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tv   Headliners Replay  GB News  November 28, 2023 5:00am-6:01am GMT

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sectors. as rishi sunak says, the uk's low tax approach and culture of innovation give it the competitive advantage . the the competitive advantage. the uk's first case of a new strain of swine flu has been detected in north yorkshire. the health security agency says the person who contracted it has got the h1n2 strain that's similar to a virus found in pigs. they have, though, fully recovered after experiencing a mild illness. but there is increased surveillance in surgeries and hospitals in northern england now , as the northern england now, as the authorities work to establish the source of the infection , an the source of the infection, an agreement was struck today between the government and england's top doctors. it could mean an end to strike action. the government agreed to increase the total pay award for consultants by 4.5. union members will now vote on the proposal, which , if passed, will proposal, which, if passed, will see strikes completely called off. drivers are being warned to
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drive carefully and avoid puddles after a record number of so called pothole breakdowns were reported to the aa. the motoring organisation says it received more than 52,000 calls outs last month for vehicles getting stuck after driving over damaged tarmac. that's the highest number of call outs for any october that they have on record . earlier this month, the record. earlier this month, the prime minister pledged to deal with the scourge of potholes on roads, but the cost of repairing them is thought to be at around £14 billion. his majesty the king has been meeting with business and finance leaders from across the world tonight at buckingham palace to mark the uk's global investment summit. king charles was introduced by the prime minister to attendees from the summit . the reception from the summit. the reception comes ahead of the king's attendance at the opening ceremony of the world climate action summit at cop28 in dubai on friday. that's the news. this
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is gb news across the uk on tv in your car , on digital radio in your car, on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news channel . britain's news channel. >> hello and welcome to headliners. >> your first look at tuesday's newspapers. >> i am simon evans joining me tonight. we have the politically astute dog whistles, leo kearse and socially challenged cat caller louis schaefer. >> so , gentlemen, are you both well? >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> excellent. you're a star in your own right now. of course, leo. we're lucky to still have you here. >> yeah, i mean, i wouldn't say i'm quite at mariah carey's level, but i've got a one hour show christmas for bluff. >> did you dance around the >> did you ever dance around the christmas ? christmas tree? >> don't look quite >> yeah. i don't look quite as good mariah carey when i do it. >> that's good. well louis next. obviously, i'm happy because. >> i hear that leo's
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>> because i hear that leo's show been cancelled. show has been cancelled. >> exactly we were >> that's exactly what we were hoping i would imagine. hoping for, i would imagine. anyway, at anyway, let's have a look at tuesday's pages . the times tuesday's front pages. the times kick off. hamas demands kick us off. hamas demands higher price to set soldiers free. the telegraph britain faces un blacklist for blocking trans laws . the express . it's trans laws. the express. it's time for bank chief who talks britain up the eye news in interest rates will stay high into 2025 say economists at the sun gone too. var var on the football and the daily star . football and the daily star. close encounters of the weird kind. those are the front pages as . so we'll go with the as. so we'll go with the guardian first. >> leo so their headline is deal to extend truce raises hopes of dozens more hostages released. >> so this is the hostages held
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by hamas that were taken on october the 7th when they invaded israel. >> but there's been a deal to have a four day ceasefire. >> and it looks like and there's only 12 hours left of that before hostilities in gaza were due to recommence. >> but qatar and egypt are negotiating an extra 48 hours. but they've got this sort of buy extra time using the hostages that they've got. and it's kind of difficult because hamas don't know where all the hostages are , know where all the hostages are, apparently, which is ridiculous . apparently, which is ridiculous. apparently at least 40 women and children being detained in gaza are not being held by hamas . and are not being held by hamas. and i'm not sure that they know what they're being held by an alternative terrorist outfit. i mean, i guess there's also what they the islamic jihad faction. >> yes, that's true. and the picture they've with picture they've gone with there is of hostages , is it? is not of hostages, is it? that's of palestinian family who are trying to flee north gaza . are trying to flee north gaza. but it's a very complicated situation all round . situation all round. >> yeah, i mean, the situation for gazans is getting terrible.
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a lot of them are in tents. there's not you know, as i don't know if there's enough aid getting into gaza. and obviously, as the weather turns, you know, even though it's the middle east, it's still cold in the winter. so they've had a lot of rain . and the situation of rain. and so the situation there is really miserable for them. >> it's just it's such an unrelenting torrent of misery that when you see photographs of hostages, it almost seems i hate to say it, but it doesn't sort of scratch the surface of the amount of death carnage amount of death and carnage there's already does it do there's already been. does it do you see one you want i mean, you see one person out the back person getting out the back of a land rover or something and you think, well, doesn't think, well, it just doesn't sort of doesn't tip the balance. >> no, i disagree. i mean, i saw on the front cover of the telegraph that a baby, really cute baby who'd been taken. it's just, you imagine that just, you know, imagine that baby of these baby in the hands of these horrific who horrific terrorists who absolutely know, on a absolutely hate, you know, on a real level, real primaeval level, have absolute hatred for that baby just of, know , where just because of, you know, where it born and who was born to. >> absolutely. i agree with you there. well, there's the daily telegraph lewis. that's your
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papen telegraph lewis. that's your paper. that's the picture of the baby that was talking about. paper. that's the picture of the batyeah, was talking about. paper. that's the picture of the batyeah, the was talking about. paper. that's the picture of the batyeah, the dailytalking about. paper. that's the picture of the batyeah, the daily telegraph»ut. >> yeah, the daily telegraph >> yeah, the daily telegraph >> yeah, the daily telegraph >> yeah . what a cute little >> yeah. what a cute little baby. it looks like. it looks like leo's baby. this is a this is. and leo, who's got who's who's got a cold, cold heart. he actually emoted when he saw the, the picture of the thing. did he. oh, it was like. it was lovely. yeah, it was lovely. it's like a dilated. it's still not going to make my girlfriend like him, but. and i don't like him and so that's what's him either. and so that's what's going on. and this is what it's all. it's basically because of this, has 250 this, because hamas has 250 people, people, including eating babies like this, that they went and captured. and you know, you're sitting there being balanced and we're trying to be balanced. and maybe i should be balanced. and maybe i should be balanced. know, i'm balanced. i'm not you know, i'm not a political guy. i don't need to be balanced. but you know, is what all know, this is what it's all caused not what caused by. but that's not what the issue . the issue. >> have you got on the >> what have you got on the blacklist for blocking trans laws? >> well, obviously, this is much more important for gb news
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people because we all trans people because we are all trans all time . um, people because we are all trans all time. um, and this is all the time. um, and this is bbc faces un blacklist for blocking trans laws and this was a believe it or not, there's this organised called gan gan ihra. i never heard of this thing and i don't even think of you guys probably have heard of it. is it low? it's the global alliance of national human rights, organised nations, right? they're the feed for into the united nations is for us, for britain to be in the in the panels with the united nations. okay. and it happens that in order for us it happens that because stonewall and mermaids two totally i'm not going to use the word we know them, we know them evil. they complained . and them evil. they complained. and so it's possible that we will not be allowed to sit at the un to be in the un, but just for the human rights body . the human rights body. >> but i mean, honestly, who cares ? does this mean we don't cares? does this mean we don't need to pay them any money? the
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un is like completely drifted away its original purpose away from its original purpose and seems push exist and now seems to just push exist to push woke ideology. the fact that they're listening to stonewall mermaids, which that they're listening to stonewevery mermaids, which that they're listening to stonewevery discrediteds, which are two very discredited organisations, is ridiculous . organisations, is ridiculous. >> it's bizarre, isn't it? the un is established to impose some sort of international law, to bnng sort of international law, to bring resolutions to avoid war and that sort of thing. why could they possibly have any interest in trans rights? >> because. because here is why. because trans rights is about self identity . dodi. and what self identity. dodi. and what the and what team world wants to do is obliterate national boundaries. it comes from out of out of wilsonian kind of thinking is we're not going to have any countries anymore. imagine there's no country. have any countries anymore. imagine there's no country . we imagine there's no country. we imagine that's what they want . imagine that's what they want. >> everybody just has their own sort self identity and their sort of self identity and their own, and they're happy. >> and you take away their >> and if you take away their country, are country, see, their people are saying, what? you're saying, you know what? you're not going to have a country, but you'll you'll have you'll have yourself you'll have your that sounds your self identity. that sounds like terrible idea. your self identity. that sounds likethiserrible idea. your self identity. that sounds likethis soundsiea. your self identity. that sounds likethis sounds like has their >> this sounds like has their own little border.
