tv Headliners Replay GB News November 30, 2023 5:00am-6:01am GMT
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here in lasted six days in use here in the uk. sir keir starmer said today the government is to blame for record migration figures as he promised to scrap laws that allows workers from overseas to be paid less than british workers . the prime minister be paid less than british workers. the prime minister and the labour leader clashed during prime minister's questions earlier on today with sir keir reminding mps of the government's promise to reduce legal migration back in 2019. rishi sunak did concede that immigration levels are still too high, but he said the number is coming down and sir elton john was in parliament today talking about a new project aiming to end all new cases of hiv infections in england by 2030. he highlighted plans for hiv testing in a&e departments to be increased in a bid to detect the virus in people who might not otherwise be tested . experts say otherwise be tested. experts say more than 4000 people in england are believed to be living with the virus without knowing health and social care. secretary
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victoria atkins says it's an important step towards eradicating hiv. >> we've seen from the scheme that has already rolled out across the highest prevalence areas that thousands of people can be helped with this. these early diagnoses and then they can be given the support and the medical treatment they need to lead, not just longer lives, but also high quality lives. >> victoria atkins, now nottingham city council says it is in severe financial distress andifs is in severe financial distress and it's therefore unable to deliver a balanced budget . east deliver a balanced budget. east midlands reporter will hollis has more. >> nottingham city council has today announced that it cannot balance its budget and the chief financial officer has issued a section 114 notice effectively declaring bankruptcy that means that the labour led authority me from today can only spend money on statue free services. those are things like education for
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roads, for children's services . roads, for children's services. as now the council must meet within 21 days to discuss what measures they will be putting in place. the council has already spent a number of years struggling with its finances and today it has really come to a head. >> will hollis. now it's another very cold night tonight. widespread frost and freezing fog across great swathes of the country , particularly across country, particularly across scotland and in the north. yorkshire has already seen wintry showers tonight, particularly along that north eastern coastline. and that belt has moved inland and snow is continuing to fall tonight in scotland and across northumberland . more is on the northumberland. more is on the way as well . temperatures set to way as well. temperatures set to drop to as low as minus eight in rural parts of scotland. and the met office has extended its yellow weather warning until friday. but they have indicated it's much too early to predict a white christmas . this is gb news
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white christmas. this is gb news across the uk on tv in your car on digital radio and on your smart speaker by saying play gb news. this is britain's news channel. >> hello and welcome to headliners. i'm simon evans joining me tonight for the most entertaining news paper review show you'll find anywhere josh howie and his young travelling time travelling younger self jonathan kogan i'm not sure i see that, to be honest . see that, to be honest. >> i mean, they put these things up. >> did you see it, josh maybe from you.7 yeah >> did you see it, josh maybe from you? yeah yeah. >> you claiming that maybe from an alternate dimension in well, i worked out . that's right. no, an alternate dimension in well, i didn'td out . that's right. no, an alternate dimension in well, i didn't work. that's right. no, an alternate dimension in well, i didn't work. i'veit's right. no, an alternate dimension in well, i didn't work. i've neverht. no, an alternate dimension in well, i didn't work. i've never worked saying away the hair. saying just take away the hair. look reckon. right. look what do we reckon. right. cover then put the cover our heads and then put the glasses on and israel. hey, it's there it is. >> hey i oh, my god . there's a
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>> hey! oh, my god. there's a lot of doctor who news at the moment swirling around. >> i don't think we want to add to anything. no, that's true. >> it's already terrible. anyway, let's take a look at thursday's pages . we kick anyway, let's take a look at tthithy's pages . we kick anyway, let's take a look at tthith the pages . we kick anyway, let's take a look at tthith the timesiges . we kick anyway, let's take a look at tthith the times migrantz kick anyway, let's take a look at tthith the times migrant deal off with the times migrant deal delayed days, put rwandan help at risk . make the telegraph at risk. make the telegraph hostage baby died in gaza . hamas hostage baby died in gaza. hamas claims the guardian air pollution from fossil fuels kills 5 million people a year. and carol ann duffy has written a terrible poem, the express . a terrible poem, the express. yes, smile of an ancient lost in a war with no end. the eye news uk pensions triple lock under threat from 2025. and finally the daily star down with this sort of thing. those were your front pages . so kicking off this front pages. so kicking off this in—depth look at the front pages
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with the telegraph. josh yeah. >> hostage baby died in gaza. hamas claims this is baby kfir , hamas claims this is baby kfir, who's ten months old, who was kidnapped when they were nine months old. and the news was revealed earlier today . i revealed earlier today. i haven't, to be honest, wanted to register it properly . many register it properly. many people have spent . the last people have spent. the last seven weeks praying for this baby and the baby brother and also the mother, ariel , who were also the mother, ariel, who were also the mother, ariel, who were also said to be killed. this is revealed . hamas said that it revealed. hamas said that it that the baby, their family were killed in a airstrike . there killed in a airstrike. there haven't actually been any airstrikes from the idf for days now. so there's no evidence that this is true. this could be part of some sort of mental torture . of some sort of mental torture. and it's but yes , if they're
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and it's but yes, if they're dead, they blame is firmly on hamas who kidnapped them from their home. >> and so what is happening at the moment? are we still in ceasefire at the moment? >> we're technically in >> we're still technically in ceasefire. were more ceasefire. there were more hostages today, hostages released today, not including noam levy, who was the young woman who people saw with blood on her trousers. no one knows anything about her. the red cross have been disgusting in their inability to actually get any proof of life through this time. it was discovered today one of children today that one of the children revealed that hidden revealed that he was hidden by unwra , employee in their unwra, a un employee in their attic . and this is someone who attic. and this is someone who we pay tax money towards to kidnap a small child and hamas will be destroyed because israel has no other choice. it's as simple as that. and whenever the war continues , as i pray that as war continues, as i pray that as many innocent palestinians are , many innocent palestinians are, say, saved as possible , but
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say, saved as possible, but israel has no option but to get rid of hamas . rid of hamas. >> anything you want to add, jonathan? >> it's just really, really sort of horrendous news. not that nobody was wanting that . and nobody was wanting that. and yeah, and it's just, you know, more false claims from a terrorist organisation. so and then the times they have that as well, but also this thing about the migrant deal with the rwandan relationship starting to fray somewhat. >> yeah, it seems to be a bit of a mess. >> so migrant deal delays put rwandan help at risk. so rwandan support for the uk's flagship migration scheme is at risk because of continued delays to getting flights off the ground . getting flights off the ground. >> ministers have been warned, so there seems to be an endless series of delays these series of delays for these flights. actually leaving. >> to incredible >> there seems to be incredible amounts around all amounts of red tape around all of now senior diplomats of that and now senior diplomats have told the foreign office that rwanda's commitment to the scheme cannot be taken for granted. scheme cannot be taken for gra so d.think there's worry >> so i think there's a worry that all work and all that after all this work and all this setting up of this whole
