tv FOX Friends First FOX News April 21, 2020 2:00am-3:00am PDT
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rob: it is tuesday april 21st, breaking overnight north korean dictator kim jong un reportedly in critical condition after having heart surgery. >> new health questions after his sudden spirits from the limelight. >> we can overcome the challenges and obstacles that are ahead of us. >> we are ready to take some steps that will help our economic help. >> i'm thankful the we are beginning to open up texas and it has been long overdue. and ready to reopen. the states rolling that restrictions as the us hold its ground against covid-19. >> some see light at the end of total, a new hotspot raising the alarm. rob: a creative dad brings the restaurant atmosphere home.
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jillian: "fox and friends first" continues right now. rob: you are watching "fox and friends first" on tuesday morning. this is a fox news alert, all eyes on north korea amid unconfirmed reports that kim jong un may be in critical condition following heart surgery. jillian: new reaction from the korean peninsula. >> reporter: us intelligence agencies monitoring the health of north korean leader kim jong un. he is said to be in grave danger after having heart surgery. the south korean government is pushing back on this original reporting by cnn saying no unusual activity has reported in north korea. it is hard to determine the extent of his sickness and what
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sort of situation he may be facing. he's in his mid-30s and rumors began to circulate about his health after he missed the support holiday in north korea marking his late grandfather's birthday. donald trump and kim jong un met three times in 2018-19 in an effort to cut a deal about the country of nuclear weapons, no agreement has been reached in the north koreans continue to test new weapons, the developers come is the north korean government claims to have seen 0 cases of coronavirus. it would be hard to confirm this information as north korea remains cut off from the outside world. rob: we will follow it. jillian: donald from plans to sign an executive order temporarily suspending immigration amid the pandemic. rob: griff jenkins, the move is drawing a lot of backlash from
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democrats. >> reporter: we don't know what this means for immigration until we see the executive order but here's what the president tweeted last night amid a barrage of condemnation. in light of the attack from the invisible enemy and the need protective jobs of american citizen i will be signing an executive order to temporarily suspend immigration into the united states. kamala harris firing back trump failed to take seriously the crisis from day one. his abandonment of his role as president cost lives and he is shamelessly doubling down on his anti-immigrant agenda. enough, the american people are fed up. amy klobuchar firing back saying as the country battles the pandemic and workers put their lives on the line the president blames others for his failures, the order i would like to see, testing, the buck stops here, the buck stops anywhere but here. the president getting some support from the likes of congressman jim jordan.
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>> it makes sense not to let new people into the country particularly at the moment we are trying to restart our economy, new hotspots and outbreaks from happening. i view this as common sense. >> this comes as existing travel restrictions remain in place in china, europe, the uk, south korea, iran and the agreement between the us, canada and mexico to extend restrictions on nonessential travel on shared borders, a federal judge in california ordering ice to consider the police follow immigrant detention who may be at greater risk from covid-19. as far as an executive order goes, it is safe to say we will see challenges soon. >> we will be watching this. >> the president vowing the us will hold its ground reopening the country amid the covid-19 fight. >> some states using restrictions this week as others show signs of the next possible hotspot. todd pyro live as the was inches
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closer to 800,000 cases. >> reporter: good morning. donald trump with a bold proclamation that we will win this two front battle defeating the virus while bringing back our country. >> we will have a resurgence at a time when millions of american workers and families are struggling with the financial consequences of the virus it is critical to continue the medical war while reopening the economy in a safe and responsible fashion. >> reporter: this is governors across several states prepared to rollback restrictions with their stay-at-home order set to expire on may 1st. some of these states lifting restrictions this week including georgia and south carolina. polymer estate congress around mormon joining us to talk about his state allowing beaches and nonessential businesses to open. >> we can't continue to be a ghost town. we are not like new york or
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other parts of the country that are devastated by it. we managed it and that will continue. >> a different response from new york city where bill diblasio is canceling permits for june events including the private, puerto rican day and the israel parade. in la mary -- mayor eric garcetti had harsh words for those protesting in favor of immediately opening the country. >> it won't be an opening of the floodgates overnight and people are demanding that are playing with all of our lives, the worst thing we could do would be to lift those floodgates up only to watch our friends and neighbors die. >> reporter: as for those protests, more are expected today in missouri, north carolina and alabama, as massachusetts sees a surge in the virus now with the third-highest number of cases in the country. with that, more than 73,000 people have recovered from the virus in our country so far.
