tv FOX Friends FOX News February 1, 2019 3:00am-6:00am PST
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todd: let's make the official prediction. two days to waiver. jillian: i think the patriots take it. todd: i think the patriots take it three points the spread. jerrod golf has a big game. let's see wha what happens. jillian: fox and friends starts right now. ♪ ♪ steve: i hope they have plenty of beer because of the mercedes stadium in atlanta will be the host of super bowl 53 on sunday. did you realize that is the most sustainable stadium in the world. it was built especially to be super green and it is deep from the heart of atlanta. ed: did you have any doubt in the beer. one thing on the checklist it's set. ainsley: i'm sure in your refrigerator too. if not get stocked up. few more days until the super bowl.
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we sent brian down there. at a diner this morning. filling in for him this morning. we love having you here. ed: great to be here. steve: let's talk a little bit about what's going on in the world. you know a couple days ago that conference committee sat down democrats and republicans. members of the house of representatives and senators. they are trying to figure out going forward by february the 15th will donald trump get money for a wall or will the shutdown occur again? ed: what's fascinating is that i was covering that a couple days ago back in washington and nita is the top democrat on that committee. steve: she is the leader. ed: i quote he had her on shannon's show and other shows. everything is on the table. talked about border security and try to meet the president halfway and what happens? nancy pelosi snuffs it out. ainsley: she says no money. not one dime for the wall. the president was speaking about it yesterday to reporters in the oval office. listen to this. >> i don't think they are going to make a deal. i see what's happening. they are all saying oh, let's do this but we are not
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giving one dime for the wall. that's okay. if they're not going to give money for the wall. it's not going to work. if it's not going to work then the politicians are wasting a lot of time. they are allowing people to come into this country and sell drugs and human traffic and do all of these horrible things that if we had the simplicity of a well-constructed beautiful barrier or wall they wouldn't be able to come into our country. steve: is this a negotiation right now? because if the president says look, i don't think they are going to do anything, is he just taunting them? the president says we are not going to do anything. we have got it do something. when you hear and this is what he is talking about. you alluded to this as well, ed. when nancy pelosi says this sounds like she already made up her mind about a month ago. >> there's not going to be any wall money in the legislation. it's all about two things. cost benefit analysis, what's the best way and what do you get for your dollar
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in order to protect the border. and it's also about and this will be coming up physical he takes some extraordinary action the opportunity cost of the money. ed: rewind the tape go back to christmas when she was in hawaii and the president was at the white house i'm ready to negotiate. fast forward. steve: reopen the government. ed: ereopened the government we thought in good faith we will negotiate. as you say the negotiation has barely started with the committee met for a couple days, couple hours over the last couple days and she is already saying no, no. ainsley: she is absolutely no wall. the president said let's just call it what it is. it is a wall. she said i would agree to possibly some barriers and fencing. she suggesting this fencing called normandy fencing to finish off the 700 miles authorized by the 2006 secure fence act. there is a picture of it right there on the left. this is the president's idea on the right. the wall.
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okay. so, the prototype. ed: which do you think works better. >> can you climb over it allows business to pass through it. it is a moveable barrier. steve: coming down to be semantics. which would you prefer? people who support the president would prefer something that looks like a wall and solid rather than the normandy style fencing. but it comes down to semantics. because the democrats are saying one thing but what does that mean in the president is saying wall. does he mean a fence? dose mean a barrier? when you were talking about she would be okay with that normandy fencing to conclude the project that is known as the 2006 secure fence act. we are only talking about 30 miles he has shut down the government and owned up to it so he could get 30 miles to that. that's why in his briefing
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yesterday. look they are not going to come to an agreement. now it sounds like there are provisions in the u.s. code where the president of the united states does not you have to declare a national emergency but he can still use some money that has already been programmed for something to reprogram it for the wall and that's according to the congressional research center. they said the president can build a wall without congress. ed: which of those prototypes is more likely to spread the of drugs across the border. they seized 254 pounds of fentanyl. okay. valued at $3.5 million. we're told it's enough to kill up to 57 million people. this is staggering in the middle of the opioid crisis here. the president has talked about it and just a week or so ago. the border patrol also said that they had seized about 700 pounds of cocaine in one shipment. look how much fentanyl is there and how they are trying to poison our children with it. ainsley: there was 18-wheeler carrying
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cucumbers or the driver or someone had hidden all this fentanyl in the back. the driver was coming from mexico and crossed over nogales, arizona and arrested there where all the drugs were found. 08 to 100 times more powerful than morphine. steve: hats off to the people at the border patrol. this is not an area where you need a fence. this is where you need secure screening at our ports. and apparently and they are reluctant to discuss exactly how it operates. but i have read news reports this morning that apparently they noticed anomalies in the floor of the tractor-trailer. so, obviously, they are using some sort of a scan. we don't know what it is. if it's sonar or whatever. saying there is something going on there called out the dogs, found the stuff. that ain't no cucumber. ed: when you put that together with the human trafficking that comes across the border as well. sebastian gorka was talking earlier on fox about the stakes here for the president. take a quick listen. >> let's be very clear, this
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is just politics, this is about vote. this has nothing to do with the security of the nation. we need to remind nancy pelosi there is only one person in america who is responsible for the national security of america and it's not nancy pelosi. it's not chuck schumer. and it's the president and president trump takes that mission very seriously and on february the 16th, i expect him to declare a national emergency and to build the wall. ed: the president told yesterday he told reporters the democratic party is all about open borders and high taxes. steve: binary choice. i'm sure what happens the president over the next two years is going to be saying look what we got out of that deal. do you want more secure borders or do you want open borders? it's that easy. 80s ains you want to talk about high taxes? if you make a lot of money you might not be able to keep it all if certain congresswomen and men get their way. there is a representative, a
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congresswoman ilhan omar we have talked about her lately because of some of the things she has said about israel. she recently said that she thinks the rich should pay even more. even more than alexandria ocasio-cortez wants. listen to this. >> those few things that we can do, one of them is that we could increase the taxes that people are paying who are the extremely wealthy in our communities. 70%, 08%. we have had it as high as 90%. >> 1% must pay their fair share. ainsley: work really hard. ed: as high as 90%. steve: 1% must pay more. can we go to the graphic that we have prepared that we're going to leapfrog over to the next sound bite to the number of taxes the top 1% pay? they pay 37.3%. so, the question to her is,
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so, close to 40% is not enough? ed: right. she is asking for a fair share. we heard that with barack obama. nobody can define what is fair share. top 1% is already paying 37.3% of all the taxes in america. so they're paying far beyond. ainsley: if you are one of those families or one of those individuals who makes billions of dollars, then you are going to hear that. and what are you going to do you? are probably going to move, right? steve: you look at howard schultz this week he said essentially look, i'm an american success story. i started with nothing and wound up really rich. i wanted to lead america as the next president of the united states. elizabeth warren, who apparently could be declaring for presidency in the next week or two, i thought she already had, she has quite a sound bite where she talks about people like howard schultz being a free loader. >> i want these billionaires to stop being free loaders. i want them to pick up their
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fair share. that's how we make a system that works not just for the rich and powerful but works for all of us. all i'm asking for is a little slice from the tippy tippy top. ed: we heard that before from congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez. they want to do a cradle to grave, too. bernie sanders is doubling down on all of this he wants the estate tax the death tax to be as much as 7'%. steve: i thought they just fixed that i thought they just amended that. brian: in the last couple years. steve: if your family is going to work entire lice to build a family farm or family business you would be able to keep more of that. because that's double taxes. ed: they want to change it on the left so you can't pass it on to your kids. take the money so you can't pass the farm or the business. ainsley: take taxes out of your paycheck now and when you die they will take more. double tax. steve: it will still hurt. ainsley: hand it over to jillian who has headlines for us. jillian: we are following a number of stories following with this. quick moving slow could make roads slick today from
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kentucky all the way to philadelphia. the storm pushing in from the midwest which will finally start to warm this up weekend. 15 people died in the record breaking cold this week. in ohio, icy roadways blamed for this crash that was caught on camera. look at that amazingly. no one was seriously hurt when the truck slammed into a guardrail. check this out ice fully encasing a fishing boat in massachusetts. some of the images come out of the storm are just remarkable. a teenager is missing for two weeks and found alive. nearly 700 miles from home. 14-year-old savanna pruitt left her tennessee home on january 13th due to a family situation. she was just found in wisconsin but unclear how she got there savanna's adoptive father randal pruitt is behind bars charged with sexual assault. today secretary of state mike pompeo is expected to announce the suspension of a nuclear treaty. the u.s. has repeatedly accused russia cold war
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pact. a full withdrawal would take about six months to complete. experts worry this could spark a new arms race. the call on the field stands. is anyone surprised? a federal judge rejecting a request from two new orleans saints fans to force a do over of the nfc title game after a blown call. the nfl admits. you heard roger goodell say it that ram's defender robby comey should have been flagged for a head to head hit. the rams won in overtime and play the patriots in the super bowl. guys, no one expected that anything was going to come of that right? ainsley: no. a lot of people were saying a pipe dream. jillian: you never know if you don't try. ed: jillian will in red and we are all in red for go red for women in february heart health specifically with women. steve: in fact, dr. oz is going to be here to talk about heart health in this hour. stick around for this very busy friday.
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ainsley: wear reade red today in support. steve: indeed. ainsley: democrats on the state level making radical leaps on abortion. where do the field of the 2020 democrats stand? will they expand rights even more? we are checking the record next. ed: clemson tiger's coast sweeney gives a surprise to the equipment manager. the heart warming moment you simply cannot miss coming up. >> i know you are busy but, the nfl have presented you with two super bowl tickets to the super bowl this year. year. [cheers] 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. the best simple salad ever?d great tasting, heart-healthy california walnuts.
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need some help managing your oab symptoms along the way? ask your doctor if myrbetriq is right for you, and visit myrbetriq.com to learn more. ♪ ainsley: more states are making major moves to expand abortion rights and with more democrats poised to jump into the race for 2020, could we see an even bigger expansion of proabortion legislation. here to break down what we can expect is president of the susan b. anthony list marjorie sellser. thank you for being with us. >> good morning. ainsley: can we expect when we look at democratic candidates for 2020. >> everybody that you just listed up there you can definitely expect they are for the democratic party's position which is abortion up to the point of birth is allow you had. that's been what's been in the public eye lately and frankly it's very helpful to know what their views are on this. totally out of step with even pro-choice people who say that they don't want abortion even after the first trimester.
