Skip to main content

tv   Fox and Friends First  FOX News  May 29, 2019 2:00am-3:00am PDT

2:00 am
history of the best pitch, first pitch in baseball history? >> that is called shaking it. white sox employees, after being rewarded with throwing out the first pitch, the team sharing the hilarious moment before the epic fail. that wraps up this hour of "fox and friends first," thanks for joining us, "fox and friends first" continues right now. goodbye. [warning siren] >> freaking huge! huge tornado! rob: it is may 29th, fox weather alert. millions of americans from missouri to new york under threat after dozens of tornadoes decimate communities. jillian: for millions of others time is running out to seek higher ground as raging floodwaters unleashed fury. we have live team coverage. rob: crews at the border.
2:01 am
jillian: a single mayor halted construction of the border wall across an entire border state. congress to the head of the path. rob: nancy pelosi gets political. a commencement speech. "fox and friends first" continues right now. jillian: a lot to get to and good morning to you. you are watching "fox and friends first". rob: thanks for starting the day with us. a 1 mile wide tornado demolishes homes and leaves a dozen people heard outside kansas city. jillian: that video unbelievable. the dangerous weather stretching from the midwest to the northeast. watch as this tornado uproots a tree in pennsylvania. >> what i thought were leaves
2:02 am
were shingles and i saw a tree. rob: the nightmare weather is not over yet. rain on the central plains, ray bogan joins us from fort smith, arkansas, historic flooding. >> reporter: we just had a severe thunderstorm that rolled through an hour ago. there was some hail, strong winds, strong wayne and thunder and lightning and it rolled through in a matter of an hour and the worst appears to be past us, however the same storm is moving through arkansas and parts of the state are under a severe thunderstorm warning until 9:00 am and meteorologists are concerned about flash flooding. we've been to two separate locations along the river and had to leave them both because when this rain comes down the
2:03 am
water rises in the river addresses in from hills and other areas and roles on down so you almost get stuck there. as you know arkansas is not the only place to experience this extreme weather. yesterday in kansas there was a nearly mile wide tornado. kansas city international airport had to delay flights, move customers into the parking garage for shelter. the storm left a lot of debris in the airfield which delayed more flights. listen to how this witness described the powerful storm. >> i could feel the air moving, coming from above and i heard stuff flying, my walls and furniture. >> reporter: this storm led to rare tornado warnings in new
2:04 am
york city. in staten island there were two tornado warnings, pictures of golf ball-sized hail and lightning shared on social media. the president has been monitoring this weather. he has been speaking with the governors of ohio and arkansas and is promising federal assistance for the floods in arkansas and tornadoes in ohio. today there are threats of tornadoes in texas, oklahoma and missouri and here in arkansas the threat for severe rain all day which could lead to flash flooding. watching it closely all over the area to see what happens with the arkansas river. heather: dangerous spring for millions of people. rob: another fox news alert, claiming responsibility for arson attacks in iraq and syria, the group claiming to use wildfires as a weapon of war. these satellite images show fires in two cities in syria. enabled his nicest says it's militants are targeting apostates in both countries encouraging other extremists to use arson on people who disagree with their beliefs throughout the summer. >> lawyers for eddie gallagher
2:05 am
will try to get his case tossed out of court today. his legal team plans to ask a military court to remove a prosecutor and have the judge step aside. gallagher, a special ops chief is accused of telling isis prisoner in iraq in 2017, attorneys claim the prosecution is withholding evidence and conducting surveillance on the defense, the navy says he did nothing wrong and has no plans to remove the prosecutor. rob: a battle brewing over a crowd funded effort to build the southern border wall. a city in new mexico ordering private citizens to suspend construction on private land. jillian: mark meredith has more on the legal fight ahead. >> reporter: the city of sutherland park near el paso. needs to stop construction because the city issued proper
2:06 am
