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tv   FOX Friends First  FOX News  April 14, 2020 1:00am-2:00am PDT

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>> when somebody is the president of the united states the authority is total. >> your authority is total. the governors know that. >> it is tuesday april 14th and this is a fox news alert, donald trump delivering a fire response to the growing number of governors taking matters into their own hands to reopen the country. shannon: live in washington the president says the demonstration's plan to restart the economy is coming. >> new numbers:encouraging story for hard-hit new york of the governor warned against letting up on the fight. >> for some people have had enough, thousands are set to
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march against the, quote, tyrannical stay-at-home policies imposed in their home states. shannon: it wasn't the typical lunch break for workers at this hospital. >> the grateful community comes together to thank our frontline heroes. "fox and friends first" starts right now. and good morning, you're watching "fox and friends first" on tuesday morning. shannon: thanks for starting the day with us. let's begin with a fox news alert, donald trump expects to release a plan to reopen the economy and get americans back on their feet. >> tensions rising as state governments look to take matters into their own hands. griff jenkins live in washington with a battle brewing this morning.
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>> the president prepares to release guidelines accompanied by the formation of the council, who has the final say on when to begin lifting restrictions? the president making clear his position that it is his call. >> when somebody is the president of the united states the authority is total. that being said we will work with states because it is very important. we have local government that hopefully will do a good job and if they don't do a good job i step in so fast that they can't do anything without the approval of the president. >> this after coalitions of governors from coast-to-coast announced plans for reopening their states in the northeast, new york governor andrew cuomo says ten said -- 7 states greater partnership, new york, new jersey, connecticut, rhode island, delaware, massachusetts, disagreeing with the president's view. >> he did work cooperatively
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with us that is why i don't understand why you would pivot at this point to this aggressive, hostile suggestion of total authority of the federal government and abandon the partnership, cooperation that he started. >> on the west coast california governor gavin newsom announcing a regional partnership with california, oregon and washington state. >> we set out a joint statement of a shared vision for a framework for reopening not just within our states but more broadly is a region. shannon: >> reporter: the debate continues but none of these states or governors announced a timeline for reopening, the president's previous mention of may 1st is more of a goal or hope than a hard date. all eyes on the building behind me as congress continues to
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work, at odds in some cases about getting more aid to all these states and small businesses. shannon: interesting to see how this plays out. >> the nypd is mourning the loss of 3 more of its own to covid-19. a former marine served 14 years on the fourth, 19 year veteran detective raymond a worked in the special victims wanted mohammed raymond served more than 30 years, the virus killing a total of 23 members of the nypd, the agency reporting a downward trend in sick calls for the fourth consecutive day. >> one of the country's largest jails releases hundreds of inmates after a third detainee dies of covid-19. chicago scott county jail making the move in an effort to prevent the spread of the virus, 500 people have tested positive so far including correctional officers. majority of the released prisoners are awaiting trial or
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serving less than one year for low-level crimes. >> democrats are proposing to release thousands of detained illegal immigrants calling detention centers a ticking time bomb amid this outbreak. under this proposal immigration, customs enforcement would free most of its 34,000 people who do not post public risk or have an underlying health condition. ice reviews every case individually on who can be freed. >> reporter: the census bureau looking to delay the 2020 head count amid the health crisis, operations are put on hold until june. they are requesting the deadline for state population counts to be moved from the end of this year to next april along with pushing the deadline to getting states skip the deadline and giving states -- both recommendations require congressional approval. >> relief is on the way to several states devastated by a deadly tornado outbreak. >> the brutal storms killing at least 30 people, flattening communities.
