tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News June 26, 2021 3:00am-7:00am PDT
3:00 am
3:01 am
boom, boom. rachel: now we know what they are having he had hegseth household. pete: we are glad you are here. we will be talking about topics like that but there is tough news this morning as well. we begin with a fox news alert. the search for survivors of the florida condo collapse continues this morning. rachel: it's been more than 48 hours now and the crews are still digging through the rubble looking for signs of life. pete: family members hanging pictures of missing loved ones on a memorial wall near the collapse side. charles joins us with the latest on the search efforts. charles? >> hey, good morning.
3:02 am
first responders continue to sift through the rubble at the collapse site searching for any signs of life or bodies that may be trapped underneath. what's really making these search and rescue efforts even more difficult is the fact that there are fires smoldering underneath the mountain of debris, as a result the fire chief says some of the areas of the collapse site run acceptable right now as they try to get to folks. >> very strategic methodical process. what we're looking for areas of boys. possible patient survivability and that's where we are focusing. >> now, what caused this condo building, which had 136 units, to collapse is unclear right now. but according to the "new york times," building managers were warned in 2018 to repair cracked columns in concrete. that work was about to happen when the building collapsed just the other day. a federal team of investigators from the national institute of
3:03 am
standards and technology are expected on site at some point so they can begin looking into what happened. rights now as it stands, 159 people are still unaccounted for and at least four people are confirmed dead. so far only one victim has been identified. she is 54-year-old stacey fang, the mother of the teen boy who was pulled from the rubble the other day. the family released a statement that reads, quote there are no words to describe the to grieve and try to help each other heal. so far, guys, one class action lawsuit has been filed on behalf of the victims it alleges the condominium association failed to secure and safeguard the lives and property of the folks living in that building whether that is true or not will all play out in court. what's clear right now there are a lot of family members right now hoping for some good news as
3:04 am
these search and rescue efforts continue. guys? rachel: thank you, charles. just so heart breaking. again, they're hearing little bits of sound. they are following the sounds, hoping that some of those sounds are people but they are not sure. and, again, charles brought up an interesting point. it was about to be recertified for safety this year first time in 40 years. and this happened. will: it's impossibly awful story. defies expectation. no one thinks you would be sitting in a building and presume to be safe and it crumbles in totality, i know not the entire building fell about 159 still missing. the story is still as the search for survivors continues and then the search for the cause. rachel: absolutely. pete: in other news kamala harris kind of finally found her way to the southern border. she was met there by two protesters. got a lot of briefings, met with migrants, talked to officials
3:05 am
there in el paso. so that is where she decided to go. i think we have some video of some of the protests she was met with hey, does this look like europe? but, ultimately, el paso was where she went. reporters went along with her as she was getting these briefings. and as has been asked multiple times as to why she hasn't gone. our own peter doocy asked her why did it take you so long to go? why is this the first trip have you made if you are in charge of what is going on as far as migration to our country, here is how the vice president answered our own peter doocyy. pete: why was right now the right time to make your first trip to the border. >> i have been to the border. march to the border. this is not a new plan. pete: real quick i have been here. i have been here. as a senator i have been here. but this is a textbook of walking into a responsibility you never wanted. and now made this trip and you
3:06 am
have made the trip to the central america, she owns it whether she wants to or not. rachel: it's interesting she chose el paso not southern texas it will veronica escobar instead of henry cuellar represents communities in texas. i think she was trying several messages one i think she is saying i have quote to get there before trump that was one important part of the plan. the second part of the plan is that i think she is trying to say this is not a crisis. then she used representative he escobar this is ellis island. >> welcome to my community, to the new ellis island, to the capital of the border. i have a heart full of gratitude because we finally have an administration willing to tackle the big challenges, challenges that our country have dealt with
3:07 am
for decades and el paso's front door is one that has always been one of dignity and humanity and compassion. will: you know, kamala harris is a politician. politician largely do things for public image. they make decisions based upon not so much does this go towards solving the problem that i'm past soling that i have addressed the problem passed with solving. you browntd you are right. will el paso not president trump to the punch. she chose el paso not only because veronica escobar is the representative of that district. she chose el paso it's 100 miles or so away from fort bliss a will crisis burgeoning whether it comes to the minors in custody there at fort bliss army base but also as you pointed out, rachel, thousand miles away from mcallen texas where the
3:08 am
problem is the most acute. the timing also reflects that when to go. as to el paso being the modern day ellis island, this is symbolic of everything in our illegal immigration debate it totally takes the word illegal out of the debate over immigration. pete: absolutely it does. in fact, i did a segment at ellis island a couple years ago for "fox & friends" when something similar like this came up and showed the process by which in a legal manner immigrants arrived at our shores, which is -- there is -- there is a young man on our screen right there walking into ellis island. rachel: there he is. pete: entirely different chaos the chaos we are encountering at the southern border right now. i don't know if we can put the map back up there. but she is charged, she says, with root causes. right? that's her charge. i'm not the border czar, i'm in charge of root causes. this if you go to el paso, you are dealing almost exclusively with mexican migrants. almost exclusively because if
3:09 am
you look at it it's further north. if you are coming from the northern triangle countries, you are going to mcallen because it's closer. it's a shorter trip. so if you are charge is root causes. you would go to mcallen. that's where people are coming from central america. if you go to el paso, those are mostly mexican migrants. are. will: there is a train that goes directly where you are talking about where central americans ride on this train all over. you have seen images on the top on the side. pete: griff has ridden on it. rachel: many children ride the top, fall off, get named. this journey is very, very dangerous. she went to mcallen saying she was there because she was making a statement about what trump had done with the children and the separation of the families, again, ignoring the dangers that the children are still going through. essentially she said this it welcome the doors are open. we seal more of this.
