tv FOX Friends FOX News December 31, 2018 3:00am-6:00am PST
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holding the cork. anna: hold the bottle. >> here we are. at the end you hold it at 45 degrees. jillian: almost missing that crazy noise we like and it spills over. anna: i'm thirsty. jillian: "fox & friends" starts now. have a good new year. >> now into the second week of a partial government shutdown. both sides digging in over funding for president trump's border wall. >> nancy pelosi needs to come back from hawaii, let's pull out more mullah for the dhs border security. >> massive manhunt right now for the gunman pulling the trigger in 7-year-old girl in front of her family. >> i feel better about syria. i think the president is very committed to making sure when we lee syria that isis is completely defeated. >> we have got to fight climate change and the president has to lean on that. it took roosevelt many, many years to get america willing to go into world war ii and
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fight the nazis. >> fourth and 10. makes a pass. it's intercepted. fires, back on the end zone, it is caught. >> as many as 2 million people expected to pack the streets of new york city to ring in the new year tonight. >> this is the baby that is going to drop where we will ring in 2019. ♪ celebration time ♪ come on ♪ it's a celebration ♪ celebration time ♪ come on ♪ let's celebrate ♪ todd: check that out it is officially 2019 in iraq land, new zealand. the first major city to welcome in 2019. rachel: thousands of people are gathering to watch the fireworks display at the sky tower in auckland.
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todd: with a new year comes new resolutions. we want to know what are your new year's resolutions. email us at friends@foxnews.com. rachel: we are 18 hours away. >> i feel like i kicked it over. todd: there is the clock right there. 17 hours, 57 minutes and 43 seconds. rachel: i was walking around times square, the center of the world will be very soon. there is a lot of security. there is going to be 7,000 new york city police officers, drones, god knows what else. we have superman, too. dean cain is here protecting us. dean: i'm going to be behind the officers that everything is okay opt back lines. those guys are great. i was here last year for new year's. it's going to be 50 degrees this year.
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amazing. todd: when you walk outside they are out there. putting the barricades up. that's going to grow over the next 17 hours, 57 minutes. rachel: there is another barrier, todd. todd: what? rachel: under a lot of controversy in our country. that is the president's wall. is he putting pressure right now on democrats to strike a deal on border security. and it comes as the government shutdown enters its 10th day. todd: garrett tenney live for us in washington where negotiations are stay stand still. >> good morning, y'all. there hasn't been any major progress or negotiations in over a week. that is largely because at least for now, democratic leaders are refusing to negotiate with the white house. and republicans are placing the blame squarely on nancy pelosi. >> first, the democrats have to come back. nancy pelosi needs to come back from hawaii.
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less hula and more moolah for the dhs and border security funding border security. they need to come to the table and do their job. fully functioning democracy demands both parties come together and executive branch work together. >> bagelsed on what we are hearing negotiations are not expected to pick up until later this week when congress begins and democrats elect a new speaker. behind the scenes though, a number of lawmakers on both parties have been working to work out a compromise to end the shutdown. the proposals being discussed include a combination of funding for the wall, a fix for daca and a number of other immigration provisions that democrats support. the president nixed a bipartisan compromise with some of those elements last year and so far democrats leader say any funding for the wall is a nonstarter. that a big reason why lawmakers believe this shutdown will likely go on for at least another week or two. happy new year. rachel: thank you, and happy new year to you, garrett.
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rachel: we know we are at an impasse because not only are lawmakers not in washington, d.c., but the key player, nancy pelosi is in hawaii. love that line less hula more mullah. i was trying to think of tan lines. i couldn't think of anything to rhyme with it. well done. very good sounding visual, if you will, just how much we know that they don't want the wall and think they need to wait until she is speaker of the house. and she can make her deal then. todd: optics aren't real good for nancy pelosi on that one. rachel: absolutely not. dean: speaking of a vigil the president with a tweet over the weekend set visual for all of us. when you think about it does make sense. president and mrs. obama built slash has a 10-foot wall around their d.c. mansion, compound. i agree, totally necessary for their safety and security. the u.s. needs the same
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thing, slightly larger version. obviously what the president is doing saying structures work, barriers work, security works. it's a good thing to secure your home and protect your family. we need to do that for the nation. rachel: have you lived in l.a. hollywood. dean: don't you dare. rachel: you are not holiday. i --hollywood. they have walls. dean: they have walls and armed guards. it keeps you safe. rachel: fair argument then? dean: no question at all. definitely a fair argument. rachel: some representatives are saying that a wall is mid evil and not up to 21st century standards. take a look. this is representative jeffreys from new york. hakim jeffries. >> what donald trump and the republicans want to do is waste $5 billion in taxpayer money on an ineffective mid evil border wall that is a
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fifth century solution to a 21st century problem. yes, we need comprehensive immigration reform. yes, we need to enhance border security. but we are not willing to pay $2.5 billion or $5 billion in wasting taxpayer dollars on a ransom note because donald trump decided that he was going to shutdown the government and hold the american people hostage. rachel: according to democrats, a wall is mid evil. it wasn't mid evil, i guess, in 2006 and 2013 when chuck schumer voted for that, right? dean: video lasts forever. i just want to add that i don't think a wall is mid evil. i think is a moat is mid evil. todd: are you proposing a moat? dean: i'm not proposing a moat but it is mid evil. rachel: do you know what is mid evil is walking, which is how people coming across the border. they get silly.
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do we trust representative hakim jeffries from new york or trust our border patrol? todd: to that point in 2006 everybody was for a structure to protect the border. and everybody sort of thinks this is just donald trump's idea. no, this isn't just donald trump's idea. like you are about to say, this is what the border patrol wants. the men and women opt ground on day in and day out basis, they want some help. and as evidence of that commissioner kevin mclean says this investment in border security which includes some type of a structure. take a listen. >> our wall system priorities are derived from the agents in the field. we have asked for 1,000 miles of wall and top 17 priorities on the primary line. these are areas where we have dense populated area on both sides of the border where people can disappear quickly if we can't slow them down. we are not talking about a
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dumb barrier. we are talking about sensors, cameras, lighting, access roads for our agents. a system that helps us secure that area of the border. dean: that makes perfect sense to me. just call me the regular layman out in the street. there's the man that has to do it and that's what he is talking about. rachel: here wall, wall, wall. when you hear that commissioner speak some places need a wall. another steel slats other drones and technology. is the problem that the problem keeps saying wall and it's like ticking them off or allowing them to oppose it because it sounds like that's the only thing that this involves? dean: he has moved on to slats and other words. as president trump says you need air to breathe, there would be democrats fighting not h2o. not 02. got to be something else. todd: if you want meek to make the meal i have to buy the groceries. the american government
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needs to provide that to them. another big story over the weekend, this one really spoke to me because you heard it on this couch. you heard it throughout fox news channel and all over, a number of republican commentators and republican congress people attacking the president for what was perceived as we're just going to remove all of our troops out of syria immediately. and one of those people who was speaking out was lindsey graham. is he a trump supporter but he was very critical of the president's statement. well, they had lunch yesterday and they had lunch on suits and ties on a sunday. i was thinking about that lindsey graham says. rachel: he is not doing the hula by the way. he is in d.c. todd: after discussing this with the president lindsey graham says it's okay. i had a good conversation. let's listen to what lindsey had to say. >> we had a great lunch. we talked about syria. and he told me some things i didn't know that make me feel a lot better about where we are headhood in syria. he promised to destroy isis.
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he is going to keep that promise. we are not there yet. as i said today we are inside the 10-yard line and the president understands the need to finish the job. i think the president has come up with a plan with his generals that make sense to me. the goal is to make sure isis doesn't come back, that the president is very committed to making sure that when we leave syria, that isis is completely defeated and we're inside the 10-yard line. rachel: we're inside the 10-yard line he says. dean: the red zone. you have got to score. rachel: i don't know anything about sports but it sounds like toward the end. dean: you have got to score. rachel: lindsey graham is as you hawkish as they get inside the senate and congress. he tweeted the president won't lee syria until isis is permanently destroyed. until iran doesn't have an ability to fill the back end, and until the kurds are protected. sounds like this decision to leave isn't as ad hoc or on the fly as maybe the media
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has presented it. that he is actually talked to the generals. he has a plan. he plans to leave in a way that leaves syria in a better place or at least ready for other people to step up. dean: do you know what happens so fast these days the president says something. the press reacts and gets their sound bites out there. they don't talk to each other. they had lunch in suits on a sunday and they found you wow, maybe we are on the same page. todd: a lot of this information came out in tweets and sound bites. pete hegseth sat down with president trump. our show is called all-american new year. it's on 10:00 p.m. tonight. pete has a sitdown with the president. you will want to sit down for that so you can learn more about these policies, syria, the border. get more in-depth than what we have from tweets and stuff. speaking of in-depth. [laughter] rachel: and she laughs. jillian: good morning new year's eve to you guys. stories we are following
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starting with a fox news alert. a massive manhunt is underway for a gunman who killed a 7-year-old girl in front of her mom and three siblings. the girl shot inside a car as the family left a houston area walmart. the shooter pulling right beside them and opening fire. the girl's mother was also shot and wounded. at this point it's unclear why that man began shooting. brackets are to blame for jetway busy airport. brackets will be replaced on that bridge and five others at washington international airport. the walkway gave way as paramedics took a sick passenger off the plane. six people were hurt but they have all been released from the hospital. we will have more in the next few minutes. todd: congratulations on your eagles i have got to say and i'm not an eagle's fan but well done. todd: new report revealing some central american countries may actually be helping illegals from the middle of the situation going on. we have a lot more on this coming up in just moments.
