. with a woman apprehended for praying outside an abortion clinic and a swat team of cops
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turning up at the house of a young autistic child who said a female police officer looked like her lesbian auntie . so you like her lesbian auntie. so you can call for a holy war on the streets of london or an intifada, which means suicide bombs on buses and in restaurants. but call someone a lesbian and you're going down. so to speak. suella braverman has done us all a favour and sparked a debate about what the police is seeming appeasement of religious extremism actually means. we've seen it before . means. we've seen it before. they completely failed in their duty to protect the batley school teacher who showed pupils an image of the prophet muhammad as an education tool in a media studies class , the police bowed studies class, the police bowed to the mob and this poor man is still on the run with his family. also on the run. no job and afraid for his life . that is and afraid for his life. that is and afraid for his life. that is a failure of policing . we have a failure of policing. we have the spectacle of a wakefield child holed up in a bizarre kangaroo court of angry clerics
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following the alleged defacing of a quran in the classroom . of a quran in the classroom. numpty cops just sat there nodding their heads and mumbling about cultural sensitivities or something . i do have one something. i do have one criticism of suella braverman . criticism of suella braverman. she seems keener on a headline than than action. i've yet to see tangible results to back up her strong rhetoric, whether it's clamping down on woke policing or stopping the boats . policing or stopping the boats. but in a world of uninspiring politics, persons who have most of sherwood forest up their arse from sitting on the fence, it's refreshing to hear a public figure say what people are thinking , because if we can't be thinking, because if we can't be honest about the challenges our country faces , we will never fix country faces, we will never fix them . if suella braverman is them. if suella braverman is sacked, all you're really doing is killing the messenger. but i shouldn't worry if she goes. the tories are guaranteed to lose the next election and she'll be their leader in a year's time. one way or another, brave woman
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will be rewarded for her bravery your reaction, mark, at cbnnews.com. i'll get to your email shortly, but let's hear from my top pundits this evening. ring side for the political event of the weekend mark dolan tonight. on a friday we have tv and radio legend mike porky parry, the brilliant showbiz journalist stephanie takyi and author and campaigner chris wild. let me start with you, porky . first of all, your you, porky. first of all, your thoughts about suella. should she stay or should she go? >> no, she should stay . i think >> no, she should stay. i think you've been a bit harsh on her, actually. and your monologue you've been a bit harsh on her, actua sayingi your monologue you've been a bit harsh on her, actua saying that r monologue you've been a bit harsh on her, actua saying that r monlooking there saying that she's looking for headline rather than for a headline rather than action. know how long it action. you know how long it takes country to get any takes in this country to get any action in any political circle. but saying the but at least she's saying the right things. at least she's opened up the debate. at least she's giving people now a
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platform to which they can attach themselves. and it's a platform that's needed greatly. sir mark rowley has been pathetic in all this. he's met police chief, met police chief saying, well , you know, i saying, well, you know, i haven't got the powers . and but haven't got the powers. and but he could have asked the home secretary to have banned it. he's been telling us all week, my intelligence tells me that isn't going to be serious. disruption, disruption on saturday or sunday. why then has he imported another 1000 police officers into the capital from all around the country to give us an army of 2000 policemen in london, in the capital this weekend, largest number of police have been in the for capital about 20 years. if he doesn't think there's going to be a problem because cause he knows the possibility of problematic situations is over this weekend of very high. as for the other side, the people who are undertaking these demonstrations, could they not
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have been decent for two days and said, look , we're having and said, look, we're having these protests because we believe in what we're talking about from the middle east. yeah, this is britain. the cenotaph is the most sacred monument we have and remembrance weekend is our most sacred and easily most , weekend is our most sacred and easily most, most endearing challenge. it really is. >> it really is brilliant. >> it really is brilliant. >> it's unfortunately i do agree with you, mike, but unfortunately, it's not sacred to demonstrate to the people who want to sacred service. >> stephanie sacred stephanie takyi country, yes, but it's not sacred the people want to sacred to the people who want to protest that is protest tomorrow. and that is also a i agree with the majority i >>i -- >> i agree thousands of should the law make it sacred? should it be protected in the calendar? >> don't this >> because we don't have this issue year . it's not even issue every year. it's not even happened moment. what we happened at the moment. what we have a big that's have is we have a big war that's taking place israel taking place in israel and palestine. why people are palestine. that's why people are marching streets. we marching to the streets. we didn't this problem last didn't have this problem last yeah didn't have this problem last year. people have spent past year. people have spent the past month watching these horrific
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images. can't they give it images. why can't they give it up one weekend, steph, up for one weekend, steph, they've it for the they've been doing it for the four weekends now. four past weekends now. >> they say live in >> why can't they say we live in this when people come this country when people come here, they should adopt the rights and the beliefs of the intrinsic population of the united kingdom and disturb bastille day. absolutely >> or 4th of july in america. >> or 4th of july in america. >> what i'm saying is, you come here, you've got to try and. okay. >> well, stephanie, what do you think ? think? >> think come back to my >> i don't think come back to my special sacred >> i don't think come back to my spe usually sacred >> i don't think come back to my spe usually the sacred >> i don't think come back to my spe usually the boat sacred >> i don't think come back to my spe usually the boat is sacred >> i don't think come back to my spe usually the boat is not red are usually the boat is not usually rocked, but because of what's going on in the world, all we hear now is people calling for a ceasefire and they're going to stop just they're not going to stop just because a sacred day for because it's a sacred day for the why not? the country. why not? >> don't they respect >> why don't they respect our values country ? values in this country? >> view? i think >> sharing mike's view? i think they're true they're showing their true colours, no colours, which is they've got no respect for the war dead. chris. >> happened yet, so >> it's not happened yet, so stop >> it's not happened yet, so st0|and doesn't for >> and she doesn't speak for everyone. she doesn't speak for me . her poisonous rhetoric me right. her poisonous rhetoric is causing problems. it's stirring the fire. right. and it's not about what's being said. it's about who said it.
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she's got a position of power. and said today, and as lord heywood said today, it's she shouldn't be it's not she shouldn't be causing division . she should be causing division. she should be bringing people together and she causing division. why isn't she going calling the police biased and biased police? do you not think they looked at the evidence way 100,000 evidence of the way 100,000 protesters last week, 30 arrests, 30 arrests? you're a journalist . journalist. >> police when they police demonstrate nations, have you looked at the way they demonstrate you're talking blm , demonstrate you're talking blm, blm versus lockdown protesters they give out cups of to coffee protesters who are trying to stop traffic on the king's highway. okay >> well, look, chris, last word on this before we come back to it later with the papers. >> the last word on it is calling bad calling the police bias is bad enough. a hard enough. the police have a hard enough time as it is. it's a time unity , not division. time for unity, not division. and to together. and we've got to stick together. you half the you can't have unity if half the people on that march want to see the eradication of a country in the eradication of a country in the middle east. >> have to say, mike, >> but you have to say, mike, that suella has a bit too
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that suella has got a bit too for boots. and she for big her boots. she and she was she needs be whittled was she needs to be whittled down. line of down. that could be the line of the day. >> is suella. now her boots go. you see, this is why we pay stephanie the big bucks. because that the question that is the question of the night . suella too big for her night. is suella too big for her boots? let me know what you think. mark cbnnews.com will return to this with my pundits at 1030 with the papers. but coming next the story, coming up next in the big story, will savoy have the will suella savoy have the weekend? i'll be asking her number leading number one fan leading conservative mp michael fabricant, who will be making the case for britain's most talked about politician . see you talked about politician. see you
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radio. well a big reaction to my big opinion . big opinion. >> i've got to say, one day i'm going to do a show which is comprised only of your brilliant emails. market gbnews.com where to start? mark i loved your big opinion. says margaret. i agree. we must have our day of reflection without any disruption from those
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demonstrations means no question of ifs or buts. our country, our laws is what an old fashioned idea . and how about this from idea. and how about this from john suella braverman is a breath of fresh air. i wish she was pm. yvonne says she's not too big for her boots. she's writing what she's saying and a few more politicians should back her. we're about to speak to a tory mp who is going to back suella braverman leave suella alone, says stephen. she's not too big for her boots . she too big for her boots. she speaks sense and speaks for many other people that i know , says other people that i know, says stephen. okay however, susie thinks that she is too big for her boots. the show is all about opinions . her boots. the show is all about opinions. get yours over to me, mark at gbnews.com by the way, nigel farage going into the jungle. i've been speaking to itv insiders. i'll bring you the latest at 10:00 in my take at ten. but it's time now for the big story and suella braverman is under increasing pressure following her critical comments about the police's handling of pro—palestinian marches as this is a political headache for the
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prime minister, rishi sunak, who must now decide whether to sack or back his home secretary let's get the views of leading conservative backbencher, the mp for lichfield, michael fabricant . michael, lovely to have you on the show . thanks for giving up the show. thanks for giving up a chunk of your friday evening . is chunk of your friday evening. is your friend the home secretary, trying to get fired ? trying to get fired? >> i don't think she is. what she is trying to do is say what she is trying to do is say what she really believes in. >> and, you know, that might be an thing for a politician to an odd thing for a politician to do, but think it's rather do, but i think it's rather refreshing. and what is she being criticised for? i was actually looking again at the article which has been so controversial , michael, article which has been so controversial, michael, and she says in it , controversial, michael, and she says in it, um, let's just find it during covid she says, why was it that lockdown objectives were given no quarter by public order police yet black lives matter demonstrations were enabled, allowing to break rules and even greeted with officers taking the knee right wing and
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nationalist protesters who engagein nationalist protesters who engage in aggression are rightly met with a stern response . yes, met with a stern response. yes, yet pro—palestinian mobs displaying almost identical behaviour are largely ignored , behaviour are largely ignored, even when they're clearly breaking the law. i don't think that's so unreasonable . that's so unreasonable. >> you know, i completely agree. i don't see the controversy. i don't think it's divisive . but don't think it's divisive. but this this idea that she's inflaming tensions, i think the people on the streets of london, manchester and glasgow calling for a war are the ones for a holy war are the ones inflaming tensions. for a holy war are the ones inflaming tensions . however. inflaming tensions. however. michael, do you think that the home secretary suella braverman, sometimes goes too far calling illegal immigration an invasion for example ? for example? >> well, in a way it is an invasion. >> i just don't know why we're being so namby pamby in politics. why can't we speak it as it is? you know , we mustn't as it is? you know, we mustn't be racist. we shouldn't be racist. that's wrong. we
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shouldn't be divisive. that's wrong . but actually speaking wrong. but actually speaking your mind and saying that illegal migration into this country , whether it be boats or country, whether it be boats or other means , is in a way an other means, is in a way an invasion, is that so unreasonable? either i just think calling a spade a spade just occasionally is no bad thing. does this story and the pearl clutching around the home secretary's remarks demonstrate just how disconnected the media and political elite are from ordinary people? >> the people that watch and listen to my show ? listen to my show? >> well, i think that is indeed a problem. look i get involved with running our used to run our by elections , and i certainly by elections, and i certainly help out in our by elections. and i see canvass returns. and what i don't see is conservative switching to labour, which i know is a big worry for keir starmer . but know is a big worry for keir starmer. but what i do see is labour for voters getting out and voting, but conservative