3:10 am
will: talk more about the condition of those children later in the show. talk about this idea that somehow el paso or the southern border is thought ellis island of our immigration debate. we will talk about that a little bit later in the show. bring you this as well. a new fox news poll issued in the last 24 hours it shows that trust in social media companies among the american population has absolutely and appropriately plummeted. you can see there 26 people of people, only 26 people of people trust social media companies to make fair decisions. pete: who are those 26%. ains. rachel: i was going to say who are those 26%? they must be people who work for google. pete: email at foxnews.com. do you really trust those tech companies right now? one guy a voice of clarity on a lot of issues like this surprisingly, but increasingly is bill maher and i spoke out about what big tech did on, say, the lab leak as an example of why we may not want to trust him. watch. >> facebook banned any post for
3:11 am
four months about covid coming from a lab. of course, now, even the biden administration is looking into this. they don't do auto fill searches for coronavirus lab leak the way they do it for any other question. and the guy said well, we want to make sure the search isn't leading people down pathways that we would find to be not authoritative information. well, you were wrong, google and facebook. we don't know. the reason why we want you is because we are checking -- [ laughter ] will: the reason why we are putting a search into the search bar is for additional information. really quickly, i talked about in this week "fox news primetime" being. pete: great job by the way. will: you will be watching it one week from now. jesse watters fills in the gap between you and me. this is important to note. google had funded some of the research at ecohealth alliance which was funding research at the wuhan institute of virology
3:12 am
and then google censored any conversation about whether or not covid might have come from a lab. so, in other words, google was censoring information about possible projects they were funding. that is a mass scandal that has as of yet not received enough attention. rachel: censors from google. they come from silicon valley. the pandemic has just revealed so much about all of it i mean, even the early treatment to me is such a scandal that they took those off their platforms. anybody who suggested doctors, doctors, virologists, scientists who suggested that we should, you know, give these early treatments were censored, removed from the platform and people died because they didn't get these early treatments. that's a scandal, too. rachel: you have been all over that rachel because they still are censoring conversations over
3:13 am
ivermectin. pete: none of these were papa jamas thought man corporate toadies that will do whatever the it boss wants. rachel: senator ron johnson will be on our show tomorrow to stay tuned for that. will: a fox news alert. a fugitive captured after days long man hunt. they have arrested othal it he was found in a tree house. he was charged with shooting officer raynard's. shows the officer trying to get wallace out of a car when he suddenly turned and opened fire. daytona beach residents organized a car parade who is still fighting for his life. former officer derek chauvin sentenced to 22 and a half years behind bars for the killing of george floyd. floyd's family called it not enough. >> 22 year sentence this gave
3:14 am
this man is a slap on the wrist. will: heart breaking message from floyd's 7-year-old daughter gianna was played in court. listen. >> if you could say anything to your daddy right now, what would it be? >> it would be i miss you and i love you. will: chauvin spoke briefly at his sentencing he offered condolences to floyd's family. and a long awaited ufo report falling short on answers. it says the u.s. government has no explanation for the 143 unidentified flying objects spotted by military pilots since 2004. at they were only confident about one incident which turned out to be a large deflating balloon. pete: way way. will: 144 that sightings could be linked to aliens but didn't rule it out either. pete: big nothing burger. rachel: only nothing what they
3:15 am
gave us. the story is incredible. pete: not incredible until you have evidence. this morning todd piro out in connecticut having are breakfast with friends with the south fort diner. will ♪ ♪ dad, why didn't you answer your phone? your mother loved this park. ♪♪ she did. my plaque psoriasis... ...the itching ...the burning. the stinging. my skin was no longer mine. my psoriatic arthritis, made my joints stiff,
3:16 am
swollen... painful. emerge tremfyant™. with tremfya®, adults with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis... ...can uncover clearer skin and improve symptoms at 16 weeks. tremfya® is the only medication of its kind also approved for adults with active psoriatic arthritis. serious allergic reactions may occur. tremfya® may increase your risk of infections and lower your ability to fight them. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms or if you had a vaccine or plan to. tremfya®. emerge tremfyant™. janssen can help you explore cost support options. ♪ ♪ aging is a journey. you can't always know what's ahead. since 1995, seniors have opened their doors to right at home for personalized care. to be their guide. to steer them through uncharted territory. and when it comes right down to it, to keep them safe at home. after all, home is the best place to be. right at home. navigating what's to come.
3:18 am
♪welcome back to that same old place♪ ♪that you laughed about♪ ♪well, the names have all changed♪ ♪since you hung around♪ welcome back, america. it sure is good to see you. rachel: desperate rescue efforts ongoing in surfside florida condo collapse four found dead as the nation hopes for a miracle in finding survivors amid the rubble. the federal government is sending scientists to investigate how this could happen. our next guest is the founder of architecture and interior design and worked on a series of prominent buildings in surfside miami beach kobe joins us now. thanks for joining us. you are actually the right person to answer some of our questions as an architect, what
3:19 am
do you think happened here. good morning, thank you for having me. our hearts and prayers are going out to our friends and our neighbors who live in this building and in this community this event is essentially what what we are seeing this far is an event that is added by a number of components that have allowed the demise number of people have people have looked at this structure before and while they have looked at the various components and right at this point in time we don't have a final decision or a final solution until the engineering is done on this building which is rather young. this building is a 1981
3:20 am
structure i was in high school at that time. i was 1 years old. so it's a rather young structure. rachel: we have a quote from an engineering back in 2018 or warned of major structural damage he said though some of this damage is minor, most of the concrete deterioration needs to be repaired in a timely fashion. obviously that did not happen is this disaster the cause of regulations not being followed? what do you think is to blame for this? >> this is probably one of the causes that led to this event. obviously, it's at the end of the day it's a number of events happening at the same time poem were working on the work trying to repair it a water problem on the deck and roof. people were trying to fix this falling concrete. as you know this falling
3:21 am
concrete essentially occurs to most of the structures that we have here in south florida. but, we have similar structures that we have been working on that were built in the 1920s, 30's, 40's, 50's. many other structures from the fountain we built in the 1960s to the cadillac hotel built in the '20s. these structures are standing just fine. the question is why-what were the number of events, if you will, that created this horrendous structural failure or this building in the middle of the night when nobody was working on it? rachel: well, we are going to get to the bottom of this soon right now. the rescue is the most important thing but the investigation is starting right now as well. kobi karp thank you for joining us this morning. >> thank you. rachel: coming up, the doj is suing florida. the governor is fighting back.
3:22 am
governor kemp will join us later in the show. stay with us. mutual's coverage customizer tool? so you only pay for what you need. sorry? limu, you're an animal! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ over the years, mercedes-benz has patented thousands of safety innovations. crash-tested so many cars we've stopped counting. and built our most punishing test facility yet, in our effort to build the world's safest cars. we've created crumple zones and autonomous braking. active lane keeping assist and blind spot assist. we've introduced airbags, side curtain airbags, and now the first-ever rear-mounted front-impact airbags. all in the hope that you never need any of it.
3:24 am
talk to me. what do we got? when you have xfinity xfi, with blazing speed... [ screaming ] a powerful connection. that's another level. and ultimate control. power us up. you can do more than you ever thought possible. yes! hold on. get a powerful and secure connection you can count on. only with xfinity xfi. and see f9 only in theaters. ♪ ♪
3:25 am
you be. pete: we're back with quick headlines a long running portland event forced to relocate because a nearby homeless encampment. the portland classic aptly named will be held at a new venue for the first time in 30 years. organizers say homeless encampment surrounding the venue's parking lot is creating a safety risk. bitcoin buyer get ready elon
3:26 am
musk jack dorsey will discuss the crypto currency next month will focus on educational initiative to promote adoption and awareness of bitcoin. rachel: i will be too. only thing excited about these days is bitcoin. will: bitcoin came up and i swung my head to you. rachel: totally. i'm blaming you for all the problems i'm having in my marriage. will: june is pride month to celebrate we are shining a spotlight those in the lgbtq to work to encourage love and acceptance. rachel: bryan llenas interviewed the first openly gay governor. brian joins us now with more. >> good morning. had this as we tour the governor's mansion with colorado's governor jarrod polus. we spoke about his family the state of lgbtq plus rights in this country and how his first term in office is going.
3:27 am
>> bring me back to the moment that you won at the victory campaign speech. >> it still is just almost like pinch me. it's hard to believe it? >> wow. >> i remember just hugging marlin and being like we did it and we both went down and it's all a blur frankly. >> you can't blame him. a lot has happened since 2018 when colorado's governor jared polis became the first openly gay governor in u.s. history. >> have you processed the impact that your win has had on the lgbtq plus community and to young people? >> i don't think i have had any time to do it. we have been managing a pandemic a global recession. it's been crazy. and, obviously, you know, my relationship has been a source of strength. >> that source of strength is colorado's first first jamar lynn reese. they have been together for 17 years and have two children. >> these are the first ladies of colorado. and then you can see there is one that's not like the others.
