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tv   Headliners  GB News  May 11, 2024 11:00pm-12:01am BST

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last conservatives to labour last week . a ban on jobs dedicated to week. a ban on jobs dedicated to equality, diversity and inclusion in the civil service has been announced. writing in the sunday telegraph, cabinet minister esther mcvey claims pubuc minister esther mcvey claims public money is being wasted. she's described as woke hobby horses under the new plans, there would be no more devoted, inclusive jobs in whitehall, outside hr and no more staff working solely on diversity related projects. ms mcvey said the amount of staff time taken up the amount of staff time taken ”p by the amount of staff time taken up by diversity programmes was, quote, a major concern united by music. that is the eurovision slogan . but the build up to slogan. but the build up to tonight's final has been anything but that . amid anything but that. amid allegations inside the arena and protests outside the netherlands entry, justis klein's been disqualified, the dutch broadcaster says it was over a threatening movement. he made towards someone who was filming him. someone from the production team, reportedly against his
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wishes . team, reportedly against his wishes. ireland's team, reportedly against his wishes . ireland's entrant team, reportedly against his wishes. ireland's entrant bambie thug has accused the israeli broadcaster khan of repeatedly breaking the rules regarding its commentary towards their act dunng commentary towards their act during the semi—finals and the french artist slimani's broken eurovision rules on making political statements by making an on stage speech calling for peace during the rehearsals. well, pro—palestinian demonstrations have been gathering outside the arena. this was earlier they were protesting about israel's participation. they were heard shouting free palestine and shame towards fans heading into the venue as several protesters, including the activist greta thunberg, were forcibly detained and taken away by police . tens and taken away by police. tens of thousands of palestinians have been fleeing rafah in anticipation of an expected israeli assault on southern gaza.long israeli assault on southern gaza. long lines have been seen on the roads leading out of rafah, with people carrying possessions and taking any mode of transport available. they've been to told move to a so—called
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expanded humanitarian zone on the west coast. it's prompted fears of a wider invasion of rafah, despite calls for restraint from the us, the uk , restraint from the us, the uk, the united nations and humanitarian organisations elsewhere. residents in northern gaza have also been told to evacuate, signalling fresh offensives against hamas months after the idf declared victory in the area , i7 after the idf declared victory in the area , 17 year old boys in the area, 17 year old boys died after getting into trouble while swimming in the town of wellingborough . ronald bell was wellingborough. ronald bell was recovered by rescue crews yesterday after reports that he got into difficulty in open water at the embankment and northamptonshire police say it was a tragic incident and ronald's family have requested privacy at this very distressing time. finally, british holidaymakers heading to majorca or ibiza this summer may have to rethink their plans, or at least their alcohol consumption . their alcohol consumption. authorities on parts of the balearic islands are trying to crack down on excessive drinking
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and boozy behaviour in some of the tourist hotspots by banning off sales of alcohol from 930 in the evening to 8 am. authorities have also banned party boats from sailing within one nautical mile of certain destinations . the moves, in destinations. the moves, in response to complaints by locals in magaluf, san antone and playa de palma . you can get more on de palma. you can get more on all of our stories by signing up to gb news alerts. the qr code on your screen or the details are on our website. now it's time for headliners . time for headliners. >> thank you. erin. hello and welcome to headliners i'm leo kearse taking you through sunday's top stories for the next hour. and i'm joined tonight by the people's chairman paul cox. hello. and the people's karen created a wind that seems unfair. >> you haven't seen me
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complaining at starbucks paul i could carrying it with the best of them. >> good. >> good. >> okay, well, let's have a quick look at sunday's front pages. the mail on sunday leads with turncoat mp asked minister to pull strings for husband's sex abuse trial. we've got that later . the sunday telegraph has later. the sunday telegraph has civil service diversity roles to be scrapped. the observer leads with terrified families flee rafah as israel set to open all out assault. the sunday express has labour's £225 council tax bombshell. the sunday mirror has helen my psychosis. hell, i'm not sure who helen is . and not sure who helen is. and finally, the daily star. and sunday has strictly come dark . sunday has strictly come dark. and those were your front pages. and those were your front pages. and let's have a closer look at those front pages. starting with the cover of the sunday telegraph, which has that story about diversity hires being scrapped. paul. >> yeah. civil service diversity
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roles to be scrapped. huzzahi unbelievable stuff . in an unbelievable stuff. in an overhaul aimed at ending the back door politicisation of the civil service, mandarins will be ordered not to hire staff dedicated to boosting diversity , dedicated to boosting diversity, equality and inclusion. and i don't know about you, leo, or you, krista, but i'm a big fan of the old fashioned meritocracy. >> absolutely. paul. i went to see a guy called alex edmonds presenting, doing a sort of book toun presenting, doing a sort of book tour. this is a guy who's written a book called may contain lies, and he's a guy, an academic who's looked into whether or not dei really benefits companies. and he had a lot to say about cognitive diversity, meaning not people in different colours. and like, what do people think, you know? yeah diversity of thought. >> can you imagine? i mean, there's none here. but but we are a minority. >> we're doing well to have some thought . thought. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> but i mean, you know, i was a diversity hire of course, because i'm half man, half pig mixed bacon. if you will. but, you know, i'll be i won't be sad
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to see the end of it just because it seems so forced. yeah but it doesn't, by the way, it doesn't credit anyone but paul . doesn't credit anyone but paul. >> this is just an end to explicit diversity roles , which, explicit diversity roles, which, you know, they've done an investigation. they've found they cost those roles . just they cost those roles. just paying they cost those roles. just paying the salaries of those roles cost £27 million. people might say, well, that's not a lot. but what those roles tend to do is then get in the way of the efficient, smooth operation of the rest of the organisation because, you know, as you've both pointed out, you can't hire on ability or meritocracy anymore. you've got to hire according to diversity to ensure there's equal representation and, you know, straight white men are often bottom of the pile, not them aggrieved about that. but but the bloomberg the business news place did a did a survey and they found that of all the jobs created in america since, since the blm, activist stuff kicked off, only 6% went to went to straight white men. >> which is quite bad news for all of us, though, isn't it?
