tv Kennedy FOX Business October 20, 2021 7:00pm-8:00pm EDT
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encouraging people to take 2000-mile journey to the southwest border they are encouraging people to take, families are separated like never before, minors dropped over the wall and over the border to fend for themselves. >> good to see you, thank you for joining us. you've been watching the evening at it, thank you for watching, during a second tomorrow night. ♪♪ kennedy: all my garden, big news. buckle up, we even have motley crew on the show coming up in a little bit. a great new book out and we are going to get right into this. first, a potentially major break in the search for brian bonner, the fbi this afternoon announced they found human remains in a reserve near the family home. they also found apparently his backpack and notebook. so far, they have not said whether the body is brian.
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props have been looking for him for over a month, a person of interest in connection with the murder of gabby petito. there have been sightings as far as right as canada cuba but maybe he was in the swamp the whole time. investigators explained by the haven't made the discovery sooner. >> earlier today investigators found human remains along with personal items such as a backpack and notebook belonging to ryan laundrie. these items were found in an area up until recently, have been underwater. evidence response team is on scene using all available forensic resources to process the area. it's likely will be unseen for several days. kennedy: an autopsy to determine whether it is brian, tattoos could make identification easier, maybe. the problem is, if it is brian,
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that means his body may have been out there in the hot muggy florida wilderness more than a month. so where does the investigation go from here? joining me to break down from fbi agent, welcome back. >> thank you. kennedy: tell me what we saw because it wasn't much. obviously the press and gabby petito's family and law enforcement across the country have a lot more questions for the director, michael mcpherson, he was brief and didn't take questions. why was that? >> the are at the beginning of finding human remains and he talked about the evidence response team which i was part of for 20 years. what the government response team is doing right now is the area completely cordoned off. they are taking a record of every single thing they find. they're going to try to determine how long he would hold up there and does all kinds of
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ways to do that. they may be looking for human excrement. it sounds ridiculous but they are going to see, has he been camped in this one particular space for a long period of time or did he just show up for a couple of days? the water table is a big deal, if we've talked about, we've all heard about the water levels dropping and that's why they found him so even if they did lurch the area before, they might not have found him. the fact that he was found in water is interesting the fact that there is think they can't identify him initially tells us a lot. so even though he did allow questions, there are many things that can be extrapolated from what wasn't said. kennedy: yes and we are told it wasn't an entire body they found. if you're talking about whether or not he was in water, does that mean the elements or time
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may have caused the most decomposition? >> it's probably a combination of both. animal activity, they always go toward the softest parts of the body so areas like the eye or if there's a cut summer, faster the animals and bugs initially do their work and they just go from there. also coyotes tend to drag human remains. we had a case one time when we were looking for a body in the angeles national forest and anthropologists came out from usc and they told us very often coyotes will try to remove different parts of the body move to different areas so if they have a part of the body, they are going to look for obviously the other parts if they were
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dragged in their bite let's say an alligator, that's an animal that can do quite a bit of damage and will drag a body toward the water but there are all kinds of animals and bugs that can do a lot of damage in a short period of time let alone a long period of time with hot water or hot weather and water. kennedy: what happens to the case in terms of due process now? do they just come out and say they found the evidence we have, we believe brian laundrie killed gabby petito? how does his potential death change how they frame the case? >> i think the first thing that's going to happen right now is you mentioned earlier about the journal they found, that journal is going to be a treasure trove of information and that information may drive exactly what you are talking about. you may confess in that journal. he may talk about what happened and will try to deflect blame
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obviously because i think it's clearly the type of person he has but there will be all kinds of notes in there. if let's say toward the end he was hungry and delirious, god only knows what he wrote in that journal. kennedy: if you read the book into the wild, toward the end of his life, it was eliminated. our his parents in trouble if they were in fact communicating with him on a. our phone and lying to the fbi about it? >> yes, i think his parents are in trouble and they absolutely were communicating with him and i think he had his burner phone with his solar charged -- solar charger. he may even have been communicating with his parents directly but i think it's interesting to note as soon as he stopped or shortly after he stopped, that's when his parents decided to engage with law enforcement. kennedy: interesting. who dropped the ball in terms of letting him out of their sight?
