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tv   Headliners  GB News  July 28, 2023 11:00pm-12:01am BST

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comes as the home august. it comes as the home office is reportedly preparing to erect marquees to accommodate 2000 people at the manston airfield in kent by the end of august . there are warnings it august. there are warnings it could trigger legal challenges based on inhumane treatment . the based on inhumane treatment. the ultra low emission zone is set to be expanded in london after a high court ruled the plan is lawful. legal action was brought by five conservative led councils . it means drivers will councils. it means drivers will pay a councils. it means drivers will pay a £12.50 daily fee if their vehicles don't meet the required emission standards . a emission standards. a spokesperson for the aa says the ruling is hugely disappointing , ruling is hugely disappointing, noting, but it hopes london will follow other cities by adopting measures to reduce the impact on those who cannot afford it. the london mayor, sadiq khan, says there will be support . there will be support. >> the decision to expand and the ultra low emission zone was a difficult one, not one. i took lightly. but it's essential . lightly. but it's essential. next week there'll be a massive expansion of the support we give to families and to businesses
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and charities. to families and to businesses and charities . as it is, 96% of and charities. as it is, 96% of cars in inner london are compliant. nine out of ten cars in outer london are compliant. they won't pay a penny more from august 29th, but we'll see the benefits of clean air. but i'll carry on listening to see what more support we can give. the chancellor says no decisions have been made on compensation for victims of the contaminated blood scandal. >> thousands of people contracted hiv and hepatitis after being given contaminated blood products in the 1970s and 80s. jeremy hunt told the official infected blood inquiry today the injustice is being addressed . labour has accused addressed. labour has accused the government of having an unforgivable lack of urgency when addressing the needs of rape victims. they say the government has not implemented crucial recommendations made by the criminal justice joint inspect after it. that's following two reports and analysis by the party shows that several emile elliott
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recommendations from the cgi report have been left unfulfilled . shadow attorney unfulfilled. shadow attorney general emily thornberry has said the joint inspectorate said change is needed now. but a year and a half later ministers have yet to lift a finger on most of their recommendations as a mother whose seven year old daughter was killed in a hit and run in walsall has paid tribute to her star. a 14 year old boy has been arrested following the incident. the seven year old girl was taken to hospital in a critical condition but she later died of her injuries. police say it happened shortly after 7 pm. yesterday. they're now looking for a blue and black motorcycle . the teenager remains in custody . natwest has appointed custody. natwest has appointed a law firm to conduct an in—depth pendant review following the closure of nigel farages bank account . it comes as the banking account. it comes as the banking group announces profits of £3.6 billion for the first half of the year. both the group ceo, dame alison rose and coutts boss
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peter flavel resigned this week . you're up to date on gb news .you're up to date on gb news now it's time for headliners . now it's time for headliners. hello and welcome to headliners. >> you run through saturday's newspapers with three comedians. >> i'm one of them. i'm leo curson. >> tonight i'm joined by the silver fox, lewis schaffer. >> i'm one of his many illegitimate children. jonathan coogan no , how are you both coogan no, how are you both doing .7 doing? >> that's the first that i've heard. >> this is a hard way to find out. well, this is you told me back a bit of the cilla black surprise, surprise. we're going to reveal the dna test from a sparkly gold envelope. >> well, actually, you know, this is bring your son to work day. and very proud. i'm day. and i'm very proud. i'm very of him. he told me he very proud of him. he told me he worked sky. worked for sky. >> where we are. he's >> and look where we are. he's already being funnier than you, lewis. have a look lewis. anyway, let's have a look at front pages those
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at the front pages of those newspapers. the daily mail leads with off fence with time to get off the fence over ulez, told. i think over ulez, keir told. i think keir could only get off a fence after asking a focus group if they him to get off a they wanted him to get off a fence first. the telegraph has council to double for second council tax to double for second home owners. the guardian leads with clear , clear with don't abandon clear, clear clean air policies. with don't abandon clear, clear clean air policies . warn clean air policies. warn scientists. the times have we'll act on every crime . that's the act on every crime. that's the police. the eye has a poll boost for starmer as sunak backtracks on net zero, the daily star has is not now pesky ice age killers. and those were your front pages as. killers. and those were your front pages as . let's have killers. and those were your front pages as. let's have a closer look at those front pages, starting with the daily mail. >> lewis well , it's mail. >> lewis well, it's time to mail. >> lewis well , it's time to get >> lewis well, it's time to get off the fence , told keir keir off the fence, told keir keir starmer. the fence over ulez and the court this is right after the court this is right after the court this is right after the court gave the green light to labour's mayor. so the labour
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mayor, rishi on the ulez thing because, because a lot of these conservative councils who are not that congested, it's very leafy out there, the air is quite good and they say, why do we need to do this? >> and it's an ultra low emission zone. makes sense in the centre of london where it's congested and there's you don't want get stuck in a traffic want to get stuck in a traffic jam well as, you know, you jam as well as, you know, you want want to breathe want to, you want to breathe there. reducing, limiting the there. so reducing, limiting the number of vehicles makes sense. but suburbs, people but out in the suburbs, people have there aren't have got families. there aren't the with with dirty the issues with with with dirty air also everybody's going air and also everybody's going electric are going electric all the cars are going to electric ten so to be electric in ten years. so this seems pointless thing. >> jonathan, i don't disagree about that. but also when you think about the centre towns think about the centre of towns where of people where there's a lot of people from income families , from lower income families, they're the who are going from lower income families, th
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if this came in, drive in. >> absolutely. >> absolutely. >> if i could drive he wouldn't let me never got a car if you let me never got me a car if you get your car i couldn't afford the pass myself but if it's the bus pass myself but if it's not just the centre of town is those people out there the those people out there in the leafy boroughs, need a car. leafy boroughs, they need a car. >> need car. and i've >> they need a car. and i've been uxbndge >> they need a car. and i've been uxbridge many times been to uxbridge many times because pinewood because that's what pinewood studios. because that's what pinewood studioslndiana jones, which am filmed indiana jones, which i am in you can go if you go. in which you can go if you go. i heard the oxbridge comedians do better, but you misheard and you thought lived in thought if you lived in uxbridge, was you a boost uxbridge, it was you get a boost . comedians it's £12.50 and . comedians and it's £12.50 and it be said it's just it needs to be said it's just one more tax. and it's also a way to get people you can it's a way to get people you can it's a way to get people you can it's a way to get people out of their cars because they don't want us to have freedom and they want us to have freedom and they want us to control no cars for the peasants. >> if you're in the suburbs, there aren't the public transport actually transport links. you actually need and you'll a need a car and you'll have a family probably. yeah, you family probably. so, yeah, you need you need a car. and like need a you need a car. and like you it is a tax. this is you say, it is a tax. this is filling a hole at the heart of sadiq khan's budget, which is an absolutely cataclysmic state because of lockdown, because of because of lockdown, which obviously championed which he obviously championed being but. but