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>> tornado, tornado. >> that video is something. much-needed resources during the pandemic are forced to shut down. >> the last thing we need, several states already battling the coronavirus pandemic are now dealing with the devastation aftermath after 50 tornadoes you saw their whipped across the self. four us states are under a state of emergency for covid-19 and severe weather. state leaders sharing how horrific this was. >> the storm was as bad or worse than anything we have seen in a decade. we are used to tornadoes in mississippi. no one is used to this. wents top 200 miles an hour in certain locations, the trail was long and the trail was devastating. >> look at this incredible
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photo. in mississippi a family making a life-saving decision to shelter inside this concrete room as the storm destroys every other inch of their home. the distraction spanning dozens of communities. one couple forced to start after after being married for 60 years. >> it is awful. it really is to see my home gone and it is gone. going to start all over again. >> donald trump is helping raise spirits promising the federal government is ready to help. >> my administration will do everything possible to help those communities get back on their feet. we are speaking with governors and representatives, fema is on its way, we just want to say
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warmest condolences and we are with you all the way. >> the violent storms forcing six states to close or relocate testing sites for the coronavirus the despite the risks officials urged the number one priority should be protecting yourself from a potential tornado today on the floor in georgia coast. >> starting today, senior citizens and adults with disabilities who live in miami-dade county florida, free at home coronavirus testing given by the fire and rescue units, testing continues for all ages in miami and has known for weeks but in some cases even people with no symptoms can get a test, the site reached capacity and four hours monday after expanding testing criteria. >> reporter: the pentagon awards $415 million contract for machines that will allow n95
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masks to be used 20 times. they are the buying 60 machines to disinfect these masks. they can sterilize 80,000 masks every day, 6 units have been delivered to hearted cities including new york and chicago, the remaining will be made available by early may. shannon: a massive rainbow offering new yorkers a sign of hope. that is beautiful. rob: the brilliant arch appearing over the big apple after the deadly -- daily cheer for workers at 7:00 pm. shannon: a photo on social media saying it was a sign of better days ahead. >> new york city resident tweeting you can't help but feel optimistic when you see this. shannon: i wish i looked out my window. more inspiring stories like this visit foxnews.com/america together. got to look outside a little more often. >> i was watching the marathon news conference with the
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president, wasn't looking out the window. a growing mystery, one person can in fact dozens of other people without even knowing it. how is this possible. >> how to explain the science behind it and who is most at risk. ♪
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>> welcome back. covid-19 is contagious which is why social distancing is important but what about superspreaders. >> these key individuals can carry viruses across small towns and big cities alike. it has happened around the world during pandemics in the past,
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joining us to break down this amplified risk is doctor linda dall, thanks for being here this morning. we take a look at the facts from past superspreading incidents, ebola cases, 61% of those trace 3% of infected people, south korea in 2015, and in hong kong in 2003 the first patient infects 125 with stars. what do we know compared to what we are seeing now with covid-19? >> we thought the average person transmits the virus to about 2.2 people but there are some people who are transmitting it more widely, the data is harder to trace for many different reasons, one being the people can be sick with the virus and should the virus early on
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without having any symptoms at all, hard to trace those people and also people have different immune systems, some people can clear the virus more quickly and others have it in their system but i think the driving force behind superspreaders has to do with exposure. it is a fine combination of having a lot of virus in your system and being exposed to a lot of different people and even traveling around a lot. >> looking at what the potential super spreading incidents with this pandemic, we look to the state of massachusetts, we heard about this story earlier on, 75% of 108 different sick residents in that state were associated with one conference. that is scary. connecticut, 50 guests infected during a birthday party. washington state, 45 people diagnosed every choir rehearsal.
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do you do to stop superspreading from happening? >> hard with a virus like this because we are still learning about it as we go. we learn more about how it is transmitted we can start and in those situations it is a combination of people involved, the way they are connecting, ventilation system. there is one who came back from wuhan in late january and was exposed to a couple hundred people and only other person was the husband, there are a lot of factors that are important. shannon: it doesn't necessarily matter if you have symptoms or don't have symptoms, you can be a super spreader and be asymptomatic. >> you can still shed virus early in the infection. the research has shown the first few days of infection before you have symptoms be blessed in the virus.