permits in the first place. and a cease-and-desist order against the owner of the property where the wall is being built. >> denied entry to the location and on friday the owner of the property. and an application for that area. >> the mayor says the application is not complete and never approved meaning construction must stop but people by the project says it is a misunderstanding. they received the green light to begin building. >> another official said so friday. that is when they told us to cease. >> reporter: we build the wall has been raising money for their project online, $22 million have been raised, this is u.s. customs and border patrol says
2:07 am
2200 people were apprehended in the el paso sector of the border monday alone. rob: us national security adviser john bolton said ships sabotaged at the united emirates coast were backed by iraq, making those comments in abu dhabi. he says there was, quote, no reason for iran to back out of the nuclear deal with world powers other than to seek atomic weapons. iran's foreign minister insists the country is not seeking any nuclear weapons. jillian: a former trump campaign aide joining the fight to uncover the origins of the russia probe. >> this has been a huge head went for the administration and i hope our country can keep growing and continuing to do all the great things. jillian: carter page taking part
2:08 am
in investigating the investigators panel hosted by judicial watch as page tells fox news he had extensive contact with had confided in an alleged fbi informant at the center of the investigation, accused of befriending trump associates while secretly working for the government. rob: john brennan and former director of national intelligence james clapper are lashing out over decent classification of surveillance documents. jillian: the argument made by former spy chief makes absolutely no sense. >> it is incredible he ironic that it is now being cast as some kind of authoritarian power grab to declassify information that would shine a light on the conduct of the country's most secretive spy institutions in 2016 and saving democracy, spy chief go on tv and declare that
2:09 am
it would jeopardize national security or put lives at risk to keep that information concealed. it is an inversion of the highest order and for indication we are in this weird bizarre world. >> john durham is looking at the origins of the russia probe at the center of this investigation is the steel dossier and the extent to which it was used by the obama administration to obtain a fisa warrant against the trump campaign. >> planned parenthood filing a lawsuit against missouri is the state's only abortion clinic could shutdown this week. the health department plans to not renew the license for the clinic in st. louis friday citing regulation failures. last week the governor signed a bill banning abortions beyond 8 weeks of pregnancy with no exceptions for sexual assault or insist. of the clinic is removed missouri will be the first state without one since roe v wade passed in 1973.
2:10 am
rob: gaming disorder is considered a disease. >> ready to go? >> do you mind if we finish the game? a real nailbiter going here. rob: the world health organization adding the condition to a list of diseases saying gaming becomes a disorder when it interferes with daily life. the decision sparking outrage from leaders in the videogame industry who want the agency to reconsider. they argue the classification lacks sufficient -- jillian: scotus handing down decision on high-profile issues including abortion. how does this affect you? our next guest we are watching them test the limits of roe v wade. >> donald trump is the greatest president since abraham lincoln. rob: john voigt with high praise for the president on twitter
2:11 am
about are those fighting words? one outspoken liberal actress thinks so. ♪ sure. sometimes i wish i had legs like you. yeah, like a regular person. no. still half bike/half man, just the opposite. oh, so the legs on the bottom and motorcycle on the top? yeah. yeah, i could see that. for those who were born to ride, there's progressive. yeah, i could see that. onmillionth order.r. ♪ there goes our first big order. ♪ 44, 45, 46... how many of these did they order? ooh, that's hot. ♪ you know, we could sell these. nah. ♪ we don't bake.
2:12 am
♪ opportunity. what we deliver by delivering.
2:13 am
noso let's promote ourke summer travel deal on choicehotels.com like this: surf's up. earn a fifty-dollar gift card when you stay just twice this summer. or.. badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com did you know you can save money by using dish soap to clean grease on more than dishes? try dawn ultra. dawn is for more than just dishes.
