tv Breakfast with Eamonn and Ellie GB News January 28, 2025 6:00am-9:31am GMT
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there. the >> it doesn't stop there. the report even recommends that officials begin recording more hate crime incidents. >> we've got to be honest and realistic and not allow political correctness to get in the way. >> rioting for fun new research gets to the bottom of how teenagers found themselves caught up in the summer riots. >> trillion dollar panic, chinese artificial intelligence deep seek sends shockwaves through the markets. >> the release of deep seek ai from a chinese company should be a wake up call for our industries that we need to be laser focused on competing to win. >> are you addicted to your phone while.7 stay tuned as we're going to meet one woman who checked herself into social media rehab. >> and we visit the school delivering a first class education. you've got to pay for it and it's on a budget. >> we teach them how to think
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rather than what to think. pubuc rather than what to think. public speaking and persuasive writing. so you've got children who have a body of knowledge to draw on, can think for themselves. >> bye bye to your bins. as one council considers reducing collections to once a month, we debate whether the green agenda has gone too far. >> and in sport this morning, sacked referee david coote has said he turned to drugs over the fear of coming out as gay. with less than a week until the transfer window closes, what will become of marcus rashford and the cheltenham festival could be a disaster as there's a shortage of guinness. >> we have strong winds in the south today and the risk of some heavy, thundery downpours too. i'll have more details coming up. >> hello there, very good to see you. i'm eamonn holmes. >> i'm ellie costello and this is gb news breakfast.
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>> now this, this business we're going to talk about today is are you addicted to your phone. and i would say i certainly know plenty of people who are definitely addicted to your phone, but they all say the one thing, paul, if you challenge anybody, as i did miss ellie yesterday and say, i think you use that too much and you say, clear off none of your business, whatever. but people always come back to you and say, never mind me. what about you.7 you're me. what about you? you're addicted to your phone. no, i don't think i'm addicted to my phone, but. >> but i think we all are. i think to some degree. >> i think you are a bit, eamonn. i think you are. do you? i do. >> have an instagram reel. >> have an instagram reel. >> you do. you do love a bit of instagram, don't you? >> i love a bit of instagram. >> i love a bit of instagram. >> loves instagram. >> loves instagram. >> but then you start scrolling and then well, this is what i'm guessing. i'm not saying this, but i would imagine that if the stuff. some of the things you're finding and sending to me, you'll see, oh, that's a good
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one. i'll send that. and then a quirky thing. and so then time goes. yeah. and i you know what? and i do admit, i sit there at dinner and i've sometimes got it down there and i'd have a go with the kids about that. but i do it, i do it and i think i may have a problem. >> see, i'm trying to work out my screen time. you can do it on your phone. i will try and do it. but basically the woman that we're talking to later on in the program, her screen time was five hours a day, right? which is a lot. don't get me wrong, it is a lot. don't get me wrong, it is a lot. but we just did a quick straw poll outside and we are journalists. we're on our we're on our phones a lot for phone calls and various things, but the screen time out there is way worse right than that lady who went to rehab. >> maybe there's an app for that. >> then you could think, i mean, the sort of stuff that you would be constantly looking at google, for instance, about sporting updates. that's true at sporting websites. a lot. of work. part of your job. yeah. >> as well as your doomscrolling. >> yes. >> yes. >> but no, i think we're all addicted to some degree. it's very bad. my new year's resolution should have been not that i made one, but it should
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have been putting the phone to the side about an hour before bed and doing some reading or something instead. >> just need people to be a bit more interesting, though. if you're, you know, if i'm looking at my phone, that's probably your fault for not having a good conversation with me. >> do you think that's what it is? maybe we've lost the art of conversation, though, fraser, because we're too into. >> our maybe. maybe the phones came first. yeah. yes, ma'am. >> what about your kids? are they addicted to their phones, or. >> are they. you know what? i don't think any more than anybody else. i don't look at. i don't look at them and sort of think, oh, you're on that all the time. i think probably i'm. i may be worse. >> well, do you know what i don't do? a lot of people use their phone and they say, i'm going to watch this program or i'm going to watch this film on that. i mean, the idea of watching what should be on a big screen on something. >> no, i can't do that. >> doesn't do. >> doesn't do. >> it on a train. and then once you're there and once you're in, you're there and once you're in, you're okay. but it's just like, but you know, it's better to do it on a tv. but it's and also it's about time, isn't it? it's all about time. >> well, let us know if you're addicted to your phone. if you
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can work out your screen time on your phone. i haven't yet worked out. try and let us know. how many hours are you spending on your phone every single day. it will surprise you, i'm sure. gbnews.com/yoursay. >> it is difficult for me because there's so much of me on there. yes, i like watching me. >> i like watching you. that's why i'm on there. because i like watching. >> you sit there and say, oh, it's me. that's good. >> and you can't help yourself. >> and you can't help yourself. >> then i could maybe say, look, it's me. do you want to watch me? >> and there you go. >> and there you go. >> you send your videos to everybody else. >> okay, two tier policing, right? so in other words, are there rules for some and rules for the other. this is our top story today. so the home secretary commissioned this report from the home office. and it says that police have been advised to ramp up recording non—crime hate incidents. now this was the whole sort of thing that it was supposed not to do. it was to tackle real crime, thievery, robbery, muggings, all sorts of things like that. but no, despite public orders to stop free speech concerns. okay, so this is all very complicated.
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>> yeah, well, the review was ordered by the home secretary in august, and in the review, it claims that two tier policing is dismissed as a right wing extremist narrative. >> the shadow justice secretary, robert jenrick, was on patrick christys show last night. this is what he had to say. >> it seems like a very worrying situation. we've got to follow the facts here. of course, violence against women and girls and some of the other issues raised in this report are important and warrant attention by the police and the authorities. but the facts are these in the last 25 years, 95% of all the terrorist deaths in this country have been islamist related, and 80% of all the referrals to the police. so when it comes to how do we use the scarce resources of the police of programs like prevent, of our security services? we've got to be honest and realistic and not allow political correctness to get in the way. >> well, the security minister,
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dan jarvis, has since said that the report's findings have been rejected. he reiterated that islamist islamist extremism and far right extremism is at the heart of the government's approach to countering terror. >> deputy editor of spiked, a man with a view on all of this fraser myers. morning, fraser. >> good morning. >> good morning. >> we had a problem with your mic earlier on, but we've got it sorted out, my friend. so what do you what do you think about this? >> well, there's a number of things here that should worry us. we should say the report's been rejected, but nevertheless, it reveals a certain mindset within the home office. i think it's absolutely extraordinary, but sadly, not surprising for the people who wrote this review to reject claims of two tier policing as part of a far right narrative. i mean, the examples of this just abound. if you think back to the riots last summer, for instance, there was actually a riot about two weeks before
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