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being a leftist. but. but lockdown , you know, starved of lockdown, you know, starved of money. he's got to that money. now he's got to get that money. now he's got to get that money from somewhere. he's money from somewhere. so he's just grabbing it from the suburbs. >> but that doesn't mean the people there who are outside people out there who are outside london to worry about london don't have to worry about this. coming. coming this. it's coming. it's coming to birmingham to and manchester and to and lancaster and to chester to and lancaster and to chester to and lancaster and these different places and all these different places that know the ultra low that i know the ultra low emission zone will eventually extend. >> sadiq khan's realm will extend to the orkney islands to mars. >> it's coming for everything. no cars for us, for the peasants ? >> 7- >> no, 7 >> no, certainly not diesel ones . anyway. moving on. what's on the front cover of the times, jonathan so here's a fun, empty promise. >> so we'll act on every crime so the police forces will promise to investigate every crime after years of overlooking lower level offences such as criminal damage, shoplifting, car and bike theft. so ministers want the police to drastically improve their rates solving improve their rates for solving many these small crimes. and many of these small crimes. and they're saying some of these crimes virtually been crimes have virtually been decriminalised. so something like under like shoplifting, if it's under £50, it doesn't even get investigated, which is kind of interesting. so if you wanted to
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steal like a a steal like a triple a playstation game, pretty playstation game, you pretty much without getting any, much could without getting any, you reciproca ation. you know, reciproca ation. that's not a bad shell. i mean, have you all experiences with the police have been good over the police have been good over the years. i've had a couple of things stolen. i've stolen a couple of things. been couple of things. never been caught i've never got my caught and i've never got my stuff back. somebody broke into my and nicked, two and my car and nicked, like two and a worth of camera gean >> oh, no. and, yeah, i don't know i left it, but it know why i left it, but it wasn't. wasn't visible or wasn't. it wasn't visible or anything. but the police, i phoned them up. >> i did notice darius quality videos up. videos went up. >> they couldn't cared less >> they couldn't have cared less really. oh so you really. they just. oh so you weren't. they were like, so you weren't. they were like, so you weren't reference weren't a crime reference number. it's like, no, in number. it's like, no, it's in colombo dust, colombo down and dust, dust, everything. like, been everything. i've like, been making everything's making sure everything's nothing. nothing gets touched. you prints. you can get the prints. >> my first day in this country. september. excuse me. july? yes was years ago. i was yesterday? 23 years ago. i landed heathrow airport and landed at heathrow airport and my bag stolen. my bag was my bag was stolen. my bag was stolen. police stolen. and i went to the police there and said, there's stolen. and i went to the police there anwe said, there's stolen. and i went to the police there anwe cansaid, there's stolen. and i went to the police there anwe cansaicaboutz's stolen. and i went to the police there anwe cansaicabout it. and nothing we can do about it. and this is the most this is the most you need the fire department, whatever it is,
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there's most cameras in the there's the most cameras in the entire is there? not even entire world, is there? not even in do have many in china. do they have as many cameras have at heathrow? >> he his way to work for >> he was on his way to work for oxfam. then he became a comedian after that. that was brownies in those days. >> that should have taught me >> so that should have taught me a yeah. a lesson. yeah yeah. >> your own country. >> stick to your own country. >> stick to your own country. >> okay. moving on. what's on the the the front cover of the telegraph, lewis? >> well, the front cover the >> well, the front cover of the telegraph council tax to telegraph is council tax to double second homes this double for second homes and this is. was is. this is. i mean, i was surprised to find out that that basically the council taxes basically they the council taxes they proposing this is the tory government proposing to double the levy of council tax that the government could provide. but the local councils want it quadrupled . i have read, which quadrupled. i have read, which is times four, that tax is higher than hunter biden . higher than hunter biden. >> it's absolutely insane. and the shocking thing is, is do you know how many my son sorry, my well , who spent most of know how many my son sorry, my well, who spent most of his time with his mother? >> don't hit me again. i shouldn't i never had a chance to hit you because your mother your mother hated me for seeing
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you. but but. but how many? how many? second homes are there in britain? know. 256,000. britain? i don't know. 256,000. that's all i'm asking. very many. >> you don't think that's a lot? i mean, that's. that's a quarter of a million. >> that's. that means not even. that's less than 1% of the population have a second home. right. but so you don't think this will make a meaningful because they're saying if we if we homes, then nobody we tax second homes, then nobody will afford a nice will be able to afford a nice second home in cornwall or scotland or wherever they they want holidays. want to go in their holidays. >> yeah. so then the locals will be will able to live in that be will be able to live in that house instead. become more house instead. it'll become more affordable for them. >> actually not true >> no, that's actually not true because happens is it'll because what happens is it'll just make it, it just make it could make it, it could the housing market. could tank the housing market. yeah, but point is, and yeah, but. but the point is, and also the tourism industry , i also the tourism industry, i mean, people aren't going to mean, if people aren't going to cornwall to live their second cornwall to live in their second homes bear in mind, people homes and bear in mind, people can home so they can can work from home so they can live extended in live for extended periods in their second stay . their second home and stay. >> money in the >> they're spending money in the local and bars and local restaurant and bars and all the of it. then that's all the rest of it. then that's that's to off some that's going to choke off some of tourist economy there. of the tourist economy there. >> how big is the
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>> yeah. and how big is the tourist economy? it's big. the point that some point is, is that is that some places get better and some places get better and some places get better and some places get worse. cornwall has gotten and better over gotten better and better over the yeah. is why the years. yeah. which is why it's expensive, which why it's so expensive, which is why the to live the locals can't afford to live there anymore. and it's just it's the town i grew it's like the town that i grew up question does this apply up in. question does this apply to people who own third homes asking a friend? asking for a friend? >> is it the same thing? yeah. >> ask josh is. yeah, but i mean the i mean with second homes. >> i mean it seems it feels like the sort of politics of envy. yes, exactly . you can't you've yes, exactly. you can't you've got this second home. oh, we're to going take that off here. we're going to tax it off. you we're going to tax it off. you we're going to tax it off. you we're going to tax you until the pip we're going to tax you until the pip until you can't pip squeak, until you can't afford it feels, you afford trousers. it feels, you know, why can't they know, why do they why can't they just be happy for people to second homes and build homes and make rich that people second homes and build homes and makafford rich that people second homes and build homes and makafford ri homes?at people can afford first homes? >> don't. we don't. that's >> we don't. we don't. that's difficult for homes. >> something it's difficult for homes. >> the something it's difficult for homes. >> the politics thing it's difficult for homes. >> the politics of ng it's difficult for homes. >> the politics of envy. it'st's not the politics of envy. it's the same way that people who come country come come into a country like come into are put in the long into britain are put in the long line. it takes forever to get in. people local people, line. it takes forever to get
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in. justaople local people, line. it takes forever to get in. just want local people, line. it takes forever to get in. just want to :al people, line. it takes forever to get in. just want to be people, line. it takes forever to get in. just want to be nicele, line. it takes forever to get in. just want to be nice to they just want to be nice to local people and they think, well, screw the can i say the word screw, screw, screw the screw the incomers, screw the screw the incomers, screw the screw people. don't screw those people. they don't see that. >> they don't live you >> they don't live that you put after screw was the after a word. screw was was the bad bit. lewis that was the bit. that's like, i don't xenophobic and intolerant. >> what they're >> no, but that's what they're thinking. these thinking. they're thinking these are people from london. they're from the second homeowners are live in london. they don't they're in they're not local people in truro or wherever the places are. know, to heck with them. >> okay. okay. moving on. is that right? got the end of that right? we've got the end of the with the daily star. the section with the daily star. jonathan, what they got in jonathan, what have they got in the cover? >> daily we're >> so the daily star lead, we're the boffins a cheery new the boffins warn of a cheery new threat to humanity. not now. pesky ice age killers. so this is exciting than they make is less exciting than they make it apparently time it seem. so apparently time travel been mastered by a travel has been mastered by a tiny which reawaken. tiny worm which was reawaken. and frozen, your and after being frozen, your tiny after tiny worm was reawakened. after mum viagra that time mum gave you viagra that time for estimated it's for an estimated 46,000. it's a bit inappropriate, right, to talk his mother that talk about his mother that way. yeah, least i talked to yeah, well, at least i talked to her, so. yeah. so basically , her, so. yeah. so basically, this tiny worm has been awoken
