tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOXNEWSW June 9, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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when i watched the last week at normandy, she's unbelievable. there is faulkner with her father, tracy simpson and vietnam, it brought tears to my eyes. he takes us was combat veteran in two theaters, is there anybody more decent pete hegseth as last week and others, who got to remind us, you sure are going to find it in the networks or read about it. the new york times and washington post, this is a very special place. i don't have to say this, i want to say this. twenty tomorrow on life, liberty and levin sunday when we have the governor of florida and america's wiseman, see you then.
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pete: what is that? will: i don't know. it's beautiful though. [laughter] laugh. pete: that's even more beautiful. we've will so is the tractor. welcome to "fox & friends" this sunday morning where your pictures bring us into with this day. i hear it all the time, love the national anthem. why don't you with guys play the national anthem? we do. so you might want go back on your, the vr. we always play the national anthem, and we love that you guys love we play the national anthem. pete: i forward every pick i -- pic if i get forward thed. friends@foxnews.com and every chance we get -- will: why with didn't you say me? if. pete: well, you don't read your e-mail. will: one of those i put in. pete: which one? if. will: the boat with. 1776 flag -- pete: was that somebody you knew? will: somebody if i knew. [laughter] rachel: the very first one, that
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was a lady who e-mailed me, ask i forwarded that. and, you know, i love hydrangeas, so it was a -- pete: we love your blue dress. and i loved the guy who was holding my book. [laughter] will: we begin with thousands of anti-israel protesters descending on the white house upset with the biden administration if over its response to the i don't think going israel-hamas if war. rachel: the destructive demonstrations coming while president biden continues his trip overseas. pete: chanley painter joins us with the details. >> reporter: good morning, team. the an estimated 30,000 anti-israel protesters converged upon the white house for hours blasting the biden administration's sport of the 8- months-long war in the gaza strip. take a listen. >> from the river to the sea -- >> from the river to the sea -- >> palestine will live forever!
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>> down, down, with occupation! >> reporter: along with the chants, many held signs accusing president biden of being on the wrong side of history as a, quote, genocide joe. some protesters burned american flags and ignited smoke bombs. the mass demonstration was organize9 by -- organized by answer coalition which unveiled a 32-mile- 2-mile-long banner which they revealed as the symbolic red line. security measures at 16000 pennsylvania avenue were tightened in anticipation of this planned demonstration, but it didn't stop the agitators from defacing nearby statue ises like this one of andrew jackson with phrases free gaza and boycott israel products and, of course, as you said, all of this happening while the president remains in france where he was honored at a state dinner last might with the french president. guys? will: thank you, chanley.
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i just find this increasingly -- this is on the day of a hostage rescue in israel. and now people are pointing out how many were killed in that rescue effort. i don't know if the number is 50 or 100, the numbers appropriate to rescue those 4 hostage aings. but in the video that stuck out to me, one lone park ranger was walking around, i believe it was the statue of andrew jackson. it had already been graffitied, there he is. he stands there in defiance, in protection. i just think that video speaks a lot about the current state of america. rachel: yeah. like, we need more park rangers around our statues? [laughter] pete: like we should defend, like this is why we don't have nice things? will: one solid man. pete: totally right. those people should all be a arrested, by the way, you can't just throw stuff at an official. will, you raised a great point.