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>> yeah. own little border. >> around themselves . >> around themselves. >> around themselves. >> have a border. i >> i may not have a border. i may just be open. >> and is which is why. >> and which is which is why. which after which is why they're after israel. because it's a nation state. why they want to destroy britain. nation britain. because it's a nation andifs britain. because it's a nation and it's team world versus, i think gb news stands for. >> i like the sound of baroness falkner of migraine, though she's that's not the she's the if that's not the place , it's what is it, margaret margarine. >> margarine anyway , next up we >> margarine anyway, next up we have the i leo interest rates couldn't this is not good news. >> some bad news for people with mortgages so interest rates will stay high into 2025 say economists , although it's economists, although it's economists, although it's economists saying that they're probably going to come down next week. but but yeah, interest rates could stay high for a couple of years after the bank of england governor issued a stark warning, saying there's not cuts for the not going to be any cuts for the foreseeable future. inflation is still, it's down still, although it's come down from, was in double from, you know, it was in double digits. it's still the digits. it's still 4.6. the target 2. we're still above target is 2. we're still above america above europe. and america and above europe. and also mortgage rates, they're quick to go up. but i think, you
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know, because the banks make money off them, they're going to be down. the banks. be slow to come down. the banks. >> oil prices, >> they're like oil prices, aren't they? >> i do think it's i mean, >> but i do think it's i mean, obviously, these things are all slightly , but slightly interconnected, but they've nature they've misunderstood the nature of the inflation. >> not because we've all >> it is not because we've all got too much and it got too much money and it certainly because we were certainly isn't because we were borrowing much money to go borrowing too much money to go out and buy. well, what is consumer it's consumer durables? well, it's supply isn't it's supply lines, isn't it? it's shortages. knock on shortages. it's the knock on effect from the effect from all the dysfunctional of the pandemic. two not getting two years of people not getting back work. there's a lot of back to work. there's a lot of complicated issues. i mean, there inflation, by there has been inflation, but by there has been inflation, but by the top, you know, and the qe at the top, you know, and the qe at the top, you know, and the asset prices have been going up. idea you know, up. but the idea that, you know, food going up in the food prices are going up in the supermarket because people just had too much money chuck had too much money to chuck eggs, you know, that was just not that's not why we've not true. that's not why we've had problem. so think had this problem. so i think i think interest rates are a blunt instrument for dealing with it, to be honest. yeah mean, maybe. but but no, no, you're happy >> but but no, no, you're happy with interest rates still. it's still the tool that the central banks main one to banks can use to the main one to rein in. but and they want to rein it in. but and they want to they want to keep it to target
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to 2. >> why should there be 2% inflation? it's just that basically people's money. >> it's just it's porridge on the on the on simmering isn't it. it's like an all day it's like an all day vat of porridge. that's where you don't want it bubbung that's where you don't want it bubbling but you don't want it going cold. you just want a bit of oxygen coming through it. of oxygen coming up through it. >> to people >> you want to keep people thinking, keep my money thinking, i can't keep my money in bank. i've got to spend in the bank. i've got to spend the money. >> two minutes the on the >> two minutes on the on the daily mirror. in fact, one minute mirror. minute on the daily mirror. >> got to pay. >> britain's got got to pay. william david walliams and he he's he they had an open mic. they had an open mic. like dunng they had an open mic. like during the recording. we have the mics i've said some the mics and i've said some absolutely about absolutely lovely things about leo and people are going to say, wait a second, you were a bad mouthing him just a second ago, but now and it would kill my career if they pleased. the career if they were pleased. the people in the booths people in the in the booths don't reveal volumes. >> did it the other way round. >> did it the other way round. >> yeah that's right. >> yeah. oh yeah that's right. he was revealed himself to he he was he revealed himself to be a nasty piece of work be quite a nasty piece of work really didn't he. >> think most people felt that
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>> i think most people felt that way. now they're going to way. but now they're going to have are too? yeah >>i yeah >> i mean, i think they're i think they're giving him the boot because i the boot before because i know the guardian doing guardian is doing an investigation his. investigation into into his. well, basically life. well, basically his sex life. i don't know if they've dug anything up, they've anything up, but they've been sniffing speaking to sniffing around and speaking to lots of rumours for so many years. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> be nice to see it all brought out into the sunlight would destroy his reputation. >> is that what do? >> is that what you do? >> is that what you do? >> worms? >> worms? >> yeah. this alleged. we >> yeah. this is all alleged. we don't the don't know if they're doing the thing. you're thing. that's what you're supposed say. you're supposed supposed to say. you're supposed to say it's alleged. we didn't allege that's the front >> it's a leg. that's the front pages. but stay with us. in the second section, we have michael gove giving it to us straight. we nhs
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earlier on gb news radio . earlier on gb news radio. >> and welcome back to headliners with me, simon evans, leo kearse and lewis schaefer. let's continue with the stories. leo we have tricky rishi now to kick us off. sounds like the guardian have got the goods on
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the double crossing. good for nothing, little pop. it sunak agreed with braverman to £40,000 income threshold for uk migrants. >> so the daily telegraph says it's been shown a copy of the deal which pledged there's a bunch of measures, pledged to increase the minimum salary for a skilled worker arriving in the uk from 26 grand to 40 grand. and this is all to bring down immigration or at least, you know, put some sort of sensible limit on it as well as to raise the quality of it and to raise the quality of it and to raise the raise the quality of it, which, you know, hasn't always hasn't always top. and hasn't always been tip top. and i got into england , but they're i got into england, but they're also ending extended visas for graduates and further limiting family members that people can bnng family members that people can bring you get place in bring because you get a place in a university bring your a university and then bring your entire if you don't even entire family. if you don't even need to get in university. >> today and i don't >> i read today and i don't i didn't like fact checking all the way back to the source, but there are a lot of people coming in on carer visas now, right to work in care, which is work in social care, which is people they bring on people we need, they bring on average with them 1.8
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dependents, you dependents, right? yeah. so you get 24 grand in, in get a job worth 24 grand in, in a care home and you've got a family with you. with who? i mean, that's quite a significant. >> and then they can bring people in as well. and then it starts expand. starts to expand. >> and is the concern, right? >> well, that is the concern. and that's what they're saying. they're saying if we have they're saying if we don't have this mass immigration, this level of mass immigration, it's going for it's not going to be good for care homes. it's not going be care homes. it's not going to be good it's the exact good for the nhs. it's the exact same lies they told us about covid is that is that is that unless you support mass immigration, you're killing granny. true. granny. yeah, that's true. that's i should that's what it is. and i should leave it at that . but the point leave it at that. but the point is, is that there's an underlying thing is that they want the people to come in because of dropping birth rates. and there's not enough people to make the rich their money. they want to fuel gdp. >> but this this could really tear the tory party apart because this is, you know, bravermans threatening to release this release evidence of the sort of deal that was done between them and obviously, you know , i don't think anybody
