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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  May 2, 2018 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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there is more pocket than denim. rob: matt likes them too. he is smiling over there. jillian: matt is behind the couch counting down telling us we have got to go. have a good day, everyone. steve: we'll see you later. >> special counsel robert mueller told the trump legal team he could speech the president. >> if trump could secure the same circumstances that were granted to hillary clinton, then why not sit down for the interview because everybody knows that donald trump is not going to get the hillary clinton treatment. >> several house republicans they have drafted articles of impeachment against rosenstein. >> the department of justice is not going to be -- we are going to do what's required by the rule of law. >> texas is launching a lawsuit with six other states to daca. >> what president trump did was unconstitutional and unlawful. >> what happened last week with the make america again hat. >> i felt a freedom and first of all just doing something that everybody tells you not to do. i have never been in to
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politics. i just love trump. that's my boy. >> i'm honored to have the heroic crew and passengers of southwest flight 1380. we salute you and every member of this crew. thank you very much. [applause] ♪ ♪ ♪ brian: what city is that? steve: brian, you look at it every morning. brian: i believe it's new york city. steve: it is new york city. we are live. it is a wednesday. it is may the 2nd. thank you very much for joining us. i have got to confess something weird happened at our house last night. i think it started about 1:30. you know when you just hear a chirp about every three or four minutes. ainsley: a bird in your house? steve: smoke alarm or carbon
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monoxide detect ter it needed a battery. brian: at least it wasn't a leak. steve: i didn't know. i couldn't find any more batteries that fit it. it's like is there carbon monoxide. ains is it one of those rectangular? steve: it was a double a. you are thinking of a 9-volt. i took batteries out of the tv remote. ainsley: reminder to change the battery in your smoke alarm. steve: i should have done it two weeks ago. we have a lot to talk to you about on this wednesday. show down brewing between president trump's lawyers and robert mueller. brian: leaks now show the special counsel is considering a subpoena to get the president to talk if he won't voluntarily. ainsley: that's right. griff jenkins is live in washington to break it all down for us. what's the latest? >> good morning, guys. if you had any doubt robert robt mueller want to question the president. we now know he is willing to go to make it happening. threatening a subpoena march meeting with trump attorneys
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according to the president's former lead attorney john dowd who confirmed saying at that meeting this isn't some game. you are screwing with the work of the president of the united states. dowd, who resigned weeks later over this very issue, told our own ed henry last night he isn't the one with all the leaks. but, hey, somebody shear is. fox news obtained a list of those questions mueller reportedly's to ask the president. 52 questions in all. topics ranging from michael flynn to fbi director james comey to jeff sessions and donald trump's meeting at trump tower. the president blasting the leaked questions over twitter saying so disgraceful that the questions concerning the russian witch-hunt were leaked to the media. no questions on collusion. oh, i see, you have made up a phony crime, collusion that never existed and an investigation begun with illegally leaked classified information. nice. well, former secret service agent dan bongino was on hand last night hammering
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this thing saying it's all about trapping the president. >> do you see the danger in this. >> yes. >> they are not investigating a crime here. they are investigating donald trump. there's a difference. you know, when you do -- i was a former federal agent. when you investigate a crime and find people. you don't find people and then go find a crime. >> and the white house, guys, say they are not the ones leaking. perhaps we will find out more in the coming days. brian: thanks, griff and good luck with that shoulder healing. ainsley: he knocked it out of place this weekend. brian: but the other two anchors were not hurt. steve: we do know the document was provided to the times by a person outside of trump's legal team and we do know that the questions were a list compiled by the president's lawyers during talks with mr. mueller. so it does look as if somebody on team trump did that because ultimately, i think what they were trying to paint yesterday between
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the leak and also the tweet by the president was it's hard to obstruct justice if there was no crime ever committed in the beginning. and that's what it says in his tweet. ainsley: so no collusion. no evidence of collusion so far. so why are they investigating him? maybe he was interfering? steve: obstructing justice. ainsley: interfering with the investigation that's what mueller might think? brian: possibly. what did you tell mike flynn about setting up a back channel. james comey, why did you fire him. jeff sessions why did you pressure him? and then you have donald trump jr. what did you know about that meeting? by the way donald trump jr. they have not talked to him yet. they have not talked to ivanka yet. what are they waiting for. march 5th meeting. jay sekulow took notes on it these aren't necessarily what robert mueller come up with. these are the questions as the legal team jotted them down as they left, types them up and got them out. i cannot figure out exactly why it benefits the trump team to have these questions out in the public. because it's out there.
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we could answer these questions because we have within study all of them. some of the things compounded for example, did you know about paul map for the contacting the russian government? did you know that? no. we never even heard that. steve: result ultimately when you look at those, whoever leaked those poisoned the well. it would be hard for the president to sit down and answer those questions former white water independent counsel lays out t. out really well. listen to. >> this goes into the heart of executive decision-making. but it also shows something else. these questions show a couple of things. the mueller people are outraged and lived at the president's criticisms of them and they have a very dangerously broad view of obstruction of justice. ainsley: several things come to mind if you get the list of questions before. if you get the 49 questions the president would know how to answer them. is he able to plead the ones
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he wants to answer and plead the 50 o fifth? steve: he could but it would look bad pleading the fifth. brian: robert mueller has gotten four people for lying to him. four people. if you look at some of these questions. and unless you have this photographic memory, you can't possibly remember. especially the way president trump's campaign was. it was seat of your pants. you are fired. you are hired. you are out, you are in. for example who knew what paul manafort was doing. why was he there? it wasn't because he wanted a russian leak. tom barack and said your campaign is a mess. take this guy paul manafort he would work for free which is a price the president loved. ainsley: if there is no collusion. dan bongino, i love that sound bite because it sounds like in all my years of being a federal investigator if there was a crime, we would track it back to someone. in this case it looks like there is someone and we are trying to track him to a
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crime. steve: they are fishing. and that's what rush limbaugh said. he said he should do it only if he gets the hillary deal. >> if trump could secure the same identical circumstances that were granted to hillary clinton, then why not sit down for the interview and answer the questions? but, of course, i speak facetiously because everybody knows donald trump is not going to get the hillary clinton treatment extended by james comey. brian: have your attorneys get immunity. have them sit in with you. it's not going to be taped. it's not going to be robert mueller. on saturday a big chip on your shoulder and have you already made up your verdict -- your mind before you went in there. steve: so, stay tuned. let's see what happens. over the weekend, kanye west sat down with candace owens and some members of the political right in the country and they talked about all sorts of things. he also went on tmz and he told people why he likes
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donald trump. ainsley: he says i'm not political but i do love this guy. he was wearing the make america great again hat over the weekend. this is what he said on tmz. >> it was a feeling i had like people were taught how to think. we're taught how to feel. we don't know how to think for ourselves. we don't know how to feel for ourselves. they say feel free. they don't want us to fee free. feeling a freedom and feeling something that everybody tells you not to do. i just love trump. that's my boy. brian: he says if you really want politics. john legend knows politics: then he tweeted out about freedom and about slavery. he said, you know, came out and says slavery was a choice and then he went ahead and clarified on twitter because it caused outrage obviously with that statement. he said to think about 400 years ago and be in that mind set today is a choice. get out of that mind set and think about now. that was a lot of the
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controversy. steve: he also, kanye did, said that donald trump is one of rap people's favorite guy. he said trump is one of rap's favorite people. there is a class war happening right now. class war is one of the reasons why trump won. obama was so high class that stopped talking to the middle and lower class. that's one of the reasons he likes the guy who is currently president. ainsley: lives in hollywood. getting a lot of back bash fro -- backlashfrom the hollywot there. for him speaking up, good for him, tripling down. this is the third or fourth time he said he loves him. brian: causing aneurysm on every kardashian from here to owe bolivia yen. steve: jill joins us on this wednesday. jillian: this is going to be a thing now. steve: got a new name. jillian: so many viewers tweeting me yesterday i'm going to call you jill now. good morning to you guys and good morning to you at home.
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get you caught up on some of the news we are following here. we now know the u.s. soldier gunned down on afghanistan on monday was part of the pentagon's counter terrorism mission. army specialist gabriel khan killed outside of deployment. his family said he defined the word bravery. >> he was called to be a warrior. >> i feel very proud of who he is. he's the kind of son that any mother would be proud to have. jillian: this marks the second combat death in afghanistan this year. a russian fighter jet buzzes a spy plane over say. the russian jet performed a safe but unprofessional move coming within about 20 feet of the u.s. navy aircraft. american pilots say they never felt threatened. a russian jet came within five feet of a navy spy plane. fox news hosting the republican senate primary debate in west virginia. state attorney general patrick morici, congressman
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evan jenkins and blankenship battling over who is more aligned with president trump. >> conservatives don't go out and take campaign contributions from planned parenthood. >> who is going to lead the senate to support the president trump agenda. >> i'm the only candidate on the stage who not only has voted for donald trump at the convention and in the electoral college. >> the three republicans are vying to unseat democrat joe marchen in november. evan jenkins will join us live in the next hour. president trump honoring the heroic crew of the deadly southwest flight at the white house. paying special district to captain tamm tammie jo shults te former navy pilot who made that landing. >> commander schultz i want to commend you for life-saving actions. everybody is talking about it they are still talking about it. they will be talking about it for a long time. the actions of the crew and passengers of flight 1380 show the great character of our nation. we're very, very proud of
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them, and god bless you all. jillian: the president also honoring jennifer riordan the mother of two who lost her life after nearly being sucked out of a window when an engine exploded. those are your headlines back to you. steve: a busy day in washington. brian: there were three key members of the obama administration and our next guest says they are doing putin's dirty work. really? dr. sebastian gorka on how they are helping russia undeunderunder mine us. >> never take your eye off the ball. >> what are you doing? >> you said keep my eye on the ball. instant purchase notifications from capital one . technology this helpful...
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♪ ♪ >> didn't have any contact with me until after i left the government on the 20th of january. i don't quite understand at least what i have read that somehow i leaked about the dossier. >> let me guess so you didn't leak anything about the dossier to any media? >> no. brian: oh, yeah. i don't believe him. do you? house intel report accusing the former white house director james clapper lying to the media. he is not the only one
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undermine our system if indirectly, directly. former assistant to president trump dr. sebastian gorka with us right now. dr. gorka, how were they helping putin. >> putin had a very clear objective to undermine america's faith in its own election and its own electoral system. that's exactly what clapper, comey and brennan did. we now know that clip you just played of clapper. that was a lie. clapper admits that he spoke to cnn. we know that cnn had the dossier. but they needed a so-called to hang it on. what did he do? dni clapper told james comey to brief the dossier to the president. after that happened, clapper told jake tapper at cnn, oh, it's briefed and then cnn had their peg to hang it on. so a dossier that was built on russian propaganda, we now know that, became a news item thanks to clapper leaking. and then what happened? after he leaves government,
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he gets a juicy contract with cnn. this is bogus. brian: couple of things, what you just said dr. sebastian goo gorka coming up. we are going to leave the room you brief him one-on-one. number two it's important he said to jake at that pointner january this' the deal. the question is did it happen after the inauguration few days in january he was president-elect and not president. that's splitting hairs. and clapper has a record of not telling the truth. he has already been caught lying and he obviously is not a good liar. only time he perks up when he seems to be caught in a lie. besides that every time he talks it's like we woke him up in the middle of the night. real quick, john brennan's tweets. his tweets are inflammatory. maybe vladimir putin has something on this president. this guy is a cia director. he is not some pundit from a third rate cable show. >> this is shocking. never in american history has a former civil servant of his ranking done what he
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just did. because he says i don't know but i think he could be being blackmailed. well, everybody out there who doesn't know the details now potentially thinks the president might be being blackmailed. is he serving putin's interest. don't forget, brian, this individual, john brennan in 1976, admitted to voting for the communist party candidate for president before he gets hired by the cia. i guess old habits die hard, don't they, mr. brennan? brian: something that president trump is doing has rattled him to his core. maybe we will find out. dr. gorka, always great to he so you. >> thank you, brian. all the best. brian: straight ahead on this time we have remaining on this show which is a lot. should illegals be able to hold government jobs? sounds like an easy question. one california lawmaker says yeah, a good idea. tomi lahren not for that. she is from los angeles. she will speak. one could become the first female amputee t to do it.
