tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News March 30, 2024 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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absolute to fallen nypd officer jonathan diller as his funeral is happening later today. joey: an end to handouts and legal action of kansas that could stop the biden administration latest round of student loan for giveness. pete: weave got usfl preview of "fox & friends" weekend starting right now. ♪ rachel: good morning, everybody. 8:0 in 8:00 in new york city. that song is bringing me back, breakfast at tiffanies.
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i don't know where notre dame is. joey: who's famous for putting that town on the map is mayor pete, pete buttigieg. rachel: that's not the best thing that's come out of there. pete: there's better things, that's fair to say. glad you're with us and at halfway park of "fox & friends" weekend on this saturday, on easter weekend, there's a huge show for you tomorrow because he is risen tomorrow. but today we just are glad you're here. rachel: we are glad you're here and celebrating easter tomorrow. pete: glad to see you, joey. joey: yeah, thanks for having me. rachel: in a few hours, sea of blue issuing late absolute to fallen officer jonathan dillen. a final mass at 10:00 a.m. before he was laid to rest. diller was shot while conducting a traffic stop on monday and a criminal with prior arrests were charged. pete: hundreds lined the streets of the funeral home before the
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second wake paying respects to fallen officer and wife and 1-year-old son. pete: the new york metz honoring diller we motional moment of silence before the team's home opener yesterday. nypd thanking the team for their tribute and support for officer diller. certainly good to see a professional sports team hi lighting someone that deserves to be highlighted. rachel: gorgeous picture. pete: no doubt. rachel: somebody that's been following the story closely because so many of the people who are being very directly affected by this are right in his hometown, and it's brian kilmeade that had an amazing interview with donald trump, and is getting a lot of inside information about what is happening behind the scenes. things that -- some things that aren't been reported and we learned right here. brian, welcome.
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reporter: we still have two and a half hours and it's filling up. st. rose cathedral do for the scene of the funeral and the priest doing the mass is the one that married them. the only way you get down on the road is if you're a police force or politician because they shut down all of maric road and this will be lined with men and women in blue and only 800 can be seated on the inside, these speakers here and there's a frequency that will be broadcasted on a radio station. you'll get to hear the entire ceremony. there's two tiers on the inside and emotions will be extremely high. one thing about massapequa, might be a retired cop, active cop, nassau county or working in the city.
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in jonathan diller's case, he was living in massapequa and his precinct was one of the toughest in the city, right in queens by jfk airport, and that's where this entire incident went down. the emotions are extremely high. after all, you're talking about a young lady just married, wondering what she's going to be doing with her young family and the rest of her life. meanwhile that's exactly the person that donald trump sought out when he got into the funeral home a couple of days ago. he immediately called after the incident. stephanie took his call and said would you come down to the wake. he said yes. here's how he described the afternoon. >> stephanie's incredible and they wanted me to be there, and i wanted to be there. i came in from florida and what a family, the diller family and they lost a hero really. i mean, just a hero. they're devastated. the family is devastated, the police force is devastated, the whole country feels this way and it's happening more and more and
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it's really a lack of respect for law and order and we have to have law and recorder back in the country and we're going to. this just can't happen. blue blood and top of the class and everything perfect. beautiful record of doing this job properly. and fairly now this is what happens. it's so horrible. jonathan was, you know, they say, he was the top in every respect. top of his class, and this happened. it just should not have happened. pete: "fox & friends" exclusive, brian. by the way, the rest of that interview watch tonight on one nation and more questions for donald trump airing on your show on our channel tonight. can you confirm, if you're an nypd, you were told not to stand behind donald trump and stand near him or get in a photo of him? reporter: i was trying to get to the bottom of it, and here is the latest. my source is impeccable.
