tv New GB News February 28, 2025 11:00pm-11:59pm GMT
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>> hello! it�*s 11:00 which means it's time for tomorrow's newspapers tonight. join us over the next hour where we'll be discussing the good news for putin. zelenskyy and trump have had a massive falling out that feels more like a wetherspoons car park than the white house, and the bbc are facing criminal investigation for their deceitful gaza documentary. honestly, we�*re at bbc verify when you need them and despite concerns about child gender transitioning, puberty blockers will be given to british children to see if drugging, sterilising and transitioning children is good for them or not. my money is on not. i�*m leo and tonight i'm joined by louis schaefer and nick dixon to take you through saturday's top stories. there they are ready to go. this is headliners. but
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before tomorrow's news, let's go to tonight's headlines with aaron armstrong. >> hello there. very good evening to you. our top stories donald trump has called ukraine's president disrespectful warning volodymyr zelenskyy he's gambling with world war iii in a bad tempered exchange at the white house. was zelenskyy arrived in washington earlier hoping to obtain security guarantees as part of any deal to end the war with russia. despite trading insults with trump last week and their meeting in the oval office quickly descended into a shouting match, with trump telling zelenskyy he's in no position to dictate and he should be thankful for us support. trump then delivered an ultimatum, saying either make a deal or we're out, suggesting the uk could walk away from negotiations and cut military aid for ukraine. >> if our military equipment. this war would have been over in
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two weeks. >> in three days. i heard it from putin in three days. >> you have to be thankful you don't have the cards. you�*re don�*t have the cards. you�*re buned don�*t have the cards. you�*re buried there. your people are dying. you�*re running low on soldiers. >> listen. >> listen. >> you�*re running low on >> you're running low on soldiers. it would be a damn good thing. and then you. then you tell us. i don't want a ceasefire. i don't want a ceasefire. i don't want a ceasefire. i don't want a ceasefire. i want to go, and i want this. >> and the last half an hour or so, donald trump has addressed that meeting with zelenskyy before he boarded air force one. he says mr zelenskyy overplayed his hand in talks in the oval office, adding that he did not look like a man who wants to make peace. >> at a meeting today, as you know, with president zelenskyy. and i would say it didn't work out exactly great from his standpoint. i think he very much overplayed his hand. we're looking for peace. we're not looking for peace. we're not looking for peace. we're not looking for somebody that's going to sign up a strong power and then not make peace because
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they feel emboldened. and that's what i saw happening. i'm looking for peace. we're not looking for peace. we're not looking to go into a ten year war and play games. we want peace. >> pope francis, who�*s been critically ill in hospital for two weeks, has had what's been described as an isolated breathing crisis. the vatican says the pontiff has received non—invasive mechanical ventilation to help him breathe as he continues to battle double pneumonia. a statement says. the pope pneumonia. a statement says. the pope is alert, but his prognosis remains guarded. francis was admitted to hospital on the 14th of february with a severe respiratory infection that triggered further complications, and joss buttler has resigned as england's white ball cricket england�*s white ball cricket captain following his side's exit from the champions trophy. the move will be confirmed after england�*s dead rubber game against south africa on saturday, their group stage exit at the champions trophy in pakistan. a third flop at a major tournament in the last 18
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months. it means that having relinquished both white ball world cups, it's left buttler world cups, it�*s left buttler considering his position. >> wow. >> wow. >> those are the latest headlines. now it is over for more with headliners. >> for the very latest gb news, direct your smartphone. sign up to news alerts by scanning the qr code or go to gbnews.com/advent. >> jean—pierre marechal. >> jean—pierre marechal. >> hello and welcome to headliners, where we give you the best of tomorrow's newspapers with the best of today's comedians. first things first, let's see what we've got first, let�*s see what we've got on the front pages. we've got the daily mail leading with a spectacle to horrify the world. the i has a shouting match in oval office. trump tries to humiliate zelenskyy live on tv, and the daily express has bust up, leaves trumps peace talks in
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crisis. and let's have a closer look at well, it's the obvious story we�*re going to be looking story we're going to be looking at lewis. it's trump. and zelenskyy. is having a bust up in the white house. >> yeah, well they're having disagreement. >> we're so used to. >> we�*re so used to. >> we�*re so used to. >> people being so happy in these places. they always go, you know, holding people's hands like macron. and do you think trump likes macron? no he doesn't. do you think you know so. but this is an amazing situation. shouting match in the oval office. >> raging trump raging trump. >> raging trump raging trump. >> humiliates zelenskyy on live tv. i don�*t know how they decide. >> whether zelenskyy. >> whether zelenskyy. >> has one eye, one. >> has one eye, one. >> y or. two ys. >> y or. two ys. >> it doesn't matter. it's just >> it doesn't matter. it�*s just the spelling. >> it�*s just the spelling. >> it�*s just the spelling. >> so they he was basically i think donald trump. >> wanted to hear him say. >> wanted to hear him say. >> zelenskyy, say, listen, thank. >> you for giving. >> you for giving. >> us $350 billion. >> us $350 billion. >> well. >> well. >> this is the thing. i mean, trump bandies this figure around $350 billion. but essentially, essentially america has has given ukraine a bunch of decommissioned military equipment and then said, that's worth, you know, x number of
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billion dollars. but, i mean, i could give you my old nissan micra and tell you it's worth $350 billion, but didn't actually cost me $350 billion. >> but as a hoarder, as most of us are. we're all hoarders. you don't want. >> to give your stuff away. even the. >> stuff you think has no value, limited value. you don't want to give it away. and we basically we kept. zelenskyy going. >> yeah. and nick, i mean, this is this is regardless of, you know, the positions or, you know, the positions or, you know, whatever. this is quite an unedifying spectacle for, for top level politics. >> it was it reminded. >> it was it reminded. >> me of. >> me of. >> the. >> the. >> jerry springer show, but it's actually the people. >> deciding if we'll go into. >> deciding if we'll go into. >> world. >> world. >> war three. it was like arguing with lewis on tv. >> it was like. >> it was like. >> this shouldn't be in the >> this shouldn�*t be in the white house. it reminded me most of lewis. it was shocking, actually. people get really mad at me on twitter about this. if you dispassionately look at what happened. actually, zelenskyy addresses vance unnecessarily. vance is saying some fairly genenc vance is saying some fairly generic thing where better than biden? biden was rubbish. and zelenskyy says, let me ask you this, jd. and then he asks, that's how he talks. and he asks him something that was quite aggressive. vance has to come