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we're going to bring more details to individuals. it was late morning, middle of the day, civilian area and one of the the captors was gotten without any, without a fight, but the other one, the other building was about 100 feet away. the israelis encountered hamas and got in a big fire fight. it took that to get to the the other three to get them to the safety. we've got some great guests to break down the details of this. israel was saying it's one of the biggest raids they've ever done, and they did lose a3 2-year-old commander in the process. -- will: donald trump rallies in las vegas today. he leads that swing state, a day after he was in california, newport beach, where he raised $3333.5 -- 33.5 million. he was greeted on the street by overwhelming crowds in now newport beach, california. orange county can be considered although not exactly alabama, it
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is a red part of california. and so today he turns his attention to nevada. ed this is the current state of the race in nevada. it's 5 points in favor of donald trump over joe biden. rachel: yeah. that's actually remarkable if you think about it. you know, a lot of those are working class service workers, and, you know, you are tourism is down. places are shutting up, shutting down because of the economy. and so these workers are feeling the pain of inflation, many of them losing their jobs. i think nevada has one of the highest bankruptcy rates as well as, you know, houses, people losing their houses. so there's a lot of, a lot of economic pain, and if i think donald trump is benefiting from that a because people, again, it wasn't very long ago when donald trump was in so people can remember what it was like under the trump economy. pete: yeah. nevada is a tricky political
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state. unions have -- rachel: yeah. pete: the tourism and hotel industry has huge pull are ther- rachel: a lot of hispanics. pete: indeed. we have some recent polling from fox news in informed nevada specifically about which candidate voters trust more on the issues, climate change and abortion it's biden, but when you get to the meat and potatoes of the border9 and the economy, foreign policy, trump is walloping -- it's interesting. trump took to truth social to talk about the price of insulin yesterday which some are suggesting is an attempt to take on that health care number which he hasn't been as strong the at, but he thinks he should be. rachel: yeah, it's interesting. you hook at those things, climate change and abortion. if those to are your issues, you're with the democrats. all the things that actually affect your life, the economy, immigration which, of course, is affecting resources and crime, all those issues donald trump is trouncing on. and so i think what it comes down to is you may be loyal to a
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party if you're a hispanic service worker, union worker, but in the end you're more loyal to your family, and that's what matters. will: it's trump +16 on the economy, +22 on immigration, biden +111 on the abortion -- 11 on the abortion. which of those issues motivate voters more? pete: correct. nevada has historically been so difficult for republicans to crack, so you're going to need a strong the get out the vote and ballot protection if act there to make it happen. will: coming up later today, we're going to have governor doug burgum of north dakota, senator tim scott, both of whom are former presidential candidates ask both of whom are -- pete: they're on the short, short list -- will: -- when it comes to being with vice president. pete: very interesting. now to a few additional headlines. a landslide in wyoming taking out a massive chunk of road at deon the pass in -- deton
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cutting off a critical link between idaho and wyoming. officials don't know how long it'll take to prepare the roadway and say the closest possible route goes more than 60 miles out of the way. you either take that road or you don't have another way to get there. that's no good for the folks around there. and a new report revealing chicago mayor brandon johnson spent $30,000 on personal grooming. the chicago sun times reported johnson was using campaign funds to pay for makeup and hair appointments. this was over the course of a year. johnson's campaign adviser saying in part, quote, he's using his own campaign funds to pay black and women-owned businesses a fair wage for their work in preparing the mayor and individuals associated with the campaign for public appearances. will: so he spent 30 grand on makeup, he gets an a get out of jail free card by saying black and women-owned businesses. i'm going to plant this here and
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it's a get out of jail free car. rachel: there is a history of mayors of chicago -- remember when the last mayor when everyone else was locked in, she went to the hair salon, do you remember that? pete: yeah. rachel: they really care about their appearance. pete: and to the bell monostakes being ran in saratoga in new york at the can -- as the track undergoes renovations, the third swriewl of the triple crown. >> a little erratic but he's right there -- [inaudible] to win the belmont if stakes at saratoga! pete: this is the sixth year in a row where a different horse has won each of the triple crown races. parity in horse racing, as you might say. good for dornoch, and those are