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what happened is president trump decided he was going to speak and he said, you know, can the police stand behind me and they said yes. so the nassau county guys stood behind them and then they asked nypd to stand behind him. evidently the police commissioner called back to somebody and the answer was no. so when president trump was speaking, nassau county cops behind him and no nypd. believe me, the police commissioner, he get as thumbs up from a lot of people here. he'll be speaking today and eulogizing. jonathan diller, but some call that he made was back and the answer was no. this is the political friction. this isn't a new york story. it's a national story. a story about the men and women in blue who are no longer allowed to do their jobs because of polit politicians and left wg ideologues and they're getting killed because of it. that's why stephanie said, reportedly multi-poll sources
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told alvin bragg, the governor and mayor you have my husband's blood on your hands. this is reaching -- you've been questioned this before, rachel, this is reaching a breaking point to them just leaving the job. they don't want to do it anymore if they're not back. especially in the city. in nassau county they're appreciated and suffolk county to a degree but not like the city. it is the wild west in that city as you know, and things are only going to get worse unless we decide to crack down on these people called criminals. rachel: brian, it's not that they're leaving the job but not able to recruit new people and who wants to go into a profession not getting that respect. i saw those pictures of him. he's such a handsome gray and looks so strong and every -- guy and look sos strong and every description of what happened on him and attack and murder and he acted with so much valor and
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courage and hearing about his widow and the way she's been scolding and defending him and the entire force and standing up to power in this very difficult moment. my heart and hat goes out and off to her. she's making this a national issue because it is. reporter: the whole family and other people going to the wake, they're letting them have it. you saw on our show, on "fox & friends," a "fox & friends" first the head of the sergeant's benevolent association say you politicians that have been anti-cop, yo you want to defunde police, do not show up. they show up anyway. some give governor hochul credit for showing up, fine. i'd rather they change the policies but at the last minute became pro cop in order to hold off lee zeldin's surge ask since that time there's been movement to try and roll back the bail reform and it's been ineffective
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and speakers like carl hastings and others saying -- cracking down on crim criminals is not a deterrent on crime. they're missing the point. when you crackdown on a criminal, they're in jail and not going to commit that crime. that makes me happy. worry about deterrence later and i want these guys off the street. now they're punching women randomly in the face and caved this in woman's face the other day and they get the guy and he's out with zero bail. how is this allowed? joey: brian, on that point about the governor, i said early if she did show up at least she had to hear and see the heart ache these policies caused. you were saying earlier in the show you confirmed and heard from the family, she didn't just show up and kind of pushed her way in before she was welcome. is that right? reporter: exactly, it was a private viewing with family and friends with open casket and it wasn't from the family but i had somebody that was right there
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and she was there and they told her to wait and she lost patience and with her detail, she walked in only to get the family's detail and the funeral director was called in to close the casket and governor hochul would no longer have to wait. that's when she got it from the family, but she got blasted. think about that. joey: that's important and not like they blasted her for no reason. she made herself the priority at this officer's funeral. reporter: yeah, by the way, she's made moves to try and crack down on criminals but it's been totally ineffective and they don't want to lock anybody up now. they're trying to close riker's island and they're trying to do that and keep the criminals scout put no new criminals in. we're in the middle of the line of fire. they sit there with their 25 cops around them in their suvs and sirens and what do we do? by the way, it's not just these rundown sections of new york city. this is a new york city problem and you guys watching us in
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chicago and philadelphia and boston and san francisco and austin, texas, you know the same feeling that we're getting. by the way, austin will be here and chicago will be here and arkansas sending state police here. it's important for them to feel as though everybody is on the same page here. at least if you're wearing the uniform they are. pete: yeah, a statement from the governor's office, brian. governor hochul attended the wake to mourn the loss of officer diller. offer condolences and hear from his family and loved ones who are dealing with unimaginable grief. she heard it. you can see it in the video, brian, must have been a relative of officer diller just sort of looking her straight in the eye and saying you're not welcome here. reporter: i know exactly who it is. it is jonathan diller's grandmother's sister's son. he's -- he goes i'm 60 something years old. i don't care what anybody thinks. she's going to hear from me.
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he caught up to her on the versus frequency ran data committee and you can see it now i think. he let her have it saying you better change things. this has got to stop. he should not have died. by the way, this could have been really double the tragedy because this killer, guy rivera, had a gun pointed at his partner and the gun didn't go-off. it jammed and he got a bullet in the back. rachel: brian, did you say earlier there were other politicians including letitia james that asked to speak at this service? reporter: mayor adams speaking and the police commissioner will be speaking, but letitia james as well as governor hochul asked to speak in st. rose and eulogize police officer diller and the answer was no. letitia james again, i mean, they're trying to grab -- they're trying to act as if they're strong against crime.