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they join us with their inspiring story next. i feel a great deal of urgency... i think, keep going, and make a difference. at some point, we are going to be able to beat als. because life is amazing. so i am hoping for a cure. i want this, to uh, to be a reality. um, yeah.
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mr. elliot, what's your wiwifi?ssword? wifi's ordinary. basic. do i look basic? nope! which is why i have xfinity xfi. it's super fast and you can control
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every device in the house. [ child offscreen ] hey! let's basement. and thanks to these xfi pods, the signal reaches down here, too. so sophie, i have an xfi password, and it's "daditude". simple. easy. awesome. xfinity. the future of awesome. steve: it is 6:24 in new york city and we have headlines for you. first up the mastermind behind 9/11 may have suffered brain damage in cia custody. according to the miami herald key ca lead sheikh mohammed's lawyers reveal head trauma which could spare him from the death penalty. hmmm. a 2014 senate report claims the waterboarded 183 times. and, a country behind those same horrific attacks now ordered to pay billions to the victims.
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federal judge finding iran libel to the deaths of more than 1,000 people whose family sued spouses, parents, children and siblings entitled to millions of dollars each. the move is largely symbolic since iran will probably never pay up. all right, ainsley, over to you. ainsley: thank you, steve. i'm talking to heroes at 20320 feet mount denali is the tallest peek: marines and the air force are going to try to attempt to climb to the tom of it all to help other veterans, especially women. if successful, retired marine corps sergeant kirstie ennis would become the first female veteran amputee to accomplish this amazing feat. caitlin sheehan and retired marine corps sergeant kirstie ennis of service to summit join us now. good morning, ladies. >> good morning. ainsley: how did you y'all get involved in this and decide you are going to climb this mountain in the
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middle of the snow? >> well, the fellows had done it. and there are a lot of incredible programs out there for veterans to do expeditionary programming and none of them were focused on women. identifying that need, we decided that we were going to do it. ainsley: how did y'all meet. >> through a mutual friend. you guys have similar mind sets and similar interests and we have same common goal of wanting to pay it forward and help other people so they linked us up. ainsley: that's great. i met you at building hope for heroes event and you lost your leg fighting for our country in a helicopter crash in afghanistan. tell the folks at home what you went through. >> it's been a long road. i joined at 17 years old. and as you said, on my last deployment my helicopter went down and as a result of it i sustained some pretty serious injury everything from trammatic brain injury and losing my leg. it was uphill battle.
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i lost that sense of purpose and i struggled emotionally and mentally. i was unfortunate that this family i established building homes for hero was introduced into my life that provided the framework and foundation for my future for me doing what i'm doing now. ainsley: that was a few years ago. and my gosh have you been through so much. so many surgeries. your mom was sitting next to you. and we were all in tears hearing your story. tell me what the organization has done for you. >> this organization really -- i mean, it gives people their lives back. we don't want pity. we want opportunity. these homes and this organization provides. ainsley: mortgage-free, right? >> absolutely. mortgage-free. ainsley: they outfitted this home in colorado for your needs to make sure you were safe and comfortable. >> absolutely. homes tailored specifically to the veterans. 's not just a home. it's not just four walls. for somebody like me who doesn't have a family or some well-established career. that's what's going to provide me an opportunity to move forward. ainsley: caitlin, you are involved with the organization as well. tell me about your service.
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you are in the air force. >> i spent four years active duty. deployed a couple times. my friends called me the confused hippy. but, i was really honored to have the opportunity to serve and it was a dynamic experience that left me with some injuries as well. so having the opportunity to find the wilderness, such an incredibly healing place. it was important for me to continue to make that accessible to other veterans. ainsley: most people couldn't do this climb without injuries. both of have you sustained injuries and you are still going to do. this are you nervous about it? >> yeah. not as nervous as i am to be on tv. ainsley: really? [laughter] >> yeah. it's its own separate kind of nerves. it's incredible being tied up with this gal literally on a mountainside because it takes three kinds of stamina. one of them is mental. we got that we have both been tried and we both have determination. ainsley: when is it, and how can we help? >> we step off on
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june 1st. that's when we get up to the glacier and make our assent. check us out. and building homes for heroes.org. >> looking to gift a home to the veteran and their family completely free once every 11 days this year. and, yeah. we are just really stoked to be a part of this. ainsley: down at ground zero and lost so many people on 9/11 and said i want to do something to give back to this country and the organization has taken off. one home every 11 days? that's incredible. building homes for heroes. check it out on their website. thank you so much, ladies. >> you are welcome. ainsley: god bless you for serving. remember when ambassador haley said this? >> it is outrageous to see so many countries who we support go against us at the u.n. we are watching their votes and, yes, we are taking names. ainsley: she really was taking names. this morning we have the list. plus, you're not going to like this one. facebook adding a button to every post asking if it's
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hate speech. just how dangerous could that get? tomi lahren launched her career on facebook and she is next. nascar driver kyle busch is 33 years old today. it's his jesus year. 33. ♪ ♪ shrimp fans - this one's for you. it's red lobster's new create your own shrimp trios. pick 3 of 9 craveable creations for just $15.99. you can enjoy the classics you love, along with new creations like savory crab-topped shrimp, decadent parmesan truffle shrimp scampi, and creamy shrimp and lobster pasta. your perfect shrimp plate is just waiting to be discovered. but shrimp trios won't last, so get to red lobster today. and get your red lobster fix
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same thing with any dent or dings on this truck. they all got a story about what happened to 'em. man 2: it was raining, there was only one way out. i could feel the barb wire was just digging into the paint. man: two bulls were fighting, (thud) bam hit the truck. try explaining that to your insurance company. woman: another ding, another scratch. it'll just be another chapter in the story. every scar tells a story, and you can tell a lot more stories when your truck is a chevy silverado. the most dependable, longest-lasting, full-size pickups on the road.
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my secret visitors. hallucinations and delusions. the unknown parts of living with parkinson's. what plots they unfold, but only in my mind. over 50% of people with parkinson's will experience hallucinations or delusions during the course of their disease. if your loved one is experiencing these symptoms, talk to your parkinson's specialist. there are treatment options that can help. my visitors should be the ones i want to see. ♪ and i gladly stand up next to you ♪ and defend her still today ♪ because there ain't no doubt i love this land ♪ steve: and we love this. it's our shot of the morning. this american flag flown in honor of "fox & friends" over the headquarters of camp burig scorpio base in
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aquatic. ainsley: a proud reminder of our service members commitment to defending freedom. brian: always great to find out when so many write us and say oh, we only have fox on whether it's in the tent or in the middle of a war zone or in kuwait where basically -- ainsley: what do we hear when we come out in the public all the time thank you so much to "fox & friends" and fox remembering our soldiers fighting for our country. steve: thank you for thinking of us. ainsley: if you are fighting for our country, thank you and we love you and so proud of you. brian: we know it's getting dangerous especially in afghanistan where we took more casualties and the 2,000 troops on that syrian border. you talk about patriotic. tomi lahren defines that. and let's bring her in now from los angeles. welcome back, tomi. ainsley: hey, tomi. >> hi, guys. thank you. it's a compliment. i will take it. steve: you bet.
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we know you got started on facebook. well, now facebook has -- they say it was a mistake, but everything that was posted suddenly down at the bottom there was a question where do you think whatever you just read was hate speech? and if it was you clicked on it and apparently they were trying to figure out what to do about all the complaints about it's just a wild west these days on facebook. >> right. they were saying, facebook said that they were trying to, quote: learn something's not right. more like they are trying to learn something is not left. because as we know, mark zuckerberg himself could not define hate speech. if mark zuckerberg could not define hate speech. how are others defining hate speech? how are the users on facebook defining hate speech? we know how that goes. hate speech is defined as anything comes from a conservative page, a trump supporter and the like. steve: ultimately, won't this shut down more people
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on the political right then? >> i hope not. i think that facebook says they are taking steps to change that. but, again, i will believe it when i see it. they have done this before. if you remember just a couple years back they had a big summit at facebook. they invited a lot of conservative thought leaders in to discuss the problem. and nothing changed. in fact, it got worse. so, i'm not holding my breath for any changes. brian: i also understand that facebook is going to be ranking news on its accuracy. really? that's interesting. who are they to decide what's accurate or not on a news basis that changes every 90 seconds? they will say i don't think that story is right. let's drop it. i mean, i can't believe they even want that responsibility. >> well, of course they want that responsibility but i would be curious to know how fox news rates on that how my page rates on their scale. again, they say that they are trying to make things better for conservatives, for conservative pages are
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for those right of center. all the features that they are rolling out seem to contradict that almost entirely. ainsley: what's your reaction to this? this is happening in your state. there is a state senator. his name is ricardo lara. introduced legislation that's allowing illegal immigrants to serve on state and local boards and commissions. >> i will tell you this: the more the california representatives move to the left on this issue, the more fed up californians are becoming. you guys know. this i say it every time i'm on. there are sane people in the golden state that are tired of this. so the more that they move to coddle illegal immigrants, the more fed up californians are getting and i think we are actually going to see a change. i actually encourage them go to the far left as you want to the american people are going to speak up. i will say this, if he is listening, which he probably isn't but we will take a shot in the dark here. holding office, elected office, serving on a board, serving on a commission,
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that is a privilege afforded to citizens. that is not a privilege or a right afforded to people that didn't respect this country enough to follow the rule of law to get here, period. steve: well, it's just a slippery slope what's happening out there. you are absolutely right. there seem to be a lot of people who aren't crazy about the direction the state is going but what are you going to do? move? >> we're going to vote. we're going to vote. and we're going to make sure our voices are heard. i'm telling you there is going to be a resurgence of logical thought, conservative thought in the state of california. might not be as soon as we would like it, but i'm telling you now, it is changing. it's changing for the better. give us a little time. we will right the ship. brian: we're still wondering what's happening down south with the caravan. about 17 people have gotten in. they are still straddling that fence. we will see how the people of california feel about that. that's controversy that's not going away. tomi, thanks so much. ainsley: thanks, tomi. jillian is over here. she has headlines for us.