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after 46,000 years, which get back to the story and stop talking 60 like so . i mean, it's talking 60 like so. i mean, it's a it's a magical scientific story because they didn't expect creatures to be able to survive this long in a kind of permafrost. so it's a bit of a bit of a rare find. and it looks like tiny creatures can actually survive for aeons . and maybe survive for aeons. and maybe that gives us hope walt that gives us hope for walt disney, who's been frozen, right? >> yeah, i mean, i should imagine the bigger creature imagine the bigger the creature is, harder it is to keep it is, the harder it is to keep it alive in ice. yeah. you're not to mammoth. just to going get a mammoth. just thaw it out and start running around. >> lewis had a story about that. well the interesting thing is, is, how did how did this worm is, is how did how did this worm suddenly become frozen? >> like, and what >> like, instantly. and what happened is, is was captain birdseye it was bragging >> well, it was always bragging about he gets it from about how quick he gets it from the field the. the field to the. >> it was. >> it was. >> do you know he mentioned you mentioned the mammoths, the mammoths, mammoths mammoths, all those mammoths died instantly. so much so, died like instantly. so much so, yeah, they did much so that yeah, they did so much so that when were walking when explorers were walking around the siberia that they let their dogs eat the frozen
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asteroids. >> so the meat was still good. >> so the meat was still good. >> it was the meat was still good because the animal had frozen in place. it wasn't like it had been laying out in the sun or whatever it was. i'm hungry now. and there were thousands them and thousands of them and velikovsky. to do with velikovsky. it has to do with the and the the planets shifting and the earth going on its axis i >> electric universe theory. >> electric universe theory. >> okay , this like >> okay, this sounds like another conspiracy theory. anyway, part one. anyway, that's it for part one. coming we've got coming up, we've got a dambusters refugee camp, lefties getting debunked and a coup in africa. see you in a couple of
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welcome back to headliners. i'm leo kearse and i'm joined by lewis schaefer and jonathan colgan, the father and son duo . colgan, the father and son duo. anyway, kicking things off with the express . and people are the express. and people are upset about ritchie's plans for housing, asylum seekers, tents , housing, asylum seekers, tents, overcrowding, poor sanitation . overcrowding, poor sanitation. sounds like a refugee camp. jonathan it sounds like the time i got locked out of my tent at
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glastonbury, but okay, so major blow for rishi sunaks migrant plan. >> does raf scampton plan delayed by a month? so the first group of migrants set to arrive at raf scampton in at the raf scampton in lincolnshire won't now be moved until october , according until early october, according to bbc. so the delays have to the bbc. so the delays have forced you to surveys on 14 buildings still not having been completed similarly, are completed. similarly, there are reports officials are reports that officials are finding it difficult to find qualified professionals to oversee electricity oversee gas, water, electricity at the site. so it's a real sort of admin error. there's they can't get the right workers. there's problems with the buildings. i think just buildings. i think i've just been have been told we actually have a couple the migrants who couple of the migrants who weren't actually able to get into the raf base. is there is there a picture of it? yeah . there a picture of it? yeah. that's that's me when i was shipwrecked , i didn't know you shipwrecked, i didn't know you were going to show that picture. >> and that's darius. when he was my 14 year old son, he looked like he's cosplaying as aladdin. >> but yeah, i don't think anybody wants to at that. anybody wants to look at that. >> all right. >> no. all right. >> no. all right. >> back to the story. so so, yeah, so this seems like a real problem for sunak. he had great
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plans they seem have plans and they seem to not have worked out. this was this worked out. was this was this predictable? we trust the predictable? can we trust the government to make big operations like work? operations like this work? i don't well this seems don't think so. well this seems to every time rishi tries to to be every time rishi tries to do to tackle the issue do something to tackle the issue with migrant crossings. >> we're >> and bear in mind, we're coming busy season coming into the busy season when, know seas are to when, you know seas are going to become so lots of boats are going to coming over. so he going to be coming over. so he needs to dissuade them. and part of of putting of that is instead of putting them five star hotels, put them in five star hotels, put them in five star hotels, put them in, you know, slightly less luxurious accommodation, you know, know, know, still safe, you know, meets all the meets all the requirements refugees , says. requirements for refugees, says. but everything that he does, every step of the way, if it's not, you know lefty lawyers gaming the system to get loads of and teach teach of money and teach teach cross—channel migrants to cross—channel migrants how to how pretend to be asylum how to pretend to be asylum seekers , how to how to say, oh, seekers, how to how to say, oh, i'll i'll get tortured if i go back. i'm christian, i'm gay, all the rest of i mean, this all the rest of it. i mean, this just seems like another another blow for rishi. >> how can he how can it go? well i mean, is something. well i mean, this is something. the unprepared for. the country's unprepared for. it's of emergency. it's a state of emergency. hundreds thousands hundreds of thousands of people coming and where
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coming into this shore and where are to be put and so are they going to be put and so he's doing his best. i think he's doing his best. i think i think the problem is it's us. it's the people who live in this country. we're too nice to people. it's the world we live in. they don't want us to be mean people. you've got to be mean to people. you've got to be mean to people. you've got to be mean people to say, you can't mean to people to say, you can't come somebody should have come in. somebody should have told to come told me not to come in. i wouldn't have been heartbroke by this i mean, at some point this guy. i mean, at some point you have tough love. you you need to have tough love. you need to say lewis schaffer, you're coming in. yeah. you're not coming in. yeah. >> some point your >> and at some point stole your bag. has to say, you bag. a country has to say, you know, because we're already seeing problems with with an issue of stories ago issue a couple of stories ago with housing with not enough housing so they're tax on they're going to put a tax on second so people can't second homes so people can't have second homes. maybe everybody could have second homes continually homes if we weren't continually increasing with increasing the population with with cross—channel migrants. >> but they there you >> yeah, but but they there you go. everybody could then then house prices would drop and then the people who own those houses house prices would drop and then the peo don't1o own those houses house prices would drop and then the peo don't want n those houses house prices would drop and then the peo don't want to :hose houses house prices would drop and then the peo don't want to hurt houses house prices would drop and then the peo don't want to hurt therses and we don't want to hurt the people own houses , their property. >> maybe a solution could be. so whenever a left wing person tweets that they that we should
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have open borders and let everybody in refugees are everybody in and refugees are welcome. they have to take welcome. they they have to take in three refugees as well. >> gary lineker took in a refugee, but she preferred being called au pair. so i don't okay. >> moving on. we've got the mail and nobody's going to the shops in britain. >> lewis no. britain's crumbling stores fronts, according to the daily mail, uk loses 6000 retail outlets in five years amid covid lockdowns and crippling , quote lockdowns and crippling, quote unquote, crippling business rates with the north and the midlands affected the worst affected and basically this is every time , every time we have every time, every time we have a story like this, i always go, it's covid, but it's right in the headline. here it's covid. so i don't i don't seem like a conspiracy theorist. it's covid. it's covid plus it's the business rate. so it's not just only covid. and i'm going to tell you what don't mean tell you what else. i don't mean to interrupt. is it the internet tell you what else. i don't mean tcanderrupt. is it the internet tell you what else. i don't mean tcand itupt. is it the internet tell you what else. i don't mean tcand it could it the internet tell you what else. i don't mean tcand it could be the internet tell you what else. i don't mean tcand it could be also 1ternet tell you what else. i don't mean tcand it could be also the 1et ? and it could be also the internet shopping online. but i'll what, what else it i'll tell you what, what else it is, it's parking restrictions on and streets because people