2:14 am
with 3x more grease cleaning power per drop, it tackles tough grease on a variety of surfaces. try dawn ultra. jillian: supreme court handed down major decisions on cases involving abortion and transgender rights. rob: what impact will this have on americans and what can we expect from the high court? the judicial crisis center, we are going to pull up the big three that were ruled on tuesday starting with the indiana abortion law, the big stalker of all this and the pennsylvania transgender policy and home depot case as well. let's start with the abortion law. almost seems like the supreme court is scared to touch abortion in general.
2:15 am
>> reporter: they took part of it in an unusual move, deciding a case without oral arguments, they said the indiana regulations how to dispose of fetal remains, have to not just throw it away but a mother should be allowed to decide how the remains are disposed of. that clearly should not have been struck down by the seventh circuit and that was interesting because they did not have an oral argument. the other part that band abortion in the case of discrimination because of a child's sex, race or disabilities, the court said we don't have a split. the court does not like to have a split between different courts or appeals between how the courts deal with it. that may come up again. other states have considered such laws. jillian: so much of the conversation is about abortion
2:16 am
and what is going on and many people i sitting at home wondering how this will impact me personally and when will we get a final decision on this? will we ever? >> this is something we have been talking about for 40 years. we are seeing a lot of states and both sides pushing the envelope. places like alabama and georgia most famously strengthening their laws to limit abortion in the case of heartbeat or early in the pregnancy. also a case like new york saying we want to liberalize the law, until the full 9 months. you have a big spectrum. recent polling shows 75% of americans do want more limits on abortion even to limit it after the first trimester to include 60% of democrats, 78% of independents. what you see is not black or white. there is a range of views and you see states reflecting that with different laws.
2:17 am
rob: very polarized. let's talk about the transgender bathrooms for the last couple years. what happened here? >> this is a case in pennsylvania where students were challenging a school district decision, they said they would be uncomfortable having transgender students sharing a locker room with them, a constitutional right to change it with privacy and that is something the court acknowledged they have but this is not being discriminated against because you have other rooms to change in. this is an issue liable to come back with the court, they didn't take it in this case but there's a lot of issues with the case coming up on a preliminary type order and i think there may be other cases of the court saying it will come up more cleanly in those cases so i expect this to come back before long. jillian: and a lot of other issues on the docket as of now and that is border patrol agent
2:18 am
immunity, the citizenship question has been a talker in the last few months. those are the things they will be dealing with. what do you make of those? what is the biggest one? >> we will find out by the end of june. the cross case is interesting because it points out if you take these arguments to their extreme you have to get rid of arlington national cemetery and throughout our memorial system. that is a really important case and the census question has a huge impact. and exciting month to wait for the decision until june 24th when they all come down. rob: back specifically to abortion and the others as well. people were so up in arms over the president getting a couple people to the supreme court at this point. it hasn't turned that conservative yet.
2:19 am
>> we had a lot of apocalyptic language and we've been hearing that since robert bork saying the sky is going to fall. people forget important cases go 5-4 but 40% of cases in the supreme court are unanimous. some deal with picky legal questions. one of the cases that came down yesterday with justice thomas sided with the four liberals. there are a lot of times you don't see those ideological lines. of course we do have the hot button cases and those often do go 5-4 and along those lines it is incredibly important because we can't understate how significant these justices are at having justices like neil gorsuch and brett kavanaugh who are committed to looking at the text of the law and the text of the constitution. that is so important when it comes down to the wire. are we going to stick with the laws and pacify elected representatives or are we going to let judges make it up as they
2:20 am
go and be flexible and come up with their own laws? that will be so important for the rule of law to have those justices there so it does make a difference. jillian: time will give us the answers to these questions. >> promising to take down donald trump. >> michael cohen was sentenced today, donald trump is next. >> blaming the president for the slew of charges he is facing but not even his friends in the mainstream media are buying it. rob: carly is here with reaction. ♪
2:21 am
welcome to fowler, indiana. one of the windiest places in america. and home to three bp wind farms. in the off-chance the wind ever stops blowing here... the lights can keep on shining. thanks to our natural gas. a smart partner to renewable energy. it's always ready when needed. or... not. at bp, we see possibilities everywhere. to help the world keep advancing.