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shannon: today the nation's largest nurses union is expected to protest outside the white house, nurses nationwide have been taking to the streets demanding funds for ppe production to be included in the next stimulus package, the national nurses united will read the names of nurses who died from the virus, nurses in new york are suing over protective gear claiming they failed to keep nurses safe from the virus. the hospitals and state stand by their efforts. >> senate leaders preparing to pass phase 3.5 of coronavirus leave as early as today, sources saying an agreement between the white house and congress is imminent. the package worth $470 billion will include $310 billion for the paycheck protection program and also $60 billion in disaster loans, $70 billion for
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hospitals, $25 billion for testing, banks are warning would not be enough for ppe to even last a week. banking industry reps say they spend $50 billion a day in small business loans. >> first responders blowing off some steam staying on their toes and elbows. ♪ rob: looking pretty good, healthcare workers in the delaware national guard breaking out the dance lives. jillian: working on an alternate care site for non-abca24 patients. pretty impressive. rob: did you get that on instagram? jillian: i didn't get that. rob: spice it up a little bit.
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eight minutes after the hour, the lone star state reopening state parks, taking steps to reopen their economy, our next guest is a texas republican who think the governor is striking the right balance between public health and the needs of workers. jillian: a spirited effort underway to save a relentless draft day tradition, how you can still bull roger goodell from home. ♪ iopen road and telling people that liberty mutual customizes your insurance, so you only pay for what you need! [squawks] only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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it is long overdue. we cannot endure this much longer. every month we stay close to will take 2 or 3 months to rebuild. jillian: open for business, the message out of texas as the lone star state begins a rolling reopen this monday. rob: joining us to break down the plan is texas congressman michael burgess. give us a broad overview of what the state is going to do. >> reporter: the governor made his announcement last friday. state parks opened monday. some retail establishments sold more than just food, but they will do sales, you have to drive and order online and drive to pick things up but these places have been shuttered for well over a month, so that is a good thing. at the same time at the same
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time monitoring to be sure there is not a reemergence or resurgence of the number of viral infections. there will be some to be sure but you want to avoid those hotspots. this virus has that super spreader phenomenon that has been seen so many times, you don't want to let that get away from you. we have an agent need to patrol that should it occur. the good news is hospitals gave up their elective surgery schedules are waiting for patients now so the fact that will begin to loosen up is a good thing and the surgeries that were elective were not you can just dispense with them, they are still important in some need diagnosis, one who needs a treatment needs to get on with the ability to do that and that is going to begin. jillian: you talk about you need to monitor for a resurgence to keep those numbers from increasing but what is your plan
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to monitor this? do you plan on having every employee check temperatures of their employees, every employer of their employees? what is the exact plan and what happens if you do see those numbers go up? will you have to walk it back? >> in that location, texas is a pretty big state so simultaneous monitoring in multiple places. whenever you report on something like this there's going to be one of 2 choices, you did too much or do too little. the governors trying to strike the balance, you would expect that. he is a judge with judicial temperament, weighing risks and rewards and things in the balance. the fact that you are going to begin to get people to more
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normal activities is critical. the degree that people are complying with stay-at-home orders has been remarkable but that is being strained right now. i hear it every day. people are ready to get back to a more normal existence. rob: let's bring up the timeline, what to expect this week, state parks opening up. on wednesday, tomorrow, medical procedures, a lot of hospitals struggling in retail stores, pickup and delivery, testing in your state, there is lagging and testing, what are you doing about that, the id machines that
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are more available, one in the county i'm the calls we had with the administration, the testing, it is been hard as a country to be far behind, they relaxed emergency use authorizations for a number of tests coming online. the president gives a report how many tests have been done so that is a good thing but you have to ask the question, was it necessary to do that to protect the population? certainly a lot of attention has
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to be paid as to why there were so many hurdles for the private sector to get involved in this space. it was never good idea to exclude them in the first place. that is a good thing. rob: thank you for your time. you might be asking yourself who didn't see this coming? some inmates released amid the coronavirus crisis are released to a life of crime. >> it is unconscionable that folks were shown mercy and this is what some of them have done. rob: social media calling out bill diblasio for leading the charge to set them free. jillian: law enforcement searching high and low, the president of the national police foundation joins us live without companies are stepping up to help save lives. are the heroe-- helping on the front lines. here's one small way you can help them in return. complete your 2020 census today.