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and on streets because people can't in people can't drive in because people can't drive. >> all connected , man. >> it's all connected, man. >> it's all connected, man. >> it's all connected, man. >> it's not just ulez. it's single yellows. yellows. single yellows. double yellows. yeah. it's this. yeah. yeah. and it's this. yeah. >> and i mean, jonathan, this could present a solution to part of the housing crisis if we convert these unwanted and empty shops into residential properties. >> that could work. what would be the funniest shop to live in? maybe like an old. like a first bought or something? well, the trampolines yeah trampolines and stuff. yeah i guess you could take the stuff out. mean, part of out. but yeah, i mean, part of the conversion to residential residential involve residential use might involve taking the shop stock out. >> don't know. i mean, it >> i don't know. i mean, it would interesting. would be interesting. >> i live in a journey with people staring you but people staring at, you know, but they that. they did that. >> they that. i don't know >> they did that. i don't know when did that, but in my when they did that, but in my neighbourhood and in nunhead and in southeast london is like every shop was, every every other shop was, every other was a shop that other house was a shop that they put a place in. put that they put a place in. it's very unattractive. >> the guardian now and >> anyway, the guardian now and left people have for some left wing people have for some reason decided that reason suddenly decided that closing people's accounts closing people's bank accounts is jonathan that's weird, is bad. jonathan that's weird, that isn't it? >> a communist until >> everyone's a communist until they start patreon account or
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they start a patreon account or something, gina miller something, right? gina miller voiced fear for democracy voiced his fear for democracy over closure of her party's bank account. the anti—brexit account. so the anti—brexit campaigner gina miller has said we a functioning we don't have a functioning democracy if political democracy if new political parties access banking parties cannot access banking services. after she was told her own party's account would be closed. so her party, which is called the true and true and fair party, that's a great name for a party that's like calling your baby the evil and corrupt party. exactly . i mean, party. yeah, exactly. i mean, that's calling your that's like calling your babysitters non diddler babysitters the non diddler community. if it's community. i don't know if it's not a good name, but she has basically said that she has been denied multiple banks the denied from multiple banks the opportunity a bank opportunity to open a bank account. recently it came account. most recently it came with, want to say monzo . i'm with, i want to say monzo. i'm not. it was it was monzo . yeah. not. it was it was monzo. yeah. and she couldn't have and apparently she couldn't have an account because they don't do political but her whole political parties. but her whole argument can argument is, well, how can a dissenting new political dissenting or a new political party ever if they can't get party ever run if they can't get a bank account when it was involved with reclaim another political party? >> i mean, it was an absolute nightmare getting getting banking political banking and obviously political parties you need
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parties need banking. you need you need somewhere to put the put money for your put the money and pay for your campaign stuff. >> but but this is, i think, a far more interesting story because first of all, it's a libertarian question. should a bank be forced to open up accounts for people ? and it's accounts for people? and it's not it's not like the nigel farage story where somebody where she was basically banned because they didn't want political any political parties there any political parties there any political party where nigel farage was because of what he said and specific opinions and they were spying on him. >> and also with nigel farage, they leaked . they were they they leaked. they were indiscreet information indiscreet with his information , which is a huge breach of data confidentiality. >> and that with natwest. >> and that was with natwest. and think we need to keep in and i think we need to keep in mind there's another mind because there's another story about the bud light situation that natwest situation in that that natwest i don't want to hype focus on this , but natwest needs to be punished. they need people. i have stopped banking with n atwe st. natwest. >> well , that's not punishment. >> well, that's not punishment. i mean, somebody else is going to a liability. to give you a liability. >> okay. to give you a liability. >> ilkay. i had an account, but >> i was. i had an account, but inever >> i was. i had an account, but i never use it. but there was no money yet. but can i just say
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one thing? this i think very interesting is that gina miller's nigel miller's been dogging nigel farage he was going to call, farage for he was going to call, thought it was just going to be a. after. is it am i allowed to say that? >> is that i don't know how you found either. did you turn found out either. did you turn up in a car park? >> that's how i was >> i think that's how i was conceived. because. >> because she was an anti—brexit person, basically anti —brexit person, basically following anti—brexit person, basically follov she saw nigel farage think she saw nigel farage getting a lot of attention from this. she thought, got this. and she thought, oh, i got attention let me speak out. this. and she thought, oh, i got atte|also let me speak out. this. and she thought, oh, i got atte|also what'sme speak out. this. and she thought, oh, i got atte|also what's interesting ut. and also what's interesting about is when nigel farage, about this is when nigel farage, when de—banking all the when he was de—banking all the all the left wing people were were ecstatic. >> yeah. on twitter, you know, they about the they didn't care about the principles of somebody having access to such a basic service that's for day day that's required for day to day life. they couldn't get enough of thought was of it. they thought it was brilliant. was brilliant. when gina miller was de—banking nigel and de—banking nigel farage and everybody came out everybody on the right came out and terrible. and said no, this is terrible. and because people on the and that's because people on the right have got principles. >> oh, we've got principles as well to put in bank accounts. >> anyway, moving on, we've got the there's been the times now, and there's been a africa. i know. i've a coup in africa. i know. i've got an accent, but by coup, i
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mean military insurrection. ian not speaking of not a shaggy bovine speaking of shaggy got this shaggy bovines, you've got this one. lewis shaggy b0vines, you've got this one. lewis yeah, shaggy bovines, you've got this one. lewis yeah, well, this is a story that i think is story that i that i think is above grade to actually above our pay grade to actually figure out. >> it takes place in africa, which a million away. which is a million miles away. it's a niger, but it relates to europe, it relates to europe. because was head because this guy who was head this president barroso of niger, which is right above nigeria or above some of these countries, ghana, and they they they had a coup , which is such an old coup, which is such an old school thing. we haven't had a coupin school thing. we haven't had a coup in a very long time. this kind of coup, the last coup, we were going to have was were almost going to have was when the wagner group or the wagner group went up to russia to kick that guy out. and this is where the weirdness comes in. >> there was a short lived coup, wasn't it? an exciting day wasn't it? it's an exciting day in russia's involved in russia's russia's involved russia's totally involved. >> the guy was >> so that the guy who was leading against in leading the coup against in niger was led and backed by the russians and the wagner group and it looks like the head of the wagner group pachinko