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rob: talking about a task force to analyze what people say is a racial disparity with this virus, numbers of black and hispanic getting the virus worse, getting it more often, killing more of them. this is new york city and you can see hispanic, black, you will see these numbers roll through in a number of cities, look at chicago, 65% of the deaths are of african-americans, what do these numbers tell you as we scrolled through different cities? >> that there is a huge disparity although doctor adams, the surgeon general agrees which i agree with too it is not necessarily biological or genetic. it has to do with social disparity and living conditions, exposure risk, access to medical care. it is important the striking difference, the demographic
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differences and all these demographic differences can help us learn more how the virus is spreading and provide more access to people who need it most. shannon: thank you for joining us with pertinent information, appreciate it. it is 18 after the all, florida seeing 21,000 cases and 500 deaths from the virus, could the sunshine state be the next hot spot? >> florida congressman neil dunn has tested positive for the virus and will tell you about his recovery and his state's when he joins us coming up. these days you need faster internet that does all you
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>> potential new hotspot particularly vulnerable due to its large senior population in florida so state leaders are ramping up testing in an attempt to flatten the curve. >> joining us army surgeon and covid-19 patient congressman neil done. thank you for joining us, how are you feeling? >> i feel excellent, thank you. shannon: tell me what is going on in your state? they are trying to ramp up testing, we take a look at cases and deaths by day for the month of april you see the numbers yourself and everyone can see how they have gone 8, april 1st, 6955, deaths, it continues to go up. what do those numbers tell you and what is "happening now"? >> look at the curve, what is happening day on day. we peaked and are headed down in terms of new cases and things like that. i think mitigation is working. i have a keen interest in that
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since i caught the virus. rob: let's listen to the governor. >> florida received test results from one in every 125 floridians. we focus on people 65 and older but we are expanding beyond that so if anyone has coronavirus symptoms you can get tested. rob: sounds like you're doing pretty good work on the testing and in miami and putnam county there is a place where almost anybody can get a test. >> absolutely the right thing to do. we have no idea what the denominator is until we start testing broad sections, it is vitally important to get a better sense how many people have been exposed. shannon: i have been reading about how in florida you will potentially start at home testing and seems like tests are more readily available in that
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state versus new york where we have doctors on every day who say i am treating what i think are covid-19 patients every day but can't test them. i wonder how this is happening. >> a terrible thing a situation where we normally get the virus but depend on china to perform the test. we need to do more testing and do it more robustly in this country and we are getting to the point we are changing to immunoglobulin testing to see who has been exposed as opposed to testing for the virus. that will be key to understanding immunity in the population. rob: the population, 20% over 65, a big retirement haven. florida was late to the game in
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closing things down, they had the big thing with spring breakers and now numbers are shooting up. how has the governor handled this? >> he has done a great job. look at getting the denominators of florida will help the rest of the country because we can generalize how the disease behaves and we are seeing new cases fall off. we are heading in the right direction and certainly has somebody with the disease i can simplify for anybody who has it. i am over 65. shannon: are you 100% back to normal? what is your message for people watching who may have a think they do if they are feeling symptoms? >> i'm 100%, i'm eight days out. rob: glad to hear you're feeling better and we will see how florida handles the spike they
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are seeing and hopefully they will do it right, appreciate your time. 25 after the hour. a first of its kind move, south dakota logical clinical trial of hydroxy chloroquine as cases are spiking and that state. shannon: the white house can unveil an economic task force so what has to happen to get the economy restarted, you peter morici joins us with steps to get back in business.
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>> new york is flattening the curve. america's coronavirus% are seeing the rate of new cases dropping. >> demonstrators planes take to the streets nationwide to protest stay-at-home orders. todd pyro joins us with more. >> good morning. some positive take aways in the new york numbers, the death toll decreasing again from the day before is officials say the spread to the suburbs appears to be under control, this graph showing hospitalization slowing significantly from earlier in the month with sunday seeing the fewest admissions in two weeks. as for icu admissions a decrease from the day before estate cautiously looks to the future.