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know, i don't think anybody expected immigration to hit like growth of 1.2 million in a year under under the conservatives right when it was such a such a dicey issue and right when you know, rishi was pledging to and it was under control what brexit the subtext of brexit had largely to get largely been about trying to get that under control. >> and in fact it's metastasised beyond i think it beyond it. and also i think it really lands this idea that sunakis really lands this idea that sunak is a double crossing . no sunak is a double crossing. no good luck is a bad faith negotiator. >> i don't think you understand how bad it is. it's not that sunakis how bad it is. it's not that sunak is bad the whole half of the conservative party is rotten because they found suella braverman was a kind of she. >> she didn't kind of present. well, she you know, she was to easy land punches on, but now she is got nothing to lose. yeah >> sorry for interrupting you. >> sorry for interrupting you. >> that's all right. independent. now we can at least rely on michael gove to give us the unvarnished , barely the unvarnished, barely lubricated about housing. lubricated truth about housing. >> well, this is same >> yeah, well, this is the same kind of story. and michael gove is the same kind of guy. they're all kind of guys, these
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all the same kind of guys, these people. think that people. and i think that people are up. that michael are fed up. it's that michael gove, the levelling up gove, who's the levelling up secretary admits the housing crisis is even worse than you think. it's going to think. of course it's going to be worse than you think because on one hand a million, on one hand they a million, whatever, two coming into the country, one. number two, country, number one. number two, people not forming families. people are not forming families. there's a huge rise in divorce. so there's an increase need for housing and number three, they're not building any housing. so if they're building houses thing, it's basically destroying our green and pleasant land. >> well, it also destroys it's virtually the only source of middle class reassurance , isn't middle class reassurance, isn't it? house prices that people the property owning democracy, the idea is that you think, well, everything else has turned to mush. let's say, to be polite. but my house is still worth a lot of money. that is the one thing on which a lot of people lean back and they can't get on and they can't get on the property ladder. >> of course, new people can't get the property. can't get in the property. they can't get in the property. they can't get ladder get on the property ladder unless you know, they work unless they, you know, they work
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really both people work really hard. both people work and then they because and then they can't because they're both both literally they're both they both literally get ladder, maybe a little get a ladder, maybe a little property break property ladder and just break into else's bedroom into somebody else's bedroom window is it window and keir starmer. is it looks like he's going get in looks like he's going to get in next and promised to next year and he's promised to build millions, more build millions, millions more houses, to houses, but he's promised to build the green build basically on the green belt. so we're going to see britain transformed. belt. so we're going to see britaithink transformed. belt. so we're going to see britaithink going formed. belt. so we're going to see britai think going to med. belt. so we're going to see britaithink going to be d. belt. so we're going to see britaithink going to be for don't think it's going to be for the better. >> i think it'll look >> i don't think it'll look nicer. but i bet somehow it fall apart. one of lobby apart. it's one of these lobby groups. of these kind groups. it's one of these kind of they all speak of things. they all speak exactly like immigration. they all chief all talk it up. tonight's chief provocation to common sense. now, the telegraph are now, leo and the telegraph are suffering aphasia. suffering from verbal aphasia. >> the patient have >> so does the patient have a penis or a vagina? this is the nonsense. new transgender form the doctors, doctors the nhs makes. doctors, doctors fill out. >> p- e doctor who. >> not just doctor who. >> not just doctor who. >> no , this this is. >> no, no, this is. this is. well, they'd probably love on well, they'd probably love it on doctor is a £450 doctor who. this is a £450 million system. that's been set up and it asks the forms and it asks staff to fill in organs. the patient currently has organs present at birth, organs surgically enhanced or constructed and organs
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hormonally enhanced. and under each of the sections, there's a list of possible organs that including a penis, vagina, uterus, cervix, breast, prostate , testes and ovaries. and then you have to click add on each relevant organ . i mean, it's relevant organ. i mean, it's lucky that the nhs has got so much spare capacity so the doctors all day much spare capacity so the doctorrin all day much spare capacity so the doctorrin this all day much spare capacity so the doctorrin this form all day much spare capacity so the doctorrin this form ..l day much spare capacity so the doctorrin this form . it'siy filling in this form. it's nonsense. >> it's more like , have you ever >> it's more like, have you ever encountered build—a—bear ? it was encountered build—a—bear? it was a of a like a disney a sort of a bit like a disney outlet kind of thing. in shopping malls young girls shopping malls where young girls could and select the, you could go and select the, you know, tie and the nose know, the bow tie and the nose and the they make their own and the hat. they make their own hugely now as well. hugely powerful now as well. >> build—a—bear group. >> the build—a—bear group. >> the build—a—bear group. >> are they they? yes, very >> are they are they? yes, very good. they're always used to good. no, they're always used to sound me as well when my sound that to me as well when my daughter was seven. yeah. but yeah, just an annoying yeah, it was just an annoying way a teddy way to spend £50 on a teddy bean way to spend £50 on a teddy bear, because was bear, basically, because it was bespoke, you know? but that's kind treating kind of how they're treating humans well, they're humans now, right? well, they're just kind of, you i'd like just kind of, you know, i'd like to say that this american to say that this is an american system, proud of it, system, and i'm proud of it, that but, you know, i that they. but, you know, i mean, i sometimes laugh at your kind of dystopia of kind of like dystopia vision of the but this is this is
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the future. but this is this is as close to that kind of you the future. but this is this is as clo transhumanism )f you the future. but this is this is as clo transhumanism kindj the future. but this is this is as clo transhumanism kind of mentality. >> right? well, is what >> right? well, this is what trans has. it's a you trans world has. it's a you could it's minor part of could say it's a minor part of trans world, but a team world. sorry, but it is it is taken oven over. >> oven >> maybe have a little box at the bottom the form where you the bottom of the form where you make notes oh, this make any notes about, oh, this person you know i would person has had you know i would allow that. >> just have a bloke. >> yeah. just have a bloke. yeah. is lassie. yeah. is it a lassie. >> any comments at the bottom. >> any comments at the bottom. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> anyway, lewis telegraph now christmas still weeks christmas is still four weeks away the swine flu away but the new swine flu is already shops. already in the shops. >> a swine flu. don't >> yeah, a swine flu. i don't eat pig very much because i am. i am on a on a i don't like their their lipid balance in in their their lipid balance in in the pig anyway first uk cases of their their lipid balance in in the pig a new pig flu found in humans and this is just another one of those panic in the uk stories because because covid's gone . no because because covid's gone. no one believes covid anymore . and one believes covid anymore. and so they want to they want to whip people into a frenzy. it won't work. i think people have been fooled into off even, even most people who are suckers for this. what about neil ferguson?
