tv Headliners GB News November 14, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am GMT
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his promise to do betraying his promise to do whatever it takes to stop the small boat crossings and by failing to override human rights concerns about the rwanda plan. she also urged the prime minister to change course urgently accusing him of leading the conservative cvs to record the conservative (ivs to record election defeats . shadow election defeats. shadow minister for international development lisa nandy, said the british public deserve better. >> suella bravermans letter is just the latest instalment in a tory psychodrama thats been playing out over the last 13 years. holding the rest of the country to ransom while the tories fight among themselves. this reshuffle was meant to be the moment when rishi sunak reset his leadership when he signalled to the country that he stands for change. but with the return of david cameron and the ongoing row with suella braverman , i think all he served braverman, i think all he served to do is just show that this is a tory government that is out of ideas, energy , lisa nandy ideas, out of energy, lisa nandy there is well, the governments announced today sanctions will
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be put against four hamas leaders in the uk and two of the terror groups, financiers . terror groups, financiers. >> it's actually one of david cameron's first moves as foreign secretary. he took up the post yesterday . they'll be made yesterday. they'll be made subject to travel bans, asset freezes and arms embargoes that prohibit the sale of weapons to any of those individuals. prohibit the sale of weapons to any of those individuals . the any of those individuals. the governments considering making the chickenpox vaccine available on the nhs following a recommendation by science artists, the joint committee on vaccination and immunisation says the jab should be given to youngsters in two doses when they're 12 months and 18 months old. it says data from other countries suggest the vaccine would dramatically reduce circulating cases of chickenpox and prevent the most severe cases in children in now the liverpool football striker luis diaz has had an emotional reunion with his father in colombia after the 58 year old football coach was kidnapped earlier this month. in a post on
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social media this evening, the colombia football federation published pictures of the family's reunion showing diaz hugging and kissing his tearful father, who at one point had been held at gunpoint. diaz's parents were snatched off the street in a case which shocked both british and colombian fans with the kidnappers demanding a ransom. diaz's mum was freed almost immediately, but diaz's dad was held for 12 days before being released . two un and being released. two un and church officials . the player church officials. the player missed two of liverpool's matches whilst his father was being held, but came off the bench for a game and scored against luton on november the 5th. and lastly , his majesty the 5th. and lastly, his majesty the king has been celebrating his birthday today. his 75th birthday, and he launched an initiative to support charities feeding families with unwanted films and they had a little surprise for him as well. happy birthday to you. >> happy birthday to you.
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>> happy birthday to you. >> king charles treated to a rendition of happy birthday from the oxfordshire community, where he launched the coronation food project alongside queen camilla. then early this evening, the monarch also hosted a reception for 400 nurses and midwives at buckingham palace to highlight the work done over the decades . the work done over the decades. as the nhs celebrates its . 75th as the nhs celebrates its. 75th anniversary . had a very happy anniversary. had a very happy birthday from us all at gb news. your majesty , across the uk on your majesty, across the uk on tv , on digital radio and on your tv, on digital radio and on your smart speaker, this is gb news, britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> hello and welcome to headliners. i'm simon evans, joining me tonight to go through wednesday's top stories. >> we have two top comedians, josh howie and leo kearse. >> good evening, gentlemen. how are you.7 >> are you? >> yeah, good, thanks.
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>> yeah, good, thanks. >> all right . >> excellent. all right. >> excellent. all right. >> well, let's crack on. >> well, let's crack on. >> of this fake banter. >> none of this fake banter. >> none of this fake banter. >> just none of us in the mood for it. >> november. daily mail to kick us off. >> he gave me manolos. >> he gave me manolos. >> no, sorry. >> no, sorry. >> that's not the main headline. >> that's not the main headline. >> we deal and you broke >> we had a deal and you broke it. >> suella tells pm looking tousled and bed headed there in their front page photograph i news review revenge served hot and inflation coming down mirror tories are revolting. that's still with suella the times pm lied to me and betrayed britain. >> there is the woman scorned express war is declared suella accuses rishi of betraying the nafion accuses rishi of betraying the nation . and finally the daily nation. and finally the daily star break ranks. as ever tories in a tizz hand bagged well, it's the same story, but a different graphic. that's the front pages .
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graphic. that's the front pages. so in reality we have very little choice about which story to deal with first, second and third. josh howie. >> but we do have a choice of the photos. >> okay. which one are going with? >> we're m- with? >> we're to go with the >> we're going to go with the mail with her. sort like, as mail with her. sort of like, as you sort of tussled you say, her sort of tussled hair, a little bit of bare shoulder. >> yes. >> yes. >> you know, a deal >> yes. >> you know, we had a deal and you broke it. suella tells pm rishi hits says he rishi hits back and says he believes actions, not words, believes in actions, not words, which says which is actually what she says in . you don't do any in the letter. you don't do any actions. and so, yeah, pretty much of it. she's much the opposite of it. she's timed to come out so because timed it to come out so because today, depending on when you're watching this tomorrow today is going be the results of the going to be the results of the supreme court. whether miranda can . so she wanted that can go ahead. so she wanted that to maximum impact. and to have the maximum impact. and it's damning. she's it's pretty damning. and she's basically saying that not basically saying that he's not getting with and it turns out getting on with and it turns out they had like a private agreement, sort a agreement, sort of sort of a blair brownie type deal. >> was quite a specific >> it was quite a specific letter as well, wasn't it? it wasn't just throwing wasn't just like throwing insults some insults around. she made some quite accusations and quite specific accusations and specifically, about specifically, as you say, about the which she the supreme court, which she doesn't feel that they've gone
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in. well armoured and prepared and have they feel and have no they feel vulnerable. no, exactly. yeah. yeah had never he yeah she says he had never he never any intention of never had any intention of taking action required to taking the action required to stop which you do sort stop the boats which you do sort of that he of get the impression that he didn't hasn't in any didn't because he hasn't in any way. hasn't done anything. way. he hasn't done anything. >> have >> none of the plans have actually to fruition . the actually come to fruition. the best like rented best he's done is like rented a barge put off the south coast. >> well, the accusation, i suppose, and she's very, very nearly made it explicit is that this whole rwanda thing was supposed to be a kind of a dramatic like like a storm, like a headline grabbing thing, which he knew would never come off as if he'd almost intended it to be just a completely a farrago because was not willing to because he was not willing to take action to deal with take the action to deal with the echr . echr. >> t seems it seems echr. >> seems it seems unfair >> and it seems it seems unfair that fired for that she's been fired for telling truth . i mean, you telling the truth. i mean, you know, i understand politicians have she's have to play politics, but she's you know, she's convictions you know, she's got convictions and she not not police convictions , but she she convictions, but she she criticised the police , criticised the police, ironically, you know, saying that they've got a two tier policing system, which is, of obvious to anybody watching the police of marches.