3:28 am
there he is. firstafter colorado marlin reese. >> i first have to say congratulations on your engagement. you did it as a pretty interesting tense moment for you and your family. >> we both got sick with covid is when i popped the question. he had to go to the hospital. right before he went to the hospital, that's when i popped it. i knew -- i certainly hoped it wouldn't be my last chance. you know, i was confident he would get better and he did. he spent a couple days in the hospital. but i just wanted to make sure. >> before his 10 year stent in congress polis was an entrepreneur he made hundreds of millions creating pro-flowers.com the online flower delivery service. >> this is so exciting being governor because it a little bit more like being a business pepper. you are the executive authority. we have 31,000 employee notice city of colorado. how do you make everyone more efficient and deliver services better. >> polis' election is years of lgbtq plus acceptance. 25 years ago colorado was dubbed the hate state after blocking
3:29 am
anti-gay discrimination laws. now the pride flag hangs at the state capitol. >> are you surprised at the speed and why do you think it's happened so quickly. >> as people get to know their gay friends, gay neighbors, gay family members, they are realizing that they are people just like anybody else. and we judge people on their character. >> we come together. >> noting pete buttigieg's husk campaign for president, polis an out gay person can win the presidency. >> do you know what? voters ultimately don't care, you know, who you are dating or who you love. what they care about is they want to make sure your personal life is not a mess. in general, they care about your plans, right? they want to know what are you going to do for me. >> what's your advice as young people who see you as a source of inspiration. >> if you know you have that supportive family and most kids want a sense of that. i think it's great to be honest with your parents and really have that discussion. if you are worried. if you are watching this and
3:30 am
have real treason worry that they might kick you out or might remove your security, you can wait a few years until you are a little bit more independent. mostly parents do the right thing. they love their kids no matter what. and it's always better to have that hospital relationship thatt relationship. >> first u.s. congressman to a be a same sex parent and also the first jewish american governor in colorado's history. back to you. pete: for more stories head to foxnews.com/america together. still ahead todd piro is at the diner having breakfast with friends. good morning. >> pete, i'm rocking the untuckit shirt first time in 15 years. denies all with the fried food. the folks are going to talk issues of the day. here did you go boys and girls. more "fox & friends" on the
3:31 am
3:34 am
new projects means new project managers. neutrogena®. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a short list of quality candidates from our resume database. claim your seventy five dollar credit, when you post your first job at indeed.com/home. ♪ ♪ ♪ the world doesn't know your name ♪ what's your name. >> alexander hamilton.
3:35 am
rachel: that's your shot of the morning tom brady and james corden give a rendition from the hit musical hamilton. pete: hit the links to prepare for upcoming charity tournament. will: brady and phil mickelson up against aaron rogers who is going to play some sports this year in montana next month. i will put money on why tom brady can sing that song from hamilton. rachel: why? will: because his children can my son knows every lyric. kids love rapping that hamilton stuff. pete: good tip. will: having breakfast with friends in south fort, connecticut. todd is at the diner talking to diners. todd: this is the first diner i have done literally since tiewrp tuesday and nothing has happened in the world since super tuesday we don't have anything to talk about. i'm joking. are we back?
3:36 am
[cheers] todd: you run a bunch of karate schools. you say you are seeing a ton of new signups are you back? >> i am back and very excited about it we have had our school precovid dropped about 65%. and we are almost all the way back now, todd. todd: but you did say that you run a bunch of schools in texas and florida and they were back the entire time. >> correct. they never had to close. we had to close for three months. todd: thank you. we have done a bunch of stories about graduations being locked down and really, really ugly and kids not being able to celebrate. you had a different experience with your daughter. >> last week a graduation in west haven over 400 kids graduated. my daughter was one of them. sang the national anthem i gave her a diploma which is a really nice honor. west haven did an awesome job. todd: she sang the national anthem, how cool was that. >> that was really great. todd: congrats to your daughter. it's not all positive news, guys. jonathan, a commercial fishing business. he says the green new deal is going to kill that industry.
3:37 am
why do you say that? >> they are placing these wind turbines right on top of productive fishing grounds right outside of new york city. scallop and skid grounds with no input from the fishing industry. todd: what's that going to do to the price of my seafood. it's summer i want to have lobster and shrimp. what's it going to do to the cost of seafood in the country. >> the cost will rise but you will also buy more foreign sourced seafood. todd: which means you are not going to be buying american. >> you are not going to be buying american and you can't depend on the quality. todd: so it's not just the keystone pipeline and oil that's getting affected. it's you guys too. >> yes. and you will also pay higher electricity bills similar to what they have in europe right now. todd: we have a little bit more time. go see a lady. i'm coming over here. ladies. >> hi. todd: how are things going this morning? >> they are going great. ed to 2025 are you excited the first weekend of summer? are we back? >> we are back. todd: is everything perfect in
3:38 am
america though? >> no. todd: what is upsetting you. >> america is still great. america is still great. todd: can we all agree with that america is still great? >> america is wonderful. todd: we need more than. that is america still great? guys, southport connecticut positivity. now it's your job in new york city to raise your positivity game. bring it boys. pete: we will try. rachel: hard to match the todd piro positivity. we love you. pete: that's what you why call him tv's todd piro. will: i like people that get up at 6:30 a.m. on a saturday and go get themselves bacon and eggs and coffee. pete: much respect. will: todd, thank you. pete: few additional headlines as well the family of paul and maggie murdaugh offering $100,000 reward leading to the connection of those responsible for their double murder. the mother and son were found shot to death on their property
3:39 am
earlier this month. alex murdaugh, imaginey's husband and paul's father announced the reward. he said in a statement, quote, now is the time to bring justice for maggie and paul. and republican senator josh hawley accuses a democratic group of harassing his sister at her workplace. the missouri lawmaker posted this photo on twitter showing a billboard truck with a negative add outside dr. leslie holly's dermatology office in springfield, missouri. senator hawley claims it's from really american a progressive leaning pac group hawley saying this is disgusting and cowardly behavior. if they have a problem with me come to my office and take it up to me. but to target and harass my sister and those she serves is pathetic and shameful. rachel: she is a veteran by the way. pete: i bet she could take care of things if she needed. to say all relationships have challenges and clearly reading is one of mine. [laughter]
3:40 am
but not many are about pizza. watch. >> do you think if i asked for pineapple on the pizza that they would give it to me? >> if that is so i can't continue to live here. [laughter] pete: that is italian man horrified when his fiancee asked about pineapple on pizza. the man admits the controversial topping is okay because he couldn't have people know they were together. rachel: that's awesome. will: look how passionate he is. i want to hear more of what he is telling her. rachel: me too. this is people who take food very seriously. he would definitely not like your pizza eating habits pizza hut? pete: i don't have i don't put pineapple on my pizza i do have standards. will: i will be looking up that video during the commercial break. rachel: i know. will: suing the state over
3:41 am
voting law is this move weaponizing the doj to carry out a far left agenda? we will ask jonathan turley if the lawsuit has merit next. ♪ ♪ the lexus es. every curve, every innovation, every feeling. a product of mastery. get 0.9% apr financing on the 2021 es 350. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. ♪ sometimes you wanna go ♪ ♪ where everybody knows your name ♪ ♪♪ ♪ and they're always glad you came ♪ welcome back, america. it sure is good to see you. welcome back, america. it syou need an ecolab you. scientific clean here. and you need it here.