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>> in retrospect, someone should have probably kept a closer eye on him but i know from experience having a surveillance crew on a present 24 hours a day is extremely manpower intensive but when we think of the manpower intensity we've seen since he's been missing and nothing compares to that, we are talking millions of dollars, i would say. kennedy: absolutely right and it's easy given how these high-profile cases go, to do a cost-benefit analysis and they should have done that in the beginning. thank you for your time. appreciate it. >> thank you. kennedy: even if it's not brian, the case is not necessarily closed. we still have no idea whether or not he had help from his parents or god knows who else. we don't know if he killed himself. if it was an accident and we still don't know why gabby was murdered so will her family ever get closure or at least the answers they deserve? tonight's panel, cofounder and
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executive director, daniel turner is here, i believe he's in washington d.c. democrat strategist, radio host and fox news contributor, leslie marshall. foundation for economic education content manager and host of the base podcast, it is hannah. welcome back to everybody including me. so glad to be here. thank you. daniel, what did you take away from what you've heard about some of the discoveries today? >> one of the interesting things the investigators said they found the remains of five other individuals in fact hopefully closure. kennedy: i was fascinated by that as well. >> you mentioned gabby's family get closure? there are five other families and multiple other families with no closure and i'm glad the case is getting attention for her psaki, her family's psaki but who are these. five people? from social media kits the drive
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fbi resources? kudos for gabby's family for bringing it to national attention and making it a national story but there are lots of missing people, men and women, young and old who don't get any of this coverage and i wonder how the fbi allocates resources depending upon fame or fortune. kennedy: they have enough money and power, maybe this can do a world of good. maybe even if there is some public interest in some of these cold cases that social media can help revitalize them and either bring some of these people home or bring closure to families left in limbo for sometimes years. >> i was watching something recently online, they were helping solve cold cases so i think it can do a lot of good. i'm glad you brought up multiple bodies there. we don't know that this is brian. obviously forensics will determine that. we don't know if it is brian, if
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he took his life, if a gator got him or somebody else got him. you asked about closure for the family, the only way they will get closure if it is him as if he left a diary or journal or a note behind and if it's left, if his family didn't get to that, if there is. kennedy: his family, it seems as though they spotted a bag and they put an object in the bag which is weird they were out there just sort of poking around picking up evidence themselves, hannah. >> it's very weird, the timing is very on, we certainly can't trust anything coming out of the parents mouths. more in public but the cases showing us is how incompetent law enforcement actually gives despite all of their spying on us and how big the government is, despite all of the punitive mess we have for people in our prison system the end of the day, we are still really bad at preventing and solving crime. consistency social media sleuths
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that are able to solve crimes the up podcast true crime documentary since actual law enforcement so if i go missing, i told my parents they should go to social media versus law enforcement. they let him get away is inexcusable and no cents. kennedy: marine brought up some great points, the amount of money, the amount of manpower, the number of people employed by federal and local law enforcement who have tried to find this guy completely dwarfs what it would have cost to keep an eye on him because daniel, it's always the boyfriend or husband. >> and you said you seen sightings of him all around the world, not all bob tries look alike. i find that offensive. just because you saw a bald guy doesn't mean it's brian laundrie. kennedy: been accused several times and now you can breathe a sigh of relief which i think is fantastic. i hope people keep talking about this. it's not like one of those
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stories where people stop talking and stop worrying about women in abusive relationships that just go missing. their names and our stories should not be forgotten and if that is the legacy here, that's -- her life has meant something more than even the people who knew her could have imagined so i know it's dark and a hard day especially for the potatoes because they still deserve the answers. party panelists going to stick around because they are fantastic. look at this, pressure prices keep going up and up and up. if you're trying to feed a family of four, good luck to you. you will have to eat one of your own. it's turning into a horror show for president biden. poll numbers to prove it. senior fellow economics at the cato institute. he's going to break it all down coming up next. ♪♪
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to feel the tension. prices reportedly up 4.6 last year,%, but so bad for keto leaders. >> can't afford half the stuff. >> going out there. it affects people living on the edge. >> it's impacting our entire lives. kennedy: /, most people are living on the edge giving inflationary pinch, they are not sitting around waiting in their office. it's turning into a big mess for the president because it's not going away anytime soon. the president's approval rating at 37%. it's the lowest of his presidency. how much higher prices go and how long could this last? joining me to discuss cato institute, he just froze, we