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scheme, they're worried that rwanda is going to back out now andisnt rwanda is going to back out now and isn't there a there's suspicion. >> i have it anyway. so there is a suspicion, but i don't know how shared it is that how widely shared it is that there has been. i mean, suella braverman obviously was kind of like figurehead for this like the figurehead for this whole campaign, idea , whole this campaign, this idea, the been kicked the strategy. she's been kicked out. there was a real sense that all it was sort of heaped on all of it was sort of heaped on her shoulders. and then she was like turfed overboard the like turfed overboard with the whole the whole thing. yeah. all of the stain, the shame of stain, all of the shame of having created a raft of legislation going legislation that was never going to hurdles that to clear the legal hurdles that it faced so that the government can sort of say, well, look , we can sort of say, well, look, we tried our best, but those dang lawyers up and lawyers tripped us up and smothered us and suffocated. >> you think was always an >> do you think it was always an empty >> do you think it was always an em i:y >> do you think it was always an em i don't you know, it wouldn't >> i don't you know, it wouldn't be the would it ? i mean, be the first, would it? i mean, i'm not saying an entirely empty gesture. work, gesture. possibly it could work, but always slightly sort but it was always slightly sort of theatrical. of bizarre and theatrical. i mean, seemed mean, mean, it always seemed i mean, i'm i've got any i'm not saying i've got any better . and lot better ideas. and an awful lot of wing commentators who of left wing commentators who have poured scorn on it are also singularly to always singularly unable to always
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suggest should suggest exactly what should happen. did happen. but, you know, it did sound an empty threat. >> if you don't behave, you're going to rwanda. it going to send you to rwanda. it always one those always sounded like one of those bogeyman but also, bogeyman stuff, but also, i mean, if they mean, they know, okay, if they do to leave the if do want to leave the echr, if they willing that, they are willing to do that, then, you know, that may be the final stage that would actually enable taking enable us to start taking advantage brexit because advantage of brexit because at the no new the moment, virtually no new legislation has passed legislation has been passed which been which wouldn't have been possible while we were members of union. of the european union. >> it's been an absurd >> i mean, it's been an absurd kind damp squib, hasn't it? kind of damp squib, hasn't it? but come to that later. but we come back to that later. it's exactly what needs it's clearly exactly what needs to happen, although well, i mean it's clearly exactly what needs t
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mean are things, you know, mean these are things, you know, protect and workers protect workers and workers rights, workers, we rights, protect workers, as we slide recession and slide into recession and economic, you know, lack of competitiveness, which is not a great protection in the long run . well, in my view. well but when it comes to rwanda, there was never any evidence that this was never any evidence that this was the silver bullet. >> no . that was going to you >> no. that was going to you know, the idea that it would be this great deterrent or whatnot. that's never your starmers man. >> what does starmer have in store for us if he gets huw thomas man, you know, no, i don't think he's i don't think he i think he would let it die a death vine. it's almost death on the vine. it's almost impossible vote for anyone impossible to vote for anyone who has any serious prospect of limiting that i starmer , >> saying that i think starmer, when i had a word with him the other day, he recognised uses that there an with that there is an issue with immigration country that immigration in this country that but no one has a solution and the tories don't have a solution and not either. but yes, this and not either. but yes, in this case i think rwanda really and not either. but yes, in this case like think rwanda really and not either. but yes, in this case like being rwanda really and not either. but yes, in this case like being criticised,aally don't like being criticised, which is what they're doing through all these court cases. they're basically going, well, rwanda is actually a totally
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unsafe place and they don't like that. enough. that. fair enough. fair enough. >> to get through the >> we've got to get through the guardian quickly. we air guardian quite quickly. we air pollution from fossil fuels. >> pollution from >> yeah, air pollution from fossil kills 5 million fossil fuels kills 5 million people that's much more people a year. that's much more than previously than has been previously estimated . this is the eve of estimated. this is on the eve of the cop 28 climate summit. ironically in dubai and yeah, this sort of ties into why you know sunak passing through the extending the zone in london what the reason wasn't about or what the reason wasn't about or what he says anyway wasn't about saving the planet as much as or net zero was more to do with the deaths from pollution which are real, you know, and people believe that but they're not happening in, you know, shepherd's bush. >> i don't think and i don't think they're happening. >> shepherd's bush is the one place it is happening. >> pollution, >> yeah, like pollution, i think. i think the reality is that they they like sort of that they they like to sort of shift goalposts . they like shift the goalposts. they like to of, you know, keep up a to kind of, you know, keep up a fog. similar to the fog. it's very similar to the playbook of playbook on the other side, of course, endlessly causing confusion. very
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confusion. it's all very convenient it's come out convenient that it's come out this moment, know, this precise moment, you know, but are going to but i think people are going to struggle visualise those struggle to visualise those 5 million deaths. what do you think, jonathan, when they find that they can't afford to heat the house? yeah, i think or install a heat pump whatever the house? yeah, i think or inis?l a heat pump whatever the house? yeah, i think or inis? no, 1eat pump whatever the house? yeah, i think or inis? no, iaat pump whatever the house? yeah, i think or inis? no, i don'tmp whatever the house? yeah, i think or inis? no, i don't disagreeiatever there. >> it's going to be quite a well, that's the thing. it's is it commercial it just is it commercial flights? is it because if it's just people travelling, it just seems like it's mbappe thompson isn't it? >> it really is private jet basically and leonardo dicaprio will because of this. now because of this. >> going to up. >> no one's going to turn up. >> no one's going to turn up. >> fortunately, there be >> fortunately, there won't be any if it's going any snow in davos if it's going to be leonardo dicaprio his to be leonardo dicaprio on his private all go to private jet whilst we all go to a in bognor regis. a holiday in bognor regis. >> watching to >> and if you're watching to cover carol duffy's, i cover off carol ann duffy's, i think possibly the worst think this is possibly the worst news, no longer laureate, news, no longer poet laureate, but 2019. but she was until 2019. >> written a poetic >> she's written a poetic tribute women's football. tribute to women's football. have it? that rain have you read it? that rain heavy leather ball, your left foot smashed a century ago has reached us here. and so we see you, lily parr, in hindsight's extra time linked to our female
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family chain of passing forwards to mary philip, first black, captain of the pride and katie chapman, carly telford. millie, i mean, it's sounds like titania mcgrath. is that poetry? i just reached that age. >> it makes me want to watch women's football. >> it was not as poetic as that norwegian footballer. your guys took a hell of a beating. i mean, i would rather hear that. let's finish off very quickly with the star, as always . with the star, as always. >> as always. >> as always. >> so down with the sort of thing top boffins predict. psycho will spell the end psycho robots will spell the end for vicars and priests. for our vicars and priests. so this another about how this is another story about how ai is likely going to replace many, many of jobs. many, many of our jobs. >> yeah, it seems to be happening in creative fields. >> happening. >> it's happening. >> it's happening. >> to write sermons. >> it's happening. >> well, to write sermons. >> it's happening. >> well, this to write sermons. >> it's happening. >> well, this is write sermons. >> it's happening. >> well, this is ante sermons. >> it's happening. >> well, this is an interesting. >> well, this is an interesting thing john peterson thing. and i heard john peterson talk this. you talk about this. what if you trained an on the trained an al on all the religious texts, lot of religious texts, which a lot of them actually been? you religious texts, which a lot of them then lly been? you religious texts, which a lot of them then condense een? you religious texts, which a lot of them then condense them you religious texts, which a lot of them then condense them and could then condense them and then questions it then ask some questions about it and an ai reach and i wonder, could an ai reach enlightenment trained enlightenment if it was trained in these things or maybe in all these things or maybe help us? >> quite easy you want >> it's quite easy if you want that but that's not