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we know they're not. and they're not going to get the optics in this city on this town on this day. pete: shameless. rachel: shameless. trying to use the funeral to wash their hands. pete: no doubt. brian, thank you for your coverage this morning and we'll be watching you on one nation tonight and there's more of the interview with the president tonight on one nation. and also we'll have the nassau county executive on our program at 8:40 a.m. eastern time. we thank brian kilmeade for all that great reporting in morning. rachel: fantastic. pete: a few additional headlines starting with this, an illinois parole official quit after a freed felon attacked a pregnant woman and killed her son. illinois state senator jason plumber has been sounding the alarm on this parole board for yeyears and joined us earlier. >> it was completely preventable, but this governor is dead set making sure these
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violent criminals is released and used the personal review board to do this. it's not a one off event. we've been warning the governor and his allies in the legislature since at least 2020 about his nominees. pete: governor pritzker, another lib releasing criminals. police say the suspect stabbed his pregnant ex-girlfriend and killed her 11-year-old son when he tried to defend his home games. the parole board should have never let him out. rachel: he was a hero if there ever was one. pete: the man of the house. joey: we need him back. pete: fewer students applying to harvard since the anti-semitism and plagiarism scandal and ivy league school reporting a 5% drop and 3,000 less applications for the 2028 class compared to last year. harvard president claudine gay resigned in january after refusing to condemn anti-semitism and then widely
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accused of plagiarism but kept her job and makes a million bucks over there at harvard. rachel: fail up. pete: wo works in cass academiae military. baseball going to the hogs and joey knows i'm right. baseball going to the hogs in the twin cities and st. paul saints minor league team introducing their new ball pick for the season. get this, his name is ozempig. he's getting into the best shape of his life. he follows in the footsteps of other ball pig legends including ham solo, kevin bacon and the notorious p-i-b. i was there and the owner is getting flak for this name. he said i don't care the the name is ozempig. joey: talking about the my
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league baseball and my favorite team is the bacon team from macon, georgia and do they get a live pig and is that bad? pete: yeah, pre-bacon pig. rachel: ozempig is a really cute pig. joey: every year we turn them into bacon. i turn it had dark. i didn't mean too. i'm sorry. i love bacon. rachel: let's not turn ozempig into bacon. pete: that's his job after the season is over. it's leaner form of bacon. rachel: we like bacon full fat. pete: real fatty and not with ozempic. pete: onto another different sort of related but totally different story and watching jess key waters last night, you saw steve ec ekkert and founderf modern day night project and effectively a masculinity camp and pay $18,000 to be whipped
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into shape to be more of a man. hear's, some of his critics dub as alpha male boot cam and there's a portion of what steve said about his man camp. >> i was at my door and my daughter was sitting here with us in studio, i was at her birthday party and all the mothers are talking about the projects and they showed you the video about. one of the women said, oh, if my husband did that, he would be crying like a baby and he would quit within 60 seconds. all the women, all 14 women and their daughters started laughing at this little girl's father. and the little girl started pretty much crying in tears thinking that is my super hero. that is who i look at assumer man and my mother and all of her friends and all of their children are laughing at my father. that is exactly why we do what we do, the way we do it for individuals like that.
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joey: i'm going to be the hot take here. can i do that? rachel: sure. this is not a man camp or how to be a man camp, it's a physical toughness camp. that's fine. i have no problem with that. we showed a clip earlier and screaming insults a at them and i've been through tough military training, this doesn't imlate that. what i want to get at is that story you told about the little girl's dad. not every man in the world can go more than 60 seconds in a physical toughness camp for different reasons. being a man is about mental and physical toughness and being there for your family. my dad told me it's provide and protect. that little girl's dad maybe isn't a physically masculine guy and there for his daughter every day and provides and protects for his family, i don't know if maybe we're phrasing in camp differently than even he means it. rachel: maybe not just a physical boot camp that we're seeing and it's a great visual. i have idea. maybe they do other things like talking about topics.
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joey: not trying to talk it down. pete: it's indicative of a hole in our society. men need to step up. joey: 100%. pete: it's a society that's femme niced men and we need men to stand up and be men and protect their household. joey: they didn't need this. i wasn't raise that had way and i don't understand it. i'm for anything that toughens men up and shows them the way. rachel: i'm for anything that says men can be men. that's what's missing. he's filling in gap in our culture. on the one hand as you said, we're femmized men and telling them they're not fe femme nicedn and they're basement video game
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men and in the end women want real men. you see this divide and sexes are supposed toes be complimentary. joey: symbiotic. rachel: love and support each other and men are supposed to provide and protect and that's what they're feeling. pete: if you joined the military, you can become a man but now if you join the military, you can transition. joey: that's a whole other topic. rachel: for free on taxpayer dollars. we'll be back with more.