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back because he's on the global stage. this is being seen by the world. he�*s got to impress trump, who likes strength and loyalty. he can'tjust do nothing. then itjust kicks off between those two. zelenskyy utters a kind of curse under his breath when vance reveals he's never even been to ukraine. and then trump just loses his rag and gets angry. 50 i think and gets angry. so i think everyone came out quite bad. zelenskyy didn't need to provoke vance, and vance was relatively calm, but he got drawn in and trump just completely lost it. so i think, you know, it�*s so i think, you know, it's unpopular. i think they all came out fairly badly. >> yeah, i mean that's that�*s a >> yeah, i mean that�*s that's a fair point. even though i mean, obviously i think, you know, vance and trump, you know, are the focus for the ire in the papers. everybody's saying that, you know, they�*re they acted you know, they're they acted terribly. they tried to humiliate zelenskyy. and it did you know in the clip that we saw it certainly looks like that. but zelenskyy could have just kept his head down, said, thank you very much, and probably walked out of there with a mineral deal with security guarantees or certainly implied security guarantees, and with a with a great deal that would have carried him through. i mean, do you think zelenskyy�*s mean, do you think zelenskyy's position is untenable now? do you think ukraine is going to have to go to elections and
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possibly zelenskyy will be replaced with zaluzany, who's a much, you know, much more diplomatic guy and much better at handling this kind of thing. i mean, he's the envoy to the uk at the moment. >> i don't think so because i. think he could go to europe. >> and. >> and. >> europe because they saw america being this way. could say, we'll take care of you, zelenskyy. of course they can't because it's europe and they're a bunch of worthless, horrible. >> oh see, nick, this is the thing that makes me mad. i mean, europe has just we've had weak leaders for so long. we've had these absolute, you know, like wimpish leaders who've let our military be hollowed out. we've got absolutely no deterrent effect. without america, we've completely relied on america as a crutch to protect us. and so, you know, europe can make all the bluster it wants to about about, you know, picking up the slack with ukraine. but we know that without america, you know, ukraine isn't viable. >> and that's what really bothered trump in his follow up tweet that he's saying zelenskyy is using america to inflate their position and they feel like they�*re tough guys. i don't like they're tough guys. i don't know if that's quite the case, but it was clear to me that zelenskyy i don't know if he was. now, maybe it's all
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negotiation tactics and it'll be fine. he put out a tweet after he left that was was seemed conciliatory. but if you look at what he did, zelenskyy came in. he had the pictures, which are no doubt horrific, of the prisoners. and he says there are thousands of people. look how badly they�* re treated. thousands of people. look how badly they�*re treated. and he�*s badly they're treated. and he�*s showing trump the pictures. it�*s a stunt. so we can all see it a stunt. 50 we can all see it and we can get the sympathy of the world, quite rightly. but he's doing that. he�*s playing he's doing that. he's playing his game and he's talking about putin as a terrorist, and he's talking about how horrifically evil he he didn't sound like evil he he didn�*t sound like someone who was ready to negotiate to me. when you mentioned europe as well, zelenskyy was very keen to say we're friends with europe. but trump kept going, well, we've given you more money and he can 9°: given you more money and he can go, no, no. friends in europe have been nice. like we gave more. and it's and that�*s. more. and it�*s and that�*s. >> a classic example when zelenskyy could have just been like you know yeah sure. you know what mr trump you can. yeah. well i'm not going to argue this point. >> you know, why didn't he why didn't he follow starmer�*s example. starmer just sucked up example. starmerjust sucked up to trump. mr president do you want to meet the king. you're so brilliant. ijust want to meet the king. you're so brilliant. i just love your hair. that's how you can approach trump. >> zelenskyy could have just pretended ukraine has a king and brought a letter saying, you know, you can meet the. >> ukraine, louis. they should bring him a portrait of trump.
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and louis said and make it out of ukrainian minerals. wouldn't that be criminal? mr president, we have a picture of your face made of minerals. he would love that. >> he would have loved that. >> he would have loved that. >> but i think i know exactly what zelenskyy was thinking. this is my guess. he's thinking, i really want to be a comedian. i really want to be a comedian. idont i really want to be a comedian. i don't want to be a world leader. >> i want to be a comedian. >> i want to be a comedian. >> i want to be in america on tv, being invited to the white house as a comedian. but he wasn�*t. he'sjust house as a comedian. but he wasn�*t. he's just a failed, wasn't. he�*s just a failed, bitter american comedian. >> imagine what that sounds like. >> yes. >> yes. >> that sounds. >> that sounds. >> like louis schaefer. and i'm sitting there. i'd be angry, too. >> you were like both of them. you're as out there as trump and you're a failed comedian. well. >> in fairness to zelenskyy, i mean, he might have been quite, quite combative, combative, but he has been in a combat zone for three years. and also trump has been, you know, kind of winding him up. he's he's been telling him up. he�*s he's been telling lies about zelenskyy saying he's a dictator when he's not. the elections were suspended temporarily during martial law. that's that�*s standard. you can that�*s that's standard. you can still be a dictator. >> even though. >> even though. >> you were once elected. >> you were once elected. >> and. >> and. >> yeah, but i mean, in this
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case, he's obviously not a dictator by any sensible measure. and trump said his approval rating was at 4%. he said that zelenskyy started the war. you know, he said some pretty silly things. >> did you see that the other day when they said you called him a dictator? he goes, did i say that? i can't believe i said that next question, which is so funny. but this guy, brian glenn, as well, the chief white house correspondent, he teased zelenskyy about his he pressed him about his suit. so trump does this thing. he did it with starmer. you know when starmer arrived he said nice suit. arrived he said, nice suit. yeah. then starmer starts self—consciously touching his suit. zelenskyy arrives. trump goes, oh he's dressed up. which is just pure like trolling. yeah. but then this brian glenn buy yeah. but then this brian glenn guy asks zelenskyy in the meeting, he goes, why don't you wear a suit? you know you're in wear a suit? you know you�*re in the white house, don't you? the the white house, don�*t you? the american people asked it in like a fairly serious way. yeah. zelenskyy is like, when this is oven zelenskyy is like, when this is over, i will maybe i will wear, maybe it'll be better than yours. and he said that was kind of that was unnecessary. yeah. i just thought of it when you said he has been in a war zone. he is leading a country at war. i don�*t think it�*s a big deal if don't think it�*s a big deal if he wears a suit. not personally. >> no, he's. >> no, he's. >> not wearing a suit for political reasons, in the same way that fidel castro used to
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wear those military garbs. you know, this is this is what he's doing. he's not he's doing. it doing. he's not he�*s doing. it deliberately. because zelenskyy is a phoney. >> well, no, it's not a phoney. i mean, he's reminding everybody as a way of reminding everybody that it's a country at war. and in fairness, zelenskyy has been to the front lines many, many times, way more times than putin, who doesn�*t seem to, you know, go down and shake hands with the north korean troops and the donkeys that are a clear example of his incredibly successful three day special military operation. yeah, we've actually got a clip of the shouting match in the oval office here. it is. >> not in a good position. you don�*t have the cards right now with us. you start having cards. cards right now you don't. you're playing. >> cards. you're playing cards. >> cards. you're playing cards. >> you�*re gambling with the >> you're gambling with the lives of millions of people. you're gambling with world war iii. you�*re gambling with world war iii. and what you're doing is very disrespectful to the country, this country that�*s country, this country that's backed. you far more than a lot of people said they should have.