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your headlines. will: i've got another talking point for you we'd love to get your preponderance on. a missouri missouri restaurant has -- a minimum age requirement for customers. pete: it's not 18? will: it's not p. it's 30 for women and 35 for men. rachel: wow. [laughter] will: the manager said it's just something for the older people to come do and have a happy hour, come get some good food and not have to worry about some of the young folks that bring some of that drama. rachel: what a what's that drama, is that drama drinking? like, they're bigger drinkers? pete: they're more raucous, one would assume. i would imagine the bliss caribbean restaurant has had some issues, maybe some intoxications, and it's not the 40-year-olds that are the rob. [laughter] the age differential track thes, you know, men take maybe a little bit longer --
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will: calm down? pete: -- to get to maturity, yeah. i don't recall what 32-year-old will was, but maybe if not that the well contained, you know? [laughter] don't let him9 into the caribbean restaurant. but i would let 229 -- 30-year-old rachel -- rachel: i was married and had a kid at that point. but, you know, a lot of times you see restaurants saying we done want kids. i actually saw a sign in new york city that said no children, dogs allowed which was very nyc. but this is an interesting new thing -- pete: wait -- will: i'm okay with it. pete: if i am too too. will: if they want to make these rules, probably based on some past experience as you point out, it's their place. let 'em do it. pete: but is it ageism the other way? will: i don't care. i don't thinker but i don't care. pete: i'm just throwing it out. there. if you're if -- 311-year-old rachel -- 31-year-old rachel -- rachel: that's an interesting
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question, but it if you're a cougar, this might not be the place for you. [laugher] will: anything can be -- you can be a 50-year-old cougar looking around at a 35-year-old guy -- pete: there's a lot of age possibilities. will: let's do another 10 minutes of breaking down cougars. rachel: do you know who the ultimate i cougar is? will: here we go. rachel: do you want to know? it's the first lady of france. for sure. am a i not wrong about that? pete: if i think you're wrong. rachel: okay. you think i'm wrong? if. will: there's a big age difference. rachel: there's a massive age difference. will: let us know what you think, e-mail us at friends@foxnews.com. all right. four israeli hostages finally reunited with their families. the intel that led to the daring rescue next. if
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civilians. joining us now if, former irk df spokesperson if jonathan -- also a former lieutenant colonel in the idf. sir, thank you very much for being here. >> thank you for having me. pete: if for our audience, how did this go down? >> well, it went down after weeks of planning, clerking intelligence from various sources including doing preparations and operations in order to gatherer intelligence on the ground which they finally allowed israeli commandos, the elite of the elite israeli special forces to understand where they were being held and then to launch an operation that basically hit two locations, and the key thing was to do it simultaneously. the underlying assumption was that if israel hits one place where n if oa or the ore place where the three men were being held, if we don't do it simultaneously, the risks for the lives of the other location of the hostages being held in the other location were very high, so it had to be simultaneously. israeli troop troops were able
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to infiltrate -- pete: so this means they were wearing civilian -- they didn't come in military formation if. >> no p. they didn't advertise their advance ahead of time k if they surprised the hamas guards and the civilian zen tries that hamas -- seven tries that hamas has deployed. they got to the locations, burst in. unfortunately, an israeli special forces soldier was severely wounded. he later died of his wounds, which is a terrible loss for israel. he ises a real bona fide hero. the operation is now named after him. he was the leader of thedown terrorism unit. -- counterterrorism unit. and what the israeli troops did was go in simultaneously, get the hostages out. and the more difficult art part became actually the vehicle exfiltration. and this is a very density populated -- densely populated area, very small alleys, very --
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lots and lots of people around at it. what basically happened was one of the vehicles got stuck. and when they got stuck, they came under tremendous fire. i'm talking massive machine gun fire, rpg, rockets. it was a really intelligence situation. intense situation. that is also, i think, where most of the palestinian casualties that we see the palestinians touting on international immediate what -- media. most of them were in that that area where's reilly troops -- israeli troops came under a lot of fire with the hostages in the vehicle. and finally, thanks to an envelope of fire and the israeli soldiers fighting their way out, made their way towards the coast where two helicopters awaited. the first helicopter or took noa to safety, and the second with the three hostages out. pete: it's incredible. you mentioned weeks of planning, i even read they built a mock-up, that's how
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sophisticated this was -- >> yes. ask if that is the level of detail that they had to have in order to have think chance of success. pete: and that must be a reflection of serious realtime intelligence that they're -- does that mean they have, the israelis have somewhat of a sense where most of the hostages might be heldsome. >> sadly, i don't think it does. pete: really in. >> you know, this was made possible because hamas decided to jail these hostages and to have them aboveground in a civilian-populated area. and we've seen this in the past. this isn't the first time that a hamas if jails israeli civilians in a civilian palestinian environment and where, by the way, the people who were guarding and forcing the israeli civilians to stay there were palestinian civilians. it's all a civilian with situationer here. many other israeli hostages are presumed to be held underground in specially-defended a hamas compounds with instructions for the hamas guards there that as soon as you hear think kind of idf activity, you execute