2:22 am
2:23 am
we like drip coffee, layovers- -and waiting on hold. what we don't like is relying on fancy technology for help. snail mail! we were invited to a y2k party... uh, didn't that happen, like, 20 years ago? oh, look, karolyn, we've got a mathematician on our hands! check it out! now you can schedule a callback or reschedule an appointment, even on nights and weekends. today's xfinity service. simple. easy. awesome. i'd rather not.
2:24 am
rob: extortion, wire fraud and identity theft. who is to blame for the long list of charges michael avenatti is facing? >> i'm facing the fight of my life against the ultimate goliath, the trump administration. i am intent on fighting these charges and look forward to a jury verdict in each of these cases. jillian: social media not letting him get away with this one. carly shimkus with serious xm 115 with what you are saying online. carley: after pleading not guilty back to back arraignments, he lays his legal woes on donald trump. prosecutors say he stole stormy daniels book deal money to pay for things like his ferrari,
2:25 am
hotels, restaurants it is being accused of trying to extort nike for $25 million. how does this have to do with donald trump? your comments are pouring in. lisa says it was trump's fault he tried to extort nike, that is rich. on facebook, michael avenatti blaming donald trump for all the problems, last time i checked nike and stormy daniels were not on the trump train. another twitter user saying it might be time to move on from this guy giving him any credibility is ridiculous. and facing charges in california which means a combined maximum sentence of 404 years. >> i got a kick out of this rift between alyssa milano and john voigt. liberal activist and actress alyssa milano slamming john voigt for releasing this video that praises donald trump. >> that a stand with our
2:26 am
president, stand up for this proof that donald trump is the greatest president since abraham lincoln. >> reporter: a lot of responding to the academy award-winning actress saying i understand why republicans like to discredit actors and their political views. stay in your ln. john. has been at western trying to stay relevant, nobody cares what and out of touch actor thinks. some conservatives accuse her of operating under double standard. instagram user says it is free speech for you but not anyone else, right? jim says i hope you take your own advice. jillian: must have forgotten she's in a lister. rob: she makes a point but if you're going to compare their resumes enacting it is not even close. carley: let's do it. country star tim mcgraw took to
2:27 am
instagram to show his freshly caught fish. his female followers were distracted by his abs. instagram found out -- oh my goodness. another. did anyone else feel hot? i am sweating. and lastly please move the fish a little, looking great. they make a great couple. rob: mother of god. carley: we all got to hit the gym to keep up with him. jillian: we have news we have been following for weeks, terrifying twisters from the midwest to the east coast, entire homes ripped from their foundations turning neighborhoods into war zones. a brand-new threat of historic flooding. janice dean is tracking the latest. rob: reporting ufos were once considered a career and her in the navy but the pentagon is changing the rules for pilots.
2:28 am
and you won't believe how many of these reports are out there, an incredible story coming up.