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so the democratic party has a real problem right now. ainsley: these are questions they will definitely have to answer in the debate because it's been in the news so much lately or mini debate. >> that's right. ainsley: it may not be smart for them to take that position when you look at the recent marist numbers abortion should be limited to at least the first three months of pregnancy. how is that going to fair for them or will they walk that back a little? >> that number shows how wildly out of step they are with all americans. even their base like the pro-choice base. again, they are over 60% reject position. democrats per se reject it, too. they have a big problem and think where they need to do better given the last presidential election. think of ohio, minnesota, wisconsin. those, you know, democrats states where they need to pick up really the old style democrats, the ones that weren't extreme on abortion. those reagan democrat types. this is alienating and frankly it's alienating everyone. the only difference now is that people know more what their position is it
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certainly hasn't changed. definitely not the party of safe, legal, and rare or the party of the little guy anymore. now they are debating whether to allow a child born alive to even be saved or to leave it there on the table. it's very clarifying and the an important moment to pay attention. ainsley: marjorie, recently there are states who have made the effort to expand abortion rights. california, connecticut, maine, massachusetts, new mexico, rhode island, vermont, and virginia and washington. remember when some of these candidates were talking about being socialists. bernie sanders probably launched that and everybody was like what? does he even know what that means? now so many more have said that are we going to seat same thing happen with abortion where it's oh my gosh you are able to get an abortion. you can walk in to the hospital the day you are supposed to give birth and get an abortion and if n. a few months are we going to be numb to this? >> if this agenda is allowed to move forward under the banner of these candidates, absolutely. that's the america that we're looking at. i think what we are see
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something a dramatic recoil of response in terms of not only the democratic grassroots but just regular old people who think this is an abomination. look, if we get callused to this there is really not a lot left. the polls you just mentioned really show a lot. this is actually going to -- it will be a contrast with president trump when he is running. he has made it very clear that this is something that he doesn't find personally acceptable. just like most don't. and really again, is going to help him in areas where democrats really feel like they are picking up in those presidential battle ground states in the midwest. ainsley: does the country really know what's going on? yesterday we did a story on the networks not covering this at all. >> yeah. thank god we are talking about it here. i think definitely. so because now they are being -- they are being forced to have this discussion, to pay attention, and that is -- that is the clarity and the contrast is a real gift.
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ainsley: marjorie, thank you for being on with us. have a good weekend. >> thank you. ainsley: we're going to talk about what some democrats' agenda are for 20206789 more on this conversation. thank you. herschel walker and dr. oz. only genuine idaho potatoes have the perfect taste and texture to get your meal started right. my mom washes the dishes... ...before she puts them in the dishwasher. so what does the dishwasher do? cascade platinum does the work for you, prewashing and removing stuck-on foods, the first time. wow, that's clean! cascade platinum.
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ed: good morning again. we are back with a fox news alert right now thousands of migrants are waking up to begin their final march to the u.s. border. our griff jenkins is traveling with them in mexico. he joins us live right now. griff, good morning to you, sir. griff: good morning we are in quertaro 100 miles north of mexico city. they made that distance. let me show you what's happening at this hour. they are getting breakfast. the city or state government of gueretaro giving food to
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migrants in this line. they woke up 30 minutes ago. let me bring you ed over here. this is the significant part. these migrants are queuing up right now at that gate they have buses provided by queretaro state as well take them to the next spot. what's really telling and news worthy for our officials perhaps maybe watching this morning. unlike the last caravan in october. remember, this caravan started on january 15th in san pedro, the last caravan went west from this location. this is the crossroads and they went to tijuana. this one looks like it's headed to texas. here is a migrant named hugo that just talked to us about it listen. >> will you will. griff: to the north. >> to the north, yes. >> the final destination where do you think it is? >> [speaking spanish] >> crossing at eagle
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passing? >> yes. griff: there is already a little bit of movement. eagle pass, texas is 660 miles from where i am now, ed. they made 140 miles yesterday and do the math that way. that puts them at the u.s. border by about monday, tuesday the latest, ed? ed: we will be getting back to you. appreciate it, griff. steve? steve: thanks, ed. it has been the rallying cry of the left, abolish ice. ♪ chanting] stay loud, say it clear. ice is never welcome here. >> get rid of it. start over. reimagine it and building is that actually works. >> abolish. >> ice. >> abolish. >> ice. >> to me saying something like abolish ice is an implicit. it's an implicit rejection of the current administration's policies. steve: well now four house democrats demanding cuts to the homeland security budget which includes cpb and ice over their so-called
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inhumane agenda. here to respond is acting ice deputy director matt alvins. matt, good morning to you. >> good morning, steve. thanks for having me. steve: start at the beginning, inhumane? right? >> no, absolutely not. the men and women of ice are con sue mat professionals. they have a difficult job and do it with compassion and dignity. and rather than being vilified for doing that job they should be respected for it and thanked. steve: our story this morning four progressive house members urging cuts to the department of homeland security budget. they are sending out a dear colleague letter and essentially what it says is cut, do not increase the funding. they are trying to starve your agency, it sounds like. >> well, i haven't seen. but what i can tell is you that crucial to any border security plan is strong interior enforcement. we cannot have a system through which individuals who want to come here to this country illegally, if
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they get past the border patrol or come to the port of entry and make fraud length asylum claim or overstay their visa that there isn't anybody here in the united states looking for those individuals. without strong interior enforcement and funding for detention beds to hold these individuals during the pendency of their immigration proceedings, you will never have border security. steve: all right. apparently they are saying that the conference committee should not give any more money to ice or cpb. why do you think it is they do not want you to provide out service that you do, which is law enforcement? >> law enforcement, i think there is a huge misunderstanding about what ice does. as critical as ice's immigration enforcement mission is. we removed over almost 140,000 illegal. ms-13 gang members. additionally a ton of things done in homeland security investigations which go unnoticed unfortunately. temperature is on the front lines of the opioid crisis.
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mailing them. we saw the seizure that cpb did with fentanyl. those are the things that ice investigation. human trafficking. child exploitation. counter proliferation. joint terrorism ice force. ice has such a wide range of enforcement duties and responsibilities that sometimes that lost behind the immigration debate. steve: matt, ultimately, you know, if they want to do something about ice, change the law. because it is the law of the land. >> absolutely. our officers and special agents are law enforcement professionals and enforce the laws that congress pass. we will continue to enforce the laws that congress pass. if our laws change we will pass the new laws. until such time as the laws are changed we will continue to enforce them village lengthily and passionately. steve: democrats in the conference committee are saying we are going to talk to the experts. you are an expert. we a wall work? >> a wall would absolutely be an essential part of any border security plan that we have. it's worked before and will work again.
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i can't stress enough without the detention funding and interior enforcement behind that wall the border patrol will not only be the first line of defense only line of defense. steve: thanks for defending ice today. >> thanks for having me. steve: matt albence. 6:30 in new york city. howard schultz returns home to promote his book event and a vin at this size protest was there to greet him. thanks a lot at a. plus, have you heard of no shoes, no service. one restaurant is banning customers who wear that red hat and brian is live in atlanta for super bowl lii with two very special guests. brian? >> yeah. in two hours, jim brown will be here. in one hour, robert kraft will be here. most importantly we are here at the land mark diner. are you guys happy? [applause] coming up next, these two guys played 12 years in the nfl each. did tony tackle herschel
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walker? about the big game. super bowl 53. back at the land mark diner in atlanta, georgia. ♪ we are the champions ♪ of the world ♪ minimums and fees. they seem to be the very foundation of your typical bank. capital one is anything but typical. that's why we designed capital one cafes. you can get savings and checking accounts with no fees or minimums. and one of america's best savings rates. to top it off, you can open one from anywhere in 5 minutes. this isn't a typical bank. this is banking reimagined. what's in your wallet? but prevagen helps your brain with an ingredient
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(get-together, especially after ibeing diagnosed last yearto go with my friends to our annual with advanced non-small cell lung cancer. (avo) another tru story with keytruda. (dr. kloecker) i started katy on keytruda and chemotherapy and she's getting results we rarely saw five years ago. (avo) in a clinical trial, significantly more patients lived longer and saw their tumors shrink than on chemotherapy alone. (dr. kloecker) it's changed my approach to treating patients. (avo) keytruda may be used with certain chemotherapies as your first treatment if you have advanced nonsquamous, non-small cell lung cancer and you do not have an abnormal "egfr" or "alk" gene. keytruda helps your immune system fight cancer, but can also cause your immune system to attack healthy parts of your body. this can happen during or after treatment and may be severe and lead to death. see your doctor right away if you have new or worse cough, chest pain, shortness of breath, diarrhea, severe stomach pain or tenderness, nausea or vomiting, rapid heartbeat, increased hunger or thirst, constipation, dizziness or fainting, changes in urine or eyesight, muscle pain or weakness, joint pain, confusion or memory problems, fever, rash,
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itching, or flushing. these are not all the possible side effects. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions, including immune system problems, if you've had an organ transplant, had or plan to have a stem cell transplant, or have lung, breathing, or liver problems. (katy vo) where i am now compared to a year ago, it's a story worth sharing. (avo) living longer is possible. it's tru. keytruda, from merck. with more fda-approved uses for advanced lung cancer than any other immunotherapy. ed: the super bowl is back it's going to be there in beautiful atlanta a couple days away. brian flew down there yesterday after the show and live at the landmark diner in atlanta, georgia with football legends. hi, brian. brian: we will get to them in a second. the landmark diner is happy to have us, right? [cheers] brian: i want you to meet two people who drove 90 minutes to get here what's
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your name. >> corey: >> brandy. brian: you moved here a few years ago why did you come? >> work. >> are you happy to be out of. >> battle creek, michigan. it's cold up there. brian: who do you predict for the game? >> i got tom brady and the boys. >> i'm in it for the food and the commercials. i will be honest. come on. brian: thanks so much for coming down and i appreciate it what about you guys? >> we're here for the georgia running backs. brian: michelle and todd. you came down because we are here? >> yeah. >> absolutely. brian: do you have a prediction? >> georgia bulldogs are going to win today. brian: both teams have running backs. -- a super bowl with the baltimore ravens and then there is herschel walker one of the finest athletes america has ever produced who by the way just for fun likes to fight with martial arts and everything else and goes into the octagon. welcome, tony. >> thank you. brian: welcome herschel. >> thank you. brian: i am picking up the
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check i have to ask you a few questions. you have been to every super bowl since 190. >> correct. brian: tell me about this one in particular how is it going to come out. >> the experience that tom brady and new england patriots have. can't overlook a great defensive line that can get some pass rush up front and the rams really bring it i mean, they are just a solid team. they can get some pressure on brady and brady, the one thing he doesn't likes a we saw last week when he got touched and they called the penalty he does not like to be hit. brian: right. >> get to him early and disrupt him. new england still has their advantage because they have been here so many times. brian: it's always close, herschel. every game goes down. even the philadelphia game. the atlanta come back. do you guys remember the falcons lost in the super bowl? [cheers] >> maybe i shouldn't have yelled that. >> second half. brian: herschel you think sign of the running backs? >> the running backs are going to be important and i'm hoping gurley is
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healthy. michelle is going to play. a big moment for him. tony was saying going to boil down to defensive line of the rams. they put pressure on brady. this is brady's home. this is where he thrives. this is what he does. i think that defensive line put pressure on him. got a chance of winning the game but todd gurley got to be healthy. brian: this is a good year for the nfl. the ratings are up 5%. they are averaging over 15 million viewers. so, what do you think is the reason for that? >> i just think that, obviously, you know, they have gotten away from the antics before the game. brian: kneeling. are you guys glad the kneeling is over? [applause] >> people go and watch football to get away from their problems and enjoy the game. i think that was really important for the players just play the game. that's what you are there for. and you know, it's great to seat nfl, the ratings coming back and people getting back into it. there has been some