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voters staying at home and they're staying at home because i don't think there is a message which is clear either from the present conservative government. and yet the one moment you have a clear message from our home secretary , we find that there's secretary, we find that there's all this controversy, 1 or 2 colleagues of mine have called for her resignation, but i note there the 1 or 2 colleagues who don't intend to stand at the next general election . and next general election. and sometimes i think, you know, it's better to keep your mouth shut if she were, people might say, never do know. say, i never do know. >> and god you don't. we >> and thank god you don't. we never you to be censored . never want you to be censored. michael, were to be michael, if she were to be fired, what do you think the implications might be for the conservatives at the next election ? election? >> well, i think people will say, you know , what do the say, you know, what do the conservative party stand for nowadays ? and when you get nowadays? and when you get someone who actually talks about what they for stand and then that person is fired , though that person is fired, though let's be clear , rishi sunak has
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let's be clear, rishi sunak has made it very clear, you nearly called him keir starmer. i know freudian slip because it's too late at night. i'm normally in bed at this time. mark it's what, it's 925. it's way past my bedtime. that's right. >> you should be having your nightcap. but. but, yeah. rishi sunak. but rishi sunak sunak. go on. but rishi sunak has very clear, both has made it very clear, both yesterday , that she yesterday and today, that she has his full confidence, which sometimes when prime ministers say that as the kiss of death. >> but i think he does mean it on this occasion . however, it on this occasion. however, it has caused . has caused. >> yeah. sorry to interrupt you, michael . apologies. the line's michael. apologies. the line's not the best, but can i just ask you some would argue that this article she wrote in the times is not helpful to the met police who have got a big job on their hands this weekend that they need rather than, need her support rather than, you know, this this criticism, this onslaught . this onslaught. >> well, i think , you know, she >> well, i think, you know, she just feels utterly frustrated with the met police >> and i think a lot of the
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general public feel about that, too, because, you know, it's not just the palace opinion demonstrations that we're having. you know, it wasn't that long ago that you had stop oil . long ago that you had stop oil. in fact, it was only earlier this week you had stop oil. actually closing off roads and policemen standing around not knowing quite what to do. it's actually the rank and file police officers , the constable police officers, the constable sergeants and maybe inspectors whom i feel sorry for. i don't think there is a very , very think there is a very, very clear instruction of tall coming from the commissioner about what to do. if you look at what goes on in france and germany and the united states, the very, very robust action they've taken against it don't stop oil or stop oil. while the demonstrate is and particularly the palestinian demonstrators who have been terrifying a jewish population in the uk and elsewhere , for if you look at elsewhere, for if you look at what those countries are doing, it does seem in stark contrast
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to the rather namby pamby approach which the commissioner seems to be taking to policing in london. and of course the mayor of london, sadiq khan, who is actually nominally in charge of the police , he's barely said of the police, he's barely said a word about it briefly, michael , before we let you get to that large glass of cabernet sauvignon , john, can i ask you, sauvignon, john, can i ask you, do you think that suella braverman could one day be the leader of the conservative party and would she make a good prime minister because many of my viewers and listeners are emailing me to say that they'd love her to be pm? well, there's no vacancy at the moment and i don't expect there will be a vacancy at the moment . but look, vacancy at the moment. but look, there are some very , very good there are some very, very good people at the top of government in conservative party and in the conservative party and suella braverman is certainly one of them. so you know, i wouldn't say no to her. >> michael, i'll quote you on that. i'll take that out of context and put that on the christmas reel. have an
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excellent weekend and we'll catch soon. take care catch up soon. michael take care . brilliant stuff. a fascinating conversation . your reaction. conversation. your reaction. market gb news dot com woods suella braverman be a natural replacement for rishi sunak further down the line. coming up next with tonight's top pundits, i'll be asking how far should the police go to protect the armistice memorial tomorrow? armistice day memorial tomorrow? and the pundits to and joining the pundits to discuss that will be former top cop kevin hurley. plus in an exclusive mark dolan tonight people poll we've been asking should rishi sunak back or sack suella braverman the results are in. i shall reveal all
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police you're listening to gb news radio . now news radio. now >> now, today we conducted an exclusive mark dolan tonight people's poll . we've been people's poll. we've been asking, should rishi sunak back or sack suella braverman? well the results are in. 84% say the pm should back suella 16% say
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they she should go reacting to they she should go reacting to the big stories of the day, my top pundits this evening ringside for all the action we have tv and radio star mike porky parry legend of fleet street. of course , as well. top street. of course, as well. top showbiz journalist stephanie techy, queen of all media and a very good friend of mine, brilliant bestselling author and campaigner chris wild . now, the campaigner chris wild. now, the latest pro—palestine march is set to go ahead tomorrow, clashing with armistice day. thousands of people will try to participate in the remembrance events to pay their respects to those who lost their lives in world war one and two. however, they may face disruption despite calls from the met police to cancel the pro—palestinian marches . the met's commissioner, marches. the met's commissioner, sir mark rowley , has decided to sir mark rowley, has decided to give it the green light. so what problems could the police face tomorrow and how should they tackle them? well, i'll bring my punstinin tackle them? well, i'll bring my pundits in in just a second. but first speak to former first up, let's speak to former detective chief superintendent at the met police, kevin hurley. kevin, they've got one hell of a
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job on their hands tomorrow . job on their hands tomorrow. >> yes, they have. >> yes, they have. >> and there are many problems that they will have to plan for. >> the pro—palestinians are just one of them. >> of course. terrorist ism is going to be one of them. >> there'll be others, extreme right wingers wanting to get involved on the act. >> various extinction rebellion. let's stop oil people deciding they want to join in as well. >> for that reason, the met have got some extra help that they've brought in. 1000 extra public order trained officers from around the country to support probably several extra thousand police officers who've been kept on duty and held in reserve for whatever the events will occur. >> of course, the thing about tomorrow that's not the main tomorrow is that's not the main remembrance day event and the main palestine march is planned for tomorrow , which is not for tomorrow, which is not scheduled to go anywhere near the cenotaph . the police have the cenotaph. the police have got well worked out contingency plans. they do it every year and they will close off whitehall at
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both ends to make sure those people who come to the cenotaph, i.e. the war widows and so on tomorrow to pay their respects, are not interfered with as they will do on sunday. i mean, a couple of things i would throw in here is people need to get it in here is people need to get it in perspective . everyone wants in perspective. everyone wants the police to get stuck in. some people want them to even batter some of the people who perhaps views are different to the views that others have got. the problem you've got is the use of force by our police officers is done at the individual level. everyone's got cameras on them. everyone's got cameras on them. everyone's got cameras on them. everyone's got body cam on the police and the police officers know that they will be judged in hindsight a year, two years later, by the independent office of police conduct, which means that any single incident which could be taken out of context, which is seen by some as going too far, will result in them either losing their jobs or being sacked . i think tactics
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being sacked. i think tactics i think tactics need to move forward and stop using the classic system they use now, which is put human being against human being in public order events and start to do that which is done on the continent which is done on the continent which you mentioned earlier , which you mentioned earlier, which you mentioned earlier, which is bringing the use of water cannon and public order size, pepper sprays and so on that keep the crowd distant from the police and avoid physical contact because it is the physical contact that results in the greatest number of injuries to the police and the demonstrators . and for some demonstrators. and for some reason in this country, everybody says , oh, water everybody says, oh, water cannon, they're terrible . well, cannon, they're terrible. well, and even though i must say, one of the great things boris did do was bring them in, what we did then is find, as theresa may blocked them and mayor khan sold them off. so as a result of labour politicians on one side and tory politicians on the other side , police have not got other side, police have not got the equipment which was deemed
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necessary after the 2011 riots to ultimately control severe disorder. i've got to say boris was a decent mayor. >> we can debate his premiership , but he did well in london. kevin stay with me and let's bnngin kevin stay with me and let's bring in my top pundits this evening. got mike parry. evening. we've got mike parry. we've also got chris wilde and stephanie takyi . and if it's stephanie takyi. and if it's possible, jonathan, let's have everyone, because i really want to have of a cobra meeting to have a bit of a cobra meeting on one because i just one, on this one because i just one, we. mike porky parry if things really kick off tomorrow, this is going to be a problem not just for the met police, but really the reputation of this country. >> well, you say the reputation of this country, one of the reasons this is happening tomorrow is we are the most tolerant country in the world. everybody that . why do everybody knows that. why do people this country? people come to this country? because we're tolerant. we're forgiving , because we're tolerant. we're forgiving, and we want to embrace people from other lands. that's where we are now. sir mark rowley, in my view, talking to an expert here from the police, of course, with us, i think is trying to get a better
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perspective of the way the police should work. but he's had to follow dame cressida dick 4 or 5 years of her. and she basically, i think, turned the metropolitan police into a sort of social services outfit . and of social services outfit. and when policemen could come and knock on your door and say, we've seen an email or we've seen a tweet , we regard it we've seen an email or we've seen a tweet, we regard it as a hate crime . um, those same hate crime. um, those same policemen need to be trained that if they hear somebody on the streets of london, chance shouting jihad or from the river to the sea, that is a hate crime. and anybody who is espousing that should be arrested. now kevin, i wish our police officers, men and women serving our country, of course , serving our country, of course, in our cities every day. >> i love the cops . i mentioned >> i love the cops. i mentioned it in my big opinion. how bad could things go horribly wrong tomorrow? what's worst case tomorrow? what's the worst case scenario , kevin? scenario, kevin? >> well , i scenario, kevin? >> well, i mean, first off, it's quite right if people that is a hate crime chanting things like from river to the sea because it
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means off all the jewish means kill off all the jewish people in israel, is an people in israel, which is an inqu people in israel, which is an insult to most jews in the uk . insult to most jews in the uk. the problem with the idea that they should be arrested and i am someone who's only to someone who's not only tried to arrest people in large crowds and actually done it is it's easier said than done because of course it takes 3 or 4 people to minimum to drag someone out of a crowd and then another 20 or 30 facing outwards like an outward facing outwards like an outward facing rugby scrum to fight your way out of the crowd , none of way out of the crowd, none of which look good. then the riots develop. people try to free them. the police will be driven back and it will get very bad . i back and it will get very bad. i think we've got two issues here to deal with. um, specifically with the pro palestinians and thatis with the pro palestinians and that is because much of the group will be young muslims. they get very excited and believe that they've that this is their chance to strike a blow for islam by fighting back at what they think are the law, the force of law and order. so they
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will get very naughty indeed if arrests are made . and secondly, arrests are made. and secondly, onceit arrests are made. and secondly, once it gets on social media, it can also be seen as a driver to drive islamist . type terrorist drive islamist. type terrorist actions by in the uk. and again, because our police are broadly unarmed , we remain extremely unarmed, we remain extremely valuable , vulnerable to people valuable, vulnerable to people running amok with knives and so on. as we've seen in the past. so yes, they should be arrested, but it's far harder to do it in reality , particularly when the reality, particularly when the police officers on the ground are actually quite scared for the safety of their jobs . the safety of their jobs. >> it sounds like modern, yeah. kevin it sounds like modern britain is under bill, based upon what you've said . chris upon what you've said. chris wild you've been shaking your head there. what do you think about this? >> just firstly to >> kevin just firstly respect to the do a great the police force to do a great job and it's incredibly difficult. know a lot of difficult. i know a lot of police officers, they're quitting their jobs because they're these they're scared to police these days. not comfortable days. i'm not comfortable with the of young muslims the language of young muslims are going get excited are going to get excited and cause don't cause a problem because i don't think at all.