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jillian: good morning. lieutenant colonel sent a flag and sent me one as well. i wanted to give him another thank you. i know it means a lot to you guys and means a lot to me as well. do you remember what u.n. ambassador nikki haley issued this warning? >> it is outrageous to see so many countries who we support go against us at the u.n. we're watching their votes, and, yes, we are taking names. ainsley: a new state department report giving her those names, revealing u.n. member states only voted with the u.s. 31% of the time last year. in a statement haley says, quote: this is not an acceptable return on our investment. american taxpayers pay for 22% of the u.n. budget. after widespread backlash a school is backing down on their decision to get students to cover up at prom. catholic school in michigan accused of body shaming for the so-called modesty ponchos. they plan to give them out at the dance to anyone wearing inappropriate dance. >> a method of shaming.
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a method of bullying. a meth of degrading. degrading the female. jillian: the school says it never intended to make students feel uncomfortable. they will have shaws for -- shar anyone violating the dress code. jillian: accused crook held up several businesses while wearing a surgical mask some say for weeks. he couldn't fool his mom. long island after his 88-year-old mother recognized him on the news. known as the cookie man, roundtree faces several robbery charges. look at this. little kids don't usually follow directions to a tee. why did this mini golfer take his mom's advice very literally. >> remember to keep your eye on the ball, knock all right. go. what are you doing? >> you said keep my eye on the ball. [laughter] jillian: is he my favorite person in the entire world.
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that's noel learning to play golf in scotland. adorable lesson as you can see why is going viral. so cute. brian: i do wish he had a bigger yard. jillian: maybe is he learning chip shots. jillian: mom is standing right in front of him. steve: i have feeling he does that every time she says that. brian: lawn so beautiful like the brady bunch lawn which was turf. looks like turf. ainsley: janice is a mom. i see video of kids go on and watch videos of my child. it's so great. brian: do you like watching videos of ainsley's child? janice: i do. moms love that kind of stuff. so, listen, some severe weather we have to talk about because we had over close to two dozen tornadoes yesterday across the plain stating and today another day of severe weather including tornadoes, damaging, dangerous, large tornadoes. so we want to make sure everyone is prepared. know what to do if there is a watch or warning in your area. this is the time of year.
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and this could be one of the worst outbreaks we have seen this season. but maybe in the last couple of years. there is the future radar. all of the ingredients are together for a severe weather outbreak including tornadoes. not a lot of time that you see the moderate risk but it's out there for parts of the plain states but really the severe threat extends from texas to the great lakes through the overnight and into tomorrow. so a three day severe weather outbreak. people need to be prepared. on the nice side of this system, going to be 86 degrees here in new york city. [applause] janice: oh my gosh a round of applause. i want to thank my mom and my grandma. [cheers] steve: going to be who so hot today people will start complaining. janice: no you won't. no you won't complain. brian: will you tell us who complained about the weather last week? janice: no. you can't complain about that. steve: it's fantastic. ainsley: you need to find that person in the hallway today, janice.
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janice: and see how are they doing? how are you doing? brian: remember that professor who slammed barbara bush after her death and kept her job soon getting a chance to sound off. one of them will join us live. steve: parents want their kids to learn about business but a study says they don't know how to teach them. anthony neil has some solutions. you have a plan. ainsley: i like the pink, anthony. ♪ ♪
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steve: recent study finds 75% want their kids to learn prunt skills but only 25% feel confident they can teach them. a money expert anthony kneel
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our friend with ramsey solutions and author joins us with more on the teen entrepreneur tool book. it's fantastic. i never pick this stuff up but have you got everything in here to show a kid how to be an entrepreneur. >> yeah, steve and good morning to you. but you said it right. 75% of parents do not know how to help their students start a young business. and we are also seeing that 45%. nearly 50% of students want to start their own business. we said, hey, why not come up with a toolbox that will help parents empower their kids to start their own business. steve: i like the way did you go through the stages right down to after they get the job interview. >> gratitude. there is nothing like being grateful and telling a customer thank you so much for the opportunity to serve you. steve: have you such an interesting story. you know what you are talking about. when you were 19 years old, you come from good family but you wound up living out of a car. >> yeah. $25,000 in debts before i turned 19 years old. homeless, sleeping in the back of my car. not because of my parents. not because of my friends
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but because of the lack of decisions i made. the poor decisions i made at a young age. traveling around the country and going into high schools and middle schools and colleges and talking to people about my story and helping them get into a brighter future is my passion. steve: let's talk about people watching right now. help them find their idea. >> in the teen entrepreneur toolbox we are teaching parents how to help their students, their kids be passionate about their own business idea. this idea cannot be the parent's. it has to be theirs. because when they are passionate about it. they will wake up at 6:00 a.m. in the morning and cut that grass you won't have to nudge them hey get up and do it. they are excited and passionate about it. steve: it's not all about the money, is it. it can't be. it has to be how are serving, about the people. once you can focus on the people and set small equal equa. i'm going to have 10 customers and have fliers out in the community in my neighborhood. small goals get you to the big goals paying for prom or
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college debt-free. steve: everybody has a goal but doesn't always work out. let them fail if they do but just don't quit. >> let them fail. don't quit. failure to me is a pathway to success. and because it's going to teach me what not to do the next time. so if a customer says no. i don't want your product today. i don't want your services today. that's okay. learn from maybe what you did and move forward. the key thing here is do not quit. quitters never succeed. but failing you can still succeed. steve: so true. >> go to anthony neil.com or dave ramsey.com. we are all over. steve: thank you. >> remember that college professor who slammed barbara bush after her death and keeping her job. students at school are getting a chance to sound off about her. one of them is going to join us live next. plus, say goodbye to policemen and firemen.
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new york making the job gender neutral ♪ i'm back ♪ back in the new york grove ♪ i'm back ♪ back in the new york grove in the groove. [cougar growling] (passenger) what are you doing? (driver) i can't believe that worked. i dropped the keys. (burke) and we covered it. talk to farmers, we know a thing or two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪
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steve: professor under fire. remember when randy gentleman war at fresno state university called the late barbara bush an amazing racist and said i'm happy the witch is dead. ainsley: well now the university is giving student and staff a chance to sound off about it even though right now the school is not disciplining her. joining us now is a student at california state university at fresno and campus reform.org correspondent nic matoya.
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thanks for being with us. >> good morning. thanks for having me. ainsley: what were your thoughts about those comments she made. >> while i absolutely disagree with what the professor said, she does have the right to free speech. and that's one of the things that we, as campus reform want to promote. free speech on college campuses. whether it be liberals or conservatives, we do have the right to say what we believe in. steve: right. >> and right to stand up for what we want to fight for. steve: nick, you say right to free speech are universal in this country. >> correct. steve: but she crossed the line when she tweeted out a phone number and said it was hey, this is my phone number. when, in fact, it was a suicide hotline number at arizona state university. >> when she tweeted that phone number to be hers she inundated phone line from getting the help they needed. that's why i believe she should be terminated. tweeting a known number that could have prevented someone from getting the help they
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desperately needed. brian: tell me about this forum. what role do you think you will play in it. >> the hope for the forum today is we will hear from the university president and our campus administration about the reasoning behind the decision not to terminate rhonda jarar from fresno state. i want to hear how our campus administration plans to prevent this type of thing from happening again. we have had instances where this has happened at fresno state before and again nothing has happened to these professors. so what i hope to see is a plan to show that this will not happen again and the plan to promote free speech on campus both for conservatives and liberals. steve: don't you -- do you think there is a double standard though? i mean, had she -- somebody on your campus in a position on the faculty had made those comments about somebody from a famous democrat family, do you think they would still be working there? >> absolutely not. i think that any one of the comments that she made about barbara bush were made about hillary clinton or michelle
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obama. they would have immediately been terminated from their position. there absolutely is a double standard within college campuses. there is a trend going on within campus reform where we are seeing, you know, college students being taunted by their liberal professors and being slammed for their views. brian: real quick: are there any democrats upset about this or we are just going to ignore it because barbara bush was from a republican family. >> there are democrats that i have talked to that are upset about this. they believe that the work that she has done in promoting literacy with children and adults alike is something to be respected. and while they may not like her politics, they do respect her as a person. so there definitely are democrats who are outraged at her comments. brian: embarrassing for fresno state. ainsley: thank you, nick. let us know how it goes that forum is tomorrow: a teenager sparking big debate over her prom dress. some people are calling it racist. that teenager is here to respond to the critics. brian: nancy pelosi just
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made her boldest prediction yet about the mid terms. are predictions are always exciting. i think she wins in the end ♪ hey, you, get off of my cloud ♪
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brian: wreaks now show the special counsel is considering a subpoena to get the president to talk if he won't voluntarily. >> do you see the danger in this? they are not investigating a crime here. they are investigating donald trump. >> several house republicans, they have drafted articles of impeachment against rosenstein. >> the department of justice is not going to be extorted. we are going to do what's required by the rule of law. >> nancy pelosi making a bold prediction for the november midterm saying we will win, i will run for speaker, i feel confident about it and my members do too. brian: john brennan says maybe vladimir putin has something on this president. >> never in history has a former civil servant of his ranking done what he just did. is he serving putin's
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interest. steve: this american flag flown in honor of "fox & friends" over the headquarters of camp buehrig base in kuwait. ainsley: proud reminder of our sacrifice in defending our freedom. ♪ ♪ it's winning wednesday on "fox & friends." ainsley: going to be a beautiful day here in no. i hope it is where you are as well. brian: right. again, we have chosen to do the show indoors where the temperature has been preordained. steve: always 72 and sunshiny here at "fox & friends." all right. meanwhile. ainsley: in other news, a show down is brewing between president trump's lawyers and robert mueller. steve: leaks now show the special counsel is considering a subpoena to get the president to talk. brian: wow.
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so this is going down to the wire. could end up in the supreme court. griff jenkins is live in washington to break it down or at least we asked him to. he might refuse one of the these times. we could toss it to him and he might toss back. do you accept our toss. >> absolutely accepted. we now know special counsel mueller has threatened the president with a grand jury subpoena to force him to answer questions back in a meeting that happened in march this according to the president's former lead attorney john dowd who confirmed saying at the meeting this isn't some game. you're screwing with the work of the president of the united states. dowd, who resigned weeks later over the issue of the president possibly testifying told our own ed henry last night he is not the one leaking all of this, but someone is as fox news obtains that list of 52 questions, mueller wants to ask the president, including his interactions with michael flynn, james comey, jeff sessions, and his own son donald trump jr. the president, not surprisingly, is firing back blasting those questions.