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because the company level, they scream and shout about their prejudices and say, we're trying to hire diverse people, and then at the individual level they say, no, this person definitely earned their place and they can't both be true. and so what's really happening is we might be missing out on some cracking hires. yeah and we might be seeing, you know, the, the sort of competent crisis starting to happen we see with boeing, which has made a big song and dance about, you know, its diversity and inclusion . the its diversity and inclusion. the planes are now falling out of the sky because they're not hiring based on ability. please. >> boeing gives the best engineers and pilots. that's all we asked for. i couldn't care what colour they are. yes, it's the purple ones are good. employ them. yeah. >> it doesn't matter whether disney show because a disney show can't fall out of the sky and kill 300 people. so yeah, okay. moving on. christina, what have the observer got in the front cover? >> the observer has terrified families. free russia as israel set to open all out assault. so another, this is ongoing . this another, this is ongoing. this is people fleeing from the north. sorry. from from the
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rafah crossing. so 150,000, have now fled , but, you know, so some now fled, but, you know, so some people are saying, is this going to are israel going to start backing off because this is no longer look. well, it never was. it's not looking good, to the rest of the world, but absolutely not. netanyahu is saying we'll stand alone. we'll fight with our fingernails . fight with our fingernails. yeah, he's he's not backing. >> they do have better weapons than that. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> from america. >> from america. >> so, i mean, it's a harrowing image, that's for sure, specifically chosen there by the observer . oh, the observer. what observer. oh, the observer. what a grown up newspaper. however, there was a lot of notice given. so there is a, you know, to add some balance to this. there is a reason why hundreds of thousands of people have been able to flee. now, i'm not suggesting for a minute that this is good. but, you know, we didn't we didn't let the people of dresden know that, we might be blowing them to smithereens. >> yeah. i mean, the ira used to give a phone call. yeah, yeah. which, yeah, this this seems to be. seems to be like. but, i mean, the military operation has unarguably, you know, not gone
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to plan and not been perfectly executed. i mean, hamas still aren't destroyed. i mean, i assume they've got this notice to move out of rafah . so it's to move out of rafah. so it's going to be difficult to kill hamas if they attack rafah now, the hostages haven't been recovered. not all the hostages, hostages and also world opinion has turned against israel and even staunch allies such as america are now, i think i think they're delayed an arms shipment. yeah. >> they've just held back 3500 bombs. that because he's not backing down. >> yeah . yeah. >> yeah. yeah. >> yeah. yeah. >> so yeah. >> so yeah. >> well there is a war of optics isn't there. and netanyahu is definitely losing that war. and in geopolitical politics, optics are, you know, 90% of everything. >> yeah. and also hamas know this. so they use palestinians as human shields. they put their their weaponry, their rockets under hospitals, under schools , under hospitals, under schools, which is a really, you know, callous and cynical way of ensuring that palestinians get killed. civilians get killed. so then they've got the horrific images to parade in front of the
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world and say, look what israel is doing, when in fact, hamas are absolutely responsible. so yeah, horrible stuff. moving on. what the sunday express got on the front cover poll. >> socialism is on its way. labour's £225 council tax bombshell. so this is angela rayner's, french style plan to boost union rights will hurt families, according to the sunday. >> but it won't hierarchies. >> but it won't hierarchies. >> she says her brother lives there so she doesn't have to pay it or something. >> yeah, she doesn't actually live there. leo just asks one of the neighbours who said she was a flipping wally , labour's a flipping wally, labour's pledge to boost trade union rights would cost the average householder an extra £225 per year , this report warns. year, this report warns. >> on the plus side, we might get some train strikes, you know. >> yes. i mean, essentially this is about levelling up and introduction of legally binding pay introduction of legally binding pay levels. so you know, back to the good old days in the late 70s before they turned off all the power. >> right. so this is this is going to ensure that public sector people get paid more. i don't want that. i don't want
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why can't the market set the rates if you wouldn't pay £225 to campaign against this, wouldn't you ? oh, i'd pay £225 wouldn't you? oh, i'd pay £225 to do to do the opposite to lower public sector pay. this is i mean, this is this is ridiculous. and we just saw there was a story on the front cover of the sunday telegraph. labour also have plans to put drones in the sky, to measure the size of your garden and make you pay the size of your garden and make you pay tax on it. there's no escape, you can't drive anywhere. you can't even go and sit in the garden, drink a gin and tonic. labour are going to hammer you over the head with tax. >> i'm going to get a job in the civil service, get a guaranteed pay civil service, get a guaranteed pay rise and a big old garden. >> i've got some horrible news for you, paul. i very much doubt you're going to get a job in this. >> i'll have to wear a wig. >> i'll have to wear a wig. >> i'm going to install an israeli air defence system in my back garden to shoot down drones. that's what i'm going to do. finally, cresta, what's in the front cover of the daily star? >> strictly come dancing? so apparently craig revel horwood, who's on that dancing show, knows a lot about ballroom. he wants to get a dance person on.