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lost him. i'm going to -- i will play the part of scott in this. hello, scott. oh wait, he's back. yeah, you are there. i was going to have to seeing. every 6-year-old gets excited when i sing that. scott, it went from being transitory to now long-term which has led somehow into this supply chain crisis. how do they blend together and when will we really start feeling it? >> you have two types of inflation we talk about. you have long-term inflation which is mainly monetary policy. the fed and easy money and that leads to long sustained increase in really all prices, not just a
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few quick at the grocery store or christmas gifts but really everything goes up and wages go up to match that kent goes up more and you get this weight price and has to step in and shut everything down and you could have a recession. the other type of inflation we hear about is more about sustained price pressures in specific and that's where things are looking rough and a lot of at the beginning of the pandemic was about economic reopening in used cars being expensive and hotel and airfare but now it's into the supply chain issue. in that case, you have a lot of demand in the u.s., monetary fiscal policy reason in reopening reasons and running . kennedy: you were just getting good. just going to have to take a flamethrower like to have in his guitar. i'm going to have to shoot all
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of your computer set up because i think that you are living in a mole hole somewhere in virginia. oh, look at that. there's a picture. he's coming up in just a little bit. some really smart things. you're going to have to give your children's body parts for christmas. that's the only solution. thank you, scott, wherever you are. multigroup base opening up about his transformation from mere mortal to rock legend. he joins me in moment. ♪♪
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ride. what does it take to go from a rumbling musician in seattle to rockstar and music icon? my next guest is all that and so much more. navigating from wild childhood to holler at breaking through international rock legend motley crew but his story doesn't end there. running we could talk about how he began as motley crew basis and cofounder and author of his latest book, the first 21 how i became making six. it's nice to see you again. >> how are you doing? courtesy of. kennedy: i got to prevent -- you guys headlined the music festival. >> a wild night, wasn't it? it was crazy. kennedy: it's always a wild night but you had an incredibly difficult childhood which i would put right up there john's childhood. your parents split up when you
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are very young. you have a sister born with down syndrome, your mom apparently decided to give her to someone else to raise and i was in tears reading that part of your book. talk about your sister, she died at 39, you guys look identical. you talk about the recipe for making a rockstar, it takes a child with a lot of imagination, you add neglect, abandonment shaken up and there you have it. have you found other rock stars have the same difficulty you had growing up? >> i think a lot of people that deal with traumatic situations, go through struggles and stuff and sometimes end up being extremely creative and turn it into positives. part of the writing process of this book was to go back and i
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learned some things about the story, my story that were not true so i got to find out about my dad who wasn't one 100% about guy. i've been sober 20 years. when i went through rehab and with a message like that is an alcoholic and i'm an alcoholic, imagine what it feels like now to be living a life in sobriety and find out my dad was not an alcoholic. this information was downloaded into my brain. the other thing i got to find out during the writing of the book, i had a lot of really great years as a kid being raised by my grandparents living in the country. kennedy: yes, your grandmother and your grandfather. tommy to take you fishing, sound like he was an incredible influence and then you've got cash this is a great turn in the story because you have a single
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month and first of all, i've got to talk about your mom because she's obviously very attractive and compelling because she had a series of interesting boyfriends including a musician -- one time played with frank sinatra and i didn't read anything about your book so the part that blew my mind was your mom had this boyfriend, the only boyfriend she had was interested in you and he was on the floor playing with you and he would tell you jokes and you thought he was so funny. he was richard and he said he was in touch with his inner child. please tell the audience who that richard was. >> richard pryor, one of the most mind blowing iconic trailblazing comedians of all time but when my mom was dating richard, it was probably 1964 or so, somewhere around there, i was about five or six years old and i didn't see color or know it was an interracial relationship and i also didn't know that was anything other
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than richard coming over to the house spending time with me which i really enjoyed. made me laugh a lot and it was later in my life where my mom was like we had a hard time, we get dirty clothes. i was like i just didn't understand all of that. it was interesting and in the 70s when i'm coming up and discovering my favorite bands and playing stuff, all of a sudden wow, that richard pryor'. mind blowing stuff. i haven't told a lot of people and as i was writing the book, i was like i kind of forgot about it to be honest. i'm 62 years old, those first 21 years were a long time especially the first, five or six or seven years, a lot of that to be told also with my family's voice so my aunt and uncle telling me about that and how richard really loved my mom.