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think that's the case at all. all police have an arduous all the police have an arduous job tomorrow. i the most job tomorrow. i think the most dangerous thing out of all this is language. language , is language. our language, professional and professional language and saying. muslims are saying. but young muslims are going be going out there to going to be going out there to cause problems is cause deliberate problems is wrong. and that's the danger here. >> but what about their language? and what about their behaviour that we've seen for the last four weekends? >> minute. >> chris, hang on a minute. what's what percentage of up—market me some stats here. >> i don't have stats , but >> i don't have the stats, but too that could too many enough that you could hear chanting for hear people chanting for a jihad, which is a holy war and calling for an intifada, which means suicide bombs in restaurants and on buses . restaurants and on buses. >> but that's a small minority rebellion. >> if it's warm, it's one person using that march to voice those sort of opinions . sort of opinions. >> hang on. let me finish. let me finish. go for it, chris. let me finish. go for it, chris. let me finish. go for it, chris. let me finish. yeah yes. if that kind of language is used and it's deemed to be used. hang on one second. and it's deemed to be a risk . yes, they should be be a risk. yes, they should be arrested. but causing what we're doing is scaremongering . we're
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doing is scaremongering. we're already predicting or pre—empting, but that's going to be we don't know . be the case. we don't know. >> interesting. kevin kevin, briefly uh, briefly, kevin , briefly. uh, briefly, kevin, chris raises an interesting point. are we talking ourselves into as well? into this crisis as well? >> first off, i didn't say young muslims are going out tomorrow to create trouble. what i said is because there will be a number of young muslim men there and young muslim women such as their passion for their religion , that they will potentially overreact to arrests against people, shouting from the river to the sea. and so on as an attack on islam because they are likely because we see it all the time to act irrationally. so be clear , i didn't say they're clear, i didn't say they're going out as young muslims to make trouble. i said that the way they react to their belief system could drive them to extreme violence because we see it quite often. >> and as you say , kevin, videos >> and as you say, kevin, videos of the police being heavy handed will be weaponized and used as
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propaganda potentially on social media. stephanie, last word goes to you . how would you like to to you. how would you like to see this weekend policed? >> you know , i think areas >> you know, i think areas around the cenotaph , i believe around the cenotaph, i believe that they will be respected . ed that they will be respected. ed and i don't believe and i don't believe any trouble will come near there. i'm more worried about the pro—palestine protests because i feel based on suella comments, i do predict there will be a riot. i feel like she has, you know, pulled petrol on the fire and now we have to worry about the extreme right now. feeling bolstered up , now. feeling bolstered up, feeling that the metropolitan police are against them. now you have pro—palestine people who've been pictured depicted as they're violent. so if you're going to strike them with that kind of take them with that brush , why won't they rise to brush, why won't they rise to the bait ? the bait? >> kevin. kevin, always a privilege to have you on the program. catch up soon, sir. former detective chief superintendent at the met police, hurley . listen, police, kevin hurley. listen, coming up at ten. looking forward want forward to this. you won't want to my first air
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to miss it. my first full on air reaction to the stunning news that nigel farage looks to be heading to the jungle. well i'll give you more intel because i've been to itv insiders, been speaking to itv insiders, and i can tell you what's happening. let me tell you, if he goes into the jungle, he will prove the doubters but prove the doubters wrong. but first, my mark meets guest is the hugely popular local radio first, my mark meets guest is th
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next coming up in my take at ten my first full on air reaction to the stunning news that nigel farage looks to be heading to the stunning news that nigel farejungle. s to be heading to the stunning news that nigel farejungle. i've be heading to the stunning news that nigel farejungle. i've spokeniing to the stunning news that nigel farejungle. i've spoken tog to the stunning news that nigel farejungle. i've spoken to itv the jungle. i've spoken to itv insiders today , and i've got the insiders today, and i've got the insiders today, and i've got the inside track. so do tune in at ten for that. but first, it's time for this.
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ten for that. but first, it's time for this . yes, it's time. time for this. yes, it's time. oh, excuse me. i'm going to clear my throat, which is embarrassing because i've got a great me . there great broadcast with me. there you go. it's not covid. i promise. it is time now for mark meets huge star of bbc meets and a huge star of bbc radio, alex dyke, who, in spite of his many years of service at local radio stations like bbc radio solent, where he amassed a large and loyal audience , he large and loyal audience, he believes he was axed by the national state broadcaster because of their diversity drive , as well as cuts to the local radio budget. he feels that as a man of a certain age, he doesn't fit anymore and doesn't tick any boxes. well, i'm delighted to say that commercial radio, they know when they got a star on their hands and he soon going to be airwaves at wave be back on the airwaves at wave 105 which is a great 105 fm, which is a great station. plus, he's busy working with broadcasting legend fred dinenage on a new theatre show about the terrifying gangster double act, the krays. but were the krays as ruthless as the
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bbc? i'm delighted to say that alex dyke joins me now. alex, great to have you in the studio. >> thank you, mark. it's great to be here. >> listen, i've lost my voice there. have done there. you should have done the intro in intro because you've been in broadcasting how long now? >> that's a that's a good that's a good cv. that's a good innings. had were innings. you've had you were at radio years . radio solent for many years. tell about audience tell me about the loyal audience you up the audience at you built up the audience at local radio are great. >> they invest in what you're saying and what you're playing and you invest in them and the area that you both live in. it's very important. bbc local radio when you think of all of the listeners , well, the majority of listeners, well, the majority of listeners, well, the majority of listeners are over 55. these are people that have been paying their licence fee for years and years and years and they want something for it. and i'd not only just bbc one and two bbc and radio four and all the other great stations the bbc provide, but they are very loyal to bbc local radio and a lot of them are upset at the moment. >> indeed. i mean, first of all, there are brilliant broadcasters
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of your calibre on local of your calibre on bbc local radio. it's a great feeding ground for new talent as well. but is local radio but but why else is local radio important? what does it give listeners come any particularly for people who are on their own and when i say people are on their own, people who are lonely and that doesn't just mean older people, but late night listening has been so important to bbc local radio and it's where they have some of their highest listeners. >> and that's where i ended my days at the bbc doing a friday, saturday and sunday late show . saturday and sunday late show. it's a tough gig that isn't it? yeah it is. but what you get back from that loyal audience is one derful and it's been tough. it's been tough to say goodbye. it's been tough to say goodbye. i love working at the bbc. i'm a big fan of the bbc, but i think they're getting some things wrong indeed. >> how did you find out you were for the chop ? for the chop? >> i found out on social media. >> i found out on social media. >> so you weren't sat down with the boss a nice lunch. alex. thank you for your many years of service. >> no, i found out on social
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media. in fact, a listener messaged me on whatsapp to say i'm sorry that your show has been axed . that's how i found out. >> and what were your emotions when you when you saw that message ? message? >> it was a mixture of being hacked off and thinking, well , hacked off and thinking, well, i've had a good run and you can't stay there forever. it's sometimes is good to move over and let other people have a go. but mean , i wasn't ready to but i mean, i wasn't ready to go. i'm 61. i think i'm a young 61. i've still got lots of life left in me and i want to keep broadcasting. you know, tony blackburn is in his 80s. he's going great guns, going great guns and of course, ken bruce also is 73 or 73. >> massive audience that he's taken from radio two over to greatest hits, radio . i think it greatest hits, radio. i think it is. i don't think he was axed by the beeb, but there was some question about whether they renewed his contract. it just sort of it feeds a perception that the beeb doesn't value older broadcasters. is that fair ? >> 7. >>i ? >> i think 7 >> i think that's true of many
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broadcasters, but i think the bbc a really good with diversity , me and all of the stuff that's going on there because the media, the world has changed so much in the last five years. mark hasn't it? yeah, but i think the one thing the bbc aren't great at is when it comes to ageism. >> yeah. so they've got sorted out all the other isms, which is good news. yeah. but people of a vintage age are perhaps cast aside. mean, we have seen that aside. i mean, we have seen that across radio because across local radio because there's people actually older than you because you're like a spnng than you because you're like a spring chicken compared to some of your colleagues. there's a few but across across few older but across across local older local radio, plenty of older voices have come off of off air andindeed voices have come off of off air and indeed radio four, radio three seems a pattern to three seems to be a pattern to me . yeah. me. yeah. >> and america they seem to >> and in america they seem to celebrate . when you get to that celebrate. when you get to that age, if you are like the, you know, the legendary regis philbin, yeah, they would celebrate it. >> and walter cronkite, you know, people are know, these people are untouchable. . i untouchable. david letterman. i mean, he decided to retire. they didn't retire him. >> johnny carson. yeah. you know, when
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know, they decided when they would great would go because they had great ratings and upset is ratings. and what's upset me is i had great ratings. >> that's what this is the problem. and that's why it's so political now that it's about an agenda rather, opinion, agenda rather, in my opinion, than gathering an than than about gathering an audience. what your thoughts audience. what are your thoughts about the future of the bbc and the fee? because the licence fee? because i understand on to understand you've not come on to here the beeb and haven't here bash the beeb and i haven't ehhen either. i think it's got a great, great legacy and there are many millions of happy viewers and listeners still. but what about that licence fee? and what about that licence fee? and what future of the what about the future of the organisation? prop had organisation? i had a prop i had a idea afternoon a great idea for this afternoon for i lost my for this evening, but i lost my prop afternoon. for this evening, but i lost my prop ia:ernoon. for this evening, but i lost my prop ia mugyn. for this evening, but i lost my prop a mug of coffee. i was >> it was a mug of coffee. i was going to come in with either a starbucks mug or a costa mug , starbucks mug or a costa mug, and i was going to say, this is how much bbc costs you how much the bbc costs you a week. in fact, it's less than this. this is how much the bbc costs it's great value, but costs you. it's great value, but i think we need to be doing something on radio and on television on for the over 55 seconds, because i don't think they are being served very well. and also perhaps for people that aren't all that politically
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correct, maybe they could have some programming on the bbc naughty comedy that we used to have back the like monty have back in the day, like monty python or little britain or the office even, which these days probably couldn't be made. >> yeah, and the bbc has gone pc, hasn't it. yeah. >> look clarkson farm. >> and look at clarkson farm. look at what he did with one series of that compared to 30 years of countryfile on the bbc he probably just by being himself , he he probably just by being himself, he probably did more for farming than the bbc did with countryfile . with countryfile. >> what a brilliant point. two things to get to. i want to actually i want to quickly the radio congratulations radio show. congratulations on the . when does it start? the new gig. when does it start? >> doing some >> well, i'm just doing some christmas on great christmas fill ins on a great radio in the south with christmas fill ins on a great ra massive in the south with christmas fill ins on a great ra massive wave the south with christmas fill ins on a great ra massive wave 105 south with christmas fill ins on a great ra massive wave 105 wave with christmas fill ins on a great ra massive wave 105 wave five. a massive wave 105 wave five. great station. that's great. so i'm going to do some christmas fill ins. i haven't got a permanent gig there, i'm permanent gig there, but i'm going busy with this going to be very busy with this theatre with fred dyer. theatre show with fred dyer. >> it. well look, >> well, that's it. well look, i'm sure you'll go time i'm sure you'll go full time at wave at some point, but what about the about this now? the craze, the most terrifying gangster twins in history . and you're working in history. and you're working on show with with itv on a theatre show with with itv legend dinenage . yeah.