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and so the assumption is that that will be teen hero luke the luke littler, who we heard quite a lot about a while ago. it's a very glitzy jacket on in this photo. yeah. so that's photoshopped. yeah. >> it's got to be well i don't i don't i mean darts players are known for having a specific physique aren't they. >> which isn't typically that of a ballroom dancer. how dare you. >> well you may not like it, cresta, but that is peak physical condition. >> he's going to be a brave and stunning contestant, possibly on strictly come dancing by the way, the knows a lot about ballroom joke deserved a lot better. >> i hope you're laughing at home about that for craig revel horwood, but , home about that for craig revel horwood, but, i mean, what do you say? it'd be great to see darts in the dancing, wouldn't it? i mean, i won't watch the dancing. i do like the darts though. he's a great player, phenomenal player. leo. yeah, well he won. yeah, yeah, he's good at throwing darts. and you know what? that's what we value now. yeah. that's you know, if it wasn't a dihya was he. no it wasn't wasn't pure meritocracy . wasn't wasn't pure meritocracy. that's the thing. >> and you see this in sports. the you know you don't have a
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completely equal representation of, you know, women and men as the top darts players and all the top darts players and all the rest of it. and, you know, because it's a meritocracy. >> no, women do compete in the men's, darts. yeah. that's right. yeah. so you're in charge. don't forget that. and you've got a brain so—sorry carry on. >> are you saying that i just got the ball joke i didn't even make? >> oh, really? >> oh, really? >> i thought you did. sorry chris. >> well, hopefully one of you can explain it to me . anyway, can explain it to me. anyway, that's the front pages looked at. join us in part two, where we'll be discussing the migrant exodus to ireland , labour's exodus to ireland, labour's dangerous tweets and biden is up to his old tricks. see
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welcome back to headliners. your first look at sunday's newspapers with me, leo kearse and gbs . very own answer to and gbs. very own answer to donny and martha. paul cox and christine whitten. who are donny and martha? that's a nice . no, i
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and martha? that's a nice. no, i do it. >> should we should we let covid. >> i know it's the reindeer. baby reindeer. oh yes. >> i've not seen it yet. people keep telling me i should watch that. yeah, apparently. >> i'll start telling you bits of it through your bedroom window when i'm standing outside it. >> apparently . yeah. carry on. >> apparently. yeah. carry on. apparently. what? no. that's spicy . men in comedy do get, spicy. men in comedy do get, followed by crazy women. >> right? okay just not us. anyway, kicking things off with the sunday telegraph and streaming's tweeting has left hull herself. paul >> right. brilliant. lovely so wes streeting put me in danger with tweet says susan hall in her first interview since the election, the tory mayoral candidate says she's been left feeling unsafe on public transport. i'm not quite sure she's described what wes streeting said as despicable , streeting said as despicable, and what he did say was a win for susan hall and the conservatives is a win for racists. bingo white supremacist and islamophobes the world over.
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i mean, let's have this right. those are dangerous comments because what is he essentially saying there is to say that everyone who voted against ulez or for less knife crime. yeah, a safer london is a racist, a white supremacist or an islamophobe. whereas you are a walley mate. >> i think what's happened is wes streeting has made it very dangerous for him to go on pubuc dangerous for him to go on public transport because he might run into you and you . might run into you and you. >> well, luckily he's a champagne socialist, so it's limos everywhere , uber exotic, limos everywhere, uber exotic, you know what i mean? yeah. i mean, like, i think it's ridiculous to say, you know, a vote for her is a win for racist white supremacists and islamophobes. i mean, lucky guess, but it's a terrible it's a terrible thing to see. and it should be. you know, the idea behind hate crime is that if you say something to somebody that huns say something to somebody that hurts their feelings and also can target them, lead to them being discriminated against or attacked in some way, that's exactly what wes streeting has done. so calling someone a racist when they're not should be a hate crime. >> it's almost qualifies for the
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old fashioned kind of hate crime. you know, the ones before all the hysteria of late. i mean, it's not an incitement to violence, but you could see it's on the way towards that, isn't it? >> yeah. and by the way, anyone who has got their ear to the ground in london knows that a lot of muslims vote against sadiq khan. they're not big fans of sadiq khan. yeah. so that makes that makes a lot of muslims. islamophobes. yeah. and white supremacists. >> good on him. well, yeah. >> good on him. well, yeah. >> there's a comedian, nabeel , >> there's a comedian, nabeel, abdul rashid, great comedian, but he does a joke that's basically , hinges on, sadiq not basically, hinges on, sadiq not being a, not being enough, not being a, not being enough, not being a, not being enough, not being a real muslim. it's very, very funny joke, anyway, we've got the observer now with worrying signs that the clampdown on migrants is hurting honest workers and not the people that you might wanted to target. chris revealed thousands of innocent and abandoned migrant care workers told to leave uk. >> so this is about people who've been threatened with deportation despite doing nothing wrong. after the home office took enforcement action against their employers. or in other words, people have been scammed by agencies who've
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extracted a lot of money out of them, got them to uk, told them they're going to sort out all their visas and everything, and they're not done it because they're not done it because they're criminals. and at the point where this gets discovered, the people, the workers are given 60 days to find a new sponsor, which sounds i mean , i don't know, a couple i mean, i don't know, a couple of months. it's not they're not immediately if they've got a job, then, you know, couldn't the job that they're doing be their sponsor. no. because that's a very good. no i think i think the agency is employing them. you know, like if you're a temp then you. yeah. so i think that's the problem, and the people creating these situations to be fair to the observer, they don't face any, they don't face anything other than losing their license for overseas sponsorship. so that doesn't seem right, does it ? meanwhile, seem right, does it? meanwhile, these people who've who've put in all their earnings sold their house, done what they can to get here and now in massive debt being sent and contributing. >> and they're actually, you know, working or they're trying to. >> yeah. although sometimes they get here and there is no job and it's all it's all a scam. so i mean, it's pretty awful, isn't
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it? the victims of crime. yes >> but they've spun this, the observer into some sort of bleeding heart business where it's, oh my god, the innocent abandonment. but it's not really. it's like policy. so, >> oh, come on, paul, we don't need rules . look at the photo. need rules. look at the photo. look at the photo. everybody's crying. >> yeah , i know, mate, but >> yeah, i know, mate, but that's the rules, isn't it? you know, if you haven't got an employer that's sponsoring you, you haven't got an employer that's sponsoring you. yeah. and you know, whilst chris is absolutely right and i do feel for these people, i just love the way the observer spin this stuff like they've got 14 year old girls writing it. yeah. >> they actually do because they don't have to pay them as much. >> yeah, that's what i've heard. >> yeah, that's what i've heard. >> but yeah, no, we do need rules. and it's like that meme that says, you know, here are ten photographs that will, you know, make you , make you want to know, make you, make you want to rip up border control and have no rules and descend into some sort of an article, a photo of a massive bag of money and a big mansion with a large fence? >> yeah, it's not. >> anyway, we've got the mail on sunday now , and the migrants are sunday now, and the migrants are landing on ireland's shores. how is this going to play out, paul?
