Skip to main content

tv   Kennedy  FOX Business  June 6, 2022 7:00pm-8:00pm EDT

7:00 pm
what assignment the officers are doing than is a lot bigger chance for corruption to exist. we got to have checks and balances. elizabeth: brandon judd, come back soon, always great to have you on. you have been watching "the evening edit" on foxbusiness. that does it for us, thank you for watching. we hope you have a good evening and join us again tomorrow night. ♪♪ kennedy: look at this california to biggest cities being swallowed whole by crime and homelessness and when dangerous people commit crimes, they get wrist slapped when they should get ten slapped. radical synthesis of the age as taking a recall tomorrow if not only that of san francisco's have enough to recall itself is come from within the democrat party. he's in deep yogurt. sure he dropped into office on a wave of women will justice
7:01 pm
reform but at what cost? people actively maliciously hurting others are set free while victims cry for help and irredeemable know they can state with impunity and big cities like since fiscal, crops and the azar at odds and when police are unsupported, they give up and no longer actively service the community most in need. san francisco homicides are up 37%, burglaries up 45% and 48% san francisco -- done done, san franciscan polls said they plan to leave the city for good. it doesn't matter if every progressive d.a. in the country parish with good intentions. the citizens they serve are drowning in crime, feces and lawlessness that affects their quality of life. these days are running cities into the ground and now they are
7:02 pm
mayors, cops and exhausted electorate are finally standing up where they can. everyone deserves to live a good life but those who extinguish others rights do not deserve to force the pendulum in the opposite direction because those tasks of peaking piece miscarried their duties. hopefully putin will be followed to recall purgatory by los angeles d.a. george gascon, the title could be an acronym for dumb. he's another well-intentioned what blank or in the toilet who rationalized crime spikes, homeless and cameras in the suburbs and distress from police his hands are tied from handcuffing people like hit-and-run teen who only barely failed to kill a mother and her baby because he had bad names. that kid is going to summer camp for five months, not every state has the power of the recall as they do in california but when
7:03 pm
joy bell lost residents, californians are beyond blessed to unring the wrong they committed at the ballot and that's the memo. imagine being too liberal for california. that these two dumb dumb das in a nutshell. will learn his fate tomorrow and with george gascon will find out in november whether or not he gets the boot as well so where did these boneheads go wrong? former u.s. assistant attorney general and candidate or attorney brother and candidate for california attorney general nate hochman joins me now. welcome, nathan. >> great to be on. elizabeth: . kennedy: what is it about these two das? essentially they are the poster children for so much on wrong in the criminal justice reform and what they are doing is setting the movement back by being so
7:04 pm
soft on people who permit atrocious felonies and truly need to do others harm. >> that's exactly right. with the das have done is adopt a far left criminal justice philosophy that believes violent serious offenders should not be put in jail to the full extent of the law and then they should be let out before they completed their entire sentence. they believe crime should not have consequences, you could get arrested in the morning and have no cash bail and released in the afternoon. if this was working, terrific but these statistics don't lie. we've been faced with exploding violent treat crime in california all over the state, homelessness at an all-time high and even fentanyl poisoning that will kill thousands of californians this year that didn't even exist years ago. each one of these das have gone in the complete wrong direction. kennedy: and you pointed out in
7:05 pm
2014 these cities were among some of the safest big cities in the country and now in 2022 they are the monk the least and people feel that way so the perception of people don't have the full safety they should wherever they live, that affects whether or not people moved out and they are really starting to. san francisco lost 7% of its population during the pandemic but according to polling, must have the city wants to leave so if you become california's attorney general, what can you actually do? it's nice to go on tv and say things and claim you're going to solve problems, we know politicians can make things worse, you're not a democrat, how could you make it better? >> here's how i can make it better. under the california constitution, california attorney general chief law enforcement officer of the
7:06 pm