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pachinko pushing what's his name, i forget his name. prigozhin prigozhin , an prigozhin prigozhin, an prigozhin prigozhin, an prigozhin is back in the good graces of . graces of. >> well, of course. i mean, that's africa is where the central african republic and all these places where russia will these places where russia will the wagner group specifically make so much money, not just propping up dictators, but also also looting the country. they control gold mines, mineral mines , all kinds of concerns. so mines, all kinds of concerns. so it's not so much the nation state building. >> it's more getting access to the resources that are already there or is there is there an advantage to having a sort of a friendly leader there? >> friendly yeah, there's definitely an advantage. and what's interesting about what's what's interesting about niger other other niger and also other other countries such as mali, where wagner have been fighting and been, know , destabilising been, you know, destabilising governments , is that so france governments, is that so france was the sort of still the sort of colonial power in niger and a lot of and a lot of african countries, central african countries, central african countries . and then russia has countries. and then russia has come in to sort of oust france . come in to sort of oust france. and, you know, you saw yesterday
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putin's offering them loads of grain and all kinds of stuff and, you know, bought the president of zimbabwe helicopter. >> yeah. and they had a meeting. the russians have had a meeting with with these african countries, 17 of them turn up. so those are 17 countries that are not kind of on our side. and are not kind of on our side. and are we allowed to say that it's the beginning of the third world war? yeah. you heard it here first, folks. >> coming up. that's it >> anyway, coming up. that's it for now. stay tuned for burning quran racist cops and a ban on meal deals. don't go away . meal deals. don't go away. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers, proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. weather on. gb news. >> hello there. i'm jonathan vautrey here with your latest gb news weather forecast provided by the met office. hope you're able to enjoy some of the sunniest spells we did see around today. but into the weekend there increasing weekend there is the increasing chance that we see some showers and is all thanks to this and that is all thanks to this area low pressure. that is area of low pressure. that is pushing the pushing its way in from the
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north—west. isobars north—west. those isobars squeezing we'll squeezing together. so we'll turn into the turn quite blustery into the weekend as well. and those frontal that saw frontal systems that you saw bringing of showers bringing in swathes of showers first thing during the overnight penod period for parts of western scotland down into northern england wales. also the england and wales. also the potential another potential for another band pushing across southeast england, uncertainty england, just some uncertainty regards to the positioning of that some that one. but definitely some heavy possible heavy pulses of rain possible first saturday. not first thing on saturday. not going be a cold night at all. going to be a cold night at all. actually pretty mild the actually pretty mild in the southeast, fresher southeast, but slightly fresher further west, lows further towards the west, lows of around 12 to 13 c on saturday, then turns into a day of sunshine and showers for the vast majority of us, particularly for northern ireland western scotland . ireland and western scotland. that's see the most that's where we'll see the most frequent potential for frequent showers potential for those heavy some those to turn heavy with some hail as well, hail and thunderstorms as well, with those blustery winds, though, all areas, those though, across all areas, those showers be pushing through showers will be pushing through relatively quickly. so still some spells around some sunny spells around and in that climbing highs that sunshine climbing to highs between 19 and 24 c. but main low pressure centre stays with us through sunday well. some us through sunday as well. some heavier southern heavier showers for southern scotland northern scotland down into northern england. then focusing england. but we're then focusing our this of our attention on this area of rain to start rain that's going to start pushing way in from the pushing its way in from the
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southwest watch southwest again. got to watch the exact timings of that, but certainly could turn quite damp for southwest england certainly could turn quite damp for on. southwest england certainly could turn quite damp for on. furthernest england certainly could turn quite damp for on. further showers land certainly could turn quite damp for on. further showers into later on. further showers into the well. that's all the new week as well. that's all for now. bye bye. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers proud sponsors of weather on gb news
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>> welcome back to headliners . >> welcome back to headliners. and let's get straight back into it with the financial times. and the quran is being burned, burnt in sweden. but it should be fine. islam is the religion of peace. >> jonathan oh, lordy, yes. it looks like the swedes are trying to burn more books than brian jones. swedish prime minister jones. so swedish prime minister ulf kristersson has said that he's extremely worried about the consequences if more demonstrations go ahead, which the quran desecrated amid the quran is desecrated amid growing muslim anger at a series of attacks on islam's holy book. so is a worry that the
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so this is a worry that the swedish prime minister has not just fearing just because of his fearing local retaliation , he's also local retaliation, he's also fearing how that's going to affect sweden's standing the affect sweden's standing in the kind of global political arena. so sweden are worried about what turkey are going to think of this because they need . sorry, this because they need. sorry, one second. who needs turkey needs sweden's backing or sweden needs sweden's backing or sweden needs turkey's backing. >> sweden is turkey's backing to join? >> yes, i thought. how sweden not in it. >> i think it's already been okayed.i >> i think it's already been okayed. i think turkey came out and said, yeah, no, we're going to do it okay they're to do it now. okay they're leaning. they're away leaning. they're pivoting away from yeah. i mean, from russia. yeah. yeah. i mean, turkey's this turkey's not happy about this quran imagine. quran burning. i can imagine. also, had the also, they've just had the election so the election in turkey. so the erdogan, leader there, erdogan, the leader there, doesn't to worry about what doesn't need to worry about what people think of much. people think of him so much. >> has happened. so >> this has already happened. so this is a it's a non—story. >> it's not. it's not quite >> no, it's not. it's not quite a story. i mean, there's a long story. i mean, there's certainly there's certainly repercussions embassies repercussions to embassies around the world. and we've seen the embassy iraq the swedish embassy in iraq getting and destroyed. >> they said that part of >> they said that was part of a russian disinformation campaign to look like it was the to make it look like it was the government of government and sort of encouraging so this is what
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encouraging it. so this is what this is what the swedish prime minister louis he's minister is saying, louis he's saying are russian saying that these are russian agents essentially who are sowing by by by sowing discord by by by pretending to be swedish people or encouraging people to or encouraging swedish people to burn quran. interesting. burn the quran. oh, interesting. >> might be true, >> well, that might be true, too. the fact the fact is, too. but the fact the fact is, is that that you have to apply to the government to burn the quran oh, yeah. so this isn't like some random person who just shows up and says, i'm going to burn the quran. so you've got to get your quran burning. got it. you got to get a licence from it. and they say there's nothing they about it because they can do about it because it's free speech when the truth is, is they could even you know, this is such important thing. this is such an important thing. i what you say. i i don't care what you say. i don't think don't think don't think the i don't think the are acting the muslims are acting irrationally this. i think irrationally about this. i think it's provocative. and i think i think sweden. you don't think they're rationally they're acting rationally or irrationally, they're acting rationally or irratiyou .ly, they're acting rationally or irratiyou.ly, is normal to just see, you think is normal to just go down an embassy go and burn down an embassy because set fire to because somebody set fire to a book. >> well, what'd you if they >> well, what'd you do if they if burned fountainhead if they burned the fountainhead or you do then, leo, or what would you do then, leo, would you tear down a i'm not