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>> well, we'll see, won't we? the irish know how we feel, migrants hope for warm welcome as they land on ireland's shores due to emerald isles own migration history and say they prefer it to be to the uk in case they are sent to unsafe rwanda . so, so much to unpack rwanda. so, so much to unpack here. first of all, immigrant immigrants might want to watch the news a bit because they're not particularly happy in ireland for people to come flooding over. and also rwanda is not unsafe. i mean, it's advertised on premier league grounds as a as a holiday destination for people who can afford to watch premier league football. and, and what is unsafe a tent cities in the middle of dublin. so what we've got here is a load of old waffle really. but because and i can't imagine which migrant that they were interviewing or which group of migrants they are interviewing, because i can't imagine they're sitting there going, whoa, going to ireland. it's going to be fantastic over
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there. we that's not happening. that's just not happening. they've got exactly the same problems. in fact, they've got bigger problems because they're still part of the eu. >> but their policy is certainly more or seen as more welcoming than the uk. it's pretty clear that the tide is turning in the uk and, you know, a previously open border country is now going to exercise a certain amount of control and probably restrict migration by half a percent. but, you know, in ireland it's still seen as welcoming everybody. and also there's, there's but it's more benefits. >> as paul said, it's not going to be for long is it. there's already this suspected arson attack at a site where migrants are going to be housed. >> i mean, that's the actual people, the you know, the irish people, the you know, the irish people aren't not loving a lot of them. and they're not, you know, unlike british people who've had, you know, any sense of, spirit beaten out of them and, you know, are now afraid of being called racist. you know, if they if they say anything at all, irish people are in the streets, they're protesting. >> well, this is it, isn't it? they still have, you know, their paddy's day celebrations in a way that's completely different to our saint george's day, completely celebrated the world oven completely celebrated the world over. and there was footage
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recently, wasn't there, of irish people saying ireland is for the irish and we're not having it, which they wouldn't hear. >> and they talk about it as if all the irish are migrants. what they forget is the irish migrated out of ireland. yeah. you know , they didn't stay you know, they didn't stay there. they migrated out, you know, and you don't need to bnng know, and you don't need to bring all that back up potatoes and such forth. but this story doesn't make a lot of sense. the more you dig into it, the more you realise it's just nonsense. and we've all got the same problems, and the sooner we realise we've got the same problems, the easier it would be to get along well, yeah, of course, because ireland is, suggested they're going to send migrants that have come from the uk back to the uk, but there's no right to return, like the uk isn't allowed to send people back to france. >> so the uk is saying, well, no, if you if we're not allowed to send them back to france, you can't send them back here. >> well that's a good point isn't it. >> yeah, it is. and there's been murmurs of will ireland get involved in the rwanda scheme or similar. >> oh well well, well looks like everybody in europe is going to follow our lead. yeah. again britain is first with a good ideas. anyway, we've got the times now. and natalie elphicke might not have stayed loyal to the conservatives but she is a
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loyal wife. so that's a plus point chris. >> she really is pathologically. so, natalie elphicke lobbied lord chancellor to help her sex offender husband . so on the eve offender husband. so on the eve offender husband. so on the eve of her husband's criminal trial, a criminal trial for sex offences in july 2020, she arrived at the parliamentary office of robert robert buckland , who, as lord chancellor and justice secretary, was responsible for upholding the rule of law. and she said, look, i just want to come in for a chat about some points of law. it's nothing to do with him indoors . and she got in, shut indoors. and she got in, shut the doors and went right. my husband and he was appalled and said, i'm not getting involved in this. it's totally inappropriate, and then even once he was convicted, she was still trying to get him softer pillows in prison. i think she'd need some help. >> but the pillows. >> but the pillows. >> well, the article is. i mean, i wasn't there, but, yes . i wasn't there, but, yes. complaining that his prison conditions were inadequate and asking for him to be given a more comfortable bed and pillows. >> i mean, if i was in prison,
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i'd probably want a soft pillow for my face to be smashed into. by for my face to be smashed into. by me, i mean that first night's lovemaking is a bit of a pain . lovemaking is a bit of a pain. >> a labour party spokesperson said. natalie elphicke totally rejects this characterisation of the meeting. of course she does. just a week ago , natalie just a week ago, natalie elphicke was a far right tory. now she's part of the labour party. yeah, she is moved from right over here to left over here. no of course she's got a consistent view on border control and that's why she's had to go to the labour party. >> and she's got a consist view on wanting to have a job. >> yes. so which you wouldn't have if she stays as a tory. >> moving on. we've got the mail now and the democrats are handing out id to illegal immigrants entering america. is this so that they can vote in the election in a few months? >> it could well be good news for president biden to welcome migrants this summer by handing out free ids for those who enter the country illegally in a new taxpayer funded pilot program . taxpayer funded pilot program. yippeei a teen world loving illegal. though don't they? they absolutely yummy yummy illegals
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illegals. but by the way, it's you know, i mean , who's going to you know, i mean, who's going to look after these people? that's what i need to know. i mean, and there is nothing wrong by the way, of looking after people. yeah but i think charity does need to start at home sometimes. and this isn't about biden and him trying to get as many illegals in as possible so that he can bolster his vote because he's got no chance. otherwise. this is this is across the world, team world and the way they want to politically run the world with open borders just doesn't take into account that you've already got problems. so you're just adding to them. it doesn't matter what colour the jelly beans are. if you put too many jelly beans into the pot, there are too many jelly beans for the pot. crestor. >> aren't they just giving jelly beans a different name? yeah, they're talking about quickly reducing . it's like we've got reducing. it's like we've got a backlog. and so now they're going to have these ids. moving to a secure card will save the agency millions. free up resources. i'm very nervous. whenever they just change something for the sake of it. i think really you're going to save me money by changing what you're doing. and even says that