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rachel: in just hours, millions of people will be ringing in the new year. janice dean is live and at the center of it all in times square coming up. look at her go ♪ when you would be here in my arms. now no fruit is forbidden. nexium 24hr stops acid before it starts for all-day, all-night protection. can you imagine 24 hours without heartburn? for all-day, all-night protection. went to ancestry, i put in the names of my grandparents first. i got a leaf right away. a leaf is a hint that is connected to each person in your family tree. i learned that my ten times great grandmother is george washington's aunt. within a few days i went from knowing almost nothing
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senior fellow for immigration studies todd who just got back from panama. todd, thanks for being here with us. read the information on this segment. it all stems from a policy called, quote controlled flow. explain what that is and why it matters? >> sure. well, first of all, since october, the president has been talking about middle easterners and terrorists coming through latin america to our border. so, that was met with a lot of ridicule and mocking. we wanted to just go down there and see for ourselves what was going on with this. so, went to panama because panama is a bottleneck country for migration from all over the world. they are coming in from latin america, south america, funneled through that thin land ismas there, pan that, costa rica, and up north. and what i found was
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hundreds of migrants from the middle east from places like pakistan, we lawn can a lebanon, iran. and i interviewed those people. i saw them and interviewed those people and most of them are on their way to the united states border where they plan to apply for asylum. how it was that i was so easily able to find -- well, wasn't that easy but how it was i was able to find hundreds of migrants from special interest countries is that panama and costa rica, it turns out, have a policy called controlled flow. and with controlled flow they actually have taken over the smuggling for the illicit networks that used to operate there. the panamanians will collect the migrants from the middle east and all these other countries that i just mentioned and they will put them in camps, take care of them, feed them, provide medical care, and then put
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them on commercial buses. the buses then will take them to the costa ricaen border where the costa ricaens are waiting. and then it's kind of a wash, rinse, and repeat situation where the costa ricaens then move them on up to the nito the nicaraguan bord. rachel: they don't want them in their country. this is a way government policy and agreement between panama and costa rica to sort of move them forward and out of their hair so they don't have to deal with this; is that correct? >> yeah, that's exactly right. it works for them and works for the migrants for a couple of reasons. rachel: have they found any suspected terrorists? >> absolutely. what my american intelligence sources tell me and also costa ricaen and panamanians have told me is that they are pulling suspected terrorists off the line, off of this conveyor
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belt fairly frequently. there was a somali just last year by the name of ebrahim cordine pulled out of camp 20 miles inside of costa rica. he was connected, it turns out, to an al-shabaab cell in zambia, they pulled him out, deported him back to africa after interrogating and all the rest. and while i was in costa rica, immigration officials there told me that he was not the only one, at least three or four more pulled out of this particular camp. todd: obviously a situation we need to be monitoring going forward. quite frankly before today, i did not know about this situation being as severe as it is. todd, thank you very much for your time this morning. we appreciate it. rachel: thank you and happy new year. >> happy new year. todd: governor jerry brown says fighting climate change is like fighting the nazis in world war ii. dan bongino says another in a long list of
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morning so far. back with quick headlines on possible 2020 contenders. former virginia governor terry mcauliff tells cnn he may challenge president trump. >> i'm not going to announce right now. i'm obviously looking at it i've got time. i have 40 years of working for this party. i have plenty of friends in many states. jillian: if he wants the nomination, he may have to challenge billionaire michael bloomberg. >> i would certainly run as a democrat. i'm much closer to their philosophy although i don't agree with any one party on everything. jillian: bloomberg ran as a republican when he won new york city mayor in 2001. he still hasn't announced whether he will run for president. and massachusetts senator elizabeth warren may have just dropped a 2020 hint on twitter. her user name is now e warren instead of elizabeth for ma. some speculate it means she is shifting focus away from massachusetts. so stay tuned for more. rachel? rachel: thanks, jillian from her shoes to her jackets in 2018 the press had a field
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day mocking first lady mump melania trump for her outfit. the media cannot stop fawning over michelle obama's fashion choices. todd: what's with the double standard. joining us now with her thoughts producer for the daily signal and visiting fellow with the independent women's forum kelsey hartness. good morning to you what's with the media double standard. >> michelle obama can of course do no wrong whereas mump appears to do everything wrong. it's like the media is waiting for her to take a misstep. and this latest example where she was -- melania trump was getting off a train after visiting a war zone in iraq which michelle obama never did, by the way,
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i couldn't help but just laugh at it because the press couldn't seem to figure out what was going on with these tan leather pants. these fashion editors at vanity fair launched some sort of investigation into them. it's like fashion editors have never seen tan leather pants before. i think the real injustifiable here though is that melania trump can deal with the mocking of her clothes and her outfits. i mean, she is beautiful. she can handle that the real injustice is the press' attention on what she is wearing rather than what she does. melania trump is working for so many important causes, fighting the opioid crisis, helping children, and in the press just ignores that, instead are focusing on what she is wearing instead. rachel: i will be honest, i wasn't a big fan of the tan pants just because when you photograph it doesn't look like she was wearing pants. dean: which would be a fashion statement. rich rach it's been two years and other than that, i think it's been pretty impeccable in terms of her
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choice of pants. another moment which i want to get your opinion on because i thought it was fascinating. she went to camp david and wore a black comp confy dress ad flats. all women do that especially if they are going to camp david. the guardian said that this wasn't her gramazon thin bottom princess perfect style. they resistance movement towards her husband like she was angry at him and decided to where this comfy dress like slapping the hand thing. they would never do this to michelle obama, would they? >> it's amazing that the media draws so many conclusions based on what melania trump wears. i think, again, we need to listen to what melania trump says and watch what she is doing rather than drawing these insane conclusions that she is sending some sort of message through her clothing. melania trump is doing great job representing the united
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states both home and abroad. she has a really thankless job. and she is doing it so gracefully. you know, look, she doesn't maybe need the magazine covers because she is so beautiful, but i think she does need and deserve attention to the work that she is actually doing on behalf of children and, again, the opioid crisis which is so important. todd: kel sekelsey you mentioned something before the cover of magazine covers. she has been on several because she is a supermodel but since she has been first lady maybe one. michelle obama was on dozens. is this another example of anything president trump does people are going to go after? i mean anything he has anything to do with? rachel: why are they afraid of putting her on the cover? dean: anti-trump bias. >> a lot of anti-trump bias. fashion designers won't even dress her. melania trump doesn't need magazine covers. what bothers me is when
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melania trump steps forward and defends herself and defends her record, the media mocks her as if she is complaining about the type of coverage she gets. whereas it's a woman on the left who steps up and defends themselves that's called feminism and standing um for yourself and being a strong, independent woman. such a double standard. rachel: you bring up a great point. all these attacks are meant to bring her down. i think it makes her stronger. she more confident and willing to get out there. thank you for your thoughts on this, i think, important topic. happy new year. >> happy new year. rachel: an illegal immigrant charged with murder, somehow gets free. how did this happen? we're going to explain next. dean: remember this scream heard around the nation and the world? >> and washington and michigan and then we're going to washington, d.c. to take back the white house. yeah!
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dean: now howard dean is screaming about president trump. dan bongino is here to react. he have something to say, i'm sure. rachel: plus, janice dean is also live in times square. janice, what's going on over there? >> we are with the uso troops who are going to help ring in 2019. here is a preview ♪ and i'm proud to be an american ♪ where at least i know i'm free ♪ and i won't forget the ones who died ♪ who gave that right to me ♪ and i gladly stand up
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♪ oh! oh! oh! ozempic®! ♪ ask your healthcare provider if ozempic® is right for you. ♪ ♪ baby i like it ♪ the way you move on the floor ♪ baby i, i like it ♪ come on and give me some more ♪ i like it. dean: wow, i like it. rachel: i like it that's enrique iglesias: dean: 2 million people. that's it in that small space 2 million people it will be crowded. todd: we will check in with janice a little later on. we are expecting a little bit of rain that could make some people wet. rachel: no toilets and wet. dean: last year it was 9 degrees. it's 50 degrees this year it's going to be great. todd: what i love about
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enrique iglesias is dan bongino. happy new year's dan bongino. >> i don't look like enrique iglesias. >> i totally disagree. dan, i want to get your thoughts on this. an individual that i'm sure you have some familiarity with hakeem jeffries a representative from this area was speaking out about the tragic death of that police officer out in california. it's a very long statement but he said something very specific about the nypd that i want to get your thoughts on when we come back from this thought. first, take a listen. >> that was a very tragic situation and my heart and my prayers go out to the officer's family. my experience in new york has been different where members of the nypd clearly, the most professional highly trained law enforcement entity in the country, if not the world, has been that these sanctuary laws
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actually help promote public safety. >> address the situation in california. >> it's a human tragedy. clearly we have to do better in terms of preventing these type of occurrences from taking place. and that's what democrats intend to do and will continue to do on a bipartisan fashion. todd: you know, dan, he didn't address the tragic situation in too much detail. he said sanctuary laws actually help promote public safety by encouraging cooperation and that is with regard to what he has been told by the nypd. you are part of the nypd. is that what they think? >> i don't know who he is talking to, but he is not talking to cops on the ground who are actually doing the work on the streets. this is an outrageous statement to make a candid question. i'm trying not to do what the left does to us every time there is a tragic
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shooting and grossly paint all gun owners one way. you can't divorce yourself from the fact that this officer in california that was killed. roniel singh. issue should say his name and everybody needs to look at that picture of him and his beautiful young child and his beautiful young wife and his dog, i can't get his dog out of my head. you can't explain to his dog why the owner, the master, the kid's father and the spouse will never ever see their dad again. explain that to me how that makes the public safe for losing an american patriot. look at that picture. i can see it out of the corner of my eye on the monitor. i can not say this enough. this is a living human who is gone from us now because we have terrible laws on our books. again, i get this. point stipulated. no everybody who comes here illegally will go on and commit other crimes. they did commit a crime by entering the country illegally. 100% of the people who come
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here illegally should not be here. this hero should be alive here today and hakim stumbled through that answer because he has no answer for that. rachel: we will switch over to howard dean he has been making statements about the president saying is he incapacitated mentally. >> as i said before i think the president is mentally incapacitated and i have thought so for quite some time. he says things that he knows are not true. essentially you can't make a bargain with somebody who is irrational because they won't keep it republicans have been quoted off the record as saying such a thing. i think congress and the republicans and the democrats in congress have got to do the best they can to run this country in the absence of a chief executive who is really a chief executive. until the republicans realize that they have an obligation to the country, not just their party, that's not going to happen. rachel: dan, this isn't the first time that they have
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said. this we saw this earlier in his presidency. this is a way they try to not normalize him. what's your reaction to this? >> [laughter] you do that thing with the left like donald trump, howard dean. donald trump, wait a second, donald trump who has made a billion dollars maybe more in business ventures over the years. he also runs for office for the first time and he wins this little office called the presidency first time out of the chute, okay? then have you howard dean a guy with all of the assets and momentum in the world who runs for president and blows it because he screams like someone hit him with a cattle prod or a poker sometime. loses his mind. talking about mental incapacitation. i will take a seriously hard pass on howard dean's opinion on that. yeah! >> i will take trump any day of the week and twice on sunday. todd: i could literally watch that. rachel: i was hoping we had
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the sound on. >> yeah! dean: governor jerry brown says fighting climate change is like fighting the nazis in world war ii. i'm sure you have an opinion on that. nazis combings up quite a bit, doesn't it. >> well, you know, godwin's rule the first person who brings up hitler loses an argument. in this case it's the democrats. it's like the moron olympics when it comes to this stuff with democrats. what i mean by that is the analogies. it's like the stupid olympics. they compete for the gold medal of what the dumbest analogy for trump can be. it diminishes them. the laughable part about this whole thing is a fascist? a nazi? trump's cut taxes. he has deregulated government. if they had any idea what history was about in those tragic incidents that was empowering government at the expense of human life. not the other way around. i don't understand how trump is some big tyrant who gist you back your money and freedom and disempowers the government. it doesn't make sense on its face. i think reasonable people
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get that and the democrats really diminish their brand by doing it. it's making them look like a bunch of children. it's ridiculous. dean: dan bongino, love to hear your take all the time. rachel: doesn't matter the time of day. >> i just got up 15 minutes ago. if i got up an hour ago i would have had flames coming out of my mouth. todd: i don't know if the nation can handle it dan bongino, have a great new year. rachel: happy new year, dan. todd: times square, new york city is going to be filled with millions of people waiting to ring in 2019. rachel: fox news senior meteorologist janice dean is live where the ball will drop tonight. janice? dean: janice? janice: amazing, yes, we are at times square a big bucket list for me. look, the uso troop is here. please introduce everyone to us. >> i'm alisa tyler, amadina and leukemia. we will be swinging in times
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square singing a salute to all of our armed forces. janice: i love it do you have any new year's resolutions? >> oh, wow. janice: sing and think about it while you are singing and tell me about it afterwards. >> that sounds like a good idea. janice: take it away u.s. troops? ♪ o beautiful for spacious skies ♪ for amber waves of grain ♪ for purple mountains majesty ♪ above the fruited plains ♪ america, america ♪ god shed his grace on thee ♪ and crowned thy good ♪ with brotherhood ♪ from sea to shining sea ♪ janice: fantastic. congratulations. i love the preview. so what time are you going
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to be performing. >> 8:02. janice: any new year's resolutions? >> to be kind. janice: to be kind. i love it thank you for coming. happy new year uso crew. todd: 8:02. dean: 6:30 in the morning and they are singing like that. rachel: not easy. todd: take it away. dean: watch fox news channel's all-america's new year's special 8:00 p.m. to 10:00 a.m. hosted by pet kennedy and pete hegseth and griff, carley. carley. todd: safer thanks to the nypd. a strategy known as broken windows policing. bernibernie kerik tells us how t helped transform this city when he was commissioner next. rachel: what's the keto diet. those are some of the google's top trending in
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>>the team? gooo team.... know what's better than overnight shipping? free one hour pickup when you order online... or on our app. at office depot officemax it's a revolution in sleep. the new sleep number 360 smart bed is on sale now during our lowest prices of the season. it senses your movement, and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. it can even warm your feet to help you fall asleep faster. so you wake up ready to make your resolutions, reality. and now, the queen sleep number 360 c4 smart bed is only $1299. ranked #1 in customer satisfaction with mattresses by j.d. power. plus, 24-month financing on all beds. ends new year's day. sleep number. proven, quality sleep. ♪ jillian: good morning, welcome back. quick headlines now. illegal immigrant charged with murder released from prison for 31 hours. a clerical error blamed for setting him free in north carolina. the 17-year-old from mexico is accused of shooting and killing a man during a botched car robbery.