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>> is he is he been quoted on any of this? >> you know what? i didn't see his name. thank god. i don't think his name was on this. that guy represents everything that's wrong this country. hope wrong with this country. i hope he out of town. but he isn't run out of town. but i'm going tell you something. i'm going to tell you something. there's i i there's one thing i should i should is. it is should we should. it is. it is this. i don't think it's a thing. okay. pig flu. if you take all necessary precautions when you make love a pig . when you make love to a pig. >> pig flu has a kind of an echo of flying pigs as well. isn't there? pigs might fly pig flu . there? pigs might fly pig flu. >> flu. thought about that. >> flu. thought about that. >> but the swine flu, that was one about ten years ago. i remember that. and i remember my wife laid up loads of masks and gloves. you know, just as she does around. so does every time around. yeah so finally, to use them in 2020. >> yeah, but look, people got hired over covid, the world health organisation got new power and expanded a lot, and now keep hold of now they want to keep hold of that funding and they want to keep staff keep hold of those staff and that power. keep hold of those staff and tha say nen keep hold of those staff and tha say the word team world >> say the word team world parkinson's law. >> say the word team world par parkinson's. >> say the word team world par parkinson's law work expands >> parkinson's law work expands to time for to fill the time allotted for its completion. first came
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its completion. that first came to cyril northcote to light when cyril northcote parkinson the parkinson investigated why the admiralty, which was a department the civil service, department of the civil service, was continuing to grow after world ii, despite the fact world war ii, despite the fact that it virtually no ships that it had virtually no ships left anything to but the left or anything to do. but the admiralty itself, just bigger and offices . admiralty itself, just bigger and offices. daily mail. and bigger offices. daily mail. now, leo knew zealand had pulled a fast on snitchy rishi, a fast one on snitchy rishi, leaving him looking like a ripe plum everyone else is plum while everyone else is having quick around the having a quick puff around the back bike shed. back of the bike shed. >> so there's over >> so there's anger over new zealand's smoking ban. zealand's u—turn on smoking ban. health say they're health experts say they're appalled by a purely political move , as rishi sunak vows to move, as rishi sunak vows to press ahead with law to stop kids aged 14. now from ever buying cigarettes. so basically underjacinda buying cigarettes. so basically under jacinda ardern , buying cigarettes. so basically underjacinda ardern , she banned underjacinda ardern, she banned smoking. i mean, she would have banned everything could. banned everything if she could. she she you know, she was absolutely she you know, the as you'd say. the team world as you'd say. yeah. yeah, she , she she yeah. but yeah, she, she she banned but then she got banned smoking but then she got voted out because everybody hates people after about hates these people after about five years because they're horrible monotonous killjoys. five years because they're horrithen monotonous killjoys. five years because they're horrithen the 1otonous killjoys. five years because they're horrithen the new|ous killjoys. five years because they're horrithen the new primelljoys. five years because they're horrithen the new prime minister and then the new prime minister said he's going to u—turn so people will still be able to buy
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cigarettes and he's going to use the money to fund tax cuts, which sounds great. i mean, i don't mind smokers kill themselves i get some money. themselves if i get some money. >> i personally think >> well, i personally think smoking kind of i mean, you smoking is kind of i mean, you know, all do a bit of know, we all do a bit of material about it here and there. vaping devices material about it here and theipretty vaping devices material about it here and theipretty undignified. devices material about it here and theipretty undignified. but:es material about it here and theipretty undignified. but ies material about it here and theipretty undignified. but i do are pretty undignified. but i do think tobacco and nicotine could be think is be separated. i think it is conceivable that nicotine actually does have some benefits for human whereas for the human race, whereas tobacco smoke, really it would be good was phased out. be good if it was phased out. but give people but you've got to give people the i really think you the choice. i really think you have got give them the have got to give them the choice. otherwise the choice. well, otherwise the mental health effects of being of your of having, of having your choices limited ever tighter tighter. >> well, w" w“ >> yeah, well, i agree with you. i mean, as a sort of a fake libertarian that i am because i've a test i'm not i've taken a test and i'm not quite libertarian as i as quite as libertarian as i as i thought i was. it's a cigarette is a small thing. and what they're going to do is they're going to able look into going to be able to look into people's in their cars. people's homes, in their cars. so you have a pack of cigarette, you're breaking law. oscar so you have a pack of cigarette, you're said king law. oscar so you have a pack of cigarette, you're said this. law. oscar so you have a pack of cigarette, you're said this. he law. oscar so you have a pack of cigarette, you're said this. he said, oscar so you have a pack of cigarette, you're said this. he said, habits wilde said this. he said, habits become when the rich grow become vices when the rich grow tired them. tired of them. >> nice. yeah. he's almost >> very nice. yeah. he's almost a marxist, wasn't he? oscar
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wilde? actually, was . is that wilde? actually, he was. is that true? he. a thing true? yeah, he. he wrote a thing called man the life of man under socialism. and it was. and i expected to be kind of expected it to be a kind of satire, but no, it was in. it was like a massive fanboy of it. wow. >> and so i take it back. i'm not going to quote him again. >> is only ever the >> morality is only ever the subtly enforced interests subtly enforced best interests of at any any of the ruling class at any any given moment. that's his kind of idea given moment. that's his kind of ideiyeah. like, i at the >> yeah. so like, i at the halfway point now don't go away. >> in couple minutes, we'll >> in a couple of minutes, we'll be right wing be back with right wing evangelicals environmentally evangelicals, dietary evangelicals, dietary evangelicals lack evangelicals and the best lack all . that's us. we'll all conviction. that's us. we'll see you in a
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door is wide open. earlier on gb news radio . news radio. >> welcome back to headliners guardian. now lewis and a mere 20 years after jerry springer the opera. further evidence that the opera. further evidence that the real religious nutjobs to beware of in our society are the right wing ones you know what? >> so sure about this. >> i'm not so sure about this. let us let study this because