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israeli hostages. and that is, of course, the main if scenario that israel wants to prevent. there have been successful israeli raids in the past in rafah, about three months ago a israeli forces were able to go in unnoticed and save two israeli men, or civilians who were taken from the kibbutz. pete: what does this tell you about the strength of a hamas? because this is an area that's been cleared, but it's not pulley cleared, obviously -- >> right. pete: civilians willing to give a heads up to hamas if something looks suspicious. are they reconstituting in a place where you can't have israeli troops all the time? >> what we know they've been doing, with hostageses, they've been moving them around. these hostages were in different locations, and they tell israeli soldiers and intel officers after they were saved that we were moved around, and that is what hamas does, has been doing with the oh hostages as well, to
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make it as a difficult as possible for israel to actually get in. they've been shifting them around. pete: if move if around in civilian populations -- >> in civilian populations, in civilian houses, sometimes underground, sometimes aboveground with the full knowledge, complicity and in many cases active participation of gazan, palestinian civilians. that's a very important point because what hamas does by its strategy is constantly to muddle the line between what's military ask what's civilian. and they're dressed in civilian clothes -- pete: sure. and then they tout them as civilian casualties -- >> they get reported as such -- pete: to the international press. i want to get your comment because there were anti-israel protesters surrounding the white house. they defaced some monuments, they were calling out genocide joe chanting you're a sellout, pack your bags and get the hell out. smearing red paint on andrew jackson is. these protesters are really angry at joe biden's approach to
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what's going on. what's your take? >> so i've been at protests like these around the world not only in the u.s. i've seen them in scandinavia, this other parts of europe with, i've seen them in the u.k. and here in the u.s. the common denominator that i see is a lot of hatred toward the west, a lot of anti-american sentiment. true, the jews and israels are front and center of most of the vicious rhetoric here and most of the hatred, but what i see is a bunch of people who do not respect american values, who do not respect western values and are very blood thirsty towards israel. what i'm concerned is that more more of public domain is slowly but surely being conquered by this type of people, anarchists who have no respect for the past and who are, who top at nothing in order to get their messages across. pete: real quick, is israel given the ability to actually take out hamas?
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is america holding back israel from finishing the fight? >> i think that israel would likely want to fight harder and faster, and i think that israel should be doing that. and i think that it would be in the interest of israelis and palestinians to get the job done faster can is and quicker, to get the suffering done. and i think israel can and should be doing it. pete: if we shall see. jonathan, thank you for your time. >> thank you for having me. pete: great stuff. all right, an elderly pro-life activist sentenced to prison after demonstrating outside an abortion clinic. a former planned parenthood clinic director who is now pro-life joins us next with reaction.
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harlow is on house arrest. she worries incarceration could further cause her health to decline. here to discuss is former planned parenthood clinic director abby johnson. abby, welcome. she is one of many other peaceful pro-life protesters including i want to the mention if heather adoni when's 5 years old. -- 559 years to old. she was put in solitary confinement which violate ises the nelson mandela act because it's too inhumane. she suffered a stroke, and they just put her back in the slammer until her sentencing. >> yeah. i mean, i do want to say is i am not someone who believes that this is the most effect ifive form of activism. you know, there's many other types of activism that are much more effective. our ministry alone, and then there were none, has safed 7000
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abortion clinic -- 700 workers, has shut down over 45 abortion clinics peacefully, not trespassing into facilities. there's other abortion, pro-life organizations that have saved thousands of babies by not trespassing. these people did trespass into an abortion facility. they did do something illegal. and while with i respect their position, i respect their activism, it's not something that i think that we should continue, something we should be doing. however, the main story here is that the dojs has weaponized their position, and there is unfair treatment going on here with the biden administration if because here is the main story, rachel. there is a young activist named whitney durant who vandalized a bowling green, kentucky, pregnancy certain, okay? if vandalized it, spray painted