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he is now back in jail in mecklenburg county where the new jail ended the cooperation with ice. bernie sanders staffs are calling for a meeting to discuss sexual violence during the 2016 campaign. according to a letter obtained by politico. the group of two dozen people want to talk toxic masculinity in the campaign world so they can work to stop it. bernie sanders committee says they are open to the meeting. the failed candidate is looking for another run in 2020. todd: the city that never sleeps one of the safest in the country. it wasn't always that wait a minute new york city homicides dropped dramatically from over 2100 in 1991 to less than 300 in 2017. that crime declined due in major part to the policy implemented by now former nypd commissioner bernie kerik, the author of the "the grave above the grave." and he joins me now. mr. kerik, thank you so much for being here. >> thank you.
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todd: as a personal antidote in fourth grade late 1980s i wrote an essay on the things i was most scared of i grew up over the river in new jersey and one of the things was going into new york city. it was because of all the news stories about the crime. you thought if you went into the city you felt you were going to get murdered. something changed in the early 1990s. what was that. >> we got a new mayor 1994 mayor giuliani came into office. he brought in bill bratton. they insite yo instituted a numf policies, the broken wind dose theory and come stat program which was a computer-driven program to basically tell us where crime was in realtime. not looking at quarterly reports, by annual reports, looking at crime daily and attacking crime as it was. todd: for those who don't know what the broken windows theory is, please explain. >> the broken windows theory was where you addressed crime, quality of life crimes from the bottom up,
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everything. things that are out there. in jersey, if you walked out of your house in new jersey across the river and somebody was urinating in public in front of your house, you would have a heart attack. that was normal every day behavior in new york. gravity, panhandling, homeless. all of these quality of life issues basically deteriorating the city and then driving crime as well. we started to attack. and it was under mayor giuliani. todd: critics would say the goal of this is just to make more arrests and arrest more people for low level offenses. how do you respond? >> no. you arrest people for violating crime. you arrest people and, listen, homeless, we didn't arrest homeless. we took homeless off the street. we put them in clinics. we sent them to the hospital. we did what we could do to help them: for example, just down the street on new
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year's eve or christmas eve 2001, i had 25 homeless people outside a church laying in the street. there was 20 degrees outside. you are going to leave them there? no, because tomorrow morning i'm going to get a call that two or three of them passed away as a result of freezing to death. so, you did what you were supposed to do. helping humanity, if you will. but the other stuff it was part of driving down crime in new york city. todd: tries to break it out for other cities across the nation. what is your advice other cities trying to follow the new york city model. >> follow the model. it's pretty simplistic, really, especially when you add the come stat model with it grabbing the crime data. you need leadership in the cities around the country like baltimore and st. louis and milwaukee, chicago. you need leadership in the city that's going to give them the resources they need to do the job.
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give them the support they need the job. give the cops the benefit of the doubt when they are doing their job. do what giuliani did. if you followed that rule, you're going to have crime reduction unparalleled as we have had in new york. todd: the key is going to be distancing that from partisanship that influences so many aspects of our day in and day out lives 2018 and 2019. >> put the politics aside. this is about securing neighborhoods and reducing crime. todd: bernibernie kerik always a pleasure. thank you for being here to discuss these important concepts. todd: dr. idr. saphier is here o discuss the 2018 health yes, questions. she is on call for you next. ♪ you just keep me hanging on ♪ (burke) parking splat. and we covered it.
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♪ dean: this year americans are turned to google to answer billions of health questions on everything from diets to rare diseases. rachel: that's right. joining us now to answer some of those google or at least the top questions trending on google in 2018 is our fox news medical contributor dr. nicole saphier. thank you for joining us. happy new year. >> happy new year, guys. rachel: we will get right to
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it. the number one thing is keto. people want to know what the keto is. >> keto genic diet fab definitely go into 2019. essentially getting rid of carbohydrates good and bad and replacing them with fat. heavy meats. breaking down your own fat. is it great for losing weight? yes you do lose weight. people start losing weight in one week. yo-yo diets. very hard to sustain. people lose weight and gain it back again. we have zero long-term studies on this because no one can maintain it. what you are replacing those good foods with are heavy processed a lot of animal fat. we know that's not necessarily good for long-term. i don't like any yo-yo diet. i like everything in moderation. stick as close as can youd to mediterranean diet and exercise if possible. todd: good old fashioned. next one on the list is co-worker that people are looking this up what is als. >> am know trophy throw pick
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lateral close refuses. lieu gehrig's disease. neurodegenerative disease. essentially nerves start dying we know it assay sending paralysis, meaning it starts in your peripheries, legs and hands and works its way centrally. some people present with weakness, picks things up, tripping over themselves and eventually comes to difficulty breathing. the problem is your brain stays intact through this entire process which is very difficult. about 5 to 10% of the population has it that's not insignificant number. 5 to 10% inherit from their family. the rest we don't know. have a lot of research into it and working on it of the this is a devastating diagnosis and there is some promise. dean: that's a rough one. rachel: people want to know how long does the flu last? dean: that's very topical. rachel: we had a friend of our show bre payton passed
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away. how do we know if it's serious or not. >> people joke about the flu. it's not something to joke about and take lightly. young healthy people can perishable of this disease. you can start infecting other people within one day of catching the flu. you may not be symptomatic yet. you start getting symptoms about 4 to 7 days of yo your infection last four days to seven weeks. keep kids home after the fever breaks. if you are having difficulty drinking eating, sleeping way too much. when in doubt, go see your doctor. we have antiviral medications that can decrease the severity of it and get your flu shot. it is not too late. dean: i have asthma. i'm a person at high risk. i get my flu shot every single year. >> i'm so glad to hear you that. dean: she is unbelievable. todd: thank you so much, doctor. we are in day 106 the partial government shutdown, president trump isn't
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letting up on the pressure. is he putting on democrats to come to the negotiating table. we are live in d.c. with how close they are to a deal. rachel: a pair of women's marches cancelled. for a alaska diversity. is this the beginning of the end for the movement? we'll talk about that ♪ talking about my generation ♪
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>> now into the second week of a partial government shutdown, both sides digging in over funding for president trump's border wall. >> nancy pelosi needs to come back from hawaii, let's pull up more mule la for the dhs. >> a massive manhunt happening right now for the gunman pulling the trigger killing a 7-year-old girl in front of her family. the president's plan to take u.s. troops out of syria. >> i feel better about syria. i think the president is very committed to making sure when we leave syria that isis is completely defeated. >> we have got to fight climate change and the president has to lead on that. it took roosevelt many, many years to get america willing to go into world war ii and fight the nazis. >> fourth and 10. here they come. make a pass. it's intercepted. down field, fires back in the end zone. it is caught. >> as many as 2 million people are expected to pack the streets of new york city to ring in the new year. janice: this is the baby
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that is going to drop where we will rings in 2019. ♪ i got a feeling ♪ that tonight's going to be a good night. todd: just to review janice dean said there is the baby that's going to drop. it's not an actual baby. it is that it's the last day of the year. let's just have some fun. rachel: i didn't realize it's an actual switch thing. dean: we want emails no negative stuff. send us your emails at friends@foxnews.com. tell us what your new year's resolution is what you are going to do. how it is going to happen. how 2019 is going to be fantastic for everybody. rachel: what's your new year's resolution. dean: i don't do resolutions. restructure. big deep breath i have goals. todd: i have got to lose. this it has to happen.
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rachel: i have the same one. todd: you want to lose my gut? rachel: i have got to lose my own. you take care of yours and i will take care of my own. dean: you guys are fine. todd: what's not fine is our current situation in washington. president putting pressure on democrats to strike a deal on border security. dean: comes as the government shutdown enters its tenth day. rachel: garrett tenney is in washington where negotiations are at a stand still. >> based on what we are hearing from capitol hill this shutdown is expected to last another week or two. both sides are really digging in here. there hasn't been any major progress or real negotiations in over a week now. that's largely because at least for now democratic leaders are refusing to negotiate with the white house over funding for a wall. and republicans are placing the blame squarely on nancy pelosi who has been vacationing in hawaii during the shutdown. >> first the democrats have to come back. nancy pelosi needs to come back from hawaii. less huela, more mullah for
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the dhs and funding border control, border security. they need to come t the table and do their job. it demands both come together and executive branch work together. >> based on what we are hearing, negotiations are expected to pick up when the new congress begins and democrats elect a new speaker. behind the scenes a number of lawmakers in both parties have been meeting to try to work out a compromise to end the shutdown. the proposals being discussed include a combination of funding for the wall, a fix for daca and a number of other fixes democrats support. the president nixed a bipartisan compromise with some of those elements last year. democratic leaders say any funding for the wall is a nonstarter. there is still a long ways to go before the two sides come together to find a resolution for this. dean, rachel, todd? todd: any funding for the wall is a nonstarter. that's not a great negotiating spot. not giving any room for
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anything. rachel: nancy pelosi said the wall is immoral. if you think it's immoral how are you going to negotiate on something you say is fundamentally immoral. dean: how is it immoral? please answer that for me anyone? answer it for me. somebody. todd: basically what you are asking for is a structure that provides security immoral in the president had something interesting to say about that in a tweet about mr. and mrs. obama. he writes president and mrs. obama built slash has a wall around their d.c. mansion/compound. i agree, totally necessary for their safety and security. the u.s. needs the same thing, slightly larger version. so, in essence, what the president is doing saying if the obamas and many people in america have a structure protecting their family from the outside world, then the nation should have one as well. rachel: i think it's an excellent point. here they are, the democrats and obama effectively the leader of the democrat party in many ways. and they are building a 10-foot wall part metal and
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bring and mortar. dean: it's a barrier. rachel: they say it doesn't work but it works for their home. the president is right to tweet about this. and really call them out on this. dean: it's hypocrisy. of course a wall works for security and safety. a same reason a lock on your door works for safety and security no. question about it. todd: let's face it, barack obama if you want to go to the antiquated notions of a father protecting his family. he has an obligation to protect his family. louie gohmert explained there is nothing more than the security -- nothing more important, in fact, than the security of the nation. here is what he had to say about that. >> the truth is there is nothing more important than the nation's security. it's our number one job in the u.s. congress, keeping america safe when you have people who are here legally from mexico, from central america saying get the wall where we need it, secure the border, you've got to make this country safe, i don't
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know why they are not being listened to. and, when you hear democrats saying oh, no, it's immoral to have a wall, and they say that while they are living behind a wall around their house. todd: my point a little bit more artfully. you are both parents you know. your number one obligation is to keep your family safe. i don't want to call him father of the nation that's hyperbolic his job is to keep the nation safe. dean: job number one. rachel: not just the wall. talking about sanctuary cities. there is all kinds of problems happening at the border and the democrats say, yeah, we are for border security. they seem to offer no solutions and seem to knock down any solutions that the republicans are offering. todd: it's the words though border security. it's political stuff that really means nothing. and if you look at even their own words from years' past, including president obama, you see them say things about illegal aliens and about border security and all these other things but now they have a whole
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different tune. rachel: they say it doesn't work but then we bring in border patrol. we had the commissioner on earlier. we had some border patrol people on last week, earlier this week. they all say yeah, we need, at least on parts of the border we actually need the structure. the question is who do you trust? some legislator in california or new york or d.c. or do you trust the guys on the ground who are telling you what they need? and, of course, this impasse has caused a shutdown. one of the things we haven't heard about during the shutdown is that president donald trump not affected by ththe shutdown. here is a tweet that he gave earlier today talking about what he has done for the coast guard. says great work by my administration over the holidays to save coast guard pay during this schumer shutdown. no thanks to the democrats left town and are not concerned about the safety and security of americans.
