tv FOX Friends First FOX News March 25, 2020 1:00am-2:00am PDT
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rob: the empire state tries to keep up with spiking pandemic. jillian: if you are struggling with hygiene, alexa has your back. >> wash your hands. wash your hands. rob: the musical reminder sweeping the internet, "fox and friends" continues right now. good morning, you are watching "fox and friends first" on wednesday morning. jillian: let's get straight to this fox news alert. relief will soon be on the way for millions affected by the coronavirus pandemic. rob: lawmakers reaching a $2 trillion update following days of back and forth. the early morning compromise.
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>> reporter: not a moment too soon, the largest package in american history by emergency legislation. $2 trillion worth of aid, healthcare professionals and small businesses for the economic crush and rescuing the nation from spiraling into a possible recession. mitch mcconnell breathing a sigh of relief after a long and tense several days. >> good news for the doctors and nurses and emergency rooms around the country waiting for more masks, more funding. it is good news for families across america. at last we have a deal. >> reporter: the details have yet to be released, expect that later stay. we have direct checks to
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americans, emergency loans to small businesses to stabilize key national industries. strict oversight for large corporations, that means no stock buybacks which is a sticking point for minority leader schumer. >> not one of celebration but necessary. the anguish of the american people wondering about the future of their health, the health of their loved ones and the economy. >> reporter: we will see how numbers break down when the bill is finalized but steve mnuchin who led them negotiations for the white house is the president will sign a deal of congress can pass it was the big question, what will nancy pelosi do with it? she could schedule a vote on the senate measure to get this done this week or move to have her own bill that was drafted next, we can watch later on.
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jillian: we will talk about this throughout the morning. appreciate it. rob: energy whenever anyone in and out of new york city supporting for two weeks. jillian: the us is on track to become the global hotspot of the global pandemic. todd pyro joins us with help from states nationwide. >> reporter: a dire warning if you have been to the big apple, the growing number of cases for people who left the city. >> anyone who left new york over the last few days because of the number of cases, you may have been exposed before you left new york. everybody who was in new york should sell quarantine for the next few days. >> reporter: governor cuomo saying new york could be two weeks from hitting the apex of the outbreak calling on the fence to use the defense production act to force
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companies to create much-needed supplies such as ventilators. >> what am i going to do with 400 ventilators when i need 30,000? you pick the 26,000 people who are going to die because you only sent 400 ventilators. rob: more cities and counties issue stay at home orders to contain the pandemic. miami now under a shelter in place as well, donald trump speaking on the severity of the virus but also in the need to restart our economy. >> we have had some bad flus and viruses and i think it is absolutely possible people have to practice all of the social distancing and don't shake hands and wash your hands and all the things we are doing now but we have to get our country back to work. our country wants to be back at work. rob: despite the president's calls for return to normalcy by easter, some see a longer timeline.
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>> this may go into another season and if it does it will bring is that much closer to the possibility of not only having drugs available but a vaccine. >> the question is early april, that would be misleading to represent this for california. rob: gavin newsom said his table acquire 1 billion tests and hundreds of millions of gallons, surgical masks and face shields, even chartering flights from china. rob: thank you so much. jillian: the u.s. navy confirming its first cases of coronavirus on inactive ship, three sailors aboard the theater roosevelt were airlifted to the hospital after testing positive
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for covid-19. it is not known where they caught the virus. there last port of call was vietnam. overall the navy reported 86 cases of coronavirus, 57 of those patients are sailors. the number of tsa workers with the coronavirus rises to 32 cases nationwide but 25 of them are screening officers and six amazon warehouse workers test positive according to the washington post. this comes at a time when more americans are ordering more online because they are stuck at home and stores are closed. rob: joe biden slamming donald trump's coronavirus response rejecting the president's suggestion that we could reopen the economy by easter maybe. he says the president could let other people do the talking. >> i would respectfully suggest he should have anthony fauci on more than the president or anyone who is not an expert may not exactly what is going on. rob: after appearing on the view he got criticism of his own. >> you are supposed to coffin to
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your elbow. >> that is true but i am alone in my home. rob: biden has not been tested for coronavirus but has no symptoms. congresswoman ilhan omar as a radical plan to stop the spread of coronavirus tweeting we need to release ice detainees, people held on bail and anyone who qualifies for work release. we need a moratorium on a course rating people who are low risk. fellow squad member rashida tlaib want to give americans debit cards with $2,000 which would be loaded with $1,000 a month until a year after the crisis. jillian: alexa giving tips on how to help prevent the spread of covid-19. >> wash your hands, everybody wash your hands. sing along.