2:29 am
2:30 am
2:31 am
>> welcome back. look at headlines. isis claiming responsibility for us and attacks in iraq and syria, the terror group claiming he is wildfires as a weapon of war. doubles and isis is encouraging other extremists to use arson this summer. >> a battle brewing over a crowd funded effort to build the southern border wall. a city new mexico forcing private citizens to suspend construction on private land. the el paso suburb claiming the we build the wall organization does not have proper permits and is out of compliance. >> hillary clinton prepares to speak to graduate in new york city today. the former secretary of state is set to deliver the commencement
2:32 am
address. she will receive an order recognizing her achievements in public service. rob: back to the story of the day, extreme weather alerts, a mile wide tornado demolishes homes, leaves a dozen people hurt. look at this tornado outside kansas city. jillian: dangerous weather stretching from the midwest to the northeast. watch as this tornado uproots a tree in pennsylvania. rob: homes underwater in oklahoma as that state braces for more severe flooding. jillian: janice dean joins us with catastrophic weather that will not stop. >> it is coming to a end. this is probably another day of the same type of weather and then we get into tomorrow and friday the pattern will break up which is great news. we have been stuck in this pattern conducive for severe storms. look at how many tornadoes we received in the month of may,
2:33 am
over 450 reports of tornadoes in the month of may and the last 30 days over 500 reports of tornadoes. way above average in terms of tornado reports. storm reports last 24 hours, around the kansas city area, around new jersey, pennsylvania, reports of tornadoes last week. the past 24 hours severe thunderstorm watches for texas towards oklahoma and arkansas meaning conditions are favorable, thunderstorm warnings and we will see the potential for flooding. we haven't focused enough on the flooding threat. the tornadoes have taken the headlines but flooding is going to be catastrophic in some of these areas, severe threat today, same areas from texas to the ohio river valley to the mid-atlantic and the northeast and that will continue throughout the afternoon and overnight. the flooding is going to be a concern not only today but the next several days into the next
2:34 am
several weeks as all that water has to go somewhere. across the mississippi river valley, the arkansas river is historic and it is going to be catastrophic and people are being told to flee their homes because flooding is going to be an incredible story. jillian: you always say the water is the most dangerous. >> in terms of weather related deaths, water issues the gilmore people. rob: thanks. jillian: the rescue hiker that said spent 17 days in a forest speaking about her incredible survival. >> they are passing over. you lose hope. an opportunity to overcome fear of everything. every single step. that is the only thing that kept me going. don't know how they spotted me. that is a miracle.
2:35 am
>> she was not on any drugs that affected her mental state. she left her phone and wallet in the car not thinking she would get lost. her rescuers joining the search for missing hiker noah mina, lasting 18 miles from where she was found. the country of nepal refusing to restrict the number of climbers on mount everest even after 11 people died this climbing season. the sores and board argues the growing popularity is drawing in more people with less experience causing deadly delays leading up to the peak this year. two americans are among the dead. dangerous. >> navy pilot of spotted unidentified flying objects like this one seen here nearly every day for two years. national security correspondent jennifer griffin explains the shocking findings revealed to
2:36 am
the new york times. >> 4 years ago on a training mission of the east coast of the united states before deploying to the middle east a pair of f 18 navy super hornet pilots captured on advanced radar and unidentified flying object. >> oh my gosh. >> object with no visible engine or infrared exhaust plumes that reached 30,000 feet and hypersonic speed. the new york times reported during summer of 2014 through early spring of 2015 sightings were nearly a daily occurrence. >> object doing things, maneuvering without any sign of propulsion. >> reporter: last month the navy announced it was establishing new classified guidelines for how it's pilot support unidentified aerial phenomena. doing so in the past was considered a career in their.
2:37 am
navy commander david fraser remembers the first time he saw one flying off san diego. >> a disturbance in the water and a white, 40 foot long, tictac shaped object just covering above the water going forward, back, left or right, the rotor wash, no wings, nothing. >> reporter: some say the sightings began after the navy install the new radar system and upgrades from 1980s era radar. others say they could be any spider drones or classified program operated by the us government. the pentagon's advanced aviation threat identification program ended in 2012 but now there is a new secret guidance about how military pilots should report these phenomena. at the pentagon, jennifer griffin, fox news. rob: some of those sightings, unbelievable. remember when alyssa milano, georgia's abortion law debate, a stage he doesn't live or vote
2:38 am
in? >> what district are you from? >> don't interrupt me. jillian: you will want to hear how netflix is joining the fight when we come back. ♪
2:39 am
2:40 am
2:41 am
rob: mark morgan is acting immigration and customs enforcement director. he was previously held the post at the fbi before leading border patrol under the obama administration. he stepped down in 2017. this is acting homeland security secretary thinks a deal with guatemala to help fight the migrant crisis. >> a new law makes it easier for illegal immigrants to get a drivers license in colorado. democratic governor signing a bill increasing the number of places where undocumented immigrants living in the state
2:42 am
can get a license. there are three offices that offer the special licenses. they hope to have ten by july 2020. rob: netflix joining the fight against the abortion law. it is considering ending filming in that state. jillian: tracy carrasco joins us now in this is a trend with several production companies. >> reporter: we seem two high profile projects pull out. and taking a stand against georgia and the controversial heartbeat bill, it would fight against that bill, and stop, this is a major move here, stranger things in the aclu and other organizations to fight against the abortion bill.