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>> the worst is over if we continue to be smart going forward. we have a hand on that valve, turn that down too fast you will see the number jump right back, but yes, i think you can say the worst is over. >> amid the positivity, unrest, a group called reopen in see calling for protest demanding state officials reopen the north carolina economy bible 20 ninth and operation gridlock were 15,000 cars and trucks are expected to descend on the state capital on wednesday to protest what they are calling tyrannical stay-at-home guidelines. south dakota did not issue a stay-at-home order. the governor telling fox news we will let the science, facts and data drive our decisionsmaking but critics are pointing to arising cases, pleading with her to institute one. the governor announcing
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statewide trials of hydro chloroquine. >> might menstruation deploy 28 million doses of hydroxy chloroquine from the national stockpile. we have millions of doses we bought in many people use it all over the country. >> nationally more than 44,000 people have recovered from the coronavirus. >> thank you. >> nancy pelosi attacking donald trump over his response to the outbreak. >> even when it was in the public domain in january and february, which would be time enough to make the decision to go forward instead of calling it a hoax, instead of calling it a -- minimizing it, we lost time. >> the house speaker claiming donald trump did not rely on information from the
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intelligence and scientific communities but donald trump is double down on his response, republicans touting his will to restrict china in new york travel. the number of deaths rising at a veterans home under investigation. 33 deaths have died at the massachusetts facility, 88 other residents and 78 staff members have tested positive. federal authorities are now looking into whether the statement facility provided veterans with adequate medical care. employees claim management did not provide staff with protective agreement and placed patients in overcrowded rooms with veterans who did not have the virus. the outbreak in nursing homes especially hard. state agencies reporting 3000 people have died in nursing homes in 7 states. according to usa today, 2300 long-term care facilities have at least one coronavirus case well another 18,000 residents of tested positive for the deadly virus as a higher governor mike
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the whitish is a state order requiring nursing homes to notify families of the resident or staff member becomes infected in 24 hours. >> the president set to announce his opening the country counsel, members today as the administration works toward bringing back the us economy. >> we have some of the biggest from every business on this council and a lot of smart people. i think they will give us some good advice but we want to be very safe. at the same time we got to get our country open. >> what big questions does the council need to answer before we are ready to open for business. former chief economist of the national trade commission peter morici, thanks for coming on, appreciate it. the first question they need to answer, which businesses are going to open first and which ones have to wait? >> the council call only provide the governor's guidance but i suggest it will be things like
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hardware stores, clothing stores where you can space out how many people are in the store. at the public levels and public transportation and so forth, in austria they require facemasks to ride a bus, that would be a sound policy in the united states. getting the facemasks to new york or washington, those are things the federal government has to focus on. rob: let's talk about austria. the country got hit hard, like italy they closed down early, they are starting to reopen an airplane is to open small shops first. they will move to big stores and in may or june restaurants will open, hotels, schools, public events. do you see something like that in this country? >> i do but it will be more elongated in a place like new york, having been there it is
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not as dense the place. in new york people live too close together to say we will just copy austria's timetable. i don't see schools reopening until september and even then they will be very different places. we are talking about bringing people in and shift so we only have half as many people coming in the fox news room for example at the same time because people sit so close together and putting partitions between them. at schools we may be doing the same thing, running grades one, 3, 5, 7 in the morning, 2, 4, 6, 8 in the afternoon, that sort of thing, to space students every other chair. you can't put plastic petitions between students conveniently because they have to interact with the teacher. but those kinds of things we will see. >> another question, how are we
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going to secure vital supply chains in this country? >> the president has been criticized for this, governor newsom announces he has a nationstate and he will fix national policy, that is demagoguery. the problem is in the course of several presidents who have become dependent on china and the only way to have all the things we need is to make all the pieces here or at least in canada if we can trust the canadians to export the stuff. how do we equip people with the masks to ride the subways, not masks people are running around with but the kind in hospitals so they are secured? if we don't do that. >> i would love something about china getting a lot of stuff back in this country. how will medical development and technology come into play? >> that will do fine when we can take the masks off. we won't be able to do that until we have a vaccine, and effective vaccine. we have a vaccine for the 50 state influence epidemic, the worst epidemic under than the
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spanish flu, that vaccine was only 60% effective. we need a vaccine that is 95% effective so we can inoculate people and feel comfortable about returning to business as usual. a lot of things we are doing would also be effective against just fighting the flu which kills people. >> it still kills 40,000 people a year. >> the point is the transmission is very much the same. we crowd ourselves too close together and don't pay attention to hygiene. that needs to change. shannon: we appreciate it on tuesday morning. >> teens and teachers in new jersey teaming up to have gear for men and women on the front lines. >> volunteers doing heavy lifting to coordinate the assembly of life-saving devices coming up.