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>> i think you're right. we've got to remember, as nick says, this is the jerry springer show. we've got a reality tv star and a comedian, a tv comedian. so this is, you know, they�*re not this is, you know, they're not your standard, you know, button down politicians. >> no. >> no. >> because also it he's been >> because also it he�*s been yelled at for like how many years now? eight straight years. >> which one. >> which one. >> which one. >> which trump he's been yelled at by the all of the press were doing this. >> to him. >> to him. >> that his his whole presidential administration, they were yelling at him. and i think he's just used to being yelled at. so he he fights, he fights back and he deserves and america deserves. thank you. thank you from zelenskyy for saving his country. his country was completely made up. >> but also, i mean, i thought i thought jd vance made >> but also, i mean, i thought i thoughtjd vance made a good point that the biden administration has sort of strung it out and, you know, had talked a good talk in press conferences, but then, you know, drip fed the weaponry to ukraine and really sort of bled both sides, which was in america's best interest because, i mean, in quite a sort of, you know, grim, cynical way, because it weakens europe, weakens ukraine
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and weakens weakens russia. >> yeah. yeah, i�*ve certainly heard that theory. yeah. and so it's not it's much better than what biden was doing. i don't i don't know i thought vance came out of it. okay. i saw alastair campbell tweeting hashtag vile vance. i was like, what did vance. i was like, what did vance do? but people hate you on all sides, no matter what you say. but i�*ve tried to be really say. but i've tried to be really down the middle about it. but didn't you think it was a little bit like a glimpse at how trump actually behaves behind the scenes? because he's all like grandpa trump now and just a nice guy. yeah, but you get an idea. this is what it's like idea. this is what it�*s like being in negotiation with trump. it's a lot of shouting. yeah. it's a lot of shouting. yeah. it's a lot of shouting. yeah. it's a lot of like world war iii in your face. >> you�*re going to do what i'm >> you�*re going to do what i�*m telling you you�*re going. telling you you're going. >> to do. >> to do. >> yeah i wouldn�*t want to bring >> yeah i wouldn't want to bring him had >> yeah i wouldn't want to bring him bad news, to be honest. you know what i mean. anyway, let's know what i mean. anyway, let�*s have a look at some more front pages.the have a look at some more front pages. the sun leads with the white house. the telegraph has make a deal or we're out. and the star has. starmer loves nice beavers. that's not the rumour i�*ve heard. let�*s have a closer i�*ve heard. let's have a closer look at those with the. starting with the whichever one is the sun.the with the whichever one is the sun. the sun? >> well, the sun just has the white house, which is a fairly decent headline, but we�*ve
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already pretty much discussed it, unless you want to do love split fern and the tv boss. but that�*s not my area of expertise, that's not my area of expertise, so maybe we should do the telegraph because they at least have that other story stories. yeah, so do you. do you want me to do it or lose? >> well, i could do it. you could. >> do it. well, i don�*t mind. >> do it. well, i don't mind. make a deal or we�*re out as amazing. but then they�*ve also amazing. but then they've also got this, this bbc police probe after bbc cash for hamas claim. this is about the gaza documentary, where the met police has said there were multiple reports. and it�*s the multiple reports. and it's the question is did they pay, did money go to hamas because there was a son of a senior figure in the hamas run government, and apparently the films who did this said there were no payments made to hamas or its affiliates. but the bbc have said that it was unacceptable and mistakes were made, were made for the production company and the bbc. 50 it's a bbc. they're in this so it's a bbc. they're in this very tricky situation now. they said nothing is more important than the trust of our audiences have in ourjournalism. and it�*s have in ourjournalism. and it's hard. it's hard not to laugh, but because we know the bbc has been they've had their views for a while. we saw what they
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thought about brexit. it was all very clear, but now they�*ve run very clear, but now they've run into an issue where you have very strong feeling, you have a organised group of people who are pro israel say, hang on, and it's just been exposed, the kind of you can see their bias. it's pretty obvious. >> and even as somebody, you know, relatively unbiased on this issue, i mean, i can see that having the son of a senior figure in hamas and narrating a bbc documentary, i mean, that's a that's a shocking state of affairs. >> well, i didn�*t see i didn't >> well, i didn't see i didn't see the documentary, but i know it wasn't pro—israel and i'm pretty sure it wasn't balanced. and i think that's that's like a cash payment. they're saying, look, the bbc made it, made a documentary showing how good the how, how the people in gaza have suffered and maybe the israelis are bad. whatever happened, i didn't see it. >> i thought you tried to get a job as an extra in it, didn't you? >> they they insisted. i cut my hair and i said, no, i. >> can't do it. >> can't do it. >> my hair. >> my hair. >> looks amazing. i mean, that's the problem. the problem is it's the problem. the problem is it�*s the problem. the problem is it�*s the bbc and the people out there hate the. am i allowed to say that the people hate the bbc? i hate the bbc. >> some people do. >> some people do.