2:43 am
>> let's talk about hackers. what are they doing -- we have the wrong story here. dominoes. >> hackers are not hacking your pizza. dominoes is going to start using artificial intelligence cameras to make sure your pizza looks like it should. the number one complaint dominoes gets, people say their pizzas don't look like they should. in new zealand and australia they rolled out these cameras. takes pictures of the pizza, what it would actually look like and grades them. your pizza is not up to dominoes standards. and it is still early on in their stages. >> does it matter?
2:44 am
>> dominoes, one of the worst pizza companies, making a great find. they are doing great work at dominoes. thank you. >> twitter for trump fans. the trump campaign is checking out this alternative social network? >> is this a solution to big tech? it is just the beginning. >> the what is coming up on "fox and friends". >> coming up on the show, airy fleischer, kellyanne conway, trey gowdy, big show, lots to talk about and one of the most amazing performances you will ever see, 96-year-old world war ii veteran playing the national anthem.
2:45 am
♪ >> we played his full performance over the weekends. harmonica pete will perform live for us today on "fox and friends," cannot wait to see that. we will be right back. ting task. oh i love it. it's a great razor. it has that 'fence' in the middle. it gives a nice smooth shave. just stopping that irritation... that burn that i get is really life changing.
2:46 am
we see two travelers so at a comfort innal with a glow around them, so people watching will be like, "wow, maybe i'll glow too if i book direct at choicehotels.com". who glows? just say, badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com
2:47 am
be go[ laughing ] gone. woo hoo. ♪ welcome to my house mmm, mmm, mmmmm. ball. ball. ball. awww, who's a good boy? it's me. me, me, me. yuck, that's gross. you got to get that under control. [ dogs howling ] seriously? embrace the mischief. say "get pets tickets" into your x1 voice remote to see it in theaters.
2:48 am
rob: look at that window. we have a severe weather alert from the midwest to the east coast. a tornado touching down blowing a home right off on the left
2:49 am
side, the home goes right off the foundation is a tree is uprooted in this video in morgantown, pennsylvania. we have amazing video. our fox affiliate in philadelphia in morgantown. one of the conditions looks calm but a lot of damage. >> most of the viewers of the fox news channel think morgantown, west virginia, they don't -- only an hour from philly, that is a house that lost a whole section but this happened at dinner time last night and they were already sealing up the houses because we had a rainstorm. of that house was wide open and you see the damage from the back of that house against the hill here. everything was picked up and tossed, a speedbump picked up, that is the first, trees were the minor thing but because of the early warning system, at the
2:50 am
height of the evening rush hour when kids were coming home from school on a nice spring day and everyone is normally growing at that time of year, just a miracle nobody was not only killed but no one was hurt when you look at the damage around here. this house was devastated. cars are the ones that look like they have been in car accidents. the houses look like they were hit by cars. this house as we walk around this tree, people were shooting out the front door and this house you would think would have some cover but the roof was getting ripped off the garage and you will probably here and echoing my voice but roof parts are coming at them. this is heavy, this would kill somebody if it hit them. windows getting blown out. part of the roof getting blown off and even the gas tank took a hit. this didn't break or we would have a worse problem. dozens of houses have been damaged.