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>> we are going right underneath. we are going to hit this. rob: that is a good veto. tornado ripping across the florida interstates out of a collar. a brutal storm system battering the south for a second week. jillian: two people have died in mississippi, alabama and georgia, heavy winds toppling trees, downpours turning street into rivers. rob: communities across the self-cleaning up. janice dean joins us as the threat for severe weather remains this morning. >> janice: we have a frontal boundary that is stationed there and risk of severe storms in the northeast including new york city. the past 24 hours you see the
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area of low pressure across the great lakes moving into canada but the frontal boundary or the front is going to bring very strong winds. we have a severe threat not only for parts of the northeast, back through the southern plains. that will be a multi-day event for the plane states, wind advisories include new york city, boston with winds in excess of 50 miles per hour ongoing this afternoon through this evening. prepare yourselves, millions of folks could get rocked later today in terms of strong wind and heavy rainfall. wednesday some of these states that were hit hard over the last couple weeks with severe storms, the potential for large hail, damaging wind and tornadoes tomorrow, wednesday, thursday, forecast rainfall, in some cases flooding rain, that will be an issue. there is your forecast for the northeast, we will deal with
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strong storms including damaging winds. look at miami city records in parts of south florida with temperatures in the 90s. a lot to focus on in terms of the weather. in your watches and warnings throughout the day and this afternoon. rob: hot and stormy, we appreciate it. in an unrelenting commitment to serve the national police foundation helping to locate critical ppe for those on the front lines. rob: the got you covered masks campaign in the hands of first responders across the nation. joining us with more is the president of the national police foundation jim birch, thank you for coming on today, we appreciate it. tell us about the mission you are on. >> it is unbelievable the demand
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and the response from people around the country donating money and companies donating personal protective equipment that they may have a surplus of. it has been incredible to launch the campaign on april 9th and 180,$000 well on our way to the half $1 million mark. jillian: you mentioned that near 180,$000 mark, 100% of the phones go to ppe, the request you have gotten from different agencies, 15,000 pieces, where are they going? >> the 15,000 is just one example of where we are
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delivering personal protective equipment. to agencies in phoenix, arizona this week. last week they delivered 300 shipments to agencies around the country. a long way to go with a list of 8000 so we need some help. rob: looking at the need, the institutions reporting one week or less supply of n95 masks, they have one week or less left, 25% need face shields quickly, 39% say the gloves. you are doing a big thing to help with this problem. what does it feel like to start something like this and see all these people in different organizations jump in. >> it has been amazing. every day there are so many things we could focus on that would not be as positive. the demand and the response from the community and people donating a few dollars, $10 to a
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campaign like this. we have had some donors, the ceo of exxon donated 50,$000 of his own resources but by and large the majority of the hundreds of donations we received from people willing to give $10, one person gave their stimulus check back to donate to this cause which is pretty incredible. it is very heartening. there is no higher calling than protecting the protectors. jillian: a great message to end on. thank you very much. rob: new antibody test results show the number of cases in los angeles county of covid-19 could be 55 times the size of what is being reported. rob: doctor bob joins us to discuss the reliability of that date in the push for more antibody testing. isn't just a department.