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that to happen. but that's not what texts is what religious texts are for, is it? it's true. that's the it? no, it's true. that's the front done. but stay front page is done. but stay with us. coming up, we have rishi ursula. mask rishi snubbing ursula. the mask is your is slipping. and could your menopause a murderer? menopause make you a murderer? we'll see you in a couple of
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the hat. come on, bring a hat minute. >> go. >> go. >> well, i was wearing the hat. listen, this is you know, this is my culture, this hat. i'm not going to mention it because i thought a religious thing. it is? >> it is? >> it is? >> yeah. it couldn't be. it's brightonian. >> that's what it is. yeah. >> that's what it is. yeah. >> brightonian. >> it's a brightonian. it's a cult. you have to wear it in cult. do you have to wear it in our at this point? yeah our rac at this point? yeah it has button. okay at has the brighton button. okay at the top, you know, and that tells you nod to other tells you you nod to other people my gangs. people with the hat of my gangs. i'm yeah. i'm in. yeah. okay. >> you're in the blue gang. >> you're in the blue gang. >> there's a couple of >> no. yeah, there's a couple of signs. not going to do them signs. i'm not going to do them on. no, no signs. don't to signs. i'm not going to do them on. iit, no signs. don't to signs. i'm not going to do them on. iit away. gns. don't to signs. i'm not going to do them on. iit away. is s. don't to signs. i'm not going to do them on. iit away. is s. sackable to offence. >> this is the recycling bin sign. let's kick off with the guardian and the barely concealed sexual tension that is tantalising continent i >> -- >> but 5mm >> but when technocrats collide, i didn't. >> i did not see that. i think you're reading between that chemistry, ursula and rishi. >> you think they've got something, want get in? something, so want to get in? >> she is not rich enough for him at all. sunak rejects von de leon's comments that the uk could rejoin the eu. this she was giving a little talk and she was giving a little talk and she
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was for our generation, messed up. but our kids. this was for our generation, messed up. but our kids . this is what up. but our kids. this is what the word the way she's using the first person plural. >> there as if she feels that she takes some just yeah they goofed up but she said the younger generation could fix it. >> but this is the big thing she said. she said the direction of travel. yeah. this is what and i don't know where she's getting that from because i don't feel there's direction of travel that from because i don't feel th> right. >> right. >> it's it's a continually >> it's a it's a continually evolving it's not over evolving process. it's not over till it's started yet. >> but yeah, it's been seven years now, so i think it is probably blink of an eye. >> something, something might have >> something, something might havwell, think thing is
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>> well, i think the thing is that whatever the bad stuff was seemingly can argue seemingly and we can all argue about the scale of that or if it happened at all, i think it did. but the point is we paid that price. so let's get some of the good stuff now, ideally, i mean, or at least see if we can get something good out of it. one thing. well, this is it. the three things that he listed when he came back and said, was it xl bully bullies? he said, this is what he said. he said, we have the ability to hold on, to strengthen our migration system, which we've not done. we can get medicines faster. now, that's an argument through covid and whatever. and there is improved animal welfare. it's like, i don't care about . don't care about. >> he actually did go with xl bullies . bullies. >> he went with animal welfare as the third reason why it's good that we left the eu . good that we left the eu. >> jonathan pryce. jonathan pryce. i've just said those words together . that's words together. that's interesting. jonathan pryce profiting jarang now. jonathan pryce profiteering. now as the times have evidence of nasty little shenanigans on the high
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street . street. >> presumably you're talking about the big issue salary whispers in my ear every time i walk past. >> yeah. does he ? >> yeah. does he? >> strange. >> strange. >> does say? >> what does he say? >> what does he say? >> i tell you. >> i can't tell you. >> take off hat. >> take off the hat. >> take off the hat. >> what exactly? they actually talking or talking about? filtered milk or something, was it. yeah. >> the crying over >> you know the crying over expensive milk is actually quite serious expensive milk is actually quite seriyes. so the cma accuses food >> yes. so the cma accuses food brands of raising prices faster than so as part of a than costs rise. so as part of a review on the grocery market, at the competition and markets authority concluded over authority concluded that over the years, about three the past two years, about three quarters of branded suppliers with products in those sectors increase raise increase their profits, raise pnces increase their profits, raise prices more their input prices more than their input costs increase. so companies costs increase. so big companies have to make more money. have decided to make more money. quelle surprise is what they do. they raise . they raise. >> yeah, but you've got to be careful with this because there is suggestion when is always a suggestion when pnces is always a suggestion when prices go up, it often happens at petrol pumps most at the petrol pumps is the most obvious people do obvious example that people do think of think it's profiteering. but of course able to course if they were able to profiteer, would profiteer, they would just profiteer, they would just profiteer i mean, they profiteer, they would just profialways i mean, they profiteer, they would just profialways sell i mean, they profiteer, they would just profialways sell theiraan, they profiteer, they would just profialways sell their goods ey profiteer, they would just profialways sell their goods at will always sell their goods at the that can get the highest that they can get away i don't have away with, which i don't have into between into competition between supermarkets. profit supermarkets. keeps profit margins very, very tight as a
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rule and supermarkets large supermarkets you know nail down dairy producers and all the rest of it. you know, the idea that they can just go, oh, we'll just put the prices up, it's not that easy. oh that's it. easy. oh well, that's it. >> but interesting thing, >> but the interesting thing, the competition and markets authority have last year authority have ruled last year that say, the that actually, as you say, the supermarkets themselves aren't profiteering it's profiteering like this. it's these things. and this these big brand things. and this is always about is what we always find about capitalism is you're totally right. long as right. the market as long as there lots of options, it there are lots of options, it will downwards. the will filter downwards. the pnces will filter downwards. the prices generally monopoly. prices generally get a monopoly. but you a monopoly but when you get a monopoly on things not breast things like breast, not breast milk, milk, milk, in my case breast milk, but on baby formula, which only has two companies that it, has two companies that do it, which what? has two companies that do it, whi nestle? at? >> nestle? >> nestle? >> yeah, whatever . >> yeah, whatever. >> yeah, whatever. >> they were the ones. that was the we don't the reason we don't have a perrier award anymore is because of their association with so things those big things like that those big things like that those big things like things or, or something like heinz like heinz beans, which is like the market heinz beans, which is like the ma they can afford to just whack >> they can afford to just whack up people up those prices because people aren't options. aren't buying the options. >> the worst one >> you know what the worst one is at the moment? ticketmaster oh, monopoly , absolutely oh, the monopoly, absolutely hated, aren't they in the us going kill live events? going to kill live events? >> yeah, i don't out no.