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outrageous games. two weeks ago, i mean, the games were like unbelievable. brian: even for a football player like you, you are still a fan at heart? >> it really is it just makes you, you know, when it comes down to the last cup perform seconds herschel and myself can put ourselves in those situations oh and then it comes down to the kicker and the kicker sometimes doesn't really make the kick and then you really want to get frustrated. >> you take it to the field it could have been it was cold weather everybody had to stay inside. brian: of course, before the game the president is going to do an interview and a lot of pomp and circumstance. you have gotten close to this game. how often, herschel, do you think about the fact that you were not able to make the last hurdle maybe with the vikings years ago you were supposed to go to miami the atlanta falcons upset you guys, so? >> that was tough. because this is the pedestal that every football player look to do. that's why i'm so happy with the georgia running backs have two running backs from georgia to reach the super
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bowl, something special. you know, i never reached it i am looking at his ring and kind of embarrassed. brian: show everybody your ring: you beat the giants. >> we all have our day. [laughter] and the giants -- don't feel too bad for the giants. they had a great season that season. brian: you were in the sopranos. tony was in the sopranos, they are doing a prequel to the sopranos is there going to be a young tony. you are a great mobster. >> yeah. you know, growing up in new jersey, having a vowel at the end of your name. the guy you see at the local diner and can just play anything. pretty easy. brian: my last question. can you shoot me over here? i'm sorry, what's your name? >> vlada. in particular, you are wearing the maga hat. >> i don't feel it's
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comfortable. "fox & friends" is here today. i feel good. brian: appreciate you coming down. land mark diner has something else pretty special. i don't know if we have time to reveal it do we have time to reveal it right now? we don't. something attached to this diner that's a stroke of brilliance. i can do it? can i reveal it? i can't. all right. watch this. come on over. when you are at a diner, a lot of times people go out late at night and they say to themselves let's go find a diner. where do you go late at night? maybe the club? maybe a comedy club? this attache attached to a comey club guys like david atell and chris rock actually come. how great would it be to watch a stand up, you are on the set and say to yourself i don't want to go home yet. i don't want to drive i had my two drink minimum and go to the diner right next door a stroke of brilliance. this should be on sharks
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because this is just a genius move and worked for the longest time right outside of atlanta, georgia, which is one of the fastest growing places in the country. ed: you did stand-up at one time? brian: yes, i did. ed: you got a joke? brian: did i stand-up at one time. i'm a news guy now. ed: do you have material? brian: i have a reputation. [cymbal] >> a lot of people convinced it is thursday. they went right from here where it smells like liquor to a place like here where it smells like bacon. ainsley: pancakes. brian: hey, land mark diner, thanks so much for coming out. [cheers and applause] what we're going to do now is hop in the car and go to the hotel where robert kraft is and we are going to go do an interview with him and come back to the diner. do you think we can pull it off. ainsley: i think you can
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6:had 1. atlanta traffic starting to pick up so go, brian. brian: see you later. steve: i think what brian wants is he wants a comedy club with food. ed: bacon specifically. ainsley: they are outfitting movie theaters where they serve alcohol and meals. there is a diner -- there was a diner when i moved to new york that had a disco club downstairs and the diner wasup stairs. ed: do they still call them dils co-s. ainsley: whatever it was a night columbus. brian: using new terms for global warming like extreme weather. why do they keep pushing the language. keep on pushing the language with the same words? steve: dr. oz is here live talking heart health. ed: no bacon or pancakes yet. ♪ha ♪
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ed: now maybe extreme weather. the left keeps rolling out new terms but change. why do they keep shifting the language? >> because they are not winning the argue: that's what the left does when they don't win the argument they change the words. when alien to illegal immigrant to undocumented and now dreamers. right? ed: who is against dreams? >> exactly same thing with global warming. the hard sell when t. is 6 degrees outside. then it's climate change so anything can justify them taking more of your money for government control and now broadened it even more to extreme weather. there has always been extreme weather. there has been the extreme weather since the beginning of the planet hurricanes and all the rest. well before the combustible engine was invented. ed: any time bad weather ah-ha we are right. >> anything to justify
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taking your money. ed: politico tried to explain it to us. here is what they say new language and shift. leading climate scientists and meteorologists are banking on a new strategy for talking about climate change. take the politics out of it that means avoiding the phrase climate change so loaded with partisan connotations as it is. so it's the last one got politicized so we have got to change. >> here's what i want to know. what's the ideal temperature? what's the perfect temperature, right? the left they feel as though they can fine tune the planet. ed: 68. >> what's goal. they feel like they can fine tune 2 to exactly what they want. ed: i don't know if you heard this congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez had a message for all of us. watch. >> we are like the world is going to end in 12 years if we don't address climate charntion your biggest issue is how are we going to pay for it and like this is the
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war -- this is our world war ii. >> saying it's the '70s. glen reynolds i will believe it's a crisis when the people who say it's a crisis start acting like i it's a crisis. davos. people flying in with private jets and all the rest to talk about climate change? give me a break. ed: anti-trump protest trash piled up everywhere they don't care. >> good stories about the environment tea party always cleaning up after themselves, right? not so much the antifa protesters. ed: appreciate you coming. >> in thanks, ed. ed: with the debate on abortion message with down syndrome this one went viral touching so many hearts. >> i am a man with down syndrome and my life is worth living. ed: that man will join us live next hour. aaaaaahhhhhhhh!
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♪ jillian: good friday morning to you. back with quick headlines. grande ego vin at a mistake. protesters holding that message meant for former starbucks ceo howard schultz. he is back in his hometown for a stop on book tour. the demonstration's organizers are concerned schultz could help trump win a second term by splitting the democratic vote. and how about this? the equipment manager for the clemson tigers gets an incredible surprise. >> i don't know if you are interested: the nfl, they have presented you with two super bowl tickets to the super bowl this year. [cheers] jillian: isn't that awesome
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david seville thanking coach david swinney as the championship team cheered him on. special needs is known as the heart of clemson football. love it that's a look at your headlines. ainsley, send it back to you. ainsley: everyone loves him. that's great. february is american heart month according to the heart association nearly half of all adults have some type of card voyeur vascular disease. steve: that is terrifying. we are getting heart healthy tips from dr. oz the host of dr. oz show. >> good morning. this is sort of shocking actually because for decades we have seen less people die of heart disease. remember kid big ailment especially for young mental. decreasing. the report we are talking about shows increase of heart attack deaths and the prevalence is increased as you point out as well. half the american population has primarily driven by high hih blood pressure. more cholesterol issues and diabetes has generated a lot
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of problems. steve: for decades you hear people talk about i'm worried about my heart health because it runs in my family. genetics are actually not that big a factor? >> genetics are maybe a third of how you age after the age of 50. two thirds of how we survive is all about lifestyle. the older you get it's all about lifestyle. affect you when you are young you learn bad habits. health core children's charity teaching teens about diet a fifth of all kids are overweight. unheard of. become really overweight when they get older because they're learning bad habits. you control most of your future. eight out of 10 people can change the risk factors of dying from heart disease. ainsley: how do we do that shopping in the grocery store? exercise? >> exercise is important and food is more important. exercise is important for longevity and food can drive the risk factor. steve: walking into a grocery store walking into a pharmacy. vegetables in particular
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they help detox phi the liver. everything on this table will benefit one of those three risk factors i mentioned diabetes, high blood pressure or cholesterol. most will benefit all three at once. i will walk you through it real quick. whole grains valuable. they form a gel in your intestines they suck the cholesterol out with them. independent benefit on blood pressure. salmon and all the oily fish the fats in oily fish are flexible when it's cold. steve: are omega threes. >> in order for the fish to swim in cold water. in our bodies makes our arteries more flexible and brain cell morse plex there cybil too. probably helps with cognitive function. not creamy stuff in the middle. all the other colorful images you see here. reflective colors of the rainbow all these colors get here because the plants have to protect themselves from the sun's effect. orange. vitamin c. we are taking those same protective nutrients into
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our body when we eat them. most important are all the leafy greensz. they benefit blood pressure,. steve: don't say kale. i can't stand kale. ed: walnuts, olive oil. fat a good fat we hear. >> folks run from fat. the reality is you do need fat. best proven for reversing heart disease takes your fat way down because you already have heart disease. worried about the half of you have risk factors. my favorite is olive oil and proven to be beneficial in the mediterranean diet they don't die from heart disease. walnuts never leaf home without nuts in your pocket. men and women, always. steve: can we start this diet monday after the super bowl? >> i want to put brian down at the diner on a diet right now. you and i. make your chili. steve: i will it's in the cookbook. ainsley: and your beer. ed: first they indisinvited him and thought democrats outright skipping the state of the union tuesday. we will name names. steve: we have a big friday
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of virginia and what he said regarding abortion to day of birth. we also played for you a sound bite from frank stephens, a man who appeared before congress. ed: unbelievable. steve: his testimony about americans who have down syndrome was retweeted with ashton kutcher 50. listen to his story. >> i am a man with down syndrome and my life is worth living. the people pushing this particular final solution are saying that people like me should not exist. that view is deeply prejudiced by an outdated idea of life with down
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syndrome. ainsley: he wanted congress to allocate funding for research for down syndrome and he got his wish. because he went and spoke publicly. they gave him a lot of money last year and he says he is on tap to get about $8 million this year. ed: he is on with us in 20 minutes. steve: his ashton kutcher every life is precious. something you are not going to want to miss coming this up half hour. meanwhile, we're glad you came to the conference committee. as we continue the theme. we are learning more and more about what the democrats are putting forward and while nancy pelosi said last week mr. president, have you got to open up the government if you want us to negotiate. he reopened the government. but now they are not really negotiating because, as you listen to her she has not budged an inch. not one nickel for that
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w-a-l-l. wall. >> to put a wall there is to, in my view, ineffective, too expensive, almost immoral. >> wants to cut a deal. >> a wall is an immorality. it's not who we are as a nation. the wall is an immorality between countries. the wall, in my view is an immorality. it is a waste of money. most of us, speaking for myself. consider the wall immoral, ineffective, expensive. steve: there she is. a little montage of her talking about how it's immoral. yesterday she had a press availability and she said no wall money in the deal. of course, is that just a negotiation? because the president has said look, i don't need congress if they're not going to give me any money. is it one of those things where he says one thing. she responds? ed: she has been consistent as you see there no, no, no. steve: he has been consistent. ed: the president said i
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come pained on this and won on this so meet me in the middle. as you said steve, said perfectly open up the government and i will negotiates. about two days ago. sat down and before the camera said everything is on the table. check the facts. she said everything is on the table that suggested a barrier, everything else. within 24 hours nancy pelosi says no. no money. how can you negotiate with democrats who simply, they are talking out of both sides of the mouth. open up the government i will negotiate. everything is on the table and then no. ainsley: could provide money for fencing and no barriers. let's just call it a you will way. forget it is called a wall. we are not calling it a barrier or fencing. we just gout notice that senator cory booker has announced he is running for president. ed: breaking. ainsley: add him to the list for 20206789. steve: we probably had a good idea he was going to be running for president. and in the last week or so, kamala harris has officially announced we understand that
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apparently elizabeth warren, despite the fact that she had that terrible roll out where she proved her heritage by the d.n.a. thing which was what 1% or something like that and then get me a beer. and then she said in her kitchen my husband is here. would you like a beer? oh, you don't want one? so she is officially going, to it sounds like. elizabeth warren going to roll out shortly. ainsley: a big announcement come up. ed: she had a rough rollout. and think about the rollout for cory booker. kavanaugh hearings had that spartacus moment throwing down the gauntlet all for not. prelude for his run this is going to get more and more interesting. the party has many not all pulling the party further, further left. steve: there you can see him. you know, i will be interested to hear what h he -- he has officially announced by a video. we will have it for you shortly.