state, that means you're basically a super d.a. and you can come into any jurisdiction, any one of the 58 counties and take over prosecution and believe that prosecutor is not doing his or her job. i'd do that in los angeles with gascon, san francisco with putin. what they have created is lawlessness where one person can steal $90 run out of the store that's led to three people running out of the store, 80 out of a nordstrom, smash and grab robberies, home robberies, double digit rides homicide. i'd stop this rise of lawlessness and turn it into a spiral of lawfulness where we bring back the idea police should be partners with us and fund police forces common sense notion that crime should have consequences. kennedy: how do you get the police back on the same page as the d.a.? that's not something just unique to san francisco and los angeles, that's happening across the country but that's what's creating so much chaos and lack
7:07 pm
of safety in communities where they need to be able to access cops when they called 911 and you can't do that if you don't have proactive policing and you can't have proactive policing if police are demonized by the aspect of government that there such to support them. >> and that's just it, you need to reverse the demonization as well and let the police know from the first day i was in office, nathan hoffman is there attorney general for california, police have a partner in sacramento. i believe that would unlock the police officers and deputy district attorneys who want to do their job. i'm sure you know the statistic in los angeles 97.8% of the deputy district attorney's voted to support the recall of their boss george gascon, they just need a california attorney general to unlock their ability to do their job so the police level and district attorney level, i would be that
7:08 pm
california attorney general. kennedy: we will see what happens because i don't think it's looking good for george gascon's because crime isn't going to go in the direction favorable to citizens of los angeles over the summer into the fall and they will be fed up with it. add to that the national problems affecting them like high inflation and people are sick of it and a lot of cities don't have a recall mechanism. they do in california, it hasn't been enough to keep politicians on their toes and in their lanes but i hope there is a big push for rationality away from these emotional list das like gascon and boudin, thank you, nathan. kennedy: it's not just california with bozo prosecutors as i'm sure you know, they are everywhere. baltimore, portland, seattle, chicago and just about every other progressive hub.
7:09 pm
all cities that have seen recent crime spikes. philadelphia suffered horrific shooting this weekend, one former cop is laming their liberal d.a. >> these criminals are so emboldened by the district attorney who doesn't prosecute, he lets them out of prison early, they should be in prison, they should be awaiting court trials, they are letting them out with no or low bail or dropping charges. kennedy: is there a chance booting and gascon could get the boot and some of these others have to go back with got american majority ceo, former presidential writer for george w. bush, ned ryun is here. we got fox news contributor radio host democrat strategist and tried california, lesley marshall is back. from the foundation for economic education, a policy correspondent and cofounder of base politics brad polumbo.
7:10 pm
also, welcome everybody. ned, i will start with you. how much is riding on the recall tomorrow and what does it mean for progressive d.a. movement that swept misguided cities we formally loved? >> i think it's going to be an interesting test of how the people of san francisco are going to respond should also give voice to the rest of the people in urban areas they are not going to stand for this anymore. it's amazing in the face of rising crime everybody is more conservative because it's common sense. the one thing you see across the country, arise and return to common sense where the american people think they should have to take community, there should be law and order, they should feel safe in their community whether they go to their place of worship or get groceries but forget about these local das and not prosecutor fairly serious crimes, let's focus on the homicide rates. l.a. county has gone up 94% from
7:11 pm
2019 to 2021, new york county has gone up 50 course --%. in chicago has gone up one 100% from 2019 to 2021. maybe just maybe people want to be saved in their communities and not be afraid of being murdered but your previous guests make great points, there are no consequences, if they get up the next day or if they get out in short-term, why would they be deterred to not do the same thing in the future? got to get back where we uphold the law and punish lawbreakers. kennedy: my fear is because i agree with the sentiment of criminal justice reform but my fear is we are going to go so far in the other direction and we know what can happen when a wave of law and order sweeps in, people's rights can be compromised long-term and you see generations of over incarceration and that's what
7:12 pm