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make soap bubbles on the double. rob: amazon's virtual song to stay germ-free going viral. other ways to stop the spread, coffee into elbow, don't touch the face, social distance, stay home. the hardest part is the 20 seconds. it is a long time. trace: and do this. i have been doing a tour of the apartment, a 10 step walk to wait the whole 10 seconds. jillian: when i am told don't touch my face my nose it is so much. rob: exactly right. 9 minutes after the hour the senate agreeing to a $2 trillion relief deal but will it be enough to kickstart this economy? jillian: the bill is a big win for millions of americans and small businesses, he joins us live next. sh your hands.
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avoid close contact with people who are sick. avoid touching your eyes, nose and mouth. stay home when you are sick. cover your cough or sneeze. clean and disinfect frequently touched objects with household cleaning spray. for more information, visit cdc.gov/covid19. this message brought to you by the national association of broadcasters and this station.
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>> it last we have a deal. i am thrilled we are finally going to deliver for the country that has been waiting for us to step up. i'm relieved the democratic colleagues are ready to take yes for an answer. rob: mitch mcconnell announcing bipartisan covid-19 relief is ready for a vote. jillian: that is a few hours away but will the $2 trillion plan make it through the house and would be enough? rob: joining us to discuss, congressman john joyce. who caved? what changed to make this deal? >> what we saw was the president and the leadership from the republican party but the points so far forward that the democrats had to realize the republicans are working for the american families, working for
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the american workers and working for the american small businesses. we need to bring this forward. i'm ready to look carefully at what is in this plan and make the decision to move on. jillian: let's look at the major components including rushing direct checks to americans, expanded and implemented assistance, emergency loans, small businesses, stabilizing key national industries and strict oversight for large corporations. do you like it and is it enough? >> what i have seen and we are looking at it carefully, we need to provide resources for small businesses to stay open, to employ their individual employees. we need to protect the american families. i think there are components of this which will get our economy moving again and keep our workers paid through this crisis. my background is i practiced medicine for over 25 years and
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the coronavirus is the biggest challenge i have seen in my medical career and certainly the biggest challenge i have seen for the united states congress in the 100 sixteenth congress. rob: democrats fought pretty hard, is the bill going to prevent companies from being bailed out by taxpayers and buying back stock? >> buying back stock would be unacceptable. i am on the small business committee, small business is the backbone of america is we need to shore up small businesses. that is our responsibility. i'm going to look carefully at the senate plan. i'm ready to vote for it. jillian: the president made a big statement when he said he wants the country to be back open by easter. let's listen to what he has to say. >> the goal is to ease the
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guidelines and open things up to large sections of the country, i hope we can do this by easter. i think that would be a great thing for the country and we are all working very hard to make it a reality. jillian: is that optimistic? >> i think we have seen the president assemble an incredible team, doctor burks, anthony fauci, mike pence. all these people together bring a lot to the table. the president has the goal of returning america to normalcy. i made this analogy before. we are in the middle of the stress test. if you look at the cardiologist when you're in the middle of a stress test you want things to be improved as quickly as possible. we want answers and that is what the president is trying to do, to move us forward in a positive way. i share his optimism. i don't have a timeline. it is not clear to me when that
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is going to occur but if we provide the necessary resources to protect our citizens i think we are on the right track to addressing this novel coronavirus. we have never seen a coronavirus like this before and we need to work together. the president has assembled an incredible team and we have the resources. we brought different medical expert into the equation. this is the right time to fund them, provide healthcare workers with the necessary ppd, necessary equipment to work together. america is a resilient group of people and together we will work to solve this coronavirus. rob: we appreciate it. jillian: your questions about coronavirus continue to pour in each and every day like this one. is it true that losing sense of smell and taste may be a hidden system symptom of the virus? rob: doctor jennifer caldwell
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of the latest news to help yand to keepormed your kids learning at home, just say "coronavirus" into your xfinity voice remote to access important information and special reports from around the world. or say "education" to discover learning collections for all ages. even adults. for more information on how you can stay connected, visit xfinity.com/prepare.