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>> yeah, i don't go out no. >> anyway, josh they've spelt that with an apostrophe between the h, which is giving the s and the h, which is giving you exotic josh josh you a slightly exotic josh josh daily mail . you a slightly exotic josh josh daily mail. now you a slightly exotic josh josh daily mail . now everything we daily mail. now everything we were scolded for saying at the time turns out to be true, yet again. >> no, i. no, no proof that face masks ever worked against covid claims . the uk hsa boss, this claims. the uk hsa boss, this professor, dame jenny harris. she heads up the uk health security agency. now i believe she was deputy before. and essentially this just this stuff just winds me up when i just think of the masks. i used to get the sweat and it was just nastiness of it. you knew it was useless . useless. >> it was all coming out. >> it was all coming out. >> it was all coming out. >> it didn't make any sense. they proved early on that it was it was an aerosol type thing. it wasn't about droplets. so wasn't about droplets. yeah. so it would up room. it would fill up a room. you could through it's could vape through it. it's ridiculous. stupid . ridiculous. it was so stupid. now they're saying they're now they're saying so they're saying people people now they're saying so they're sayinbeing people people now they're saying so they're sayinbeing instructed e people now they're saying so they're sayinbeing instructed e fhavez were being instructed to have like and that would like two levels and that would make. but even three levels. she's saying there's no real evidence of anything. and if anything, that
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anything, the argument that actually stuff worse actually made stuff worse because made people falsely because it made people falsely confident . confident. >> and also, we all know we went to the supermarket with the same mask for like three weeks in a row. kind of still in my row. you kind of still in my coat pocket, three years on. yeah, dog. but here's yeah, the dog. but here's the story on. story before we move on. >> she said, well, >> they said she said, well, what's of doing it what's the harm of doing it anyway? there is a harm. anyway? well, there is a harm. there's a bunch of there's a harm for a bunch of there was a harm for kids who were school during were stuck in school during summer wearing them were stuck in school during surday,�* wearing them were stuck in school during sur day, coming wearing them were stuck in school during sur day, coming back, vearing them were stuck in school during sur day, coming back, welts; them were stuck in school during sur day, coming back, welts on|em all day, coming back, welts on their there's their faces. yeah. there's the harm of our leaders harm in the trust of our leaders that next time something like this happens, quantity this happens, huge quantity of landfill well. this happens, huge quantity of lan i fill well. this happens, huge quantity of lani mean, well. this happens, huge quantity of lani mean, some well. this happens, huge quantity of lani mean, some of ell. this happens, huge quantity of lani mean, some of the least >> i mean, some of the least biodegradable billions this. >> e- this. >> i pay good money made >> and i pay good money made into nappies. i pay good money on fillers. and on these lip fillers. and i didn't get to show them for two years. >> your ordinary >> your pout is extra ordinary now. baby development, they >> and baby development, they can't interacting >> and baby development, they can'tthat. interacting >> and baby development, they can'tthat. seriously. nteracting >> and baby development, they can'tthat. seriously. nteractag with that. seriously. that's a real that and real issue. that was and interacting human beings real issue. that was and inteipeople human beings real issue. that was and inteipeople used1uman beings real issue. that was and inteipeople used to nan beings real issue. that was and inteipeople used to bullyzings and people used to bully people for not wearing them is ridiculous. you should be ashamed. all you. ashamed. all of you. >> another >> jonathan here's another tripwire. fact, tripwire. a minefield. in fact, i in the telegraph, i would say in the telegraph, should defence should menopause be a defence or mitigation mean , i use mitigation in law? i mean, i use excuse can if i'm
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excuse whenever i can if i'm honest. >> yeah . where is sajeela? so >> yeah. where is sajeela? so menopause offers menopausal offers could be spared. jail under new sentencing guidelines. so the sentencing council, which advises the government and courts, has set out new guidelines encouraging courts to consider more rehabilitative community sentences rather than sending people, in this instance, women, to jail for short terms. >> well, you say , i think you >> well, you say, i think you were probably with people. were probably right with people. the because the first time around, because women a loaded women is obviously a loaded term. there's probably have term. there's probably men have menopause now well, right? menopause now as well, right? oh, yeah. oh, of course. yeah. >> studio that wearing >> and the studio that wearing a blue hat is a prime example. >> i do think the beret now, eddie izzard tells me i look splendid. think the splendid. i think the interesting thing about this is that one of the major mitigations in terms of sentencing is already if you are pregnant or if you have young children. so basically, they've already got any woman from roughly like 16 up to about 48. they're all covered by the fact that it would be to cruel put them in jail while they're pregnant as long as they get pregnant as long as they get
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pregnant before they're sentenced. it's cool put sentenced. it's cool to put anyone and then now the anyone in jail. and then now the menopause you through to menopause takes you through to about something that. menopause takes you through to ab basically. this is their time to really, it's to shine. yeah, but really, it's because out of because they've run out of spaces. also part of spaces. it's also the part of it. but you know what? of all of the groups the different groups that they're here they're talking about here of sort giving mitigating sort of giving these mitigating sentences, with this sentences, i do agree with this one. menopausal women , you know, one. menopausal women, you know, and i say this with all love, but their mental and it's not fair. they're not thinking properly . yeah. i mean, look, if properly. yeah. i mean, look, if they're on hrt , then everything they're on hrt, then everything goes right. but some of the crimes they commit, there was a woman think killed some woman who i think killed some cars or something and did cars or something and it did sound like was. sound like it was. >> imagine that was >> you could imagine that was the thing that a massive the kind of thing that a massive hormonal imbalance would just kind you know, you out kind of, you know, send you out to do. i think there may be other crimes you have to other crimes where you have to say, homicide, very say, well, triple homicide, very few that few women do commit them, that she hot women. she was very hot about women. yeah now nostalgia yeah josh mirror now nostalgia fans will be excited to hear the united states air force are putting band back together putting the band back together
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for reunion . for a long overdue reunion. >> bang, bang us nuclear >> indeed. bang, bang us nuclear bombs set to return to uk for the first time in 15 years. i didn't even know they were gone. >> no, the eagles i my first ever protest was actually greenham common. >> was it when i was when you were a lesbian? yeah, when i was lesbian. my mum dragged me along. >> now, that's why jonathan. >> now, that's why jonathan. >> very, very. i do have >> very, very. yeah. i do have the haircut. radiation. that's why lost my was remember why i lost my hair was remember growing greenham growing up with the greenham common it was a big deal, >> yeah. it was a big deal, wasn't it? what was it? about 1986 something? 1986 or something? >> think was >> well, i think it was the early 80s. that was that early 80s. was that was that cnd? yeah. cnd? was that. yeah. >> did genuinely did >> but it did it genuinely did become was become a feminist thing. it was mainly women and then and then it became like a feminist protest since the female since the was menopausal >> yeah. it was a menopausal woman with a nuclear bomb. that's risk. >> so now all our nuclear well, we've parents are under >> so now all our nuclear well, we"sea. parents are under the sea. >> yeah. the american deputy defence kathleen >> yeah. the american deputy defenc has kathleen >> yeah. the american deputy defenchas been kathleen >> yeah. the american deputy defenc has been visiting een >> yeah. the american deputy defenc has been visiting raf hicks, has been visiting raf lakenheath , which is where the lakenheath, which is where the bombs were last time. some of the bombs were. and that's an indicator that they're going to be like million to