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abort god, all these violent, terrible things all over this pregnancy center, did significant damage to the pregnancy center, violated the face act. the same thing that these people aring being held account accountable for, got 2 years probation, no jail time, no prison time is and a $2,000 fine. okay? now, meanwhile, these people have been sitting in a federal prison if -- rachel: yeah. >> -- and are possibly receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars of fines. that shows that there is something political at may here, and this is an unequal balance of justice. rachel: yes. well, you know, there were abortion clinics in which there were molotov cocktails thrown into pro-high centers, i should say, by vein's revenge -- jane's revenge which is a domestic terrorist group. we don't know what's happened with that, i doubt they're going to get the same sentences that
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these, again, nonviolent people. they may have trespassed into there, but their nonviolent, many of them elderty -- elderly, if with health problems. i will also say, abby, when the pro-palestine protesters went into st. patrick's on the holiest of days, that is also a violation of -- and they disrupted the mass. that's a violation of the face act. nothing happened to them as a well. it's the two-tiered system that a you're talking about that i think has people up this arms and also, i mean, just throwing the books at these people. and i don't think it makes us hook good as a country when -- look good as a country when this is how we treat our humanitarian, human rights activists. >> well, lahr ifly the elderly. -- particularly the elderly. look, these people, a 75-year-old. woman, she's not going to harm anyone, okay? and even though these people did trespass, they're not harming anyone. heir trying to save the lives of our most innocent, okay? let's get a grip, okay? not that they're trying to harm
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anyone. these pro-palestinian protesters, they are harming people. i mean, let's get real. people aring being harmed during these protesters -- rachel: well, property's being damaged. we just had a segment on it a couple minutes ago. >> yes. rachel: but the point is i think this is a political issue. it's not just pro-life versus pro-choice, though that's clearly on the ballot. i think people are very concerned about these two tiers of justice, that joe biden is weaponizing the justice system and law enforcement against his political and ideological enemies. i don't think we can question that anymore if when we see this, the january 6th, the way the january 6th protesters were treated are versus, you know, the anti that and blm -- antifa and blm protesters. and, again, last word, quickly. >> any of us could be next. rachel: that's right. >> if you are against what this administration believes in, think of us could be next. rachel: that's right. it's not that it can happen to to you, it is happening to american citizens, not just
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donald trump. i respect what you say, there are better methods, but that still doesn't take away what's happened to these elderly people. thank you very much. caitlin clark bringing new excitement to women's basketball but that a same energy won't make it to paris. how the rookie sensation was reportedly snubbed from team usa. that's next. ♪ you've got to keep your head up, ask if you can let your hair down ♪ ♪
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rick: welcome back to "fox & friends." a lot going on in weather today. big storms across the central plains but two big stories across f. we've been so incredibly hot in florida, may was your warmest month ever. warmest may ever, and they broke records from orlando all the way down to key west and pretty much every place in between. it was your warmest may ever. incredibly warm temperatures, again, we're going to break all kinds of records and a pretty significant threat for some kind of heat illness. so heatstroke, watch for that, especially central parts of florida. this is all going to change, however, because we've got some tropical moisture coming in. this is going to get in here by midweek, and a lot of florida's pretty dry. the heat has brought in drought conditions as well, is so some of this moisture is going to be welcome. but watch what's going to happen, some spots maybe get
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over 10 inches of rain. that will cool the temperatures down, which is going to be welcome, but it is going to be very, very wet. now, we are talking about tropical season, it's hurricane season right now. take a look at this. this right here is your average peak if temperature of the water out in the atlantic bay syringe and we are way above average already. right now we're not looking at a tropical system probably moving in towards florida, nonetheless, a lot of that tropical moisture's coming in, and that's why we're going to see this rain midweek with. will, over to you. will: wnba rook e key seven sensation caitlin clark reportedly being left off team usa's roster for the paris olympics. while team usa has not made an official announcement, sources say the athletic coach, cheryl reeve, is opting for experience as the team aims to bring home its eighth consecutive gold medal. here with his thoughts is dan dockage. good morning, dan. this --
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>> good horning. will: -- at first blush, outrageous. and almost everyone who has seen this news has responded similarly, outrageous. so let's start with this. on the basketball court, on the merits, dan, is caitlin clark an olympian? >> well, i think so. but i'm not going to lie to you, i don't know every woman in the if wnba. i mow this -- i know this, trout thing diana -- out there at a 41 careers old for her sixth gold medal doesn't do anything to grow the game, and all i've heard for years is pay attention to us, love on us, and now you have a real opportunity. i'm not going to lie and sit here and say, hey, look, i know that league. i didn't know anything about the league. i had a radio show, have a radio show in indy, and two summer ifs ago we did not say a word about the fever. will: right. >> so, sure, let's just go this route, everybody on that team deserves to be on that team. let's justs say that, i guess.