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jillian: washington dc's metro transit system will close 17 stations due to the coronavirus outbreak, ridership has declined by 90% in the last two weeks in the metro says they need to conserve their cleaning supplies, they shut down two stopped last week, they will remain closed until further notice. rob: long lines at gun stores in los angeles not stopping the city for shutting them down amid this outbreak, the sheriff claiming they are a nonessential business. marijuana shops with medicinal marijuana license will remain
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open. gun shops -- in new jersey the governor ordered all gun stores to be shutdown. jillian: doctors and researchers searching for a cure to the deadly coronavirus as the number of confirmed cases in the us tops 55,000. rob: questions and concerns have been pouring in his new information on symptoms and treatment circulate by the day. doctor jennifer caldwell joins us with answers. the first is from kathy on facebook. wants to know is it true that losing your sense of smell and taste may be a hidden system -- symptom of coronavirus? >> it might be. we have received reports out of the uk and emt doctors and other specialists that some of their patients had loss of taste and smell. we have also had anecdotal reports from people who had
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coronavirus with the same. this is something we need to look out for and look further into. jillian: add it to the list we go through every day to see if we have any of these. here is an instagram by wendy, does the virus attack men more than women and if so does that have any significance? what do you say about that? >> it is significant and preliminary data family into the country suggests men have been infected more than women and sometimes more severely. we have yet to see what the data will show in the united states but gender data does matter, that will help us determine which way to move forward, figure out why this is happening if it proves to be the case but we have to pay attention to data happening from overseas. kim jong un cpap machine serves like a ventilator? >> they are generally used, the
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short answer is no. and if you have respiratory failure, you need a lot more than a ventilator as well. it is not going to work to ventilate your body and take care of your needs. jillian: can old folks tolerate the anti-malaria drug? >> a great question, hydroxychloroquine has been around for a long time to treat malaria. there are other rheumatological conditions but older people take these medications, the safety profile. rob: we are looking at what that will do.
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from christie, does the heat kill the virus? how has that been determined? >> a lot of people are wondering. there are two sides to this, what is the myth about heat we are seeing on the internet, some people saying a blow dryer will kill coronavirus or drinking warm water. that is not true. however when it comes to temperature that is the question we have been asking ourselves, when it gets warmer will we see less coronavirus? viruses typically don't do as well in humid weather. whether that is the case with this coronavirus we have yet to see. the verdict is out on that but warm water and warm remedies are not going to kill the virus. jillian: you wonder if it does kill it in the summer a lot of people worry about the fall. the latest information, thank you very much.
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rob: new trials underway for drugs that could treat covid-19. what the trump administration is doing to increase our supply of these medications. jillian: 200 police officers nationwide have tested positive for the virus, more are calling out sick. one police chief begging the white house to make testing first responders a priority. he joins us live with that message.