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when he is talking about why he should be president. what he will tout as the former mayor of newark, new jersey as some of his accomplishments because a lot of people have been critical about what actually during his administration. ed: he has only been in senate for a brief amount of time. doesn't have a lot of accomplishments. think about barack obama he was in the senate hot minute. i'm not insider. i'm going to run outsider campaign. you will see maybe a dozen or so of these senate democrats are going to get in. among other things, people are hungry for change and people are hungry for outsiders and the same old people in washington may have a hard time. ainsley: president was interviewed by the "new york times." speculation he might not run again in 2020. he said i love this job. steve: that's right. he was also asked about which of the democrats would give, you know, would be the best opponent and he said this about kamala harris. he said i would say the best opening so far would be kamala harris. i would say in terms of the
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opening act it would be her. some of the others were very flat. he had -- i do think elizabeth warren has been very badly hurt with the pocahontas trap. i think she has been hurt badly. i may be wrong but i think that was part of her credibility and now it's all of a sudden it is gone. ed: he had a big part of that setting the trap. steve: regarding her rollout, he was very, he told maggie he is very impressed with the side size of her crowd. she had 20,000 people on the stepping of oakland, california which she had her official debut which was more than barack obama had at his. ed: springfield, illinois. steve: tuesday, you will be able to seat state of the union on the fox news channel. the president is going to start talking at 9:00. right now we have heard his speech runs one hour. that is without applause. there will be some, if not a lot of it but we are hearing once again a number of
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democrats are planning to skip the state of the union. ed: a lot less people in the room to clap. ainsley: congressman john lewis is not going to be there he says is he skipping it and congressman hank johnson both from georgia. lost in georgia for the governor's race she will be giving the democratic rebuttal stacey abrams after the president speaks on tuesday. steve: john lewis did not go last year. ed: he was leading democrats for the inaugural. this has been day one of the administration. inaugural, swearing in when both parties used to come together i didn't like the election results but i'm going to at least give you a day. didn't give the president day one. ainsley: so much has changed. people criticizing the president overseas you never used to do that. if you were a sitting president you -- if you were a past president you wouldn't criticize the sitting president. things have changed. steve: no kidding. let's talk about california.
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if you were mateo you might know of the worst hall restaurant. they tweeted something out the other day that if you have a maga cap don't show up. are the tweet read this. it's now been deleted but it said it hasn't happened yet but if you come to my restaurant wearing a maga cap, make america great again cap, you aren't getting served. same as if you come in wearing a swastika or a white hood or any other symbol of intolerance or hate. that was kenji lopez-alt. clearly a shot at trump supporters who show up in diners and whatnot with red hats as brian just was down in georgia wearing that cap. that tweeted has been deleted by the man thought san mateo. ainsley: the person who owns the restaurant has the right to do i assume. you have to keep in mind you are alienating so many of your customers, a big portion of our country
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supports. this is the president. ed: we were just talking about the state of the union. you don't like him sit from and don't applaud. show up. show him some respect. same thing with the hat. it's not like we don't like the hat. it's the new white hood. it's racist. it's a free country. someone wants to wear the lawsuit. there was actually a congressman after that whole kentucky incident at the lincoln memorial. kentucky catholic school students a democrat who tweeted out that we should ban teenagers from wearing the red maga hats. forgetting, of course, about the first amendment. he later corrected it apsz absurd. steve: i wonder why this guy deleted the tweet the firestorm online was so overwhelming he decided or did he hear from actual customers hey, i like that. i don't like that. what do you think about his decision to say if you are wearing a maga cap don't come and buy my food. email us friends@foxnews.com or we're on facebook as well.
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ainsley: jillian has headlines for us. jillian: good morning. as the democratic co-sponsor of virginia's late term abortion bill now apologizing for supporting it delegate adams didn't read the full text had i done so i would not have co-patronned it. it would have removed abortion restrictions allowing a mother to terminate the baby up until birth. roger stone is heading back to court today. president trump's long-time associate denies having any knowledge of russian collusion. is he charged with lying to congress, obstruction of justice, and witness tampering. and the special counsel russia probe. prosecutors want to delay his trial so they have time to dig through voluminous and complex information on stone's hard drive. starting today, girls can join the boy scouts for the first time ever. the first all-girl troop was just sworn n guam. the 109-year-old organization announced the move back in 2017. new troops made up of all boys or all girls. the group also changed its name to scouts bsa as part
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of the program shift. girls have been able to join the cub scouts since june. the atlanta falcons lineman national guard captain just awarded the nfl salute to service award. the league and usaa recognizing his efforts to honor and support our military including two uso tours overseas and raising awareness about ptsd. he says i am honored to win the award but honestly i'm just honorabled to be part of an organization that is military first from the top down. big congrats to him and thank you. ed: we saluted him. he deserves it. ainsley: pregnant women brought from china to the united states so their babies can become citizens. the birth tourism scheme that just got busted by the feds. steve: you are going to wants to hear about that. stocks just had their best january in 30 years. and we are expecting a solid jobs report later this morning in about two hours and 15 minutes.
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stuart varney says the economy will only get better, why? he will say next. your enamel is very precious. acidic foods can wear away your enamel. your tooth is going to look yellower, more dull. i recommend pronamel because it helps protect and strengthen your enamel. it's pro enamel. it's the positive thing. ♪ the best simple salad ever?d great tasting, heart-healthy california walnuts. so simple, so good. get the recipes at walnuts.org.
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steve: 8:30 this morning the jobs report is going to come out and major economic news for the month. stocks just ended january with their best gain in more than 30 years according to the "wall street journal." ainsley: what does this mean for the rest of 2019 and for your wallet? ed: here to break it down is the host of varney and company on the fox business network mr. stuart varney. >> i will not forecast where the stock market is going but i'm going to tell you that it just had a terrific month of january. steve: why? >> the best in 30 years, actually. steve: what's going on? >> interest rates tame, not going up as we thought. the feds are not going to jack up interest rates. china trade deal that is now looking kind of positive and that's very good news for the market. profits running 18% above where they were this time last year. that is a very strong gain in profitability. and that's the bedrock of stock prices. profits equal stock prices that's what we have got.
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25,000 on the dow. that's where we are. steve: unbelievable. we have heard so much about apple and the problem apple has been having is with china. if the president is able to broker some sort of a deal with xi of china that's going to help. that's going to help us here. >> if you saw that press conference it wasn't a press conference it was a televised discussion with china. it was brilliant. actually. i really loved it that seemed to me to clear the decks for a deal in the future where mr. trump and president xi get together and finalize a deal. it was a deck clearing exercise. that is very promising indeed. look, we have got a strong economy now. it can get stronger if we get a solid deal with china. jobs we're going to get a report on jobs this morning. jobs are the real standout the bright spot in this very strong economy. ainsley: what are you expecting with a jobs report? >> under 200,000 new jobs. but, that report is going to be affected by the government shutdown. by the lay off of seasonal
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workers, a couple of other factors. the bottom line is jobs. the labor market, very, very strong. small business, just did a survey, 1/3 of small businesses couldn't find qualified people to fill the jobs that they got available. one third. that's huge. despite offering a third of them offered higher wages. the problem in the labor market is you haven't got qualified people to fill the jobs that are available. ed: you are warming liberal hearts right now. you are giving positive economic news. if the stock market has all this money we are going to tax it. killing 80% of it. >> you are killing me. look, the economy is very successful, people are making money and here come the democrats saying we are going to take off you. bernie sanders wants a really heavy duty death tax. ed: 77%. >> 77%. there are others calling for 70, 80 e 90% tax rates and
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elizabeth warren is calling for a wealth tax. that's not like an income tax. that's a wealth tax. that's the cerebral of your seir money. steve: tax for being successful. >> successful, who do you think you are? get out of here. steve: show starts at 9:00 this morning. the jobs number will come out at 8:30 eastern time we will have it here on the fox news channel. ainsley: thank you, stuart. 20 minutes after the top of the hour. with the debate on the nation raging nationwide a message for a young man with down syndrome touching all of our hearts. >> i am a man with down syndrome and my life is worth living. ainsley: that man will join us live next. ed: that's awesome. remember the fiji water girl from the golden globes? now she is taking them to court. find out why coming up. ♪ ♪ amazon prime video is now on xfinity x1.