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todd: you never saw it on any of the other news. everybody is focused on the shutdown and lindsey graham's comments on syria. you heard nothing about this. oftentimes in the mainstream media and just out there generally i think the coast guard gets a bum wrap. they are part of the forces that defend our nation. this was very very important step that he took paying those brave men and women who support us and defend us. you think the marines are the big tough guys. they certainly are they have enormous respect for the individuals in the coast guard who are pretty jacked up themselves. >> that's a tough, tough job and the last one i would want. what those guys do in the water and out there. those guys are amazing. my hats off for the coast guard. todd: i have never job for you. governor of california. i mean, and you are allowed to say whatever you want like jerry brown said fighting climate change. obviously california big in to fighting climate change, he made an interesting analogy. take a listen. >> i would point to the fact that it took roosevelt many,
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many years to get america willing to go into world war ii and fight the nazis. well, we have an enemy though different but, perhaps, very much devastating in a similar way. and we have got to fight climate change. todd: yep. fight the nazis that's what it is. my own california governor. we asked dan bongino what he felt about that. and he had something to say about it. >> first person brings up hitler analogy. a medal for what the dumbest analogy for trump could be diminishes them. the laughable part about this whole thing is a fascist, a nazi? trump's cut taxes, he has deregulated government. if they had any idea what history is about tragic incidents that would empower government not the other way around. the democrats really diminish their brand by doing. this making them look like a bunch of children.
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rachel: the nazis. they always go to the nazis. changed for some people is important. generally when you poll americans it's not that high on their list. obviously jerry brown trying to bring drama and attention to it for jerry brown it is the number one issue facing the country. todd: less than 21 hours to go. dean: yea. i'm sorry did i celebrate. i live in that state and pay high taxes. todd: do you think gavin newsom will be different? dean: i sure hope. so if he is not i will give him a stern talking to. todd: somebody who won't be different in 2019 jillian mele. jillian: i don't know what that means. todd: perfect already. jillian: that was very nice of you but not true. stories we are following starting with this one the tunnel 2 towers foundation has raised $115,000 to help the family of a fallen california police officer. their goal is 300,000. frank siller, the ceo of the
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organization joined us this weekend. it's gut-wrenching. as americans we need to let these families know when something like this happens, when they go out to protect their communities that we're going to stand with the family that are left behind and take care of them. jillian: officer singh was shot and killed on christmas. he leaves behind a wife and son. if you would like to help, head to our website friends@foxnews.com. a massive manhunt is underway for a gunman who killed a 7-year-old girl in front of mom and three siblings. shot inside the car as the family left a houston area walmart. the shooter pulling right beside them and opening fire. the girl's mother was also shot and wounded. it's unclear why the man began shooting. facebook now apologizing and admitting they made a mistake by banning reverend franklin graham over a post from 2016. the post supported north carolina's controversial bathroom bill. graham joined us to offer some suggestions for facebook moving forward.
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>> i think they ought to come up with a standard based on god's word and that applies to all people in every country everywhere in the world. and if they would support free speech, i think it would be good for them. jillian: graham's page has since been restored and he has accepted facebook's apology. the indianapolis colts are the last team in the playoffs. >> fires into the end zone and that will be hauled in for the touchdown. jillian: andrew luck leading the colts past tennessee punching the final wild car spot in the afc. the defending super bowl champions philadelphia eagles back in the post season after beating washington. they crushed them by the way. and the baltimore ravens win their division thanks to a win over cleveland. a look at your headlines. todd, how are your giants doing in the playoffs this year? todd: we can talk about my counsels, they won that
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division. just wait. we have more super bowl, jillian mele. thank you, jillian. rachel: thank you jillian. dean: definitely exciting end to the season. todd: women's march cancelled because it wasn't diverse enough. is this the beginning of the end for the women's march? next. rachel: what happened after lightning hit a fighter jet in mid-air? dean: as you get ready to celebrate new year's eve pedialyte has a message it's not just for babies anymore. athletes use it all the time ♪ we're having a good time ♪ ♪ ♪
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tackle tough greasy messes around your home, and save money with dawn ultra. brand power. helping you better. ♪ dean: woman's march in california now cancelled. organizers claiming up to this point the participants have been overwhelmingly white, lacking representation from several perspectives in our community. rachel: that announcement just days after the group cancelled the chicago march citing high cost tied to the nation of islam leader louis farrakhan. is this the beginning of the end for the women's movement? tammy bruce joins us now to weigh. >> in good morning. rachel: good morning, happy new year. >> yeah, same to you.
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new zealand it's already the new year. dean: australia, too. >> there you go. rachel: antiwhite woman. we know from leaders anti-jewish, anti-pro-life women. what kind of women's march is this. >> issue regarding lesbians, gay representation. this is the ultimate end result of identity politics. right? and the left chooses this framework because they don't want to talk about the issues. clearly the thing that brings all women together are the issues. the issues that affect us transcends politics. it transcends race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, even socioeconomic status because all of us need a good economy, violence against women affects all of us. violence in general. wars around the world, the education of our children. where we can choose to live. drug use. all of these things make us sisters. and, yet, it's pathetic.
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it's disappointing. it's sad. there's a lot of women where we can speak about these issues, it shouldn't matter what we look like. part of what we were trying to do in the feminist movement was argue that the appearance of a woman is not the only thing that matters, that we are more than an external framework. and, yet, what has the left done? taken us back into the stone age and relying on the divisions between individuals. now it's been cannibalizing of this left-wing effort. dean: is that all because of identity politics? is that the reason? is that what has changed? >> i think we have seen this before. i saw it when i was with the national organization for women. it is a liberal tactic in general. usually for the outside of dividing and conquering, right? but, in this particular instance now, when you have got even just liberal efforts, which all good people, perhaps there is classical liberals and
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conservatives, we all agree on issues, child care issues. access to education, et cetera. rachel: none of these things are discussed. >> none of them are discussed and that's the point. ultimately, when you discuss i that really matter to women, it takes you ultimately what is considered a conservative point of view. rachel: right. >> personal freedom, financial independence. be able to make choices that best suit you as an individual. here you have they are trying to decide women based on race, based on faith jewish women have been attacked. based on sexual orientation. being against the men in your life that men are the problem, that masculinity is somehow toxic as opposed to not looking at men as the partners that they're in our lives. it's classic, it's typical. it is what the left has always done and it's why everything they touch ultimately is destroyed. rachel: i think it's ironic. because, if you look at the numbers, economically speaking, women have never done better. what is the purpose of this march? and by the way, is it just
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an anti trump march mass can a raiding as a woman's march? >> the left, all they want to do really is organize. and they want to organize against whatever the establishment is. certainly if that establishment promotes individual power, individual freedom, that's the thing that, of course, is anathema to left wing organizers. they want everyone to think only of a collective. rachel: group think. >> it is group think. but ultimately what i think the original mission was. really good people involved. most of those individuals, including one of the original founders have stepped away. the chicago march has been cancelled as well. other chapters have actually dissolved. but this is -- you can actually gather women and have them organize on a variety of issues that we find that matter to all of us like economic independence. rachel: okay. well, we will see if they actually reorganize and revamp this but for now they are cancelled. all right, tammy, thanks for illuminating us on what is
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really happening. >> my pleasure. rachel: happy new year. the illegal immigrant accused of killing california officer had two duis and even gang ties. we will talkyb about that next. ah come on, i know you can hear me. mike mike mike...mike what day is it mike? ha ha! leslie, guess what today is? it's hump day. whoot whoot! ronny, how happy are folks who save hundreds of dollars switching to geico? i'd say happier than a camel on wednesday. hump day!!!! yay!! get happy. get geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more.
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i am a techie dad.n. i believe the best technology should feel effortless. like magic. at comcast, it's my job to develop, apps and tools that simplify your experience. my name is mike, i'm in product development at comcast. we're working to make things simple, easy and awesome. ♪ jillian: good morning, it is time for your last news by the numbers of 2018.