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sure what the fountainhead is. i mean, not i'm mean, personally, i'm not i'm not rand. not mad at rand. >> ayn rand. >> ayn rand. >> i thought you liked han run games and somebody burnt one games and if somebody burnt one of i'd just like, fine. of them, i'd just be like, fine. >> a playstation four >> you burnt a playstation four game, you know what i mean? i don't. i'm not that worked up about you're comparing about it. no, you're comparing part pluralistic, liberal part of a pluralistic, liberal democracy. either democracy. you can either decide, to part decide, hey, i want to be part of pluralistic, liberal of this pluralistic, liberal democracy don't kill democracy where we don't kill people burning the quran, or people for burning the quran, or i'll live in, you know, i'll go and live in, you know, saudi arabia or one those saudi arabia or one of those frictionless utopia where the rules in are followed. >> and no, you are wrong. wrong wrong. at end the day, we wrong. at the end of the day, we need to people those people who are burning the are upset about burning the muslims burning the muslims because burning the muslims because burning the muslims the quran care muslims burning the quran care about and stopped muslims burning the quran care about and and stopped muslims burning the quran care about and an stopped stopped muslims burning the quran care about and an stopped caringd caring and we stopped caring when down when they when they tore down when they tore statues in this tore down statues in this country people care. we country, people didn't care. we should cared . i cared. should have cared. i cared. i cared, too. but we all should have cared. when they start tearing, start, we tearing, when they start, we should stopped at the point should have stopped at the point of actually people and of actually killing people and burning stoning burning people and stoning people . people to death. >> i know. did you see >> i don't know. did you see that? that would that? no, because that would have next thing from
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happening. >> no, that's absolute nonsense i >> - - >> anyway, we're moving on. we've financial we've got the financial times now. 2020, was now. and in 2020, there was a scandal as the democrats buried the biden story the hunter biden laptop story and stopped it, derailing his father's election bid . do you father's election bid. do you think they can do again? think they can do it again? louis well, know what? louis well, you know what? >> this is one of the most common and yet simple stories about biden has about what hunter biden has done. explained to done. it cannot be explained to people know. but people who don't know. but basically he was a bag man. he was carrying around money from the china. he's the ukraine and china. he's carrying of carrying around another kind of bag giving another bag as well and giving another and and stuff. is that and drugs and stuff. is that what you're about? drugs what you're talking about? drugs and money to his dad? and giving money to his dad? yeah. and the department of justice america , they put justice in america, they put they pressed charges against him and he should be going down, down, down. but instead they made a sweetheart deal and they basically let him get off. and so what happened is with the sweetheart deal, they to sweetheart deal, they had to take it in front of take they take it in front of a judge and judge said this. judge and the judge said this. this an embarrassment this is such an embarrassment that i cannot let this that even i cannot let this thing go through. you go back and you cut this deal again. >> yeah . and that's amazing. a
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>> yeah. and that's amazing. a judge and a democrat controlled country with a democrat controlled media democrat controlled media and democrat controlled media and democrat controlled establishment still pushed the pushed back against the established agent and said, no, i'm pushing this plea i'm not pushing this plea deal through. sounds through. and it sounds crazy like louis like he's like louis sounds like he's a conspiracy theorist there. but actually, time , this one actually, this time, this one time, not the house time, he's not the house oversight committee as investigated money going into the accounts of biden family members, some of them who've who've done nothing to receive that money. some of them are, you know , too young to do you know, too young to do anything to receive the money. yeah. they've uncovered pretty, pretty egregious evidence of corruption . corruption. >> you're telling me the dems aren't all the all the good things that people say they are shocking . shocking. >> okay, moving on. mps have found a novel way of making everyone thinner, banning food . everyone thinner, banning food. it's great to see politicians borrowing ideas from north korea. >> yes, they're calling kitchens ultra low eating zones . it's ultra low eating zones. it's pretty clever . and this kind of, pretty clever. and this kind of, you know, government meddling is.thank you know, government meddling
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is. thank you . it's quite is. thank you. it's quite despicable, really. so cook at home meal deals should be banned to tackle obesity. so some people say and these are the environment, food and rural affairs committee, a less attractive group. you will not meet them. they've called on ministers to make the move as part of a plan, a broader crackdown on junk food promotions. this sort of promotions. so this sort of wimpy little group have decided that supermarkets such as marks spencer's and tesco , etcetera, spencer's and tesco, etcetera, etcetera, shouldn't be allowed to sell their at home meal to sell their cook at home meal deals as marks and deals such as marks and spencer's range and spencer's dining range and tesco's dinner for to promotion. so what they want to do is they want impose their miserable want to impose their miserable lives on you and tell you lives to on you and tell you what you can't do in your own kitchen. you want. they kitchen. you if you want. they don't want you to. they don't trust you. don't trust you trust you. they don't trust you with shopping. with your shopping. >> you the main >> they say if you have the main the and everything, then the side and everything, then it's many calories. well, it's too many calories. well, how do they know how many calories get obese? calories you'll get obese? maybe. my maybe. maybe this is my cheat day. but bagging for day. but if i'm bagging for three day, what they three hours a day, what they don't i'm doing. don't know why i'm doing. >> be running around. >> i could be running around. i could be sprinting. i could be i
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mean, i'm obviously i'm fat and it's disgusting. he tells me mean, i'm obviously i'm fat and it's 11 sgusting. he tells me mean, i'm obviously i'm fat and it's 11 haveing. he tells me mean, i'm obviously i'm fat and it's 11 have toi. he tells me mean, i'm obviously i'm fat and it's 11 have to eat he tells me mean, i'm obviously i'm fat and it's 11 have to eat meattells me mean, i'm obviously i'm fat and it's 11 have to eat meat all; me mean, i'm obviously i'm fat and it's 11 have to eat meat all day, and i have to eat meat all day, but, like, why shouldn't i be able to shop and eat what i want? don't tell me what to do. >> you're you've some >> you're you've got some strongly opinions calories. >> well, do. and if they're >> well, i do. and if they're including home meal including and cook at home meal deals aren't cook at home deals which aren't cook at home like sandwiches and chips and whatever i i don't eat that whatever i mean i don't eat that stuff shouldn't eat that stuff and you shouldn't eat that stuff. stuff is low stuff. that stuff is low protein. it high it. isn't protein. it is high in it. isn't that actually that high fat. that actually that high in fat. high sugar. it is high in high in sugar. but it is high in salt and sugar. let me just let's try and squeeze in let's just try and squeeze in this this story, because i think it's important. >> the daily mail >> we've got the daily mail now and light has gone so woke and bud light has gone so woke and bud light has gone so woke and broke that they're having and so broke that they're having to of people. to fire hundreds of people. hopefully transition to hopefully they'll transition to a yeah, well, a new career. luce yeah, well, this should happen. >> should happen a >> this should happen to a natwest, anheuser—busch >> this should happen to a natwest,anheuser—busch lay natwest, anheuser—busch to lay off hundreds after off hundreds of employees after bud dylan bud light and dylan mulvaney disaster and anheuser—busch is the light. the parent company of bud light. bud light. think bud light. but i think anheuser—busch is owned by inbev or it's owned by even or something. it's owned by even bigger. and so bigger. ab inbev is. and so they're of 2% the they're letting go of 2% of the workforce, which actually workforce, which is actually stronger bud light, 2,
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stronger than bud light, 2, which is which is about 380 people. and it should be noted that with companies like this, people don't know who runs these companies. they have they don't have somebody who's like a boss, an old wizened guy like looks like me, but not me. who knows stuff, who's been around the beer business forever . they hire beer business forever. they hire some young girl out of harvard university, some mba graduate, some mba, and they're called a product manager. yeah. and they're basically they're told to do something and they go out and do it. and this young girl who. young woman. sorry she she basically said we have to get our esg score up. yeah. okay >> environmental, social and governance . governance. >> governance. right. and that's why they hire dylan mulvaney, who is was a woman , a delayed who is was a woman, a delayed woman going to be a woman ? woman going to be a woman? always a woman. a woman. more than a woman. more than a i mean, i mean, this this shows that this woke stuff, esg, they try and do the right thing.