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simple. easy. awesome. ains apsz national debate on the value of life continues, this message from a young man with down syndrome who testified before congress in 2017 is going viral all over again. >> i am a man with down syndrome and my life is worth living. the people pushing this particular final solution are saying that people like me should not exist. that view is deeply prejudiced by an outdated idea of life with down syndrome. ainsley: that young man from that video, a special olympian and the ambassador
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for the global down syndrome foundation mr. stephens joins us now, hey, frank, good to see you. >> good to see you, too. ainsley: thank you. frank, why do you do that? why do you want to speak out? why do you want to speak to congress? you speak to schools and you are an ambassador for this wonderful organization. >> i speak to schools because people like me don't know who we are but when they get a chance to know us, they basically get a chance to like us. ainsley: there is so much to like but and ashton kutcher, he put your video from 2017 on his facebook page and he made your testimony come to life all over again. what was your reaction? >> i would like to thank my friend ashton kutcher for bringing back my testimony. it's like the walking dead
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because it just won't stay down. ainsley: we have talked a lot in the media over the last week or two about the value of life and we have some democrats that are pushing for abortion very very final moments when a woman is about to deliver birth that would be acceptable. what are your thoughts? >> can you give me that question again? ainsley: so we have talked a lot in the media, there are politicians advocating abortion up through the third trimester. would would you say to moms out there that just found out they have complications and they found out their child might not make it full term or their child -- >> about abortion, i don't want to make it illegal. i want to make it unthinkable. politicians change laws.
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i want to change people's hearts. ainsley: how do you do that? >> i want to change people's hearts by changing people's minds and hearts together. ainsley: have you been able to do that? >> i have. ainsley: tell us more about that. >> okay. give me the question again. ainsley: tell me more about that. have you talked to women that are struggling through some of these issues? how have you changed the hearts of so many people? >> i went to talk to a young mother in tanzania, africa about the hopes of what her son can accomplish in her own country. ainsley: and, frank, last question, why is your life worth living? >> my life is worth living because it is fantastic.
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i've gotten to travel all over the world. i get to play in new york. i'm going to be in two documentaries which will be on next month. and i have a lovely girlfriend, friends, and a wonderful family. ainsley: you are so beautiful. god bless you. thanks, frank. >> you're welcome. ainsley: breaking just moments ago senator cory booker is running for president and we have the campaign video that was just released. plus, brian is down new atlanta with super bowl team owner robert kraft. brian: we laft the land mark restaurant to meet the owner of the patriots who has a lot of partying to do tonight. a lot of hands to shake. he suspect early for us here on "fox & friends." and he is going to tell us things you wouldn't believe.
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am i right, mr. kraft? top secrets you will only reveal to us. >> brian is the man. we go back a long way. fox news is great. brian: i might be on the patriots next year. that's how well we are getting along. back in a moment. don't move. exclusive interview with bob kraft, owner of the super bowl champions some times i forgot to count new england patriots. will they get another? he is going to tell us ♪ you're made of trillions of cells. they work together doing important stuff. the hitch? like you, your cells get hungry. feed them... with centrum® micronutrients. restoring your awesome... daily. feed your cells with centrum® micronutrients today. feed your cells with take prilosec otc and take control of heartburn. so you don't have to stash antacids here... here... or, here. kick your antacid habit with prilosec otc. one pill a day, 24 hours, zero heartburn.
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>> i wonder if a high school senior in the united states in a good school knows what an adverb is, what an adjective is. they know about global warming but basic stuff, teachers union support everything that undermines my country in my view and i am supposed to feel bad? i do feel bad for the individual teacher but i'm
quote
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sorry, your union is a destructive force in america. steve: there is dennis prager in a new episode of the wise guys on fox nation. bill bennett talks to west coast panel including prager u founder dennis prager, politics in california and illegal immigration. ainsley: you can catch it all by going to foxnation.com. you can start your free trial and then if you love it, you can sign up and it's only $5.99 per month. ed: it is an app., awesome, almost like netflix for news. i'm going to have a sports show on there in march. ed henry's front row seat you will love it a little bit like netflix has all kinds of options. check it out on the app. store. ainsley: have you cooking. ed: i saw a show by kellyanne and it was awesome. steve: this sunday clearly is a big football game the l.a. rams will take on the
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new england patriots in super bowl as you can see right there liii. ed: this will be the patriots' 11th super bowl. they are used to this. what does team owner bob kraft think about their chances? ainsley: is he definitely doing something right. brian kilmeade is back with that special guest. good morning, mr. kraft. steve: he has his duncan donuts coffee. patriots run on dunkin. >> i like it gets me going. i will move it if it's uncomfortable. brian: thank you for the sponsorship i think they renewed. season ticket holder and he is now bought the team for $175 million. it's worth a lot more. they weren't winning much. they win all the time now. five super bowl victory. nine conference titles. 18 division titles. best of all you are a fan first, right, bob? >> i pinch myself all the time that i have the privilege of owning my
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hometown team. and i love having the responsibility of managing it and when you do a great job, you do -- if you do a good job, you do a great job for your community. brian: absolutely. one thing that the nfl commissioner brought up at his conference on thursday is one thing about bob kraft is that, you know, people think about what he does for the patriots. you don't understand what he does for the league. so when you are not patriots you are on all these committees trying to make the game and all these other franchises better. >> it started 25 years ago when i bought the team and i paid 50% more than i thought i would. and i had a lot of debt and i wanted to make sure things went well. and so i try to weigh in and we're not sellers so when you are not sellers, you think long term and you want to make sure the organization you are involved with, just like fox,. brian: right. >> is thinking strategically and not short-term profits.
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brian: absolutely. before we talked i buy stuff, i don't really sell stuff. not looking to sell the patriots now. here you are third straight super bowl. you had dramatic come back against the falcons i don't want to bring it up on the streets because there is a lot of falcon fans here. >> it's good for cbs because people are passionately passione routing against us. it's good for the ratings. brian: you don't mind that? >> no, it's great. brian: last year the dramatic loss to the eagles, this year you are going against the rams. never been here before. what's your mindset going in? the only thing guarantee it's going to be close. what's the mindset of the team going in? >> i think about what it was like 17 years ago stew the day on sunday february 3rd. we were the largest underdogs in the history of the super bowl. brian: taking on the st. louis rams. >> taking on the exact same franchise. and you know, no one gave us
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a chance. and came through. so i never take it for granted. the good news is when you practice well, at least you are in a position that you have a good chance. i think we have had a good week of practice. the guys are really serious. you know, they know how unique this opportunity is and after we went the first time in '96 i was thinking it might never happen again in my lifetime so we better take advantage and enjoy every moment of it. brian: so, after the game, tom brady felt as though he had something to prove. i don't know he does this to himself all the time. >> after which game. brian: after your conference championship victory he looked at hogan and being hogan looked at him he said you are too old and he said you are too slow. something about your team even though you keep winning you keep on thinking it's the patriots against the world. you still have that underdog mentality. >> part of it a lot of it was before the season
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started we had a lot of your friends in the media making commentary on the end was here. brian: there was rumors that brady was going to retire. how close was that? how real is that? >> well, the good news is we are going to the super bowl and. brian: so it was real? >> no. i don't think there's anything, other than his family, that turns tom brady on like playing football. i know that he wants to do it as long as he can. brian: right. how close were you -- what role did you play in the training of garofalo over to san francisco and how much did it mean to tom brady did it that he was traded? >> let me just say this. you know, i have probably one of the best football minds handling personnel in the 99-year history of the league. so, we consult on a lot of things.