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police policing of the marches. you've freely you've got people freely chanting anti—semitic , genocidal chanting anti—semitic, genocidal chants . and some of them are chants. and some of them are being started by police employees , police advisers. employees, police advisers. >> we felt it for well, as long as this program has been running, certainly over two years now, it's been a regular complaint that the met police are not fit for purpose , that are not fit for purpose, that the police seem to be. one moment. i think nick refers to it as a narco tyranny , which is, it as a narco tyranny, which is, i think, an american sort of concept whereby on the one hand, you have a police force which allows open shoplifting to go ahead and rioting and things get burned down, and yet also you get visited for posting an unpleasant facebook. >> yeah, crazy. it's >> yeah, it's crazy. it's a shame. i was just warming to her. yeah don't worry. >> she'll be leader soon. so >> she'll be leader soon. so >> well, i do wonder now at this point, i mean i don't think she will be the leader of the tory party in exile. i don't think she's quite. i do wonder she's quite. but i do wonder whether she might join one of the parties. mean, the breakaway parties. i mean, she easily elevate she could very easily elevate the and was it reform is
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the esteem. and was it reform is one of them isn't it is a major one. i wonder whether they they'd have a suella sized hole. >> yeah. yeah. although she might know given might not want to you know given that you're a bit of trouble remembering that is no remembering remember that is no sign of anything these days. juggernaut >> what have we got of any of the other papers? got anything else to add to any of it? no >> well, you've got the times. yeah. >> what have you got in the times there. yeah. >> so she says the prime minister lied to me and betrayed britain, which is the essence of the letter. mean, she really the letter. i mean, she really does. all out. there's does. she goes all out. there's not. i mean they'll be scraping rishi the with shovel. >> and she does specifically say and i there's some >> and she does specifically say and to i there's some >> and she does specifically say and to it. i there's some >> and she does specifically say and to it. i mean, here's some >> and she does specifically say and to it. i mean, withs some >> and she does specifically say and to it. i mean, with the me truth to it. i mean, with the police felt at the very police thing, i felt at the very least was identifying least she was identifying something huge of something that a huge part of the shared, that the nation shared, that that suspicion and it needed addressing . but she addressing. but also she addresses the 2019 majority, bofis addresses the 2019 majority, boris johnson won on a certain a raft of policies and some very, very specific sentiments were underpinning those. and again, rishi has not been legitimately elected really. i mean, you
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know, it's a second and third order effect, isn't it? his his premiership? >> yeah, absolutely. i mean, the when boris was defenestrate and they had the internal election to get the next person that wasn't legitimate. but then even the person they picked from that didn't get to be prime minister or they got like, you know, a couple they managed couple of weeks and they managed to to make some to they managed to make some make some things happen in the background and get rid it. make some things happen in the bacbutiund and get rid it. make some things happen in the bacbut it's and get rid it. make some things happen in the bacbut it's and it's rid it. make some things happen in the bacbut it's and it's rid it's. >> but it's also it's just it's damning criticism , he's damning that her criticism, he's just you say , just not getting, as you say, stuff done really if they stuff done and really if they have any chance it's about taking bold action and he's just trying everybody happy. trying to make everybody happy. >> back to the >> he's going back to the password cameron it's exactly password. cameron it's exactly it's like and he's lost these by elections, by massive, you know, so it's i don't think it's going to win him any seats. >> i mean just i don't know but but pure politic you know real politic or whatever. he's only he's number of people who he's the number of people who are be persuaded that are going to be persuaded that that they're safe rishi that they're safe with rishi because got david cameron. because he's got david cameron. and going back to and course we're going back to a pre brexit version of the party. they compared to the they are minimal compared to the number who are just going to say
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a on both your houses. a plague on both your houses. yeah. and exit stage right . yeah. and ah exit stage right. and either go and support reform or just and either go and support reform orjust stay home. to be orjust stay at home. to be honest, you an honest, when you have an election middle election in the middle of november, not november, it's not very difficult persuade people. difficult to persuade people. not inspires passion. not like he inspires passion. no, exactly. >> to be playing safe. >> he seems to be playing safe. he acting like keir he seems to be acting like keir starmer he's starmer just when he's completely position to completely the wrong position to have any chance of winning the next , he needs to next election, he needs to present some pretty radical change. >> basically, both of them fighting over the deckchair attendant . aren't they on the attendant. aren't they on the deck of the titanic? what have you got in the i? >> is that actually there is something else in the time. >> so the chief is >> so there's the nhs chief is chief pledged and of chief has pledged and of cervical cases. so cervical cancer cases. so they're going to do this by replacing women with trans men. so going to do with so they're going to do with cervixes or services . yes. cervixes or services. yes. altogether. but yeah, it's crazy. i mean, cervical cancer affects over 3000 women a year and kills 850 women a year. and it's been brought down 87. thanks to this this vaccine against hpv, which which as well
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as letting you drive lorries as it causes some sort of human papilloma virus and causes cervical cancer. >> i hadn't heard of it, i must admit. but obviously that is tremendously good news. i mean, it is extraordinary, actually, the medical advances that go on under the radar because we are very focussed obviously on this program and elsewhere on bad news. you know, obviously news. but you know, obviously fewer and fewer people die of such . such things. >> this is long term planning as well . so seeing the well. so you're seeing the fruition this of giving girl fruition of this of giving girl eight year old girls, the vaccine. are now seeing vaccine. you are now seeing what's happening. >> it's extraordinary things that by vaccines that can be treated by vaccines like is obviously the like malaria is obviously the most headline result . which most the headline result. which which. , exactly. but which. oh, yes, exactly. but only i mean within only 20 or 30 years ago it was it was one of those eye rolling moments. apparently among med students. somebody would always say, why can't a vaccine for can't we have a vaccine for malaria? oh, have to malaria? and the oh, i have to go through this again. it simply isn't and is isn't possible. and now it is extraordinary. so yes, can we go on to the ai now? >> and obviously, that's the
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main thing. revenge served hot. they are definitely getting less flattering , these photos of. but flattering, these photos of. but the big news, more good news, actually. inflation is set for seismic fall today or tomorrow. whenever you read this , below 5. whenever you read this, below 5. so it's going down from like 6.7 to 4.7. that's a pretty big drop. but the ai is very at pains to point out that it had nothing to do with sunak. yeah nothing to do with sunak. yeah no responsibility whatsoever. it's one of his five pledges, of course, was to halve the inflation, but it is good news. but then we've seen massive wage inflation terms of 7.7% over inflation in terms of 7.7% over the last few months. but then there was arguably a course correction and things . correction and things. >> one of those occasions when i really wished been in really wished i'd been in a unionised public sector kind of profession. but yes, i mean, it's still high 5% throughout most of my adult life it's been sort of 2 or 3% in the last 20 years anyway. >> yeah, we've heard a couple of decades of nice, non—inflationary, constant expansion , which is which is expansion, which is which is great. funny , you see great. but it's funny, you see people the on the i saw people on the on the i saw somebody on gb news saying, oh,
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but rises are still higher but price rises are still higher than it's like, than they were and it's like, yeah, we're not going yeah, we haven't we're not going to get deflation. >> we get and we don't >> we might get and we don't want either. don't want it either. yeah, we don't want it either. yeah, we don't want no it can stabilise want it. no if it can stabilise around that'd be great around 2 or 3, that'd be great stuff to get cheaper. well, there's poland. finally stuff to get cheaper. well, the|metro. poland. finally stuff to get cheaper. well, the|metro. leo poland. finally stuff to get cheaper. well, the|metro. leo so and. finally stuff to get cheaper. well, the|metro. leo so this finally stuff to get cheaper. well, the|metro. leo so this isnally stuff to get cheaper. well, the|metro. leo so this is the/ the metro. leo so this is the ice hockey death. >> there's been an arrest. the man who who skates up , who the man who who skates up, who the man who who skates up, who the man died . i don't know if man died. i don't know if obviously it's alive investigation now. so i've got to be careful how i refer to this. but if you've seen the video , i mean, he spins round as video, i mean, he spins round as blade goes up and slices open the other guy's throat. it's horrific. and assumed it was in canada something like that. canada or something like that. but apparently they've got ice hockey yeah, then hockey here now. but yeah, then they've unearthed a video of an old incident with the same kind of movement. so i mean, i guess for the police to get to this, this, this stage of arresting him for manslaughter, they're there's obviously some suspicion that it's not not accidental. >> well, there was a lot of