3:42 am
and here. and here. which is why the scientific expertise that helps operating rooms stay clean is now helping the places you go every day too. seek a commitment to clean. look for the ecolab science certified seal. when we started carvana, they told us that selling cars 100% online wouldn't work. but we went to work. building an experience that lets you shop over 17,000 cars from home. creating a coast to coast network
3:43 am
to deliver your car as soon as tomorrow. recruiting an army of customer advocates to make your experience incredible. and putting you in control of the whole thing with powerful technology. that's why we've become the nation's fastest growing retailer. because our customers love it. see for yourself, at carvana.com. if you have risk factors like heart disease, diabetes and raised triglycerides,... ...vascepa can give you something to celebrate. ♪ vascepa, when added to your statin,... ...is clinically proven to provide 25% lower risk from heart attack and stroke. vascepa is clearly different. first and only fda approved. celebrate less risk. even for those with family history. ♪ don't take vascepa if you are... ...or become allergic to icosapent ethyl or any inactive ingredient in vascepa. serious side effects may occur like heart rhythm problems and bleeding. heart rhythm problems may occur in more people...
3:44 am
...with persistent cardiovascular risk or who have had them in the past. tell your doctor if you experience an irregular heartbeat or other heart rhythm problems. possible side effects include muscle and joint pain. celebrate less risk. added cardio protection. talk to your doctor about adding protection with vascepa. ♪ rachel: we're back with some quick headlines, marilyn manson will reportedly turn himself into police over alleged assault charges. the assault rocker is wanted in new hampshire for spitting on a havingographer's camera in 2019. it comes as man son faces abuse accusations for more than a dozen women. and the children of alex trebek and larry king accept posthumous awards for their fathers. took home emmy for outstanding
3:45 am
game show host while chance it took home outstanding talk who he host. given a separate tribute along with the late regis philbin. todd: the justice department taking georgia to court as merrick garland sues the state in an attempt to overturn new voting law. >> our complaint alleges that recent changes to georgia's election laws were enacted with the purpose of denying or abridging the right of black georgians to vote on account of their race or color. many of that law's provisions make it harder for people to vote. will: georgia governor brian kemp condemns the administration for this move saying quote they are weaponizing the department of justice to carry out far left agenda that undermines election integrity. here to react is fox news contributor and law professor at george washington university jonathan turley. quoold to talk to you this morning. i can't help but see that there might be a silver lining in this
3:46 am
story because georgia has been an issue of branding. brand the law as racist. it's existed in the media and in popular culture. actually putting it in a courtroom sort of forces the charge, the complaint to be proven. what is the prospect of the doj to point to any particular part of this law and say that has a discriminatory affect? >> i'm high will he skeptical and i think that they may ultimately regret this move. it could indeed clarify this issue in the way that the biden administration does not want. now, the democrats often attack the judges that rule against them the way that frankly the trump administration sometimes did. but, this is a very dubious case in my view. because the georgia law has great overlap with other states like delaware. voter identification as an example is extremely popular with voters. and you now see a lot of democratic members beginning to say really, we are not
3:47 am
questioning that anymore. president biden was corrected by papers like "the washington post" for misrepresenting aspects of the georgia law. and that's all going to find a rather hard stop in the courts. i will tell you, will, what's really surprising to me about this is on monday, we are expecting a ruling in the arizona election case which comes under section 26 the voting rights act that presumed basis for this lawsuit. it's very odd that they would make this announcement before they hear from the supreme court on that major election challenge. will: well, is this a possible theory just as a quick follow-up jonathan over the course of the trump administration, we saw that investigations, so process became headlines, anything anyone was investigating could be seen as a scandal regardless of the conclusion or even the evidence to support the quote, unquote investigations so the fact that they have sued georgia
3:48 am
becomes the story and so you drag that out into 2022 maybe and you say oh, well, they are subject to suit. regardless ever the merits of the suit. so i guess my question would be how long could the doj drag this out for the headline of you're being sued even if it's a weak suit? >> well, this could be years. will: there you go. >> one of the issues that the court may ultimately amplify is that elections were left in the constitution to the state. alexander hamilton actually wrote in the federalist papers imagine if the federal government was to take over the management of elections and he basically said we would all object. well, that's what's happening now in congress they are trying to essentially federalize elections and i think they are going to have a serious pushback on this lawsuit and yes, it may take time, but you could have a ruling by the next presidential election that runs against the narrative of the biden administration. will: that timing will be what
3:49 am
is interesting. we have less than a minute, jonathan, i do want to ask you about day care chauvin's sentence 22 and a half years to the murder of george floyd. always when it comes to sentencing the operative question is what are the parameters, what are the precedence? what does a defendant usually get or accused or not accused but convicted criminal usually get in a trial is it within that sort of parameter? >> i think it was. the baseline here was about 10 years lower. but he was found to having a straighting circumstances. someone who was acting through official authority. i think a lot of -- courts would have come down in this range. it was actually lower than what some people thought would be brought in. what's intriguing is chauvin's own statement to the court where he said to the family just wait, i have news coming that might bring closure. a lot of us were scratching our heads. the only thing i could think of he is considering a plea of
3:50 am
guilty to the federal charges. he still hasn't stood trial for those charges. otherwise, i can't imagine what he is -- was referencing. >> jonathan turley thank you for enlightening us this morning. >> thank you. will: up next we have the tech to make you feel safe and secure. whether you are at home or on the go. kurt the cyberguy showing off the products shaking up the market. ♪ ♪ is now a good time for a flare-up? enough, crohn's! for adults with moderate to severe crohn's or ulcerative colitis... stelara® can provide relief and is the only approved medication to reduce inflammation on and below the surface of the intestine in uc. you, getting on that flight? back off, uc! stelara® may increase your risk of infections, some serious, and cancer. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you have an infection... flu-like symptoms, sores, new skin growths,
3:51 am
3:54 am
that feeling at home and when you are out and about to get safe and secure. i have got more focus on it. and some things right now ransomware problems coming to your house, here is the idea. number one, make sure you have got proper antivirus malware protection at home and then do this. use a drive like this. this is a my passport ssd portable drive. they start at about 119. i have seen them for less on amazon, but these will -- you plug them into your device at home, your computer, your atlanta, save everything at home and then what i want you to do is unplug the device and leave it there. do this about once a month. no hacker can get to this and your private information while it's unplugged from your devices. pete: off the cloud. >> right. off the cloud. the other thing right here is just greenous for your car. if you could hire a security
3:55 am
guard to be in your car constantly, this would be it. this is the owl cam classic 5. this is most updated version that came out. this is a camera in your car. it's a lot more than that, personal vehicle security system. it's -- it is cloud based and constantly connected through 4 glte taking pictures inside your car with infrared if somebody breaks into it when you are driving and something happens, you are going to have evidence of that it's brilliant and $269. and then, you know, this pretty cool thing at home, wifi is not as secure as your cellular signal. and to boost up your cell inside your house there is ora cell phone booster from sure call it starts at $299.99. one outside, one inside. really gives you a secure connection while you are on the internet. using your phone. it's awesome it really does work regardless of whether you have a good signal or not at home. and then you finally do leave
3:56 am
your house, especially during the summer, we have seen this before for the folks that were on shark tank and they just came out with a new one called the phone vault. this is a mini portable phone safe. i actually was able to put two phones inside of it you clip this to a lounge chair, a bike, your golf cart, whenever you are out and about. and this is going to give you great protection. what they did for us, it's normally 49.95. if you put in promo code fox at the aqua vault.com, 29.95 for this and amazing for that one. i have will show you online at cyberguy.com a lot of this stuff including how alexa can guard your house. will: if pete gets the cell phone booster than me as his neighbor i get the benefit, right? i don't have to have it as well? or does it have a private log in? >> not true. you need the inside -- if you guys want to move in together you are in business. but i don't see that happening. [laughter] >> with the mrs.s obviously.