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joey: attorney general for state of kansas ask leading the charge to stop the biden administration's latest student loan bailout file ago lawsuit that ten other student haves -- states have joined can eling $1.2 billion in debt for 153,000 borrowers using taxpayer money and attorney general joining us now. attorney general, thanks for joining us. explain to us how this policy is hurting folks in kansas. >> it's hurting everyone and then by the way, joey, the numbers are bigger than that and
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up over 150 billion in counting and they announce every week and we just forgave another $1 billion and the money doesn't come out of thin air. they're forgiving the student loans of people that ran up huge debt, maybe went to graduate school and paying for it with taxpayer dollars by people that didn't go to school because it was too expensive or people that worked through college or families like mine scraping by to save money to send kids to college. they're transferring wealth from lower income and middle income people to people higher income. it's extremely unfair. joey: there's a holt of agriculture and farming in kansas and people that work really hard to provide food with livestock and americans that are the same. the unfairness is highlighted with a high population that gets an education and skill but maybe not through college. why aren't they getting the debt
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forgiveness and why is it the liberal studies majors? >> yeah, our discussion illustrates these are profound questions and do you want to transfer wealth from hard working americans who decided to forego college and got a two year technical degree and not sitting a on a ton of debt. no, we don't. regardless of the discussion and cheryl: congressman way we come down and not the bureaucrats job to make the decision and it's congress' job and that's what the supreme court said in 2023. only congress can do this and the biden administration turned around and said we're going to do it anyway. we're going to slap a different name tag on it and go ahead with it. it's just outrageous that a president would defy the united states supreme court. we haven't seen this since the civil war era. president loses in court and says i'm going to do it anyway. joey: another topic and we've talked all morning about of crime in america and what happened in new york and this crisis 23409 specific to a
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couple big cities, and kansas made retail theft a felony and organized crime can proliferate and tell us about that and why it was important for kansas to jump -- to get ahead of this. >> yeah, something that's affecting the whole country and called organized retail crime and distinguished from say shoplifting for yourself or doing a smash and grab where one person goes in and grabs something they see or like, organized retail crime is a network of two, three, or more people doing push outs where they fill a cart or shopping container full of things that they can market on the internet or can -- sell to a fence and we're talking about hundreds of billions of dollars across the country being stolen every year. and often going to large box stores and fill up a cart with large expensive items and load into a vehicle in the parking lot. nobody tries to stop them and market it on the web. and so kansas recognize this is
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is not garden variety shoplifting and other states are doing the same thing and we've got to deter this type of crime. joey: attorney general kris kobach, thank you for this message and for the work you're doing. >> thank you, happy easter. joey: happy easter. all right, cowboy core. beyonce fans embrace the latest fashion trend after the release of new album. it's in rachel's pop culture roundup and we'll leave it to her. counting down to kickoff and spring football back with the ufl and abby is in arlington, texass with the ufl president. ♪ when dry eye symptoms keep... coming... back... inflammation might be to blame. over-the-counter eye drops can provide temporary relief. xiidra can provide lasting relief. it targets inflammation that can cause dry eye disease. xiidra? no-o-o! xiidra treats the signs and symptoms of dry eye disease. don't use if allergic to xiidra.