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>> some people hate that. i mean, i think for balance, we�*ve got to say some people probably love the bbc. yeah. >> you know, not. >> you know, not. >> who we�*re watching. louis >> who we're watching. louis schaefer i think the bbc is the second worst thing about this country. >> was the first worst. >> was the first worst. >> i don't know, whatever you want to make up, it's there's something worse than the bbc. maybe it's the royal family. maybe it's the royal family. maybe it's. >> you know, i think it's louis schaefer. maybe he's number one. >> maybe that they were so weak that they let me come into the country with, like, basically no questions asked. >> and this comes just at the same time as the bbc have launched a new campaign to get people to pay their tv licences, because half a million people stopped paying their tv licences because they�*re watching netflix, they're watching other netflix, they�*re watching other things on youtube or whatever. and i�*ve read some of these and i've read some of these letters. they�*re very, very threatening, almost as threatening, almost as threatening as hamas. 50 yes, it's interesting. they�*re they're doing that at the same time as they're alienating a big portion of the licence fee paying them. >> you made you made a joke about it�*s almost as threatening as hamas because that�*s a joke. >> no it is. it's almost as i've never actually been threatened by hamas. >> right. but the letters that
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they send, and you can read them over and over and over again, and you still don't know whether you should pay or not. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> you know, it's supposed to be. it�*s supposed to be if you be. it's supposed to be if you don't watch, if the service is, you don't have to. you don�*t have to. >> well, yeah, i mean, the idea i mean, if, if the bbc licence fee didn't exist, you wouldn't bring it in, like, we're not bringing in a licence fee for dishwashers or microwaves. >> it's an anachronism. it�*s very different. with louis, people are giving money for having to watch him. but that's a completely different arrangement. >> okay, well, that's the front pages done coming up in the pages done. coming up in the next section, a total nobody resigns from the government. and trump might not like ukraine, but he seems to like the english. find out what that�*s aboutin english. find out what that�*s about in a moment. this is headliners only on gb news.
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tobias nana. he makes the good point that the time of ukraine's independence from the soviet union in 1991, ukraine held the third largest nuclear arsenal in the world. they had 1900 strategic warheads and all these missiles and stuff, and they gave that up in return for security guarantees. the, you know, said that they would remain a sovereign country and wouldn't be invaded. so maybe the lesson is never give up your nuclear missiles. yeah. that's what all countries never trust. never trust america, never trust the west. yeah. never make that mistake. well, moving on, we�*ve got the telegraph. oh, no, we've done, we've done. >> maybe we've. >> maybe we've. >> got the guardian now, with the second falling out over assistance to other countries being cut. although given what else we've seen today, this one seems like small fry. lewis. >> oh, yes. this is an. 0h, >> oh, yes. this is an. oh, sorry sorry sorry, sorry, sorry. you know, ijust pressed. you know, i just pressed. >> i just. >> i just. >> heard a. >> heard a. >> woman i wasn't. >> woman i wasn't. >> during the show. >> during the show. >> i just turned my phone off. no, it seems worse than it is. it's not. it's not bad. i wasn�*t talking. >> to anybody. >> to anybody. >> and would you stop that? nick, you were yelling at me before. >> he�*s right to yell at you.
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>> he�*s right to yell at you. >> you�*re taking photos of me >> you're taking photos of me before i go on. >> and sometimes. >> and sometimes. >> during the. >> during the. >> show. >> show. >> anneliese anneliese dodds, who�*s an mp from somewhere, and she's like the she�*s the head she�*s like the she�*s the head of, of international development, which is the same thing that america's been getting at. just resigns over keir starmer's decision to cut age aid budget. and they're cutting the aid budget from 0.5 6% percent of the british budget to 0.3. you put so much pressure on me. >> no, you're doing a really good job, liz. >> i�*m trying to read everything >> i'm trying to read everything because you got you constantly told. and so she�*s a senior labour mp and she says we need to give money. the people of gaza and sudan and the ukraine are going to suffer because they're cutting the budget by $6 billion. >> right. and i mean, nick, i�*ve never heard of anneliese dodds. i mean, i had really but she's i mean, i had really but she�*s not she's not exactly. >> one of them. she was in neighbours i. >> but this i mean, this foreign aid. what have learned over the last couple of months since trump got into office is that
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foreign aid? i thought it was going to help starving african kids and stuff like that. >> no. >> no. >> no, no, it's all going to >> no, no, it�*s all going to like gender clinics. and, you. >> know, morocco, it's moroccan pottery classes. yeah. no. which she was worried about. there's some argument obviously not in the absurd examples, but there's some argument about soft power. she's worried about china's she�*s worried about china�*s global influence. she's like, we need our soft power. the problem is, we're in a world of hard power now. we're entering this world, which is land wars in europe. 50, you know, this is symbolic of that. you take the money from foreign aid, which is kind of largely nonsense. you give it to actual military spending. yeah. it�*s incredible spending. yeah. it's incredible to me. this is the thing you resign over, like, you know nothing to do with the british people. i think finally. hang on. we're not giving useless money to loads of foreign countries. i�*m out. yeah, i think it's terrible. but she's think it�*s terrible. but she's got a history of being quite woke. i saw something graham linehan tweeted about it. it looked a bit woke. so i�*m like looked a bit woke. so i'm like fine. yeah. >> and she's making she's making >> and she's making she�*s making the point lewis that this you know the pullback of aid if we're not you know funding these moroccan pottery classes and gender clinics then it could enable russia and china to step into the void and further their global influence. but i don't think russia and china are going
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to suddenly start running pride parades in zimbabwe. >> no they're not. as a matter of fact, russia doesn't have even money for russia, which is why they want the war to end. so this is such a stupid comment. and anybody who's been following what's going on in china, they're having a mass economic depression there, from what i could tell. or maybe it's just taiwanese propaganda, but they're having, you know, so china is dead in its tracks too. so this woman is a total absolute. the i'm not going to say it. >> just leave some dead air there. that'll be great for the people on radio. yeah, we've got the telegraph now. >> it's better than what. >> it's better than what. >> would have happened. drug dealer can't be deported because of language differences. and also i think they use the metric system too, nick. they won't know what an eighth is. >> great point. it's polish drug dealer avoids deportation because he doesn�*t speak the language. the language in question being polish. so yeah, i mean this is absurd. it's. nikodem lopata, 22, convicted of cannabis offences aged 18 and also was caught with more than £1,000 of crack cocaine and heroin. normal in scotland, i
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know while carrying a rambo style knife, which seems that�*s quite a big knife in my mind. >> yeah, this is sort of, you know, from my point of view, having the knife is almost worse than the drugs. >> it's not great. and of course, lo and behold, it's article eight of the. yet again, we know the telegraph is in a kind of crusade against echr. it makes me wonder if there's someone inside the system saying, can you get out some of these stories about echr? because every day it's like pakistani paedophile won�*t go pakistani paedophile won't go back because it would bother his children. and you know, someone from zimbabwe, the same albanian criminal whose kid didn't like criminal whose kid didn�*t like chicken nuggets. this is the latest in that series. and it's he doesn't speak polish and it�*s he doesn't speak polish and it's just unbelievable. we need to get out of the echr. i�*ll say it again. >> the echr is what this is blamed on. but i think really it's the interpretation of the echr because other european countries are privy to the echr, but their their judiciary hasn't been captured by the woke left. they haven't had these, you they haven�*t had these, you know, activists have this long march through the institutions,