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let us let us study this because i had not heard about that before. you put spin on it before. you put your spin on it is medics quitting over jobs before. you put your spin on it is medics quitting overjobs ? is is medics quitting overjobs? is quitting jobs, medics? that's doctors and nurses over, quote , doctors and nurses over, quote, distress caused by right wing christian group. so this christian group. so this christian legal centre that that the guardian is blaming is has been suing hospitals on behalf of the families of patients to not have the plug pulled on these children who were dying. so basically this this group is saying keep my children alive and the doctors and the nurses just want to pull the plug and kill them. you know, because it doesn't fit into their time schedule. >> alfie evans and archie archie, that's not what i mentioned here. they were famous cases, weren't they? both of them. >> they're not just they're not killing them because don't killing them because they don't fit into the time schedule. they're killing them they're also killing them because would be expensive. they're also killing them bec expensive uld be expensive. they're also killing them bec expensive is! be expensive. they're also killing them bec expensive is the expensive. they're also killing them bec expensive is the same|sive. they're also killing them bec expensive is the same thing, >> expensive is the same thing, you know. >> suppose balance, >> well, i suppose for balance, then i can understand then i will say i can understand if they believe the child is in constant and irresolvable pain and not viable long term. i
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and is not viable long term. i don't know . i mean, it's been don't know. i mean, it's been for a long time the point the idea has been that human life is a non—negotiable, right? you sustain it as long as possible. >> well, that is totally not true. we've got nice true. that's why we've got nice that's what we have in our heads. >> don't do that. it's not >> they don't do that. it's not negotiable costs negotiable because it costs money, too. >> i'll take other side >> now, i'll take the other side of what i just said. is that. is that.is of what i just said. is that. is that. is that it cost money to keep these kids alive. and if people kids are going people think the kids are going to should be to die, the money should be might better spent somewhere might be better spent somewhere else. suppose else. absolutely. and i suppose also say is also what they would say is i think perhaps i mean, the story is that the medics are experienced, i suppose, degree is that the medics are ex emotional. suppose, degree of emotional. >> they're getting bruised by this kind of constantly being harangued christians harangued by these christians who absolutely will not will not give an inch. but but the idea is that they are privy renting them from explaining it to the parents in such a way that they manage to accommodate the idea that their child is going to die. >> yeah, and i can totally understand that. you know, the medics can be right. yeah, but we still need to have this
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opportunity to push back against the is, for most the state. the nhs is, for most people, their only health people, it's their only health service. they can't afford, you know, bupa or whatever it is. >> so to fly canada. >> so to to fly canada. >> so to to fly canada. >> so to to fly canada. >> so this idea that you can't question the state when it's when removing the of when it's removing the life of your a nonsense. and your child is a nonsense. and i think that it's think the idea that it's a christian pressure group maybe isn't the worst thing. >> know, conceivably because >> you know, conceivably because you're a group you're not going to get a group of clinicians to do of professional clinicians to do that, you? yeah. of professional clinicians to do tha and you? yeah. of professional clinicians to do tha and if'ou? yeah. of professional clinicians to do tha and if it]? yeah. of professional clinicians to do tha and if it waseah. of professional clinicians to do tha and if it was a]. of professional clinicians to do tha and if it was a muslim >> and if it was a muslim pressure group, the guardian would right behind them. would be right behind them. well, what well, this is, of course, what i was at with the jerry was getting at with the jerry spnnger was getting at with the jerry springer thing. >> know that there is so >> you know that there is so much pressure coming from muslim groups of one kind or another these days, whether it be teaching school teaching lgbt stuff at school or, or drawing or, you know, or drawing pictures the prophet, pictures of the prophet, you know, as a christian know, but as soon as a christian group they are right group appear, they are right wing, you and they're wing, you know, and they're extremists like, oh, extremists and they're like, oh, they're you know, they're terrible, you know, well, maybe they are terrible. probably gauche, probably they're a bit gauche, i suspect guardian is the newspaper of team world extinction rebellion. now leo, they're have attacked they're back. they have attacked they're back. they have attacked the of high street the last handful of high street bank bank branches? the last handful of high street baniyet bank branches? the last handful of high street baniyet to bank branches?
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the last handful of high street baniyet to be bank branches? the last handful of high street baniyet to be converted'anches? the last handful of high street baniyet to be converted into es? not yet to be converted into soulless drinking establishments. yeah. yeah. >> although you can take a bottle of buckfast into my local santander extinction rebellion, activists glued shut doors of 50 barclays, including in glasgow, leeds in london as they accused the bank of mega funding fossil fuel projects . i mean, obviously fuel projects. i mean, obviously their trust funds are held at a much posher bank, probably in switzerland. yes. so they don't need to worry about that. but they accuse barclays of investing $190 in fossil fuels since 2015. good hope we're hope they're making a lot of profit on that. but this is i mean, this is horrible. it's punishing the old and the disabled who need to go into a bank branch. most can do it online. most people can do it online. some people need go in and some people need to go in and speak somebody because they speak to somebody because they can't whatever. can't work phones or whatever. and stop oil are and also just stop oil are funded by a multi multi millionaire. dale, vince , who's millionaire. dale, vince, who's an baron , he's just an energy baron, he's just pushing his own business angle. he makes green energy . he makes he makes green energy. he makes energy from from wind. so you know, he wants the government to
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buy that energy instead of buying instead of using fossil fuels . fuels. >> certainly agree with you on the, you know, the high street thing and just getting in the way of ordinary people. it reminds me, do you remember chris the brass eye? and reminds me, do you remember chion, the brass eye? and reminds me, do you remember chion, the the brass eye? and reminds me, do you remember chion, the satirist? ass eye? and reminds me, do you remember chion, the satirist? andeye? and reminds me, do you remember chion, the satirist? and he? and reminds me, do you remember chion, the satirist? and he had! so on, the satirist? and he had a sort of wannabe imitator, mark thomas, who was a good stand up comic. and then started making political mark thomas political stuff. mark thomas would always kind of as far would always kind of get as far as the receptionist, do you know what in like shell hq or what i mean? in like shell hq or whatever . and chris morris, whatever. and chris morris, famous said, said dismissed him at the scourge of at one of the scourge of receptionist everywhere. you know, was morris would know, it was morris would actually get the ceo on the show that's an interesting point because extinction rebellion we had had heard from them in a couple of months or a year or something, i think i think something, and i think i think they envious of just they are a bit envious of just stop and that's why they're stop oil and that's why they're running this thing. >> know, i mean, the fact >> you know, i mean, the fact is, is that is that i don't i think we need oil. we need to be warm . warm. >> yeah, it's true. people still underestimate just how useful it is. i'm afraid.