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they're going to have access to a new portal. and that's a word that makes me nervous. i mean, that's this is a massive system. >> is it like stargate? >> is it like stargate? >> but you go to rwanda? >> but you go to rwanda? >> no, it just means that somebody in the office is brother in law creates software. i don't know, i'm very cynical about this. it sounds like they're just fiddling about with they're just fiddling about with the deckchairs on the deck of the deckchairs on the deck of the ship. >> they say. so currently, the migrants get issued with, with paperwork, which is paper. and obviously there, you know, sometimes sleeping rougher and, you know, poor conditions in tent cities or whatever. so having a plastic id card will be more robust than having bits of paper that feels like such a minor change. >> you think, okay, fine, do it in a different format. >> but, well, i guess this is to consolidate and also, you know, create an electronic trail so it'll make it easier. i don't know why. i don't know why. i'm playing devil's advocate really keenly . keenly. >> you're the host you should do because so far croatia and i have just told you that this is a really bad idea. and largely it is. but there is some method to the madness. i mean, biden hasn't come up with it himself. if it had, it would all have
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been, well, goodness only knows what it had been. talking socks and talking. >> okay, that's it for part two. but coming up in part three, we'll have islamic feminism. it's a new thing, drink spiking which is unrelated and more eurovision turmoil. don't
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welcome back to headliners. we jump welcome back to headliners. we jump back in with the sunday telegraph. and despite their history with the guillotine, the french are still too keen to remove body parts. cressida >> nice. france has learned nothing from uk's trans eras, feminists warn. so this book has been written by two french women. dora mutu and marguerite stern, and they released this book called trans mania. and it's really covering all the stuff that as gp news, people we've been listening to for probably a year now , they talk probably a year now, they talk about the cass report, and all the stuff that we've talked about endlessly on this channel,
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about endlessly on this channel, about why it's dangerous to trans children, and they're in favour of not letting people trans until they're in their 20s, all of that good stuff, but it's going down really badly in france because they haven't had this conversation yet. they're sort of a bit behind. but this week jk rowling has come out. of course she has and supported them, she said , she's obviously them, she said, she's obviously she's been through the same thing she said as someone whose death has been demanded on placards for exactly the same reason , i send dora mucho love reason, i send dora mucho love and solidarity. it's nice , isn't and solidarity. it's nice, isn't it, but anyway, their book, they're going through all the same problems that , we had here, same problems that, we had here, like with sharon davis when she released her book, the bookshops start hiding it because lots of people that work in bookshops might be quite young and blue haired. >> oh, they're terrible people, right. >> so that's not on, is it? >> some of the worst, leo? some of the worst. >> but on the plus side, there is a lot of there are green shoots here. they've had a run of 15,000 copies and it's now being printed again because there are people quiet rebels, which was on andrew doyle show the other week. dora muto talking about this. >> yeah, she was you were on as well. yeah. and, when she was
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being interviewed and she pointed out something that's really key, not just that they're way behind the curve. the cash report is now out. yeah. and if mainstream media wish to, that could be a lot more prevalent. and in people's minds and thoughts. and it's you know, the cash report is widely accepted as well. it's the only place it's not accepted is really on the extremes of the trans movement. yeah with both extremes, both extremes of the trans movement within that . and trans movement within that. and even people that needed their minds changed on this. it has changed hearts and minds and just we just need to get that knowledge out there. it seems ridiculous. the cash report in itself is a tragedy. and the fact that now it's out, it's not being perpetuated across europe or the world and people like dora are having to go through this in france, like people did here. it seems ridiculous. yeah. >> and i thought france didn't go in for gender ideology as deeply as britain did, because britain, you know, tends to copy america. what happens in america happens a couple of years later in britain. and so we, you know,
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we really went i was going to say, genitals deep, but we went, you know, we went deep and but it's often the way, isn't it, that it's just certain, activist groups that make the most noise . groups that make the most noise. >> it doesn't necessarily mean that the average person in france thinks this is all good. yeah. and of course, the pair have been sued for incitement to hatred by two lgbt+ rights groups , dora has also been groups, dora has also been charged with incite attachment to anti—trans hatred because she referred to a trans woman as trans feminine male rather than female. so, you know, so we're we're seeing these hate crime laws being weaponized again to, to target and stifle any dissent or, i mean, in this to case, stifle legitimate and welcome criticism and questioning of this ideology. >> it's ridiculous. >> it's ridiculous. >> we've got the sunday telegraph now, and the women's officer for uk islamists has some progressive ideas he'd like to share. i'm sure they'll be green party policy soon. >> paul strap in is islamist compare women without her jabs to unwrap sweets. yummy, a newly