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and we've got this activist judiciary who are making these decisions. lewis. >> well, it's similar to what's >> well, it's similar to what�*s going on in america, where all the judges going on in america, where all thejudges have going on in america, where all the judges have been appointed by biden or obama, and they�*re all left leaning judges. and i think that's the same. that's the same way here. i mean, nick acts surprised that all these stories are coming up. that�*s what newspapers are supposed to do, nick. they're supposed to find these stories because that's what people will read. >> i don't think i act surprised. >> oh. >> oh. >> well, we�*re. >> well, we�*re. >> moving on. we�*ll fit this one >> moving on. we'll fit this one in. we�*ve got the mail now, and in. we've got the mail now, and trump is going to officially make english the first language of the united states. what a masterstroke to bring america closer to britain. trump is unarguably a genius when it comes to international diplomacy. lewis. >> he�*s doing this for england. i don't think so. trump is to make is to make english the official first language of the united states, an historic move. and it is. it's basically an executive order. it hasn't been put through congress, so it can't be signed off by congress. 50 when the next person gets so when the next person gets elected from the democrats, they can just undo it. and it�*s
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can just undo it. and it's interesting because it was it was only been around since george w bush instituted it. and then biden and then trump. >> english language. >> english language. >> the english language being the main thing. i think it's going to offend a lot of arabic speakers. >> in america. i don't think there are that many arabic speakers. >> i make a joke, i'm making. >> i make a joke, i'm making. >> a. >> a. >> joke, a joke. brilliant. but i mean this. do you think this will get rolled back? this might be one of those changes that trump makes that people keep like the gulf of america thing will stay. >> yeah, they're making it sound >> yeah, they�*re making it sound like a big deal, but there's only 32 states that have english as the official language, so it's not a massive deal, is it? it's something clinton brought in. it's the kind of thing rupert lowe talks about here, you know, cutting down waste by needing endless translations. it's more of a symbolic gesture, isn't it? trump is in biden, isn�*t it? trump is in biden, like the spanish language white house website went down immediately when trump got in, you know, but like george w bush had it originally, biden brought it up. trump took it down. biden put it up. trump took it down against. it's kind of a gesture, really. >> it�*s a very sensitive subject for americans. >> okay. which which you are well, still. >> to come. >> to come. >> in england liners puberty
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>> say that. >> say that. >> welcome back to headliners. let's go to gbnews.com/yoursay for some of your comments. alexander dai davies says i bet lewis is secretly an underworld drug kingpin. i think he'd have better clothes. yeah, and somebody else said, nick and lewis are like an old married couple. i wouldn't want to be the kids in that couple anyway. we've got the express now with a story straight out of 19305 germany, children are going to be given sterilisation drugs to see if it�*s bad for them. >> nick yeah, i know it's shocking unethical fears as shocking. unethical fears as children to be given puberty blockers. a new £10.7 million experiment. 50 i thought we�*d prove that these puberty puberty blockers are terrible. but
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there's a two year clinical trial just to confirm. they're definitely terrible. and so, of course, children will inevitably be harmed. proving this, i don't see any other way of looking at it. and lots of doctors agree here. so i don't know why here. so i don�*t know why they're doing this. >> yeah. i mean, it seems like a man in the pub could tell you that pumping children full of things, that drugs that are going to have possibly have horrific side effects, including sterility, increased risk of osteoporosis, certain cancers, this that's worse than just letting nature take its course. apparently, when kids have gender dysphoria, puberty resolves it in most cases, so giving them drugs to stop puberty is actually harming them. >> i would agree with that. and i remember when this we had this story two years ago and they and i pointed out, they said, except for experiments, if they were part of a study, right. this is what they said. they said it�*s what they said. they said it's going to be totally against the law to give out these things unless someone's in a study. and i said they're going to just put everybody in a study and which is what they�*ve done, it's
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is what they've done, it's absolutely a horrific situation. i didn't think it was that bad backin i didn't think it was that bad back in the day. but the more you think about it, it�*s really bad. >> and this study is only going to study them for two years, so we won't even know the long term we won�*t even know the long term effects. i mean, i guess a number more years, which i�*m not sure they�*re going to, they're going to be monitored. >> for and they�*re going to have >> for and they're going to have to keep on giving it out after the two years. that's the thing. the two years. that�*s the thing. they�*re not gonna say we�*re going to stop. >> apparently it's very >> apparently it�*s very difficult to come off these drugs. so yeah. so yeah, this this seems like a quite a risky trial to be, to be undertaken. anyway, we�*ve got the anyway, we've got the independent now with good news for students. they can go ahead with the dumbest protest of all time. lewis. >> yeah, this is in the independent, which is actually free because it�*s not free because it's not a newspaper. it's only online. but we included it in here. i don't we included it in here. i don�*t know why. top university loses court battle to stop israel palestine protests on campus. i don't know how many israel protests there are, but there are a lot of palestinian protests. they want to be able to continue to kill people. and so what what cambridge university was saying, hey, can we can we prevent a protest on
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the place where we're going to have our graduation ceremony for the next five years? and the court said, no, we�*ll do it only court said, no, we'll do it only this year, maybe. >> right, right. >> right, right. >> and then you're going to ask for more. but the point is, is like it should be against the law to protest in favour of, of gaza. >> well, i mean, i think the right to protest is, is there we've got the right to freedom of speech. i mean, i guess the question for me, nick, is why these students want to protest in favour of people who would probably throw them off the nearest building. >> yeah, obviously you want freedom and free speech and free expression. freedom to protest. but then you we've imported the world�*s problems so it gets a bit. mind you, students have always marched about problems. nothing to do with them, haven't they? across the world to virtue signal. and some of it is genuine. it is a horrible war. i�*m not totally undermining it. but you get these strange groups. the european legal support centre. what is that? turns out it's. you think it's. oh, that sounds like something to be europe. no, it's a group to be europe. no, it's a group to advocate for palestinian rights in britain and europe. but it�*s kind of the name
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but it's kind of the name european legal support centre. you're like, oh, it�*s like a palestine advocate group. so there's all these strange groups in the country you don't realise. >> and there's funding, strange funding that goes into some of these groups. and we saw in america the demonstrations, they all had identical tents, which is strange because, you know, a grassroots organisation, surely everybody gets their own tent from their own little shop. some of them, you know, borrow them or have second hand ones. but no, the tents had all been supplied, everything had been supplied. and organised and paid for, and some of the students were getting paid to appear in the demonstration. this is where you know, the ngos and, you know some some of the dark, some of the moody money that sloshes around from us aid or the soros foundation or whatever it is. >> and you�*re going to say, cyrus, i was just waiting for george soros. i was waiting for alex jones moment. get the brain pills out. it's george soros. >> well, he is the guy. he's the blame, and he's getting american money. he was getting usaid money, usaid, whatever, usaid money. you said, right? he was no, according to what they said. >> no, that's what it's called usaid. >> no, it's not called usa.