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speculation at the time. but as you say, we should probably be careful about that since it is now going to court. but as you say, horrific to watch really sickening. well, i think that'll do the front pages. we do us for the front pages. we are are going to a break now. afterwards we have kids cracking the have brand at the the whip. we have brand at the beeb and chickenpox parties. so last year we'll you
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issues are the cost of living crisis , paying their bills, crisis, paying their bills, feeling better . feeling better. >> and welcome back to headliners so on the other side of the house, leo, the express would have us believe that kingship is every bit as prone to mutiny as sunaks yeah, absolutely. >> it's the israel crisis that's caused caused ructions for him . caused caused ructions for him. so keir starmer is to sack every front bench rebel over the gaza ceasefire in brutal labour purge . so the labour leader is going to be poised to fire at least ten shadow ministers who support a ceasefire in gaza. i mean, it's weird. it looks like here's finally found his cronies. he can never pick a side. i mean,
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this is a guy who couldn't he can't mcdonald's. it can't order at mcdonald's. it takes about five hours and takes him about five hours and he just orders whoever the person front him is person in front of him is ordered. on an israel versus ordered. but on an israel versus hamas, he's he's come out firmly on the side of israel, on the side of on the side of civilisation, basically, which is potentially a necessarily a vote loser for him. >> but it is obviously the more problematic in terms of his is a vote loser for certainly some of the some of the legacy of the party from the corbyn years. >> i mean in 2019 85% of british muslims voted labour. you know, it was a huge. so you don't see that level of bias amongst any other religion. whereas now , you other religion. whereas now, you know, he's sort of rejecting that side things. and the that side of things. and the muslim very important that side of things. and the mllabour. very important that side of things. and the mllabour. replaced mportant to labour. it's replaced the white vote in white working class vote in northern towns. yeah but this is this an incredibly this is now an incredibly divisive issue. they've got, you know, of know, obviously a lot of muslims, a lot of woke leftists who or, you know, who support hamas or, you know, or certainly side or equivocate with hamas. but i think it'll
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make labour much more palatable to the sort of middle englanders that keir needs to win over to win the election. >> i mean, assuming it is a political calculation rather than a firm moral principle, and i'm quite willing assume that i'm quite willing to assume that i'm quite willing to assume that i think is probably correct. no i think is probably correct. no i think is probably correct. no i think exactly. >> someone's out i think exactly. >> numbersimeone's out i think exactly. >> numbers and ne's out i think exactly. >> numbers and realised out i think exactly. >> numbers and realised that»ut the numbers and realised that if he's to be remember when he's seen to be remember when like said, you know, like corbyn said, you know, let's sample to russia let's send the sample to russia to see what they if they say like was like that , that like that was like that, that people was anti—semitism people say it was anti—semitism that brought corbyn, it that brought down corbyn, it wasn't at it was that wasn't at all. or it was that moment when people saw what they could see clearly with their own eyes and go, wait a minute, this guy is an idiot. yeah. and obviously he's learned. keir starmer has learnt from those things. has actually things. he has actually been tough. on tough. he's been tough on anti—semitism. he's already kicked that kicked out corbyn any time that they try to the left or the far left of his party, he have acted up. he said to them, look, you sign this letter, you're gone. and he's done that before. now he hasn't actually fired anybody yet, but this is because the vote is going to come through.
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and the kings, the snp, are proposing a vote for the king's speech and but he is but he will follow through, no because follow through, no doubt because as they have worked out as you say, they have worked out the numbers, sure, and he the numbers, i'm sure, and he will absolutely alienate much more of middle england the will absolutely alienate much mmillion/iiddle england the will absolutely alienate much mmillion muslims.]land the 4 million muslims. >> you follow labour >> i mean, you follow labour more closely. do you do you have any people mind more closely. do you do you have any you people mind more closely. do you do you have any you think people mind more closely. do you do you have any you think he'sle mind more closely. do you do you have any you think he's thinking|d more closely. do you do you have any you think he's thinking of? that you think he's thinking of? i wouldn't be able to name names, but people like, names, but people who are like, he's he's got rid a lot he's got he's got rid of a lot of worst people already, but of the worst people already, but i mean, names the i mean, ten names on the frontbench who genuinely thinks. >> i think there's like much they're the they're much more like the second anyway. second tier people anyway. and also arguably to also they were there arguably to appease the left of the party. yes. in a way. get rid of them. and i think it's a good thing. maybe he'll get suella in over the times. >> josh, it's only a matter of time is time before steve coogan is ianed time before steve coogan is invited another casting invited to another casting session at the beeb. >> gosh , yeah. russell brand, >> oh gosh, yeah. russell brand, bbc investigates five complaints. was in the complaints. so this was in the good old days before hamas went and murdered 1200 israelis and despicable ways. remember russell brand ? the whole thing?
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yeah. >> so it was a big story. >> so it was a big story. >> it was a big story back in those in those halcyon days to complaints have been made more so since. so obviously it was a huge deal. every front page week or so news, we were sort of convinced it that there was going to be this sort of avalanche of complaint coming, pulled away. >> the struts that were holding it up. yeah, absolutely. >> all these people come forward it up. yeah, absolutely. >> iactually people come forward it up. yeah, absolutely. >> iactually ateople come forward it up. yeah, absolutely. >> iactually at thee come forward it up. yeah, absolutely. >> iactually at the bbc ne forward it up. yeah, absolutely. >> iactually at the bbc anyway rd it up. yeah, absolutely. >> iactually at the bbc anyway ,i and actually at the bbc anyway, it turns out two complaints have come . say they've come forward. say they've got five they're five complaints total. they're investigating two of them historical. was about four historical. one was about four years now two new ones years ago and now two new ones have in. they're not have come in. they're not sexually way. sexually related in any way. they're his they're just about his behaviour. so i'm just saying you might have expected more if i'm not saying he behaved savile a savile esque avalanche . a savile esque avalanche. >> no. or even the second order after savile, against all the other djs and sports presenters. >> now, that's not to say that his behaviour i agree with his behaviour and these ones that these these other things that
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have come forward before have been dealt with in a court of law anything that . no, law or anything like that. no, but saying that it but i'm just saying that it seemed was going to seemed like there was going to be hoo ha. and it be this big hoo ha. and it doesn't it has not materialised. >> and some the >> yeah. and some of the complaints like somebody complained for her complained that he asked for her sex and she felt uncomfortable. and, you know, that's that's terrible. that's how we get terrible. but that's how we get sex. you to be proactive sex. you got to be proactive about it. you've got you to about it. you've got you got to get out there and start asking some those tough some of those tough, tough questions. was. >> his % wasnt m— m wasn't it? i think >> his style wasn't it? i think anyone who came within 100 yards of must been aware that of him must have been aware that that how he that was kind of how he operated, you which operated, you know, which is, again, excuse again, obviously not to excuse any that went on that any behaviour that went on that did legally , as did transgress legally, but as you as kind of brash you say, as a kind of brash peacock a kind of individual, peacock of a kind of individual, you know, that was his shtick . you know, that was his shtick. >> i'm not. yeah, but >> i mean i'm not. yeah, but then this is his one of the people here, they're saying he made and misogyny made his explicit and misogyny stick shows. how were they allowed to be broadcast. that's what looking and what they're looking into. and you're this you're going, that's what this is. or whatever. it was a is. 2008 or whatever. it was a different . it's like different time. it's like saying, benny hill, how saying, how did benny hill, how how could they have done benny hill?