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legend fred dinenage. yeah. >> fred's the official autobiography for the krays. the show is called ronnie, reggie and me. i sit down and just get all those stories out of fred . all those stories out of fred. he's got some wonderful stories. >> yeah , i mean, the krays were >> yeah, i mean, the krays were intense agent. they were good looking. they were of looking. they were sort of popular culture icons, weren't they? pretty bad men. they? but pretty bad men. i mean, what was, what was what was worst they got up was the worst they got up to? >> both committed >> well, they both committed murder. yeah, they both committed each each. committed one murder each each. >> and then, of course, they terrified a community, i suppose. yeah >> yeah, they did. but there's so much romance. i mean, you've only got to look at the prime time dramas on television. there's so many documentaries and drama was about murder. people are just. they just. they can't get enough murder. >> and the krays were loved and respected by many in their community. too many argued they felt safer with the krays around. exactly. it works around. so. exactly. it works both it? can both ways, doesn't it? can i just say that the bbc's loss is wave's gain ? gb news is gain as
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wave's gain? gb news is gain as well. so will you come back and see us again soon? >> i'd love to mark brilliant stuff. >> alex dyke there you go. mean honestly folks in prime, let >> alex dyke there you go. mean hontelly folks in prime, let >> alex dyke there you go. mean hontelly folifantastic3rime, let >> alex dyke there you go. mean hontelly folifantastic stuff, let >> alex dyke there you go. mean hontelly folifantastic stuff .let me tell you fantastic stuff. we've got so much more to come. let me tell you, the 10:00 hour awaits . could it be true? is awaits. could it be true? is nigel farage on his way into the jungle? well, i have been speaking to the itv insiders. i've got some very, very good contacts and i've got the answer. so i'll give you the steer on where the nigel is heading to australia in just a few minutes time. it's my take at ten. you're going to love it. so get the kettle on your friday night starts here. this is mark dolan , right. see you in dolan tonight, right. see you in two shakes of a lamb's tail
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it's 10:00. it's10:oo. happy it's 10:00. happy friday. one it's10:oo. happy friday. one and all the weekend starts here. did you have a good week? well, listen, time to relax crack listen, time to relax now. crack open a cold beer from the fridge bottle of something maybe
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bottle of something or maybe just a nice cup of rosie lee on tv, on radio and online in the united kingdom and across the world. this is mark dolan tonight . it world. this is mark dolan tonight. it might world. this is mark dolan tonight . it might take world. this is mark dolan tonight. it might take a world. this is mark dolan tonight . it might take a ten. my tonight. it might take a ten. my first full on air reaction to the stunning news that nigel farage looks to be heading to the jungle. well, not for the first time. he will prove the doubters i've been on the doubters wrong. i've been on the phone colleagues at itv . i'll phone to colleagues at itv. i'll give you the inside track. is he going to australia ? also, is going to australia? also, is britain now in the grip of religious extremism ? and will religious extremism? and will the authorities be dealing with these marches for the foreseeable future ? i'll be foreseeable future? i'll be asking the formidable politic commentator christine hamilton , commentator christine hamilton, who's also been in the jungle all plus tomorrow's newspaper, front pages and live reaction from tonight's top pundits . so from tonight's top pundits. so a packed show, lots to get through. nigel farage in australia, yes or no ? i'll give australia, yes or no? i'll give you the answer in two minutes time after the headlines with the very excellent ray allison .
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the very excellent ray allison. thanks mark. >> good evening. our top stories, the home secretary has expressed her full backing for the met police ahead of the armistice weekend during a meeting with sir mark rowley. suella braverman told the police chief she was confident that any criminality will be dealt with robustly . the force says an robustly. the force says an exclusion zone will be in place covering areas, including whitehall and horse guards. parade effectively banning those on pro—palestine marches. they've also admitted it's likely that officers will have to use force now. ms braverman's comments come as rishi sunak faces continued calls to sack the home secretary. she defied downing street by writing an article accusing the police of playing favourites with pro—palestinian protesters. the police federation described her comments as unacceptable . two comments as unacceptable. two teenagers have been charged with racially aggravated criminal damage after free palestine was sprayed onto the cenotaph in
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rochdale. one has also been charged with theft after poppy wreaths were taken from the base. detective chief inspector stuart round said the damage has caused emotional distress in the local community. israel's military says more than 100,000 palestinian ins have moved from north to south gaza in the last two days. tens of thousands are thought to have made the journey today after the israel defence forces opened an evacuation corridor. the deadline for that is now over. it's not yet clear when the next pause in fighting will be. natwest has scrapped about £7.6 million in potential payments to dame alison rose over her role in the nigel farage de—banking scandal. the former chief exec had been in line for an exit package of more than 10 million, but the board is now only giving her around 15% of that. dame alison says she's pleased the bank cleared her of misconduct, but the gb news presenter, nigel farage, says she failed in her duties.
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>> she broke every rule in the financial conduct authority rulebook. she breached my confidentiality , she told confidentiality, she told a complete lie about my financial situation, much to the amusement of my enemies. i was then forced to publish a subject access request which contained a lot of very unpleasant and indeed deeply defamatory comments about me . and i had to do that to me. and i had to do that to prove that the real reason i'd been debunked was because my views did not align with those of the bank. >> 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 frost let's get back to. mark frost dating stuff. >> well, my thanks to ray addison who returns in an hour's time. what a busy hour in store. welcome to mark dolan. tonight is britain now in the grip of
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religious extremism? and will the authorities be dealing with these marches for the foreseeable future? i'll be asking the formidable political commentator christine hamilton. plus, tomorrow's newspaper , plus, tomorrow's newspaper, front pages and live reaction in the studio from my top pundits . the studio from my top pundits. well, we've rolled out the red carpet tonight, tv and radio star mike parry, showbiz journalist stephanie takyi and author and campaigner chris wild . plus they'll be nominating their headline heroes and back page zeroes of the day, a packed houn page zeroes of the day, a packed hour. and those papers are coming. but first, my take . coming. but first, my take. a ten nigel farage looks to be going into the jungle. now, of course, it's not officially confirmed yet and i've had no contact yet with nigel himself , contact yet with nigel himself, but i've been in broadcasting for two decades. and let me just say that i've got some pals at
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itv , not holly or phil, but well itv, not holly or phil, but well connected executives who have hinted very strongly to me that he's heading down under. of course, he all but denied it to me earlier this week. take a listen . nigel. i was down at the listen. nigel. i was down at the australian embassy earlier today. i didn't i didn't see you in that queue for a visa, did i? >> no, i think you did. um, no, i'm. i'm certain you didn't. actually. i do have an existing australian visa, so if i chose to go there on holiday, i could without too much difficulty. but also i luckily we share an office. >> and i saw you trying out kangaroo testicles in the gb news kitchen . so have you got news kitchen. so have you got anything to tell us? >> yeah. cut down on the booze, mark, because you're clearly seeing things . seeing things. >> well , listen, my sources at >> well, listen, my sources at itv are more solid than tyson fury's biceps, so it's my belief that nigel is going to australia as a compelling. but yes ,
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as a compelling. but yes, controversial figure. i've got no doubt that poor old nigel will be doing those dreadful bushtucker trials every single night. bitter remainers will be voting online to put nigel through hell . he'll be forced to through hell. he'll be forced to lie down in a box full of rats and bugs. he'll be diving into filthy swamps to collect those all important stars, and he'll be sleeping with snakes. a walk in the park compared to 20 odd years in the european parliament deaung years in the european parliament dealing with the likes of slippery , my brexit hating slippery, my brexit hating reptile guy verhofstadt swallowing kangaroo testicles and being bitten by rodents will be positive , pleasurable be positive, pleasurable compared to his time in brussels . now there is a risk that if he says or does something outrageous, it could impact any future political ambitions. he may have . and i'm aware that may have. and i'm aware that many are hoping that such ambitions exist and that, for example, he might step in and rescue the tory party if they collapse at the next election
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in. but i think nigel's future as a credible politician is assured. what makes me so confident because the guy is authentic , he doesn't say things authentic, he doesn't say things for clicks or for headlines or short term political gain. he doesn't tick boxes. he does not just sit on the fence with nigel. what you see is what you get. so if he's himself, it's only diva celebrities complaining about a lack of food that he has to worry about. i predict that this move, if it happens , will be a triumph for happens, will be a triumph for all involved. it will be a triumph for itv. their ratings will go through the roof . i'll will go through the roof. i'll be honest, i might just play cat videos whilst he's on the other side . it will be videos whilst he's on the other side. it will be a videos whilst he's on the other side . it will be a triumph for side. it will be a triumph for nigel's bank manager. coots must be gutted that they've given up this reported £1.5 million windfall go woke go broke, eh? it will be a triumph for gb
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news. as for up to three weeks, the spotlight will be on our biggest star. and most importantly, it will be a triumph for nigel because viewers will get to know the guy that i know. a gentleman, an extraordinarily warm, charming, funny , approachable human being . funny, approachable human being. love him or hate him, nigel farage is a copper bottomed superstar and he will smash it in the jungle. my sources tell me that he's been off the booze for the last few days. not being able to have a pint of his favourite english real ale will be the greatest challenge, but whatever happens, he'll have my support and that of all of our amazing viewers and listeners here at gb news as the most consequential politician of his generation without ever once having stepped inside the house of commons. this is a guy that likes to win . he made brexit likes to win. he made brexit happen. likes to win. he made brexit happen . he exposed the scandal happen. he exposed the scandal of de—banking and saw off natwest's chief executive of
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dame alison rose. he kept jeremy corbyn out of number 10, thank god. and handed victory to boris johnson on a plate after making a deal not to run his own mps against the tories in marginal seats. and you know what? i think nigel is going to win again. the king of brexit may be again. the king of brexit may be a few weeks away from being the king of the . jungle i've spoken king of the. jungle i've spoken to several itv insiders. it is my view and my opinion that nigel is going to australia . nigel is going to australia. take my word for it. but nigel has not confirmed this yet. he's on record as saying that he's deliberating , but i have my deliberating, but i have my sources so what do you think? would you like to watch nigel? will he win the thing? how do you about him leaving gb you feel about him leaving gb news for three weeks and joining itv? know. market itv? let me know. market gbnews.com. let's hear from my top pundits. first of all, tv
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and radio legend mike porky parry , showbiz journalist parry, showbiz journalist stephanie takyi and author and campaigner chris wilde. stephanie i've got to talk to you because not only are you a top political commentator, you're the queen of showbiz as well. have it on good well. yeah i have it on good authority. nigel's going to australia . sophia. i think he'll australia. sophia. i think he'll smash it. what do you think? >> will. but he >> of course he will. but he will ruffle a few feathers at home and also on the camp. as we know with celebrities. mark most of them are pretty woke and most of them are pretty woke and most of them are pretty woke and most of them will be pretty set on their ideas about nigel farage. and he's going to have to try and prove to him that prove to them that he's a man, that stands by his beliefs and his reasoning for why he feels the way he does on certain opinions and some celebrities may be offended by that, but as i say, show business is all about business, and no one's more decisive than politicians. so what's going to happen when he is on that camp ? he's going to is on that camp? he's going to have to come across as a people's person. and the nigel