2:51 am
>> something else. we appreciate it. >> after years of accused shadow banning and censorship some conservatives are ditching twitter for new social media apps. >> a lot of people being censored and a lot of people want to join a community where they can discuss. the reality is they are acting like publications rather than a community for him. >> the trump administration seeking out the site. is this a new solution for conservatives? social media strategist joins us, you're on parlor, you have been throwing it. is this a good idea for conservatives? >> a great idea for conservatives. something has to be done because
2:52 am
you have too many, the far right all being censored, removed off of twitter entirely, trump looking into this and taking a stand taking this seriously, we will look at parlor and see if this works for me, this is important. >> on the one hand we will get to the trump administration in a second but for everyday conservatives on twitter being silenced, do you want to stop fighting the fight? almost seems if you give up on twitter you bow down to those trying to silence you. >> i think there are a few ways - one is new companies can emerge to fight the fight so that is a good thing. the other is government can step in and start regulating platforms. we only have a few companies, the big three, really controlling information for the public. jillian: if the president were to sign up for parlor would help or hurt him?
2:53 am
>> i think it would help and hurt him. on the one hand it would help him in terms of taking a stand saying i'm moving on to this platform to regain market share. on the other hand it could hurt him. i am removing myself from twitter and everyone else is not going to hear his message. jillian: he wants to reach the most amount of people he can and he does that on twitter and this is just the beginning of what is to come. >> we have a long way to go. all these companies, you really need to achieve the way we are doing this with a monopoly. jillian: appreciate it. 53 after the hour. nancy pelosi urging college grads to make this country better but only if they do it her way. social media not entirely onboard.
2:54 am
. .
2:55 am
2:56 am
2:57 am
rob: welcome back. holocaust education could soon be required in the state of oregon. lawmakersian masrily passing the bill to add the subject to its curriculum. if signed by the governor it will go into effect starting this fall. the bill was created in honor of the holocaust survivor who died in oregon last year. nearly a dozen other states have similar education nationwide. jillian: house speaker nancy pelosi takes identity politics to a california
2:58 am
campus. the democratic congresswoman calling on 102019 graduates to act with boldness and urgency to save america. >> and infrastructure we must invest in the human [inaudible] of our country. recognizing that we have to correct the danger to our democracy the growing disparity of income in our country presents. jillian: pelosi lecturing students at san francisco state for the need of diversity, immigration and the urge to protect dreamers. and we asked what you thought about this it and your comments still coming. in most of you say graduation should be free of politics. rob: leslie on instagram said absolutely i don't want to pay for her opinion. jillian: this is a commencement and not a political event. what a shame. rob: quit inviting politicians to speak if you don't want to hear politics.
2:59 am
time for the good, the bad, and the ugly. start with the good. a bible remains untouched after a family losing their home when a tornadoes swept through indiana. the house was blown completely off its foundation and thrown into a nearby field when the family returned to survey the damage they found the bible where the house once stood virtually unscathe. jillian: brings chills. police find a million dollars of drugs washed up on an alabama beach. 21 pounds of marijuana and 86 pounds of cocaine. investigators say they don't know where they came from. rob: finally the ugly. there is a enough top contender. >> i can't decide whether that's the worst pitch baseball history or best pitch. rob: she is standing there 15 feet to the left. chicago white sox employee
3:00 am
plunking the forever right in the face. this is a reward for being the good employee got to throw out the first pitch the team sharing this photo showing the hilarious moment right before that epic fail. she hits the guy right in the head. jillian: happens to me. not that bad but -- hi. siren. >> freakin' huge. absolutely huge. >> that thing is rotating like crazy. ainsley: straight to a fox news alert. vicious tornadoes and thunderstorms overnight from missouri all the way to new york marking 12 state days of total destruction across our great country. this mile wide twister former near kansas city. brian: at least 12 people are injured there. the mayor of linwood just outside of kansas city say dozens of homes all gone. >> i could feel the air

175 Views

2 Favorites

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on