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and we start with 1 billion. that's how many people across the world will be watching the 110th new year's ball drop in times square. you can see it right here on the fox news channel. it will also be live streamed online. next, 3,000 pounds. that's how much confetti will rain down on times square in addition to actual rain once the clock strikes 12. 30 million pieces of paper. what a mess. and finally 22 percent. that's how many americans won't see the clock strike midnight tonight because they will be asleep. i'm definitely in that number. todd? todd: you and i both in that camp. we won't be tired. the murder of this california cop officers saying now reigniting the debate over the state's sanctuary laws. >> this is a criminal illegal alien with prior criminal activity that should have been reported to ice. we were prohibited, law enforcement was prohibited because of sanctuary laws and that led to the
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encounter with officer singh. todd: heart breaking to hear the family member right there. the accused cop killer had two prior drunk driving arrests and gang ties. under california law sb 54, local authorities are banned from reporting information like this to ice. so, are california sanctuary laws to blame? joining us now to weigh in chief rich busby with the new jersey state association of chiefs of police. denton county, texas. sheriff tracy murfrey and frederick county maryland sheriff chuck jenkins. thanks all three of you for being here. first question to mr. jenkins, what are your thoughts on sb 54. >> my thoughts are this is extremely dangerous for the community, the citizens and obviously law enforcement who now, instead of turning officers at risk for going out on the streets and trying to apprehend the suspect. just very bad policy for
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america. todd: sheriff murphree, your reaction? >> absolutely. think about what this is. this is a law that prohibits law enforcement from cooperating with other law enforcement to enforce the laws of this country it's politically motivated law that puts citizens and police officers in danger every single day. todd: chief busby, is this a turning point in the sanctuary. is it republicans and democrats come together or more partisan politics as usual with regard to the sanctuary idea in 2019. >> if it's not, it certainly should be. officer singh was an american success story. he, himself, was an immigrant. and for him to come into this country in the correct way, with his family, to start a family the way he did and to serve his community with honor and decency and to be respected the way he was and to be shot down in the street like a dog of america, this is
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terrible. it's indescribable and something has to be done about it. and us in law enforcement and leadership have to be the voice for our people. and this morning i think that we are. todd: the people on tv talk about this in broad strokes how it helps, hurts law enforcement. you guys are on the ground. you are in charge of individuals trying to protect our citizens of the u.s. first question to you, chief busby, on the ground, how does a law like this impact your day in and day out work? >> well, we have had a serious morale problem dealing with situations like trying to explain it. to be clear, all of us want people of all statuses in our communities to be able to report crimes and to feel safe and to be a part of us. there is no question about that. there needs to be something done to protect those folks. the folks who are here legally and that are here every day need protection as well and deserve the full
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credit and protection of our laws. todd: sheriff murphree, how does a law like this impact the day in and day out policing? >> like the chief said, we need to cooperate with our federal partners. when, in texas, you know, my officers don't go out and question people on their citizenship. if they are witnesses to a crime or if they report a crime. when they come into my jail, if they violate the law, my state has taken opposite approach. governor signed a bill that if we don't cooperate with ice and federal partners, then we can be taken out of office. i completely agree with the governor. we have to cooperate and get these criminal aliens out of our country. todd: lastly to you, sheriff jenkins. you are a hodgepodge state. a lot of liberal, a lot of conservatives. how do you navigate something like this in your state? >> i partner with ice and our partnership has been very successful in terms of
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removing criminals from our streets, not returning criminals to the streets. as a matter of fact, we have placed into deportation more than 1600 criminals, about 106 of them were gang members. mostly ms-13. so, i have been trying to fight this fight. maryland is looking -- has looked at for three years now sanctuary state policies. i have been a part of the fight to keep them from coming here and i will continue that fight. we just can't tolerate it any further in this country. todd: last question to chief buzby what can be done to stop this in 2019 or is it hopeless? >> i think nothing is hopeless. it's easy for us to throw our hands up and run screaming from the building but we can't do that to our community and certainly can't do that to our officers. i think both parties need to sit down and really consider what we're trying to achieve, what makes sense and how best for us to get there as a country. and i think it is solvable. anything solvable if we work together. todd: gentlemen, best of
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luck and prayers in the new year's. you defend and protect your respective areas. we appreciate you engaging in this debate. it's one that's going to be the focus of 2019. >> thank you. todd: donald trump completely transforming the democrats. jonathan turley says it's because of the president's policies. plus, as many as 2 million people will soon be packing the streets of the big apple to ring in the new year. we are getting all the details. get this, on the special crystal ball drop. that's coming up next. and from the perfect bubbly ttruffle, the appetizers that will impress your guests coming up. so simple, so good. get the recipes at walnuts.org.
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so dad slayed the problem with puffs plus lotion, instead. with lotion to soothe and softness to please. a nose in need deserves puffs, indeed. ♪ todd: it's the final countdown to 2019. taking a live look at times square where the new york city mayor expects not 1, not 1.5 but 2 million people to ring in the new year tonight. we can whistle for that. dean: yeah. but the nypd says it will be one of the safest places in the world. more than 7,000 counter-terrorism officers will be on patrol, including a brand new fleet of drones for aerial surveillance. rachel: with a new year comes new goals. so we want to know what are your new year's resolutions? email us at friends@foxnews.com. we talked earlier. dean doesn't have
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resolutions. todd does. dean: goals. goals. rachel: just goals. we will get to fox news senior meteorologist janice dean. she is live where all the action is about to take place. she has all the details about the famous times square ball. janice: yes. this was my goal for 2018. and i made it happen. tom brennan from waterford crystals, how are you? >> i'm wonderful. thanks so much for having me. happy new year, everybody. we are here with waterford crystal. janice: what's your title. >> master artisan. my job is to do all of these great and talk about the famous irish crystal company that is waterford. janice: you are not just a spokesperson you know how to make these things. >> it's amazing to me that here we are behind the beautiful ball 2688 crystal triangles 6-tons in weight under 12,000 pounds in weight and we have the world watching, 1.2 billion people. going back a generation, how proud am i to be from the town of waterford second
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generation master craftsman learned how to do this from my dad. and i get this amazing gig talking to you and all your viewers at home. just fantastic. janice: 19 years with waterford. >> 19 years we are involved with the times square lighting. great team of team. waterford crystals celebration, recognition, success. we began 235 years ago. janice: wow. >> in the middle of the georgian period of. here we are 2019 celebrating with the world. what a gig. janice: every year there is a theme. >> brand new theme. this year the gift of harmony. each year part of greatest gift series. global sentiment. like a human interaction. this year it's all about harmony and about that balance of mind of body and soul and being at once with yourself a better version of who you can be. janice: are you going to do that i'm doing it now. janice: can i touch it. >> of course. janice: this is amazing. different lights. >> sure, there is 32,000 leds behind the crystal
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panel. that's where the panels are right here. i have to put this on in a moment. i will be in trouble if i don't. billions and billions of light combinations. when they see that ball drop, on new year's eve, waterford, my factory, my hometown is the most watched on the planet. janice: you are amazing. thank you for being here. >> my pleasure. janice: congratulations. can i take this. >> no, you cannot. >> oh, go on then, it's a deal. todd: nice, well done. see you later, j.d. todd: my rests liewtion is to hang out with j.d. more. unfortunately that is not her resolution. dean: i would like to have his accent. it's so cool. todd: we will toss it on to somebody who has no resolutions. as dean cain established she is perfect in every way. jillian mele. jillian: i don't have resolutions i have goals. i like that and appreciate that a lion escapes and kills an intern at north
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carolina preservation center. 22-year-old black mauled to death while cleaning animal enclosure just two weeks into her new job. >> this is the worst day of my life. we have lost a person. we have lost. anna: mall. we have lost our faith in ourselves a little bit today. jillian: the lion was shot and killed. unclear how it escaped. fighter jet pilot is nearly struck by lightning in the cockpit. watch this. crazy, right? the pilot from kuwait jumping and reaching for goggles as the lightning strikes the jet. his camera catching the whole thing. is he okay. the jet is damaged. vegan protests getting so out of hand, counter-terrorism police are stepping. in u.k. officials now ready to protect workers in the meat and farming industries with -- from so-called militant vegans.
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britain's national pig association and paltry council are being washed by police after violent threats. some groups have even admitted to vandalizing private property. pedialyte rolling out new products for adults that could help with new year's hangovers. >> do not go in the bathroom. >> calm down. >> there is a tiger in the bathroom. >> what's going on? >> jillian: never gets old. the company introducing sparkling drink packets. mixes with water and meant to prevent dehydration. not going to lie i have done the pedialyte thing or two. jillian: you might need it after this next segment. rachel: maybe she is not so perfect. [laughter] dean: she is. rachel: she is. the best thing to complete any party to ring in the new year is appetizers and, of course, champagne. todd: here to show us chef with the best name ever zach. >> and carl helem.
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let's start with zac sass. >> we have shot chicken sliders. truthfully macaroni and cheese with hot chicken on it and nashville hot chicken waffles with hot chicken on top with syrup. todd: how do we make. this chicken tenders already prepared. regular basic flour, bake in the oven simple to do at home. vegetable spices, cayenne, blacsugar and black pepper. it's pretty simple. all equal parts. you don't have to measure anything out crazy, add everything in individually and just stir it all together. todd: vegetable shortening is on my list of approved items. it's crisco, right? >> it is crisco. todd: crisco in 2019. rachel: what do you do with. this this is the sauce right here. don't need to heat it up. just all the spices blended
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together. very simple to do. todd: do you dump these in. >> drop one, in coat it in the brin breading and coat it in the sauce. it's done. there you go right there. and then for the secure. we will take this shingletonen tender you put over here and move it over here real quick. todd: it is beautiful. >> it is beautiful, sir. cut that up and take that and put it on top and drop your secure right on top. dean: yum, of course after you eat that you move right to champagne. >> trite sham page. >> we have karl helene how can we have champagne on any budget don't have to be a millionaire? >> not at all. champagne to be named champagne. in the rest of the world it'sparkling wine. the most beautiful is chandron. beautiful expression of the napa valley. exact same process. go for $24 for six glass:
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and then you will move on to chardon. there one bottle opened every second in the world. rachel: wow. >> number one for a reason. and beautiful limited edition for the end of the year is the representing the paris. >> how much. >> 39. fun to play with. you don't need a glass. you can actually put a sipper on it available. todd: this is not a child's size because in the u.s. children cannot drink. rachel: it's a champagne bottle. >> drink directly out of it pack of 6. dean: beautiful. >> $12 a bottle. then you move to renault. the oldest 1729. rachel: where does that come from. >> champagne.
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and that is a blank de blanc. todd: i was waiting for your segue so we can eat. and then definitely what is most amazing champagne in the world krug grand cuve. if you have never had krug in your life you should try it. rachel: you are a connoisseur. there is a huge difference between when you try this and this. >> yes. especially those two because this is only chardonnay. that's the brand chardonnay. it was a lot of red wines would have this -- few champagnes can give you. todd: to reiterate a lot of options for a lot of different price points.
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something to remember on this side of the table cayenne is hot. he did warn me in his defense he said this is going to be hot. i'm tough i can handle it i need. this we are going to have a great time tonight. but you have to practice responsible drinking. it's so important. dean: absolutely. put the sipper on. rachel: how about practicing french accent. >> of course. outstanding. todd: important story coming up. this soldier knows first hand about perseverance. recovering from ptsd after three combat tours. he shares his incredible story. you don't want to miss it. rachel: democrats have spent all year resisting president trump. and now our next guest argues it's actually transforming their party. we have got jonathan turley up next to explain ♪ on the edge of glory ♪ and i'm hanging on a moment of truth ♪ i'm on the edge ♪ the edge ♪ the edge ♪ the edge
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[ horn honking ] [ engine revving ] what's that, girl? [ engine revving ] flo needs help?! [ engine revving ] take me to her! ♪ coming, flo! why aren't we taking roads?! flo. [ horn honking ] -oh. you made it. do you have change for a dollar? -this was the emergency? [ engine revving ] yes, i was busy! -24-hour roadside assistance. from america's number-one motorcycle insurer. -you know, i think you're my best friend. you don't have to say i'm your best friend. that's okay. ♪ rachel: welcome back. it's been a year of resistance for democrats against donald trump and our next guest argues this is all consuming and has caused the party to completely transform and abandon the core values that they used to stand for. todd: george turlejonathan tempe slay professor.