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>> the united states ramping up antibody testing as states look to enter phase i of reopening the economy. rob: primary tests suggest the outbreak could be significantly more widespread than experts thought. jackie ibanez has shocking new data. >> reporter: antibody testing in los angeles county suggest the number of cases could be 55 times larger than previously confirmed because of carriers without symptoms or never tested at all. that confirms why testing is so important when it comes to public spaces in the coming weeks. the white house so states are sufficiently prepared. >> by our best estimates we have enough testing capacity today for every state in america to go
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to phase i. if they meet the other criteria. >> reporter: governors on both sides of the aisle pushing back to larry hogan who supplied 5000 test kits for his seat from the lab in south korea. donald trump says that wasn't necessary. and taking advantage of them. >> hundreds and hundreds of labs ready, willing and able, the governor from maryland didn't understand, working with all the governors. jillian: taking the lead in testing, some governors say the federal government needs to do more. >> the statement have any revenues.
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it is dependent on what we get from the federal government and the federal government that promised funding all along. jillian: andrew cuomo bringing that message the president today, he will visit the white house later this afternoon. jillian: thank you. rob: joining us with expert analysis is doctor bob, chairman of medicine at st. joseph university hospital, thanks for coming on today, we appreciate it. what do you make of the numbers out of la county? it is unbelievable and we can pull it up, 13,000 reported cases but this estimation shows there could be close to half 1 million. that is a huge disparity. >> yes, it is, thanks for having me. i am not surprised. i have been saying as well as other immunologists and people have been saying 80% of the people that get infected are
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asymptomatic. the question is are we carriers if we had the infection and didn't know we had the infection? the probability is pretty good that we are and transmitting it to other people who are also without symptoms. it is those who get the symptoms who become very sick that we are concerned about. if these tests are accurate and i presume they are we should be able to tell the strength of the immune response, look at certain kinds of antibodies within a test itself and we know whether you, for example, have been infected six months ago or you were infected two weeks ago so this is very promising and exciting. it also speaks for heard immunity going forward. jillian: a key piece of this is we don't know how long the immunity may last. >> that is right and you know why? the coronavirus, covid-19 is related to the coronavirus is. it is a big family and is coronavirus is, you get a common
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cold over and over, you could get three or four colds a year. you ostensibly have been unity to that coronavirus of another group. we are wondering if that is the case with covid-19. if it is you can be reinfected. probably not as severely if you're one of those people who get really bad infection. rob: does it change anything? we find that 8710 -- 80% of people have no symptoms doesn't change anything about how we lock us down? does it move closer to something where you take all the people who are at risk over 65, the list of preexisting conditions and keep them safe and reopen sooner? will it change anything? >> yes. one could reopen much much sooner. we have to protect our vulnerable population, those with immunodeficiency some of those with chemotherapy in the elderly and infirm. people in nursing homes, seeing how this is going through nursing homes very quickly and
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killing a lot of people, you are absolutely right. that is what anthony fauci meant when he said we have to track the infection among certain individuals who are very ill. jillian: richard asks i am returning as a construction worker, my work is all outdoors, i will be wearing mask and gloves but should i be dressing to cover my body head to toe to prevent getting covid-19? >> i say you don't have to look like a butterfly in a cocoon. a mask is fine, i think you don't have to wear gloves if you are far from your partners in the construction site. a lot of people want to wear gloves because it makes them feel comfortable but your distancing is key here. if you have another construction guy sneezing and coughing you don't want to be near them and where your mask and gloves but don't think you have to wrap yourself up in ppe like we do in the hospital. rob: can we be tracking the virus into our homes with our shoes? should we leave shoes outside?
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>> data from studies that have just come out is that yes, you can track this stuff in if you are working in a nursing home where there are a lot of infected people are working in the hospital but if you are just walking around in a supermarket or home depot or wherever you go shopping you don't have to leave your shoes outside. we will become like the japanese who leave their shoes outside the door and go in with their socks and my wife wants me to do that. jillian: thank you for your time and information. we will be right back.