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>> w- w the 70s of his 2000. >> it was not that long ago. it was lad culture. >> it was i remember i was lad culture. >> it was i rememberi remember >> it was i remember i remember listening to russell brand on i think radio he used think it was radio two. he used to show on quite to have his show on now quite often gig a often driving to a gig on a saturday night. it was funny enough, and occasionally enough, and then occasionally you go, well, that's you kind of go, well, that's a bit strong for radio i do bit strong for radio two. i do remember this bit strong for radio two. i do re a,ember this bit strong for radio two. i do re a, youer this bit strong for radio two. i do re a, you know, this bit strong for radio two. i do re a, you know, i this bit strong for radio two. i do re a, you know, i shall this bit strong for radio two. i do re a, you know, i shall write this is a, you know, i shall write in. i remember him having david ikon a couple times ikon a couple of times and thinking odd for thinking that was a bit odd for radio two, but i think he regarded as more a uri regarded him as more like a uri geller character. regarded him as more like a uri gelratherracter. regarded him as more like a uri gelrather wasr. regarded him as more like a uri gelratherwasir. looking regarded him as more like a uri gelrather wasr. looking for >> rather was also looking for his future career. >> yeah, but at tim davie, i think is named in this story who is now the director general. yeah yeah. he seems to have heard russell brand for the first time. he's saying, i listen back and i was appalled . listen back and i was appalled. okay. yeah. okay telegraph now, leah wes streeting meeting is set to abolish the nhs by the sound of it. >> so yeah, league tables for the nhs under labour's reform boom or bust plan will be bust. >> then . >> then. >> then. >> yeah. i mean that would continue the trajectory. so wes streeting , the shadow health
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streeting, the shadow health secretary , will promise far more secretary, will promise far more transparency about poor performance and no more turning a blind eye to failure. just with the nhs. though the rest of the public sector can carry on failing. but yes, they're going to they're going sort of to they're going to sort of measure the performance. but this means hospital trusts this means the hospital trusts the hospitals marking the hospitals will be marking their and, their own homework and, you know, and know, measuring things and they can, know, statistics can be can, you know, statistics can be fudged. there's no fudged. and also, there's no it's if it will lead to it's not as if it will lead to any market pressures like people won't be choosing different won't be choosing a different hospital. you can't hospital. it's like you can't you're not generally is you're not generally there is some of team sent in some sort of team sent in or something. >> . >> is it. >> f- f— 5 send in a team, but >> yes, they send in a team, but that team sent in by the labour party. you get worse. party. so you get worse. >> well, that's true. it's going to be ofsted. why? imagine to be like ofsted. why? imagine it troubleshooter. it be like troubleshooter. i think there's ofsted. >> oh yeah. look the mess >> oh yeah. look at the mess and the education no the british education system. no ofsted have done a sterling job. can't wait do the hospitals. >> i don't mind paying taxes or paying >> i don't mind paying taxes or paying more taxes. point is, paying more taxes. the point is, well , no, you paying more taxes. the point is, well, no, you just assume from well, no, you just i assume from what talked about in what we've talked about in the past, just to sure what we've talked about in the pastget just to sure what we've talked about in the pastget good: to sure what we've talked about in the pastget good value to sure what we've talked about in the pastget good value for sure what we've talked about in the pastget good value for money.|re you get good value for money. yeah, the money
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yeah, that seems all the money comes me in some ways. comes back to me in some ways. >> well, it's a funny thing with the nhs though. i know traditionally we know traditionally we all we all know the the, you the idea that it's the, you know, unofficial know, it's the unofficial religion nhs and you religion of our nhs and you know, nurses all know, we clap the nurses and all that. i, have sensed a that. but i, i have sensed a real change since pandemic. real change since the pandemic. i people feel it's not fit i think people feel it's not fit for purpose and needs a really radical they're putting a lot radical as they're putting a lot more and then we more money into it and then we are the improvements are not seeing the improvements that we need. >> yeah, he's coming out >> yeah, i think he's coming out strong, he's coming out fighting. he's strong, he's coming out fightirto he's strong, he's coming out fightirto face he's strong, he's coming out fightirto face them he's strong, he's coming out fightirto face them down. 'sthink going to face them down. i think this is really good idea. it's this is a really good idea. it's going some level of going to show some level of accountability and also they're going to be judged the things that judging like that they're judging on, like waiting whatnot, which that they're judging on, like waihaven't whatnot, which that they're judging on, like waihaven't been whatnot, which that they're judging on, like waihaven't been we hatnot, which that they're judging on, like waihaven't been we haven'twhich that they're judging on, like waihaven't been we haven't hitch we haven't been we haven't hit the waiting times that we used to about ten years, to have for about ten years, like four hours or whatever. something 13 something happened about ten, 13 years and one thing i think years ago. and one thing i think is really encouraging efforts to prevent ill health is something they're judged they're going to be judged on. and economically out and that economically pays out a lot in the long run, lot more in the long run, although that although i don't know that i like living that society. like living in that society. >> it does work. preventative medicine and nudge campaigns in one it is one kind or another, but it is always slightly
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always that sort of slightly clammy that people are clammy feeling that people are tutting you you . tutting at you when you. >> but sort of makes it more >> but it sort of makes it more fun back brandy, fun knocking back brandy, knowing they definitely knowing that they definitely need sandwiches . need better bacon sandwiches. >> that's on the basis of a the royal sussex and the haywards heath. will one heath. i will tell you one thing, at the age of 50, i go to the hospital and to the doctors quite lot more the last few quite a lot more in the last few years i used to. i think years than i used to. i think there point in your there does come a point in your life when certain conditions start and this thing start cascading and this thing leads you suddenly leads to that thing you suddenly notice. up and it notice. it picks up and it enters consciousness . i enters your consciousness. i think in your 20s, 30s, 40s, even, barely think about it even, you barely think about it from one day to the next. >> far has >> your big thing so far has been sandwiches. been bacon sandwiches. >> yeah, >> bacon sandwiches and yeah, long queues and. and not happy telegraph now josh health officials are party poopers . officials are party poopers. >> yeah. chicken pox . >> yeah. chicken pox. >> yeah. chicken pox. >> chicken pox. >> chicken pox. >> chicken pox. i >> chicken pox. i say >> chicken pox. i say very sorry. a chicken pox vaccine to be offered to all babies and toddlers. this all relates to one of the front page stories, but less sexual. and it's an interesting thing. every all the stories about the pandemic have
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been the it's led to these increases in literacy and various other factors truancy and whatnot. this is slightly a good story in that it cut down on chicken pox because the kids weren't exposed to each other and they want to kind of exploit weren't exposed to each other and byy want to kind of exploit weren't exposed to each other and by pushing) kind of exploit weren't exposed to each other and by pushing through: exploit weren't exposed to each other and by pushing through this loit that by pushing through this vaccine, which is already being implemented for the last few decades america and canada decades in america and canada and various other places, possibly wiping out for possibly even wiping it out for good it can it does get good because it can it does get serious for a minority of kids, but also even young adults can get it . get it. >> well, the worry is because the reason kids to to the reason kids used to go to chicken parties and get it chicken pox parties and get it is fairly harmless, is because it's fairly harmless, if when you're young if tiresome when you're young and as your it's a great and as your party, it's a great party. but when you're older, you and it give you you get it and it can give you shingles. think , aren't it? shingles. i think, aren't it? which a lot nastier. which is a lot nastier. >> slate roof. yeah hey, you want de shingles . want a slate roof de shingles. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> they already had this vaccine. why weren't they giving it before? know it's slightly. >> well, maybe an >> well, maybe it's an administrative thing. maybe they need be but i think need to be older. but i think the is not enough. kids the point is not enough. kids have parties have got it anymore for parties to right. do you want to be viable. right. do you want i mean, it's bit like like