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joey: we're checking in with russ brandon and abby hornacek live in texas. reporter: you know this guy too if you're a bill's fan and you've had so much experience and played a big role in the americaner teen the usfl and xfl and what aspects of the league you're taking too the ufl? >> took a village, abby, to get here. it's been a great experience and excited to get going today and worked closely with our partners at redburg for 78 days and amazing we're kicking off here with fans in arlington and excited to get going. reporter: for the fans watching at home and hear spring league,
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what would you tell them about the talent you've pulled in >> bring all the teams here and lot of talent and recognizable players and over half of the players signed an nfl contract. 107 players from both leagues last year go to the nfl. there's really good talent and people will see that over the next few days and they turn on fox and see great football out here today. reporter: you mention the fox and what does it mean to broadcast on fox and what kind of technology are you working with and bring the game to fans at home. >> we are working closely with eric shanks during this process and they're the industry leader and we're excited to be on fox and be a part of this. you'll see cool rules, technology, innovations and dynamic play on the field, we're excited and our fans will be as well. reporter: given success of sfl and usfl ho get us here, how do
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we continue that success and focusing on moving forward with this new league? >> rules,ing it nec technology and different innovations and bringing the rules to the consumer in a meaningful way and some of the different ewe answers of transparency and officiating and other things from a rules standpoint, they can see that interaction between the official in the booth and see player to coach communication and and hear what goes on inside of a player's helmet and cool things that our fans will enjoy and we'll continue to enhance as we move along. reporter: one last question before going back to the anchors and pete hegseth ped a one day contract with the usfl. i'm working for you, pete. >> done deal. pete: done deal! these are big dudes. i appreciate it, commissioner. i'll take you up on it. let's do it. i was a high school backup
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quarterback and punt returner and wide receiver. wherever you want to put me. joey: he wants to kick. reporter: backup quarterback. he's got all of the same. pete: ready to government abby, thank you very much for that. sealing the deal. rachel: thanks, abby. reporter: thanks, guys. rachel: it'll be fun to watch. pete: absolutely. usfl. i'm going to get in the game and get killed. joey: are you saying kickers aren't important? rachel: i'm saying i'd like to see him actually, if you're going to do it, just do it. pete: maybe a kickoff team, who knows. whatever the commissioner wants. rachel: all right, onto this. a promisings sign, almost half of gen z couples went to premarital counseling. joey: and thousands of people paying their respects to fallen nypd officer jonathan diller this week. pete: brian kilmeade joining us with nassau county executive bruce blakeman ahead of today's
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all over the country are paying their respects to fallen officer jonathan diller, including president trump. >> we were driving down the road and felt like for miles and men and women in blue going for such a period. i said that's a lot of people. that was long blue line indeed. they have respect for this family and the fellow officers. rachel: brian kilmeade is live in new york at site of the funeral. it's a really sad day. reporter: rachel, thank you very much. it is real will is. bruce bla blakeman was at the president's side. that was extraordinary and the former president comes down to massapequa and goes into the funeral home. how was he greeted by the family and heading inside? >> the president came into the
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funeral home and stephanie, jonathan's widow, and he went into a private room. they were there for about 10 or 12 minutes and having a very emotional conversation and then she took president trump to the casket and having another conversation there. they were discussing what jonathan was like and what kind of sports did he like and food did he like. a discussion about what jonathan was like. then stephanie introduced the president to the family members, and he paid his condolences to each of the family members. then they stopped him and asked him to sit down and sign a mass card. he did that. he sat down, signed the mass card. on the way out, jonathan's grandmother stood up and said would you give me a hug and president trump grabbed her and they embraced very tightly, and the grandmother had tears coming down her eyes and then something happened i've never seen at a
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wake before. all the friends and family of jonathan gave him an ovation. started clapping for the president, and it was very warm, it was very beautiful, it was very moving. the president could not have been nicer. reporter: so today is going to be extremely sad. the culmination of five straight days of mourning and trying to piece this all together. what's going to be happening inside st. rose? >> well, there'll be a mass, i believe, i know you typically there isn't a mass during this time of year when it's the day before easter. commissioner cabon of nypd speaking and mayor adams will be speaking and i assume a family member will be speak. i've been to many of these as you have, brian, this is always the toughest day of the family. two dais of the wake where you're really interacting with people and it really doesn't hit home. then today at the funeral and the burial, it's going to be a
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very tough day for the family. reporter: people here who have never met him feel as though they've lost a family member. there's going to be tens of thousands of police officers, nypd, nassau county, big difference going for nassau county and the sponsors in the way nypd does and work on the border of where this all took place in queens and nassau. can you describe that? >> we don't have a migrant program and we have a patriotic county, we're home to a lot of military veterans, home to a lot of cops and fire fighters. this is a very patriotic community with most law enforcement. reporter: big difference and lastly, bruce, for the family, they feel like this is the tipping point. they let all these officials know you have my son's, my brother's, you have jonathan's blood on your hands by your soft on crime policies. could this be a tipping point in this process? could this be -- could the worst days be behind us and are they
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beginning to understand what's going on here? >> i certainly hope so. i'm feeling it on the streets. people saying we're fed up and we've had enough. criminals have more rights than victims and tired of the lawlessness and we want to black the blue, and we -- back the blue and get back to american values. i think the american people and the people here in the metropolitan area have had enough. reporter: bruce, i wanted to let everyone know, snipers above the building because any time there's a big group of police officers, again, they've got to be watched and see and understand what's happening over here. if we clear out right behind us, that's what this is all about. jonathan diller, who lost his life at age of 31 years old. back to you guys in the studio. pete: well done, brian. rachel: thank you, brian. pete: brian kilmeade and bruce blakeman. joey: last thing with the snipers on the building is they're a target is what he pointed out. he didn't use that many words but any type there's this many
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police officers together, they have to be watched and speaks to the nature of this issue and when things are great and rudy giuliani has the city in a great place, it's still tough and a dangerous job. a job that something like this could happen on much less the way things are right now with more people getting second and third chances to commit crime or in this guy's case, 22 chances. rachel: hate to see this thing get politicized and shouldn't. today should not be politicized. this is a family that's grieving a father that's 31 years old. child is 1 years old. the person who is -- the priest who's doing the funeral married this supple just a couple years ago. joey: two yearses ago, yeah. rachel: absolutely tragic and it is as brian said earlier, it is a national issue. it has to be, and that is why when on holy thursday, three presidents were here raising money. donald trump was at, you know, the wake and visiting with the family.