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tweeting so disgraceful that the questions concerning the russia witch hunt were leaked to the media. no questions on collusion. oh, i see. you have a made-up phony crime collusion that never existed and an investigation begun with illegally leaked classified information. nice. the white house is denying any role in the leaks, guys. as critics of the rickenbacker probe are saying these questions are further proof that mueller is trying to set a trap for the president rather than investigating an actual crime. steve: good point. all right, mr. griff, thank you very much for the live report from our nation's capital. brian: question is how did it get out? i think it matters how to get out. it looks as though the story is john dowd and jay sekulow were possibly in the meeting with ty cobb but it was jay sekulow who wrote down the questions as he was listening, which accounts for some of the misspellings that are in there. comes out to about 48 or 52 questions. none of which are surprising except for some come pound questions like did you know
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paul manafort was dealing with russia basically did you ask him to? we didn't really know about that. but, it doesn't mean just because we understand where they're coming from, doesn't mean they are not challenging for the president to remember exactly what took place and who did it. steve: sure, but, look, by putting out all those questions and, of course, of the way he answers every question, then there is a question tree. if he says yes. you go to this question. if he says no, you go to this question. it could take two days of testimony. 12 hours in all. nonetheless, i think somebody from team trump, you know, leaked this out. just to show that mr. mueller is out to get him. there's a trap. don't do it. and the president doesn't have to. brian: i just don't get that message. it doesn't look like -- it looks like. steve: it's a trap. brian: almost every lawyer looks at this and says if he is my client, he doesn't sit down for this. ainsley: right. brian: too much chance for perjury. i don't know who it benefits to get these questions out. ainsley: i doubt he will sit down. if he is forced, to he could
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prepare it in advance and go over with his attorneys and maybe plead the fifth if he doesn't want to answer the questions which he could look guilty if he does that dan bopg, he was on with sean hannity last night. he had an excellent point. there hasn't been any proof of collusion it looks like they are just going after our president. they are going after donald trump because they just don't like him. listen to this. >> do you see the danger in this? >> yeah. >> they are not investigating a rhyme here. they are investigating donald trump. there's a difference. you know, when you do -- i was a former federal agent. what do you is investigate a crime and find people. you don't find people and then go find a crime. brian: mccarthy a fine prosecuting attorney here writes for national review says these questions are for saps and would only lead to another sitdown. trump's problem is poor judgment not crimes. steve: by putting all these out into the public domain, now everybody is looking -- man, mueller is just out to get trump. he would be crazy to sit
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down with him and so that sets up the president saying, look, you have seen the questions. i'm not going to sit down. brian: i don't know if you jump to that conclusion. it looks like everybody we have talked about. four people have been charged with perjury. steve: you think the mueller team leaked it. brian: i'm saying i don't know the benefit if the trump team strategy was to leak this to the "new york times," i don't understand the benefit. because the questions aren't don't seem necessarily out of left field. they seem thorough and comprehensive and a bunch of traps. ainsley: "new york times" says they were read by special counsel investigators. these questions to the president's lawyers who compiled them into a list and provided to the times by a person outside the president's legal team. but then have you republicans that are saying it was leaked by the special counsel's office by robert mueller's office. we don't know. steve: nobody knows except the reporter at the "new york times." nonetheless, when you look at all of the questions, and you are going wait, it looks like they are trying to prove obstruction of
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justice. so it's hard to obstruct justice for a crime that never happened. and that is where were all the questions about russia? brian: but there is some collusion questions in there. the preponderance collusion is not right. steve: we have victoria toensing going to join news an hour. she is an expert at this. she says the president doesn't have to do any of this because of article 2 of the constitution. brian: go to the courts and have this for another year as it goes possibly to the supreme court. sebastian gorka wrote a column about this and just to join us earlier. he said this whole thing is about three people in the obama administration who have combined to tangentially collude with russia to take this president down. is he talking about clapper. he's talking about brennan. and he is talking about comey. especially in the case of james clapper. this guy has already been caught lying. not telling the truth when he says there has been no -- he has not leaked any information about the
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dossier to the media. turns out he corrected himself. he did. listen. >> clapper admits that he spoke to cnn. we know that cnn had the dossier. but they needed a so-called news hook to hang it on. what did he do? dni clapper told clap tore brief the dossier to the president. tapper told jake tapper it's briefed and they had their hook to hang it on. dossier built on russia propaganda, we now know that, became anus item thanks to clapper leaking. this is bogus. brian: we're talking about this. we are talking about the fact that he says it's briefed. you can run with the story. remember, james clapper in james comey's book has been confirmed elsewhere. push james comey to tell the president in trump tower about the dossier. because he told james comby the press has it looking for a news hook.
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don't want the president to be surprised by it perhaps the press had it because he leaked it. guess who had it? cnn. guess where he went afterwards cnn as a contributor where he back tracked on the story a couple times. he gave it to jake tapper and says maybe other members of the media. steve: keep in mind this weekend cnn won a big award at the white house correspondent's association dinner for that story. ainsley: of course they did. nancy pelosi in an interview says she is here to stay this master negotiator as you remember. she is saying she is going to be the house minority leader and the democrats are going to win in november. steve: here is a quote from the "boston globe" yesterday. we will win. win back the house. i will run for speaker. i feel confident about it. and my members do, too. ainsley: she already is the house minority leader. i meant to say she wants to be speaker again and she is determined she will be. same old same old. brian: others say congressman crowley of new york. hardly a unifying spirit. anyway, we will see about that.
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a lot of her predictions don't come true and a lot of the things she says don't pan out. ainsley: not crumbs? steve: that's right. you got to figure that there are a number of republicans who are going to put those comments into a great big ad and say do you want nancy pelosi to be the speaker of the house again? with her old ideas and whatnot? ainsley: look at that. brian: i saw congressman tim ryan at the white house correspondent dinner. they don't speak. he got closer than anyone else fearless running against her and the money machine she is. steve: that's the peril if you speak out against somebody very powerful in leadership they don't help you with cash for your re-election and you wind up on no committees. ainsley: she is known for being able to fund raise. brian to two things can save the house for republicans impeachment and nancy pelosi. those are two things saying bring it on. keep talking about that. that will scare the american public. ainsley: let us know what you think. meantime hand it over to
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jillian who has headlines. >> good morning to you. get you caught up on headlines we are following. starting with. this u.s. soldier gunned down on monday. part of the pentagon's counter terrorism mission. 22-year-old army specialist gabriel khan killed outside kabul on first deployment. his family says he defined the word bravery. >> i'm very proud of who he is. he is the kind of son any mother would be proud to have. jillian: this marks the second u.s. combat death in afghanistan this year. a convicted terrorist who called college students on a so-called jihad will spend the rest of his life behind bars. mohammed brown sentence in the shooting death of 19-year-old brendan kev lynn. brown apologized to kev lynn's family but says he doesn't regret anything. >> we are so grateful this monster will be locked up forever with no chance of pick and roll. he doesn't deserve to seat
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light of day ever again. jillian: brown murdered tevlin as he sat at traffic light in new jersey. he also admits to killing three other people. thousands of students across the country planning to walk out of school today in support of the second amendment. the stand for the second walkout created by a high school student who wants to give pro-gun students a voice. about 300 students in 42 states will participate in the 16 minute demonstration. the movement comes after staged the pro-at the time gun violence in the wake of the parkland school shooting. a pair of bald eagles at the national are a enter retum are n d.c. eagle cam. brother or sister d.c. 7 is expected to hatch some time this week. stuff like that you can't get enough to watching. ainsley: is he cute. steve: they can do a better job with the names d.c. 6.
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d.c. 6 clean up four nest. ainsley: eaglet. we had live caterpillars in my apartment. good teaching school. hayden will love that turned into butterflies took them to the park and released them. can you buy them on amazon. do you want me to buy you a caterpillar for christmas? brian: if you have a plan b i wouldn't mind that. steve: i have a big yard. i have my own. ainsley: put them in a jar you don't need to teach them. brian: i don't need to see it to believe it first immigrants from caravan getting asylum. i know. what about the others still waiting and straddling the fence. the border and customs commissioner joins us next. steve: plus, have you heard about this? a teenager shamed online over her prom dress? some say it's racist. she says it's just a dress. she joins us live to fire back at her many critics ♪ i won't back down ♪ ♪ of green mountain
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this situation ask a direct result of weak immigration system and porous borders. under this president we will
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uphold our laws and defend our sovereignty and we will protect the borders of the united states of america. steve: there have you got vice president mike pence doubling down on the knead for stronger immigration laws as more migrants for that caravan apply for asylum. here with more is u.s. customs and border protection commissioner kevin -- good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: i know there was a lot of criticism for the government because when the migrants arrived i believe on sunday, your folks said hold it, we don't have any room here. but had you a good reason because you were already processing a gigantic group of mainly mexican migrants who are also seeking asylum. >> yeah. that's right, steve. to give you context. san ysidro port of entry over 100,000 travelers a day coming through that port. largest port for drug seizures. finding inadmissible person. those who have fraudulent documents or no right to
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enter. very busy place in the first place and processing people without documents who are making asylum claims is necessarily time intensive and we need to have space for them to handle that appropriately. steve: sure. and i understand according to the san diego papers, 28 caravan members were admitted to apply for asylum. as they do that, how does it work this time? do they just go through the entry and they sign some papers and, boom, they are loose somewhere in the united states or are you hanging on to them? >> it's actually not that straightforward. there is significant interview process. there is a sworn statement. there's a time frame before they can see an asylum officer. steve: okay. >> all these procedures have to be set up and happen at the port of entry. then our partners have to find space for them in their detention cells whether it's single adults or family units. transportation issues. a whole lot of things that have to happen for each case. steve: sure. we are looking at some of the images of people along the border the southern
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border. for those 11 who jumped the fence, they were grabbed by the -- your folks and now what's going to happen to them? >> yeah. u.s. border patrol apprehended about 11 folks and some with family units crossing the border between ports of entry the night of friday and into saturday morning. we set those up for prosecution with the strong support of the attorney general and the department of justice. steve: right. >> they are in u.s. marshal custody and go through the criminal process. steve: message down south if they are thinking of coming into the country illegally or to apply for asylum, what is the message now? >> secretary nielsen has made it clear you cross our border between ports of entry you are violating our laws and you will be prosecuted there is no exempt categories. steve: very good. he is the commissioner of the cbb kevin, sir, thank you very much. >> thank you. steve: all right. now we know what's going on down there. have you heard this? a teenager shamed online over her prom dress. some say the dress is racist. she says it's just a dress. she joins ainsley live to
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fire back at her critics next on "fox & friends." ♪ ♪ ♪ d. with safelite's exclusive resin, you get a strong repair that you can trust. plus, with most insurance a safelite repair is no cost to you. >> customer: really?! >> singers: safelite repair, safelite replace.
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it's super fast and you can control every device in the house. [ child offscreen ] hey! let's basement. and thanks to these xfi pods, the signal reaches down here, too. so sophie, i have an xfi password, and it's "daditude". simple. easy. awesome. xfinity. the future of awesome. brian: time for news by the numbers. i hope you are dressed while i read this $23.1 billion how much americans are expected to spend this mother's date. that's a shot of a woman's torso. it would be the second most expensive one on record behind last year. good luck, moms, you deserve it. extreme cutout jeans are on your mom's shopping list. not jeans. they are called shorts. the company is called karma
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denim. finally, that's how many times a florida man won the lottery. two, so he could buy all the jeans he wants. he just $1 million on a scratchoff ticket there. four years after winning a 1-million-dollar ticket in sarasota. now let's go over the rails to ainsley who is sitting alone but won't be sitting alone for long. ainsley: this teenager right there shamed over her prom dress, the one she is wearing in that picture. some are calling her racist. she a high school student in utah. and she was posting these photos wearing traditional chinese prom dress. the 18-year-old was sent hundreds of angry comments on twitter including this one which seemed to start it all by saying, quote: my culture is not your [bleep] prom dress. but the student is now standing up to those critic critics. she joins us now.