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how this is completely transforming the democrats. explain what you mean by that. >> i grew up in a staunchly democratic family in chicago. and and the democratic party used to represent something. but, what we have seen is the last two years is that they have been become the inverse image of donald trump. that this obsession is really worthy of melville. it's this all consuming effort which is beginning to erode what defines the democrats. what happens when donald trump leaves office? what is left of your party? if you take a look at the last year, it's really mystifying. you know, when we were dealing with the fbi material. congress was seeking to release to the public, the fbi redacted a huge amount of that material, many of us said, look, this is part of a pattern with the fbi. they often overclassify. it is often to protect themselves from embarrassment. not national security. and, yet, the democrats said, no, no. you just have to accept what
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the fbi is saying about classification. well, when those redactions were lifted, we found out they weren't really classified. they were shielding embarrassing things about fbi officials. when donald trump said i want to get out of syria and afghanistan, the democrats who have long opposed endless or undeclared wars said oh my god this is hasty. how could you do this? we have to fight terrorism. rachel: right. >> all of these things lead to you wonder what is left of the democratic party beyond being opposed to donald trump? rachel: right. in the case of syria, you bring up a great point. you have heard of so many democrats actually saying we need to listen to the generals and generally they say, listen, we are a civilian led military and they listen to the president and they have generally not been for intervention in a lot of these cases. what i see that's interesting, jonathan maybe you can speak to this, i see that on the republican side there is a debate there are plenty of republicans who oppose and aren't afraid to
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oppose the president on certain positions. on the democrat side it seems to be they are unified and no matter what the position is they are going to oppose. you are saying that's actually changing who they are. >> i think it is. the republicans have to be careful, too. if they just simply become the party of donald trump, they are going to have this same vacuum once he leaves the office. but what's strange about the democrats is even their rhetoric seems to be adopted from an earlier time. if you look at what democrats are now saying about russian influence, you know, we all, i hope, agree that the russian interference with our election was terrible, worthy of sanctions and worthy of investigation. but, more and more democrats are saying that anyone who associates with russians are traitors and, you know, there are enemies, sort of cold war language that usually the democrats dismiss and opposed. so, the only point of the column is this: that at some point the democrats are going to have to have an
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identity separate from donald trump. and if they go into 2020 as simply the inverse image of donald trump, then we are really not going to have a two-party system. we have a 1.5 party system. todd: it's going to be interesting as jonathan alluded to earlier if trump presidency is over if they go back to old or course they're on now. something we monitor this year and of course next. rachel: thank you. great article. >> happy new year. todd: the race for 2020 heating up with several democrats on the verge of announcing their run. they are being pressured who should be on their staff. how they are already succumbing to political correctness. this soldier knows first hand about perseverance. recovering ptsd after three combat tours. he is here to share his incredible story. we also have a big surprise for him. stay with us. that's next. ♪ she grows up,
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all about sacrifice wearing the uniform of our great nation. is he here to tell us how we can persevere in the new year. joining us army sergeant first class matthew weis and operation of finally home rusty carroll. welcome to you both and happy new year. tell us a little bit about what you faced when you were deployed. >> so my career started 2000-2001. i was already in the military before 9/11 started. and through six deployments, i missed the birth of my son. i mean, it's really tough to kind of think back on some of that stuff. i mean, really. rachel: it's hard. how do you get through it? >> family, friends, a man by the name of chris floro who pulled me out of a dark hole. really family, parents, people surrounding you, pushing you, pulling you out
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of depression. i mean, i would say a year ago i wouldn't be doing this. it's been tough. todd: rusty, what can you tell us about the organization finally home. >> nonprofit provides mortgage free homes and loan modifications for wounded veterans across the country. to say date we have completed over 170 homes. we have another 50 in various stages of planning and we have identified another 30 veteran families in need. rachel: how do you go about identifying families that you want to serve in that way? >> we have a number of different ways but we have got relationships with various branches of the military. various regional va offices and the like that help bring some level of identity but, frankly, we need those that need help to look out for help. because there are people who want to help. todd: matthew, you applied for one of these homes, correct? >> yes, sir. todd: do we know where we are in the process? >> not really, no. [laughter] >> i know i'm on tv. [laughter] todd: we do have a surprise for you.
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and rusty, i would like you to take it away. >> absolutely. we provide mortgage free homes and some of our builder partners i want to introduce dan our founder and representative for builder department lamar jason. >> how are you? >> good morning. rachel: good morning. what do you have to tell us? >> matthew, how are you all doing this morning? >> fine how are you, sir? >> god bless you for your service. thank you for your service and whole family for your service that you have done over the past years and the sacrifice, your six deployments, two purple hearts, two bronze stars, that's amazing. and i'm honored to be here today with our special guest and jason wa has something he ws to say to you. >> weiss family it's a pleasure to meeting you on behalf of lennar our associates and trade partners i'm excited to let you know you are the
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recipients of a brand new mortgage free lennar home. todd: wow, that's awesome. take it away. what is your reaction? >> i would say speechless. that's something that doesn't happen ever. just really thankful and get closer to my family and hopefully keep growing, and becoming a better person and better father. rachel: your beautiful wife, what are your thoughts on this? tell us what you are feeling. can i see it in your eyes? >> i'm speechless. todd: amazing moment. thank you for being here. more "fox & friends" right after this. and we promise they will get a smaller key. [laughter] try this new robitussin honey. the real honey you love... plus the powerful cough relief you need. mind if i root through your trash? new robitussin honey. because it's never just a cough. . . .
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♪ >> the government shutdown enters it is 10th day. todd: president putting pressure on democrats to strike to a deal for border security. massive manhunt happening for the gunman who pulled the trigger killed a 7-year-old in front of her family. todd: killing of officer singh igniting debate over sanctuary laws. >> this is concern for citizens and obviously for law enforcement. >> the sanctuary laws help the promote public safety. >> this is outrageous statement to make. this hero should be a live
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today. rachel: a plan to take u.s. troops out of sir i can't remember. >> i feel better about syria. the president is committed to making sure when we leave syria isis is completely defeated. >> this is the baby that will drop. we will ring in 2019. ♪ ♪ the final countdown todd: the song may be europe but continent right now experiencing the new year is australia. that is right there is 2019 in sydney celebration is on the way. i did research on this. turns clock struck midnight there. so what we do is celebrate. rachel: more than a million people are watching fire work shows around that city harbor. dean: i know that harbor well.
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i walked the bridge. it is scary. what are your new year's resolutions. email us at friend and foxnews.com. i'm not a resolution guy. i'm a goal oriented person. rachel: i know you are. todd: you mentioned you're a goal guy. you're a resolution person. i have one goal for the gay, that the producers don't say this at the end of it. thank todd it's over. one more hour. if i avoid the producers saying that. rachel: whole different story. dean: todd bowls of the jets, he had a tough one. rachel: let us know what you're thinking. dean: people are talking to us. todd: carol's resolution so to call people more often. that is a good idea. rachel: that is actually a good idea. todd: conversations with a real
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human being. novel. rachel: he is aiming for more family time and increased random acts of kindness. todd: laurie writes, don't stress the small stuff. dean: here is from brooks. convert at least two liberal friends to admitting trump is indeed their president. todd: you do that, you get on the show. dean: film it. todd: friends at foxnews.com. if you film that. president putting pressure on democrats to strike a deal on border security. rachel: president trump tweeted moments ago. all concrete wall was never abandoned as been reported by the media. some areas will be all concrete but experts at border patrol prefer a wall that is see-through. thereby making it possible to see what is happening on both sides. makes sense to me. dean: that's it. experts at border patrol.
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garrett tenney is live in washington. the partial government shutdown is now in the 10th day. how are things going, garrett? reporter: negotiations have really not been taking place here for over a week. both sides are digging in. democratic leaders are refusing to negotiate over funding on a border wall. the administration is not backing down on president's promise for some funding. over the weekend the white house says they're willing to compromise. so far democratic leaders have not been willing to talk. >> first the democrats have to come back. nancy pelosi needs to come back from hawaii. less hula, more moola. a fully functioning democracy demands both parties come together that the congress and executive branch work together. todd: behind the scenes a number of lawmakers have been meeting
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to end a shut down. combination of funding for the wall, fix for daca, a number of other immigration provisions democrats support. those sweeteners may not be enough though because democrat leaders say any funding for the wall is a nonstarter. larger negotiations are expected to pick up, once the new congress begins. democrats elect a new speaker. based on what we're hearing from capitol hill, the shutdown is expected to last at least another week or two. rachel: thank you, garrett. another week or two. you have to believe that. as kellyanne conway said, more mullah less, human. moola, less hula. dean: bad optics, no question about it. todd: one of the major parts about the bad optics, what do
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people on the ground want, defending cities and towns. we were fortunate to have three individuals on with us lasteed, why the concept. sanctuary cities, towns, whatever is tough as they try to do their job. take a listen. >> this is extremely, extremely dangerous for the community, the citizens, obviously law enforcement, who now instead of turning someone overto i.c.e., under controlled environment, controlled circumstances you put officers at work. >> officer singh was an american success story. he himself was an immigrant. for him to come to the country in the correct way be shot down literally in the street like a dog, this is terrible. >> this is a law that prohibits law enforcement from cooperating with other law enforcement. it's a politically-motivated law that puts citizens and police officers in danger every single day. rachel: it is very clear how law enforcement feels about
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sanctuary cities. they definitely believe that law is responsible for the death of officer singh. had that law not been in place this officer would be alive and with his family. despite hearing people on the ground, people like senator jeffreys in in new york doesn't matter, doesn't believe the wall or sanctuary cities will prevent this take a listen what he had to say. >> that was a very tragic situation and my heart and my prayers go out to the officer's family. my experience in new york has been different where the members of the nypd, clearly the most professionally heil-trained law enforcement country, in not in the world, that these sanctuary laws actually help promote public safety. >> address the situation in california. >> it's a human tragedy. clearly we have to do better in terms of preventing these type of occurrences from taking place. that is what democrats intend to
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do and will continue to do on a bipartisan fashion. dean: rep jeffries offering no real explanation. so dan bongino weighed in on that. >> i don't know who he is talking to but he is not talking to the cops on the browned who are actually doing the work on the streets. this is an outrageous statement to make. this is living breathing, american hero who is gone from us now because we have awful border control, terrible laws on your books. 100% of the people come here illegally should not be here. these heroes should be alive today. hakim jeffries stumbled through the answer because he has no good answer. dean: dan bongino telling it like he always does. todd: dan bongino used to work for the nypd. his sources are solid. rachel: he says sanctuary policies help people, make husband more safe. dean: trying to allude people
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reporting crimes to the police. that has been debunked by several law enforcement personnel on our show today. todd: syria, the president just moments ago, sending out this tweet about syria. it reads as follows. if anybody but donald trump did what i did in syria, which was an isis-loaded mess when i became president they would be a national hero. isis is mostly gone or slowly sending our troops back home to be with their families while at the same time finding isis remnants. the ellipse sees, we're expecting that that tweet to finish. this comes on the heels of lindsey graham's comments after a lunch yesterday. i want to get your thoughts on the tweet. what are your thoughts. rachel: he has been fighting isis since the day he was elected. one of the first things he decided to do was change rules of engagement for the military, so they can get in there and
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eliminate this menace. we haven't really heard much about it. dean: haven't heard anything about it. >> until he decides, we pretty much wrapped this up. let's get out of syria. you can debate whether that is good or bad but seems like this is the first time we heard from the media anything about it. he is absolutely right. had anybody else had the success he had eliminating isis he had, this happened under president obama's watch you would have expected a lot more kudos and front page, magazine and newspaper stories how successful. dean: i'm not too young or too old to remember the obama administration. there was talk about isis attacks, isis this, their territory expanding. under president trump they have gone almost into nothing. you don't hear much about it, haven't heard much about it. one of the quiet things he accomplished that has been phenomenal. >> pulling out of syria by president trump has been a bipartisan criticism. not just the democrats.