the das are doing, forcing the pendulum in the opposite direction. will californians get it right with these recalls? >> well, it depends. i'm not sure. i'm a liberal, a democrat, i am not part of the progressive liberal part, i'm a centrist and moderate like a majority of my party and that's what you will see you tomorrow and i think we will see it not just in california but i am concerned exactly about what you said, you must have read my mind, the pendulum. it goes right and people forget and that it goes left and he goes back. most people and numbers are happier in the middle but let's talk about numbers. whether you have a democrat, mayor, democrat d.a. or republican mayor d.a. homicides are up. ask him, even though i'm not a
7:13 pm
fan of his, people want to blame him but look at his belly track record, it's on par almost identical with his predecessor. we also see rises in homicide, car theft and cities like san francisco, san diego and you don't have das like san francisco and l.a. proposition 47 part of the reason for this, proposition 47 was in place before these guys with district attorney's in the cities and obviously misdemeanors are a problem, bigger problem for gascon, i think you know this, the problem is that he doesn't want to prosecute anything tied to homelessness or addiction and it's the misdemeanors becoming a huge problem and a lot of people on the left angry. kennedy: it's not just the misdemeanors. they want to do anything about homelessness but when you have women sexually assaulted in homeless camps, you have to help them. you have to get people treatment and keeping them out of prison doesn't mean they are naturally going to get the help they need so they themselves can have a good life so brad, they may not
7:14 pm
be causing the crime spikes but they are not making it any better. >> certainly not and i'm sure there are a number of things i disagree with but i think we might be focusing on specific das too much because yes it's a q in these cities but homicide is up 30% nationwide and they are still not that far from national averages but is going up across the board and why is that? we know the underlying root causes of crime one of the biggest ones is economic instability, inflation time and time again has proven to cause crime. we lacked people's jobs down, close to their schools and ruined lives, we've created a desperation and i think that's a huge role in the crime search across the country and these cities. are the das helping? probably not in a lot of ways but i don't want to submit the forest to the tree.
7:15 pm
kennedy: but the problem is and you are right about the correlation between the pandemic, joblessness and hopelessness but we are going into a recession. we have inflationary environment, we have more jobs and people looking for jobs, that's going to reverse. you think there's a crime spike now, what happens when it's really, really bad and you have people like gascon and boudin and mike schmidt and portland under ted wheeler, what happens when those people are in charge when the bottom falls out of the economy some degree society? that's what scares me, there's lack of rationality and the political philosophy doesn't care about the fallout. luckily few of us around here do including the party panel who are sticking around. much more later in the show. coming up, gas prices are skyrocketing, president biden planning a trip to saudi arabia to beg for help and starting a
7:16 pm
new green energy push, he's using defense production act for everything. what is he doing except making us energy dependent? more than any other country. he'll be here to break that down next. ♪♪
7:17 pm
7:18 pm
7:19 pm
7:20 pm
kennedy: i'm just tweeting tweeting on the lawns twitter, look and see what i tweeted @kennedynation just for you. gas prices hit an all-time high again. $4.86 a gallon in the u.s. and dublin president davis president biden took office. what is the administration doing to help? instead of decreasing domestic oil production, president planning a trip to saudi arabia to beg them to open their spigots. here at home he invoked defense production act to accelerate clean energy manufacturing which he hoped would transition the u.s. off fossil fuel. yeah, that's going to happen in a year. how high will gas prices get? president biden chasing windmills. joining me now, energy expert
7:21 pm
and power the future executive director daniel turner, welcome back, daniel. >> thank you for having me, great to be here. kennedy: if the president isn't going to saudi arabia on bended knee baking the kingdom for dirty gas, he's blaming boudin's a few blame them, you certainly don't have to acknowledge your failures on energy policy. >> he is acknowledging he's committed a mere grade regulations, punishment of the investors in the fossil fuel industry, land access denied. this is a cause-and-effect, lots of causes, he doesn't want to deal with the effects but saudi arabia is interesting because it does acknowledge that we need a supply increase. he recognizes the best way the only way to lower prices is increase the amount of oil in the global market but why don't
7:22 pm