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and the ore thing, will, look, you, me, three retirees, my wife could win the gold medal against who they're playing. the next team is denmark, for crying out loud. i mean, grow the game. will: you, me ask and three retirees, we could win? it even rhymes. well, i'm going to answer my own question to you, dan, as well. caitlin clark is top 5 in assists, top 5 in scoring, or top 10 in scoring. the point is she's not a charity case. >>ing no. will: she's not a mascot. she is absolutely good enough to be on this olympic team, and then comes the issue i of why would you leave her off? now, we've heard for years, dan, well, we should be making what the men make, or we should be flying first class, or we should be getting more attention, you should market us. and here is the women's basketball world choosing to reject the attention that a is finally coming hair way by rejecting caitlin clark are. >> well, they had a great opportunity here because there
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is no basketball player -- i don't care about luca or jaylen brown or whoever's playing in the nba a final, there's no bigger draw right now in the world. i would argue in the world than caitlin clark. so here's this opportunity. look, let's be honest, most people didn't even know they had women's basketball in the summer olympics. now you have a chance to do this, and you don't take it. so, here, here's what i'm saying, everything about caitlin clark's success was about privilege whether it was white privilege, her being a straight, white girl. well, it stands to reason to ask, wait a second here, you know, this coach here is not a straight white girl. she's married or or to a woman. so is there something about caitlin charkh in the swellous city, the insecurity that kept her off the team? if you're going to say, well, all of this that she is given is because of this privilege, then it's reasonable to ask, is the insecurity, is being straight, white girl not allowing her to be on this team? i don't think it did, i honestly
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don't. but people are asking it, and i think rightfully so. but what a missed opportunity. they could have had more eyeballs on women's basketball which would have equated to going back to your season and finishing up even stronger. but now it's just same old-same old, no one's going to pay attention -- will: right. >> -- and that's a missed opportunity and a really dumb missed opportunity. will: i think you're exact ily right. all of those questions are very legitimate. what is the pettiness, the jealousy, what is the reason for the continued slights of caitlin clark, and then we just can't hear about it anymore. we can't hear about all of the need for equality, the need for better treatment. you can't hear about it when you reject your biggest moneymaker. he wassen gone from possibly a top 33 storyline in the olympics to nonexistent. -- top3. no one will care about women's olympic basketball. dan, we will watch don't at me, thanks so much for getting up early. >> thanks, my friend.
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will: rachel, over to you. rachel: sounds racist to me. all right, right now polls are open in 20 european countries as voters decide the e.u.'s next parliament. experts say frustration among europe's farmers over climate policies could affect several races across the continent. one retired professor saying the e.u. has been forcing farmers to be quite -- to be, quote with, part ecologist, part nature conservationist. election results are expected as soon as tomorrow. if. three people climbing a aboard virgin galactic's unity spacecraft yesterday launching into space and landing safely back on earth in just over an hour worth of time. the trip marking virgin galactic's second successful space flight. the company is planning the launch its delta class of commercial spaceships that are capable of flying eight missions per month within the next two years. right now a seat costs you just about $450,000.