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>> south korea on high alert as north korea wanted several short-range cruise missiles into the sea of japan, several military aircraft that appeared to be involved in the store, the country conducting similar drills for weeks. today's launch comes one day ahead of south korea's planned elections. fox news alert, coronavirus closing in on 2 million confirmed cases worldwide but for some european countries beginning to ease lockdown restrictions as they see infection rates falling. actions being taken. >> exactly right. there are some countries across europe there are taking steps this week to reopen parts of their economy while others are simply making plans for the
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future about when they hope life can return to normal. in spain some lockdown restrictions been lifted as the number of new coronavirus cases has declined. spanish officials stressing the easing of roses focused on factories and construction sites. the purpose is to work on restarting the economy, not for life to return to normal right away. spain is the second worst hit country behind the united states. in neighboring france, authorities plan to gradually reopen for business though emmanuel macron has extended the lockdown until may. >> may 11th will be the beginning of a new period, it will be progressive, the walls will be adapted to respond to the results, the primary objective is the health of everyone in france. from may 11th we will progressively reopen nursery schools, primary schools, middle schools and high schools. >> reporter: italy is following
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suit and taking gradual steps reopening bookstores and children's clothing stores which you endorsed a factories closed. italian authorities will keep the lockdown in place until may 3rd. there is concern reopening for business too soon could lead to a second wave of cases. this is the situation in part of japan that has seen an increase in test results over recent days, the japanese region has re-declared a state of emergency after the previous one was lifted in mid-march, in the middle east is real is currently partaking in rolling countrywide lockdown starting at 5:00 pm local today, there will be 44 checkpoints across the country where police will be insuring only essential workers are traveling from their homes in an effort by benjamin netanyahu to slow the spread of coronavirus in israel. >> thank you.
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shannon: new jersey students may be out of class but are still working extremely hard. a group of high school is using their newfound free time to protect and provide for those on the front lines, fighting covid-19. joining me live to explain the movement, the teachers who helped make this a reality. thank you for being here. >> appreciate the time. >> go ahead and tell me how this all started. i know you wanted to make 3-d printed masks and that was taking a long time to do. >> yes. a while back during the beginning of our break from school when we were learning remotely at home, on the group messaging apps, one of our teachers put up a video about a group in new jersey who were trying to 3-d print ppe and trying to 3-d print facemasks, respirators worries switch of
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the filter paper and so i contacted one of my teachers, a computer science teacher and asked him if i could take home his 3-d printer he had in his room and try printing this stuff and he said okay and gave me the printed take-home in the material and so i started printing and realized i couldn't make the facemask work because i wasn't able to get a perfect seal against someone's face so it occurred to me to try printing components for face shields like the plastic clear face shield that would protect someone from water droplets or fluid, like someone's cough so i started 3-d printing those components and that was working really well. >> but you realize 3-d printing takes a long time to do whereas something like laser cutting is a lot quicker so i understand that this is where you got involved in the story.
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>> yes. dave and i had a conversation with some people throughout the region and they were expressing the need and then we started reaching out to manufacturers of materials, we originally were going to purchase raw materials ourselves and then quickly realized in the sheer volume of numbers needed it was better if we brought in process materials. >> we take a look at the progress, students have raised 40,$000 at this point, the face shields that have been distributed at 15,000 and the goal is 26,000 if not more, new jersey state police have noticed this saying the efforts were nothing short of an act of monumental humanitarianism. what does that mean when you see that? >> from my side it is awesome because when i hooked up with that in our goal was to assist all those people doing all the hard work, doctors, nurses,
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emts, to keep them safe was our overall goal so we are excited to be part of it. shannon: it is incredible and thank you for sharing your story with us. bob, adam, dave, thank you for your time, have a good day. >> the pandemic taking a big toll on the concert industry, it could top $9 billion, how ticketmaster's spark a lot of outrage by changing the post policy for postponed events. [applause] shannon: thanks and praise for the frontline in a state hit hard by the coronavirus and severe weather. social media reaction to this touching moment.