the saudi's drill more for $120 a barrel and not alaska or new mexico or america? he never says anything about increasing america production, he will say things like i'm going to lower gas prices but never once talks about increasing oil production in america because they won't allow him to do that. kennedy: are talks about increasing oil refinery because that's another aspect shut down and this is one area where you have to give him credit for being honest because he basically claimed during the campaign in 2020 that he would shut down the fossil fuel industry and in order to appease the green, they have said they are at war with them and they don't like the industry, everyone else can learn code, they can build windmills so we've been sold this dream and part of me wants that dream to be realized. i want us to have clean plentiful energy sources but right now, isn't green energy just as dirty as traditional fossil fuels? >> one of the great lies they've
7:23 pm
convinced the american people and most members of congress. they convince them that fossil fuel are inherently bad or dirty and that's a falsehood. second, they've convinced people if we have wind and solar we don't need fossil fuel and literally millions of products made from fossil fuel, look at food prices and how it's related to fertilizers and nitrates which are a byproduct of natural gas. even the price of wind and solar themselves, because of fossil fuels they are made from. kennedy: and your energy grid is fueling your soul solar panels, guess what fueling the energy grid? fossil fuels. we are not there yet, they have not admitted the ramp to energy independence mostly green takes a lot longer than what we've got but we need a pipeline even if
7:24 pm
it is with oil that has to be refined, open more refineries. allow more fleeces it is the president disingenuous when he says it offered 70% more leases in the government and they don't want? >> totally disingenuous. the obama administration played the same games with the industry and the america people. this is the very first step in a long likely regulated process bringing oil to market. anyone trying to put a dent on the house how much government you need so then you have access to the land does not mean you have access to drill, extract, bring to market etc. the biden administration is right, there's not a lot of investment in this industry right now because of the stair terrible investment because the industry knows the biden administration will come after them and punish them every step of the way so sadly does not investment because why bother?
7:25 pm
kennedy: and as you pointed out, they are not looking for endangered species when they build solar and wind farms. they could disrupt if you put a short haired there it, that would be very sad but god forbid someone wants to drill for the black gold, they are shut down in pariah. good to talk to you, thank you so much. coming up, the pandemic triggered so-called welsh migration. which states are losing the most people and tax dollars? which states are winning? where are people moving? are you a good tipper? a new survey suggests you are stingy. more before the pandemic, the panel returns to discuss next. ♪♪
7:26 pm
7:27 pm
7:28 pm
7:29 pm
behold, wealth migration is upon us. according to irs, data, high income earners are moving out of
7:30 pm
new york and california heading to low tax state like texas, florida and arizona. florida biggest winner gaining $24 billion in gross income but biggest loser, california, new york losing almost 20 billion each due to workers clean during the pandemic but with lockdowns basically over, have people stopped fleeing? of the going back to high tax havens? no. first four months of this year, thousands of new yorkers have moved to the sunshine shape so is everything better in florida? not in tampa bay where lightning will be crushed by rangers. party panel is back. ned ryun, lesley marshall, brad polumbo. what is driving people out of places like new york and california? i don't see the similarities? >> maybe people don't like being taxed to death but even more,
7:31 pm
having their money spent on government institutions, government employees i think are failing the people of various states. this got to be frustration, let's get out of here. my only problem is i don't want people leaving blue state going to red states and taking their blue state politics with them to their new state of florida or tennessee or arizona. leave your blue state politics behind because that's what turned your state in a terrible place to live in the first place. don't take it with you to the new state and if they will, i'm fine with it. kennedy: as a californian, what say you? how different is your state now than before the pandemic? >> 1% of our population fled, 99% stayed and less fled in 2021 the 2020 but here's the deal, whether they are rich or not,
7:32 pm
cheaper home prices, three of the top five most expensive cities to buy real estate in the united states this year including the city i live in, so i get it. here's the problem so in texas you have locals complaining because rich people from california are coming in outbidding everybody for houses willing to pay cash so they are increasing property value which is already high and out of some people's reach already. kennedy: i don't know where you grew up, i grew up in oregon and the californians moved in when i was in elementary junior high and oregonians hated them and they had signs in their yard like go back to california. they were destroying the real estate market for locals. that's been happening for ages so where is this all going to land, brad? what are we going to see in terms of migration?