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i mean, it's a bit like like what was it , i mean, it's a bit like like what was it, glandular fever. do you remember that one where she used to go around at parties just before exam time? used to go around at parties justbut ore exam time? used to go around at parties justbut ore exansayre? used to go around at parties justbut ore exan say that there's >> but they all say that there's a less obviously immunity a lot less obviously immunity because larger pool because there is a larger pool of have it. so of people who don't have it. so it suddenly go crazy. oh, it could suddenly go crazy. oh, right. yeah, true. right. yeah, that's true. >> we'll remember >> well, we'll see. i remember it smell of galadriel. it well. the smell of galadriel. bleak now from deliveroo. bleak news now from deliveroo. leo. just pizza leo. and it's not just the pizza that's late. >> yes, this child labour in >> yes, this is child labour in the children rent food the uk. so children rent food delivery apps to work illegally . delivery apps to work illegally. so children as young as 15 are working as delivery app riders thanks to a black market trade in app accounts. so this is an investigation by the bbc. so justeat, deliveroo and uber eats. allow delivery eats. they allow delivery drivers to lend out their accounts. if you've got an accounts. if you've got an account to ride and deliver food and obviously then when you get your check that your account, they check that you're over 18 all rest you're over 18 and all the rest of it. but no, you can then just lend and they lend your account out and they leave to the riders to leave it up to the riders to make doing it make sure that they're doing it ethically, is a terrible ethically, which is a terrible idea i mean, the kid, idea because i mean, the kid, the was was 17. he was the kid here was was 17. he was a teenager , leo he died on
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a teenager, leo he died on a borrowed motorbike while working for the app. he was a total stranger. seems like a great kid. wanted to be kid. he wanted to be a millionaire, according to his stepfather. whatever it stepfather. and whatever it took, earn took, he just wanted to earn money and hustle. know, money and hustle. so, you know, a kid have a great kid would have been a great asset to the country, would have grown be would have grown up to be a brilliant guy. and sadly, his life's short. life's been been cut short. >> horrible because >> that is horrible because obviously, know, delivery obviously, you know, delivery drivers whatever drivers or riders or whatever they're do they're called, they do cut corners. had corners. i've actually had a couple very calls with couple of very close calls with them, they're them, you know, where they're trying you trying to undertake you, you know, and know, in the traffic and that kind thing, because can kind of thing, because they can make couple of quid make an extra couple of quid that they? that way, can't they? >> all i'd say is add to >> i mean, all i'd say is add to that, it's not that these apps have them encouraging it have let them or encouraging it or like they just or anything like that, they just haven't got the limitations they need obviously, need to stop it. now, obviously, hopefully they will. >> know >> funnily enough, i know somebody lot of money somebody who made a lot of money on deliveroo over somebody who made a lot of money on last)eliveroo over somebody who made a lot of money on last feweroo over somebody who made a lot of money on last few years. over somebody who made a lot of money on last few years. i over somebody who made a lot of money on last few years. i will over somebody who made a lot of money on last few years. i will have the last few years. i will have a and whether he can't a word and see whether he can't get his head around that's get his head around that. that's right. part two done. part right. part two is done. part three criminals, three fatherless criminals, childless fathers supersonic childless fathers and supersonic sex pests. we'll
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this new team. met >> welcome back to headliners . >> welcome back to headliners. so leo, we have the telegraph now and according to a prison reformer, even our woeful attempts at fatherhood are better than nothing. >> so yes, there are fears fatherlessness is fuelling crime. so family breakdown leads to higher levels of offending and antisocial behaviour, says prison reform our lord farmer. i'm guessing his ancestors were farmers at some point. pig farmers at some point. pig farmer ? yeah, there's research farmer? yeah, there's research that shows 75% of young offenders did not grow up with both parents. i don't think this is controversial, is it? >> this has been known for a long time. it's the single most strongest correlation, isn't it? >> yeah, it makes it makes its common well. i mean, common sense as well. i mean, this is the sort of liberalisation you liberalisation of the 60s, you know, get know, where people could get divorced and all the rest of it. it out great for middle it worked out great for middle class because, you know, class people because, you know, then the class people because, you know, thenthe the class people because, you know, thenthe life the class people because, you know, thenthe life that the class people because, you know, thenthe life that you the class people because, you know, thenthe life that you wanted. life, the life that you wanted. but for other people, it wasn't so great because, you know, the family structures break down all
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the bonds, the sort of cement of the bonds, the sort of cement of the that holds people the community that holds people together away . and the together went away. and the stats, the stats are pretty stark. pretty stark . yeah. so stark. pretty stark. yeah. so fatherless children are eight times more likely to be on the at risk register and 50 times more likely to die of an inflicted injury than those living with two biological parents was. i mean, i was raised by a single mum and i just sniffed of glue, but just sniffed a bit of glue, but well, they are obviously. >> issue >> i mean, it's a tricky issue to without being, as you to discuss without being, as you know, without treading on a landmine, because obviously single kids on single women who raise kids on their own are heroes for doing so encouraged to feel so. to be encouraged to feel that they're supported , you've that they're supported, you've got to be able to discuss it without putting any blame. >> some of them are just impossible to live with. >> course. but you've >> yes, of course. but you've got without got to discuss it without putting blame women. putting any blame on the women. it's men. it's a it's the it's the men. it's a bit when you do stand up bit like when you do a stand up gig- you bit like when you do a stand up gig. you ever done like gig. have you ever done like a tour date and it's half empty and to you're angry and you want to you're angry about you about it, but you can't complain. you end complain. you you end up complaining the who complaining to the people who have you know what i have come. do you know what i mean? like that's all i've done. >> but yeah, exactly as leo
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said. mean, these statistics said. i mean, these statistics are 50 times more are incredible. 50 times more likely die an injury, you likely to die of an injury, you know? mean, why. that's know? i mean, that's why. that's how around. i'm how i keep my wife around. i'm like, you leave me, the like, don't if you leave me, the kids are going to be 50 times more likely. there's another kids are going to be 50 times more iinteresting:here's another kids are going to be 50 times more iinteresting statisticiother really interesting statistic about visits about people who receive visits from family members whilst they're yeah, a 39% they're in prison. yeah, a 39% less likely to reoffend than the people who don't. it's people who don't. and it's actually the biggest . know, actually the biggest. you know, everyone give them everyone says, oh, give them some education in jail or or deal drug treatment deal or stop drug treatment programs or whatnot. those only have an impact of 9, 19. this is a huge impact. so it seems continuing relationship with the with family members coming in and you think and i don't know if they already do this, but surely it makes economic sense to pay for family members give them travel, bus them free travel, free bus pass or it to be able to or whatever it is to be able to visit their relatives in jail because such a big impact. >> it's one those things >> it's one of those things where that would be the leading the the that the horse. so it's the fact that the horse. so it's the fact that the family members to go. the family members want to go. that signal. they're that is the signal. they're they're to out into they're going to come out into their being cared. somebody cares about if if cares about them. if you just if you turn up and