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be upgrading like 40 million to build make build some barracks there, make sure make sure everything's safe, make sure everything's safe, make sure take the sure you can't just take the nukes out of a shed or something. yeah, of course. greenpeace i'm not. the green party saying, oh, no, don't party is saying, oh, no, don't do it. but i kind want them do it. but i kind of want them back. do it. but i kind of want them back . want the bombs back? yeah back. want the bombs back? yeah like they're sort of saying, oh, it's going to make us more of a target. but we keep seeing target. but we keep on seeing all from where all that stuff from russia where they're like, we're going to nuke and here's a little nuke you. and here's a little way would way that we would do it. >> we've discussed time to >> we've discussed it's time to take of the take advantage of the opportunities by opportunities presented to us by brexit. one those brexit. and if one of those isn't new germany isn't a new germany and a pre—emptive strike, i don't know what we're the halfway what it is. we're at the halfway point. for race point. stay with us. for race rounds radio five, beyonce rounds at radio five, beyonce bleached backlash why bleached body backlash and why revisionist biracial queer western novels have not become the genre busting success we'd hoped. saddle up, partner. see you a couple
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that he finds the skin colour of his colleagues is affecting his mental health. i think there might be a word for that, isn't there? >> yeah, the word is legend . no? >> yeah, the word is legend. no? >> yeah, the word is legend. no? >> okay. >> okay. >> definitely not. so bbc presenter says overwhelmingly white workplace affects his mental health. well, he wouldn't like it here, right? bbc radio five live. >> this is a very, very diverse panel >> this is a very, very diverse panel. no well, it's a very diverse office. and the people who work here, really i don't talk to the employees . talk to the employees. >> i have not been in radio five recently, but i have been in radio five. i don't know which one he's talking about, but there used to be one in new broadcasting house. it is reasonably there, i reasonably diverse there, i think. that's what think. okay that's what i remember. bbc remember. certainly the bbc department. remember. certainly the bbc depwhat'st. remember. certainly the bbc depwhat's he complaining about >> what's he complaining about then. if it's. >> it's a bit odd. he says >> yeah. it's a bit odd. he says it's only muslim it's the only muslim right is that sign. that that's a sign. >> say he's the only. he >> does he say he's the only. he said there's no he says he's not sure there's muslims who sure if there's any muslims who are editorial staff are on the editorial staff whatever. first of are on the editorial staff whaso er. first of are on the editorial staff whaso that first of are on the editorial staff whaso that means first of are on the editorial staff whaso that means he'st of are on the editorial staff whaso that means he's not all. so that means he's not sure. yeah. and secondly, maybe everybody's jobs everybody's in different jobs and of muslims who and there's loads of muslims who
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are presenters i are presenters or whatnot, i don't but but yeah, don't know. but but yeah, i mean, this is it's unacceptable, isn't it? >> i mean , it's unacceptable to >> i mean, it's unacceptable to him say think so, yeah. him to say it. i think so, yeah. >> i think it's think it's out >> i think it's i think it's out of order. i think it's been on his show a couple of times. >> spoken to him. he's a >> i've spoken to him. he's a fairly bloke fairly reasonable bloke generally sure generally speaking. and i'm sure he's probably thinks he's he's he probably thinks he's like broaching difficult like broaching a difficult subject and raising it and hoping can be hoping that the bbc can be encouraged diversity encouraged to pursue diversity because it will help everyone. >> the hat, if he >> if you wore the hat, if he was sort of say, he sort of also sort that, oh, it's sort of saying that, oh, it's because getting because they're not getting people or they're not promoting people or they're not promoting people who only people who are like who only like whatever, which is like them or whatever, which is thinly veiled. if there's any evidence prejudice against evidence of prejudice against asian people or black people about being promoted behind the scenes or in front of the scenes or whatever like that, sure. bnng or whatever like that, sure. bring up that evidence. but just to go, oh, i walk into to sort of go, oh, i walk into a room and there's a bunch of white people, you know, of course these, like course i hate these, like flipping it around. but of course, any other course, if it were any other ethnicity mentioned, it would be to do it in this country. >> that would be obviously unacceptable. if white man was unacceptable. if a white man was to like working
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to say, i don't like working there, many, there, there's too many, you know. black people asian know. yeah black people or asian people whatever, but and go people or whatever, but and go even further. imagine if you or ihappened even further. imagine if you or i happened to be living overseas and started complaining i happened to be living overseas and native d complaining i happened to be living overseas and native people laining i happened to be living overseas and native people ofning that the native people of whichever country it was, you know , predominated in a know, predominated in a workplace . i mean, i cannot workplace. i mean, i cannot imagine anywhere that would put up with that. >> but i think also just the fact he said it's just the fact that they're white, it affects his mental health, not the way they've that's they've treated him. that's true. cultural thing true. it's not a cultural thing like white. it'sjust like that, just white. it's just the of it . the visuals of it. >> it's become acceptable and it should be. josh, should not be. josh, a controversy in the times that perhaps suggests way forward perhaps suggests a way forward for radio situation for the radio five situation here this would be here though. yeah this would be interesting. >> beyonce mother hits back at skin lightning claims. so beyonce has got a new movie out or called renaissance or something. i think it's a it'll be a video. yeah, whatever it is. but there is a i've only seen like there's a photo of her but she like got bleached but she is like got bleached blonde ish and then a white blonde hair ish and then a white and a silver skirt. the whole theme to be silver. and theme is meant to be silver. and she looks particularly pale .
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she looks particularly pale. yes, should we say so? a lot of people have been online going, wait she like self wait a minute, is she like self hating or i mean, it could easily be done in post—production to say the very least now, couldn't it? >> no suggestion. >> there's no suggestion. i mean, thing is, she's mean, the thing is, she's filters alone just from what i've her, just from what i've seen of her, just from what i've seen of her, just from what i remember, watch i remember, i did watch a concert movie of her doing like some big thing in the desert or whatever. >> w- w— >> anyway, the point is, she seems proud black woman. >> absolutely. very unlikely she's to her skin. she's done anything to her skin. she's jackson, she's not michael jackson, is she? was she reminded me she? but it was she reminded me a bit in this of the mother a tiny bit in this of the mother of dragons. i don't know if that's where she's heading with it, i mean, that it, you know, but i mean, that kind little bit. kind of aesthetic a little bit. but, was looking but, you know, it was looking a little bit sword and sorcery, a little bit sword and sorcery, a little it's not little bit sci fi. it's not naturalistic. it's an aesthetic. >> i mean, a of >> yeah, well, i mean, a lot of celebrities skin celebrities have used skin lightning. some old lightning. like i saw some old pictures of justin trudeau and he much darker daily man . he was much darker daily man. >> and jonathan, they have the latest on the go woke go broke phenomenon . turns out no one phenomenon. turns out no one wants to read queer western of colour. a shame. colour. that's a shame. >> westerns . >> queer westerns. >> queer westerns. >> like a queer western. >> yeah. like a queer western. >> yeah. like a queer western.