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underestimate just how useful it is. i'm afraid . telegraph now is. i'm afraid. telegraph now lewis and inverted pyramid but sadly not of piffle. >> yes . i sadly not of piffle. >> yes. i don't sadly not of piffle. >> yes . i don't know what >> yes. i don't know what a piffle is. piffle >> an inverted pyramid of piffle was what boris johnson described one of the scandals he was accused of , of being piffle is accused of, of being piffle is nonsense. basically and an inverted pyramid. >> i mean, there's a lot of nonsense on on a tiny little and then a tiny. oh, that's true of coui'se. >> course. >> i think it was that he had got the other way around. >> should be the other way around. >> an inverted pyramid of piffle. it's an unstable. >> oh, well, there you go. well we're something every we're learning something every day. tuned day. that's why you're tuned into this is the into this. and but this is the pyramid of the population. pyramid but pyramid population, period. but i've following i've been actually following quite, a lot in real life quite, quite a lot in real life how retiring baby boomers, boomers, rich risk plunging britain into crisis. and the truth is, is there a lot more people who are old and they and there are fewer people that are young.so there are fewer people that are young. so you could go a lot of different ways and who are you going to blame them? you could blame the old people for being too many, or you could blame the
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young not having young people for not having enough kids because they believed feminist believed in this feminist ideology is ideology that team world is promoting the death of love. >> that's why we need islam quickly. we'll have lots of wives. >> well, you saw the picture on the front page of the guy. he's got million yeah. how many got million kids. yeah. how many kids these people? got million kids. yeah. how many kid�*tell these people? got million kids. yeah. how many kid�*tell you se people? got million kids. yeah. how many kid�*tell you what, ple? got million kids. yeah. how many kid�*tell you what, though, there >> tell you what, though, there is. i know these terms is. i mean, i know these terms are very you they're loose are very you know, they're loose kind collections of kind of collections of individuals. baby boomers last for was in 65. i'm for what i was born in 65. i'm right cusp. but baby right on the cusp. but baby boomers sounds very painful. well, being on cusp, yeah, well, being on the cusp, yeah, there but the boomers have there was. but the boomers have been least ten there was. but the boomers have been now, least ten there was. but the boomers have been now, right? least ten there was. but the boomers have been now, right? i least ten there was. but the boomers have been now, right? i mean, ten there was. but the boomers have been now, right? i mean, if] there was. but the boomers have been now, right? i mean, if a years now, right? i mean, if a 60 if you were born in 45, born in 50, you've been retired for like now. right? born in 1950. is that right? >> em. w- e for 70, 50, 65. >> no. you've been retired since 19. since 2015. yeah. i knew that was right. yeah. so they've been retired . that was the peak. been retired. that was the peak. baby boomers. in the baby boomers. we're in the middle is what saying. middle of it is what i'm saying. this like some wave, but this isn't like some wave, but this has happening some time. >> our our fertility rate people need to be having on average, at least children. we're least 2.1 children. and we're not way below that. it's
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not we're way below that. it's like one point, 1.5 or something, 1.6, which is something, 1.6, 1.6, which is shocking. and that's , you know, shocking. and that's, you know, so we're trying to replace that with immigration. i mean, with immigration. but i mean, long that's to turn long term, that's going to turn us yugoslavia or lebanon. us into yugoslavia or lebanon. >> fur babies, people have those now. yeah, people people get cats or whatever. >> instead, there's this narrative, in narrative, like lewis says in the media, don't have kids. the media, oh, don't have kids. that's lame. that's rubbish. be single. we lots of horrible single. we have lots of horrible casual sex and take antidepressants be an antidepressants and be an alcoholic. and it's like, no, have i didn't know till have babies. i didn't know till i baby. it's amazing. it's i had a baby. it's amazing. it's the best thing you can do. but i can't believe the amount you have to for things like have to pay for things like nurseries and stuff like that. and to pay tax on and then you have to pay tax on top of it. and then you have to pay tax on top actually, they have some >> actually, they have some figures. >> stuff should be tax >> nursery stuff should be tax deductible need deductible because you need it to get your job done. this is it to get yourjob done. this is it says uk aslef is the highest child world at child care costs in the world at about £936 per month. >> obviously that's like five days week. you know, full days a week. you know, full time. sweden, it's £115. now time. in sweden, it's £115. now i've a very obvious solution i've got a very obvious solution to this, which is that pensioners mr sweden pensioners have to look after kids if you
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want a state pension, you start looking after kids, old person looking after kids, old person looking after kids, old person looking after you baby, but they can have loads of them. that's the thing. you get to pensioners per like half dozen kids, so per like half a dozen kids, so you not one of the you know they're not one of the pensioners kills over. i've got a idea. a better idea. >> how about how about i not work? >> we're moving on now to french news. la pot calling the kettle black as the independent mayor of paris has the cheek to call twitter an open sewer. yes the paris mayor has quit twitter. >> they're calling it a gigantic global sewer. and that's twitter, not paris. yes. i don't know how she says it's destroying our democracies by spreading abuse , lies and spreading abuse, lies and misinformation or or the free flow of information is securing our democracy. so that's the way i see twitter now. previously when it was tightly regulated by leftists, they'd silenced stories such as the hunter biden laptop scandal and subvert democracy that way. now, now it's free. some people don't like that. some people don't like that. some people don't like the truth. it's too it's
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too hurtful for them. i mean , too hurtful for them. i mean, there is there is there are some hurtful opinions. >> there is some some vulgarity. you there's i mean, you know, and there's i mean, i don't like term hate speech, don't like the term hate speech, but there is some on but there is some stuff on there. you going to go there. where are you going to go that's a bit strong. but they'll go was obviously on the side of the controlled the liberals who controlled the flow she doesn't flow previously, and she doesn't like up. no, it is. like it up. em no, it is. >> but when was the last time you heard someone say, did you see that? that what what was said on threads. yeah >> that one called. >> what's that one called. marmaduke. or something. or mammoth. oh i know the one >> or mammoth. oh i know the one you yeah. you mean. yeah. >> this this one every six >> yeah. this this one every six months isn't it. mastodon or mastodon. >> yeah . >> yeah. >> yeah. >> god bless them , louis. >> oh god bless them, louis. this one will be right up your alimentary canal. this is ultra processed foods, and they're wicked, wicked ways . wicked, wicked ways. >> yes, it is. and this is ultra processed foods are not more appealing. study finds. and this is that was done by the is a study that was done by the university of bristol, which my is a study that was done by the uni goesy of bristol, which my is a study that was done by the uni goes to.: bristol, which my is a study that was done by the uni goes to. it's stol, which my is a study that was done by the uni goes to. it's aol, which my is a study that was done by the uni goes to. it's a veryhich my is a study that was done by the uni goes to. it's a very goodny kid goes to. it's a very good school, but it is it's basically they did a survey where they put two types of food hyperpalatable
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food, three kinds hyper processed food. i don't know that, you know how processed and palatable just means like sugar or sugar, right? >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and basically this is i tried research this thing. i couldn't get the information about what actual foods were studying. they put an avocado in, somebody's in front of somebody or a king prawn. which would you like to eat? the truth is, is our brain is hard wired to go mental after you're eating sugar. yeah, it is . it turns off our leptin , it . it turns off our leptin, it downgrades our mitochondria , it downgrades our mitochondria, it turns our whole body. all tingly and all draghi to make us eat and all draghi to make us eat and get fat because we're high pronating and you know, and even worse than that, you can have some sugar. >> if it's really just sugar. it may be fruit, but the, the sugar and fat combo. yeah, because there two things there are only two things in nature that are sugar and fat in proper . like nature that are sugar and fat in proper. like high ice cream. yeah no, like literally in nature. and that's nuts. ice cream and baby and baby milk. >> yeah, but nuts are not edible, but they need to be