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good morning. >> good morning. ainsley: tell this how this happened. >> for prom i decided to go to a vintage shop in downtown salt lake. i was looking for a dress that had a modest neckline and was unique. and second, i saw this dress. i was immediately drawn to it and its beauty and i bought it the night of prom i got multiple compliments from strangers and even from teachers and administrators and my friends. when i posted it on twitter, the day after was the simple caption prom. that was when i started getting some responses. and i wasn't expecting it quite exactly. so it caught me by surprise. ainsley: some pictur people in t picture kneeling down clapped and folded. some say you are mocking chinese culture. what do you say to that? >> we were not mocking chinese culture. in fact, we were referring to a famous youtubeer from h
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3 h 3 productions. ainsley: i want to read some of these tweets that you got because you wore that dress. one person says what's the theme of your life? ignorant? and then another person writes: this isn't okay. i wouldn't wear traditional korean, japanese or any other traditional dress and i'm asian. i wouldn't wear swedish, greek either there is a lot of history behind these clothes, sad. what's your response. >> i feel there is a difference between wearing something with a different intent because i personally -- i wore the dress because i really respect the culture and i believe it is very beautiful and i wanted to show my respect and love by wearing one of their clothes in admiration of them. ainsley: if you could do it all over again, would you wear the same dress. >> yes. i would definitely wear it again. ainsley: you are one tough cookie. a lot of teenagers your age wouldn't be able to handle
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all of this criticism. how do you handle that? >> i just tell myself that there is going to be people who aren't always going to be pleased. i have learned to accept that in that i know what i have done and the reason why. and that's what i tell myself. ainsley: what's the lesson here? what have you learned. >> my lesson, i have learned, is it's important to see things from other people's shoes and being able to understand other people's opinions and awareness is a big thing. ainsley: well, ben shapiro, i don'i don't know if you know o he is. he is an activist, republican. he has gotten backlash from berkeley. he says way to go. proud of you for defending yourself. what about your pins pal your school what are they saying? >> my principal has been very kind to me and pulled me out of class on monday. and he told me how he is on my side and he is proud that i'm standing my ground and i
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felt very supported there along with my peers at school. ainsley: what about this p.c. culture we are in. i'm sure there are a lot of people who complimented you on your dress and said it was perfect. you said your friends did when you were taking pictures. what does it say about us as a society and where we are headed as a country? >> i feel our society is growing a lot and being able to accept other cultures and show your appreciation and i feel that if we are able to do these things, whether it's wearing a dress or supporting them verbally, we can maybe even end racism. ainsley: all right. keziah daum thank you for being with us. >> thank you. ainsley: environmentalists want to put president trump on ice literally. details on this crazy new.
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franklin graham is here to share some stories coming up next. ♪ ♪ ♪ with expedia you could book a flight, hotel, car and activity all in one place. ♪ but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. the name to remember. ♪ look how beautiful it is... honey, we need to talk. we do? i took the trash out. i know - and thank you so much for that. i think we should get a medicare supplement insurance plan.
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ainsley: my faith is important to me that's why i wrote the book the light within me. i'm going to be at a book signing in new jersey. if you live in the north veil new jersey area. i will be at books and greetings may 6th this sunday at 1:00 p.m. go to church with your family and come over and meet me. please don't leave me hanging. i need a big crowd on sunday. brian: all of a sudden you are insecure.
quote
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you want new jersey to be south carolina. ainsley: southerners they watch. they love fox news. so you get hundreds at these book signings. in new jersey i need a strong showing come on, steve. steve: she is going to be in bergen county, just across the george washington bridge. folks, all of new york can come over. brian: you have to see the amazon reviews people are reading it and loving it. great job. ainsley: thank you so much. steve: the late reverend billy graham was affectionately known as america's pastor. he touched the lives of millions worldwide. >> it may not be what we call revival. but certainly this is the moment of spiritual awakening. when it is easier to talk to men about god, it is easier to talk to men about christ in various parts of the world. than it has been for many years. brian: now his legacy lives on through his son reverend franklin graham who just released the new book "through my father's eyes."
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he joins us now. reverend franklin cono graham, good to see you again. >> good morning. brian: how are you doing. >> very good. my father has been preparing for all of his life and that's where he is. we spend a lot of time preparing for retirement. preparing for our education. preparing for our career. and people spend so little time preparing for eternity. and my father spent a lifetime preparing for eternity. and now he is in heaven in the presence of god looking at life through his father in heaven's eyes. this book is just lessons i learned from my father. spiritual lessons. lessons that not only will -- that have affected my life but anybody who reads it. my father was an unusual person. a man of prayer. he believed the bible to be the word of god cover to cover. there was no question. he decided that early on in his ministry. i don't understand it all.
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but i'm going to believe it all. and he believed the bible and when he would preach, he would stand up and hold the bible in his hand and say the bible says. that was his authority. the bible says. and not only did he believe the bible, but he followed what the bible preached and he was a great, great person. steve: franklin, had you two fathers. you had the guy who filled up the stadium and then you had the guy at home. >> same. same father. a lot of people think that -- well, a person that's well-known many times when the cameras are on them and flash bulbs are flashing and smiling and when that's turned off, they are different people. my father was the same in the stadiums, on television and what we saw at home. there wasn't two people. he was just the same. ainsley: what's your message, the dad seemed to all of us this perfect man. bet he was so nice and patient and gentle. he represented christ. what dues to the people that feel like they are not good
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enough. they are imperfect. >> jesus christ took our sins. all of us are sinners. the bible says we have all sinned, me, you, my father. and the penalty of sin is death. and jesus christ came from heaven to this earth to take our sins and he died in our place. and if we're willing to put our faith and trust in him, god forel. forgive us our sins and cleanse our hearts and have that hope of being with him in heaven. brian: your dad defied logic. >> 100. brian: go through the pictures and comment on some of them. can we do that? golf? >> he loved golf. he played golf up until the 1980. and then he just stopped. he felt it took too much time and he felt guilty but he loved to play golf. he was out there giving all of his children a golf lesson. ainsley: look how cute he is. i understand we have a picture of you with your daughter in 1988. look how precious that is. >> and she -- she was --
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daddy must have been asking her questions. i don't know. she must have been answering it. ainsley: what was he like with the children, with your children? >> very patient. loved children. my father, again, what you saw on television was the same we saw at home. he was a kind, gentle person. a very -- he would listen. and a lot of people don't listen today. steve: nobody knew him like you did. and you're going to read a little passage. >> yeah. and this is just an excerpt. even though i dreaded the day of my father would no longer be just a short journey away, i wanted to end the book with his journey to heaven. because this was his greatest longing to finally see life through the eyes of his father in heaven. steve: franklin, that is beautiful. do you think so elm few people think about the end of their life as you said at the beginning of this interview afraid.
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they don't want to think about it because they don't want to die? >> we are all afraid. we are getting closer and closer to that moment. the bible says there is an appointed time of death for all of us. and then after that the judgment. god is -- we're going to stand before god and give an account. there is a judgment. but that's why christ came. he took our sins. because none of us can stand before god as sinners. but he took our sins and he died on the cross. he was buried and he rose again. is i coming back. brian: pope made some news and walking it back to a degree that there is no hell. does franklin graham think there is a hell? >> jesus preached on hell. he taught about hell. so there is a hell. because jesus taught about hell. ainsley: your book, on shelves yesterday. >> yes. ainsley: it's called through my father's eyes. we learned so much about life and how to be a better person or better person because of your dad and your family. thank you for everything. >> we want to be saved. and our father taught us how to be saved, saved from
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hell. ainsley: he had a simple message. god loves you. >> he did. brian: director never has a simple message. toss to jillian. ainsley: now. jillian: sometimes that toss is very complicated. jillian: good morning to you guys. get you caught up on news we are following. manhunt intensifying for a registered sex offender led police on hours long chase in an rv with his kids inside. the driver was allegedly fighting with his wife earlier in the day and took off in california. he eventually ditched the camper, leaving behind his young children. both under 3 years old. sea parole ye and believed to be armed and dangerous. one state is getting rid of the policeman and fireman, the new york state assembly a bill replace those terms with the gender neutral job terms of firefighter and police officer. liberal lawmakers say it's a show of respect. the now heads to andrew cuomo's desk.
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environmentalists want to prove to president trump global warming is true. carve the president's face into artic glacier. they want a live stream video of the 115-foot sculpture to show how quickly it melts. president trump has called global warm ago hoax. he has joked about being added to mount rushmore. what do you guys think of that one? steve: icy. [laughter] brian: i hate talking behind your back but i thought it was very interesting. steve: let's go from really cold weather to really warm weather here in new york city. janice dean. janice, they call it tornado alley for a reason. a lot of storms out in the middle. janice: talk to amazing people. at the amazing people we have out here. severe weather. let's talk about it because it could be coming to a neighborhood near you. highs today very warm temperatures ahead of this cold front and tornado alley is going to be fired up again. we had close to 2 dozen reports of tornadoes yesterday. we will see the possibility for the same today. starting this afternoon. there are some of the
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reports that we are getting and the video now thankfully no one is hurt. and we don't have any deaths because it happened out in farmland which is where we like the tornadoes to stay. but, unfortunately as we go throughout the afternoon and the evening hours we could see the potential again today for tornadoes. this actually could be a more destructive day. so beautiful-looking tornadoes. thankfully they didn't hurt anybody. but there's the threat today through this evening and it will las last. what's your name. >> jordan. >> do you like "fox & friends." >> yes. janice: good answer. say hi to steve, ainsley and brian right there on the camera. >> hi. steve: hello. ♪ i call brian pee pee all the time. thank you j.d. steve: getting warmer more people in fronkt the building. you three republican candidates for senate squaring off at the big debate in west virginia.
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congressman evan jenkins was on the stage. how did it go? brian is going to talk to him next. ainsley: is chivalry dead? next guest says yes and women are the ones that killed it. is that true? we're going to debate it. brian: thanks, women. ♪ ♪ if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, or psoriatic arthritis, little things can be a big deal. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats differently. for psoriasis, 75% clearer skin is achievable with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and for psoriatic arthritis, otezla is proven to reduce joint swelling, tenderness, and pain. and the otezla prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if these occur. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts,
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that smile. technology this convenient... could make history. what's in your wallet? claritin and relief from of non-drowsy symptoms caused by over 200 allergens. like those from buddy. because stuffed animals are clearly no substitute for real ones. feel the clarity and live claritin clear. what the. >> if you want to see what the problem is. patrick morsey. >> did your mom ever tell you we should wash your mouth out with soap over those lies. >> i'm actually in washington working with president trump. i have been fighting the establishment. >> you can't drain the swamp being like the swamp. >> we need somebody representing our values. brian: exchange fiery face off here on fox news last night exclusively. three g.o.p. hopefuls taking the stage for the senate primary debate in west virginia.