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that we know and love. that we all know and love. >> well, listen, chris, is there a danger that he will be the victim the tv editors who can victim of the tv editors who can decide however you come across, they can cut out all the bits where you're charming and lovely and only where you're and only have bits where you're losing temper. and only have bits where you're losiabsolutely.1per. and only have bits where you're losiabsolutely.1fthink every >> absolutely. i think every politician goes on to these reality tv shows that seems to be the media's objective , isn't be the media's objective, isn't it, to kind of make them look worse than they actually are? i don't really know the guy, but i think it's happening at the right time. in times of gloom and need to laugh, and doom, we need to laugh, don't we? i need something to laugh think he'll laugh about. and i think he'll bnng laugh about. and i think he'll bring well, nigel, he'll bring that. well, nigel, he'll bnng bring that. well, nigel, he'll bring it. dry. bring some humour to it. dry. listen he's marmite and not listen he's marmite and i'm not his biggest fan, but i think in that capacity , when he's in that that capacity, when he's in that jungle, know , people show jungle, you know, people show their colours. so let's their real colours. so let's hope let's he, hope he can and let's hope he, you know, the public him. you know, the public like him. >> michael , you've been a top >> michael, you've been a top broadcast media executive. you co—founded talksport , but you co—founded talksport, but you were my for a period of were my boss for a period of time the late 90s. do you time in the late 90s. do you think that this is a good move on the part of nigel and more
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importantly , a good the importantly, a good move on the part itv ? because if he does part of itv? because if he does go cost them a few quid. >> well, it's a good move on the part of itv because he's very popular he's going drag popular and he's going to drag in audiences. so so they'll in huge audiences. so so they'll get their money's worth no matter what they pay him. what i think to be the think is going to be the most fascinating of this, if fascinating aspect of this, if he goes in, i don't think it's completely yet, is it? completely confirmed yet, is it? but i rely on your sources , but i rely on your sources, mark. it is what i think will be the most fascinating aspect is at the end of it, will he have written off his potential political career? he's already tried to get into the commons about seven times. i think , and about seven times. i think, and not succeeded yet. so is he saying , i'm not succeeded yet. so is he saying, i'm trying to read nigel's mind now ? right. i've nigel's mind now? right. i've given up with politics now. i've done the best i can. i didn't get into the commons. i'll take a big bunch now from this tv show and then i'm i'm in clover when it when it comes to my finances or or will he proved to be so successful . i'll and will be so successful. i'll and will the better sides of his
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character and the decision spune character and the decision spline with which he controls his life and the views by which he leads his beliefs ? will they he leads his beliefs? will they come out so forcibly during this show, which is one of the biggest watched shows in television in this country ? and television in this country? and will people then suddenly decide this is the man who should be leading the country? mike, i think it will be the latter, actually , because last year we actually, because last year we saw when they got matt hancock on, a big furore on, it was such a big furore about it, but it actually turned out to be quite redemptive for matt hancock. >> he actually got more support than people actually , but we than people actually, but we knew he was at the end step. >> knew was the end of >> we knew he was at the end of his career that's >> we knew he was at the end of his he career that's >> we knew he was at the end of his he it.|reer that's >> we knew he was at the end of his he it. what that's >> we knew he was at the end of his he it. what i'mthat's >> we knew he was at the end of his he it. what i'm saying why he did it. what i'm saying is you're going to is it's not if you're going to use actually relaunch use this to actually relaunch his career . his political career. >> there you go. what do you think should nigel the think should nigel go into the jungle you had his ear, would jungle if you had his ear, would you yay or nay? let you advise him? yay or nay? let me your thoughts. mark at me know your thoughts. mark at gb news.com . listen, folks, lots gb news.com. listen, folks, lots more to get through. we've got the controversy that lies ahead this weekend. is britain now in
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the grip of religious extremism ? the grip of religious extremism? and will the authorities be deaung and will the authorities be dealing with these marches for the foreseeable future? i'll be asking former political asking the former political commentator, christine hamilton . commentator, christine hamilton. now, christine was also in the first series of i'm a celebrity. so she'll her honest so she'll give her honest verdict on how nigel will on verdict on how nigel will get on if , as it is my verdict on how nigel will get on if, as it is my view and my understanding, that he's going to go into the jungle. plus, tomorrow's front pages with instant from my instant reaction from my excellent pundits, christine hamilton is next. nigel should he stay or should he go
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trouble. >> you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> should nigel farage go into the jungle? it's my understanding, having spoken to itv insiders, that he will go to australia and he'll be on itv every night as of next weekend . every night as of next weekend. normally i wouldn't encourage anyone to watch another channel in fact, i still don't. but if nigel's in the jungle, i've got no doubt you'll be watching. and what i'm going to do if he does
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do that, is provide you with fabulous analysis fabulous post—match analysis every time i'm air. so from every time i'm on air. so from ten, when that show comes off air, you'll get a full response from and team. we will be from me and my team. we will be on nigel cam every night. good evening. mark, says dawn in devon. nigel is to be celebrate as he speaks without fear and i'll be delighted to watch nigel in the jungle. i hope the younger viewers will see his honest , outspoken values . younger viewers will see his honest, outspoken values . helen honest, outspoken values. helen mark i wish. excuse me. i will miss nigel on gb news, but i'll watch him every night despite the fact that i haven't watched mainstream media for such a long time and for the first time i'll be voting reality show. go, be voting on a reality show. go, nigel. patricia says nigel is the greatest, and he will win. but corinne says, mark, i don't want nigel to lower himself to the jungle depths. say no, nigel. well, nigel is reportedly undecided, and he has not revealed. it's not been confirmed. he's going in. but it's my understanding that he will. there you go. well, look,
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i can be judged on that on sunday, can't i? let's hope i'm right i'm trouble the right or i'm in trouble with the bosses and nigel. okay, folks, lots more to get through and let us crack on. it's time now for the newsmaker . and let's get the newsmaker. and let's get more on the planned protests for armistice day tomorrow. i'm delighted to joined delighted to be joined by the great battleaxe herself. great british battleaxe herself. her words, mine, christine her words, not mine, christine hamilton on hello, mark. christine before we talk about the rather worrying events that are going to possibly happen this weekend, we've got some much needed good news on a friday night. it is your birthday . birthday. >> yes, it is. yes it is my birthday. another one down. how many more to go , i wonder. many more to go, i wonder. >> and i cannot believe you're now 50. but can i say you don't look it at. and also, i'm a go on. well, first of all, i will just say , i'm sure neil said it just say, i'm sure neil said it to you earlier when he brought you breakfast in bed , your you breakfast in bed, your husband, neil hamilton. but you are a beautiful woman. you're fabulous broadcaster and just
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the most delightful human being. so happy birthday from me and all of our viewers and listeners here at gb news. we love you loads . loads. >> oh, thank you very much, mark. the best the best mark. that's the best the best birthday present i've had day. >> speaking of which, we will get to the serious business of news but it news and current affairs. but it is birthday today. anyone is your birthday today. anyone that to go wikipedia that wants to go on wikipedia will not believe figure will not believe the figure involved but look involved. but you look incredible . what did you get? incredible. what did you get? did get anything ? i mean, did you get anything? i mean, have the red red have you received the red red carpet treatment your other carpet treatment from your other half? yes of course i have. >> and it did start with we're not breakfast in bed because i don't but a mug of tea don't do that. but a mug of tea in bed? of course it did. but most that. most mornings start like that. can't on that, can't fault him on that, unfortunately , we have had to go unfortunately, we have had to go to a funeral today, so that wasn't ideal on my birthday. but it appreciate how it makes you appreciate how lucky you are still to be around i >> -- >> most definitely. well, my commiserations to the person that christine , we are that passed, christine, we are very concerned, aren't we? all of us. a nation awaits what's going to happen this weekend. we're praying there be
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we're praying there won't be trouble, kick off. trouble, but it could kick off. what's the worst thing that could what could happen? do you think? what are darkest are your what is your darkest fear out fear about what might play out this weekend ? this weekend? >> oh, do know, i feel so >> oh, do you know, i feel so i'm very angry about some of the things that are going on. but i'm also incredibly saddened by it i can remember not it because i can remember not that long ago when the entire nafion that long ago when the entire nation together for at nation came together for at 11:00, 11, 11, 11, and everything came to a halt. if you were in a shop, if everything stopped, if you were even the buses stopped . when even the buses stopped. when i was a child, the buses stopped at 11:00. they made sure they weren't running. so we've sadly come a long way from there. and it isn't going to be at 11:00 tomorrow. the great coming together of the nation that it always used to be. i just pray that there is no trouble . any that there is no trouble. any decent person wants there to be no trouble . no one always fears no trouble. no one always fears that there are troublemakers in any crowd who will be out to make trouble and there's two days, aren't there ? there's days, aren't there? there's armistice day tomorrow and then
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there's remembrance sunday the day after. and i think we should be entitled as a nation to have those two days to remember for the people who gave some of them gave their all. and it is such a moving weekend . and the sight of moving weekend. and the sight of the veterans , the widows and the veterans, the widows and sometimes you get the little children marching with their dad's medals or their grandpa's medals and it just is such a heartwarming sight. and please god, we can just enjoy. is the wrong word, but enjoy it in the normal way without any interruptions. we don't want anything to take away from this weekend of remembrance. >> you're absolutely right. and i think that should be the abiding message. and let's hope that wonderful message prevails . that wonderful message prevails. christine, shall we have some fun? because it is friday night, not only is it your birthday, but my sources tell me that nigel is heading to australia. he hasn't confirmed itv have not confirmed. but if he goes into the jungle, of course, you were
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there for the first series of i'm a celebrity , weren't you? i'm a celebrity, weren't you? >> i was . and for what it's >> i was. and for what it's worth, i bet he's going in. i absolutely bet he's going in. so i'm sure we'll see him. he won't be able to resist. yes i was in the very first one when literally . oh, my goodness. i'm literally. oh, my goodness. i'm on the screen now. there we are. nobody really knew what was coming. itv didn't know that the program was going to be so successful. look at my black eye. i can see i got a terrible black eye in one of the trials . black eye in one of the trials. the reason it's successful is because they make they make sure there's a mix of personalities that don't get on. they deliberate when they ask me to go on. the first time i said no because thought i really don't because i thought i really don't need life was pretty need this. life was pretty hellish 2001. so they asked hellish in 2001. so they asked me again. they obviously hadn't got their middle aged mother hen, with middle aged got their middle aged mother hethose with middle aged got their middle aged mother hethose days with middle aged got their middle aged mother hethose days .rith middle aged got their middle aged mother hethose days . and niddle aged got their middle aged mother hethose days . and youle aged got their middle aged mother hethose days . and you know,d got their middle aged mother hethose days . and you know, i in those days. and you know, i loved it. i loved every minute of it. there was the odd, scary moment with snakes and all that sort of thing . but basically i'm sort of thing. but basically i'm an outdoorsy girl, so the camping side didn't worry me. i
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didn't it to end . i loved didn't want it to end. i loved it. and i think nigel will do well because he's a he's a people person and people were saying worrying that he had he has some medical problems. he might not be too good on the trials. you can get an out or a for buy the medical for the trials. if can't do it. lots trials. if you can't do it. lots of have done that, of people have done that, especially the older and especially the older people. and i think you'd be very good. i think his problem is he can have a short fuse . i've been at the a short fuse. i've been at the far end of it . you can have a far end of it. you can have a short fuse, but as long as he keeps that under control and it's a wonderful opportunity. you mentioned i think, mark, it was you mentioned the editing. that the only thing i was that is the only thing i was worried about. i wasn't scared of everything, but it of snakes or everything, but it was the editing. they was the editing. but they were certainly very fair with me, as far as i aware . so i don't far as i was aware. so i don't think i was edited badly. but i'll tell you , he's jolly well i'll tell you, he's jolly well going to miss the old alcohol. i mean, that was one of the big problems for me and if they do well, get the odd well, he might get the odd treat. send the odd