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you bribe people to turn up and look bored, it's going to be i'm speaking from personal experience. >> interesting that it is >> it is interesting that it is one of the major talking points among that phenomenon that you get the black get in america. the black conservative, you know, like thomas being thomas sowell being the grandfather, it grandfather, godfather of it all. but there's another glenn loury and on. they emphasise loury and so on. they emphasise again and again that the welfare state essentially was a disaster for the black community. and obviously young black men massively overrepresented in correctional facilities in america . but it correlates even america. but it correlates even more closely with fatherlessness as well. and i just think it is, you know, it's an extraordinary it's almost like you've, you've basically hobbled the horse before it starts. >> yeah. and you've created a culture of instead of people going out and and, you going out and striving and, you know, working for themselves, you've you've sort of sucked the well they get into, they get into gang culture is the big deal isn't it? >> get into gang culture >> they get into gang culture because they're looking for some kind bonding sort kind of male bonding sort of opportunity, kind of male bonding sort of opport substitutes twice father substitutes are twice as likely involved crime. father substitutes are twice as likeyeah, involved crime. father substitutes are twice as likeyeah,that's'olved crime. father substitutes are twice as likeyeah, that's it.'ed crime. >> yeah, that's it. >> yeah, that's it. >> okay, josh, over to the metro
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and your template for fatherhood is lionised by tory is being lionised by tory ministers. yeah >> get bonking for britain, uk needs to shag more for country to survive. you're welcome. britain . and yeah. so this is britain. and yeah. so this is the mp for north east hampshire. he's 37. what does he know about life? but they've sort of equating immigration. we've talked about it before about this whole replacement , not this whole replacement, not replacement. sorry >> great. >> great. >> replace the replacement. >> replace the replacement. >> le grand replacement with the replacement rate necessarily. do the replacement rate is we've not been hitting as birth rates have been on the decline much greater in places like italy where they're going to whole towns are going to be dying out in the next ten years in sardinia the next ten years or anyway. or so anyway. >> there's sort of equating >> so there's sort of equating that and saying, well, we don't need immigration. if we are need immigration. an if we are subsidising building our own babies, basically, yeah , we'll babies, basically, yeah, we'll be less culturally disruptive . be less culturally disruptive. >> but of course you have to raise those children then. so
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that's economically disruptive , that's economically disruptive, isn't it? >> yeah, this e yeah, this >> well, yeah, this is, this is why politicians, most why politicians, as most politicians, want mass politicians, just want mass immigration. don't want immigration. they don't want people like people having kids like like rishi sunak , for example, is a rishi sunak, for example, is a classic person because if you have the kids born and raised here, got to pay for all here, you've got to pay for all the you've got to the health care. you've got to pay the health care. you've got to pay them, you've got pay to educate them, you've got to they're going to pay. and also they're going to pay. and also they're going to entitled kids. to be quite entitled kids. they're be working they're not going to be working until like 25 and then until they're like 25 and then they're going to be working in pr you pr or something. so you need somebody come in and do the somebody to come in and do the do get hands so do the get their hands dirty. so they import fully they just want to import fully grown get grown workers that'll get through next five years. >> the next electoral cycle. >> the next electoral cycle. >> i you described >> yeah, i think you described it as throwing on it as throwing kindling on a fire, which is quite a good. >> and i mean, >> exactly. and it's not i mean, this country is in trouble. there other countries, as this country is in trouble. the|say, other countries, as this country is in trouble. the|say, that er countries, as this country is in trouble. the|say, that are ountries, as this country is in trouble. the|say, that are worse.s, as this country is in trouble. the|say, that are worse. italy you say, that are worse. italy and countries, and the mediterranean countries, which think have which we still, i think have in our prejudice or our heads a prejudice or a preconception that places preconception that these places are enormously fecund. they have massive parties under olive trees , loads of children running trees, loads of children running around, not working. and then you've places like south you've got places like south korea and singapore, the absolute kind of the white heat of economic activity in the
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pacific rim. the fertility level is below one, like less than half because they're working too hard. yeah exactly. and it just sucks in immigrants mainly from india and they go india there. and they go straight to work in tech and then they, you know, they, they just expire. then they, you know, they, they justbutiire. need more people? i >> but do we need more people? i mean, everybody says we need we need people, but what about need more people, but what about increasing productivity? i think the of cheap labour the easy access of cheap labour caused know basically open caused by know basically open borders means that we're not investing in things that would improve our productivity. >> i think we basically everyone improve our productivity. >:waiting; we basically everyone improve our productivity. >:waiting fore basically everyone improve our productivity. >:waiting for automation veryone improve our productivity. >:waiting for automation to yone is waiting for automation to take at this point. aren't take over at this point. aren't they? then we can introduce they? and then we can introduce they? and then we can introduce the sorts out the the virus that sorts out the problem. we can have some border control making people work longer. >> yeah , like hours or years . >> yeah, like hours or years. >> yeah, like hours or years. >> years. years. yeah independent now. leo and red flags around the red arrows. >> that's right. so the red arrows are subject to the most intense scrutiny after a damning report, according to a minister. i mean, they were subject to a lot of scrutiny before as well. went up in the sky. it was
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captivating to watch. but yeah, across all of the uk's defence teams, this is this after teams, this is this is after a report women were plied report found women were plied with treated like proper with alcohol treated like proper tea harassed for sex. tea and harassed for sex. according to defence minister andrew murrison. so the red arrows they fly really close in the sky without touching , but the sky without touching, but they can't do that. they get a little bit handsy when they're on the ground. >> absolutely. yeah. but >> yes, absolutely. yeah. but we've gun. know it's we've seen top gun. we know it's a culture, isn't a macho culture, isn't it? i mean, these these women mean, are these are these women pilots they are they are pilots or are they are they are they of you they just kind of like, you know, i think there was only one woman most men . woman pilot in most of men. >> yeah, the report came out a few weeks ago, but never i've few weeks ago, but i never i've never the red arrows. but i never seen the red arrows. but i know they many times know some people they many times they love. well, i you're they love. well, i guess you're down coast, but. down on the coast, but. >> no, no, my dad. down on the coast, but. >> hugeo, my dad. down on the coast, but. >> huge aviation.i. down on the coast, but. >> huge aviation. i mean, how how are they worth the investment . investment of. >> well, i don't know. i don't know now. but know how big they are now. but of they were was of course, what they were was demonstrating skill the demonstrating the skill with the training aircraft they training aircraft. they flew, they called nats. then they were called nats. and then they were called nats. and then they they were they i think hawks and they were they i think hawks and they were they aircraft they i think hawks and they were they would aircraft they i think hawks and they were they would then aircraft they i think hawks and they were they would then be craft they i think hawks and they were they would then be sold in which would then be sold in quantities indonesia or quantities to indonesia or whatever so it was
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whatever. so yeah, it was a commercial exercise to some extent, they were, yeah , it extent, but they were, yeah, it was it's little bit was kind of it's a little bit like relationship that like the same relationship that formula one to then renault formula one has to then renault selling, making selling, you know, making better cars on the road as well. so i think there is an element of purpose to it, but i bet they are intolerably macho . yeah. are intolerably macho. yeah. >> got to flying this >> i mean, got to be flying this this hulk of metal through the air. yeah. >> you take this risk, >> when you take this risk, i will tell you something. you know, occasions when know, on the few occasions when i've big risks, it often i've taken big risks, it often correlates a certain amount correlates with a certain amount of boorish behaviour. shortly afterwards, away with it. >> is this an admission? >> is this an admission? >> suppose it is. let's >> yes, i suppose it is. let's get it out. there was years ago staying with sexual harassment news now. josh in the guardian, but in a slightly less glamorous , environment . , high stakes environment. >> yeah, this is the other end of the scale. yes. just of the scale. yes. i've just flipped my 20th burger. >> darling . >> darling. >> darling. >> mcdonald's harassment and bullying cases truly horrific, says the uk boss that he's before they're getting 1 or 2 complaints of sexual harassment a week. this mcdonald's in this country has about 1500 outlets.