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>> welcome back. ticketmaster under fire for quietly rolling out a new refund policy as constants and sporting events are postponed and canceled. >> carley shimkus with serious xm 115 is here with the social media backlash. >> according to one estimate the concert industry could lose over $9 billion to 2 covid-19 cancellations with an additional $1 billion of ticket sales tied up in sports tickets so a lot of money is on the line. consumers are upset because
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ticketmaster changed the wording on their website. it used to say people could get refunds if their event was postponed, rescheduled or canceled but now the website says you can only get your money back if your event is canceled and that is fueling a lot of anger from people online who are already tight on cash and wants to get their money back for a concert that may or may not take place in september or october. checked his reaction. when twitter user says it has got to be illegal to change the policy on his grandfather and after a point of sale has occurred. jeff a little more sympathetic saying these was the trying times for ticketmaster but gordon says i see a class-action lawsuit in ticketmaster's future. ticketmaster says the whole thing is out of their hands and their policies for postponed events is always been set by event organizers so they are saying don't look at me, look at the event organizers but the bottom line is a lot of people who purchase tickets before this whole thing set in want their money back and are not getting it.
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shannon: in one town people line up in their vehicles to thank the hospital staff. >> thank you so much, god bless you. carley: mississippi prayer group did what they do best, got together and prayed for hospital staff and patients inside memorial hospital in gulfport, mississippi using loudspeaker, microphone so all the hospital workers could hear their kind words, this is getting a lot of reaction on facebook, one person says wonderful demonstration of love and prayer for the entire staff working to keep us safe, keep praying, david said bless all of you from top to bottom. it takes all of you to run an efficient ship and jones appears to work possible, god bless you, i'm honored to know you and work
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for hospital of excellence, very sweet and spiritual moment taking place in mississippi. shannon: hospital workers feel these moments across the country. shannon: that makes them so special. rob: helping push through this. how about a tv show about corn teen. >> jimmy fallon started this on social media yesterday and it really took off, he asked people on twitter to come up with a tv show name that fits with quarantine and his mission was the facemask singer instead of the masked singer and other people chimed in, tax four submission. everybody loves robin. this person is breaking bread instead of breaking bad. a lot of wordsmiths on social media last night. >> someone posted something about i haven't started baking bread yet, don't get it but now i do. rob: in the next hour of "fox
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and friends first" we have seen shortages of toilet paper, eggs, milk, now new fears the meat aisle could soon be impacted. shannon: china, south korea and japan seeing patients recover from coronavirus only to have symptoms come back. does that mean it can reactivate or are people catching it a second time? doctor jeanette joins us to explain. - when i noticed my sister moving differently, i didn't know what was happening. she said it was like someone else was controlling her mouth. her doctor said she has tardive dyskinesia, which may be related to important medication she takes for her depression. her ankles would also roll and her toes would stretch out. i noticed she was avoiding her friends and family. td can affect different parts of the body. it may also affect people who take medications for bipolar disorder and schizophrenia. she knows she shouldn't stop or change her medication, so we were relieved to learn there are treatment options for td.
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- if this sounds like you or someone you know, visit talkabouttd.com to sign up to receive a personalized doctor discussion guide to help start a conversation with your doctor about td. you'll also be able to access videos and a free brochure that show the different movements of td. visit talkabouttd.com or call to learn more. - we were so relieved to learn there are treatments for td. - learn more at talkabouttd.com.
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>> when somebody is the president of the united states the authorities total. that is the weight has got to be. it is total. >> tuesday april 14th, fox news alert, the president delivering a fire response to the growing number of governors taking matters into their own hands to reopen the country. >> live in washington the president says his own plan to restart the economy is coming. >> new numbers tell an encouraging story for hard-hit new york as the governor warned against letting up the fight. >> some people have had enough, thousands are said to march against the, quote, tyrannical stay-at-home policies imposed in their home state. >> she skyrocketed internet start them for sounding the alarm. >> wait until you hear how cores answered her call for more beer. "fox and friends first"

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