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>> they try to say, oh, if we put enough transgender people in the adverts, that means we'll be really good and we'll get good really good and we'll get a good score can borrow money score and we can borrow money more from vanguard or more cheaply from vanguard or blackrock whatever. blackrock or whatever. the big credit. is. but credit. yes credit bank is. but actually can really damage actually it can really damage the business the where the business to the point where they're having lay off they're having to lay off employees they've lost their places. >> the number most people >> the number the most people have on them. just have turned on them. just interrupt the interrupt you. the most important thing. sorry, sorry the most. being rude. no, go the most. i'm being rude. no, go for it. the important thing for it. the most important thing is fact that there was a is the fact that there was a fight back by americans who said we are going to punish bud light for this. >> and jonathan, quickly >> and jonathan, just quickly before break, i thought before we go to break, i thought you had something to say. that's all. that's all for part three. but coming up in the final and funniest section , we've got funniest section, we've got women's football. a flop for zuckerberg and cars that can predict future. see you in a predict the future. see you in a couple of minutes. so .
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nice. welcome back to headliners kicking things off with the telegraph and women are discriminate against in football and not just by their skill level. >> louis mate mate yeah . >> louis mate mate yeah. >> louis mate mate yeah. >> wait till i say what i'm going to say and i've got to be on my best behaviour because my, my girlfriend and wife partner or whatever she is, she just, she thinks that's your best she just thinks that's your best behaviour be referred, you behaviour to be referred, you know, she prefers i pick know, she prefers that i pick one those things and one of those things and that sounds ambiguous it. sounds so ambiguous about it. anyway according the anyway according to the telegraph, discrimination against football at an against women in football at an all high and so this is all time high and so this is a survey that was done by women in football, which is i guess women who are they sound like they wouldn't have a bias. yeah, they wouldn't have a bias. yeah, they wouldn't have a bias. yeah, they wouldn't have bias. wouldn't wouldn't have a bias. wouldn't be a problem. they be looking for a problem. they said solve. they asked women said to solve. they asked women who are football, they said, who are in football, they said, are are is there more are are are is there more sexism, sexual harassment, derogatory comments on ability based gender, whatever it is. have you have you experienced
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this? and 82% said yes, which just shows that that women love to complain. well it also shows that 18% are ugly. >> jonathan, what boom, boom ? i >> jonathan, what boom, boom? i just said that to get you into trouble with your with your into trouble. >> good. it worked . >> good. it worked. >> good. it worked. >> i'm a big believer that women footballers should be paid exactly the same as men. >> male plumbers, footballers . >> male plumbers, footballers. >> male plumbers, footballers. >> no, i wouldn't. i wouldn't watch it. i'm it's for the proles. >> this is not women. no, this is not women. this is not women playing the game . this is women playing the game. this is women who are like, working behind the scenes, doing camera work , doing scenes, doing camera work, doing linespeople. yeah >> and obviously, i mean, sexism and harassment and stuff is, is bad , however. bad, however. >> but that doesn't happen just in football jokes with crack aboutis in football jokes with crack about is it's obviously terrible so it's good they're taking steps to wipe it out. >> we've got the mail >> moving on we've got the mail now scientists are now and scientists are developing cars developing technology for cars based on mystic meg. jonathan yeah, is kind of cool. yeah, this is kind of cool. >> daily mail >> so and the daily mail connected will able to connected cars will be able to predict blackspots
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predict accident blackspots before and so before a crash happens. and so vehicles connected the vehicles connected to the internet used to predict internet can be used to predict where will internet can be used to predict wh before will internet can be used to predict wh before any will internet can be used to predict wh before any collisions will internet can be used to predict wh before any collisions takell be before any collisions take place, according to a new report . so this is interesting. so it takes the data generated about various manoeuvres, such as harsh or harsh braking or skidding or like weird corners and then basically skidding. >> something that >> is that something that happens your pants when you happens in your pants when you when a real bad when you have a yeah, a real bad skid . skid. >> so so basically this >> so yeah. so basically this allows highway engineers to kind of out potential issues . of work out potential issues. it's and it's quite it's all data led and it's quite futuristic . want say i it's futuristic. i want to say i it's not, but it probably it not, but it probably is. it probably will and this probably will be. and this essentially is pre—crime, but for incidents . so yeah, for driving incidents. so yeah, now what this is with this story is a guy his name is his name is andy graham of white willow consulting give he he basically wants to control the data and get the government to pay for providing the data which is basically cars connecting to the internet where they know where we are, whether they control our our freedom and they can turn your car off any time, turn a car off. >> it's basically very scary
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stuff. and it hasn't happened yet, could happen . yet, but it could happen. >> and this is why we don't want to good old trusty to lose our good old trusty petrol and engines petrol and diesel engines because you can't turn them off from skynet . moving on, we've from skynet. moving on, we've got the telegraph now and mark zuckerberg launched threads as a text based version of instagram , it turns out people aren't , but it turns out people aren't interested people interested in reading. people describe lunches . describe their lunches. >> yeah, this is this is i >> yeah, well, this is this is i you're going to use use a joke which is twitter killer threads attempt at a joke . i wasn't attempt at a joke. i wasn't thank you thank you for the live review is this go on twitter no particular joke review is this go on twitter no particularjoke because i came up with a joke myself. twitter killer threads is struggling to keep people interested. mark zuckerberg admits . right. that's zuckerberg admits. right. that's what he said. and i said that threads is hanging on by a thread. oh, right. isn't that what you said before? no, no , what you said before? no, no, but that's a that's a proper joke . joke. >> the story, please. the story is that is that is that mark zuckerberg saw a weakness in twitter run by elon musk and
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he's quickly hired 150 million users because it's tied to instagram. so anybody with an instagram. so anybody with an instagram account, which is obviously a very popular social media app, can then like port onto onto threads this new twitter, there's no barrier to entry loads and loads of people did it, but now those numbers are really dropping off hard so it's less than half or something. >> people don't need more social media. we all hate it. we've already got twitter, we've got instagram. we just don't need another one. >> exactly. and twitter. i mean, the launching threads the reason for launching threads was of was the twitter is full of arguments. elon musk is to arguments. elon musk is made to me. turns the me. it turns out the unpleasantness in the arguments is what it compelling. is what makes it compelling. >> totally it worth >> that's totally makes it worth going >> that's totally makes it worth goiipeople an argument. >> people want an argument. that's i'm. no, they don't. that's why i'm. no, they don't. that's why i'm. no, they don't. that's why i'm. no, they don't. that's why getting married . that's why i'm getting married. >> on. we've got >> anyway, moving on. we've got the telegraph, which bad news the telegraph, which is bad news for young men who want to lose their virginity. might never their virginity. you might never have jonathan i mean, that have to. jonathan i mean, that cuts quite quickly . cuts me quite quickly. >> is very good >> yeah, jonathan is very good looking on this. >> i'm okay. call in if you're