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yeah they employ 180,000 people. a huge percentage of that are mostly young people as well. so this is a big issue. but also it's a franchise system. so it's not like they own the actual lot of these restaurants. although he's admitted they are getting complaints from some of the restaurants that they do own this is before before the this is before going before the commons business and trade committee. they say that this all kind of came out. there was all kind of came out. there was a big report about it and they said that they've now got like an independent investigations unit and looking into these things , i imagine it's a hard things, i imagine it's a hard things, i imagine it's a hard thing to deal with on that scale i >> -- >> but you need a bit of, you know , may, may , may, don't you? know, may, may, may, don't you? it i guess it's got to be like a built into the culture. i remember i worked in mcdonald's for about three weeks in 1984 when i was a student in southampton . and the main southampton. and the main prejudice there was against students . it was a very much an students. it was a very much an us and them system there.
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>> and they know that you would go on to exactly. >> i was like , what are you >> i was like, what are you studying? law? how are you? how are well, in the meantime, studying? law? how are you? how are this well, in the meantime, studying? law? how are you? how are this bin ll, in the meantime, studying? law? how are you? how are this bin linerthe meantime, studying? law? how are you? how are this bin liner on meantime, studying? law? how are you? how are this bin liner on your ntime, studying? law? how are you? how are this bin liner on your fist1e, put this bin liner on your fist and unblock the lavatory. and go and unblock the lavatory. >> that's good. that's >> yeah, that's good. that's i think law student should think every law student should do that. >> totally. sports news >> yeah, totally. sports news now, daily mail. more now, leo in the daily mail. more trouble with trans competitors in the pool. yes. >> this is a pool player. >> so this is a pool player. lynn pinches brother. this is . lynn pinches brother. this is. she hasn't pinched her brother. she's called lynn pinches her brother has praised her for taking a stand after she refused to play a transgender opponent in the final of this pool tournament and says she feels it's so unfair to compete against the trans women. so we've we've seen this in we've seen we've seen this in other sports , obviously contact other sports, obviously contact combat sports , arts and physical combat sports, arts and physical sports, whether it's swimming or running or whatever, cycling as well. transgender women , you well. transgender women, you know, vastly outcompete . i mean, know, vastly outcompete. i mean, they can just lift more weights , they can just lift more weights, they're stronger and all the rest of it. it's ridiculous. i mean, pool is less of a physical, physical male sport.
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but still, i mean, i guess the transgender players might have more experience of handling. >> whether . i more experience of handling. >> whether. i don't >> i wonder whether. i don't know. she doesn't say. that's very sorry on very good. sorry i stepped on that. i wonder whether she just is a matter of principle, whether know, whether she's just, you know, does ,i whether she's just, you know, does , i saw the does she think, well, i saw the clip and people actually were clapping was quite dramatic. >> kind just went and >> she kind of just went and whispered the in ear of whispered in the in the ear of the referee or whatever, the umpire. just kind of umpire. and then just kind of walked left this this umpire. and then just kind of walkewoman left this this umpire. and then just kind of walkewoman left til; this umpire. and then just kind of walkewoman left til thought trans woman baffled. i thought it a very brave thing for it was a very brave thing for her do . yeah, i'm not sure, her to do. yeah, i'm not sure, but my point is there was a massive height advantage . yes, massive height advantage. yes, of the. >> that does matter. yeah. >> that does matter. yeah. >> obviously, as a man their brain would work better. >> we've got time to squeeze one more in before just gets cancelled . three down, one to cancelled. three down, one to go. after the break, trump is haemorrhaging dollars. pink is coming up on pros and ms marvel is no marvel. we'll see you in a
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welcome back for the final section on headliners. so the garden open now josh and whatever donald trump's chances of winning back the presidency are, midas not are, his midas touch has not deserted him in business. >> trump's truth >> matthew yeah. trump's truth social platform $73 social platform has lost $73 million filing million since launch, filing shows. now, that's not necessarily unusual. it does cost and millions of cost millions and millions of dollars to launch massive platforms. >> and this one's about to >> and this one's just about to get successful. get really successful. >> take >> yeah, yeah, just gonna take off. i've got four off. i mean, i've got four followers twitter, followers that's my twitter, but yeah, million, yeah, they made 1.4 million, 2.3 million or whatever. it million or whatever. and it seems trying to seems like they're trying to keep doing a merger keep it going by doing a merger and they've and that's why they've released these figures. they've had to release allow this to go release them to allow this to go ahead. there's then ahead. but there's but but then if go ahead if the merger doesn't go ahead and mar—a—lago, he can't
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and unlike mar—a—lago, he can't really one by really overvalue this one by orders of magnitude. >> to be him, my >> i mean, to be fair to him, my sense that he set this sense was that he set this up when he was thrown off twitter, mainly as a sort of for mainly as a sort of a for channel propaganda. and channel his own propaganda. and if presidency, if he wins the presidency, expensive will have expensive channel, it will have been worth it, won't it? i suppose, terms what he suppose, in terms of what he would have on advertising. >> yeah. and i think the fact that musk bought twitter that elon musk bought twitter and sort of left and removed the sort of left wing censorship from wing bias and censorship from it, know, really sort of it, you know, really sort of ruined the business case for gettr and truth social. and he offered his money. but you can't you put a price truth. you can't put a price on truth. >> that's true . you can. >> no, that's true. you can. yeah he also musk actually offered him he's reopened his account and trump refuses to use it, doesn't he? because he's trying to with this one. so trying to stay with this one. so there bit of a there is a little bit of a history reached over an abyss. never mind back the mail for never mind back to the mail for news that pink wants be the news that pink wants to be the news that pink wants to be the new parton . new dolly parton. >> yeah. pink . who's a >> yeah. so pink. who's a singer? pop singer, is set to hand out 2000 copies of banned books at her miami concerts. i mean, you might think, oh, this is great. what is it, like 1984? is it books like that? and it's
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like, no, they're they're actually just books that have been banned from libraries and schools they feature schools because they feature sexualised images. and this was i mean , some of these you think, i mean, some of these you think, oh, this is some oh, no, this is just some reactionary wing bigots, oh, no, this is just some reac know,r wing bigots, oh, no, this is just some reac know, takingwing bigots, oh, no, this is just some reac know, taking offence iots, oh, no, this is just some reac know, taking offence at ;, oh, no, this is just some reac know, taking offence at some you know, taking offence at some depictions you maybe depictions of, you know, maybe non—binary characters or homosexual it's like homosexual characters. it's like no , this absolute no, this is like absolute pornography , like, like drawings pornography, like, like drawings and depictions and a lot of it is, you know, sort of funnelling into paedophilia is funnelling was some practice. >> i hadn't heard of. they have, funnily. you can see it i think used funnelling in that seems to be an ofcom violation but but yeah so she's short on lube and pink obviously being a being a celebrity she's got a non—bio ornery kid. she does seem to have missed grasped the nature of it. i think there are some books which are not being made available to like seven year olds. books that olds. there are other books that are no on the are just no longer on the curricula, which you know curricula, um, which you know what there's of what i mean? there's a lot of different kind gradations banning. >> think if you're to >> i think if you're going to criticise a and i agree criticise a bill and i agree with you, some of the books that