7:33 pm
will more people settle in states that have no state income tax? >> i think we will. sometimes the news is surprising and sometimes it's not surprising at all and that is the category this one is, irs data showed new york, california leading wealth. not just residents but wealth because of successful high earning residents fleeing going to states like texas, and florida and it's no coincidence three of the top five states seeing a net increase have no income tax at all. people don't like it when you punish success and you take more of their money every year end wasted on different things while failing to provide basic quality public services. it's pretty obvious here americans voted for freedom and lower taxes and i think they will keep doing so now that the pandemic has made remote work more possible. kennedy: i think you're right because if you live in a city with high city tax in a state
7:34 pm
with high state income tax and you are also punished by the irs, it's unattractive if you do see rise in crime and homelessness like you do in big cities and california. it's a different landscape than it was five or ten years ago and that's why places like arizona, texas, tennessee, florida, they are waving people in like bring your money but as ned said, leave your politics over there. redistributions, it turns out to be unattractive. here's something unattractive and here's a tip for jobseekers, stay away from the service industry. why? a survey from credit card.com shows americans are tipping less than before covid despite pledging they would get more to make up for their service lost wages. restaurant tipping is correlated with age and gen z, the least likely to tip well followed by
7:35 pm
millennial's. the most generous tippers? gen x and baby boomers they eat at denny's like 3:00 p.m. so gen x wins, generational warfare. 43% say they always tip rideshare driver. how could you not to? 27% say they tip their hotel housekeeper. i always leave money on the pillow for the man for or the housekeeper, whoever gets it first. are you tipping more or less these days? >> i'm at 20%, 20% and have been before and am now because if i did not, my wife would probably do an act of violence on me but first of all, people should be happy they are still eating out, the restaurant should be. at the same time, pre-covid until now, there's a few things like i don't know, inflation,
7:36 pm
silent tax on the american people 8% although real inflation is higher. the price of a gallon of gas has doubled and between now and last year there's 9000 less in savings for the average american, they just have less money so something's got to give. it would be nice if they were generous and tipped at a decent rate when they went out to eat but at a certain time, a give and take, you don't have money between inflation and gas and other rising costs in life and at least they are still going out to eat and restaurants can stay in business. kennedy: are you surprised gen x are the best tippers of all? it doesn't surprise me. it's the greatest generation. >> being a gen x, i would agree with you on that. ned, by the way, 20% is so 2019. i used to tip 20% before the pandemic, i tip more than 20% and there are two reasons that i hope it's okay to say this -- >> do not tell my wife.
7:37 pm
[laughter] kennedy: lesley is rich. >> i worked five jobs in college and one was waiting tables, i know how hard the job is, you got to tip them, a lot of them aren't getting a decent minimum wage. when i was growing up, jewish people were cheap was the obviously false stereotype and i thought i'd never wanted anyone to think i was the cheap people of the jewish tribe so i've always over tipped. because of the pandemic i thought i got to give more to these people but i understand people who don't have as much to give especially if wages are down . kennedy: let's go and you can pay. we will get the best service. [laughter] so brad -- >> can i come in? kennedy: everyone on this panel can come including reggie whose brad legal. are you a good tipper, brad? >> i started to think more since
7:38 pm
the pandemic. i think the old thing here is also in part two to wealth, it's not like young people are stingy and cheap and had to be broke more than older people further along in their careers. kennedy: taking over and door, they are fine using services but they don't want to tip for it, if you don't have money, go ride your bike. >> way to slow down because of inflation. what's going on here has a lot to do with finances. kennedy: but you can also tip relative to your bill if you don't have a lot of money for small bill, leave a nice tip still. a guy told me if you can't afford to kiss, tip, you can't afford the restaurant. words to live by it by also wealthy person who's welcome to take me to dinner. it's always good to see all of
7:39 pm
you, i love talking to each of you. thank you. >> thanks, kennedy. kennedy: covid cases on the rise, more people are still going out and they have resumed their normal lives. should you let covid ruin your summer bun? doctor marc siegel has his prescription pad at the ready, he's next. ♪♪
7:40 pm
7:41 pm
7:42 pm
7:43 pm
covid cases are on the rise but that may not be the bad news, used to be recent data shows while cases are up, hospitalizations and deaths thankfully have not fallen, much lower than it the omicron surge in late summer and january. in other words, covid may be here to stay but isn't the nightmare it used to be.