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rachel: all right. it's time for another pop culture roundup and this time rob smith and i will touch on the late greatest on all the hollywood drama starting off with this actress eva mendez reveals more about her switch to being a stay at home mom with her husband ryan gossling, watch. >> it was like a no brainer. it was almost just like a nonverbal agreement that it was like, okay, he's going to work and i'm going to work. i'm just going to work here. rachel: i love that. i'm going to work because at home mops work. this trackses that 38% of hispanic moms and largest percentage of at home moms are hispanic, she's latina. >> this post on x were mean to eva. rachel: what did they say? >> whole girl boss and she shouldn't be staying at home and
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that's not a job. but ryan gossling, i think he got paid $13 million for barbie is so i think they're good 6789 she doesn't need to work. rachel: if i had seen that on x, i would have been on it. >> they were going at it in the comments. rachel: glad someone is pushing back on that. at home mom is work. beyonce fans are embracing what's being called cowboy core, because beyonce has released a new country album with dolly par ton and willy nelson. rob, i love country, not a big beyonce fan. the behive can come after me. they've done it before. can conservatives have anything without liberals invading? >> i'm a beyonce fan and not a country fan. but podcast called can't cancel rob. can't cancel rob smith. i hope the beehive doesn't cancel me. i like the album but don't love
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it. i love that she covers dolly parton's jolene and she's begging jolene not to take herman. she's saying take him if you want to try it. rachel: interesting. not a fan. i know the beehive, they're mean. >> they'll come for you. yeah, yeah, not ryan, please. rachel: kicking it old school and secondhand clothing markets are booming. it's now a $73 billion business and up 11% since joe biden was in office. they're selling clothes. what is this a sign of? nosotoll jaire for the 9 -- nostalgia for the 90s or bidenomic s? >> i think both. nintendo 6 64s are $5,000 and i wish i would have saved money but a luxury clothing resell market and it's bidenomics and people are kind of wanting to, you know, tighten up the belt a little bit.
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rachel: even the rich are selling clothes. >> absolutely. rachel: it's a sign of the types for sure. look at this new trend, it's a wedding trend. so 45% of young people who are getting married, gen zers are going to pre-material counseling or -- premarital counseling or therapy prior to the wedding. i'm catholic and can't get married without sort of like a you go through a course, even a weekend retreat so you're serious and this is like counseling and therapy. >> i got to tell you, i feel like you are the expert on marriage. i mean, you've been married forever, very successful marriage and all the beautiful kids and all that, i think that any kind of counseling before intoing into the union is the best thing, and i think it's a sign of gen z becoming more conservative because they're embracing things like that. i think it's airship of the types. rachel: i do too. any time you're take ago vow so serious, shows there's a lot of thought behind it. i'm not opposed to this.
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>> those divorce rates will probably go down. rachel: that's a conservative thing as well. thank you, rob. you're the best. one more time on the podcast. >> can't cancel rob smith, youtube or apple podcasts, wherever you get your podcasts. rachel: thank you, rob. faith and friends concert series is back this week. we have a performance next. here we go... (♪) a perfect king's hawaiian slider. tastes good too! king's hawaiian slider sunday... the only way to sunday! shingles. some describe it as an intense burning sensation. or an unbearable itch. this painful blistering rash could also disrupt your work and time with family. shingles could also lead to long—term, debilitating nerve pain that can last for months or even years. if you're over 50, the virus that causes shingles is likely already inside of you. (♪)
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