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jillian: world leaders enforcing stricter measures as the number of coronavirus cases around the world surpasses 420,000. rob: italy significant raising its penalty if people defied the lockdown and the prime minister of india shutting down his entire country. jillian: china regains normalcy. >> reporter: a lot happening around the world. in his real the country will go
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into a stricter lockdown forcing people to stay within 300 feet of their homes. additionally all outdoor activities will be banned and civilians will only be allowed to leave for food and medicine. spokesman for the israeli defense forces told fox news the military will support local police in enforcing the new guidelines, soldiers will not be carrying weapons. new policies come of images show the most iconic site in the least completely deserted. israel the scene 2000 positive cases of coronavirus and confirmed a death this morning. the prime minister has implemented a 3 we lockdown for the entire 1.3 billion person population. with so many people, social distancing will be near impossible and without the extreme measures being taken millions could be infected. one other issue is population of 100 million people over 60, the group that is more susceptible to dying from coronavirus. to your battalion doctors face overwhelming conditions in
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hospitals, the death toll tuesday, 743 people in a 24-hour period bringing the total to 6800. the number of new cases being reported, officials cautioned against making assumptions about a trend downward. in china now local transmissions are being reported. new cases are coming in, officials say others are arriving in the country. the lockdown was lifted overnight as people flocked to a section of the great wall in beijing that has been reopened. china remains under scrutiny from the international community for hiding information regarding the initial outbreak. hopeful news we are getting amid this outbreak, we did learn the olympics slated to start at the end of july in tokyo are going to be postponed, that announcement by the international olympic committee and japanese prime mister abe, the games will not be canceled, just postponed until 2021.
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rob: we appreciate it. russian president vladimir putin taking precautions as coronavirus cases rise in russia. you see wearing a yellow hazmat suit and protective gloves when visiting a hospital in moscow. russia has 499 cases of covid-19, one person has died. the state department commending china for rejecting a conspiracy theory in a cbs news interview last month he said there are people who are saying these viruses are coming from some military lab not of china, maybe in the united states. how can we believe all these crazy things? the state department spokesman says they welcome the ambassador's comments adding saving lives is more important than saving face. jillian: treatment for the coronavirus is accelerating. rob: several pharmaceutical company are testing various drugs which may help treat the worst symptoms of covid-19.
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>> reporter: the most critical covid-19 patients in new york will be given drugs in the hopes they will relieve the virus's worst symptoms. clinical trials are underway testing whether hydroxychloroquine, a drug to treat lupus, and antibiotic combined with chloroquine and antimalarial drug actually make covid-19 patients better. >> optimistic results. >> reporter: the fox news townhall, mike pence said these drugs will be widely available. >> we are working with the fda to allow these already legal medications to be used for off label predictions by doctors. >> reporter: the fda put a ban on india's reduction of hydroxychloroquine and chloroquine to ensure supply. >> also been working with manufacturers overseas. >> reporter: pharmaceutical companies are working overtime.
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a phase 2 clinical trial of the rheumatoid arthritis drug that could relieve lung inflammation and created an antibody cocktail in a lab that could give temporary immunity to covid-19. >> not like a vaccine. given to all the people at risk, children with cystic fibrosis or give it to the elderly, a great intermediate step. >> reporter: andrew cuomo also said his team is working on a blood test to determine who has already been infected with covid-19 and has antibodies already in their system as estate braces for new patients. >> these are healthcare workers going back to work. >> vaccine could be a year away but researchers have identified 70 drugs that could treat covid-19. jillian: hopeful, all these options and possibilities. now to this, 24 hours the new york police department reports a
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30% jump in positive coronavirus tests. nearly 3000 members are out sick. detroit police confirming his dispatcher died from covid-19. one california police chief says enough is enough pleading for the white house to stop testing nba players and make first responders a priority. john carly joins me with the message. what is your message? what do you want people to know? >> reporter: when we start looking at this as a public health crisis in america what we forgot to realize is the first responders when we look at er nurses and doctors and try to deal with those who are suffering and facing this illness require police response, ems response and how to keep them healthy as we face the crisis together. that focused the efforts of law enforcement leaders around the nation to come together on
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conference calls or california police chief calls to find out what the best practice would look like and how to redeploy resources. as we face this crisis. jillian: let's look at some numbers, uniformed police officers testing positive for coronavirus in large cities across the country starting in new york, 170, los angeles eight, detroit 9, dallas 2, boston and seattle. the concern is if some of these police stations get depleted with people who tested positive or have to quarantine as a result of contact with another officer a coworker, what is the plan? >> that is happening on a daily basis now. employees that come to work each and every day even though most of california is in a state of