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registered islamic charity has compared women who do not cover their heads to unwrap sweets in comments condemned as misogynistic and offensive . oh, misogynistic and offensive. oh, that's islamophobic. well, it is, and that's why i didn't say it. and the charity commission better watch out because you've got to be careful, you know, some islamists can get a bit angry . angry. >> well, look, i'm not in any trouble. obviously, i agree with him. i mean, i've been saying this for ages. nothing wrong with women taking some responsibility, you know, cover up, put it away. i don't really think that, i also his analogy was terrible. it started off really. i was like, yeah, it's kind of got a point. and then he started talking about these two sweets and he says, if i take this one and put it on the ground and step on it with no wrapper on, and this one with a wrapper on, and this one with a wrapper and i step on it, which one do you want to eat? and i thought, well, neither they've been on the ground and you've stepped on them. yeah. >> but and he's comparing this to there was a viral video of a woman who walked around new york and she wasn't dressed, you know, she wasn't dressed in any way. yeah. like a like an unwrapped sweetie. she had
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leggings on. she had at unwrapped sweetie. she had leggings on. she had a t shirt. she was dressed like a normal person. and and she got accosted, 100, i think 100, 100 times in an hour by men who wanted to taste the sweetie. and then, a woman in a hijab or whatever it's called, did the same walk and didn't get the didn't get the same reaction. but then, i mean, that's how john simpson, fled afghanistan. so they might have thought that could be john simpson under that. >> and he's no , sweetie. no, >> and he's no, sweetie. no, that's a big old humbug in there. that's a right . forgive me. >> we've got the metro now. >> we've got the metro now. >> chris skudder. >> we've got the metro now. >> chris skudder . and gary >> chris skudder. and gary lineker has to weigh in on paul gascoigne. oh, sorry. it's a different gazza , gary lineker different gazza, gary lineker can't be silent as he regularly cries over scenes in gaza. my god. despite his impartiality row with the bbc last year, gary lineker has said he can't be silent about israel's attacks on gaza , citing some of the scenes gaza, citing some of the scenes of destruction as the worst thing i've seen in my life, so it's gary doing what gary does
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best, he's virtue signalling, he says, i've got no skin in this game. i'm not muslim. i'm not jewish, i'm not israeli, i'm not palestinian. no, gary. but we all know you love twitter and attention. >> so and also getting money off your tax bill because he fought a court battle with hmrc over £49 million in unpaid tax. and £4.9 million in unpaid tax. and part of his defence was that he isn't a proper employee of the bbc because, look at all his political activism on twitter. that's separate to that. so he used it to bolster his freelance i >> -- >> yeah, we shouldn't be making crying a defence. i remember ted bundy crying. yeah, he was still a wrong'un . yeah. a wrong'un. yeah. >> however good looking and dreamy he was. and also , where dreamy he was. and also, where were his tears? where were gary lineker's tears? on october the 7th? >> oh they weren't. >> oh they weren't. >> well, he covers that. obviously. we all know october 7 happened, but the minute you raise your voice against what they're doing now, you get accused of being a supporter of hamas and this kind of stuff. and he talks about, he says, we all know that the history of
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this area of the world goes way back before october 7. i'd love to hear gary lineker giving a middle east history lecture. i think that would be really enriching because he knows how to say nazis. >> yeah. and, he doesn't seem to see the correlation between what's going on with the hamas and the nazis. what's going on with the hamas and the nazis . so he's going to and the nazis. so he's going to get to that point in history, and it'll be like one of those it'll be like spider—man one, where there are which one? because he's just going to go, oh my god, they're all the same. yeah, i'm on the wrong side of history. >> yeah, yeah. we're looking forward to that moment. onto the mail on sunday. now paul and thousands of british men are wasting perfectly good drugs by putting them in other people's drinks. >> outrageous stuff. nearly a million people's drinks were spiked in britain last year. instances of the offence have surged by 13% nationally, with over 114 reports of spiking every month in london alone. so this was a survey by drinkaware, of more than 10,000 people, and it said that 2.2% were reported to have their drink spiked within 12 months. that doesn't
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sound a lot, but if you strap like that out across the nation, that's 900,000 people. so i think it does. >> if i was in a nightclub and you told me that two in every hundred people in here have been spiked this year, i'd think that's not good. >> well, i mean, it it's harrowing stuff. i hate these, honestly. reading this makes me just rage. i hate these people . just rage. i hate these people. there's scumb. i just castration is let's face it right, there aren't many women going around spiking their drink spiked poll. >> yeah, but yeah, but to be clear, it says there's male victims are male victims, and we know that there are to do with theft. it's not. but it is also largely about sexual offences. >> but just castrate him. >> but just castrate him. >> right. okay. >> right. okay. >> i mean , are you going to say >> i mean, are you going to say anything to them? >> i wouldn't even jump in there with an axe just straight. >> it would sharpen the axe. you start your chemo. >> well, what a nice man you are. we've got the mail on sunday now, and the axed eurovision starjust klein has spoken out. did they cancel him because his name sounds like jews ? jews? >> chris, shamed eurovision star joost klein hits back after song
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show axe rapper denies touching camerawoman as he is investigated by police. and dutch tv says boot will upset millions as 175,000 sign petition . and as usual with the petition. and as usual with the daily mail, i have pretty much told you the whole story that it's not a lot left to say, yeah , it did make me laugh that the eurovision song contest people came out and said, we absolutely insist that everybody has a safe environment to work in and we won't have any abuse. and i thought, what about, eden golan. how is she feeling? the israeli s|nger? singer? >> yeah, not too well, i wouldn't have thought. maybe she's winning right now because it's about that sort of time, hasn't it? but i've absolutely no idea. i haven't here, and neither do the daily mail and neither do the daily mail and neither does anyone else. all we know is the accusation is from a female. camera person, and we don't even know if that's true. so, i mean, and i am more than happy to make extreme points about things i have no idea about things i have no idea about leo, but but on this occasion, i feel like we should just sit back and wait and see
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what happens. >> right. sit back and wait and see what happens. that's no fun at all. >> come on, let's speculate. >> come on, let's speculate. >> although the producers have just told me that apparently eden golan is winning so far. >> get in there. so come on israel. >> yeah, a massive public vote. so i'm not sure. i don't know the split. i don't know if they have judges. is it like boxing? we don't know. anyway, that's it for part three. join us in the final section where we'll have naughty priest's futuristic spy cars and for the first time ever on gb news