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>> read many >> yeah. have you read many a fistful of dollars on the eastern? >> all right, that's pretty good. >> there's. what's this one called? red was it lucky red? lucky by claudia cravens? >> yeah. i'll read the headline . >> yeah. i'll read the headline. so workbooks bought for huge advances by inexperienced editors hired post—george floyd have flopped, including 500,000 queer feminist novel that sold 3500 copies and elliot page's 3 million transgender memoir that sold 68,000 copies. >> which doesn't sound bad, but for three mil. >> so that's about $40 a copy or something. they pay for that. i mean, obviously, some this is the business model. you sometimes it but the sometimes get it wrong. but the suggestion so much that suggestion is not so much that there's market for stuff there's no market for this stuff so they hired some so much as that they hired some people who just went crazy with the advances. >> done through >> they've done it through activism rather than trying to pubush activism rather than trying to publish think publish books that they think are did they ever are going to how did they ever manage persuade anyone to pay manage to persuade anyone to pay half because half $1 million for a because everybody feeling guilty everybody was feeling guilty sort of a doris sort of gay version of a doris day movie by the standards. >> but you know what? >> but you know what? >> when when the whole >> when that when the whole george version but when george gay version but when george gay version but when george floyd happened there were
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when you walked into any bookshop in the top ten best sellers were all of yeah sellers were all sort of yeah what black people really think of and blah blah blah, of you and blah blah blah blah, blah. everybody felt like, oh, well, if i'm middle class well, if i'm a middle class person any , oh, i'll person or any, any, oh, i'll just buy a book and that'll make me feel good. better about being. >> these aren't even these are not i know what the books like the x and stuff the ibrahim x kendi and stuff but that these are but these are not that these are this a novel literally this is a novel literally written about a biracial lesbian cowpoke who kind of rides into town and creates a stir in the local. >> that is the activism right? thatis >> that is the activism right? that is it. yeah. because the activism comes rather than writing story, has to writing a good story, it has to be a story where it promotes an ideology and the thing is, there is a limited market because you maybe you'll feel guilty and they'll buy one book. but that's not going to be all of your book purchases along those lines. so they of editors they hired a bunch of editors who weren't who frankly weren't qualified for paid over the odds. for it, who paid over the odds. meanwhile, lots of meanwhile, there's lots of evidence about you young male white writers who cannot get anything published at all. and literally , they have these
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literally, they have these companies, these agents have said they said, we're just not taking white editors. taking on any white editors. there's a no matter how good is in there, they say something like, is this right time for like, is this the right time for us to be sort of, you know, advancing you advancing the. yeah, but you know the is, is know what? the thing is, is they're their own they're killing their own industry. the thing. industry. see, that's the thing. because at the of the because people at the end of the day want quality. so day just want quality. so they're look their they're going to look at their profits they'll take it for profits and they'll take it for a amount time a certain amount of time and then ultimately we then ultimately they'll go, we need sellers. then ultimately they'll go, we nee funnily;ellers. then ultimately they'll go, we nee funnily enough, then ultimately they'll go, we neefunnily enough, i'm in a book >> funnily enough, i'm in a book group in hove. it's not the hat for the book group. i'll be wearing that next time. but the wearing that next time. but the we profit song, which we we read profit song, which we gathered night to discuss gathered last night to discuss which had pure coincidence, which had by pure coincidence, just won the booker prize. we chose it like a month ago, and the consensus was it was not worthy of the booker prize. but it activist book. it it is an activist book. it essentially warning essentially is warning that a far right government could seize control in ireland at any time and ordinary citizens could be turned refugees such as turned into refugees such as you've in aleppo or you've seen in aleppo or whatever it was. it was like it was as bad or as was nothing like as bad or as niche as the ones in this
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article. but it's clear that the publishing industry is like, congrats slating itself for having its finger on the wrong pulse. that isn't the pulse in ireland. the pulse in ireland is adrift into left wing authoritarianism. that's where you're to be arrested you're going to be arrested for having your computer. >> publishing is one most >> publishing is one of the most captured industries , and captured industries, and i wonder if it's going to be one of the first industries we truly see the people who finance see where the people who finance all will turn around and all of this will turn around and 90, all of this will turn around and go, wait a minute, this these columns are not going up. i'm paying columns are not going up. i'm paying this and i'm getting this i >> -- >> yeah, well, on the plus side, we have the internet and everyone can up own story. >> so make your own stuff. >> so make your own stuff. >> yeah. guardian news now. josh in they strike a in the guardian as they strike a deal sony to movies . deal with sony to make movies. yes it's interesting. yeah. >> strikes >> so guardian strikes tv and film company behind film deal with company behind the crown. this is sony pictures entertainment at crown entertainment at they crown doctor who sex education so all of the rubbish shows and the idea is that anything that the guardian works on, any stories they might release and we've seen like films like spotlight, which was about the boston globe
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. okay yeah. where they cover the. yeah, the paedophiles in the. yeah, the paedophiles in the catholic so so the catholic church. so the so and there have been actually movies like snowden which was based on a guardian revealing the washington post one about the washington post one about the all the king's men. yeah and whatever so the idea is that sony pictures will now have the first look behind at this but i'm thinking there are a lot of films they could make that they could do something about sort of owen jones baiting jews . they owen jones baiting jews. they literally wrote down. >> the first film is owen jones starring in the fiddler on the roof. we both thought the same thing. >> they could have hadley, freeman and suzanne moore being hounded out for believing that men and women are different and male rapists. what was that? >> one of fox news that was a kind of sexual harassment case that they could follow, like blonde or something? blonde ambition or something? i know that. it know it wasn't called that. it was know what was something. i know what you're talking about. yeah. so similar you're talking about. yeah. so simthere's of that. and how >> there's lots of that. and how they pretended that they the guardian pretended that they the guardian pretended that the incident the whisper pedo incident didn't happen. the whisper pedo incident didn't happen . there's lots of great happen. there's lots of great guardian moments i would very
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much to exposed . much like to see exposed. >> basically, it's a it's a great crossword with a newspaper attached. john daily mail. it seems someone does indeed become male daily. nice >> but where are their guardians 7 >> but where are their guardians ? yeah. >> god , i'm so lonely. >> god, i'm so lonely. >> god, i'm so lonely. >> britain's transformation analysis reveals 1 in 600 teenagers now identify as trans up seven fold since the year 2000. >> so the first analysis of uk medical records is this entry found transgender identity rates have increased fivefold with far higher leaps upon the young . so higher leaps upon the young. so what we've noticed across the last 23 years or so is that there's been a massive increase of young people identifying as trans gender. and now i mean, experts saying the actual the figure is likely to be much higher than this. but i guess this finished in 2018, where we've really seen it kick off five years. >> exactly. >> exactly. >> that was first thing >> that was the first thing i thought. that's i would thought. that's where i would have to start measuring have wanted to start measuring it from probably two thousand