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>> no, it's not called usa. >> you said. >> you said. >> you said it's called usa id. >> you said it�*s called usa id. >> you said it�*s called usa id. >> yes, i know i was joking. okay. you know how we�*re all okay. you know how we're all explaining our jokes to each other tonight because no one gets them? well, that was one of those. >> what i�*m saying is, is that >> what i'm saying is, is that it should be. we are. this country is at the precipice of that. we�*re about to fall off the precipice. yeah. and we need to do something to stop this craziness in america. donald trump is saying, if you support gaza, you you can�*t be in the country. >> i don't know, i think i think wejust >> i don't know, i think i think we just allow it. like nick says, you know, people, i remember when i was at university, people had che guevara posters on the wall. and, you know, he wasn�*t a fan and, you know, he wasn't a fan of you know, young people in of, you know, young people in the west and some of the things they get up to. so, yeah, i think young people are always going to be stupid. let them be stupid for a bit. i think it just. >> and then they'll come back, come back. >> then they�*ll come back. theyll >> then they�*ll come back. they'll turn into conservatives when. >> they get a house or something and realise how the world works. >> buy a house, start paying tax and suddenly become conservative. we�*ve got the conservative. we've got the telegraph now, and a judge ruling that getting legitimately confused is racist. nick. >> yeah, mixing up names of non—white colleagues is racist.
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tribunal rules. this was jaguar land rover engineer who basically a woman who they, her line manager said was one of the kindest people he knew, mistook one indian person for another in a meeting, and the one of the indian people who felt insulted by this handed in his notice and sued. it's just kind of extraordinary because it's so mean and pointless. and this is the this is the workplace we're in now. but it was obviously accidental. if you were from a culture, you just you find its nuances easier to understand. it's like how we can pronounce gloucestershire, but other americans can't. or even more locally. i�*m from near burnie locally. i'm from near burnie side, but even the woman on the train says burnside, you know, the automated thing, you you're the automated thing, you you�*re familiar with names, you�*re familiar with names, you�*re familiar with names, you�*re familiar with faces. there�*s familiar with faces. there's nothing intentional about it. so why sue? why make such a big thing? and it's so obviously just you're not, you know, you're i don't know, ijust don't see it as. and by the way, just before the show, someone mistook me forjosh howie the ultimate insult. and i'm not going to sue. i�*m not even going going to sue. i'm not even going to sue. >> that's how magnanimous you
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are. and it does seem ridiculous that the tribunal, the judge, ruled in favour of the person making the complaint. when, you know, this is and this is so abhinav sharma accused magdalena basescu of mistaking him for bhuvnesh bharadwaj. i mean, none of these are your classic english names. this is you know, people can add this, this internecine conflict, you know, outside the uk. >> yeah. and they said the reason that the court gave the money to the woman is because the other side didn't bring the other woman in to say was what? my feelings weren't hurt. yeah. because she wasn't there. it was like just bad lawyering, i don't know. did it say how much money that it was? it was like tens of thousands of pounds. >> i don't know. >> i don't know. >> that they went for because she was fired from. >> i don't think it actually says! >> i don't think it actually says i think the hearing to dedde says i think the hearing to decide the compensation will take place at a later date. >> oh, okay. yeah. >> oh, okay. yeah. >> i don't know where i saw £40,000. >> well, we�*ve got the mail now >> well, we've got the mail now with a rare example of a british judge actually stopping someone
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coming into britain. lewis. >> this is in the daily mail, which is £1.60 tomorrow. and the teenager who claimed his parents tricked him into moving from london to ghana to go to boarding school over fears that he was he was in a gang, loses his high court bid to return to the uk. this is one of those stories. let me tell you what the story is. so the kid gets sent to ghana, which is a lovely country. i did a report on it when i was seven years old in new york and he was sent there, and they didn't let him come back to england because england is dangerous and the kid was going to die. and maybe the kid was becoming a bad kid hanging out with bad people. yeah. and so the parents wouldn't let him come back. he says, teenager, we don't know how old this teenager is. we don't know. we don�*t know. >> he was 13 when he. >> he was 13 when he. >> travelled to the west. how old is he now? >> yeah, i'm not sure how old, how old he. >> is now. and how did he make his case if he's in ghana? and his case if he�*s in ghana? and how did it go in front of the high court if he�*s in ghana? high court if he's in ghana? >> i'm not exactly sure how it happens, but what's interesting, happens, but what�*s interesting, nick, is that africa seems to be safer than london.