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looking in person. >> i think on the screen >> but i think on the screen he's better looking. he's even better looking. >> fat here. >> i look fat here. >> i look fat here. >> i look fat here. >> i prefer to george >> i, i prefer to george michael, but looks. it looks good. >> he's got beautiful eyes. >> he's got beautiful eyes. >> i look like a young tony blair. is that something young, like yeah. so the old like 714? yeah. okay. so the old story is virgin induced by story is virgin birth induced by scientists first time scientists for the first time could save endangered could help save endangered species. and short species. so the long and short of fruit flies have of it is some fruit flies have been genetically engineered so that they can actually procreate without say, sexual without, what can i say, sexual interaction in what you just did? yeah, fair enough. without banging. so basically that is really for species that really good for species that don't have risk of being don't have that risk of being extinct and they can just do it in a lab. like how louis conceived me. so in a lab, get some some species , you know, you some some species, you know, you get they get so few. >> there's the i can't remember there's a weird sort of tiger looking thing and there was only one left. so they couldn't procreate. >> well, that's what they're trying to do. they're trying to make single species. this is what they say they do. but they're to where is the they're going to where is the money? isn't helping money? the money isn't helping women and men
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women get pregnant. and men people get pregnant. >> where there'll be no >> that's where there'll be no more men. >> that's where the money they're going move to, they're going to move this to, on the human waste. on on to the human waste. >> such a non story. but >> this is such a non story. but can i tell you, this is a non story. >> this could mean that we we're men are redundant. men are needed you know, watch needed for you know, watch tv. >> are redundant. >> we are redundant. >> we are redundant. >> come on. they can just get sperm. they can have sex with anybody to the thing anybody they want to the thing that found interesting that i found interesting and wait get into trouble wait for me to get into trouble over they were doing this over this, they were doing this on fruit flies and fruit flies live for about about 40 live for about for 80 about 40 days, for about 80 days. days, live for about 80 days. and what found out about and so what they found out about these types of fruit is these types of fruit flies is they have parthenogenic genesis. after 40 days, they basically they days they they reach 40 days and they think coming to think nobody's coming along to impregnate me. so i'll do it myself, is very to myself, which is very similar to the the western women work the way the western women work anyway. >> think the wait 40 >> i don't think the wait 40 days, but anyway, 40. >> they for 40, 40 years. >> they do it for 40, 40 years. at 40, the show is nearly over . at 40, the show is nearly over. >> so let's take another quick look at saturday's front pages . look at saturday's front pages. the daily mail leads with time to get off the fence over ulez , to get off the fence over ulez,
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keir told the telegraph leads with council tax to double for second home owners. the guardian has don't abandon clean air policies. warn scientists . the policies. warn scientists. the times has will act on every crime, say the police . the ai crime, say the police. the ai has pulled boost for starmer as sunak backtracks on net zero. the daily star has not no pesky ice age killers. and those were your front pages. and that's all we have time for. your front pages. and that's all we have time for . thank you to we have time for. thank you to my guest, lewis schaffer, and jonathan colgan. and we're back tomorrow at 11 pm. my birthday was televised violence with andrew doyle lewis schaffer and paul if you're watching paul cox. and if you're watching at 5 am, please stay tuned for the breakfast show which is coming up just this break. coming up just after this break. and worry, that was a and don't worry, that was a stage slap, assure you. stage slap, i can assure you. the father son relationship is fine. goodbye fetch . fine. goodbye fetch. >> the temperature's rising . >> the temperature's rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on . gb news. hello there. >> i'm jonathan vautrey here with your latest gb news weather
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forecast provided by the met office. hope you're able to enjoy some of the sunnier spells we did see around today. but into weekend there is the into the weekend there is the increasing that we increasing chance that we see some and is all some showers and that is all thanks this area of low thanks to this area of low pressure that is pushing its way in the northwest, those in from the northwest, those isobars together. so isobars squeezing together. so we'll turn quite into we'll turn quite blustery into the well. and those the weekend as well. and those frontal that you saw frontal systems that you saw bringing showers, bringing in swathes of showers, first overnight first thing during the overnight penod first thing during the overnight period of western period for parts of western scotland into northern scotland down into northern england also england and wales. also the potential for another band pushing southeast potential for another band pushing just southeast potential for another band pushing just some heast potential for another band pushing just some uncertainty england, just some uncertainty in the positioning of in regards to the positioning of that definitely some that one, but definitely some heavy pulses rain possible. heavy pulses of rain possible. first thing on saturday. not going a night all. going to be a cold night at all. actually pretty mild in the southeast , slightly fresher southeast, but slightly fresher further towards the west, lows of around 13 c. saturday of around 12 to 13 c. saturday then turns into a day of sunshine and showers for the vast majority of us, particularly for northern ireland and western scotland. that's we'll see the most that's where we'll see the most frequent potential frequent showers potential for those turn with some those to turn heavy with some hail as well. hail and thunderstorms as well. with blustery winds, hail and thunderstorms as well. with across stery winds, hail and thunderstorms as well. with across ally winds, hail and thunderstorms as well. with across all areas, s, hail and thunderstorms as well. with across all areas, those though, across all areas, those showers will be pushing through relatively quickly. so still
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some sunny spells around and in that climbing to highs that sunshine climbing to highs between 19 and 24 c. that main low pressure centre stays with us through sunday as well. some heavier showers for southern scotland northern scotland down into northern england. focusing england. but we're then focusing our area of our attention on this area of rain to going start rain that's to going start pushing the pushing its way in from the south—west again. to watch south—west again. got to watch the timings of but the exact timings of that, but certainly could turn quite damp for wales, england for wales, south—west england later showers into later on. further showers into the as well. that's all the new week as well. that's all for . for now. bye bye. >> the temperature's rising . >> the temperature's rising. boxt solar proud sponsors of weather on .
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gb news oh.
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>> welcome to lee anderson's real world. on tonight's show, we have alex burghart mp steve pound, ex—labour mp , the pound, ex—labour mp, the gentlemen of parliament. sir jacob rees—mogg. we also have lizzie cundy , who is a socialite lizzie cundy, who is a socialite tv presenter , media star, 80 pop tv presenter, media star, 80 pop icon david van day and a legend in his own lunchtime . i'm gary in his own lunchtime. i'm gary the cabbie and also tonight, tv. first, we've got the yes or no quiz with two politicians. but first, let's go to the . news first, let's go to the. news >> good evening . first, let's go to the. news >> good evening. i'm first, let's go to the. news >> good evening . i'm tatiana >> good evening. i'm tatiana sanchez in the gb newsroom plans to move 2000 migrants to scampton in lincolnshire have been delayed until october. officials had indicated the first group would begin arriving at the former air base in august. it comes as the home office is reportedly preparing to erect marquees to accommodate 2000 people at the manston airfield in kent. by the end of august. there are warnings it
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could trigger legal challenges based on inhumane treatment . the based on inhumane treatment. the ultra low emission zone is set to be expanded in london after a high court ruled the plan is lawful legal action was brought by five conservative led councils . it means drivers will councils. it means drivers will pay a councils. it means drivers will pay a £12 $50 daily fee if their vehicles do not meet the required emission standards , required emission standards, says a spokesperson for the aa , says a spokesperson for the aa, says a spokesperson for the aa, says the ruling is hugely disappointing, but it hopes london will follow other cities by adopting measures to reduce the impact on those who can't afford it. the london mayor, sadiq khan, says there will be support the decision to expand the ultra low emission zone was a difficult one, not one. >> i took lightly. but it's essential . next week there'll be essential. next week there'll be a massive expansion of the support we give to family , us, support we give to family, us, to businesses and charities . as to businesses and charities. as it is, 96% of cars in inner london are compliant. nine out of ten cars in outer london are compliant. they won't pay a penny more from august 29th, but

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