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treat. they might send the odd bit, but not for a few days . so bit, but not for a few days. so if you're alcohol addict or a if you're an alcohol addict or a smoking or whatever , you know, smoking or whatever, you know, you're going to you're going to miss your favourite treats. but i think he'll love it a lot of people won't. politicians, by the way , don't tend to do very the way, don't tend to do very well . if you look at the raft of well. if you look at the raft of politicians who've gone and they very first very often they're the first out. but i think i mean, matt hancock stayed for in a long time he certainly wasn't time and he certainly wasn't isn't what shall we say, flavour of the flavour of the month. so i think he'll do well whether he'll win or not. it entirely depends how the cookie crumbles. who else is in there ? you just who else is in there? you just you never know . but yes, you're you never know. but yes, you're right. i think you said earlier that we will all sit at home in the flabby comfort of our armchairs with our glass of wine and our whatever voting for people to do trials. it's wonderful . there's something wonderful. there's something very sadistic, sadistic about all of us. yes. let's throw them into that . but as long as he into that. but as long as he does those well, people like the viewers like people who do the
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trials. well and who just go for it, they don't like whips. so as long as he doesn't wimp out of that sort of thing, i think he'll do well. whether he'll win or remain to be seen. but or not remain to be seen. but i wish luck and i'm perfectly wish him luck and i'm perfectly certain he's going in. i mean, honestly, he likes an audience. he likes an audience for his views. he likes to he likes to perform well. it's a great platform on which to perform. and i'm sure he won't be averse to collecting the check either. i would like to make it clear that 20 or whatever it is, two years ago, the amount paid was not quite so generous. that's right. >> you should have held out for a couple of years. listen, christine, have a great birthday night and we can't wait to see you in the studio. i think you're in nana you're back in with nana tomorrow right ? >> 7- >> oh, no, 7_ >> oh, no, not ? >> oh, no, not tomorrow. 7 >> oh, no, not tomorrow. sunday sunday, sunday at three with nana akua mark. i couldn't wish for a better birthday present than to share a little bit with you and gb news viewers.
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>> brilliant . have you and gb news viewers. >> brilliant. have a you and gb news viewers. >> brilliant . have a great >> brilliant. have a great night. enjoy yourself. hang over tomorrow and then back on air sunday at three with nana. thanks, christine. brilliant stuff, in the background stuff, nigel in the background there. just getting the birthday cake ready with couple of cake ready with a couple of candles . not many. he's not candles. not many. he's not going burn the house down. going to burn the house down. please be rude. okay please don't be so rude. okay folks, my pundits are back in just two minutes with just two minutes time with tomorrow's papers . don't go tomorrow's papers. don't go anywhere
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you're listening to gb news radio . radio. >> okay, folks, the papers are in. so let's do that little sting thing with a graphic and music together at the same time . music together at the same time. this show this show is not thrown together. and yes, we have a budget. look at that. okay. the times as jamie okay. at the times as jamie oliver, i'm scarred, bruised and wounded . of course, he's had his wounded. of course, he's had his business challenges over the years. i must say. i've worked with him a couple of times. really nice guy , respect our really nice guy, respect our sacred de sunak tells protests
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and an excellent portrait of king charles smart thinking king charles, who turns 75 on tuesday in a new photo by rankin that features in the big issue to promote the coronation food project's efforts to stop much needed supplies from farmers and supermarkets going to waste . supermarkets going to waste. charles at 75, what an excellent portrait that is . portrait that is. >> it seems for once to have a decent suit on when i've seen him out and about recently in places like where's he been? india and places like that, correct? tanya kenya it suits look as though he's just been pulled out of a swimming pool. yeah, i know what you mean. >> bit crumpled, >> you look a bit crumpled, can't >> you look a bit crumpled, canyeah. yeah definitely. >> you look a bit crumpled, canwell, yeah definitely. >> you look a bit crumpled, canwell, yeah and 1itely. >> you look a bit crumpled, canwell, yeah and itely. >> you look a bit crumpled, canwell, yeah and i do '. >> you look a bit crumpled, canwell, yeah and i do a >> well, look, and i do a very dignified portrait. want dignified portrait. i want to talk about the king 75. and talk about the king at 75. and you're collective verdict on on his efforts far free calendar his efforts so far free calendar in the daily mail celebrates the king's 75th birthday at charles and his grandchildren. also know as nation holds its breath before huge protest in the capital on armistice day, pm
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tells marchers respect our sacred ceremony , which i think sacred ceremony, which i think is something we all talked about earlier in the show. >> most definitely, michael, and we'll pick up on that in just a moment. >> also running that portrait of the king on the front page of the king on the front page of the mail. he is still in great pain over his rift with harry. i'm not surprised . well, i might i'm not surprised. well, i might get the inside track from stephanie takyi on that. who is the showbiz queen? dame mirror. now biggest security alert , torn now biggest security alert, torn apart 2000 police to keep peace dunng apart 2000 police to keep peace during huge demos. cop guard on cenotaph, all on armistice day . cenotaph, all on armistice day. >> that is a magnificent picture of the cenotaph, isn't it? >> it's dramatic , isn't it? >> it's dramatic, isn't it? >> it's dramatic, isn't it? >> it's dramatic, isn't it? >> it very dramatic. >> it very dramatic. >> it very dramatic. >> it stretches up into the sky and the words on it haunting the glorious dead , written, of glorious dead, written, of course, rudyard kipling . wow, that's. >> that's a good that's a good little bit of pub ammo there. now going over to the daily telegraph. police ready to use
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force against protesters and also the king now portrait again, portrait of steely determination in miracle drugs for cystic fibrosis are too expensive for the nhs to use and hunt to give business a tax cut worth £10 billion. jeremy hunt is determined to give businesses a £10 billion tax cut. at his autumn statement later this month, according to the telegraph. chancellor wants to extend full expensing, which allows companies to write off the cost of investments , as he the cost of investments, as he believes the move would help boost long term economic growth . boost long term economic growth. growth also astrazeneca jab at relatives fight for death certification iweekend brave man faces sack for going rogue as pm prepares reshuffle the sun is exclusive stars deal settled knowles mega divorce oasis legend noel gallagher has finally reached a mega expensive settlement in his divorce from sarah mckay . donald, his former sarah mckay. donald, his former wife, is expected to get as much
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as £20 million plus from their £8 million mansion in hampshire. noel partied with bono in vegas to celebrate whilst sarah went to celebrate whilst sarah went to ibiza. how the other half live. >> who do daily star hallelujah supermarket replaces psycho self service tills with some actual people. >> yes . unexpected human people. >> yes. unexpected human in people. >> yes . unexpected human in the >> yes. unexpected human in the bagging area psychotic supermarket self service tills that refuse to let you scan your baked beans are being replaced with real life people. one nil to the humans . yo let's actually to the humans. yo let's actually dig out maria if you can. lottie and jess as well. look up if you wouldn't mind the details of which supermarket that is because i think it's one of the smaller super markets, smaller regional supermarkets. okay, folks , look, let's get reaction folks, look, let's get reaction now from my top pundits. i'm delighted to have with me in the studio none other than television and radio icon mike porky parry, stalwart of fleet
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street, no less, showbiz journalist and political commentator as well to boots. she does it all stephanie takyi author, campaigner and man about town ever youthful looks. >> thank you, chris wilde. >> thank you, chris wilde. >> okay, folks, listen, let's get into some of these stories and we'll try to have some fun in a moment because it is friday night, but we just need a reflection on tomorrow. pm tells marchers stephanie respect our sacred ceremony. what is absolutely critical. number one tomorrow is the memory of our fallen war dead. >> and i agree. and to be honest, mark, we've never had to have a big discussion like this as a nation about having to respect this week and making sure it's sacred . and for those sure it's sacred. and for those fallen soldiers who have made it possible for us, a country to live in peace, but it's a day of parody box to me because while we're trying to respect what's happened before on the other side of the world, we have a war thatis side of the world, we have a war that is breaking out. and there
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have been rumours of potentially world war iii, know, so we world war iii, you know, so we are living in a very funny time. >> well, indeed, michael, i do wonder, you know, notwithstanding our concerns about this weekend, whether these marches will be with us for the foreseeable future. >> well well, it depends how long the war goes suppose , long the war goes on. i suppose, is middle east, because is in the middle east, because the israelis are getting stuck in a big way in trying in in a big way in trying to achieve their target to eradicate hamas. but you can't really eradicate an ideology , really eradicate an ideology, can you? you can knock out the people who are ahead of hamas now, but will along. now, but more will come along. strangest thing for me about all these is that the vast these marches is that the vast number of people going on these marches are actually marching on behalf of the aggressors, not the victims, because the victims , of course, 1400 israeli people who were brutally slaughtered by a bunch of savages who invaded their country and did said they wanted to get rid of all jewish people. but the protesters are out there marching for those who
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brutalised is reilly's. >> can you say that nobody's . >> can you say that nobody's. >> can you say that nobody's. >> no, they aren't. they're not marching in support of israel. are they an israel ? are the are they an israel? are the victims here? israeli people are the victims. >> what, stephanie , they're not >> what, stephanie, they're not marching for hamas either. >> they're marching for palestinians. >> yes, they have. >> yes, they have. >> i'm palestinian is hamas. >> i know, but they're two separate entities. >> i know, but they're two sepwell, entities. >> i know, but they're two sepwell, you:ies. >> i know, but they're two sepwell, you say that, but you >> well, you say that, but you can't you can't ban them as one. hang on. palestinian people voted hamas to run gaza in 2005. they chose them as their representatives. okay. i'm sure a majority of palestinian people have not agreed with what hamas has done on october 7th. >> but is it in poor taste to go on marches days and weeks after october the seventh, the biggest single attack on jews since the holocaust? >> i think what's been poor taste is that over the past few weeks, we've these very weeks, we've seen these very distressing images from palestine of small children who have been killed in their thousands, people who've lost their homes because of hamas,
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because hamas have weaponized civilians , haven't they, as well civilians, haven't they, as well because israel as well. >> but israel dropped leaflets in the aftermath of the 7th of october saying head south and hamas blocked the roads and said, don't go anywhere. stay where you are, where you are. surely end, are surely hamas are in the end, are the aggressor. of course they are. >> they are the aggressor. but this about the normal this is also about the normal human being in palestine who has nowhere to go . where do they go nowhere to go. where do they go overnight ? i've been thinking overnight? i've been thinking recently, that happened recently, say if that happened to someone said, you've to us and someone said, you've got 24 hours to leave your house and everything, you got 24 hours to leave your house and everything , you know. and everything, you know. >> unsettling . it's my >> yeah, unsettling. it's my mother in law. she was she was she lived in northern cyprus and she lived in northern cyprus and she was only a young girl when she was only a young girl when she and she was only a young girl when she you've and she was only a young girl when she you've two and she was only a young girl when she you've two hours and she was only a young girl when she you've two hours to and said, you've got two hours to leave. this, leave. but i just on this, i just want to change the narrative bit. it's not narrative a little bit. it's not about what's happening . it's about what's happening. it's a great unrest at the moment. it's the winter of discontent. and i work lot people work with a lot of young people and are scared. and they are scared. they're suffering with anxiety because they're that terminology they're using that terminology is going to be world war iii. a lot people are marching is lot of people are marching is because of that unrest . they're because of that unrest. they're not educated about world war ii.