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my mom was a bit of a wild child and she disappeared and he was trying to find her all the time, where is she? he wants to be with her and it was just kind of the way it was with my mom. men came and went and it was really my grandpa was more of a father figure for me. kennedy: then you have to live with your uncle don and his family, the president of capitol record and you didn't know it. he was like hey, do you want to watch the olympics? you are like one of the olympics? it's like you're going from wyoming to idaho seattle and finally you make your way of life but one of the things i love -- well, there are two things. one is how you discovered just caskey and that influenced your rock writing and writing shout at the devil and having that
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foresight, do you still read thought to inspire you when you are writing now? >> absolutely. for me, very early on i remember with my mom and we were driving around los angeles, i remember hearing the song downtown. it was a story about everything that happened downtown and as a kid, my brain was like wow, where is this place? then jimmy dean with big bad john and those stories and later it became dylan's and writers like we talk about writers like ian hunter and i started being drawn to either authors or lyricists or poets whose telling stories. as i started to develop, i liked the pistols but i liked t rex
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and fixing them altogether but i don't want to have moon june fire desire lyrics. it became kind of an interesting thread in my life and eventually it influenced me and became a big part of motley crew's career. if you look at girls girls girls, we are on the wild side, girls girls girls, a simple message but if you go into the lyrics, it's pretty telling about what's happening at that time and how they were, documenting hollywood at its worst. [laughter] kennedy: you guys were there and were so foundational in the sense coming into a new era in the 80s and i moved to los angeles in 1990 and i remember that time before alternative had taken hold before crunch had a foothold and that scene was
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massive in reading your book and hearing your voice and if you don't want to pick up the book, get on audible. it just adds that much more of a layer but one of my favorite stories, he wanted to be an and so badly, you have friends to practice in rick's house seattle going to roosevelt high school and you went to a music store, ask when application info in the back, he showed up with an empty guitar case and sold off the wall and put it in the guitar case and walked out. that is so punk rock, i loved that. >> there is a part in the book where i was breaking down all of these jobs i did and some things like that where in this case i sold the guitar because i needed one because we had no money to buy a guitar or a base and a lot of cases i did petty crime we are to jobs and stuff and i gave
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it to my wife and she goes i didn't know i was married to such a criminal and what was missing in the story, i had to go back to adjust it, we were doing these weird little sneaky things in the 70s selling illegal light bulbs online. it goes on and on and on but it was to afford gas to go to band rehearsal, have a bigger drum than anybody else on the strip. it was always about the big picture which was someday being one of the biggest fans in the world. accidentally in the book is a little bit of a roadmap to success for both people if you read and you get what you get and there's a lot of quitters out there. you've just got to keep pushing and pushing and whether it
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family issues where people don't believe in your vision or don't believe in you, you got to keep pushing and pushing. very few people. kennedy: motley crew is proof of that. i got to work with you at 987 l.a., you have incredible work ethic and such an entertaining story that ends up with you in a giant white rolls-royce with red interior so you've done something right. thank you so much. >> thank you. kennedy: easily the most high-profile governors race in the u.s., the battle for virginia. wait until you see what a reported. he got so mad. that's next. ♪♪
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bellwether is important is virginia, and in place? the race is very important for the democrat on the front of well they were thinking, it would be underwater, they are athlete and patina and other state with a flip from the northern part of the state are democrat, southern armor reported kind of a race between joe biden smothers and donald trump lovers, not just democrats and republicans. i want to say something about the interview because henry, i interviewed on my own television show but radio show. there have been times where we have it visually, there are times i ask a question and answer in there like okay, thank you. mike but wait there assistant told me 20 minutes and there like no, ten, their schedule is crazy, we have to cut it short. i didn't see it as he was getting up, up because of the
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question, i saw him look at a handler inside we've got to go he answered questions prior to that but i didn't take it. kennedy: and he started talking about him being an anti- vax or trump an office which is not necessarily helping him, that kind of stuff and i know gavin newsom has had success with that is recall election in california but when you've got parents showing up in droves as all board meetings and former governor who want the job thing parents shouldn't be in the classroom, they want clarification and i don't think they feel they've had that. plus hannah, like those of us who follow every day, he is gas
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machine. >> he is a walking cast machine. i wouldn't want to answer these because his policies are losing interest. the race is something democrats are trying to make about joe biden versus trump but it's not. it comes down to education, the first companies in the country will have a say in what happened to them and their families and children over the past year end a half and a lot of cause for people against parent involvement with their own children's education or school choice or options in this country and lockdowns, asking children eight hours a day and forcing max back seems to be concerned because we know they are unpopular and when people get the chance to speak up, they will. we see people waking up to education system, great opportunity for change and that's what the left has to be a because they are on the wrong side of this issue. kennedy: fair on the wrong side when it comes to education in so many aspects and that is the worry. it seems like it's the bad political judgment to try and keep parents out of the education conversation and when