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but, my coach has the final say. brian: okay. and this league had a great year. up 5%. interest in the playoffs 51 million, i think, watched your conference game. you care about the league as you just mentioned. how much does the no longer the kneeling situation have to do with the league surge, do you think? >> well, i think there is a whole number of factors. i think a lot of people and we have seen it with the government shutdown, people living paycheck to paycheck don't have a lot of savings. and they are looking to connect to something that allows them to escape from their daily tremendous trevails. the nfl being a sport once a week, if you have people that your community can identify with and what we do out in the community, how we connect with our fans, i'm pretty proud of our guys. and, i think we have tried to bring pride to our
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community over the last 25 years. when you think about it we came down here last sunday. we have 35,000 people come to our stadium, which was more than our average t. ten dance when i used to sit in the stands. and they came for 20-minute block and they started lining up at 2:30 in the morning you know how cold it is up north. brian: fundamentally you are a fan. right after you won the president of the united states tweeted out congratulations patriots and bill belichick and tom brady. clearly he is pulling for you guys. what does that feel like? >> well, we can use every fan we -- who wants to support us from wherever they are in their standard of life. i will tell you this year we and last year we started the largest homeless shelter in boston. we have done a video for them and we sponsor a big
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brunch for them so they all can come in and it's very well attended. so we love all fans. brian: right. have you had a chance to speak to the president? because i know you guys are social friends. never about business but are social friends. have you spoken to him before? did he give you any advice? >> well, i have a lot of people that give me advice and he has been very supportive and i know he is working very hard to serve the best interest of the country. brian: right. will you watch his interview before, his speech to cbs before? are you going to watch this year? >> i don't know where we will be or what time it is. is it on fox fox news? brian: not on fox. >>the guywho runs our company mk level and success have you had you really relate to him well? >> well, he is one of the most outstanding human beings on the planet. you know, to think of a man who came from australia,
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went to the u.k., did what he did, had the impact on the election process there with the newspapers and the media and sky. excuse me, came to america, started fox the same time we came in to the nfl 25 years ago. he changed the nfl the way the other networks had to cover us. he really helped upgrade and i think he and his family, you know, are amazing entrepreneurs on a global basis. and i love that he is still active and dynamic and trying to do great things. brian: could i say i fully back that endorsement and have you never been more right. >> i know you are objective. when is your contract up? brian: this next year. thank you. bob, do the best you can can you do that real quick your prediction on this game? i know who you want but what
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do you think? >> well, i really hope and believe good things will happen but no one knows. brian: right. >> think of 17 years ago, 18 years ago. brian: the upset right after 9/11 in new orleans the big win over the rams biggest show on turf went down to tom brady and a young owner bob kraft. thank you so much. >> great being with you. get some crispy home fries. brian: absolutely. good luck on the game. back to you. ainsley: thank you, brian. thank you, mr. kraft. breaking moments ago senator cory booker running for president campaign video just released. steve: plus another video just in showing the migrant caravan on the move. thousands of them heading out on foot right now. griff jenkins is live with the caravan. you will see that next. >> plus geraldo rivera and the counselor to the president kellyanne conway both here, both live both coming up ♪ what's wrong ♪ what's wrong with being ♪ what's wrong with being
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i'm running for president of the united states of america. jillian: booker crowd of presidential hopefuls including kamala harris and castro. there is a look at your headlines. news expected but official. steve: talk to geraldo about that shortly. meanwhile take a look at this. right now migrants are piling into semitrailer trucks on final march to the u.s. border. ainsley: right now two more caravans are gearing up to leave central america. ed: our man near the border
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griff jenkins is traveling with migrants in mexico right now. he joins us live. good morning, griff. griff: hey guys, good morning. they are on the move. you can see behind me on this walkway coming across the busy highway they have been filing in for the last half hour. they are coming down this walkway. and let me bring you over here for a second and show you they are loading in to trucks right now in a very orderly fashion. it is queretaro which is where we are. if you want to have a look what it's like to go into one of these. let me see if we can go in and. [speaking spanish] >> we will bring new here to give you a look the conditions they have to ride. in come on in, everyone, can you see the conditions are very crowded and it's dark in here. they are being organized to sit down. it will be very hot by day's end and now we will go ahead and step out of here to get out of their way. now, where they are heading is a little bit different than last caravan. here is one of the migrants who told us where is he
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going. >> the final destination where do you think is? >> [speaking spanish] >> passing around eagles path, texas? >> yeah. griff: show you a map where that's going. last map going to tijuana. that right there eagle pass is only 660 miles from where we are. it is the texas border. and they will be there no later than tuesday. probably more like monday, guys. ed: wow. steve: griff, riding in those semis looks completely unsafe. who is organizing this? >> each mexican state as you move north is organizing these free rides and free meals. in this case it is the mexican state of queretaro that is organizing these rides right here take them to the next state which is
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san louie. ed: appreciate that. steve: unbelievable. that's just a line of people up around around. ainsley: you said those trucks get so hot. ed: unbelievable. coming up. do not let the cold affect your house. skip bedell has a tips for making your home safer. steve: he is on my doorbell right now. ♪ freedom ♪ delivers the news around here. ♪ liberty mutual has just announced that they can customize your car insurance so that you only pay for what you need. this is phoebe buckley, on location. uh... thanks, phoebe. ♪ only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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and smarter and more efficient in the winter, right? ed: that's right. i thought you wanted to keep reading i didn't want to interrupt. >> i have been researching the best smart products out there and i have got them here for you today. i especially love ring because what they have done is made a whole ecosystem of products that works to help keep your house safe. ring video doorbell using hd camera. see on smart phone who is on the door and talk to them and even let them in with smart lock. in addition to that they have this whole system everything from smart cameras indoor and outdoor cameras that work with your smart phone and even this awesome alarm system which i love. check this out. for $10 a month you get 24/7 professional monitoring. no more big bills no. contracts. you get a full alarm system for your home and all of this talks to each other. for instance, if the alarm system goes off or the cameras automatically start recording. everything goes right to your smart phone. ring has figured out how to tie that whole thing
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together. steve: ring calls the cop. >> 24/7 call you if they get alarm. if you don't do the right password it calls the police. they have smoke fire alarms, carbon monoxide even a panic button. ainsley: do you this yourself? >> this is all dyi installation. super easy. this next product i have got to tell you. this is a brilliant light switch. so this is a smart home control. remember we used to have like 20 remote controls and got a universal remote? now we have 20 apps on the phone. this takes all your apps and controls all your smart devices right in your light switch. pull your light switch out and pop this in. dyi couple of minute installation. now we have control of your climate, your music. your lights. steve: light switch right now replace it with this brilliant brand. >> watch this someone is at my ring video doorbell i now see who is at the door and no matter what home i'm in they show up on the camera. can i hit my smart lock and let them in. unbelievable. this is an incredible product from brilliant.
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this is flo by moen smart home waterman torg for your home. the epa says we waste over a trillion gallons of water every year from leaks. leaky faucets. running toilets. this will monitoring your water usage it sends innovations to your phone. gets plugged into main water line the thing i love about this the best. god forbid you have a leak or break a pipe. steve: a lot of people do this week. >> pipe burst, away on vacation or working from home your house is destroyed. this will immediately shut your water off. it detects a leak up to one drop per hour. steve: it goes on the water main. >> it can detect a leak as small as one drop per hour shut your water off and send you innovation on your phone and flo by moen has it figured out. steve: for more information go to skipbedell.com. ed: it is a breaking news story out of washington this more senator cory booker running for president. reaction from geraldo rivera
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♪ ♪ we're coming to your city brian: there are a whole lot of democrats who want to live in that building new l new one this morning. steve: foggy down there, not only in washington. geraldo will join us. brian the super bowl down in atlanta. person you're referring to, cory booker, senator from the great state i live in, new jersey, during the kavanaugh hearings, what this is referred to now as commonly the "spartacus" moment. >> i will release the email about racial profiling. i understand, the penalty comes
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with potential ousting from the senate. if senator cornyn believes i violated senate rules i invite, accept the consequences. this is about the closest i ever have in my life to and i am smart discuss moment. >> middle of kavanaugh hearings. he made the big show of it. in the end nothing really came of the whole fight. steve: he said doing something apparently already done. took a lot of heat. ed: release emails. chuck grassley, said i'm releasing the stuff anyway. it is one big show. ainsley: a lot of people thought the kavanaugh hearing was opportunity for so many of them to be heard. ed: kamala harris. ainsley: exactly. whether they would run for president in 2020. this morning, cory booker posted this post on enat that fram. >> i believe we can build a country where no one is forgotten, no one is left
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behind. where parents put food on table, with good-paying jobs and good benefits in every neighborhood. where our criminal justice system keeps us safe, instead of shuffling more children in cages and coffins. together we will channel our common pain back into our common purpose. together, america, we will rise. i'm cory booker, i'm running for president of the united states of america. steve: let's bring in geraldo rivera. he joins us every friday at this time. geraldo, you just heard cory booker, the junior senator from the state you and i both live in. what do you make where he said our criminal justice system keeps us safe instead of shuffling more children into cages and coffins? >> talking about there is the revolving door of municipal justice where kids get busted for small-time drug offenses. then get caught up in the system. they get longer and longer
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sentences until they become career criminals. his call for criminal justice reform is probably the most attractive thing about the cory booker candidacy. you remember steve, back in 2012 i was going to run against cory booker for the open seat held by frank lautenberg, long-time senator who passed away in office. kellyanne conway, who is coming on the program was a had advising me. do a spot, standing in the worst block in the worst neighborhood in newark, don't let cory booker do for new jersey what he did for newark when he was mayor here. it would have been a kind of a bitter and angry, ugly way to campaign. i ultimately decided not to run because the republicans nominated someone who was traditional conservative despite my arguments they needed someone more progressive in new jersey.
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ed: what you said is really important. people like, optimistic, forward-looking messages, what you wanted to do if you had run. when cory booker, using a phrase like we're throwing kids into cages, how negative, how down is that, when you're trying to launch a presidential campaign? >> well, it may be down, but i'm not sure, remember cory booker has been running for president since birth basically. he is a lean, hungry politician. he is charismatic. on stephen colbert, bill maher show every other night. he will try to go that route, the counter culture route to see if that has any attraction. go ahead, ainsley. is. ainsley: sorry i interrupted you. alexandria ocasio-cortez, several saying tax the rich 90%, socialist, medicare for all? >> my impression he will be much
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more pragmatic than that. he will try to run left of center, but not as far left as say aoc is. booker, his, i think his real problem, whether or not he is sincere, whether he is a deep thinker, that old sparta does preposterous moment during the brett kavanaugh hearings, what was that all about, i am "i am spartacus? i am napoleon. whether he will be a distraction we'll see. he has been running a long time. steve: last six we've been talking about the government shutdown. last we can nancy pelosi said i'm not negotiating with donald trump until he opens the government. last friday he reopened the government. now the signals are, nancy pelosi very clear yesterday, she said, there is no wall money in the deal. yesterday, the president had heard these comments and he said this in the oval office.
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>> i don't think they're going to make a deal. i see what is happening. oh, let's do, we are not giving one dime for the wall. that's okay, if they will not give money for the wall it is not going to work. if it is not going to work the politicians are wasting a lot of time. they are allowing people to come into country, sell traffic, human traffic, all these horrible things, if we had simplicity of well-constructed, beautiful barrier or wall they wouldn't be able to come into our country. steve: geraldo, you said on this program, give the president money for his wall? >> i think that not to give the president, just on principle, just digging your heels in, you're not getting a dime to replace, repair, or god forbid to expand over 600 miles of fencing and barrier and wall that already exist is pure spite on nancy pelosi's part. i think the president is probably right. she is digging in her heels, not saying a single dollar for a
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wall, giving the president really no chance. not a negotiation. in other words, a negotiation, you sit, you have compromise, painful, i will give you 50 miles of waa, give me amnesty for the dreamers, ticket to citizenship. you make a negotiation. difficult on both sides. you have to give up something you don't want to. seems to me she is many doing any potential negotiations from the get-go. making much more likely in mid-february the president will declare a national emergency because he is hell-bent getting a barrier, getting a wall, getting some more of the division to our neighbors in the south in physical form. ainsley: why do you think he tweeted out, let's just call them walls from now on, stop playing political games, a wall is a wall? remember he said at first we'll call it a barrier, whatever you want to call it, now he is saying no. >> then he would put solar panels on top of it, cool drinks
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with umbrellas, all rest of it. what the president has discovered, much to his chagrin, i think governor christie was right, the president went into the first shut down without a clear idea how he gets out the back end of it. now it is worse, nancy pelosi is telegraphing out front, no matter how the negotiations go, not a time for the wall, no matter what. i believe what happened is, he sees he will not win in the negotiation. he is going to go ahead. that is a signal, clear signal, ainsley, the president will declare a national emergency, use money from the department of defense or some other federal agency, homeland security, wherever money exists maybe fema, to start construction. i think in a way, it is a face-saving for the president, he must get some new wall out of it. just as it is face saving for nancy pelosi. she cannot allow a single foot of wall to be constructed. this is a sorry way to run a
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government. ed: geraldo, as the political debate plays out, look what happened in arizona, border patrol, 24 hours or so confiscating enough fentanyl to kill 57 million people in this country. how can democrats continue to say this is manufactured crisis, when something like that factually happens at the border? >> they would say, i know nogales very well. i'm a u of a grad. we used to go to nogales, mexico, every night. now no more. a lot more trepidation. a lot fewer social calls, casual calls across the border. the democrats would argue fentanyl came in produce truck, as most trucks do, through the port of entry. the wall would not have stopped it. to that i reply, take nancy pelosi at her word. let's enormous enhance the, ports of entry.