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lindsey graham has been very vocal. todd: he was very vocal that the moment president tweeted out he was pulling out of syria. they had lunch yesterday. if you listen what lindsey graham said yesterday, i now feel a lot more confident. we don't know the ins and outsdt suffice it to say, one the major critics -- we'll listen to lindsey graham following that lunch. >> we had a great lunch. we talked about syria. and he told me some things i didn't know, that made me feel a lot better where we're headed in syria. he promised to destroy isis. he will keep that promise. we're not there yet, but as i said today, we're inside the 10-yard line and president understands the need to finish the job. i think the president is come up with a plan with his generals that makes sense to me. the goal is to make sure isis doesn't come back.
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the president is very committed to making sure when we leave syria that isis is completely defeated, and we're inside the 10-yard line. todd: we are inside the 10-yard line. you can't throw an interception. dean: you have to score when you get inside the red zone. one the important things was protecting the kurds. that hasn't been talking about a lot. our allies in the area. rachel: lindsey graham says we won't leave until that is true. toad todd get over to jillian with headlines. jillian: fox news alert. a massive manhunt is underway for a gunman who killed a 7-year-old girl in front of her mom and three siblings. the girl was shot inside her car as they left a houston area walmart. the shooter pulled beside them. the mother was shot and wounded. it is unclear why the man began shooting. patrick frazee will her formal charges in the murder of kelsey berreth.
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her body has not been found. berreth's parents have custody of the baby. kevin spacey caught delivering pizza to the paparazzi. the disgraced actor handing a free pie to a "daily mail" reporter in baltimore. spacey wearing a baseball cap that said, retired since 2017. he was taken off "house of cards," the hit netflix show after the allegations surfaced begins him. those are the headlines. all i know i want pizza. rachel: maybe not from kevin spacey. todd: moving on from that situation. securing the border on the front lines. a border patrol gives us an update what is happening on the ground as california prepares for another visit from the homeland secretary. rachel: they are being pressured about outside forces about who should be on their staff. a democrat who use towed work
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feed your cells with whoooo. did you know the exact same hotel room... ...can have many different prices? that's why tripadvisor searches over 200 booking sites to find the lowest price on the hotel you want. your perfect hotel room for the perfect price! ♪ todd: welcome back. homeland security secretary kirstjen nielsen visiting the border as the government remains
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shut down. president trump and democrats still fighting to make a deal for the border wall. fighting to keep america safe, here with inside look is san diego sector deputy sector patrol agent roy villa real. they have people dressed up in suits and what is on the border. i feel that does the nation a disservice. we're not there on the front lines. describe the situation that you're experiencing on a day in, and day out basis. >> well, good morning, thank you for having me on. in 30 years working with the border patrol, we have never faced situation we're facing today. wer are overwhelmed with migrant units, princely family and children. people other than countries than mexico. first time in border patrol
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history majority of our arrests people from other than mexico. china, bangladesh, central america. todd: the fight over the border wall is extremely political. let's remove politics from this for a moment. what do you want? you're on the ground. you need resources. what do you want? >> well, what we need along the border is a border enforcement system. there is no singular solution. what we need is a combination of factors. a border infrastructure, roads, that provide access to the border, technology, ground sensors, ground, cameras, night vision, drones, wall or fencing to securitied border. it is a comprehensive system. it is complex and multifaceted. what we need is an entire border enforcement system. todd: in your opinion, how would a wall, structure, whatever, help with the situation you and your colleagues are experiencing all over the southern border over the last few months?
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>> after 30 years of working in border enforcement i can attest to the walls, border fences do work. was here in the san diego in the early '80s, '90s. we began putting up fences. that had a dramatic impact on flow of illegal my abrasion. i was in yuma, arizona, in four when we put up fencing. same thing unfolded. we put up fencing, add technology and agents, has a impact on flow of i will list it far kick ticks, brings control to the border. todd: people that want the wall are described as racists. what are your opinion to that? >> the wall doesn't see color. it doesn't see nationality. it is designed as a border security structure. it is designed to show a dell delineation of the border.
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whether illegal traffickers or migrants. whatever it happens to be gives us opportunity to respond. todd: thank thank you for gettip early on the west coast. amazing insight from somebody living this every single day. >> have a great day. todd: you as well. some staffers from bernie sanders's 2016 campaign want to meet with him, to address sexual violence from that campaign. a former sanders campaign staffer joins us next. talking about a pretty robbery. a woman robbing a beauty salon, stops to apply makeup. it is caught on camera. hey, you have to look good. ♪ two because we've seen a thing or two. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪ before discovering nexium 24hr to treat her frequent heartburn, marie could only imagine
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we're working to make things simple, easy and awesome. ♪ jillian: hope you're having a good morning so far. welcome back. some quick he lines. president trump tweeting minutes ago standing behind his decision to pull out of syria he tweeted quote, if anybody but donald trump did what i did in syria which was eisnaugle-loaded mess they would be a national hero. isis slowly gone. we're sending our troops back home to be with their families while at the same time fighting isis remnants. goes on to say, i campaigned getting out of syria and other place, when i start tweeting
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news mead or failed general complains about me and my tactics are working. just doing what i said i was going to do. there you have it. secretary of state mike pompeo is going to brazil. bolsen far row has been called the trump of the tropics in part a political outsider with a strong social media presence. rachel. rachel: thank you, jillian. former bernie sanders campaign staffers reportedly seeking a meeting with him and his team to address sexual violence and harrassment from the 2016 campaign. and a pervasive culture what at the call toxic masculinity. shy is a farmer bernie sanders campaign staffer. she joins us now to weigh in. you were hearing the reports. what is your opinion on this? you obviously worked on the campaign? or worked for bernie. >> i did, absolutely i worked on
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the campaign. i stayed on the campaign trail six or seven months. nothing like starting new year with a little bit of truth. i will speak for my colleagues are afraid to do so. people want to be rehired. you will not hear a lot of people speak up. these were issues addressed publicly couple years ago. some of those individuals will be honest on the letter have different motivations. i don't know what their true inend is. issues have been brought up. let's move on to the next thing. there hasn't been meetings or people have not been embraced in the way they feel they have gotten the respect, the proper attention been addressed. it is not just sexism. it is discrimination as well. you will not hear this. probably only hear from me. a handful of african-american candidates, not candidates, employees, including myself talked about discrimination. one group is being chosen over the other, specifically latino. groups prioritized, black staffers are not. you will see more unfold.
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i made claims. other people made claims. what senator sanders needs to do allow the staff or bernie bros around him to handle the issues, deal with it head on or there will be more to come. some is resentment, some of it is truth. you can't hire a bunch of populists folks think no one will stand up for freedom. no one will stand up for what is right. that is the problem with the left. not just with senator sanders but on campaigns in general. this is a constant issue no one speaks about. >> we'll talk about some other campaigns in a second but first i want to read a statement from bernie sanders campaign to "politico." they said we always welcome hearing experiences and views of our former staff, speaking generally during 2016. there were a number of hr actions taken. harrassment of any kind is intellable. we will continue to examine these policies and processes. feedback is welcome and we'll make any necessary changes. so we move on to the next topic because right now we're hearing a lot of 2020 candidates on the
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democrat side are jumping in, and they're under a lot of pressure to have a very diverse, i'm sorry? and according to vox of course. so i want to hear what you have to say about this. is this pressure real? are they having to check boxes we have this many black people, this many hispanic people? >> you know, here is the reality again, i will say the truth. i'm okay fine losing jobs and uberring if need be to speak the truth. there is always issue with hiring candidates, diverse candidates. not because they can't find anyone. i was graduate of congressional black caucus boot camp in 2010. it was allegedly a group designed to be put together to be hired by campaigns, guess how many people called me for a job interview or even opportunity? the answer is zero. there is no issue. we're trying to find diverse candidates. the issue is, as usual, it is typically ran by white men. when you hear, oh, we're all about racial diversity, we're
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all about including everyone, it is a flat-out lie. the republicans have some work to do. i can't give republican as pass on this either but at the end of the day when 90% of particularly african-americans vote democrat, that is where my issue is. why are we not hired? why are we not consultants? why is the black media not respected. i've been speaking about this for years. i'm glad to see people are finally speaking up. guess what reality is? they will hire same ones over and over. check off a few boxes pretty much keep it moving until more people speak up. rachel: they need to talk the talk, walk the walk, you're right, needs to be on both sides. that said, when mitt romney said he had binder full of women, he got a lot of criticism, a lot of flak. this is positive news story in vox saying hey, we need to diversify. what is the double standard? it's a positive story that they want to, you know diversify. when mitt romney does it or republicans do it is viewed as
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somehow insincere? >> that is how it always been at least the mitt romney said he had a binder. at the end of the day where is the binder of black folks. i have one but they won't be calling. to be honest, rachel, what they are doing insulting a lot of employees, calling people to volunteer, we want to pick your brain, which is flat-out insulting. i suggest to senator sanders all the rest of these candidates have a real conversation, invite people to the table. i'm not talking about petition signers. bring consultants to the table, working in the field is over with. time to bring real consult ants to the table, continue to lose and continue to be called out. rachel: consultants paid not volunteer. we appreciate you being here on new year's eve. happy new year to you. >> thank you, rachel. >> of at arrest of an illegal immigrant in murder of a california police officer, some
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♪ comfort. what we deliver by delivering. and if you get lost, just hit me on the old horn. man: tom's my best friend, but ever since he bought a new house... tom: it's a $10 cover? oh, okay. didn't see that on the website. he's been acting more and more like his dad. come on, guys! jump in! the water's fine! tom pritchard. how we doin'? hi, there. tom pritchard. can we get a round of jalapeño poppers for me and the boys, please? i've been saving a lot of money with progressive lately, so... progressive can't protect you from becoming your parents. but we can protect your home and auto when you bundle with us. ♪ todd: look at that. 8:32.
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people are already starting to gather. 8:32 in the morning. dean: in the am. rachel: it will be get up to two million people there. who are these people already starting the process? dean: wearing diapers. rachel: what will they look like by midnight? what will they be doing? todd: i like to refer to new year's eve coverage as one long commercial for depends. be honest. they're standing against a barricade literally for the next, i don't know? rachel: there are restaurants. why can't you go to the bathroom? todd: you're packed in like sardines at some point. starting in a few hours from now. people want that important spot to watch the ball drop. good luck. dean: wow! rachel: we have a great show for you tonight. pete hegseth is there. kennedy is there. don't even turn off the fox news channel. dean: i will be there for a little bit. rachel: dean will be there.