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they want to take on what's likely going to be joe manchin. joining us now is within of those candidates gop congressman evan jenkins going in the real clear average had you up by four in this primary process. how did you feel about your performance? did you watch it back? >> i actually did, brian. i thought things came across very clear. the choice is clear. you know, i'm the proud west virginian. i'm the only one on that stable that actually voted for donald trump in the election the primary 2016. i exposed patrick morsey for the never trumper that he is. i asked him to look in the camera and tell people who he voted for in 2016 because he admitted he didn't vote for donald trump. brian: in particular, no one knows how this is going to go, this is one of these primaries where the primary could reveal to a sitting senator a legitimate contender to knock that sitting senator off the seat since you are in a red state. what's the difference
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between the three that emerged that you didn't even know going in. >> well, what's investor clear, patrick morrisey has deep ties to the d.c. lobby world. 18 years big pharma made millions of dollars peddling the pills in our state. don blankenship everyone knows the don blankenship story. he was convicted and spent a year in prison. he is running for the senate. but, what really came through last night is my staunch loyalty and support of president trump standing um for our west virginia values. who we are, what we believe in. and the clear choice and i'm the only one that can defeat joe manchin. that's what this election is all about. bringing a much-needed republican member to the united states senate. i can defeat joe manchin. i will defeat joe manchin. and i'm a proud supporter of donald trump. always have been. the only one on that stage that actually voted for him. brian: what makes you think you can beat a guy who has been a governor and two term senator?
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>> joe manchin has lost his west virginia values. you know what? he is in washington. he sleeps on a yacht. when i'm in washington, in congress, i sleep on a cot in my office. there is a big difference. he defended and supports planned parenthood. he voted against the president's tax cut bill. i voted to cut taxes. i voted to defund planned parenthood. joe manchin has abandoned our second amendment rights. i have 100 percent voting record with the national rifle association and the national right-to-life. strong pro-life, strong second amendment. i remember the west virginia values. joe manchin has lost his values. he has come -- he is part of d.c. he is not a part of west virginia anymore. brian: all right congressman evan jenkins thanks so much. congressman who wants to be senator from west virginia. thanks so much for the debate last night. you all came to play. we appreciate it. thanks, congressman. >> we appreciate you being here. thank you, brian. brian: all right. no problem.
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11 minutes before the top of the hour. kanye love fest with the president is not going away. he continues. now he is opening up about why he thinks trump won. plus, graduation season is here. are you planning on surprising your new grad with a brand new car? janice and julian are jul jillie testing out. we might give one to them. ♪ ♪ liberty mutual stood with me when this guy got a flat tire in the middle of the night. hold on dad... liberty did what? yeah, liberty mutual 24-hour roadside assistance helped him to fix his flat so he could get home safely. my dad says our insurance doesn't have that. don't worry - i know what a lug wrench is, dad.
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brian: it's graduation season moms and dads looking to surprise grads with a new set of wheels. new car. here is the safest most reliable options here with
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consumer report. >> hi, thanks for having me back. brian: you wanted to start with the mazda why. >> one of the great things about the mazda cx 3 automatic particular emergency brake. proven piece of data hardware that is shown to reduce accidents. you have a young driver in your household. you want to give them all the safety features available and this one has it standard. brian: great handling, very competitive, tall and narrow. i like the look on it. i would add this. i like the price, too, for a brand new car between 20 and 26,000. >> there is a lot of value here. mazda typically has good reliability. excellent fuel economy. "consumer reports" testing. this is a great car for a young driver. brian: come over here with me. woman named ainsley has a car thinks it's as good if not better. ainsley: hey, mike. good to see you. thanks for being here. i like this because they are heated seats. all four of the seats are heated. >> you don't think that your young driver really worries about these things hey, the parents do. when you are not letting your child drive this. well we can drive this. this is a ford edge. this did very well in "consumer reports" testing.
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excellent controls. the sync 3 info takenment system. easy to figure out. a lot of room and spaciousness here. good seats. we like the ford edge. we think it's a good, safe choice for a young driver. ainsley: backseat is spacious, too. meet jillian. jillian, this is mike. jillian: hi. i'm just enjoying my ride over here. >> isn't it funky. >> lot bigger than it looks like. >> what we like about this for young driver in "consumer reports" testing we found the seats to be very comfortable. excellent visibility. it's got this boxy shape, right? lots of glass area. lots of ways to see out. visibility is important as other things. forward collision warning emergency braking available on the trim line. jillian: what does this one? >> 22 to 32,000 more or less. jillian: let's go see steve what do we have here? steve: welcome to the hyundai sonata. let me tell you, so the price is affordable. kind of.
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>> 25 to 35. something like that. steve: here is the reason. come on over here kids will like it. it's got a really cool screen where it has terrific sound system. there are usb plugs. it's a command station. >> comes with android auto and apple car play. so that means their phones can talk to the infotainment system. easy to use controls. sonata one of those cars flies under the radar and doesn't get enough love. steve: tell me about the volkswagen? janice: tell me about this beautiful car. >> talking about cars for kids to me this is the one i want. this is the volkswagen golf off road wagon. really nice inside. beautiful interior. excellent visibility. great seats. janice: here is our interior. >> lots of available safety equipment including forward collision warning and automatic collision braking. i love driving this car. janice: does the sun roof
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open up? >> the top part does. janice: the top comes down, baby. steve: thank you very much. janice: got it. let's go. steve: tweeting about robert mueller. that's coming up next. so, i'm doing all i can to stay in his life. be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. . .
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[whistling] hello. give me an hour in tanning room 3. cheers! that's confident.
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but it's not kayak confident. kayak searches hundreds of travel sites to help me plan the best trip. so i'm more than confident. forgot me goggles. kayak. search one and done. dray, when he was younger, he loved to smile; and we knew he would need braces because his teeth were coming in funny. this is the picture that was on the front page of the newspaper. all you can notice is the braces! then, once he got to michigan state, he broke the retainer! my bottom teeth, they were really crooked, and i just wasn't getting braces again. then i discovered smiledirectclub. it's easy to just grab it and go and i can change it on the road. i did photoshoots with my aligners in and you can't see them. a smile is a first impression, that's why i think having a great smile is so important.
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ainsley: showdown pruing between president trump's lawyers and robert mueller. >> we know special counsel mueller threatened the president with a grand jury subpoena to fores him to answer questions. brian: first immigrants of caravan getting asylum. what about the thousand of others still waiting? >> if you violate the border of entry and our laws, you will be prosecuted. there is no exempt category. steve: some say the prom dress is racist. >> i really respect the culture. i feel it is really beautiful. brian: should illegal hold government jobs. one california lawmaker says it is a good idea. >> that was not a right for people that didn't respect the people to follow the rule of law
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to get here. period. >> what happened with the great america again hat. >> i felt freedom, doing something everybody tells you not to do. >> i never been into politics. i just love trump. that is my voice. ♪ ♪ >> that song and chorus, so recognizable. used on so many tv shows even the finale of "the sopranos." it was written by jonathan cain. one of the members about journey will talk to us about the journey of journey coming up. ainsley: he plays the keyboard. has a knew book out. brian: i believe there were only two journey albums. i had both of them. am i right, joel?
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[buzzer] i was told there were only two. ainsley: because you were on a budget. fascination with numbers and bands. want to know how many people are in the band and how many albums drops. brian: one of the many mysteries that makes meme. ainsley: he is a numbers guy. brian: showdown between president trump and robert mueller's lawyers. ainsley: leaks show the special counsel is considering a subpoena to get the president to talk. steve: griff jenkins is live in washington, d.c. he appears without his arm sling. reporter: i have it over here if you need one. this showdown could end up in the supreme court if special counsel mueller follows through on the grand jury subpoena threat if the president refuses to answer questions. revelation coming from a meeting back in march, according to former lead attorney john dowd, who confirmed same to mueller's team. this is not some game. you're screwing with the work of the president of the united
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states. dowd resigned a few weeks later over the prospects of the president testifying, told ed henry he is not the one leaking as fox news obtain ad leaked list of 50 questions mueller wants to ask the president. including, mike flynn, jeff sessions and his own son donald trump, jr. the president is firing back. so disgraceful that the questions concerning the russia witch-hunt were leaked to media. no questions on collusion. you have a made up phony crime collusion, that never existed and an investigation begun illegally leaked classified information. nice. leaks continue and continue as critics of russia probe these questions prove mueller is trying to set a trap for the president rather than investigating a crime, guys. steve: griff, thank you very much. that message, that sentiment was encapsulated in a tweet that came out 17 minutes ago from the president.
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he tweets there was no collusion. it's a hoax. and there is no obstruction of justice. that is a set-up and trap. what there is, is negotiations going on with north korea over nuclear war, negotiations going on with china over trade deficits, negotiations on nafta and much more. witch-hunt. in other words, he is trying to run the country and trying to get us to make america great again but he has got this then going on where they're trying to show that he obstructed justice or there was russia collusion. to him there is no evidence. ainsley: what is important to the american people? are they sick of all this collusion mess? there hasn't been any evidence of collusion. robert mueller is continuing this. is it obstruction of justice? is he going to be subpoenaed. what do you at home care about you? care about nafta and what happens in china and north korea. at that would be amazing if they could sit down and talk and negotiate. brian: that might be one of the president's all-time great tweets. lays out what his day is.
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his day has nothing to do with robert mueller, swearing in mike pompeo and re-energizing the state department and substantial congress he is making with or without congress. his statement was, john dowd, reportedly march 12th, meeting with the mueller team, this isn't a game. president has to run the country. can we get down to it? can get get over this? couple things worthy. this leaked out. the questions leaked out. the trump team, there was verbatim from the mueller team taken down as jay sekulow, john dowd, ty cobb were listening robert mueller's team listening to the questions. robert mueller has gone after four people not telling the truth to the investigation, to the fib i b there are some things in these 52 questions where if you do not line up with rick gates, if you do not line up with michael flynn, whatever they said or paul manafort, or
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the papdopoulus, down get the president on this? that is the goal here. steve: president says this is a trap. given all the world has seen the four dozen questions the president is note going to sit down with mr. mueller. it is unlikely, not impossible, but nonetheless goes to a tweet the president sent out yesterday. it is hard to obstruct justice for a crime that never happened. where, it all started with russia collusion. i think i read this morning in the paper that manafort's lawyer says the mueller team said we can't find any coordination or communication between manafort and russian officials. brian: right. could that be one of the surprises? is that part of that case? can you actually surprise somebody. is there a discovery process before you sit down, we got these intercepts of manafort talking to the russian government. steve: no obligation. we'll talk to victoria tensing
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in about five minutes. she is expert on the topic. what she has to say will surprise. ainsley: let's talk about the caravan, all the central americans traveling trying to get into the united states. 18 migrants coming in. 28 migrants in another article. 30 migrants made it over the border, mostly women and children within the air van. eight on monday. the rest of them on tuesday. steve: when they arrive the san ysidro port, the process 100,000 people a day. they were shocked the border patrol said we can't dot processing for asylum, because we're filled up. as it turns out there is a big group of mostly mexicans trying to get asylum at that port. now those people are angry from the people from the caravan, because the caravan people are
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jumping the line. wait a minute. we've been here a week. you have to wait your turn. brian: backlog of court cases for people like this is up to over a million. so over a came here. they declared status. they know what to say. we give them a court date. it is so backed up they have to get a million people ahead of them. this is an insane system. it doesn't benefit anyone. there might be people there helping american society. others that don't belong. they want to foment violence in the society. this is not a way to run a superpower. what are the people thinking around the world. ainsley: we'll have to hire more people to process them. so many people coming through and we want to vet them more to make us safe. steve: out of 100, only 20 show up for the court date. commissioner of the cpb this is
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a very thorough, time sensitive process. no one will be exempt from the law during this administration. >> processing people without documents who are making asylum claims is necessarily time-intensive. we need to have space for them to handle that appropriately. the u.s. border patrol apprehended 11 folks, some with family units crossing the border between ports of entry. we set those up with prosecution with the strong support of the attorney general and department of justice. they're in u.s. marshal custody. they will go through the criminal process. secretary nielsen, you cross our border between ports of entry, you will be prosecuted. there are no exempt categories. steve: all different from the last administration. brian: "et"'s kang news. kanye west made a lot of news, he tweeted i like donald trump. one of the guests african-american, was a democrat, now a republican. says i'm tired of thinking
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african-americans have it bad. this generation does not. candace owens says you're overserved in america. kanye west tweeted support. they talked. they had a chance to meet face-to-face. kanye did "tmz" yesterday. ainsley: watch this. >> this was a feeling i had, like, people were taught how to think. we're taught how to feel. we don't know how to feel for ourselves. people say feel free. they don't want us to feel free. freedom, first of all, just doing something that everybody tells you not to do. >> i just love trump. that is my boy. there is a class war happening right now. the class war is one of the reasons why trump won because obama was so high-class, that it stopped speaking to the middle and the lower class. steve: kanye took a lot of heat aligning himself with candace owens. he took a lot of heat for loving trump.