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>> that's an incredible thing. it's now officially safer. the plan i suggested this a while ago in satire and it�*s now ago in satire and it's now happening. make britain seem as bad as possible and you�*ll eventually stop people coming. there was actually a campaign to do that wasn't there recently involving albanians. so this. so we're now so bad and we're less we're now so bad and we�*re less safe than ghana. and finally, though, the great news is we finally managed to keep someone out of the country that got deported. we won one. we won one. finally, although the echr probably belonged to reverse it in a minute. >> forcing the kid to come back. yeah, please. >> his parents, he can rejoin. >> his parents, he can rejoin. >> but don't you agree that's a bit poor that they don't say how old the kid was. >> how the kid was 13. >> how the kid was 13. >> 14? no, he was >> how the kid was 13. >>14? no, he was 13 when he >> 14? no, he was 13 when he went there. >> yeah, but then it's irrelevant. >> it isn�*t irrelevant. >> it isn't irrelevant. >> it isn't irrelevant. >> how old. it�*s not that >> how old. it's not that interesting, though, is it? >> it is. >> it is. >> to me. for tv, for a tv show. if you were on a live tv show, for example. >> we should probably just move >> we should probablyjust move on. we've got the daily mail now with an american school that's brought back 19505 style with an american school that's brought back 1950s style racial brought back 19505 style racial segregation. brought back19505 style racial segregation. nick. >> yes, it's back. minnesota high school forced to cancel no white student trip after civil rights complaint. this was highland park school and they had this, as it says, a no
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white. if you weren't if you're excluded. hang on. it was for yes. no white people were allowed whatever. i tried to overcomplicate it completely. we used this kind of thing. we saw an evergreen college. we're used to it. if you�*re trying to apply to it. if you're trying to apply for a job in britain, see how many you know all these jobs are. you can't be. it doesn't are. you can't be. it doesn�*t apply to if you're white basically. yeah. >> so finally, sometimes they list all the things. oh you can apply if you're a caribbean or asian or and it�*s like just say asian or and it's like just say you're listing all ethnicities. no, no white guys. >> yeah. yeah. exactly. and you know, if you really want to take this argument far enough, i�*d this argument far enough, i'd say i don�*t mind freedom of association because it's more freedom. but we�*d have to be freedom. but we'd have to be both ways, which obviously never would be. so both ways, which obviously never would be. 50 therefore you end “p would be. 50 therefore you end up with civil rights and it has to be equal for everyone. and we're finally realising this. we're way behind in this country. but america under trump, it�*s finally starting to trump, it's finally starting to kick in. you can'tjust be kick in. you can�*t just be racist to white people all the time. >> no. in america, i think the high court has the high court. the supreme court has said that it's got to be fair both ways. yeah. and that's the way that's the way it should be. >> and there have been people challenging university admissions processes as well,
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which have, you know, for a long time discriminated against not so much white people. and they do discriminate against white people, but they also discriminate against asian people because asian people. too clever. >> too clever. >> too clever. >> and there's too many of them. but and i was a kid, we used to hear about that in, in new york in like in all the best schools. they weren't accepting jews because there were too many of them in their minds, you know. but it was bad for it was bad for let them decide who they want to have. >> i think. yeah, just decide it on merit and, you know. >> not even on merit. >> not even on merit. >> imagine if we picked basketball players, you know, and made sure there was an equal ethnic distribution amongst basketball players. >> but my. >> but my. >> these little, you know, little guys as well. >> as the big guys, colorectal surgeon his son my covid. >> oh he said it again. >> 0h he said it again. >> 0h he said it again. >> like the gingold his son was was. was a dress. he was living in new york. his son his son was going to play for the for chicago, the basketball team because he was a tall white guy. yeah. they just needed him so badly. >> is this anecdote going
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anywhere anyway? it ends now. we've got an all female space launch, an all female dating complaint, and several reasons lewis could get sued. i think we just heard about a new one. this is headliners only on gb news that. >> you�*re looking happy. >> you�*re looking happy. >> well, the forecast looks good. >> 50 good. >> so you've sorted the travel insurance then? >> allclear travel insurance sponsors gb news travel destinations forecast. >> unsettled across many parts of the mediterranean. some heavy rain, also some thunderstorms, particularly affecting parts of spain. some heavy showers for madeira and parts of tenerife, and some heavy and prolonged spells of potentially thundery rain, particularly across southeastern parts of spain. some heavy showers affecting nice and also rome. parts of the adriatic coastline, but largely settled across greece, and it is largely an improving picture as we head into next week with the best of the temperatures once again across tenerife.
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>> welcome back to headliners, and we're just going to go to gbnews.com/yoursay for a couple of your comments. the truth teller says keir starmer is like the strong woman trump needs, like a modern day thatcher to reagan. might be being sarcastic there. and mark luscomb says did there. and mark luscomb says did the colorectal surgeon have a long arm? this is an image i'm long arm? this is an image i�*m trying to get out of my head. mark moving on. we've got the mark moving on. we�*ve got the independent now with an all female space launch. well, let's hope it goes better than some of these all female flights and doesn't end up upside down. louis. >> yes? you know something? i'm with you 100%. it's a very scary premise. katy perry to join lauren sanchez, whose kevin is. what's his name? jeff bezos's girlfriend. the one who looks kind of like a. am i allowed to say. i don't even like to say. >> almost certainly not. unless
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you want it to join your clip montage and then go ahead. >> and gayle king and historic all female mission to space on jeff bezos rocket. and i know if i was married to jeff bezos, i wouldn't want to get on jeff bezos's rocket. >> do you know what happened? you probably saw that picture. where his is it his wife or girlfriend or whatever, his partner. she was looking longingly into the eyes of leonardo dicaprio after he saw that. he's like, you go into space. he stuck her in a rocket. it's classic. it's classic. >> something bad's going to happen. >> revenge is a dish. >> revenge is a dish. >> best. or maybe it�*s just >> best. or maybe it's just women getting away from louis by getting off the earth. this is possible. >> and how long is the flight going to be? >> well, interestingly. so this is a flight that doesn't go to the moon or anything. itjust goes up into space and, you know, gently turns. >> around and comes back kind of arbitrary thing that says this is. >> yeah. 50 it�*s really not, you >> yeah. so it�*s really not, you know, it's not interplanetary at all. but but it�*s all automated. all. but but it's all automated. >> it�*s another glass ceiling >> it's another glass ceiling smashed. leo. >> right. so there�*s no pilot. >> right. so there's no pilot. it's automated. it�*s not even any fun. yeah. and the journey. the journey is going to be 11
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minutes long. >> well, we've got the times now with gary lineker reporting record profits. well, i hope the tax man gets a cut of this, nick. >> absolutely. gary lineker�*s goalhanger podcast rakes in profits of £1.4 million. incredible. you know if you've seen some of the stuff i mean, the rest is history. people seem to really like. and it seems to actually be good from what i�*ve heard. the rest is politics. do you really want to, like, tune in and listen to rory stewart get things wrong for hours of just like kamala harris will definitely win? he�*s like, he's been proven completely wrong so consistently. but hey, if you listen to alastair campbell and rory stewart, that is your choice. free country or it used to be. so he's just raking in to be. so he�*s just raking in money because he's smart. he�*s money because he's smart. he's worked out this rest of his series. he already had, i believe, something of a profile. 50 believe, something of a profile. so he's managed to make that work. he's got the rest his football where he drones on to alan shearer. you know why this is a non—story? >> he�*s a very smart guy. he manages. he manages his business very well. he manages his public image very well. >> yeah, he makes it seem like he's a nice guy. >> yeah, but. >> yeah, but. >> but this rory stewart guy that you mentioned, he actually his wife gets money from us a
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us, right? you remember reading that? >> the turquoise. >> the turquoise. >> thing to teach modern art to afghan women. >> shireen. >> shireen. >> millions of pounds. >> millions of pounds. >> the afghanistan women. >> the afghanistan women. >> yeah. right. 50 i don't know >> yeah. right. so i don't know whether rory stewart is a good guy or not. i can barely look at him. he's so ugly. >> and i'm pretty sure. >> and i'm pretty sure. >> i don't mean to. i don't mean he's that ugly, but he's not great looking. >> just because you�*re just >> just because you're just cause you�*re so good looking. you could be jeffrey epstein. >> i�*m a ten. >> i'm a ten. >> i'm a ten. >> you've actually made me >> you�*ve actually made me sympathise with you because you've. you've called me ugly so many times. like, finally, i�*ve said this the first time i�*ve sympathised with rory stewart. poor rory. >> i�*ve never called you ugly. >> i've never called you ugly. >> i've never called you ugly. >> on the show. you�*ve done it live on tv, you�*ve done it on live on tv, you've done it on the phone. you did it like last week. >> i�*ve got issue a correction >> i've got issue a correction because rory stewart is very attractive for a donkey sanctuary. we've got the sanctuary. we�*ve got the telegraph now with some of the craziest reasons people have got sued at work. lewis. >> yeah, this is one of those saturday stories. don't offer a chair to a 66 year old. i�*m 67. and you know what? you don't and you know what? you don�*t because you feel horrible. i�*m on the train and somebody off. nobody offers me any seats.