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processed. this study makes the pepsi challenge mistake, so they put amounts this stuff, put small amounts of this stuff, you and fat and you know, sugar and fat and like, in a small amount like, yeah, in a small amount and cup fill, you'll be and a little cup fill, you'll be like, that's delicious. like, oh, that's delicious. >> it. you're >> eating a plate of it. you're going to be like this disgusting, disgusting. >> section to go. >> one more section to go. coming the walked coming up, the prodigy walked back. choking back. back. the men are choking back. the and porn. your buddy the tears and porn. your buddy has your has got your
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>> that direction anyway, leo. >> that direction anyway, leo. >> hello. we're back. sorry in the middle of an argument about the middle of an argument about the birth control pill . the birth control pill. >> i'm not going on it. simon lewis refuses to independent of the prodigy, have changed the title of one of their songs, apparently by inserting three asterisks into it. yeah. so the prodigy have the lyrics prodigy have changed the lyrics to smack my bishop. it's an anti anti—catholic church song. so this is 26. i can't believe it's been 26 years already. after the song was released. it was controversial at the time. um, they're on tour at the moment and they're playing the song without the, you know, without saying the, you know, the controversial controversial line. >> e- line. >> saying without the >> they're saying without the original as well. original vocalist as well. right. he's gone anyway, hasn't he think it was
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he died? i don't think it was the but was the dancen >> keith. yeah, yeah. i don't think he. unless he did sing. i thought he did sing. he did sing on later stuff. yeah at the on later stuff. yeah so at the time criticism from time it received criticism from artists including tori amos and the boys and the beastie the beastie boys and the beastie boys most misogynist boys were the most misogynist band when came band in the world when they came out. obviously got out. then they obviously got money became lame and money and became lame and stopped. all that. but stopped. stopped all that. but the video all the video wasn't at all misogynist. you know, misogynist. it showed, you know, somebody a wild night out somebody on a wild night out vomiting, doing drugs and all the of it. but the end the rest of it. but at the end of it, they look in the mirror andifs of it, they look in the mirror and it's a woman. it was a very progressive, and she was smacking up. smacking her own up. >> exactly. was was >> exactly. she was she was like her inner self that her was her inner self that needed be released from her needed to be released from her repressive sort of 9 to 5. yeah. and they were a fun band. >> of course they were. they were great. and you know this song live, you know, it wasn't a tall, oppressive, you know, compared to they used to have that sound that great kind of drum sound that great kind of drum sound that sort of like an, that was sort of like an, like an implosion. >> you remember that? it sort >> do you remember that? it sort of sucked all the air out beats? yeah, was good. yeah yeah, it was really good. yeah >> and didn't they weren't their
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hit yeah and hit song firestarter. yeah and isn't more like dangerous, isn't that more like dangerous, damaging one's that damaging. no one's stopping that exactly . and they're not blaming exactly. and they're not blaming all the fires that have set all the fires that have been set on that. all the fires that have been set on you. all the fires that have been set on you can put arson in her >> you can put arson in her majesty's dockyard. but there's no putting women on no disrespect putting women on this yeah now, this show, so. yeah times now, lewis, article that lewis, a long article that somehow mentions neither gladiator nor toy story three. yeah, it mention andrew tate. >> why do middle aged men keep crying and. and i'll tell you why. middle aged man keeps crying. because when you're middle aged women you middle aged women give you something about . middle aged women give you something about. i was something to cry about. i was fine until the time i got fine up until the time i got married. my wife taught me how to cry. basically she taught me how how it is and the thing about women is it's like they're trying to make it. trying to make men cry. >> thing about crying, >> here's my thing about crying, though, and i've had this conversation online a few times . conversation online a few times. men but they don't cry men do cry, but they don't cry when they're sad. they cry when they example heroism they see an example of heroism or self—sacrifice that's what or self—sacrifice. that's what women to movies women like. they go to movies and they go, oh, it's so sad. they but he they were lovers. but he cancelled and you're cancelled his death. and you're like, yeah, whatever. you know? he sank in the
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he let go and he sank in the titanic. but when maximus dies at the end of gladiator, you know, to his know, and goes back to his cornfield runs his hand over cornfield and runs his hand over the ears of wheat. yeah, it all comes because he is. he is acted with honour. right >> i know now i know >> you know, i know now i know what you're talking about because. or because i was because. or i do because i was watching . i was watching the watching. i was watching the world at war with laurence olivier. yeah and there was this. there was that part when the russians came in and they brought all their troops and they. they were about to be. and i'm not saying support the i'm not saying i support the russia, was, it was it russia, but it was, it was it was exactly what you said. >> and toy story three. it does. it right at the end. it kills me right at the end. and went with of dads to and i went with loads of dads to that. i'd heard that there that. and i'd heard that there was crying and i thought it was the bit where they were all sliding in the incinerator sliding down in the incinerator into inferno then they into the inferno and then they get no. after that, get rescued. no no. after that, they're the toys were in they're all the toys were in a box. giving them to box. and andy's giving them to the little girl because it's time for andy to go to college. and is at the and then he woody is at the bottom the box the little bottom of the box and the little girl wants woody. andy had girl wants woody. and andy had been woody to
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been meaning to take woody to college, but he decides to give him up or. >> well, i cried when i went to the bought hot dog the foyer and bought a hot dog and it cost £28. >> idea in the >> interesting idea in the guardian. leo, could guardian. now, leo, that could revolutionise consumption. >> this horrific. so >> listen, this is horrific. so this the buddy boost. how this is the buddy boost. how accountability you accountability partners make you healthy , happy, and more healthy, happy, and more successful. a this is successful. so this is a this is a accountability partner is a friend who helps you commit to your goals. you know, you might go to the gym together, but it's in the papers because speaker in the papers because us speaker mike speaker mike johnson, the new speaker and his teenage son, monitor each other's pornography and that's the longest thing i've heard for a very long time. i mean, wrong even if you do mean, it's wrong even if you do it with mate, doing it with it with a mate, doing it with your own son is just with your own dad. >> like a mutual, right? >> it's like a mutual, right? >> it's like a mutual, right? >> yeah, yeah. >> it's like a mutual, right? >> that's yeah. >> it's like a mutual, right? >> that's i yeah. >> it's like a mutual, right? >> that's i mean,1h. >> it's like a mutual, right? >> that's i mean, presumably the dad doesn't do it at all. dad just doesn't do it at all. that's the idea. >> it could have. it could have come up on the app he was come up on the app if he was looking at. they've an looking at. yeah they've got an app looking at. yeah they've got an app the app. app they've got in the app. >> it's called covenant eyes. so on my god. we think of walk oh my god. we think of walk people as being really, you know, watching what you do. and
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i is in i mean, to be fair, this is in the guardian and they're appalled when somebody watches a ricky so, know, ricky gervais dvd. so, you know, here appalled that here they're appalled that people watch people are wanting to watch less porn. understand. porn. i don't understand. >> is the this is the >> this is the this is the christian right that we hear a lot about. right. america. lot about. right. in america. they a weird bunch, they are just a weird bunch, aren't they, than here aren't they, than they are here or more devout. >> i them as more so more >> i see them as more so more devout and better. >> i would do mine with what's her we on the on her name that we have on the on the occasionally. who the channel occasionally. who the tory minister who is. the old tory minister who is. >> and whittaker whittaker. >> and whittaker and whittaker. >> and whittaker and whittaker. >> be my porn >> exactly. she could be my porn buddy. >> exactly. she could be my porn buddy . you know what? buddy. you know what? >> as a i didn't grow up >> as a jew, i didn't grow up liking christians. i didn't grow up liking christians. now i think need a bit more of them i >> -- >> i've got a 16 year old son. i don't i haven't even asked him at all if he's like, i can't imagine having that conversation. you know what i mean? anything about it? like, do you have a phone? yeah. >> yeah. but that's the flip side of all this stuff. being pushed in schools is we don't have to do it. >> yeah, you deal with it. thank you much for that. you very much for that. heartwarming times.