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and seven. i mean, it and seven. i mean, i think it was still quite a niche concern then, wasn't it? >> the difference this then, wasn't it? >:the the difference this then, wasn't it? >:the most the difference this then, wasn't it? >:the most incredible rence this is the most incredible statistic. way they rewrite statistic. the way they rewrite it here is in 2000 there were no 16 trans and for 16 year olds who trans and for every 100,004 per 100,000in 17 year olds. right? yeah 2018 years later, there were 78 per 100,000. so that's a huge jump. within that 18 years. but you're absolutely right . it's absolutely right. it's indicative of it being a fad and certainly going to be a much greater and i suppose the important thing to ask is how many of them have puberty blockers, how many of them have had irreversible surgery , how had irreversible surgery, how many of have messed with many of them have messed with their possibly their system or indeed possibly had? also how many are had? and also how many are really annoying? there's really annoying? and there's been school been annoying at their school and they thems and whatnot i >> -- >> one more section to go. we'll be right back with the latest from the jungle restoring the jungle and where to jungle on your head and where to hook up once you've got it restored. we'll see you in a couple
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and welcome back to headliners . and welcome back to headliners. so, josh moore summits in the jungle as the tricky terrain of cultural appropriation gets put through the intellect , ritual through the intellect, ritual mincer, no names is farage clashes with a rival over doing a black accent. >> jonathan kogan here will be doing an example literally just said of the black accent . now said of the black accent. now josh is going to demonstrate two of the same jokes we've written time. we're time, time travelling , time travelling. travelling, time travelling. god, the funny thing, let do god, the funny thing, let me do my accent. >> there's a particular word they is pronounced they say is pronounced differently in jamaican, which is get the is water, and i couldn't get the hang it's not water. hang of it. it's not water. yeah, i've never heard this. i know are loads of old know there are loads of old jokes can and stuff, jokes about beer can and stuff, but never water is a but i've never heard water is a do want me. do you want me. >> well but this started >> yeah well but this started the and then you the discussion and then if you see the you'll see that see the clip you'll see that essentially the french guy, the maitre d, he was sort of saying, people take the mickey out of
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his accent. yeah. and then what's the difference is, i think what nigel and then they got like costumes are got into like what costumes are okay? nigel likes to dress okay? and nigel likes to dress up. i mean, we all know that he dressed mexican. he's. dressed up as a mexican. he's. he's. you see him in he's. every time you see him in the he's just the office, he's just like, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. >> this hat i'm wearing tonight is i'm just is essentially i'm just basically, i'm basically, you know, i'm negging. nigel >> he loves, he loves, he loves a outfit but but and a mexican outfit on. but but and he's just all like, oh, he's just, he's sort of he's exasperated by it. but you're right, of course, there's an hypocrisy between taking the mickey a french accent, mickey out of a french accent, but not to take mickey out of a french accent, but mickeynot to take mickey out of a french accent, but mickey out to take mickey out of a french accent, but mickey out of to take mickey out of a french accent, but mickey out of a to take mickey out of a french accent, but mickey out of a jamaicans the mickey out of a jamaican accent. that's accent. yeah, that's that's that's i've for that's really what i've said for a long time, that if multiculturalism is going to work, humour going be the work, humour is going to be the way will break the boundaries. >> if you have protected classes within that, not going to within that, it's not going to survive. i mean? survive. you know what i mean? if a a black comedian if you if a if a black comedian can go on stage a cockney can go on stage and do a cockney accent, you know, or indeed ed guz khan, a muslim comic, does a thing where he like mocks his elderly, but birmingham neighbour and it's quite funny ,
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neighbour and it's quite funny, it does her voice and then he does his voice and nobody kind of goes, well, hang on a minute guz, that's not your culture, that's not your accent, that's not how you speak. you know, and i but i'm fine with it. but if it were reversed, we can't have that. won't it's. it's that. it won't be. it's. it's hypocrisy it. yeah. yeah hypocrisy with it. yeah. yeah yeah. other hand, you yeah. on the other hand, you know expect from know, what do you expect from nella rose? i mean , i've never nella rose? i mean, i've never heard of you and nella rose fantasy . fantasy. >> you know about it before i saw the first episode, and she seemed very pleasant eating some, like, slugs with with nigel and a challenge . nigel and a challenge. >> but then i see there's been a lot of controversy, but that's the whole point of these tv shows like ursula and rishi. >> you, it's simmering. >> i tell you, it's simmering. it's it's going turn it's going. it's going to turn one power couple one episode on the power couple staying with cultural appropriation . jonathan, this appropriation. jonathan, this young fan is very young sports fan is very disrespectful the vertically disrespectful to the vertically bifurcated red black individuals i >>i -- >> i think hm >> i think the term as people of colours, people of colours, yes, that's right. >> so a young kansas city chiefs fan, as all support the fan, as we all support the kansas city chiefs go chiefs go
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chiefs. >> do not say that anymore is accused kansas he's accused of racist blackface by reporter even though other half of charles face was painted red to match the team's colours. >> but he could only see the half that was black, could he? >> well, initially he could only see the of the. >> well, initially he could only seeyeah. of the. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> and yeah. >> and he yeah. >> and he yeah. >> but he was also wearing a head thing which is head dressing thing which is also seen offensive . also seen as offensive. >> but that's traditional right . >> but that's traditional right. except that they don't do that now they've removed from now or they've removed it from their something. their badge or something. >> they're >> well supposedly they're not allowed stadiums but allowed in the stadiums. but then pointed out then when this was pointed out to the writer who the man who is black who wrote this article . black who wrote this article. right. he sort of doubled down and ifs right. he sort of doubled down and it's even more and said, well, it's even more offensive a offensive than that. he's got a red because like red face because that's like it's not it's not it's like but it's not it's not based those are not that's not why the colours based that why the colours are based that way. were the team way. if those were the team colours then that is interpreting worst, interpreting that in the worst, least well. interpreting that in the worst, lea it's well. interpreting that in the worst, lea it's like well. interpreting that in the worst, lea it's like supporting. interpreting that in the worst, lea it's like supporting chelsea >> it's like supporting chelsea and sort of mocking the and you sort of mocking the dead. yeah yeah. that's blue, right? yeah yeah. enough right? yeah yeah, yeah. enough of cultural appropriation. how about appropriating some of your own thigh fat to cure baldness
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when. when you could just wear a nice, warm hat? >> oh, no. this great. but, >> oh, no. this is great. but, you know, we do a of. we you know, we do a lot of. we covered lot of these bald covered a lot of these bald stories, and i've still not seen any them true yet. but any of them come true yet. but going scientists say going bald scientists say injections from your injections of fat from your thighs the process thighs could reverse the process . that's very exciting news. i will be going home. i will get a syringe. i will be back next week. and you can see if it has made any impact, if smeared on your head. >> you had a choice, though. >> you had a choice, though. >> would you choose to get your hair back you could just let that? >> totally. yeah. i didn't even have appointment about it, have an appointment about it, but didn't believe it but i just didn't believe it would would be that bothered. >> got >> a friend of mine got a treatment done, but now he's addicted plastic surgery addicted to plastic surgery and he's going create get his he's going to create to get his legs he's two inches legs broken. so he's two inches taller. thing. taller. it's a whole thing. >> i sometimes think i could >> i do sometimes think i could get. excalibur the get. remember excalibur, the film? merlin in that film? yeah. so merlin in that played williamson, played by nicol williamson, i think name was shakespeare, think his name was shakespeare, an a sort of like an actor. he had a sort of like form fitting metal plate on his head.i form fitting metal plate on his head. i always thought that looked quite cool. you're nearly there . yeah. yeah, exactly. one there. yeah. yeah, exactly. one of the things i try out in the