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because of that unrest. they're not yit's:ated about world war ii. because of that unrest. they're not yit's not. about world war ii. because of that unrest. they're not yit's not. times world war ii. because of that unrest. they're not yit's not. times haved war ii. and it's not. times have changed. and it quite changed. and i find it quite difficult adapt and difficult to adapt to that. and when educate people when you try to educate people about about about world war ii, about freedom , about marching, there's freedom, about marching, there's such a great unrest and a lot of people angry people are angry about everything. whoa . everything. whoa, whoa, whoa. every tv, understand ? every day on tv, you understand? >> and they know that world war ii involved the holocaust. every body knows that. that's why israel exists as a country. israel exists as a country. israel exists as a country. israel exists as a country because of the holocaust , which because of the holocaust, which took place during world war ii. that's the only reason it's there. and when you talk about them leaflets , i read them dropping leaflets, i read a report, remarkable report report, a remarkable report today that israeli army, the today that the israeli army, the idf, israeli defence forces , are idf, israeli defence forces, are ringing people up on their phones and saying, we're going to have to attack the homes you live in. you have two hours to leave. it's horrible. well, nobody the israelis nobody nobody gave the israelis any warning when they were slaughtered on october the 7th. >> israelis don't take >> the israelis don't take hostages. they don't behead babies. >> they don't human >> they don't scorch human remains. it feels like remains. when it feels like that's what they're doing . that's what they're doing. >> but not the palestinian people . hamas, you know? people. hamas, do you know?
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>> yeah , it feels that's >> yeah, it feels like that's what they're at moment what they're doing at the moment because are they to because how close are they to eradicating hamas then from a month ago ? month ago? >> i don't think they're any much closer , but we've seen much closer, but we've seen about over, god knows, thousands of babies, young women , young of babies, young women, young men, horrible people who have died why? why? died. why? but why? >> i'll tell you why. why? because hamas military leaders live underneath hospitals. they literally live underneath schools underneath hospitals in 300 miles of tunnels. >> so, mike, are you telling me are you telling me all of the citizens in palestine have to die now? >> of course they don't . but >> of course they don't. but what is that's what what i'm saying is that's what they eradicate. they have to eradicate. >> what's happening ? >> what's happening? >> what's happening? >> many germans died in the >> how many germans died in the second stop hitler and. >> tragic and horrific. yeah but hitler had to be defeated. are there not parallels? surely mark, there must be another way. >> there is >> there must be. there is another way. >> the constitution >> look, the hamas constitution says we have only one aim in life. that is to wipe out israel. if they don't get rid israel. so if they don't get rid of hamas, they're going to get
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wiped out. so they go after hamas and hamas hide amongst people in hospitals and schools. >> is there >> chris, is there a is there a is there a other way? >> yeah, of course. >> yeah, of course. >> what is that other way? >> what is that other way? >> you know, this may sound rather poetic, but i think we've got to got enough powerful leaders to come , enough is come together and say, enough is enough. this . stop enough. stop, stop this. stop this catastrophe. stop innocent people. >> hamas, stop, chris, because they have hamas chief determination to wipe out israel. the reason you can't have a ceasefire is because hamas would not recognise a ceasefire. they've said that they said there'll be more. october the 7th. so what are the israelis supposed to do? they said again and again was their spokesman last week. >> he said that it's >> and he said that it's a valiant and justice fight >> and he said that it's a valiant but justice fight >> and he said that it's a valiant but listen,e fight >> and he said that it's a valiant but listen, ofght >> and he said that it's a valiant but listen, of course , battle. but listen, of course, the bottom line is there are no winners. and we can hope a winners. and we can hope for a diplomatic sooner diplomatic solution sooner rather . here it is rather than later. here it is friday. so should we have a bit of a jolly story? right. and i'm loving this one. chris wild. it's not it's poor noel it's not it's not. poor old noel gallagher's divorce might cover that sec, well done. gallagher's divorce might cover that dailysec, well done. gallagher's divorce might cover that daily star well done. gallagher's divorce might cover that daily star forwell done. gallagher's divorce might cover that daily star for spotting e. gallagher's divorce might cover that daily star for spotting this the daily star for spotting this one. hallelujah supermarket replaces tills
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replaces psycho self—serve tills with some actual people now. well done. to katie, jess marie , well done. to katie, jess marie, ria and the gang for finding out it was in fact, booth supermarket. do you know booths ? supermarket. do you know booths? >> i know of it. it's quite naughty . >> i know of it. it's quite naughty. it's quite a posh place. lottie here. it's kind of posh of a waitrose booths. >> where are they situated? >> where are they situated? >> north. north pass anywhere past leicester. >> they're pretty smart. >> they're pretty smart. >> they? yeah. apparently >> they're pretty smart. >> very hey? yeah. apparently >> they're pretty smart. >> very expensive apparently so. very expensive move. >> look . well done >> okay. and look. well done then. so you will get human then. so you will get a human being to swipe you know, purchases. >> finally finally . purchases. >> finally finally. i don't purchases. >> finally finally . i don't want >> finally finally. i don't want that. oh yeah. >> but you want human beings behind a counter looking at what i buy and judge being judged . i buy and judge being judged. >> me trying to hide, trying to hide michael but i'm telling you, i'm an ace. >> i'm swiping all my groceries, get in and get out. >> is it. it breaks down about eight times and you end up spending two hours in. it's not for me. and also , michael, use for me. and also, michael, use it properly. >> when a self checkout, >> when you use a self checkout, how often does it approval how often does it say approval needed? time .
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needed? exactly? oh, every time. >> yeah, quite often. but. but i'm smarter than the average bean i i'm smarter than the average bear. i do is with the case bear. what i do is with the case of that goes first. and of wine that goes first. and then while you're getting the rest the done, rest of the stuff done, the woman's flashing woman's watching the flashing light. she comes over, puts her ticket on it, and you're home and clear. and drying clear. >> about human >> it's all about human interaction. thank you. yeah. this what we need more this is what we need more than ever society . ever in society. >> i haven't got to listen >> i haven't got time to listen to woman behind the counter to a woman behind the counter saying, oh , isn't weather saying, oh, isn't the weather nice ? having a nice day ? i nice today? having a nice day? i don't want small talk. i don't want no small talk. >> that's also someone's >> but that's also someone's livelihood. is someone livelihood. that is someone getting to that so getting paid to do that job. so more we give these machines power, people who do you power, that's people who do you know mike needs ? know what mike needs? >> mike needs hug, i think. >> mike needs a hug, i think. no, >> mike needs a hug, i think. n0, , >> mike needs a hug, i think. no, , no, >> mike needs a hug, i think. n0, , no, no. no, no, no, no, no, no. >>— no, no, no, no, no, no. >> you, steph . that's >> thank you, steph. that's right. remember , right. remember, remember, somebody's got to install the machine the machine and maintain the machine. that a job. okay machine. that is a job. okay brilliant stuff. >> maria, i'm going give >> maria, i'm going to give you a reminder policy. a reminder of the tax policy. yell when you get it, yell that to me when you get it, please, going please, because i'm going to quickly listen, quickly mention that. so listen, folks, we've a really, folks, we've got a really, really big part to very, really big part to come. very, very excited about this. got more plus my pundits more front pages plus my pundits
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will nominating will be nominating their headune will be nominating their headline heroes and back page zeros the day, including the zeros of the day, including the beatles and some mike rowley and also suella braverman and others . so, look, we've got some great, great stories to come. plus, i have been asking you in an exclusive mark dolan tonight people's poll , if he enters the people's poll, if he enters the jungle, which my understanding is that he will will nigel farage win? i'm a celebrity. the results are in. i shall reveal all
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next well, look , we're worried about well, look, we're worried about what's going to happen this weekend for the remembrance sunday. armistice day sunday. and armistice day memorial . well, will there be memorial. well, will there be disruption? will there be trouble ? will this from john trouble? will this from john mark, want to see any mark, i don't want to see any children but as mike porky children dead, but as mike porky parry a father and parry says, as a father and grandfather, those evil ,
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grandfather, those evil, murderous dictators went in and chopped off babies heads and even put one in the oven. can you imagine that ? and it says, you imagine that? and it says, what this country is what direction this country is going in today. they cannot respect taking two days off. they could have done any other day chose to do it. when we day but chose to do it. when we remember our war dead. it is ridiculous, john speaks for ridiculous, says john speaks for many . kerr says , hi, mark. ridiculous, says john speaks for many. kerr says , hi, mark. i'm many. kerr says, hi, mark. i'm sorry, but i do not have sympathy for people who cheered when a murdered israeli girl's body was dragged through the streets of palestine . and streets of palestine. and stephanie is talking nonsense . a stephanie is talking nonsense. a lot of the palestinians support hamas. okay what about this very nice supermarket at northern supermarket booths? forgive me for not knowing about it. i need to head up to one because apparently they're very nice. they are clitheroe and they are at clitheroe and macclesfield . not sure buxton , macclesfield. not sure buxton, says sonia, but they've done a very good thing, which is they've got rid of the self—service checkouts. so you get a human being to sell you your . now today we your shopping. now today we conducted an exclusive mark
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dolan tonight people's poll. we've been asking if he enters the jungle, which it's my understanding he will. well, nigel farage win. i'm a celebrity. 62% say yes. 38% say no. he will not. okay let's have a look at one last headline and it's the daily express. always a good read. prime minister's poignant armistice day message to the nation . remembrance is to the nation. remembrance is sacred. a moment of unity of shared british values. michael l has rishi sunak been a little quiet over this affair ? quiet over this affair? >> well, i think rishi sunak has not shown what i regard as the cold, hard steel of leadership. okay because he's vacillated between been whether or not i should actually sack suella braverman and whether i shouldn't . what will that do for shouldn't. what will that do for the for me on the back benches and frankly , in a situation like and frankly, in a situation like this , for instance, mrs. this, for instance, mrs. thatcher would have either bang
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chopped the minister involved or she'd have issued a public statement and said, i entirely agree. i entirely agree with my home secretary, but she wouldn't have gone down the middle. and, you , i saw a load of rishi you know, i saw a load of rishi sunak people today saying the usual they say, and that usual thing. they say, and that is, well, it is not the words i would have used. that's a complete cop out, isn't it? you know, why don't you just say you agree you agree? agree or you don't agree? >> it's a it's a sort >> i agree. it's a it's a sort of— >> i agree. it's a it's a sort of weasel words, isn't it? let's look sun newspaper look at the sun newspaper exclusive stars deal settled. i don't know. jonathan if you've got the sun there, but if you have a chance, grab it for us if you can. this is noel gallagher, have a chance, grab it for us if you céonehis is noel gallagher, have a chance, grab it for us if you céone of is noel gallagher, have a chance, grab it for us if you céone of theioel gallagher, have a chance, grab it for us if you céone of the mostiallagher, have a chance, grab it for us if you céone of the most famousr, who's one of the most famous musicians the world. of musicians in the world. of course, of one half of oasis. he's made a few quid over the years, afraid he's minus years, but i'm afraid he's minus a few quid now because the headune a few quid now because the headline mega divorce headline is no mega divorce millions and a house for sarah. that's right. oasis legend noel gallagher has finally reached a mega expensive settlement in his divorce from sarah mcdonald. his former wife is expected to get
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as much as £20 million, plus their £8 million mansion in hampshire . noel, who is 56, hampshire. noel, who is 56, partied with bono in vegas to celebrate whilst sarah, who's 52, went to ibiza. oh how the other half live. i love it . other half live. i love it. listen, the interesting thing about this, stephanie, is that yes , he's a rich man, but but he yes, he's a rich man, but but he won't have enjoyed writing that cheque for 20 million, will he ? cheque for 20 million, will he? >> i think would have >> i think he would have actually, because, know, actually, because, you know, this was a couple who were in love is the love at one point. that is the mother of his children. i mother of his children. so i think he's going to i hope they've got children together. but i think they i think they do. >> yeah. they've got at least one. couple. one. i think a couple. >> and have to these >> and you do have to end these kind profile marriages kind of high profile marriages with money. you know, in hollywood, they're quite lucky because they're quite saved by prenups where if you're over here, don't really have that here, you don't really have that security. and we're talking about here. he's about noel gallagher here. he's quite know , quite a wealthy man. you know, so he's going to want to make sure that she well sure that she is well settled for rest of her life.