3:57 am
3:58 am
oh! are you using liberty mutual's coverage customizer tool? sorry? well, since you asked. it finds discounts and policy recommendations, so you only pay for what you need. limu, you're an animal! who's got the bird legs now? only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ keeping your oysters business growing has you swamped. you need to hire. i need indeed indeed you do. the moment you sponsor a job on indeed you get a shortlist of quality candidates from a resume data base claim your seventy-five-dollar credit when you post your first job at indeed.com/promo
4:00 am
4:01 am
had wham earlier. good morning pete and will. pete: good morning to you. raimondo do you think he is awake? rachel: no chance. pete: everyone in new orleans glad you are here. i once sought minnesota vikings play at the superdome there and we lost. rachel: at least great food. pete: awesome town. rachel: we are going to begin with a fox news alert. really sad news. rescuers are through sifting through the rubble of the surfside condo building desperately looking for any signs of life. at least four people are dead and 159 are sadly still missing. pete: staggering numbers. some areas of the site are inache accessible because of fires still burning underneath the rubble. officials say they remain determined the world is crying
4:02 am
for surfside and waiting for us to bring their loved ones out and that's what we're going to do. will: an engineer warned of major structural damage to the complex and urged them to repair in 2018. work was about to get underway when the building collapsed keep you updated on that story throughout the morning and as the story develops in the coming days. now let's turn to this the department of justice suing georgia over their voting law and georgia governor brian kemp is now accusing the biden administration of weaponizing the doj by targeting his state's election integrity act. here is what attorney general merrick garland had to say about the georgia law. our complaint alleges that recent changes to georgia's election laws were enacted with the purpose of denying or abridging the right of black georgians to vote on account of their race or color in violation of section 2 of the voting rights act. rachel: meanwhile you had
4:03 am
jonathan turley on earlier this morning and he had -- will did, will did, i'm sorry about that. [laughter] rachel: i did see the segment. but here's what jonathan turley had to say about it. >> i think that they may ultimately regret this move. it could indeed clarify this issue in the way that the biden administration does not want. one of the issues that the court may ultimately amplify is that elections were left in the constitution to the states, alexander hamilton actually wrote in the federalist papers manage if the federal government take over the management of election and he would basically say we would all object. well, that's what's happening now in congress, they are trying to essentially federalize elections and i think they are going to have a serious pushback on this lawsuit. you could have a ruling by the next presidential election that runs against the narrative of the biden administration. pete: that was a clarifying aspect of that interview.
4:04 am
ultimately a lawsuit like this brought to a supreme court that now is tilts conservative could actually end up absolutely verifying that what the state of georgia did. which said we had, because of covid, a lot of confusion, we don't have clean voter roles. we are going to do something about that. we want voter i.d. we don't want marv mailout ballots we are going to clarify. the supreme court does that it actually hurts the narrative of the biden administration at the same time though you raise the right question which was you muddy the waters enough with a lawsuit, make it look illegitimate until -- will: walk through this at first blush seems to set up the biden administration for at least two lawsuits. we know that the georgia law was branded racist. and most of that brand couldn't be backed up by substance. so why would the biden administration the department of justice walk in to that. what seems like a certain loss. i think have a hard time, a lot of trouble backing up the claims that this is discriminatory or that is discriminatory. i think they would lose that suited. and jonathan agreed with that
4:05 am
poo penaltiality. also in point in turn they could lose the idea that the federal government step in and meddle with elections anyway it's a state issue. they seem to be walking into two likely losses, so why do it? because if you spend two years dragging out a fight you can say georgia is under investigation. georgia is being sued. and maybe that narrative continues to play through 22 through midterm elections, and maybe even into 2024. pete: because then the result of that lawsuit ends up on page a 16 somewhere and nobody ever sees it. rachel: there are potential benefits to racializing everything. we are going to have governor brian kemp coming up in the 8:00 a.m. hour. you want to stay tuned for that meanwhile, nikeens ceo john donahue had a call with his earnings call earlier, by the way, nike earnings up the highest ever this past week. and during that call, he said to the people on the call, quote:
4:06 am
we are the largest sports brand there in china. we are a brand of china, we are for china and the biggest asset we have in china is consumer equity, consumers feel a strong, deep connection to nike, jordan and converse brands in china and its real. so connecting himself, his company to china, a country, pete, with massive human rights abuses. i mean, they have concentration camps in modern daytimes not only that we know they have, you know, we leased code onto the globe and there has been massive repercussions for american lives and american economy. pete: nike doesn't care saying of china and for china you couldn't say anything more directly than what nike ceo said. far cry from when it was started in what was it eugene, oregon. somewhere in oregon is where phil knight started it he starterred it by importing shoes from japan from the very
4:07 am
beginning. selling them out of a van on the west coast. but, nike was able to grow because of the capitalism and the fertile ground and entrepreneurship of america. because of the massive consumer base there in china, where they believed they can create and sell cheap goods from china to lebron james to everything else, will, you know the sporting world so directly. that is a market for them. and it's not about the american flag, it's not about capitalism, it's a market and so they will say whatever they need, to because they have to kowtow to their masters in china. will: that's the two takeaways, we both picked up our paper at the same time to read the print version of what he had to say. it's a brand or of china and for china. ultimately, it's not because nike wants to be a chinese communist party country. what it's due to is they want to got largest market in the world and make a bunch of money. they know in order to do that they are going to have to say outlandish things like this to
4:08 am
do business just like we have seen with holiday and tech hollywood and techcompanies andl world. pete: not the lebron james orsonna. they are not supporters of the chinese communist party. they want to make gobs of cash they know that's where it is they suppress themself. agent and company calls them you can't say, this otherwise you won't have access to china. there isn't enough of a well of patriotism for our own country. rachel: that's the part that's really sad for me. and you saw with lebron james, especially, that he, you know, said freedom of speech, you know, we ought to really not worry about that because, you know products matter more. pete: if they told us our ratings could go up 30 fold on "fox & friends" if we broadcast in china and our salaries would all go up but have to stop criticizing the communist chinese as a result.
4:09 am
rachel: not worth it to me. pete: of course it's not worth it someone apolitical who wants to make a ton of money. they are happy to sell it out. that's what you see. rachel: then they lecture america about a lot of stuff but not china. anyway, we now have to turn to this. the truth is still out there. the long awaited intelligence report on ufos is released but it fall shorts on answers claiming most sightings can't be explained. lucas tomlinson is live in washington with more. lucas? >> good morning, rachel. this ufo report is likely to leave many people unsatisfied. the u.s. government says it has little explanation for 143 sightings since 2004. the evidence remains largely unconclusive. the unclassified report from the director of national intelligence warns these unidentified objects clearly pose a safety of flight issue and may pose a challenge to u.s. national security. these observations could be the result of sensorsers spoofing that require vigorous analysis.