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i would make a humanitarian argument, a democratic argument for a wall. hear the stories of these children dying with, in the desert trying to get across desperate because they can't get through ports of entry, where they found 4,000 bodies over the last year. i once tried. i made it with a group of undocumented migrants who walked 45 miles. many of them were, at the end of their line by the time we made it across. steve: president is suggesting he wants to beef up the ports, do something about a wall as well. we'll see what happens. looks like the president will not get what he wants. always a pleasure. thanks very much for joining us. >> thank you. good seeing you too. ainsley: jillian has more headlines for us. happy friday. jillian: happy friday. get you caught up on this, a teenager missing two weeks found alive nearly 700 miles away from home. 14-year-old savannah pruitt left
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her tennessee home due to a family situation. she was found in wisconsin. it is unclear how she got there. her adopted father, is behind bars charged with sexual assault several ref their engineses so a cop killer could hear them after as he is put to death. the officers setting up outside the prison where robert jennings was executed by lethal injection this week. he shot and killed houston police officer elston howard during a robbery event in 1988. officer howard was 24 years old. two democrats will skip president trump's state of the union address. john lewis and hank johnson will not be at speech. stacey abrams will deliver the
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democrat response at the state of the union. campaign rosemary mirinner was one of the first woman to earn her wings. at 21 years old became the first woman to fly a tactical fighter jet in 1991. she became the first woman to command a aviation squadron during the gulf war. she decide last week of ovarian cancer at 65 years old. back to you. steve: pioneer. thank you, jillian. all right, meanwhile, it is chilly outside but the deep freeze that we had a couple days ago, not quite as bad. but it is not over yet. a live look in chicago where it is just nine degrees. we're live in the windy city, chilly windy city. ed: bat the taking over the basketball court? the wild scene inside of one arena.
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steve: we're back with some extreme weather. quick-moving snow could make roads slick today all the way from kentucky up through philadelphia. ainsley: this week at least 15 people killed in the record breaking cold. ed: let's not forget the middle of the country. mike tobin is live in chicago where a warm-up may be on the
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way. does it feel warm yet? doesn't look like it. reporter: the warm is all relative. amazing what starts to make you feel comfortable. that is 10 degrees right now. that is so much better than negative 20. still quite cold. a lot of good news. amtrak services running in the city of chicago. the metro electric lines are not running in and out of the city. that is only because a freight train derailed and took out a bunch of infrastructure. flightaware.com says we have fewer than 1000 cancellations for the first time since this whole thing to the started. the issue is burst pipes. when you weather gets cold, you get a plug of ice, that expands and breaks the pipe and when it melts water shoots all over the place. plumbers are doing double duty. firefighters, between space heaters, bad ideas to get warm, overtaxed systems, you get a lot of calls for firefighters. they bring in warming trucks to
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rotate the fire crews through. so among other things they get their hands moving. beyond that what you have a lot of people in the midwest a little bit in shock what we went through. steve: all right. those images are stark. but it's a lot warmer today, mike, than what you had yesterday. ainsley: high yesterday was zero. reporter: it is. ainsley: now it is nine or 10 degrees. thank you so much, mike. ed: beautiful picture. steve: what about temperaturewise we'll see today? janice dean the weather machine joins us from the streets of new york city where some folks braved cold weather. janice: how are you guys? where are you from? >> charlotte, north carolina. janice: i love the optimism. >> thor. >> billy. janice: 39 years what is the secret? >> do whatever she says. janice: love it.
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what is your name? >> theresa. janice: we'll look at temperatures, look at the record lows my friends, these are actual air temperatures. minus 56 in cotton, minnesota. minus 38 in mount carroll illinois. if that is verified, that will be the coldest state record, minus 38. that is the windchill, 4 in chicago. that is 26-degree difference than yesterday. minus one in new york city. those are the windchills. look at difference, 27-degree this time yesterday in chicago. it will feel down right balmy. here are the forecast temperatures saturday, sunday, monday. gets close to 50 degrees. we'll have another arctic blast. it won't be like this one. a system moving into the west, it will feel relatively warmer across much of the area. here is the super bowl forecast. 60 degrees, maybe a little light rain. nothing they can't handle.
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tomorrow is groundhog day. we'll i'm heading to punxsutanwey, pennsylvania. we'll see what the groundhog says about six more weeks of winter. ed: not six more weeks of winter steve: six weeks until spring. ainsley: 60 degrees for super bowl. perfect. self-proclaimed "spartacus" is in the 2020 race. >> closest i will ever have in my life to and i am smart discuss moment. ainsley: does cory booker have a chance to in a crowded field? we'll discuss next. ed: counselor to the president of the united states, kellyanne conway as well as nfl legend jim brown, coming up next. ♪ what makes this simple salad the best simple salad ever?
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it's simple, easy, awesome. click, call or visit a store today. ♪ ainsley: time now for the news by the numbers. first, .378, the blood-alcohol level of a drunk driver already on probation for driving drunk. police say the suspect's blood was four times the legal limit. had the potential to actually be deadly. next, $25 million, that is how much galvin newsom wants for emergency fund to help migrants. if approved, taxpayer money would be available this summer. beyonce and jay-z are bribing fans for free concert tickets to life by going vegan for a month. that they eat plant-based food and reduce their environmental footprint. ed: another democrat entering
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the 2020 race. >> i believe we can build a country where no one is forgotten, no one is left behind. where parents can put food on the table. where there are good paying jobs and good benefits for everybody neighborhood. where our criminal justice system keeps us safe, instead of shuffling more children into cages and coffinses. ed: cages and coffins. tough rhetoric from cory booker w ever growing field of democrats, does very a chance of standing out? here to debate, michael knowles of the michael knowles show. >> good morning, he had. ed: do we have the spartacus moment? >> is spartacus eligible to run for president? who is cory booker? in 2012 he was moderate denning mitt romney. today he is spartacus crying tears of rage. you saw this entire opening
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commercial, was about victim-hood, collective pain. this is another hard case for cory booker to make. cory booker, when he was a kid, his parents were executives at ibm he is trying to pretend he grew up in the school of hard knocks. howard schultz, billionaire ceo has much better claim than cory booker does growing up victim-hood. what will he run toward? seems outflanked on all sides. outflanked in achievement and outflanked in ideology. i haven't been this excited since julian castro announced would run for president. who will probably not be vice president. >> i agree with some of my counter part stated. cory has issues in more progressive field. he has issues with connection to big pharma, school choice and his connections to wall street. he has got some issues that many progressive are not going to like. however, i think he can stand out.
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he is a good politician. he seems to constantly win. so he has got a chance. he certainly got a better chance than howard schultz at any point. howard schultz doesn't even have even a shot. ed: we shall see. i can see you, a lot of democrats seem to be a little bit worried about mr. schultz. >> he make as good cup of coffee. ed: we'll debate that maybe on another day. some people like dunkin' a little better. michael, i want to widen the lens and talk a little bit about the democratic field. the president is already sort of licking his chops, when you look at it, they're for open border, they want more crime essentially in his words. look what is happening in abortion in virginia and other states, the party, the democratic party is getting more radical. >> that's right. they're learning all of the wrong lessons from president trump. they see that president trump had success by taking clear, bold, extreme policy stances. the difference is, president trump's strong, bold, policy chances are popular policies,
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border security, economic growth. now the democrats are doubling down on their issues but for very unpopular policies. open borders,0, now 90% tax rates and abortion not only in the second trimester in the third and apparently the fourth trimester, abortion after birth, according to democrat virginia governor. this will not play very well. ed: jason on that point, you're representing a party that is, you know, pro-choice. they want abortion rights but is it getting more and more extreme so that when you try to win a national election this, is going to blow up in your face? when you add what michael said about taxes of 70, 80, 90%, how do you win a national election? >> first of all we had a tax rate prior to 1980 was 70% for top 1%. we had plenty of economic growth during the period from 1930 to 1980. i don't think -- ed: there were a few loopholes that maybe people got around that were not paying.
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>> what happened in the 1980s and 1990s economic growth exploded during the era. ed: let jason get in. >> many of the policies mentioned, particularly things like medicare for all, 70% of americans want medicare for all. a lot of progressive policies that are being put forth, criminal justice reform, these are really popular policies with most americans. ed: president signed into law criminal justice reform. are you for the president on that one? >> no. i think the president has made a good start being bipartisan and listened to democrats and push american people wanted for criminal justice reform. ed: medicare for all, how everyone will pay for that. we look forward to that debate. jason, michael. >> i will be there. ed: we'll have you back. the january jobs report about to come out. we will bring you the numbers live coming up. plus counselor to the president of the united states kellyanne conway is live and react to jobs numbers and whole lot of other issues.
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our man brian in the super bowl. good morning. >> ed, thanks so much, the landmark diner is still pumped up. [applause] jim brown is coming from his hotel. i sit with mike and great group. talk to them in a moment. you have two words for me. >> the ball and the wall. that is what we're talking about. >> mike is auctioneer. say for example this group wants to buy this ball, what is opening bid, $50? >> start at $10. >> let's go. >> 200, 300, 400, five, five, 600, seven, go to heaven. >> there you go. back in a moment with very fun group in atlanta, georgia, and jim brown. ♪ [ camera shutter clicks ] so, now that you have a house, you can use homequote explorer.
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steve: this is a fox news alert. the bureau of labor statistics just announced the unemployment rate the past month was at 4%. while it looked as if because of the government shut down, the jobs number created in last month would be dampened, it is actually a blowout number. ed: 304,000 new jobs created in the month of january. stuart varney knows this better than anyone on last hour, the estimates were 200,000 jobs created but people were cautious because of government shutdowns as steve mentioned it might have dampening effect. ainsley: people cutting back, not creating jobs. it is exactly the opposite. >> despite the government shut down, it might have been even higher if not a shutdown. these are very, very strong numbers. steve: they certainly are. that is the headline. 4% is the unemployment. ed: went up slightly because more people getting in the job market trying to get jobs. steve: we'll keep you posted on all of that.