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for the rest of her life. >> do you think that prenup >> do you think that a prenup was involved? if it's 20 million? because i mean, don't you sort split your wealth you sort of split your wealth down the and he's worth down the middle and he's worth more isn't he? down the middle and he's worth mo well, isn't he? down the middle and he's worth mo well, that's�*t he? down the middle and he's worth mo well, that's why? down the middle and he's worth mo well, that's why i think >> well, so that's why i think he's quite lucky this, he's been quite lucky with this, because much because he could have paid much more to her. so they have more to her. so they must have had something in place. and you know what? she didn't know what? maybe she didn't press more because you can press for more because you can get women who can mutual get some women who can mutual respect. scornful will and will literally take half the. yeah. take them to the cleaners . take them to the cleaners. >> seen settlements of up >> we've seen settlements of up to £350 million, usually from a russian oligarch or an american billionaire. but those sort of settlements have been. >> chris, is it ethical for her to walk away with that much cash, given that he that cash, given that he made that money music work? money through music work? >> yeah. do you know what i mean? my wife, she looks after my kids and although i'm not worth millions and millions, but if i was and would want to if i was and i would want to give her half to make sure my kids safe. of course. kids are safe. of course. >> briefly, stephanie , he was >> briefly, stephanie, he was really this woman. >> briefly, stephanie, he was r> briefly, stephanie, he was r> briefly, stephanie, he was r> briefly, stephanie, he was r
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yealife. he had problemsove of interview after interview going, yealife. he had problems withf my life. he had problems with the previous lady. yeah. meg, meg, and matthews but these meg, meg and matthews but these two, it looked like the ultimate showbiz marriage. i was surprised showbiz marriage. i was suerell, that's the with >> well, that's the thing with showbiz marriages , mark. when showbiz marriages, mark. when they in front of the they go outside in front of the cameras, united cameras, they put a united front. no one really knows front. but no one really knows what happens behind closed doors, how knows what happens behind closed doors . behind closed doors. >> how smart was sir paul mccartney because he's a billionaire. and kevin , he got billionaire. and kevin, he got and he got away with £30 million and he got away with £30 million and he's almost a billionaire, isn't he? he's a billionaire . isn't he? he's a billionaire. got even my hero. >> elton john got a divorce and a lovely lady, renate blauel. she only took a couple of million. he said that she would have cleaners, have taken him to the cleaners, but . fair play. but she didn't. so fair play. listen, now listen, let's have a look. now at headline, of the at your headline, heroes of the day , michael. hoo hooi well, at your headline, heroes of the day , been el. hoo hooi well, at your headline, heroes of the day , been talking hooi well, at your headline, heroes of the day , been talking aboutvell, at your headline, heroes of the day , been talking about pop we've been talking about pop music. so who's your hero? we've been talking about pop mu the so who's your hero? we've been talking about pop mu the beatles. your hero? we've been talking about pop mu the beatles have hero? we've been talking about pop mu the beatles have toero? we've been talking about pop mu the beatles have to be. >> the beatles have to be. >> the beatles have to be. >> they've got a number one record 60 years after their first one. >> how about that? okay, now and then retrieved, of course, from old tapes put together by john lennon. but for me, the beatles are everything that music is and
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they are my heroes . they are my heroes. >> well, indeed. i got in big trouble with tony blackburn last week on his radio show. he's ranting about me because i posed the question, are they overrated? >> oh, they overrated . >> oh, they overrated. >> oh, they overrated. >> but i'm pleased to reassure mr blackburn we debated it. and the answer was no, they're not. they are the greatest band of all time. they are. and i've got to i love ringo and i love to say, i love ringo and i love paul to say, i love ringo and i love paul. and i'm so glad they're still making still with us. yes, still making great music. yes. >> remember, they >> i agree. and remember, they brought berlin wall brought down the berlin wall once youngsters of russia once the youngsters of russia suddenly started receiving smuggled in music from the west. the only thing they wanted to listen to was the beatles . and listen to was the beatles. and the more they listened to it, the more they listened to it, the more they realised the west is a better place than the east. bnng is a better place than the east. bring down the wall. you bring down the wall. there you go. well, power >> okay, well, let's power through can, folks. through these if we can, folks. now, hero the now, stephanie, your hero of the day. now, stephanie, your hero of the day it's the hollywood actors >> it's the hollywood actors that by their guns and that stood by their guns and they made sure they got a good deal from all these powerhouses such netflix , amazon, who such as netflix, amazon, who have the to money pay actors
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what they're worth. it's okay if you're leonardo dicaprio , but if you're leonardo dicaprio, but if you're leonardo dicaprio, but if you're at the bottom of the chain, people been chain, these people have been suffering. well done to them. suffering. so well done to them. they finally struck a deal. >> chris, briefly , your >> amen. chris, briefly, your headline, hero. >> yeah. just quickly, kid , >> yeah. just quickly, this kid, this james copeland, this student, james copeland, who spent his student and who spent his student loan and buying a house, then he bought another and bought another house and bought another, multi another, has become a multi millionaire. said millionaire. and he said students waste all their money on . what on drink partying. what a productive lad. yeah michael, i love this story. >> we don't have long for it, love this story. >> youron't have long for it, love this story. >> your backiave long for it, love this story. >> your back page)ng for it, love this story. >> your back page baddie.t, but your back page baddie. >> it's the parents of any >> well, it's the parents of any child in bristol was allowed child in bristol who was allowed to stay off school today and go to stay off school today and go to a palestinian protest march . to a palestinian protest march. and children were actually heard chanting the from the river to the sea. how can you allow kids under 11? the report said under 11 getting involved in that it doesn't matter the right two wrongs. kids at 11 should be involved in political debate like that. don't understand like that. they don't understand it . well, you go. well, >> well, there you go. well, listen, tell you that listen, let me tell you that stephanie's sir mark stephanie's baddie was sir mark rowley, is the met police rowley, who is the met police chief, not happy there, and
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chris suella braverman , i can't chris suella braverman, i can't imagine why can i thank my brilliant pundits ? i thought i brilliant pundits? i thought i don't know if you agree. i'm sure you will. but they were brilliant. great. really enjoyed their while their company. chris while stephanie queen of all stephanie takyi queen of all media parry . most media and mike porky parry. most importantly, my importantly, thanks to my amazing team. katie , maria amazing team. jess, katie, maria , lottie and of course , the , lottie and of course, the brilliant director of the show. marvellous jonathan. i'm back tomorrow at nine headliners is
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next >> good evening. i'm ray addison in the newsroom . our top in the newsroom. our top stories. the home secretary has expressed her full backing for the met police ahead of the armistice weekend during a meeting with sir mark rowley. suella braverman told the police
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chief she was confident that any criminality will be dealt with robustly. the force says an exclusion zone will be in place covering areas, including whitehall and horse guards. parade effectively banning those on pro—palestine marches. parade effectively banning those on pro—palestine marches . the on pro—palestine marches. the prime minister is urging protesters to respect the commemorations as well. rishi sunak faces continued calls to sack the home secretary. she defied sack the home secretary. she defied downing street by writing an article accusing the police of playing favourites with pro—palestinian protesters . the pro—palestinian protesters. the police federation described her comments as unacceptable . two comments as unacceptable. two teenagers have been charged with racially aggravated criminal damage after free palestine was sprayed onto the cenotaph in rochdale . one has also been rochdale. one has also been charged with theft after poppy wreaths were taken from the base. detective chief inspector stuart round said the damage has caused emotional distress in the local community. israel's
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military says more than 100,000 palestinian teens have moved from north to south gaza in the last two days. tens of thousands are thought to have made the journey today after the israel defence forces opened an evacuation corridor . the evacuation corridor. the deadune evacuation corridor. the deadline for that is over and it's not yet clear when the next pause in fighting will begin . pause in fighting will begin. now west has scrapped about £7.6 million in potential payments to dame alison rose over her role in the nigel farage de—banking scandal. the former chief executive had been in line for an exit package of more than 10 million, but the board is now only giving her about 15% of that. dame alison says she's pleased that the bank cleared her of misconduct. but gb news presenter nigel farage says she failed in her duties. >> she broke every rule in the financial conduct authority rulebook. she breached my confidentiality , she told confidentiality, she told a complete lie about my financial

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