4:10 am
this classified video from a fighter jet off the coast of florida reignited the public's interest in ufos. >> my gosh. the wind is 120 miles west. look at that thing, dude. it's rotating. oh my gosh, dude. >> wow. >> what is that? >> senator marco rubio said the report is just the first step quote: the defense department intelligence community have a lot of work to do before we can actually understand where these aerial threats present a serious national security concern. adam schiff wants to know if flying objects are the work of a foreign adversary, space debris or something else entirely. those who believe in aliens are likely to remain very hopeful. will, rachel, pete, great to see you guys together. will: thank you, lucas. rachel: do you believe they are telling us everything, will? will: this is my opinion on this. i do get giddy and happy. we had this conversation the other night over a cocktail, but
4:11 am
we suggested that i think most of our thought process on everything is entirely too constipated we are told you can only think about things in a certain band width, politically world view. it would serve us to think broader. here we have a topic we don't know the answer and we don't know what it is. we shouldn't jump to the conclusion, i think, that it's nothing. i don't think we should jump to the conclusion that it's alien. i don't know what it may be. it could be as odd and as extreme is it time travel? is it people from another time, space and dimension? it could be as benign as balloons. but, everything should be on the table. rachel: everything should be on the table because if there is an encounter -- whenever you have a new civilization and by the way they seem to be eons ahead of technologically whatever it is. it never goes well for the people aren't as technologically savvy. think about the encounter of columbus into the new world.
4:12 am
it didn't go well for the new world if you are one of those. will: explain your faith. pete: am i on the sideline morning show? will: how do you rationalize your point of view on this versus the conversation we had the other night? pete: i have no idea. first of all, i'm hung up on the fact that will you used the phrase mental constipation which i have never heard used. it's fantastic. will: thank you. pete: i'm going to integrate it remember there was one instance they could write off deflating balloon makes sense have you ever deflated a balloon and let it go like this. that to me is the best explanation, you guys are talking about aliens are rising and being on the right side. will: f-18 radar does not all have to be explained to a balloon going like this. rachel: i'm saying the military people who saw it were freaked out by it. pete: i need some mental will. will: you could need mental
4:13 am
exlax. arrest made in terrifying shooting that sent two kids ducking for cover in the bronx. michael lopez is a gang member who has five prior arrests and out on parole for attempted murder at the time of the shooting. police believe he was trying to carry out a hit on a rival that day. lopez now faces another attempted murder charge. reckless endangerment and more. a united airlines flight running in to a bit of trouble on the tarmac at lax. los angeles international airport. officials say the salt lake city bound expressed jet was pushing back from the gate last night when a disorderly passenger tried opening the cockpit door. he eventually opened the emergency door and jumped out onto the tarmac. police apprehended him. it's unclear why this man did this or if he will face any criminal charges. pga star bubba watson can really bring it off the tee. his club snapped off this drive at the traveler's championship
4:14 am
in connecticut it flew for several yards. no one was injured. the crowd was shot how far the shot went despite the mishap. bubba went on to birdie the hole one shot under leader jason day those your headlines. i know we have to get to commercial. i have a theory. i know why this airplane stuff is happening why the ufos why people keep going to the exits it seems to happen more and more. pete: it does. will: i'm telling you we are copy cats. we give something more attention people do it. streakers on a football field. even serial killers. i think everything we give attention to we invite more of. right now this airplane stuff we are giving attention to it and some people are going yeah, i'm going to do it. that's my thing, i'm doing that, too. pete: could be, too. less on the planes and more streaking. will: and ufos. rachel: how about unmasking everybody on the planes and maybe will be less frustrated and not going for the door. pete: president biden's message to struggling businesses being sent quiet and clear.
4:15 am
>> employers can't find worker i said. [whispering] pay them more. [whispering] a small business owner react to that next. ♪ ain't no stopping us now ♪ we're on the move ♪ ♪♪ dad, why didn't you answer your phone? your mother loved this park. ♪♪ she did. centrum multigummies aren't just great tasting... they're power-packed vitamins... that help unleash your energy. loaded with b vitamins... ...and other key essential nutrients...
4:16 am
...it's a tasty way to conquer your day. try centrum multi gummies. now with a new look. ♪welcome back to that same old place♪ ♪that you laughed about♪ ♪well, the names have all changed♪ ♪since you hung around♪ welcome back, america. it sure is good to see you. (announcer) if you've struggled to lose weight, you might think you were born with a slow metabolism, but what you may have is insulin resistance. fat becomes trapped inside your body and it becomes very difficult to lose weight.
4:17 am
now there's release from golo. it naturally helps reverse insulin resistance, stops sugar cravings, and releases stubborn fat, all while controlling stress and emotional eating. at last, a diet pill that actually works. go to golo.com to get yours. that's g-o-l-o.com. a lot of people think dealing with copd is a walk in the park. if i have something to help me breathe better, everything will be fun and nice. but i still have bad days flare-ups (coughs), which can permanently damage my lungs. my lungs need protection against flare-ups. so it's time to get real. because in the real world our lungs deserves the real protection of breztri. breztri gives you better breathing symptom improvement, and flare-up protection. it's the first and only copd medicine proven to reduce flare-ups by 52% breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor
4:18 am
if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. for real protection ask your doctor about breztri. >> whispering] pay them more. employee bargaining chip. what's happening? rachel: president biden believes the shortage to the national labor shortage is simple pay workers more. is he disregarding the impact of
4:19 am
unemployment benefits on small businesses 53% of voter believe those benefits actually hurt the economic recovery next guest is the owner of duwop diner is the president right. [whispering] should you pay them more? >> i literally could not understand what i was listening to. will said this i feel i'm brain constipated as well. there is no ending to this. we went through the pandemic, everyone should be willing to go back to work, make a living, support their families. it's as if we are taking 10 steps backwards to not be like this. i understand people want to work and people need, you know, but you can't use it as a bargaining chip. i have an opportunity. to employees here is a job. i'm going to pay you well, perform your performance and
4:20 am
that's how it works. you can't come in and ask for an amount so high for an hourly wage that does not negates simple economics where you just can't afford to pay anybody. i have numerous and plenty of business owners where i'm from that we won't talk and discuss we feel this administration has never been and will never be in tune for small businesses. rachel, i just don't get how you whisper that to somebody and not feel that they should be guiding us. you can't pay somebody, you know, okay, let's see so i'm in new jersey, our unemployment or our hourly wage is going up every year. that's fine. we are set up for that for 12, 13, 14, 15, progressively every year. that's fine. we are finding ways to counter act that so, you know, our costs go down and employees can make
4:21 am
more money and that's fine. we already were -- we knew that was coming. it's a trickle affect we can't find people to work so they say to us, rachel this is the funny part it's a business. everywhere i go, everywhere i look help wanted, help wanted. in lowe's home depot, big manufacturers, small businesses. rachel: yeah. >> it's not the haughty taughty business. it's the unemployment that needs to stop not for the people who don't need it. it's for the people that need it. for. rachel: i have to tell you jason, my heart has been going out to business owners they haves about been disproportionately hurt during this pandemic. biden administration will start to -- you know best how to run your business. thank you so much for joining us today. >> thank you i appreciate it, rachel. >> you got it, jason.
4:22 am
vice president harris pays a long overdue visit to the border. what do people who live along the border think. we ask them next. ♪ es. and our fancy doghouses. it's a fancy dog home. right now, get incredible savings on behr marquee® paints. starting at $39.98*. (man) i've made progress with my mental health. so when i started having unintentional body movements called tardive dyskinesia... ... i ignored them. but when the movements in my hands and feet started throwing me off at work... i finally had to say, 'it's not ok.' it was time to talk to my doctor about austedo. she said that austedo helps reduce td movements in adults...