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emergency with the stay-at-home order our first responders are coming to work each and every day and we have to make sure the healthy officers are available to respond. without them we will be in real trouble. as we triage, prioritize, testing or public health orders coming out of the county public health department are driving this on that national call, leaders around the nation including fema and homeland security trying to come up with what that is going to look like a we need a faster way to test first responders potentially coming in contact with those being isolated by the cdc and while we all want to know what happens when you test positive think about the opportunity to turn around first responders quickly so that we don't lose them. that testing requires us to prioritize. that is the basis for my
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comments on their confidential call at the times a week and make this happen and be in front of this as we see this demand increase. jillian: one of the questions is do you think all police departments across the nation should have testing available to them? if that is the case, say the testing is made available, you test everyone one day and the results could be different, how do you keep up with that? >> the national police foundation has been working with every police agency in the nation, voluntarily submit this information to keep track of the demand, the impact of those who are testing, and the resources needed and there is a clearinghouse that can work with those agencies that can provide this even at the state level. the idea that you will test every police officer or first responder in the nation daily is not practical. but what about a return to work
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or testing process that prioritizes so that we don't eliminate them? some of that i think and the discussions we are having is what would it look like if there was a mechanism for somebody who is sick, how do you test the internet around quicker? that is the focus of what this is all about. we can find a way to do that. jillian: a lot of nba teams tested players and staff. we reach out to the nba but have not heard back, first responders, nurses, doctors, those on the front lines, thank you for joining us with the message and thank you for all you are doing in the community. rob: projected job losses from the crisis significantly less than the layoffs during the great recession but that is a pretty big number and our next guest is the current outlook could get worse if congress doesn't act fast.
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rob: american jobs in jeopardy as coronavirus shuts down is this nationwide. time to get back to work before it is too late. >> you can destroy a country this way by closing it down. i gave it too weeks and we will assess at that time and give it some more time if we need more time but we have to open the country. rob: the economic losses mirror the great recession of the late 2000s? former chief economist from international, peter morici joins me. predictions for the coronavirus, what we saw in 2008-2009, 5 million predicted job losses compared to 8,700,010 or 12 years ago. if you look at the unemployment
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rate only a point off. what do you make of those predictions? >> there kind of conservative based on the virus subsiding fairly quickly and given conditions in new york and the fact that half of the cases we are getting the rest of the country are people leaving new york and going elsewhere i would suggest this thing will last into april and the unemployment rate will go above 10%. we are looking at something more severe than the great recession. rob: that is a scary prediction. what do you make of the president's optimistic timeline of getting things running into a half weeks? >> the center for disease control has a different view. considering the rate of infection is still growing in new york city and is yet to fully block them in states like maryland, the fact that our lockdowns are not is strict shall we say as they were in china, in china if you were
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suspected of having the disease they quickly quarantines you away from your household. we are not doing that sort of thing. my feeling is this is going to be with us for a wireless warm weather knocks it out. i don't think it will be hot enough in the northern states fast enough. growing up in new york it will not be that hot until june. rob: we are very free and that is costing us when you're trying to fight a virus. it has been a greater demand, walmart, amazon, is big hiring. not sure what that looks like and the dow, the biggest jump yesterday came up quite a bit when the president started talking about reopening the country. do you think that holds?
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>> what matters is how the stimulus package is received and executed, not what the president says. if that money gets out quickly then i think it could get the economy a lift and create optimism in the stock market. american companies have fundamentally changed. there may be companies that go away because of this but usually further down the economic ladder. the s&p is composed of very strong companies and i expect them to survive and worth more than they are today. people shouldn't be selling stock. rob: the president wants to restart the economy while fighting this virus. is there any way to do that? >> that is like saying we will have mass mobilization without having mass mobilization for war. we are on a wartime footing and need to stay that way. the president is trying to be optimistic, being a good cheerleader but in the end if he tries to lift these restrictions, the states will continue doing what they are doing. my state, virginia, was locked down as of last night.