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were included of this were included as part of this sort of permutation of woke ideology were disgusting and borderline pornographic . but borderline pornographic. but they in florida, they in certainly in florida, where this is where this concert is going and where she's is going on and where she's talking doing this, talking about doing this, there's that they there's an argument that they have out have sort of thrown the baby out with there are with the bathwater. there are books the books that books and the four books that they going to giving out they are going to be giving out don't like terrible books. don't seem like terrible books. and, mockingbird in and, you know, mockingbird is in there, yeah. yeah. well, there, right? yeah. yeah. well, beloved by toni morrison, you know, the best. >> the reader's wives. >> the reader's wives. >> the reader's wives. >> the family which >> yeah. the family book, which is children's book that is just a children's book that has the different types of has all the different types of families, including a gay couple. so what? so the books that they've given examples don't seem to be such a big deal don't seem to be such a big deal. but you're right. this bill is absolutely, massively mis sold this. like, don't mis sold as this. like, don't say gay bill, because course, say gay bill, because of course, they're trying to sort of make it like this homophobic it into like this homophobic thing to actually, thing as opposed to actually, that's just not that's not sexualise children. sexualise our children. >> , it true as well. >> yeah, it is true as well. i must admit that, you know, a number the 20th number of books of the 20th century banned century that were banned initially, ulysses and last initially, like ulysses and last exit brooklyn even d.h. exit to brooklyn and even dh. lawrence, you know, have now
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become classics of become seen as classics of literature. you know, maybe literature. so, you know, maybe maybe pink will be on the right side history . oh, dear. maybe pink will be on the right side history. oh, dear. daily side of history. oh, dear. daily mail. now, josh, this was not mentioned by jfk. the prospects for fathering alien species in the race for space. >> yeah, human couples could give birth to alien babies as scientists work to pioneer sex in space. but gravity and radiation pose serious risks. we sort of covered this because they took rats up. they took like foetuses up and they checked development checked their development out because of the earth's because outside of the earth's atmosphere, there's going to be radiation . and if that and radiation. and if that and they've proved sperm they've proved that rats sperm is fine, rat sperm is fine. >> so let's use that then. that's fine. exactly >> i guess they're talking about now taking it to the next level, which is delivering a foetus to birth . oh yeah. and that's going birth. oh yeah. and that's going to be the next step of it because of course, we do need because of course, if we do need or to another that's or go to another planet, that's something that's we're going to have something that's we're going to havi like the way you frame >> i like the way you frame that. scientists having that that. the scientists having that conversation that. the scientists having that convers. ready that. the scientists having that convers.ready to move this to are you ready to move this to the next level? yeah essentially
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take it up a step. >> obviously when mean >> so obviously when they mean auen >> so obviously when they mean alien they're talking alien births, they're talking still but outside still human beings. but outside of the normal jurisdiction . of the normal jurisdiction. >> so the now, leo i have >> so the times now, leo i have to say perhaps the most disingenuous headline of the night. so it says the death of the superhero marvel's new film has lowest opening ever. >> so it suffered this box office collapse and marvel have dominated hollywood for more than a decade , and this film is than a decade, and this film is also a mediocre reviews, and it made just $47 million over its opening weekend in north america . and it costs like, i think, $220 million to make. and the previous lowest marvel film was was the incredible hulk, which made 55 million. however, that was that was years before 2008. but this film, although it's made no money, it's going to get a great esg score . it's all a great esg score. it's all women. it's diverse. it's got the first black woman director. so you know, they're taking all the all the boxes so, i the all the boxes there. so, i mean, money really matter? mean, does money really matter? >> i >> well, that's that's what i mean the disingenuous mean about the disingenuous headline, is headline, because the paper is suggesting end of suggesting, is this the end of the superhero run ? but i the whole superhero run? but i
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think rather like think it's rather this is like the ghostbusters, think it's rather this is like the it? ghostbusters, think it's rather this is like the it? things)usters, think it's rather this is like the it? things ,1sters, think it's rather this is like the it? things , you s, know. >> no, there was a thing a few weeks they are weeks ago. basically, they are in are absolutely in crisis. they are absolutely losing amounts money losing huge amounts of money with plus service as with the disney plus service as well. they've been underperforming. an underperforming. i am like an insane geek of marvel and so we i go take the kids every single opening weekend. we haven't been to like the last 2 or 3. right. because the quality is just absolutely dropped we've absolutely dropped off. we've given up on and these given up on loki and all these it's south park. it's like south park. >> they've just made they're >> they've just made it. they're making shoving making it lame and just shoving in pointless messaging in all this pointless messaging and all this, like, unnecessary, just crowbarring in diverse, diverse . diverse. >> also, it's just bad storytelling, which is and i think be honest, the last few think to be honest, the last few i mean, i found the i saw, i mean, i found the whole end game. >> you know, it was very complicated. it very heavy. complicated. it was very heavy. but the humour got kind of leaden. felt , do but the humour got kind of leaden. felt, do you but the humour got kind of leaden. felt , do you know what leaden. i felt, do you know what i was the thing. i i mean? that was the thing. i think bringing good writers for that, and might that, you know, and you might lift back again. lift it back up again. >> but diversity issues well. >> but diversity issues as well. >> but diversity issues as well. >> well our for >> yeah. well that's our tip for mcu. they'll they'll mcu. i'm sure they'll they'll take that board. the show is take that on board. the show is nearly over. let's take another quick wednesdays front
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quick look at wednesdays, front pages. daily mail . pages. we have the daily mail. we a deal. and you broke it. we had a deal. and you broke it. suella tells pm plus story about manilow's for christmas i news revenge served hot and inflation falls mirror tories are revolting and fans fury at ant and dec over farage the times pm lied to me and betrayed britain and a low sugar treat guide the express yes, war is declared battle come down suella accuses rishi of betraying the nation and finally , the daily star tour and finally, the daily star tour is in its handbag. well, that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, josh howie and leo. curse we're back at 11 pm. tomorrow with some people . tomorrow with some other people. i've done my two for the week and be back this time and i'll be back again this time next you're watching it next week. if you're watching it at tuned for at 5 am. stay tuned for breakfast. sleep breakfast. otherwise, sleep tight.
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>> and a very good evening to one and all. yes, it's 7:00. it's time for farage here on gb news. but you've probably heard he's down in the jungle in australia. he's not here unbelievably. we've had two days of political dynamite and guess what? nigel knows absolute lutely. nothing. he doesn't know that suella has been fired. he doesn't know that david cameron has now been ennobled and is the foreign secretary, let alone knowing anything about the big news today . this bombshell news today. this bombshell letter from m. suella braverman that may well be the sinking of rishi sunak. we'll be obviously talking about that with some great guests. i've also secured some incredible new drone footage of some of the migrant camps out side calais. you will not want to miss that . i can not want to miss that. i can absolutely guarantee you . and of absolutely guarantee you. and of course, we need to understand what's going on in the jungle
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before the show starts. we'll be talking currie about talking to edwina currie about what nigel will be experiencing as we speak. all of that coming up.and as we speak. all of that coming up. and farage here on . gb news. up. and farage here on. gb news. >> good evening. and the top story from the newsroom tonight , story from the newsroom tonight, in an astonishing rebuke following her sacking as home secretary yesterday, suella braverman has today accused the prime minister of having manifestly and repeatedly failed to deliver on key government policies. ms braverman accused rishi sunak of a betrayal of his promise to do whatever it took to stop small boat crossings by failing to override human rights. concerns about her rwanda plan. she also urged the prime minister in her letter to change course urgently telling him he'd led the conservatives to record election defeats while the shadow minister for international development, lisa nandy, reacted like this .
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