4:23 am
...while i continue with most of my mental health medications. (vo) austedo can cause depression, suicidal thoughts, or actions in patients with huntington's disease. pay close attention to and call your doctor if you become depressed, have sudden changes in mood, behaviors, feelings, or have suicidal thoughts. common side effects include inflammation of the nose and throat, insomnia and sleepiness. don't take austedo if you have liver problems, are taking reserpine, tetrabenazine, or valbenazine. austedo may cause irregular or fast heartbeat, restlessness, movements mimicking parkinson's disease, fever, stiff muscles, problems thinking, and sweating. (man) talk to your doctor about austedo... it's time to treat td. td is not ok. visit askforaustedo.com - i'm norm. - i'm szasz. td is not ok. [norm] and we live in columbia, missouri. we do consulting, but we also write. [szasz] we take care of ourselves constantly; it's important. we walk three to five times a week, a couple miles at a time. - we've both been taking prevagen for a little more than 11 years now. after about 30 days of taking it,
4:24 am
we noticed clarity that we didn't notice before. - it's still helping me. i still notice a difference. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. wanna help kids get their homework done? well, an internet connection's a good start. but kids also need computers. and sometimes the hardest thing about homework is finding a place to do it. so why not hook community centers up with wifi? for kids like us, and all the amazing things we're gonna learn. over the next 10 years, comcast is committing $1 billion to reach 50 million low-income americans with the tools and resources they need to be ready for anything. i hope you're ready. 'cause we are.
4:25 am
♪ ♪ will: vice president kamala harris finally making long awaited trip to the southern border. blaming the trump administration for the surge. >> many of you are aware that the are president has asked me to focus on the issues of the root causes of migration to the united states. as you know, we inherited a tough situation. and in five months we have made progress but there is still much more work to be done. will: here to react texas congressman lance gooden, john
4:26 am
ladd lives along the mexico arizona border. congressman, let's start with you for one moment. that's blatantly untrue. this does not appear to be a situation that the biden administration inherited. this is not something as well that seems to be progressing. what is happening, the status and what needs to happen, congressman? >> well, first of all, it's completely ridiculous. no one -- i don't think even democrats believe that we had a border crisis in january when donald trump left office. this has progress sod something unconscionable. we have cartels running the border. we have children being ferried across by god knows who. and we have democrats stay saying that el paso is the new ellis island. i would never insult the good people that came to ellis island so many years ago by equating their experience to one in which the cartels are trafficking children across the border. what vice president harris did yesterday was make a trip to the border, only because donald trump is visiting our greg
4:27 am
abbott our governor this week on the texas border. everything they have done is reactionary. nothing to get ahead of this crisis. they won't even admit we have one. it's very upsetting and appalling. will: ellis island legal immigration. what's happening at the southern border illegal. she visited el paso. she visited several miles away from where the crisis is actually taking place, unfolding. she was several miles away from fort bliss where she could have seen the cost of that on some of the migrant children. so let's talk to someone, two people in fact who have firsthand knowledge who could have shared something with kamala harris. john i had the pleasure of meeting you in arizona there on your ranch. was very nice to meet you then. good to have you on the program again this morning. so, john, tell us, better yet, tell the vice president what she would see if she came to where the border crisis is unfolding, for example, right there on your ranch? >> well, she would have seen people from mexico and northern
4:28 am
triangle dressed in full camo with carpet shoes on that don't want to get caught that are coming to america to conduct their drug business for the cartel. will: john, you were saying as well as a rancher, operating a business right there along the border, this crisis has totally changed not just how you do your business, john, but how you let your day unfold. what your daily duties entail. >> yeah. well, first off, president trump had it figured out. we had four years of very little illegal activity on our border. but we start the day off checking to see if anybody is hiding out in any of our outbuildings or around our house and most the time go out and make sure your car and truck are still there. will: there is first hand experience. there is the border crisis that could be seen if someone actually wanted to go see what was actually happening. amanda, this is the first time we have gotten a chance to talk. you are from new mexico. tell me what the experience is like there in new mexico.
4:29 am
>> it's a little bit rough. i mean, when you talk to a border patrol, and a good day, when you only catches 150 people crossing the border. and i live 8 miles north of the border, so, i shouldn't be having to hear that they caught them just a mile past my house. will: right. right. and is your experience similar to john's operating a ranch has essentially changed your duties have changed, your experience has changed? >> yeah. we get within a mile of our many cow waters and we have to get our binoculars out to check to make sure no one is there. and if they are, then we have to turn around and go back to the house and call them in or not even say a word because we don't know what can happen out here. if they have been retaliation. will: right. understanding the problem, seeing the problem. step one, so you might start by listening to amanda and john. step 2, after understanding the
4:30 am
problem, start to put together a solution. none of that was accomplished, has been accomplished just yet. so we will have to talk in the future and congressman, we can talk to you more about that in the future and what those steps can be after you surveyed and understood the problem what can you could to fix it? thank you all for your time this morning, john, amanda and congressman gooden, appreciate it. >> thank you. will: still ahead, 159 people are still missing as the search for survivors in florida and the condo collapse continues. florida congressman carlos jimenez will join us live next. because your derriere deserves expert care. preparation h. get comfortable with it. more protection, more sun, more joy. neutrogena® beach defense® the suncare brand used most by dermatologists and their families,
4:31 am
neutrogena® for people with skin. ♪ i wish that i knew what i know now ♪ neutrogena® ♪ when i was young... ♪ you need a financial plan that fits the way you want to live in retirement. a plan that can help grow and protect your money - now or in the future. with an annuity in your plan to help cover essential expenses, you'll have the freedom to live the retirement you want. this is what an annuity can do. find the right financial professional to show you how. learn more at protectedincome.org. we're carvana, the company who invented car vending machines and buying a car 100% online. now we've created a brand-new way for you to sell your car. whether it's a year old or a few years old. we wanna buy your car. so go to carvana and enter your license plate answer a few questions. and our techno wizardry calculates your car's value and gives you a real offer in seconds. when you're ready, we'll come to you, pay you on the spot and pick up your car, that's it. so ditch the old way of selling your car,
4:32 am
and say hello to the new way at carvana. are your hr processes weighing down your employees? on to quarterly projections! expense report! if you're using multiple systems, re-entering data over and over time sheet! using email and spreadsheets to manage information and approvals, then your hr systems are a drag on productive time. with paycom, employees enter and manage their own hr data in a single, easy-to-use software. visit paycom dot com and schedule your demo today. do they know this door is locked
4:34 am
>> sadly they did not find anybody alive and nor have they recovered additional bodies. will: miami-dade county mayor speaking just moments ago on the condo collapse in surfside, florida. rachel: rescuers are searching for survivors or any signs of life in the rubble as 159 people remain missing and four are confirmed dead. pete: the cause of the collapse still unclear. federal scientists have been called to examine the site. meanwhile, the first lawsuit over the collapse has reportedly been filed. it seems -- it seeks more than $5 million for damage -- in damages for victims. let's bring in florida congressman carlos jimenez former miami fire cheer and former mayor of miami-dade congressman, congressman, tough time right now for that community. talk to us about the latest of what we know.