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welcome back to the final section of headliners we've got the metro now. and a story about a woman who gets paid £100 to pour custard on herself . if paul pour custard on herself. if paul got paid every time he spilt a dessert on his lap, he'd be minted. and also chocolate chipped . chipped. >> i pay women £100 a week to pour custard on themselves. i'm a splasher. >> yeah, but tell us what the story is. well that isn't me. >> so one minute, beloved tv
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presenter anthea turner looked pristine in her black jacket and trousers on an episode of noel's house party. the next she laughed and gasped, and a yellowy green gunge covered her from head to toe. and i was . from head to toe. and i was. there is no other way to put it, aroused paul again. >> i'm gonna have to ask you to tell us the story. >> okay? >> okay? >> i'll tell the story now. i'll tell the story now. well, i didn't know it then. i just discovered what would become a fetish of mine for years to come. sploshing leo sploshing. this term is generally described describing a person who covers themselves or someone else in a in a usually wet and messy substance, in to order achieve sexual stimulation or arousal . i sexual stimulation or arousal. i can't look at cressida . can't look at cressida. >> i can't think about dave benson phillips most of my childhood was tv shows of people trying to win tokens to avoid getting splashed. i didn't know it then, but that seems highly inappropriate. gunging yes, it was called gunging. yeah, i'm a
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i'm a i'm impressed that, this this is based on watching anthea turner on tv. >> this is only in britain. could somebody develop a sexual fetish from watching anthea turner on tv? >> do you remember anthea turner's photo shoot with the snake? >> yeah, yeah. no >> yeah, yeah. no >> well, google it. >> well, google it. >> google it later. yeah >> google it later. yeah >> okay. well, let's now look at the sunday times. >> no , cressida. >> no, cressida. >> no, cressida. >> and a catholic priest has shocked the congregation . has he shocked the congregation. has he actually preached the word of god instead of stonewall ? god instead of stonewall? >> did you say resurrection? the catholic priest and the shock sermon, father thomas mchale, the priest of our blessed lady immaculate in blackhill concert, shocked parishioners when he took to the pulpit on good friday and told the congregation that jesus had died with an erection . erection. >> i hadn't seen anthea turner on tv . on tv. >> jesus was into his sploshing, a full or partial erection has
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been seen in the corpses of men who have been executed. apparently partial, and particularly when they've been hung, i'm just reading from here. this is not a fact. i know it's also been seen in men who have died with fatal gunshot wounds to the brain or spinal cord. so erection during death is nothing to be ashamed of. >> they still get accused of bad behaviour. >> yeah. it's not morning glory, is it? it's quite, >> it sounds like. >> it sounds like. >> it sounds like. >> it sounds like even . >> it sounds like even. >> it sounds like even. >> even in death, he's sexually harassing. >> yeah. can you imagine ? >> yeah. can you imagine? >> yeah. can you imagine? >> yeah. can you imagine? >> yeah. oh of course. like, why would death be an excuse? but that's. >> i mean , that's interesting >> i mean, that's interesting that, you know, so if you get shot in the head, you know, some nerves get triggered that tell your body it's sexy time . your body it's sexy time. >> well, that's just men, isn't it? i mean, it's like the least appropriate time. what do they do? they zone out and think about that. yeah. >> and imagine. imagine you get hungin >> and imagine. imagine you get hung in a bus. you know what i mean? go over a wall, hung on a bus? yeah. watching a youtube video about anthea turner. anyway, we've got news now, paul anyway, we've got news now, paul. and a story about cars spying on us. if you buy a car
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from china, it presumably has more bugs than a french hotel mattress , which door is that, by mattress, which door is that, by the way? sorry, this is the 17. >> oh, my god, look at this. it's a one. >> and a seven. >> and a seven. >> i don't have it here. next one in the pile. your car, your car. i'm so sorry, people . this car. i'm so sorry, people. this is a professional show. you made me your car may be spying on you and can expose what you did in a crash. from satnav routes to call logs, modern cars record vast amounts of data which is proving invalid to uk police forces. but campaigners warn of privacy risks as drivers rarely delete personal information . and delete personal information. and you tend to use these things, don't you? just mainly to solve crimes, don't they ? the amount crimes, don't they? the amount of crime that's been solved now the acid attacker in london just this year, the reason we knew that he jumped off the bridge is because we saw him climb over the bridge off bus. cctv footage, but we never saw him climb back out right. >> wow. well, you sure you're not a detective? this is so. we knew he hadn't. just one more
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thing. >> like, it's like an episode of frost . but i just realised is i frost. but i just realised is i never actually had story 17. even >> good detective work . >> good detective work. >> good detective work. >> it's happened. it's happened before. >> with a similar warning about this before chris skudder with the tesla cars, where people were watching. apparently there's so many cameras in them, people were watching and seeing all kinds of, you know, marital infidelity and all kinds of stuff. >> and the downside is something maybe some people want to keep that stuff secret. >> yeah. >> yeah. >> no, it's terrible . it's >> no, it's terrible. it's terrible. they're feeding it all to the chinese, aren't they. or something i don't know, i mean, the kind of cars i've had. you're lucky if the windows open. so this isn't something that's ever bothered me, sounds very fancy. it sounds like a tax on having a really posh can >> yeah , well, yeah, i got into >> yeah, well, yeah, i got into not really road rage. >> well, somebody was angry at me a few years ago. i drove this old polo and, he was shouting at me. he's all like, yeah, i'll get a better car, you know, and effing and blinding and stuff. and i reached over to wind down the window to say, there's nothing wrong with my can and the wind came off in my hand and