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took a lot of heat saying slavery was a choice. brian: he fired back. listen, with i'm trying to say. the mind-set is a choice. don't look back 400 years. think about how things are today, how you want to be. i'm being attacked to present new ideas. to make myself clear i know slaves did not get shackled and put on a boat with free will. to make myself clear he said that he also had another defining statement. he quoted harriet tubman, i freed 1000 slaves. i could have freed 1000 more, only if they knew they were slaves. ainsley: we asked you guys at home to respond to this. maria wrote us, kanye started a tsunami a dialogue about freedom of choice for all who were expected to think and follow the far left doctrine mindlessly. good for him. steve: sheila e mailed him, just because he loves trump does make him a hero or new fav to
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conservatives. the impact on waking his fans. that is where the threat lies for the left. brian: chelsea says i'm not a fan of his music but i support what he is saying. democrat liberals don't seem to comprehend. i don't really follow politics. if you want someone follows politics, my buddy john legend follows politics. he likes his approach. way he does things. he pointed out in hip-hop, i wouldn't know this, donald trump is part of a lot of lyrics. steve: we have heard he might like to run for president some day even though he is not very political. brian: in 2024. i don't think he would run against trump. ainsley: there is what america is about. you are allowed to have different political views and like each other. he and john legend don't agree on the politics. if you read tweets or news, they still love each other. steve: they were over the weekend together. ainsley: right, exactly. steve: nancy pelosi has a lot to say about republicans.
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>> crumbs they are giving. should they mow the grass so people can't hide in it. a bowl of doggie doo put a cherry on top and call it a sundae. ainsley: gross. is schiff valley dead, there is new op-ed, that says yes. you, if you're a woman, you killed it. we'll debate it next. ♪ lilly.
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♪ steve: president trump outraged as the questions robert mueller would like to ask him are leaked to the press including fox news. the big question now, who is the leaker and why does it keep happening? let's talk to attorney victoria tensing and former attorney to the congressional committee and former attorney general to president ronald reagan. >> good morning steve. steve: we were talking during the break you have no idea who the leaker is but don't these leaks make it clear longs like the special counsel is out to trap the president of the united states? >> not just out to trap him, but these are all improper questions
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under various bases, steve. one of them, the president in the legal vernacular is not readily available to be interviewed. what does that mean? well the information has to be very material to the matter. but it can not be, that it can not be gotten from any other place or any other person. steve: so if there is another person who could do the testimony, you default to them, and not the president? >> absolutely. then that's done out of policy because the president, you know, all kinds of people would want the president to be a witness in something. case law is here in washington, d.c. but there is even, more important issues at play here and at that is, the president's, so many questions are challenging the president's authority under article ii. the president is the chief executive. he hires and fires people. he can do so. he is not to be questioned in any place for having done so. so many, why dud fire mueller or comey and those kind of thing. steve: right.
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>> the third category is executive privilege. and that is deliberative process the president foes through. for example, what did you, was the decision you made if, deciding whether to fire flynn? steve: right. >> that is second live privilege but there is even another category. these blew my mind. what did you feel? what did you think when? bless me father, i have sinned, i had impure thoughts. i thought catholic confessional only place thoughts are called into question, not the legal system of the united states. steve: so if you were one of his attorneys, you and joe, got close to it, but you had other clients that would keep that from happening, if you were advising him right now, you would say, mr. president, sitting in a chair opposite robert mueller is the last place you need to be? >> i would say, as i have said to other clients, if you want to go down there, i'm going to go stand in the door, you will have
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to go over pie dead body to go down there. i have said at that to other clients. they didn't go and thanked me later. steve: victoria, real quickly, president said hard to obstruct justice for a crime that never happened. look where is the russia collusion. they can't find that. how could i be obstructing that? >> remember scooter libby, my client who the president pardoned. there was no crime. valerie plame was not covert. they got scooter on process. one i want to comment on the president, if the president says x, and jim comey says x, bob mueller's people will say, oh, jim comey told the truth and the president lied. this is now an article for impeachment. they can't indict him according to doj case precedent but they can take him, well, legal memoranda. but they can write an article of impeachment. that is exactly what happened to scooter libby. two people's memories differed.
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scooter was indicted. he was not the president. steve: you made it clear. it could be a trap. thank you very much for joining us. >> sure. steve: straight ahead, is chivalry dead? yes. i can also help with this. does your bed do that? oh... i don't actually talk. though i'm smart enough to. i'm the new sleep number 360 smart bed. let's meet at a sleep number store. hesumatra reserve told in the time it takes to brew your cup. let's go to sumatra. where's sumatra? good question. this is win. and that's win's goat, adi. the coffee here is amazing. because the volcanic soil is amazing. making the coffee erupt with flavor. so we give farmers like win more plants. to grow more delicious coffee. that erupts with even more flavor. which helps provide for win's family.
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mr. elliot, what's your wiwifi?ssword? wifi's ordinary. basic. do i look basic? nope! which is why i have xfinity xfi.
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it's super fast and you can control every device in the house. [ child offscreen ] hey! let's basement. and thanks to these xfi pods, the signal reaches down here, too. so sophie, i have an xfi password, and it's "daditude". simple. easy. awesome. xfinity. the future of awesome. >> lady, ha anything like this happened to you? , watch. >> it's open. it's open. >> i don't go on dates with guys that don't open the door for me. >> really? >> yes. >> seriously? >> yes. >> oh, man. >> no he -- ainsley: well, according to a recent survey by match.com, 73% of women believe chivalry is dead.
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according to one of our next guests, explains in the new op-ed, because women killed it. suzanne baker a columnist, author of guide to marriage. we have a professor at john hopkins university to discuss it and a democratic strategist. good morning, ladies. good morning. suzanne, you wrote the op set. wendy, you read it, i read it. you compare a telegram that was sent to a woman right before she got marid to a facebook video. i read back in the day, back in 1954, your friend, her period of time recently died, your friend was going through memorabilia. she finds the telegram. this is the husband writing to his soon to be wife. darlinglying i will wait for you at 8:00, with a lifetime of expectancy. my heart coming down with the aisle. may god be with us tonight. my love for you, henry.
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suzanne you saw on facebook this video saying chivalry was harmful to men and women because it reinforces this idea that women need to be helped or saved by a stronger man, it takes away from woman's agency. you saw these two contrasts. you started to write the op-ed, explain that a little for us. >> sure. it just struck me as just wow, i mean the stark contrast between this beautiful letter that really moved me to seeing this message from this woman, basically selling the same tired message that men have been hearing for decade which is, i can do it by myself. i'm strong enough. you don't need to hold the door open for me. you don't need to pay my way. basically anything that is sort of traditionally male and female in terms of the courtship is just gone. after some years of hearing that, my argument is that men have effectively said, okay, you said you don't want it, so i guess i'm not supposed to do it. if i do it i will be insulted.
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they are really lost and confuse what women want. women are just as confused because they have been sold this message that, that chivalry is bad or somehow destructive to women it is not at all. so we have a problem. ainsley: wendy, what do you think? are we to blame, women. >> i wouldn't go as far to say women killed chivalry. whether you look from card did i. about, to beyonce,working moms or countless others what we have done we evolved the conversation what it means to be a woman in today's society. and what that means is, we're doing it all, and it is basically mean men have to basically rise to the occasion to meet us where we are. we are not the mothers of our past. there was fog wrong with that past -- nothing wrong with that we're doing juggling millions of things. chivalry is not dead, in essence we don't want men to open doors for us, what we are saying we have to handle us and handle a full-time job as well.
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ainsley: you make a good point in the op-ed, suzanne, not that we can't open our own doors, to the that we can't pay for our own food, but you say that, is it, is this show of sign of respect? why is it important to let a woman do those thing? >> right. so what's been lost in this whole, 40-year experiment really or, however you want to define it is the yin and yang the dance between women and men. men and women now are completely confused and lost about who is supposed to do what. who wants what and what women specifically are confused about, is men and how their, it is in their dna to provide and protect women. that is who they are. that is their identity. we've essentially ripped out of them. when they become unmoored. if you don't let them do what is in them to do you're going to disrupt that dance. so what i'm trying to say is,
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masculinity and feminity are wonderful things in and off themselves, when they work in tandem, sparks fly. it is awesome. we're not allowing that to happen pause we are infused with this message about equality, the idea men and women are the same when they are not. that gesture of holding the door open i was using as one example is to the men trying to open press women. they want to please them. they want to take care of them. they want to show them honor really. we knew this in the past. everybody knew this this has gotten completely lost in the last 40 years. you can see that in the telegram how deeply that was felt and understood. women today want. you read at that telegram. who would to the want that, right? but how are we going to get there, yeah, got to get back to understanding -- ainsley: wendy, we're all, i heard it said that we are created the, we are both equally as important but created the
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differently in our needs and our wants. do you agree with that? >> i agree with that to some extent. as a wife and mother of two little boys i believe the strength of a woman what makes men respect us even more. we are to the necessarily damsels in distress here. we can open doors for ourselves is. we can do things for ourselves. we welcome men to open doors for us as well. but its okay for a woman to be strong. it is okay for a women to be independent. that in no way negates a man's masculinity at all. >> i couldn't agree more. ainsley: wendy, suzanne, great to see you. we'll have to have you back. we'll continue the conversation later. thanks, ladies. remember when u.n. ambassador nikki haley said this. >> so outrageous that some countries we support go against us at the u.n., we're watching votes and we're taking names. ainsley: she was taking names. this morning we have the list. nancy pelosi made her boldest prediction yet, not only will democrats win the midterms, she
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will become the house speaker again she says. your emails next. ♪ with big dreams. ♪ we came with big appetites. with expedia, you could book a flight, hotel, car, and activity all in one place. ♪
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♪ >> should they mow the grass so people can't hide in it? a bowl of doggie do, put a cherry on top, call it a chocolate sunday. they go to church a lot of these people anti, you pray on sunday and prey on people the rest of the week. steve: some of nancy pelosi's greatest hits. brian: she has more, believe me. ainsley: we left out some of the others. we don't have time for them all. steve: she was talking to washington -- rather
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"the boston globe." made it very clear. the reason she is hanging on all these years since she was speaker because she think there is will be a blue wave and get the big chair again. ainsley: that she will become speaker again. brian: when we win i run for speaker, we're confident about it, my members do too. not all of them, even toe she is a money-generating machine. who is high-fiving? every republican that wants wants to stay in the majority. she is somebody that motivates the right to vote. a lot of people think she is somebody that is, takes a lot of moderates or independents says, i remember what it was like when she was in charge. i don't want to relive that. ainsley: a lot want new blood. you ask democrats, who is the next candidate? they don't have any idea. we asked all of you to write in. james said, it is going to be a tough sell since some of the newer democratic members of the house want her to step aside. steve: meanwhile they do want
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her fund-raising. another viewer tweets, whether dems are in the minority or majority, nancy pelosi should not be speaker. the democrats in congress should also resist that. brian: vicki said this, but in higher voice. is that all the dems have? they're in trouble. i don't even know what their message is, their message is, we didn't vote for the tax cuts. their message is, the president doesn't even resonate anymore. the president was falsely elected. doesn't matter. guess what's happening? through all this turmoil the president's approval rating is going up. on real clear average is 42, a little bit above where he was -- steve: highest in 11 months. brian: a little bit above where president obama was, who did not have big scandal looming over his head or check that, investigation looming over his head. ainsley: the american public sees the president trying to get the wall done, to pass tax cuts and democrats are standing in
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his way. once it happens like the tax cuts, people are seeing bonuses. they're looking at nancy pelosi calling them crumbs. they're saying she is out of touch. she was trying to prevent us from -- brian: you know what could hurt the republican message? what marco rubio said. so far he claims, i will paraphrase, i see no discernible advantage for the average worker from the tax cut. steve: that is outlyer from the a republican. democrats all voted no on the tax cut. keep in mind kevin brady is on two days ago. they will bring up phase two of the tax cuts before the election, means every democrat could vote for it this time. they won't, because they say it is a bad idea. nonetheless a lot in troublesome states could say yes, make an ad that effect. brian: waiting a long time for phase two. we've been hearing about phase two for two months. don't say a word about phase two. we're working on it. jillian: good morning, how are you guys. ainsley: we're almost done. we're close to thursday. close to the weekend.