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rob: talk about the 401(k), people watching these things plummet. what are your tips, what do people do if you are younger? >> the situation is to do nothing. you shouldn't be selling your stock. if you have a lot of cash and your job is secure you might consider buying in over the next month or two a little bit each week, stocks are on sale. you have to ask yourself are you a policeman? your job is secure if you are a policeman. are you in a consulting business for an economic downturn? you're likely to be unemployed or have reduced wages, you better hold onto your cash so it begins with your own job, your availability of money and you might want to buy inside. rob: thank you for your time this morning, we will be right back. [ "one more time" by daft punk ]
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run your entire business with zoho one. the operating system for business. rob: a growing number of grocery store workers testing positive for covid-19, some chains chose thing -- closing locations to disinfect and slow the spread of the deadly virus. jillian: states call for stricter safety standards. >> grocery store workers are on the front lines of the covid-19 fight, workers are testing positive in several states. governor charlie baker of massachusetts making it clear food shopping is allowed but at the same time calling for distancing guidelines. >> many of them have implemented their own proposals with respect to this. others haven't. we believe everybody should be playing by a set of rules with respect to distancing
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absolutely. jillian: maryland's governor calling for stricter measures to protect employees after trader joe's closed at least one store after a worker tested positive. trader joe as releasing a statement reading a crew member recently tested positive for covid-19 or is receiving treatment for a suspected case. out of an abundance of caution we temporarily closed the store for closing cleaning and standardization and contacting shoppers who visited those stores advising them to contact the local health department. other cruise >> reporter: like kroger taking precautions like installing plexiglas to protect their workers. in colorado, governor sending a letter to the president of the state's largest chain with proposals, things like providing gloves, masks and face screens, expanding grocery delivery services, designating periods for high-risk individuals to shop and ensuring crowds are
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social distancing. a sign employees with higher health risks to tasks with lowest exposure risks. these are steps to protect what is now a vital workforce. rob: we appreciate it. jillian: donald trump gets high marks from the american people for his handling of the covid-19 pandemic but kirstie alley ignites twitter after praising him for a job well done. rob: carly shimkus with serious xm 115 with reaction on social media. carley: according to the latest gallup poll 60% of americans approve of the president's handling of the coronavirus pandemic, that includes 94% of republicans, 60% of independents and 27% of democrats but kirstie alley sparked a firestorm on social media for her pro trump tweet saying i wanted to thank you for your recent decorum,
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sincerity and care, taking charge and leading in a manner needed and wanted for this country. the cheers star receiving cheers and jeers, trump supports loving it, crystal says don't be afraid to speak your mind, the president has done an amazing job. another twitter user saying agree every day we get updates from him and his team. the response is different in other less friendly to the president corners of the social media realm. jillian: i never thought i would see the day you get some beer or wine to go and get a free gift everyone wants right now. carley: that would be toilet paper. the thunderbird lounge in arizona giving away a free roll of toilet paper with every beer and wine delivery order. a bartender knocks on your door, hands you a cold one, how about that for one snapshot? this twitter users to the world is starting to sound more
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civilized every day. jamie a little jealous saying i wish i lived in your neighborhood. they are rolling out the white carpet for customers. rob: those are big roles, those are not little puny rolls. those are good ones. what is up with the security guard? carley: my favorite story of the day, national cowboy museum in oklahoma had to close down amid this pandemic but they never got more attention on social media because their security guard has taken over a twitter account and folks are loving his innocent posts, tim posted a picture of a buffalo scout alone and commented great social distancing. in a tweet, asked how i ended up doing social media i got roped into it. people are loving the fact that he signs all of his posts saying
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thanks, tim and includes the word hashtag in his hashtags. job well done. rob: germs left on surfaces of the diamond princess cruise ship survived for 17 days. what does this mean as the world tries to curb this outbreak? infectious disease expert joins us live. >> in 1944 i served my country. now it is your duty. jillian: the hero the greatest generation sending a message to all of us. we will be right back. robinhood believes now is the time to do money.
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>> the senate has reached a bipartisan agreement on a historic relief package for this pandemic. rob: it is wednesday march 2, '05, help finally on the way for millions of american families, the senate made a breakthrough on a monumental $2 trillion relief bill for workers and businesses. jillian: capping negotiations that were nearly derailed bipartisan demand. rob: new warnings about new york city, the covid-19 capital of the us, the alarming spike in cases there and across the country, clamping down on donald
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