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heartwarming story in the times. lewis as man willing to go the lewis as a man willing to go the extra yard to pursue his dream. lewis as a man willing to go the extrayeah, to pursue his dream. lewis as a man willing to go the extrayeah, that'ssue his dream. lewis as a man willing to go the extrayeah, that's the his dream. lewis as a man willing to go the extrayeah, that's the question.. um, yeah, that's the question. >> extends by 22cm of >> man extends legs by 22cm of fill to fulfil dream driving fill to fulfil dream of driving diggers. he's only four foot three tall. guy . three inches tall. poor guy. yeah. and in this country it's horrible shorter people. yeah. and in this country it's horriband shorter people. yeah. and in this country it's horriband because people. yeah. and in this country it's horriband because people like yeah. and because people like leo get all the girls, all the kids , everything, they're kids, everything, they're well—liked and so he started. he had. they have this surgery now, which i think i've seen people where they actually .breakthe where they actually .break the leg it open, and then it leg cut it open, and then it grows and then wouldn't you expect i mean, i do feel sorry for the guy and i'm pleased that he's like, if he's done this and he's like, if he's done this and he's now fulfilling his dream, driving these vehicles. >> would some kind >> but you would think some kind of could have been of prosthetic could have been attached regular attached to his regular leg without breaking his bones. yeah, is to drive. yeah, but this is to drive. >> i think when you're operating heavy machinery, can't have heavy machinery, you can't have some, a strap pop some, you know, a strap can pop off all of a sudden, off and then all of a sudden, what's his name? >> prometheus is pistorius. yeah. >> yeah. you can't. and then the crane swings round and crane just swings round and demolishes orphanage. but demolishes an orphanage. but yeah, probably done yeah, i mean, he's probably done it a girlfriend as well.
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it to get a girlfriend as well. funnily enough, have funnily enough, i did have i haven't my legs lengthened, haven't had my legs lengthened, but have had this not the but i have had this not the exact same thing, but had lots exact same thing, but i had lots of because i was of bone removed because i was run and remember run over. and then i remember that had to reform. yeah. >> so you know the pain involved. yeah >> yeah. >> yeah. >> i hope he wasn't run over by a pickup truck or a jcb because this could be a long term revenge is what he's planning. so you're saying. >> you're saying has >> you're saying that leo has had leg lengthening? no they didn't make it longer. why do you lie? didn't make it longer. why do you finally , leo, we got one didn't make it longer. why do youfinally , leo, we got one more >> finally, leo, we got one more story. let's see if we can do this. and we just. just over a minute and this i think, minute and this show, i think, has earned word of the year so deep fake ai in post—truth is merriam—webster its 2023 merriam—webster chooses its 2023 word year, it's about word of the year, and it's about being to yourself. being true to yourself. >> the 2023 word of the year is authentic pick. so they're saying there's a crisis in authenticity. all this fake news and don't what and stuff. you don't know what to unless watching to trust unless you're watching gb can trust every gb news. you can trust every single word. >> i think we are authentic here, though. i mean, we kind of, maybe put of, you know, maybe we put a little bit of a filter on, but not too much. >> i can't speak for everybody
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out i'm my best to >> i can't speak for everybody outauthentic. my best to >> i can't speak for everybody outauthentic. remember best to >> i can't speak for everybody outauthentic. remember to ;t to >> i can't speak for everybody outauthentic. remember to get me be authentic. remember to get me on twitter. louis schaefer, buy my i got a little bit confused. >> so can i just ask miriam webster normally a word webster because normally a word of is a new word like of the year is a new word like selfie or, you know, i don't know, greenwashing or something authentic around for authentic has been around for a very time, right? yeah very long time, right? yeah it's been used. >> not. it's not even an >> it's not. it's not even an old word that's come back into fashion. just been fashion. it's just always been there. it does it mean that >> but is it does it mean that this is the word that people are searching for? miriam webster inauthentic. >> they are. >> i think they are. >> i think they are. >> are. i feel they are. >> they are. i feel they are. whereas last year's one gaslighting, that actually gaslighting, that was actually quite that quite good because that was a very term. i find very useful term. i do find gaslighting is from the 1930, from should have from a film. you should have just a slang at that just use it as a slang at that time. did they? >> they should have gaslighting. now that's when you tell someone they great. like they look great. you know, like lizzo. everybody's like, oh, you're i you're stunning and brave. i love yes love it. yes >> girl as slay queen. >> girl as in slay queen. >> girl as in slay queen. >> yes. lighting was was used. last thing. >> the show is nearly over. let's take another look at let's take another quick look at tuesday's pages. the time tuesday's front pages. the time is demands price. is hamas demands higher price. the telegraph
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the soldiers free telegraph britain faces un blacklist for blocking trans laws. boohoo the express tie for bank chief who talks britain up. sorry. time for a bank chief who does that the i news have interest rates that will stay high into 2025 say economists. the sun gone too far . ooh say economists. the sun gone too far. ooh that's vr and the daily star close encounters of the weird kind. those were your front pages. that is all we have time for. thank you to my guests, leo kearse and louis schaefer. there is louis with his merchandise. leo will be back with howie back tomorrow with josh howie and capurro . and if you're and scott capurro. and if you're watching at 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. otherwise, thank you very much for entrusting your rundown of the night with us.see your rundown of the night with us. see you again soon.
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awaited inside story of royal rivalries is released today , but rivalries is released today, but is omid scobie's book really something? the house of windsor should worry about? our royal correspondent cameron walker has the latest. >> yes to alleged royal racists are character assassins of the princess of wales and harry and meghan painted as innocent victims, but should we believe everything we read? join us shortly . shortly. >> we mightn't believe it, but it's a good read, isn't it? another 11 israeli hostages, including three year old twins , including three year old twins, have been freed by hamas as the ceasefire is extended for two days. as nigel farage being silenced in the jungle. >> our reporter ben leo has the latest from australia . latest from australia. >> that's right. join me live down under where i've got exclusive bombshell information about potentially censoring nigel farage aidan magee with
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