7:44 pm
everything is going to be shut down at a moments notice. here with me to discuss, medical correspondent nyu langone professor of medicine and america's doctor marc siegel is back, welcome back, sir. >> great to see you, kennedy. kennedy: we are hearing about a lot more cases and positivity, are we still reacting in the same way? what is happening, is covid weakening or are the treatments we have just better? >> everything you have said, i agree with except for one thing. about lockdowns were restrictions coming back, i wish we lived in your libertarian world but we don't so everything else is correct, it milder, the virus itself has been looked at by one of the top virologists in the world in the uk, it's not getting as deep into the lungs. i think we have treatments we didn't have, paxlovid i think is
7:45 pm
working pretty well. i think the combination of people who have had this and by the way, if there's way more cases than anybody is reporting because nobody is reporting these. the government is not coming to your door saying what about the home test? they don't know so as many mild cases compared to hospitalizations and the death rate is flat. i think it's time to live with it, you still don't want it, it makes you sick but time to live with it but it doesn't stop certain counties from saying mask mandates from coming back. the mandate should be out of the equation but it's not. still there's the d.o.j. fighting for mask mandate on planes. with this contagious a variant for the mask to do anything would have to be n95 the way i am in the office so it doesn't make sense to bring restrictions back. i wish i could tell you with certainty there won't be
7:46 pm
mandates in the future, i certainly hope not because the way you describe is right, we are learning to live with it. it's overall milder and we have many more tools to work with than before. they ought to do if they believe in the public-private partnership with operation work speed would be to give us the omicron specific vaccine, to get us the treatment and things we need but they are very slow and -- the prior administration but they are very slow. kennedy: they've known about the baby formula shortage for months, six months and just now they are getting around to doing something. there isn't the same urgency but i want to ask you selfishly about people with long covid. i'm still suffering the effects of both times i had covid, are people who have long covid, are they at risk of getting it again? >> i'm worried about long covid and i'm glad you brought that up because that's where the conversation should go in there is not enough studying and we don't have treatment.
7:47 pm
paxlovid may help but we think vaccines help to some extent and we think it gets better over time but overall cases, we have to broaden it, broaden the definition. almost every organ in the body can be infected. it's a big deal, that's where the conversation should go you can end up with long covid and that's what i don't want people to get still and why i am vigilant about prescribing paxlovid and using monocle antibodies when i can. long covid is a problem. from a business view, it's going to damage the workforce, no question. kennedy: it's not made up, people don't want covid, long covid and the symptoms are so weird. you can go to your doctor with pretty much everything and there was a long covid. buzzing in my ears? long covid. it hurts when i do this -- long covid. >> the fatigue bothers me a lot, a lot of fatigue, that's the main one. kennedy: i haven't had to take like this since i've had newborn babies but you get through it thanks to good doctors, thank
7:48 pm
you for your time, always appreciated. >> you are still so sharp and funny, i don't see any difference. kennedy: your very kind, i'm going to take a nap. no, we'll see you when we are back. ♪♪
7:49 pm
7:50 pm
psst. girl. you can do better. ok. wow. i'm right here. and you can do better, too. at least with your big name wireless carrier. with xfinity mobile, you can get unlimited for $30 per month on the nation's most reliable 5g network. they can even save you hundreds a year on your wireless bill, over t-mobile, at&t and verizon. wow. i can do better. yes, you can. i can do better, too. break free from the big three and switch to xfinity mobile.