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jillian: before we get to that we have to get drought up on headlines. start with that you remember when u.n. ambassador nikki haley issued this warning? >> it is outrageous to see so many countries who we support go against us at the u.n. we're watching their votes and yes, we're taking names. jillian: new state department report giving her those names revealing u.n. member-states only voted with the u.s. 31% of the time last year. in a statement haley said quote, this is to the acceptable return on our investment. american taxpayers pay for 22% of the u.n. budget. a face only a mother could know. this accused crook who police say held up several businesses wearing a surgical mask stumped police for weeks but he couldn't fool his mom. marcel roundtree turning himself in after his 88-year-old mother recognized him on the news. known as the cookie man, he faces several robbery charges. same college where americans
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tore down and burned american flag after the 2016 election, will hold a feminist he collaborative at the college in massachusetts they will talk about reproductive justice and gender lens to social issues. the two week course costs fearly $3,000. even dogs have days they don't want to get up and go to work. >> my poor husband, trying to go to work and he lays flat on the ground. it is only tuesday. dude has wednesday, thursday, friday, still to go to work. court court that is k-9 officer jango refusing to get in the car. the officer had to persuade him with a belly rub. he jumps right up, dad, let's go. time for work. steve: he was waiting for it. ainsley: that is cute. steve: thank you very much, jillian. ainsley: i love the story.
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$3,000 for a feminist camp to learn about reproductive justice. jillian: i like the belly rub story. i don't work without a belly rub. ainsley: really? i don't want anyone to rub my belly. brian: put that if the manuel. >> we have to talk about belly rubs all day long. we have to talk about severe weather. it is happening yesterday. it will happen today and tomorrow. two dozen reports of tornadoes, some of the video we're getting in. thankfully no one injured or hurt in these tornadoes, today could mean the difference. it will move into more populated areas. the section is going to widen from texas up to the great lakes. we'll see visuals of these. we hope they're not on top of people's opens. know with to do if you have a watch or warning in your area. we're certainly going to have tornadoes today. they could be large, they could be destructive and they could be deadly. we don't need that. this is the severe weather
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setup. perfect extreme weather setup. jet scream is in place. we have upper level wind and lower level wind and gulf moisture and turning wind in height. tornadoes a threat. they will happen across the plain states especially the red and orange areas. that is the main concern overnight tonight and into tomorrow. i need you folks living across the plains know what to do with your watch and warning. protect your kids and your animals. lowest level in your home when you hear the sirens going off. steve: a lot of people have root cellars or basements. they might head there. brian: oklahoma city, most of them have it. >> heed the warnings. steve: thanks very much, jd meanwhile -- brian: as the immigrant caravan waits at the border, many on the left want you to believe only innocent people are entering our country. one policeman with a reality check next. steve: one of the most iconic rock songs of all time, but do
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you know where the name, don't stop believing came from? that is journey keyboardist jonathan cain shares the journey because life should have more wishes and less worries. feel the clarity and live claritin clear. gentlemen, i have just received word! the louisiana purchase, is complete! instant purchase notifications from capital one . technology this helpful... could make history. what's in your wallet?
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♪ brian: the justice department charging nearly a dozen members of migrant caravan entering the country illegally, as a case of the america's heartland shed as light on reality some immigration officials face. in cleveland, ohio, a mexican immigrant thrown out of the u.s. three times, sentenced to 15 years in prison sexually assaulting a child relative. he will serve time in state prison before deported back to mexico again. a real prince. cleveland police detective and former president of the cleveland's police patrol association steve loomis. you're looking at migrants. every one is open up your heart
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to these people. they're desperate from honduras, you say there is another side to this? >> absolutely, absolutely. i would challenge nancy pelosi to spend five minutes with the mother of this beautiful child that was victimized and shouldn't have been. her explain her position on open borders and sanctuary cities to that mother an thousands like her, thousands of parents who are victimized, we have victimized children in this country. we have victimized adults in this country by illegal aliens. brian: there are a few hundred got there. they started at 1400, only because the president was relentless and attention was pretty hard. however, we let in about 17 or 18. don't tell me they're all refugees. they're not all women and children. looking at guys sitting on top of at that fence, they look pretty healthy. >> absolutely. law enforcement, speaking from law enforcement, we support,
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we're constitutionalists. we support this country, every aspect of it, including legal immigration. we want people to come into this country. but we want them vetted. we want them to come in here way our forefathers and grandparents came in, legally. that is not too much to ask. for nancy pelosi and, others to any that somehow we're the bad guys, because we're not going to allow that. president trump, god bless him, for closing those borders to make it more difficult. brian: steve, you have a real divide. you have these texas counties banning together look to throw out the daca kids, reverse president obama's daca decision. you have others like mayor rahm emanuel who wants to give illegals licenses in order to be able to vote, basically give them instant citizenship, as well as our line tick mayor here in new york city -- lunatic
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mayor in new york city. have you ever seen such a divide on black and white issue. >> it is working out in chicago for the mayor on the decisions make. he is another one that has to go. the fact of the matter law-abiding citizens are being victimized from our perspective at higher rates than we've ever had before. look at the look hon this guy's face, 15 years. he thought he would get deported. absolutely. there is no, there is no ramification for illegal aliens committing crimes. in this country. you president them on a plane, fly them home. what the heck is that? brian: so they come in again. >> they come in again three times, through el paso this guy to painsville which is one of our sanctuary city here in northeast ohio. it has got to stop. brian: got to take politics out of it. it is not the hispanic vote or north or south. >> no. brian: this is about what is america and how to get in. detective steve loomis, thanks
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so much. >> thank you very much, sir. the family of that victim of this five-year-old, this is hispanic family. you know on that point. so they're not just victimizing caulkcation americans. they're victimizing everybody. brian: thanks, steve. up next, one of journey's biggest hits but did you know the song, quote open arms." didn't exist. the man who wrote it, john cain shares the music. also with a great singing voice, bill hemmer. >> for the school dance there. brian, breaking the president's latest response on collusion and obstruction. we'll have that for you. jason chaffetz why republicans are not getting pursuit of evidence. nikki haley making waves at u.n. and get ready for major changes in facebook. see sandra and me at the top of the hour.
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♪ ♪ "don't stop believin'," hold on to that feeling. city lights,. steve: that was 1981, i went to the concert by journey that year. that is one of the most iconic rock songs of all time. "don't stop believin'" name of long time journey band member jonathan cain's new memoir. ainsley: he is keyboardist. he is songwriter. he leads worship at his wife's church. he is an author. jonathan cain. joins. you are married to paula white, advisor to the president.
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>> i am so blessed. god has a sense of humor. brian: a rock star. john tan, get it out of the way, it was a phone call to your dad. you were about to give up on music career. what did he say? >> don't stove believing, john, i have a vision for you. the whole message in the book, there is a blessing, there is a breakthrough beyond the setback. you know almost like, you have to go through these moments to get to your breakthrough. and, that was always the case. it seemed like the lord put me next to greatness, you know. when i was if l.a., i was all around this greatness. but i couldn't get in. wasn't my time. wasn't my season. it was god's timing. steve: right. >> i think that is the message if the book. i really tried to inspire young, creative people, that get, feel like they're stuck or feel like they're not getting validated, there is hope. that success is just around the
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corner. as pie father had told me, i go into detail about my journey to journey in the book. steve: you actually listened to your father. >> he was such an amazing man, and, i know today it is so tough, you know, for young, creative people and i want to give this to them to inspire and to encourage, you know, there is many life lessons in this book. i go through some of my father's famous saying like, don't stop believing. my favorite one of my father, only a stepping stone to something greater. always looking forward. always glass half-full. ainsley: you write about a fire in your elementary school in the '50s. 92 classmates and teachers were killed? >> it was a terrible fire, december 1st, we all grew up that day. and, it was a hard chapter to
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write. it was very -- i wept a couple of times, recalling -- but it was so -- the thing about writing those books, all the things were so clear in my mind. so my memory served me well. i can remember so many, the names of the nuns, i remember the names of my first grade teachers. ainsley: you never got into drug because of your dad, your dad's voice -- >> my father told me they were the devil's work, you know. he was very spiritual man, very prayerful man. he led me to jesus christ at early age, seven years old. brian: most rock stars, no offense, look beyond their age, because they lived so hard. you looked like 20 years younger, because you listened to your dad, you have a hit song and hit book. >> because i have a good god. ainsley: amen. brian: jonathan cain, more with him in a moment. ♪
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>> we have jonathan cain from journey. paula white advisor to the president. they'll be in the after the show show and what an inspirational couple you are for our country. >> bill: 9:00 in new york and fox news alert brand-new developments in the robert mueller matter. he reportedly told the president's legal team that if president trump refuses an interview on behalf of special counsel he could face a subpoena and what happens then. wow. good morning. i'm bill hemmer live inside of "america's newsroom." it is still spring in the northeast. we weren't given a head fake yesterday. it came and it stayed. >> sandra: don't put away the winter jacket you'll jinx us all. the news coming in from president trump's former top lawyer john dowd. he said mueller raised the possibility of a subpoena during a meeting with the president's attorneys

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