guests. her pronouns are aloha and mohalo, former press depthsal candidate and fox news contributor, tulsi gabbard. if being handsome were a crime he d be on death row. cohost at fox and friends weekend, pete hegseth. she s so loud the nypd gave her a ticket for not having a muffler. fox news contributor, kat timf. and when he jumps in the ring they feel it from new york to beijing, my massive side kick kick aand the nba world heavy weight champion, tyrus. that s about it for me. i m pretty tired. rough week. before we get to some news stories, it s friday so you know what it s time for. greg s leftovers. m mm. greg: we should put a human head in there. i shouldn t be telling you that, i should just do it. it s leftovers where i read the jokes we didn t use this weekend. if they suck, that s not my fault. it s on you. i blame you. for the first quarter of 2023, delta airlines reported $360 million loss. if the company continues to lose money at this rate they ll be legall
freedom of speech. that s the most basic of all of the freedoms. that s why it s enshrined in the first amendment to the bill of rights. it s central not only to freedom but to humanity. we can speak. that s our power. in the beginning was the word declares john in the opening of the fourth gospel. the word is the most important thing we have. take away our ability to choose our own words and we are no longer human. we are subject and chattel. authoritiarians understand this. they mate freedom of speech. they would let you have a machine gone before they allow you to say what you want. with a gun you can kill people but with words you can expose them. with words you can change the world. there has never been a deep change that not begin with words. not with violence but with words. that s why they are so focussed on what you can say. on the words you can use. they understand the power of words. elon musk understands this too. that s why he is trying to buy twitter. not beca
follow that, stav danaos! you re here with the weather. here with the weather. good afternoon- here with the weather. good afternoon. it s here with the weather. good afternoon. it s been - here with the weather. good afternoon. it s been a - here with the weather. good afternoon. it s been a wild i here with the weather. good i afternoon. it s been a wild start here with the weather. good - afternoon. it s been a wild start to the week. low pressure nearby, lots of showers and thunderstorms. a few sunny spells here and there and we are going to continue this theme as we head through the working week. we have had the same area of low pressure with since last weekend, parked across the west of the uk, but as we move through the next few days, it was start to migrate towards the east. then we are between weather systems for the coming weekend, so it should be a bit quieter with some sunshine around. we could see mist and fog around. we could see mist and fog around too. th
straight after hardtalk. welcome to hardtalk. i m stephen sackur. today, i vejourneyed to the south coast of england to meet one of the great women pioneers of photo journalism, marilyn stafford. she was born in the united states, but she moved to paris where she became the protege of the brilliant cartier bresson. and like him, she loved to capture intimate portraits of ordinary people. she s worked in war zones and on fashion catwalks. and now, at 93, her work is being admired by a new generation. so, what gives her pictures their power? marilyn stafford, welcome to hardtalk. thank you. let s start way back. you trained as an actress, you spent a while as a nightclub singer, and yet you really found your creative voice in photography. what was it about photography that really reached into your soul? i have been called an accidental photographer, because i really did not set out to do the photography at all. the photography was something that was just there. when i was a chi
had a permit to do so. speaking before hearing the culture secretary s views, the greek prime minister, who is facing an election, warned voters return was not imminent. translation: if the greek people trust us again, - i believe we could achieve this target after the elections, with full respect, of course, to the obvious red lines that all greek governments have posed. one red line could be accepting the sculptures back on loan. but the law prevents the british museum from returning ownership to greece, even if it wanted to, unless the culture secretary changes her views, for now, a short term loan looks like the only option on the table. katie razzall, bbc news. time for a look at the weather. rain, rain, more rain. sorry, everybody. look at how we closed out the day in somerset. and look at where the rain is at the moment. it s pushing in from the south west. the wind is going to strengthen as well, gale force gusts overnight. the heaviest of the rain at the moment is ac