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next few weeks before the big vote. so jonathan over to the metro. they are surprised to find that gay men over 50 might still be interested in sex. extraordinary. >> you bet they are . >> you bet they are. >> you bet they are. >> i've heard. so josh gets a bold story and i get the grinder story. >> i see what's going on here. >> i see what's going on here. >> fair enough. so you can smear a bit of thigh fat over your headif a bit of thigh fat over your head if want. i'll smith on head if you want. i'll smith on one side. so grinder is not just for the young, it's for people like me, says headline, like me, says the headline, not necessarily are necessarily me. so there are countless people to countless apps for people to pick when pick from these days when looking a match perhaps looking for a match or perhaps a hook—up. out that hook—up. but it turns out that ghndr hook—up. but it turns out that grindr very popular for gay grindr is very popular for gay men 50, which is, as we men over 50, which is, as we were discussing earlier, no surprise at all. if you're a if you're a gay man, the most popular for over 50s. popular dating app for over 50s. >> the >> is that right? that's the story. >> is that right? that's the st0|so surprising thing is >> so the surprising thing is that men over are still that gay men over 50 are still looking sex and hook—ups looking for sex and hook—ups rather like long term rather than for like long term relationships and life assurance plans . is that the point? plans. is that the point? >> i think the point. but >> i think that's the point. but it's a bit obvious, isn't it? >> i don't know. >> i don't know. >> but did you know grindr? so
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ghndr >> but did you know grindr? so grindr you don't. supposedly they into how it's they sort of go into how it's actually because gets very actually because it gets very confusing sort of confusing because they sort of trying that because of trying to say that because of previous idea within previous homophobe idea within society and stigma surrounding age that this is why grindr works, because it's a slightly anonymous site and you could hide your or something like that. i don't know. >> let's see if we can hook this in together with the one with the with the survey the metro, with the survey sponsored by a store to sponsored by a pet store to reassure that perfectly reassure you that it's perfectly normal a fortune on normal to spend a fortune on your christmas. this your pet this christmas. this is if gay you're not if you aren't gay and you're not having anymore. having sex anymore. >> people buying dog >> well, the people buying dog collars >> well, the people buying dog coliso! are spending more on >> so brits are spending more on pets this christmas than on their is their partner. yeah. which is incredibly cool because they don't want to let their fur babies. is they're babies. this is what they're calling pets. now, i've never heard of that before. really heard of that before. it really makes crawl. how makes my skin crawl. how >> children, for god's sake, babies. >> yeah. just have a hairy >> yeah. orjust have a hairy child and 77. yeah. they don't want their fur babies to be left out. and then it gives a list of presents , balls, homeware, bones presents, balls, homeware, bones . this is all i get for my kids as well. i've got to cut you off
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there. >> so as the vet said to the labrador, the show is nearly oven labrador, the show is nearly over. let's take another quick look at thursday's front pages. we have times migrant deal we have the times migrant deal delays. put rwanda and help at risk. telegraph hostage baby died in gaza. hamas claims guardian air pollution from fossil fuels kills 5 million people a year. express smile of an innocent lost in a war with no end. eye news uk pensions triple lock under threat from 2025. and finally the daily star down with this sort of thing. those were your front pages. that's all we have time for. thank you to my guest, josh howie jonathan kogan. steve allen here tomorrow at allen is back here tomorrow at 11 pm. with lewis schaffer and paul you're watching at paul cox. if you're watching at 5 breakfast. 5 am, stay tuned for breakfast. otherwise, and good otherwise, thank you and good night. >> looks like things are heating up. boilers, sponsors of up. boxed boilers, sponsors of weather on . gb news. good evening. >> welcome to your latest gb news weather update from the met office . thursday will be another office. thursday will be another cold day. there's still some dry and sunny to weather be had, but
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we do also have some snow and ice warnings in force for thursday morning across the northeast. we could see some snow showers continuing throughout tonight, it's throughout tonight, but it's across the southwest this across the southwest where this area of rain will push up from the south, bumping into the colder bringing snow colder air, bringing some snow to southern areas, mainly across the high ground of devon and cornwall. we could see cornwall. but we could see a dusting of snow far east as dusting of snow as far east as parts wiltshire . so parts of wiltshire. so potentially some snow and ice out there tomorrow morning. there's risk across there's also a nice risk across parts of northern ireland as well. will be a cold well. and it will be a cold start once again, a colder start than this morning. tomorrow morning , with the snow showers morning, with the snow showers will continue across northeastern areas throughout thursday . this northeastern areas throughout thursday. this area rain, thursday. this area of rain, sleet and snow will continue to affect far south—west as affect the far south—west as well through much of the day before sink before it does then sink southwards into the evening in between, though, we've got a good deal of sunshine. it will be feeling cold, though. temperatures still only reaching 3 degrees for many areas . 3 or 4 degrees for many areas. some areas of scotland sticking with so another with a frost all day. so another very cold start to friday, much
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of that rain has now cleared the south, but we will see some patches of freezing fog around these could be quite slow to clear throughout friday. and elsewhere, though, a good amount of sunshine once again, a bit more sunshine to come throughout saturday. and sunday. and the temperatures start rise temperatures could start to rise a little the south by the end a little in the south by the end of weekend. >> brighter outlook with boxed >> a brighter outlook with boxed solar sponsors of weather on .
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urging brits to remain vigilant . urging brits to remain vigilant. as our homeland security editor mark white has an exclusive report for you today. >> you've seen in the past events overseas often can lead to radicalisation of individuals here, and we're very alive to that. here, and we're very alive to that . and we've seen an increase that. and we've seen an increase in prevent referrals and we've seen a particular increase in the amount of online extreme material referred to us. >> a further ten israeli and four thai hostages have been released by hamas overnight, as israeli military have just announced . the truce with hamas announced. the truce with hamas will continue . charlie peters will continue. charlie peters we're bringing us the latest lines throughout the morning . lines throughout the morning. >> the prime minister's office in israel say in the last hour that they've received a new list of hostages expected to be released . we'll discuss who is released. we'll discuss who is likely to be on it and what will happen when that ceasefire ends . happen when that ceasefire ends. >> the country's on snow watch today. you better believe it. it's freezing. conditions lead to weather warnings right across the uk. have you been affected? do let us know.
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