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parents get a with of that, they start to get nervous because they've already been investigating all the other options, looking at private schools and charter schools and homeschooling for over a year end a half now. if they have teachers unions controlling politicians saying things like we don't want parents to be involved, i think that is where you draw a line and it not good political inflammation. >> it's not an school choice as a winning issue for anyone who embraces it regardless of their political party. parent do want that choice. i don't begrudge him, he's a wealthy man, i went to our school, my parents had that luxury and it was part of their faith upbringing but a lot of families don't have a choice and
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there are families whose kids are second the schools and take not only will you we not give you the choice to go to another school but we won't let you know what's happening in the classroom. that is scary for parents and he's on the wrong side of this argument. parents standing up and fighting back is going to cost them the election probably. kennedy: so how does it turn out? the polls are tightening, how does he turn it around? >> if school choice for virginia or parents across the board, he wouldn't see governor abbott having to look for another job in texas, a red state with some ideas and jumping would be leading, school choice would be leading, it would not be tied in the reason is people not reality. no governor of any state makes one 100% decisions in public school system in that state, i don't care what state you are in school districts, certainly have power. parent to have power clearly school choice is not the end-all be-all answer for every parent. ask people taking their school to private and they haven't seen the success and programs they want in the school system and
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they are not comfortable taking that out. kennedy: thought a symmetric you will see over and over and when you include the discussion, they are very happy with charter schools, very happy when they do have a choice and when they have been completely underserved by teachers unions and the public school systems. it is the end all because they will and all interfaced with public school because it done their children set such a great disservice. daniel, and hannah, tropical storm is next. ♪♪
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a new study claims dogs can develop adhd which explains why they keep eating their homework. that's a hunger for knowledge. this is topical storm, topic number one. apple is selling a piece of cloth for just $19. one more way apple can help you literally come from riches to rags. the new apple publishing path which apple recommends using exclusively to wipe your devices and you can wipe your devices for free by forgetting your password ten times general. personally i'm holding out for the piece of cloth to promax.
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that one makes the cloth look like an old sock. apple breakfast made from nonabrasive material which is what separates it from the new dave chapelle special. and it comes with the apple logo logo blazoned in the center. just don't peel it off or you will find the sham wow motor underneath. i look back i. topic number two. hooters employees are complaining their new uniforms are too skimpy. no problem, ladies. you can always buy an extra apple cloth for $19 and-inch. the uniform change is an effective, to include the iconic orange shorts to make them smaller tighter. the average american is becoming the exact opposite of that. hooters waitresses post videos of themselves wearing the bottoms on tik tok complaining
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they look more like underwear than shorts. that's a lot of. the video, millions of views to show how popular it is to fightr servers. [laughter] that's fine. i just made that up. what they really said, don't get your panties in a bunch and get your but donkey don't back to work. topic number four. move over, bisexual man. as a heartthrob ready to save our lives, turn us on. the new batman sign robert pattison. a different kind of batman in
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the twilight movies and the new movie explains a generous doing or using his resources to save the world from evil. finally, an honest movie about president trump and a serial killer who forces batman to solve riddles and tweets the answers using # to call me tuesday before time runs out. it diabolical. in the end, the greatest riddle of all, why haven't bisexuals superman ever hit on him? how much spandex and nipples after showed to get some attention? the rest of the movie calling superman and hanging up. gotham city is completely destroyed. i'll be back with canada dog. ♪♪ ♪♪
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kennedy: time to show off your dutiful canada. the only dog who loves your dog is much as you do, # tell me about your dog. i'll make your dog famous. first off, ranger, i love ranger. next up, wayne sent australian shepherd, where you going, peter? texas. this is luke. a good boy. we have here, two dogs, jj and
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lucy, two of my favorite names. they look like great logs. having some fun like iran is is carolyn's little allie named eugene. you are adorable. you're definitely cute enough to be in canada as a writer, why? are going to want that other document requests river gloves and squeaky toys i do, too, and i love your ear. next week of kennedog. tweet me your best photos of your dog enclosures you hash
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thank you for watching the last day. our a good guy making super gay. follow me on twitter instagram. tomorrow night on the, and glory at the end of i know you are saying, but if i can't show? kenneth the are. - holy cow. all of a sudden we've got a chunk of gold right in these grooves around here. right there. - [narrator] veteran miner rick dale is panning a sample from an abandoned gold mine called the mohave. - [rick] i am shocked that we're finding a nugget already. i wish i had a bell to ding.
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