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i was like, oh, maybe this guy's got a point, anyway, onto the metro. >> now, in a story about ageing women's breasts, this is some low hanging fruit. >> cressida , i married a much >> cressida, i married a much older woman. >> now her boobs are getting saggy and i want out. but tell us the story. >> it's brilliant . >> it's brilliant. >> it's brilliant. >> it's brilliant. >> it's about gravity, leo, it's an inevitability, anyway, this guy, he married a woman. it's only four years ago, and he thought he was in it for the long haul, and then he changed his mind. that's the gist of this. i mean, in sickness and in health. doesn't mention breasts, does it? >> yeah. i mean, for years, i mean, this this is pretty ridiculous . ridiculous. >> and he's quite callous. i'm wondering if this is a real letter, if somebody's read some of the things he said. he's in his 20s, he's married. he married a woman who's now in her 50s, so i guess early 50s. and he's, he wants to leave her because her breasts are sagging. but the way it reads, it doesn't read like a real. >> no. he said, her neck is quite wrinkly to point to the point that i bought her a couple of roll necks , which which don't of roll necks, which which don't show the damage . as for her
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show the damage. as for her makeup, she may as well. she may as well put it on with a ch, right. >> i bet she bought him , like, >> i bet she bought him, like, loads of covid masks just so she's got to listen to this nonsense . come on, grow up. i nonsense. come on, grow up. i mean, get a divorce or don't you? this is so silly. >> and also, you know, men can also start sagging as well. yeah, i'm not going to say where, but it's somewhere that likes to, you know, adjust a lot. and, yeah. okay. the show is nearly over, so let's take another quick look at sunday's front pages. the mail on sunday leads with turncoat mp asked minister to pull strings for husband's sex abuse trial. the sunday telegraph has civil service diversity rules to be scrapped. the observer leads with terrified families flee rafah as israel set to open all out assault. the sunday express has labour's £225,000,225 council tax bombshell. the sunday mirror has helen my psychosis. hell, whoever helen is . and finally, the daily star
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is. and finally, the daily star on sunday has strictly come darting. and that's it for tonight's show. thanks to paul and cressida and headliners is back tomorrow, 11 pm. with some other equally hilarious people. and if you're watching at 5 am, then stay tuned for breakfast. but for tonight, it's good night or good morning. and god bless . or good morning. and god bless. >> that warm feeling inside from boxt boilers sponsors of weather on gb news. >> hello there! welcome to your latest gb news weather forecast from the met office. looking ahead to tonight, most of us it should be dry and that gives us another opportunity to see the northern lights. so at the moment we have got high pressure clinging on. but that will move towards the continent as we go through the next few days, heralding a change to the weather. but before we get there, plenty of clear skies tonight away from the eastern seaboard. so yeah, an excellent opportunity to see the northern lights, especially across more northern parts of the country. and despite the clear skies,
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it's going to be a mild night for most of us. temperatures in towns and cities firmly in double figures. so for most of us, a bright start on sunday morning, quite murky across some northern and eastern areas. but the low cloud will gradually burn its way back towards the nonh burn its way back towards the north sea. showers breaking out fairly early on across parts of northern ireland. and then as the day goes on, parts of scotland, wales, england, down towards the very far south—west, seeing a few thunderstorms developing, some of these will be torrential. warnings are in force as we go through the course of sunday. in the sunshine, though temperatures reaching 27 degrees. but then on to monday , another band of rain to monday, another band of rain moves in from the southwest that takes a fair time to get anywhere further north. then wales in the southwest. so for the rest of us, it's a day of sunny spells and scattered showers that sets us up for a fairly changeable middle part of the week, with temperatures returning to something a little bit near normal for the time of year. yean >> looks like things are heating up . boxt boilers sponsors of
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up. boxt boilers sponsors of weather on
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so why does the bbc's eurovision pick hate our union flag? >> and as the garrick club votes to allow women in as members, is it too little, too late yet again? >> meghan markle tries to make a foreign nation all about her. >> surprise, surprise, the bank of england says mass migration is fuelling the housing crisis and has the labour party gone far right? >> it's 6 pm. and this is the saturday five.
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welcome to the saturday five. yes, it's that saturday night of the year which is always given over to ridiculous outfits, dodgy dancing and high levels of camp than you get on rupaul's drag race. but if you're not a saturday vie fan, some event called the eurovision song contest is on one of the other channels. neil bucha, as always for benjamin butterworth, he's in yemen on yet another of his climate neutral holidays . but climate neutral holidays. but i'll be in, ben, i hear, as always, and we're joined by the brilliant broadcaster and journalist nichi hodgson and the fantastic political commentator alex armstrong . now you know the alex armstrong. now you know the drill. we each take it in turn to introduce a topic, and then the rest of us weigh in to tell them why they're completely wrong about everything. your wonderful viewers never hesitate to jump in as well. send your views and post your comments on gbnews.com forward slash kwasi.
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and don't forget, ask your questions and get them in for ask the five. that segment's coming in hour two. but before we start tearing each other apart, it's your saturday night news with . aaron. news with. aaron. >> very good evening to you. i'm aaron armstrong in the gb newsroom in the netherlands. entry has been disqualified from the grand final of the eurovision song contest. singer and rapper used to. klein won't compete while swedish police investigate a complaint of inappropriate behaviour made by a member of the production crew . a member of the production crew. separately, ireland's entrant bambie thug miss dress rehearsals over what they've described as an incident which needed urgent attention from the european broadcast union. now, tonight's final takes place against the backdrop of huge pro—palestinian demonstrators in the city of malmo. they're protesting against israel's participation in the contest. they're marching from the city centre and now gathering, as you can see outside the venue . fans
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can see outside the venue. fans are also arriving at the malmo

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