7:51 pm
7:52 pm
a new video the shows president biden's son hunter, you've heard of him, partying naked with a prostitute while holding a handgun. on the bright side, he finally learns to use protection with a hooker. that's a no good son of a gun and this is topical storm, topic number one. mug shot monday and tonight we meet a florida woman, florida? what's? whose jig was up. 38-year-old amy harrington arrested for driving under the influence, of being sexy after police say she tried to prove she was sober by dancing an irish jig. his a tip, when you tried to convince people you are sober, don't do anything that reminds them of st. patrick's day. it was after amy rear-ended another car on the way home from her shift as a bartender. it turns out she'd been pulling a different type of cap all night. amy was ordered to take a
7:53 pm
sobriety test but instead of following instructions, she started irish dancing and performing ballet moves for the police. good news, she was able to successfully touch her nose. the bad news is, she did it with her ankles. very flexible. topic number two. lightning. queen elizabeth appeared in her jubilee pageant and hologram the thing about the jubilee, still meghan markle. here's the queen appearing as her younger self, the backseat. what's? even the queen of england can't afford gas. if only our country's leader with his present and young. that part came out when the queens hologram got into the battle. the carriage led 3 miles long, 3000 performers said to be the largest jubilee event in british history, the parade include performance by british popstar
7:54 pm
and shearing, don't tell the queen she thought was prince harry. oh gender balls. topic number three. the maker launching a new round of cannabis infused iced tea. you thought high tea was for hoity-toity holograms. it's called t parts and is going on sale where marijuana is fully legal which might explain why they keep electing this guy, president blackface. each property will contain 5 milligrams, 5-milligram's of caffeine, the perfect way to wake and bake. the bear company says the dreams are the beverages of the future because new gas prices, there's no other way to take a trip.
7:55 pm
the boston beer company says is proud to be the first major public traded company to offer marijuana based products unless you count netflix, doritos, burger king, ben & jerry's, nintendo and companies that put your mom on the couch. scientists discovered slowly here scallops. uncontrollably attracted to disco lights proving once and for all scallops or as you will as, implications for the fishing because now strobe lights can be used to trick scallops into entrance and fishing traps or even worse, a coldplay concert. the truth is, scallops love a good dance party. it makes them come out of their shells. scientists attribute the attraction to the vision because scallops have 200 individual eyes. no wonder they are called sea creatures. i haven't seen that many eyes since i read an italian phonebook, discovery expected to give fishermen the easy way to add to the income, i can't help feeling bad for the scallops. they think they are on the where to party and then they are
7:56 pm
eaten. also known as in the evening with army hammer, one can dream. we'll be right back with mouth trumpet monday. we will. look at the lights. scallops unite. ♪♪
7:57 pm
lemons. lemons, lemons, lemons. look how nice they are. the moment you become an expedia member, you can instantly start saving on your travels. so you can go and see all those, lovely, lemony, lemons. ♪ and never wonder if you got a good deal. because you did. ♪ another crazy day? of course—you're a cio in 2022.. but you're ready. because you've got the next generation in global secure networking from comcast business. with fully integrated security solutions all in one place. so you're covered. on-premise and in the cloud. you can run things the way you want —your team, ours or a mix of both. with the nation's largest ip network. from the most innovative company.
7:58 pm
bring on today with comcast business. powering possibilities.™ (mom allen) verizon just gave us all a brand new iphone 13. (dad allen) we've been customers for years. (dad brown) i thought new phones were for new customers. we got iphone 13s, too. switched to verizon two minutes ago. (mom brown) ours were busted and we still got a shiny new one. (boy brown) check it out! (dad allen) so, wait. everybody gets the same great deal? (mom allen) i think that's the point. (vo) iphone 13 on us for every customer. current, new, everyone. on any unlimited plan. starting at just $35 all on the network more people rely on.
7:59 pm
allergies don't have to be scary. spraying flonase daily stops your body from overreacting to allergens all season long. psst! psst! flonase all good. we got the house! you did! pods handles the driving. pack at your pace. store your things until you're ready. then we deliver to your new home - across town or across the country. pods, your personal moving and storage team. ♪♪ time for mouth trumpet monday, # mouth trumpet monday. i don't know why i'm yelling. here we go. [mouth trumpeting]
8:00 pm
[mouth trumpeting] kennedy: that's right. thank you for watching the best hour of your day. twitter an instagram. tomorrow night gary hoffmann, olivia rondeau jimmy failla. kenne-dvr it it. who loves you? goodbye. ♪♪ the most remarkable display of teamwork, and technology, and skill that i've ever seen. so when we discussed the stories that we wanted to tell on this season of "how america works," i said, "whatever else we do, let's make sure we get our cameras "aboard a nimitz class nuclear-powered aircraft carrier. "the story will shoot itself." well, we did. and while the story didn't exactly shoot itself, the footage does tell an undeniable tale of excellence. tonight, you're gonna meet a few of the 6,000 americans

636 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on