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>> people have thrown chairs at you. >> that's different. the idea is that they're offering you a chair. they're saying, hey, you chair. they�*re saying, hey, you look horrible. no one wants to be even in a nice way. and so this is other rules to avoid being sued by your colleagues. it's like a list of things you can't do, you. >> know, only you read it before the show. >> i did read it. ijust didn't mark it up because it was it was one of these stupid stories. >> it everyone. sorry. everyone used to stand up automatically and let women take their seat on the train. if you read if you read peter hitchens. >> book, they�* re read peter hitchens. >> book, they�*re horrible. >> book, they�*re horrible. >> our whole their whole culture has fallen apart. it lacks organic bonds. now they're trying to regulate it in a top down, bureaucratic way. it's down, bureaucratic way. it�*s never going to work. yeah, decline of everything. >> i absolutely agree with that. well, the show is nearly over. 50 well, the show is nearly over. so let's take another quick look so let�*s take another quick look at saturday�*s front pages. the at saturday's front pages. the daily mail has a spectacle to horrify the world. the i has a shouting match in the oval office. trump tries to humiliate zelenskyy live on tv. the express has bust up, leaves trumps peace talks in crisis. the sun has the white house.
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fantastic pun there. the telegraph has make a deal or we're out. it's the same story and the star diverges with starmer loves nice beavers. i think that's something about beavers being reintroduced, which farmers aren't too keen on.but which farmers aren't too keen on. but starmer won�*t miss on. but starmer won't miss a chance to hurt the farmers. well, that�*s it for tonight's well, that's it for tonight's show. thank you to my guests, louis and nick. i'll be here tomorrow night at 11 pm. with nick and steve and alan. if you're watching at 5 am, then stay tuned for breakfast and i�*ll see you tomorrow night. goodbye. >> i think nick is great. >> i think nick is great. >> and there will be a light breeze in the morning leading to a warm front. boxt heat pumps sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hello there. good evening. welcome to your gb news weather update from the met office. as we head towards the weekend, we can expect some cold and frosty mornings with some fog in places. cloudier in the north at times but otherwise high pressure largely building which means lots of settled and fine conditions to come. and we�*ve ended the day too, on plenty of
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fine and clear weather, but a frontal system just edging its way into the north—west at times. so turning cloudier here overnight with some outbreaks of rain and some fairly blustery winds too, across the far north of scotland. but elsewhere plenty of clear skies. that means temperatures are going to dip away quickly, turning rather cold overnight, likely to see some frost and some fog by the time we reach the morning. possibly even some freezing fog where we see temperatures drop below zero. so to start the weekend on saturday, a little bit of a mixed bag across scotland. it is going to be rather damp at times. still rather damp at times. still rather blustery around north western coast. starting to turn a little bit brighter across the north—west though, we can't rule out a few showers moving through here. quite a damp start across northern ireland, northern parts of england, perhaps some higher cloud making things not turn quite as chilly, but elsewhere across england and wales. another chilly start to the day, likely to see some frost and fog in places, but that should clear rather nicely through the course of the morning, allowing plenty of the morning, allowing plenty of sunshine to start the day and eventually brightening up across
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scotland too, with some sunny spells here. but where we see this band of cloud and possibly some light rain at times, that's some light rain at times, that�*s set to stick there through the afternoon, and perhaps bringing in some hazy, sunny spells elsewhere too. but temperatures fairly similar to where they've been to today, so highs of around 10 to 11 celsius. now for the second half of the weekend. once again a cold and frosty start, particularly across the south and southeast. and once again, we'll start to see again, we�*ll start to see a build of higher cloud for northern areas. but it should stay largely dry away from the north—west, though, where once again we can expect some outbreaks of rain and into next week high pressure sticking around. so once again, lots of fine settled weather and some sunshine by. >> we can expect clear skies leading to a light and warm day lovely boxt solar
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the most important question. can president trump, i hope, yes, with some other allies to stop putin, withdraw this enemy's our enemy, withdraw these troops from our land. and i think that you asked about the history, about the i think that if president or when he will stop putin, if president trump will bring peace to our country, i think he will be on this wall. think. >> we�*ve had very, very good >> we've had very, very good talks. >> mr president, do you think you'd like to see. >> military aid to ukraine? >> military aid to ukraine? >> mr president zelenskyy just said that there would be no compromises with vladimir putin. ijust compromises with vladimir putin. i just wanted to compromises with vladimir putin. ijust wanted to ask both of you, firstly, are there compromises that you think the president zelenskyy is going to have to make? and president zelenskyy, is there anything that you might you think you may be able to offer or bring to the table, for example, elections? thank you. >> i think you�*re going to have >> i think you're going to have to always make compromises. you
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