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nationwide protest going into the week, at least 300 plan to call out to protest their treatment during the pandemic. we see walkout in staten island, chicago and detroit. organizers say 130 amazon facilities have had one employee test positive, one amazon employee has died. they also want paid sick leave, guaranteed healthcare and a promise not to be retaliated against workers who speak out member the staten island employee who was fired. amazon has made efforts to address these concerns, raised wages for hourly workers by $2 an hour. this is a company with over $1 trillion market. we have seen jeff bezos try to reassure workers but that may not be enough in this is picking up steam against the company.
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jillian: facebook releases county by county maps and what are they showing? >> people reporting their symptoms, they released a county by county map showing clusters of self-reported covid-19 symptoms exist, those who contribute voluntarily, a facebook survey, mark zuckerberg said the goal is to give officials an idea where they should be directing resources like ppe supplies, maybe ventilators. it is described as a heat mass, the first released, 2 million responses expanding worldwide but people going onto facebook, i have got it, i am sick, staying home because they weren't sick enough to go to the doctor and get tested. this is an interesting way to find out the true number of cases but it relies on folks and their honesty. rob: you have people randomly saying that.
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thank you so much. jillian: bud light bringing a different kind of booze to the nfl draft. >> come on! rob: to keep the annual tradition going bud light wants videos of roger goodell posted to social media with blue the commissioner, they will donate one dollar to the nfl fundraiser. jillian: the draft is the third day the league, there was a technical glitch on the first pick. time to check in with steve doocy, a man that we never blue. >> good to see you. i know you don't, i appreciate
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that. they are yelling to, not blue. coming up on "fox and friends" 17 minutes from now they are talking about trying to figure a way to open up florida in five days. we have the governor of the great state of florida ron desantis who has the plan, task force, congressman brian mass. some of our favorite faces on "fox and friends," stuart varney talking about money, judge andrew napolitano talking about the law, the president's executive order to freeze immigration and former congressman jason chaffetz. we are in the midst of a pandemic, doctor siegal, doctor covid-19 -- dr. nicole saphier and doctor haas, ted cruz, the senate could have a vote today, negotiators finalize a deal on the rounds, half $1 trillion plus check this out.
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sunset solidarity, colorado first responders and musicians play bagpipes and drums every night to put on an outdoor concert for the community. one of the band members who is also a nurse will join us live, a busy 3 hours kicks off 15 minutes from now on the channel you trust for your morning news, back in a few. i use rakuten to get cash back in-store and online. or anything i want to buy is going to be on rakuten. rakuten is easy to use, free to sign up and it's in over 3,000 stores. i buy a lot of makeup. shampoo, conditioner. books, food. travel. shoes. stuff for my backyard. anything from clothes to electronics. workout gear. i even recently got cash back on domain hosting. you can buy tires. to me, rakuten is a great way to get cash back on anything you buy. rack it up with rakuten, sign up today to get cash back on everything you buy.
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china is, quote, a victim of the virus. dan crenshaw and tom con spearheading a bill that would allow americans to sue china's government for damages. congresswoman alexandria ocasio cortez celebrity the oil price crashing below 0 for the first time in history, the green new deal crusader posting a now deleted tweet, love to see it, low interest rates means it is the right time for a worker that mass investment in green infrastructure to save our planet. jillian: after learning about the moving forward initiative on this show, one iowa man expanding the mission in his own community donating gift cards to frontline workers and at risk individuals as a way to help shuttered restaurants get the business they so desperately need. joining us with an update on their progress is leslie good dell and feedforward and
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volunteer scott duncan. >> thank you. jillian:. 8 million restaurant employees have been laid off or further due to the pandemic. that is why you decided, to buy these gift cards to restaurants, donating them to those who desperately needed in the community. >> we just passed the 50,$000 donation mark last friday and we are four weeks in as of today. an outpouring by the community, the goal we talked about this in the last couple days, how do we keep this going? as the need increases we want to keep supporting but at the same time everybody else is still at home and trying to figure out
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the next course of action. we want to keep this going. how do we add on and build on to what we have already done. jillian: 50,$800 since march 2, '04, really credible that number. i will bring you in. i know that you saw our story with leslie a few weeks ago, you were inspired to do it in your community. your goal was $2,000. tell me how much you have raised so far. >> so far $7,120 as of last night with 125 donors. jillian: that is incredible. >> widely success for a town of 16,000. jillian: every dollar counts, every little bit you can do. >> for an essential worker that taught me not to be scared to do something. i have to go to work and i know how it is for those people. i wanted to help the frontline
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workers. i know how the restaurant business works and understand what they are going through. jillian: what has the reaction been like? some people were brought to tears when you gave these donations, these gift cards. >> yesterday is the most touching moment for me. a coffee shop, got to figure, people staying in their beds, in their clothes, working from home, pretty touching to be told about our story and what we are doing for her and our gift cards, she lives here and started crying and it was very touching, one of my favorite moments. jillian: leslie, you sent me the message scott had sent to you. you have been able to touch people in multiple states across the country. how did that feel? >> thanks for having me a couple weeks ago after we talked about this, i got called from people around the country.