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todd: what else will be there, 7,000 counterterrorism officers trying to keep everybody safe. dean: making it one of the safest places in world. rachel: we're very close to times square. dean: i trust our law enforcement professionals. todd: we're talking all morning long about resolutions for new year, goals. rachel: he doesn't like resolutions. todd: same general concept. here is what you wrote to us. martin emailed, spread more kindness. dean: that is pretty straightforward. i like that. >> lauren wants to bring more awareness to our officers. that is especially this week a good resolution. dean: it's a good resolution all the time. thank you, lauren. e plame us to friends@foxnews.com. i'm a goal oriented person. rachel: we all need to be as
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cool as dean. the murder of this california cop, officer singh is now reigniting a debate over sanctuary city laws. take a listen. >> this is illegal illegal alien with prior criminal activity that should have been reported to i.c.e. we were prohibited, law enforcement was prohibited because of sanctuary laws and that led to the encounter with officer singh. todd: every time we run this, more and more difficult to watch. dean: just horrible. todd: the cop killer had two prior duis and gang ties. but under california law sb 55. they are banned from reporting the person to i.c.e. dean: mike slater is radio show host in california, my home state, he is here to weigh in. mike, why do we have this in our state. what can we do? >> i don't want to hear this
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argument that conservatives or racist. officer singh was a immigrant. he came here legally. chose his life to protect fellow citizens. this murderer came here i illegally. these are very different people. we want more officer singhs. we want to open up the big beautiful door in our wall and let more officer singhs in america. we want to get rid of people like this murder, kick them out of this country. build a wall so they can't come back. i don't want to hear the argument that they're racist. give me a break. dean: what drives me crazy you're anti-immigrant. we're not, i'm not anti-immigrant. i don't think he is anti-immigrant. anti-illegal immigration conflating the two between illegal and legal immigration is a whole different ball of wax. rachel: that is the whole thing. they want to conflate it.
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that is part of the process. mike, let me ask you this, we're talking about the sanctuary city laws in california. we were on yesterday, what are calfornians thinking? i got a email from somebody in california, listen stop saying california in step with this. the lawmakers are out of step with the citizens of california. can you say that's true or not? >> listen i would like to think that's true but democrats now have a supermajority in both the statehouse and state assembly. we keep voting for these people. it's insane. they don't care. nancy pelosi and all our local california politicians, they will never really comment on what happened to officer singh because it doesn't fit the narrative. to them all illegal immigrants are future doctors, lawyers, dreamers. i'm not saying all of them are murderers either. we have to understand the knew once between people who are murders like officer singh, right? that is all, distinguish between
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those two. but the democratic lawmakers won't let us. here is the one thing that will change that as soon as majority of immigrants in california start voting republican, you will see, you will see nancy pelosi and all the democrats building that wall as fast -- you will see nancy pelosi mixing the mortar, laying the bricks at the southern border to prevent immigrants coming in. as long as they vote democrat, they're not changing anything. todd: looking into 2019, you say california could literal become more liberal in the new year. why do you say that? >> totally game on. supermajority in both houses and senate. new positive gavin newsom. nothing stopping him. they will pass single-payer universal health care for everyone in california regardless of immigration status. which means people will be flooding into america to get their surgeries. people will come in from arizona and new mexico and across the country to california to get the free health care. that is the big thing gavin newsom will pass. dean: that seems like
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impossibility. my taxes and your taxes won't be able to pay for that. at some point in time it will be a huge problem. when will that happen? >> stop with your common sense, dean. we live in california. everything is possible in california as long as you wish it. it is all based on wishes and fairytales. dean: i work in hollywood. i see plenty of those, my friend. no question about it. rachel: thank you, mike. we appreciate your perspective. we're hoping maybe common sense comes to the state. a lot of officers lives are on the line. >> amen to that. rachel: all right. todd: somebody with a fairytale that her eagles are going to repeat. ian mele. jillian: we're in the playoffs. your time is not. dean: my money on jillian. jillian: thank you very much. armed men wearing masks and tactical gear and tack style style clothing was on his way to church to fulfill a prophecy was arrested. tony albert ii was carrying a loaded gun, extra ammunition
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when he was taken in custody in texas. he claimed to be going to an unknown church. he is in jail on $1,000 bond. elizabeth warren take a major step to run for president in 2020. she formed a exploratory committee. today she makes it official, forming the committee to run. millionaire michael bloomberg says he doesn't know if he will run in 2020, one thing he knows which party he would run for. >> i would certainly run as a democrat. i'm much closer to their philosophy although i don't agree with any one party on everything. jillian: bloomberg ran as republican winning new york city mayor in 2001. he will decide next year. a pretty perfect robbery? a woman caught on camera robbing a beauty salon and stopping to apply makeup. you can see her grab a lot of cash, take time to try different
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products, even curling eyelashes. police in china are still looking for the thief. when you go to rob something you want your eyelashes to look good. dean: if you're on cctv you want the right curleyed eyelashes for sure. todd: main thing i learned from you, dean. dean: i curley mine for sure. did i say that. rachel: i told you he was california. todd: switching gears. heart break from the border where another child dies in u.s. custody. they say the wall will prevent tragedies like this at the border. you want to hear what that person has to say.
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♪ todd: today marks the final day of 2018 and as a result of final trading day of year. dean: one of the consistencies has been the market volatility. rachel: gerri willis live at the new york stock exchange with what to expect moving forward. gerri? >> good morning, guys. that's right. we'll have a good day today i think, fingers crossed. that is what traders are telling me this morning. and why? it was trade headlines. we got news in the "wall street journal" this morning, president tweeting over the weekend, u.s. china progress in trade talks. we're starting to flesh out a deal here that could be very important for the markets. meanwhile when you look back what happened over the past year it has been very tough indeed. this december, all three indexes losing 10% as amazingly bad performance. dow, s&p, nasdaq were down more
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than 4.6% for the year. not good news. i want to show you, some of what probably your favorite stocks, ones you know, amazon was up 26% for the year, mainly because it was up so very much overall. and also suffered this fall. apple down 7.7. facebook, down, get this, 24%. they dealt with a lot of questions about privacy. netflix, another stock you might know, up 33%. we're expecting a good day. it has been a very tough year indeed. guys down here just catching their breath. they have to do trading, end of year planning, some people sell winners for tax reasons. other portfolio managers doing what they call window-dressing. making portfolios look better than otherwise. fingers crossed. dean: it has been volatile, that's for sure. rachel: happy new year. >> happy new year, guys. dean: president trump tweeting i campaigned on border security which you cannot have without a
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strong and powerful wall. our southern border has been long an open wound where drugs, criminals, including human traffickers and illegals would pour into our country. dems should get back here and fix now. rachel: our next guest says the wall will prevent more tragedies at the open border. todd: michael goodwin, always a pleasure to see you, sir. why do you say so? >> everyone is in a lather over these two dead guatemalan children died on american side of the border, one was eight, one was seven. these are clear tragedies. you look at history. what families said about it. they were both with a parent when they came across. they were given a lot of medical care here. neither survived unfortunately. i think, you look at the incentives for the parents who made this trek. it is dangerous. and they have to know it's
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difficult. and yet why do they come? part of it is clearly that the hellish conditions in central america, which are the violence is just beyond understanding for most of us. and yet the incentives that we give them here is part of the reason they come. one of the fathers said he heard a rumor if you bring a child you can stay. todd: right. >> a bonderrer is a deterrent. it just doesn't make it difficult when you get here. but in the minds of people in central america, it says i'm not welcome. i won't get in. and there are so many, the border is, nearly 2,000 miles long. there are some open stretches that, if you just get across for a minute, put a foot on american soil, and claim asylum, you now have the right to stay pending a hearing. that doesn't make sense to american taxpayers. and to american citizens. so the idea that these children
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are americans responsibility because their parents brought them on this dangerous trek, i think is in part owing to incentives that we have inexplicably given them to make this dangerous decision. that has to end. a border wall goes a long way to ending that calculation. dean: certainly does. what about the argument that the border wall is immoral? >> that is a word nancy pelosi uses. that is interesting to me that she also says it is our moral responsibility to care for these children? so the morality that she sees is that, in effect, encourages people to come. they will then be taken care of here. it seems to me that morality, compassion says, don't come, don't risk your children's lives on this dangerous journey. nor is it i think moral to american taxpayers. as a read of mine wrote, about
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the penalties that fall on american border officials when a child dies, they are suddenly, they may lose their jobs now. is that fair to them and their families? dean: certainly not, no question. >> where is the morality here. rachel: compassion. they like to wear the man tell of compassion. great article. go to -- the post. >> also foxnews.com. rachel: a lot of reactions to it dean: todd, loves to read your stuff. rachel: up next, janice dean live in times square as we count down closer to 2019. dean: someone will get hurt. todd: this is a great title. the gladiator of is trying to break a record here on fox news.
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hours. in 15 hours, right? dean: she is already going. janice: of course we're already going. jeff, pour me some champagne. >> [inaudible] janice: i love it. tell me your fancy title. >> lucky. co-organizer of times square in new year's eve. it is great event. janice: tell me about the ball drop. what do we expect, who is drinking. >> nobody is drinking. star of the show is ready to go. at 6:00 p.m. the ball will go up. it will slowly rise. people are cheering. we have over six hours of entertainment. it is amazing. janice: who? >> bebe recollection is a. lovely the band. sting. janice: you would if you didn't have champagne. >> celebration of 100 anniversary of ripley's believe
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it or not. we have the lab. dance crew. world of dance. people at home they will see one, watch, a little portion of what is really going on for six hours this is elect tick mix of entertainment from all types of genres. what is great people from all over the world. a million people celebrating together. janice: i hear closer to 2 million. a billion people watching on television. >> that is incredible. 190 million plus americans counting down in unison with the ball as we get ready for 2019. janice: as a weather person, a little bit of rain is coming. will that damper the spirits? >> not at all. make us more sparkly down there. janice: i love it. that is fantastic. speaking of sparkly, cheers, jeff. over to you, guys. todd: jd, you're having fun over there. we could get violent. bringing in the new year by sabreing champagne. dean: can i grab this one?
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>> sure. todd: current world record is 66 bottles. set in 2016. dean: we'll try to beat that. butch, is what a great name. catering hall. he is is known as gladiator of sabreing. he is shown how it is done. i will not do it. how do you do this? what is the story? >> we basically grab one bottle. take the case off the bottle champagne. roll it above the rim right here. we look for the seam on the bottle which is right there. if i can find it. we take. practice one. don't want to chop. dean: whoa. >> just like that. dean: all right. todd: going for a record here. rachel: do you hold the record? >> try it every year. we get very close. rachel: what is the record? >> 66. dean: you guys ready to see this? [cheers and applause]
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i have a sabre. put a minute on the clock. to. ♪ todd: wow. ♪ todd: if i stand close to this i get champagne all over me. ♪ dean: popping them off the top there. todd: they're being reset. rachel: he is -- [inaudible] ♪ dean: come on, butch. you can do this. is ♪ dean: 20 seconds left. you got this. rachel: you are going to break it. dean: 20 seconds. getting close. there is a spot.
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dean: five, four, three, two, one. oh. rachel: you were close. you were close. todd: we'll clean this all up. we'll have more "fox & friends." dean: we're not going to drink it. ♪ thpaste. it's three times more effective at removing plaque, the main cause of bleeding gums. leave bleeding gums behind with parodontax toothpaste. leave bleeding gums behind that's why i take osteo bi-flex to keep me moving the way i was made to. it nourishes and strengthens my joints for the long-term. osteo bi-flex; find our coupon in sunday's paper.
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"after the show show". the first 46. she will try to do that by herself. come on, you got this. >> eric: we're 10 days into the shutdown with both sides refusing to budge in the partial government shutdown as it drags into the new year. when will it end? we don't know yet. i'm eric shawn. we're live inside "america's newsroom." >> i'm heather childress. bill and sandra are off today. another brand-new year? >> eric: i can't believe it's 2019 already. >> heather: the more non-negotiation. the democrats and white house are stalled over funding for the president's long-promised wall. nancy pelosi likely to take over as speaker later this week has said house democrats will propose a funding bill when the new congress convenes on thursday. >> eric: both parties are playing the blame game pointing
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