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meantime secretary of state mike pompeo is at a microphone, he is about to announce something big. listen to this. ainsley: he is, we're having issues with our audio, talking about the nuclear arms treaty. steve: all right. try it now. they found the switch. >> possess or flight test a ground launched intermediate cruise missile system with range of 500 and 5500 kilometers. in spite of this violation for almost six years the united states has gone to tremendous lengths to preserve this agreement and insure security for our people, our allies and our partners. we have raised russia's non-compliance with russian officials including at the highest levels of government more than 30 times. yet russia continues to deny
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this missile system is non-compliant and violates the treaty. russia's violation puts millions of europeans and americans at greater risk. it aims to put the united states at a military disadvantage. and it undercuts the chances of moving our bilateral relationship in a better direction. it is our duty to respond appropriately. when an agreement is so brazenly disregarded and our security is so openly threatened we must respond. we did that last december, when the united states with strong support from all of our nato allies formally declared russia in material breach of the treaty. i also then, provided notice, that unless russia returned to full and verifiable compliance within 60 days, we would suspend our obligation under that treaty. we would provided russia ample window of time to mend its ways, for russia to honor its commitment. tomorrow that time runs out. russia refused to take any steps to return real and verifiable
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compliance over these 60 days. the united states will therefore suspend its obligations under the imf treaty effective february 2nd. we will provide russia and the other treaty parties with formal notice that the united states is withdrawing from the imf treaty effective within six months pursuant to article 16 of the treaty. russia has jeopardized the united states security interests and we can no longer be restricted by the treaty while russia shamelessly violates it. if russia does not return to full and verifiable compliance on the treaty within the six month period which destroying its violating missiles and launchers and associated equipment the treaty will terminate. before close i want to give a special thanks to our nato allies who stood with us in our nate stood with us.
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their support is good for our shared security. it is good for transatlantic unity and it is good for international peace and security. president trump is grateful for all you have done. the united states is hopeful that we can put our relationship with russia back on better footing but the onus is on russia to change course from a pattern of destablizing activity, not just on this issue but on many others as well. the united states stands ready to engage with russia on arms control negotiations that advance u.s. and allied and partner security and are verifiable and enforceable. must also include all of the partners. they must all responsibly comply with their obligations. as we remain hopeful after fundamental shift in russia's posture, the united states will continue to do -- steve: we heard the headline. united states is suspending nuclear pact with russia. point out apparently russia has been in violation of the arms
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for more than five years. back in december, the federal government gave russia 60 days to clean up its act. they did not. so the secretary of state from foggy bottom announced effective tomorrow we're suspending it. ed: interesting, standing up to russia against the narrative many in the media the president will not step up to russia. you're in breach much that as you say, for years. enough it enough. ainsley: february 1st, 60 days later, we giving them full warning. we're pulling out. what will this lead to, a new arms race? ed: the question without the new treaty, critics of administration say this could lead to a new arms race, without the treaty in place, russia may all all of sudden get more arms, if they're in breach, with a treaty in place we might watch them more, this might open it up. steve: what is this the treaty we're suspending? it prevents the united states and russia possessing land based
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cruise missiles that can strike 500 to 5,000-kilometer range, 300 to 3500-mile range. deem signed in '87 by reagan and gorbachev. it was designed to keep ground based nuclear weapons out of europe. but the headline the united states suspending the nuclear pact with russia because they have breaking rules for past five years. ainsley: five years. they're not in compliance. we have to do something. we can't let them get away with it. ed: couple minutes we'll get live reaction from kellyanne conway about job numbers and whole bunch of other issues as well. steve: right back. leave bleeding gums behind with parodontax toothpaste. leave bleeding gums behind yeah right. iand the earth is flat. ahhh!! treat your cough seriously with robitussin cf max.
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let's bring in kellyanne conway, counselor to the president of the united states. she is inside the building. the weather outside not great. kellyanne what does this all mean? >> i will allow secretary pompeo's statements speak for themselves. he is our chief diplomat. obviously he had a big announcement today and i will let his words speak, but i think in the broader scheme of this president relations around the globe he is somebody trying to bring peace and prosperity here in and abroad but at the same time his america first policy extends all the way around the globe. his first duty is trying to keep us safe. he is trying to secure the southern border and trying to negotiate around the globe where appropriate. steve: sure. i've been watching tv on tv, hear them on the radio how this president is never tough on russia. looks like we just got tough on russia? >> he has been tough on russia for a while. i will like to see how they spin this one.
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this is a president who put additional sanctions on russians, on bad actors where he and his treasury department have seen fit. he expelled 60 plus russians from this country, shut down two of their consulates at last count, i think pushed back on putin not once, but twice, when one of his puppets, ad saud in syria gassed his own people. when the president saw that he took action immediately. and so that should not be conflated with the fact that when he wants to meet with vladmir putin as they did several months ago for all the world to see in a joint press conference, they're discussing issues where these two major countries, maybe can work together to defeat isis once and forever. of course territorial caliphate in syria is all but destroyed. the president tweeted about endless wars in syria and afghanistan. promised to get out of them. $50 billion a year, lot of treasure and more importantly lives lost. we'll see how they spin this he is trying to show this than
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worried about collusion doesn't exist? that is really silly. they have to look at how tough they have been on russia. at the same time trying to negotiate peace where they can, big resolve by two major countries where it is appropriate. ainsley: kellyanne, senator cory booker from new jersey announced this morning he will be running for president, friday, heading into the weekend. what is the administration reaction to that? >> welcome the water seems warm. welcome to dive in, i don't know, 10, 15, 30 other candidates. i would ask him a couple questions as he runs from my native new jersey. one is, what is wrong with the candidates already in there? what is your objection to kamala harris running, elizabeth warren, kirsten gillibrand, tulsi gabbard maybe? if he was running we would call him a sexist running against women in the democratic field. i ask him what exactly you accomplished qualifies you to be commander-in-chief and president of the united states?
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being motivational speaker who is quote tiney, words of david axelrod, mastermind behind president obama's presidential victories, he slammed him, he doesn't sound like inspirational leader sometimes, sounds like a motivational leader can be tinny, people witnessed that when he unloaded for all cameras to see on now supreme court justice brett kavanaugh. steve: spartacus moment. >> spartacus moment, it went beyond that he was pretending breaking with protocol in the senate. would release confidential emails. it was senator cornyn of texas reminded him those had already been released. he also i think people should look at his record in newark, new jersey. mark zuckerberg of facebook, about eight or nine years ago gave $200 million in matching funds to newark for the school system and a whole bunch of that, millions and millions dollars went to politically connected consultants. ed: a lot didn't pan out. >> i first came upon cory booker many years ago when he was
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pro-school choice advocate. the modern democrat party which he is running for presidential nomination moves so far to the left he can't continue to help schoolchildren. ed: kelly, talk about the left. speaker nancy pelosi basically suggested the president open up the government and i am going to negotiate. yesterday she had a news conference, first one in a while, said no money for the wall. do you feel had? >> not at all. she is revealing who she is. she is against rank an file members in her democratic conference who are, who are elected in trump districts. there are 31 of them. 22 of them are freshman. they and trump won the same congressional districts. you have got to believe they represent people who believe border security is national security, think it is a great idea to work on daca, tps. to have 2750 new border patrol agents, 75 new immigration judges and all the support it requires. $800 million to meet humanitarian needs, 800 additional million dollars for
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technology and drug detection. we just had a port entry, we had largest seizure of fentanyl in history of the nation. 254-pounds, could have killed 50 million americans, street value, $200 million. came at the port of entry. that is stuff we know about. steve: they do security at ports which president asked for more money as well. kellyanne, have a good weekend. >> thank you. ainsley: super bowl weekend. steve: brian live in atlanta with the super bowl. has a special guest. jim brown. there he is. ed: check in with sandra smith at top of the hour. >> secretary of state mike pompeo speaking a short time ago, announcing u.s. withdrawal from a landmark arms control treaty with russia. we'll be live at the state department with latest in moments. plus president trump calling border talks a waste of time in a new interview. so what is his next step? the dow, the best january for the dow jones industrial average in over 30 years. as some are now calling on the
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♪ brian: hi, everybody. welcome to the landmark diner. super bowl liii. great crowd. greatest athlete of the 20th century right across from me. jim brown, ladies and gentlemen. [cheers and applause] >> all right. all right. brian: football. you spent a little time with bill belichick. he has been a friend since coached the browns. how is his mind set?
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>> he is the genius of professional football. he has the best mind in the game. he is a great humanitarian. he comes off quirky sometimes because he is mentally so extreme. brian: right. >> but i love him of. brian: yeah he came and visited you, with all that is going on he spent time with you. >> we are sitting up in my suite, which is a little one, he brought his wife. we talked about everything. brian: he appreciates everything you have done in life. today from 4:00 to 7:00 you're going to be at top golf club in atlanta, jim brown legends of golf tournament there. sanders, emmett smith, adrian peterson, marcus allen, great runningbacks for the american program. >> all right. brian: play golf with everybody and you will see these great guys. >> mix with the stars. brian: i got a chance to know you, as great as you were in football, you have done more for this country as an activist. day one of black history month. we'll see footage with muhammad
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ali, at time they told you syracuse football team, black players stay in these hotels and they stay in others. how far have we come for black history month? >> first of all i love the country. i struggled all my life to deal with freedom, equality, grudges. i hold no grudges. of course it is in the best country in the world but we all, we have things that we have to get right. and so we continue to work. but what's so great about it, you know, be very blunt, it is not white and black. because when you look at those stands out there, right, how many white people do you see that is paying their money to see predominantly black teams? brian: right. >> so america has come a long way. it is great because, you know, we came from slavery. you know.
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we, from african slavery. that is long way to come. brian: you came from st. simons island in georgia. you guys heard of georgia? [applause] brian: in new york, end up at syracuse, go to cleveland. become one of the most famous men in america. your thought and prediction on the game on sunday. we know it will be close. >> come on, brian. brian: i know who you want, who do you predict? >> he says he knows who i want. i will predict the team i want to win with the coach that i love. brian: bill belichick. >> yes. brian: sadly beat the falconses greatest comeback ever we're in atlanta. jim, thank you so much. see you at the golf tournament, 4:00 to 7:00 today, top golf in atlanta. "fox & friends" continues.
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will join us well live with three hall of fame quarterbacks. um you will have to tune in tomorrow to find out. >> be back here on monday. >> sandra: breaking news out of the state department moments ago. secretary of state mike pompeo announcing a suspension of a landmark nuclear arms treaty with russia. the inf treaty bans both countries from stationing medium range nuclear missiles around europe. president reagan negotiated in 1987. they say moscow has been violating that agreement for years. more in moments. meanwhile, president trump dismissing border wall talks as a quote, waste of time accusing nancy pelosi of doing a tremendous disservice to the country. good friday morning, everybody. i'm sandra smith. >> jon: i'm jon scott. president trump implyi
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