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starter kit tell people get off the ground to people in mississippi, florida, virginia, massachusetts, delaware, colorado. it has been amazing to think there are so many people who want to have a purpose right now and give back at a time we are seeing so many stories that can crush our souls, these should uplift everybody and now there are so many people out there, the grassroots campaigns at the community level to make a difference. people are everywhere, thanks for helping spread the word. jillian: you are making an important difference right now. keep doing your thing and keep updating us. we will be right back.
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>> i think it's unconscionable on a human level folks were shown mercy and this is what some have done. jillian: mayor blooz seemed surprised that some of the inmates he released during to covid-19 where back to committing crime. carley: new york city granted early release to 1400 prisoners in effort to stop the covid-19 in a prison system. a move that appears to have backfired. according to the "new york post." at least 50 of the new rye li released prisoners have been rearrested for new crimes in
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recent weeks. de blasio says the recidivism rate is low but any amount is concerning. and some on social media say that this is his fault. john tweeting who could have known, oh yeah everyone. david chiming in saying bill, that's why they were in jail in the first place. on the other hand. 300 inmates, 500 correction department employees have tested positive for covid-19. two inmates have been killed by the virus so far. jillian: so will we see some baseball any time soon? here is what dr. fauci has to say about that. >> it's going to be the virus that determines what the timetable is. because if we get the virus under really good control, it is conceivable that you may be able to have some baseball with people practicing physical separation. carley: dr. fauci said it is possible to be able to go to a game this year. the more probable outcome is games without any fans in the stands. and him just leaving the door
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open has social media talking. one twitter user says just play baseball without fans. don't allow the news reporters in the player's room and dustin tweets i'm fine with television baseball. i just want baseball. so, dr. fauci says if players are allowed to go to games. they probably will have to wear face masks which takes the fun away i don't know how you eat a hot dog. rob: if you miss going to restaurants a lot of us do. this could help, right? carley: yeah. a georgia dad turned his home into a i had batchy restaurant for his young son's birthday. he has the skills. i would like to draw your attention to the paper bag hat which is a very nice touch. this video going viral with over 700,000 views. some have been inspired to try their hand at i had batchy as well. hold off on the egg tossing trick and the onion volcano, i would leave that to the professionals. jillian: that is so cute.
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i love that. carley: if you watch the whole video his folks have enthralled. rob: i miss going to dinner i'm tired of the four things i know how to cook. jillian: got to go. "fox & friends" starts now. have a good day. steve: it is 6:00 in the east on this tuesday, april 21st and we start with a fox news alert. reports this morning that kim jong un may be in critical condition and grave danger following cardiac surgery. rumors have been swirling about the north korean dictator's health for a while. and now u.s. intel agencies are reportedly monitoring those. brian. brian: yeah. he missed the celebration for his grandfather's birthday last week which is really mystifying. last seen at a meeting a few days before. ainsley: south korea's government pushing back on this report saying it has not seen
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