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the third annual hang eight dog surfing competition taking over flagler beach, florida, on saturday. the event, which raises min money for a handful of dog-related nonprofits, drawing its largest crowd to date. two dozen local dog-themed businesses taking part in the event which also hosted, of course, a costume contest. those are your cutest headlines. all right. celebrating the stars and stripes. it's nationalling flag week, is we're -- national flag week, and we're making the perfect american flag next. ♪
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pete: we're back with a look at a few business headlines. another food chain is leaving california as blaze pizza is relocating its headquarters to atlanta. the pizza chain says the move will reduce its state the corporate tax rate significantly. about a third of its 300 locations are currently in california, but the company says its restaurant-level employees will not be affected. and bark air, a new luxury
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airline for dogs? it's being sued by westchester county over -- new york if, over allegedly violating county law. the suit just days after take off on their first ever flight seeks an injunction against bark which would prohibit it from operating in the airport's private jet area. bark air says they don't comment if on ongoing litigation but assured fans they don't believe this will impact their operations. that is an interesting headline. rachel: private jets for dogs? pete: if i guess. but it's being sued, i don't know. we need a follow up. rick: i like it. if i had the money, ill like it. pete: there you go. new day, see how this headline goes, there if yelp revealing americans are getting tired of tipping. mention of tipping-related phrases in reviews are up saying they've seen the term tip-flatoin nearly 400 to%, might be due to customers being more conscious of their tipsing
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due to high inflation. now, that one i can see. those are your headlines. will: national flag week starts this week, and we're celebrating with flag making on fox square. rachel: here to show us how to make the american flag is the other than of metal art of wisconsin and our show's friend, shane henderson. >> thanks for having us. will: it starts with this machine, which not a lot of us have. >> augusta is using this axiom precision c and c machine, great for a home or basement, and you can make flags just like we do. rick: it's like a video game. >> kind of, yeah. a controller, you can download files right off the internet -- will: put your designs in but then hand finish it at the end. >> yeah. there's a lot of hand work afterwards. pete: came off that, very cool. what else you got? >> so here's our, you know, breadbutter, you know, our hand-head if flags. wavy old glory -- what's her
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name? are. rick: yeah, what is her name? pete: oh, rosie the riveter. rachel: my gosh. i didn't see that with the picture, i'm sorry. i would have been able to help out. >> here's our concealment products, so these open up, great for father's day. pete: get anything designed to the front you want. >> yep, biomettic. thumb -- biometric. >> this is our stealth mirror, we'll skip over that -- pete: okay. >> we'll go over here to the kids -- pete: so you don't need a machine for these flags. >> no, these are safe chemicals that do patina a on the steel. we're using vinyl strikes, and they're applying the chemicals that are safe to use, and it looks like that flag right there when they're all done. if. pete: ends unlooking like this. rachel: so do you sell a kit is so kids can do this?
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>> yeah. it's available on web site. rachel: what a great idea for fourth of july. >> can and the it's super safe too. pete: in that one looks kind of done. >> she's got to peel her stars and pray some more chemicals -- rick: if she waits longer, does it become more a patina'd -- >> yeah, if you leave it on too long, it turns black. pete: i have one of these in my office. i think i have five of your things, shane. how many years ago did you tart doing this? >> 2013 we started, and you had us on in 2019 and changed everything for us, so thank you very much. will: is if we're going to see what happens with the mirror? >> yeah. hold on one second. this is a stealth mirror. hit it with your phone app -- [laughter] rachel: look at that. it's like a gangster's paradise. [laughter] if? >> yeah, it is. ask it's got printed --
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[inaudible] that's the new -- printed foam so we can do patriotic foam -- pete: will, you got the cash. what else is in there? will: i got the cash. [laughter] rachel: pete might make that exchange. pete: i might, actually. >> back here we have our big giant butcher block -- pete: and this is freedom cabinet if.com? >> yep, free shipping, father's day -- rachel: shane, i'm going to do my best vanna if white. we've with -- vanna white. pete: keep making those flags. rachel: thanks, shane. ♪ if rocking in the usa ♪ hi, i'm eileen. i live in vancouver, washington and i write mystery novels. as i was writing, i found that i just wasn't sharp and that doesn't work when you're writing a mystery
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you know, i spend a lot of time thinking about dirt. at three in the morning. any time of the day. what people don't know is that not all dirt is the same. you need dirt with the right kind of nutrients. look at this new organic soil from miracle-gro. everybody should have it. it worked great for us. this is as good as gold in any garden. if people only knew that it really is about the dirt. you're a dirt nerd. huge dirt nerd. i'm proud of it! [ryan laughs]
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