4:35 am
>> well, there was reports that i just read that indicated that there was an engineering report that said that there was a stein issue and water issues above the garage deteriorating the concrete and foundational walls. that is something that needs to be looked at and see if that was the cause. obviously we have urban search and rescue teams there around the clock looking for any signs of any survivors. unfortunately the more time that drags on the less likely that that is going to be the case and so the fact that you have 159 people that are unaccounted for is really troubling for us. and, you know, but the whole community has been rallying around -- rallying around the rescue workers like miami-dade always does when tragedy or some kind of like a hurricane his. we always rally around each other. it's a great community. rachel: congressman, so shocking to see those images because, you
4:36 am
know, we think of the third world, it almost looks like a war zone. these weren't cheap condos. they were going for 600,000. some $2 million a unit. should people who have condos along that stretch be concerned as well or do you think this is something just specific to that particular building? >> look, we have had condos in miami, miami-dade for a long, long time. this is the first one that i recall has ever happened to. so, no, i wouldn't be overly concerned from this will come new inspections and new requirements to make sure that it never happens again. unfortunately, one of the things that happens -- fortunately one of the things that happens in a tragedy is that we learn. we learn how to avoid future tragedies and so that's what i would expect from this why was a loued to happen. exactly what happened and why was it allowed to happen and
4:37 am
what we can do to prevent it in the future. i would not be overly concerned if i was on a condo in miami beach right now. will: positive news royal caribbean set to launch the since the pandemic no sail orders what will mean for businesses in florida. i imagine this is a welcome reloaf. >> yeah, miami the port of miami which miami-dade county operates. are unnecessary so i think the centers for disease control has really that kind of picked on the cruise industry non-consistent fashion. i'm glad that at least they are starting. i think we need to do more. we need to push the cdc are people in the united states have been vaccinated. we need to get back to business. and so, you know, i'm glad that we have something, you know, a trial run right now. but we need to get this back up and running. it is a huge industry.
4:38 am
and miami-dade county it's huge in broad, again, all state of florida, i think we have 50% of the cruise industry around the world happens in the state of florida. it's a big deal to get them back up and running. it's not just the people that are working on the cruise lines all the nominee supply the cruise line and those people are working in our county. and so it's important to our economy to get it back up. pete: on our community on thursday we want to get your reaction. listen. >> it's awful hard as well to get a latinx vaccinated as well. why? they are worried they will be vaccinated and reported. the more we close the gap vaccination the more lives we can save. congressman, is that the issue? >> no, i don't think so. in miami-dade county we don't ask your immigrant status. i mean, you can get vaccinated.
4:39 am
we want everybody to be vaccinated and that's not going to be the issue. so there are people that unfortunately do not want to get vaccinated either because they are fearful or they just don't want to be vaccinated so we need to push the vaccinations as much as possible. we need to get as many americans vaccinated as possible. once we can do that, then we will go back to the -- the old normal which is really what we all want. the old normal. by the same token, once everybody has had the opportunity to be vaccinated we need to get back to the old normal anyway. because it's their right not to be vaccinated it's also the right for people who have been vaccinated to go back to living our life in as normal fashion as precovid-19 fashion as possible. and we need to do that as quickly as possible. rachel: i couldn't agree more, congressman. can i ask you, as a fellow hispanic american, what your thoughts are on the fact that -- i found it really demeaning frankly that comment there that,
4:40 am
you know, all hispanics are being afraid of being deported i don't like the term latin next. i don't know what it means to be quite honest. >> i don't know either. i'm hispanic i'm a citizen of the united states u.s. congressman. we are like everybody else. we came here looking for a better life for my father and my mother brought me here looking for a better life escaping communism and socialism in cuba and really proud to be americans. and so that somehow we are different than anybody else and that we are going -- we are afraid we are going to be deported, no. that's not the case. and so i think the president really is out of touch with what's really happening on the ground and so, you know, again, i urge everybody to be vaccinated. but, again, that's your-that's
4:41 am
our american rights to do as we want. i don't know of anybody that can't get vaccinated and so once that happens, we should just open up and go back to business -- ill will will congressman gimenez thank you for getting up with us this morning and sharing your perspective. rachel: thank you, congressman. will: latin next is a term no one uses you should be offended because joe biden racistly imfluid every latino person was here illegally. are you afraid of being deported? rachel: no, i'm not afraid of being deported by the way can i show my i.d. i'm not afraid to show my i.d. when i vote as a minority either. pete: and you are capable of getting one. rachel: all the stereotypes by the democrats and biden administration. will: gets a pass if you vote democrat insane. look now for chief meteorologist rick reichmuth with our fox weather forecast. hey, rick. rick: good morning, guys, yeah. so we have had really big flooding happening this week.
4:42 am
we have a rot of that ongoing right now and a major heat wave building again out across parts of the west. take a look what's happening here. central part of the country. some areas of missouri that has seen with 13 inches of rain in the last couple of days. that's causing massive flooding. you can see this line of storms. we have got a system that's stalled out right there. so the next number of days we're going to see rain falling in the exact same spot. anywhere you see this green we have flood warnings going on and flash flooding going on anywhere you see those little red squares as well. flash flooding going on right now and the rain not going to stop at all. this is just through the weekend. you see the exact same spot. some spots a lot of spots at least over an inch to two inches. we will see isolated maybe some 4 to 5 inches again from this the other story we are going to be watching talking about this heat a out across parts of the west. it's really building into the pacific northwest. and we are probably going to be breaking all-time record temperatures tomorrow and monday across the pacific northwest. plenty to watch right there. guys? rachel: it looks hot.
4:43 am
pete: thank you, rick. appreciate it well, with cancel culture infiltrating college campuses, one professor has decided to liberate his students. how far he is creating a safe space you might say for free speech, coming up next. ♪ ♪ how do you like me now ♪ ♪welcome back to that same old place♪ ♪that you laughed about♪ ♪well, the names have all changed♪ ♪since you hung around♪ welcome back, america. it sure is good to see you. ♪upbeat music♪
4:45 am
transitions™ light under control. ♪upbeat music♪ transitions™ signature gen 8™ available now, in 4 vibrant style colors. transitions™ keeping your oyster business growing has you swamped. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. when you sponsor a job, you immediately get your shortlist of quality candidates, whose resumes on indeed match your job criteria. visit indeed.com/hire and get started today. it's the lowest prices of the season on the sleep number 360 smart bed. it's the most comfortable, whose resumes on indeed match your job criteria. dually-adjustable, foot-warming, temperature-balancing proven quality night sleep we've ever made. the new queen sleep number 360 c2 smart bed is only $899. plus, free premium delivery when you add a base. ends mon i've lost count of how many asthma attacks i've had. the new queen sleep number 360 c2 smart bed is only $899. but my nunormal with nucala? fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma.
4:46 am
not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection-site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask your doctor about nucala. find your nunormal with nucala. ♪ ♪ will: we're back with a quick check-in with todd piro as he chats with locals at the southport diner in connecticut. how is it going, todd? >> it's going awesome. what a fun time we are having this morning here with the owner of the southport diner with tony. you have a message for america. what is it. >> i'm making diners great again. todd: i love that can we get a round of applause for tony making diners great again. it's tough to get workers in this economy? >> it is tough. but you have got to treat your workers with respect and they will come to work if you do
4:47 am
that. todd: are you optimistic for the future. >> i'm very optimistic. this is america greatest country in the world. todd: a lot of news america is not doing we'll real well. you say we are america we are going to win. >> most resilient. todd: find it? >> southport diner stay tuned. todd: signature. >> can i see it. nobody has this sauce in the world. nobody. pete: unique sauce? that's what you can't beat. i want one. >> sauce of the boss. pete: tell him i'm in. awesome. >> thank you, todd. pete: and todd's guest wrapped the segment. thank you. with cancel culture and wokism on full display across college campus one professor is fighting back and liberating his classroom. the duke professor creating a seminar for his students to speak freely on controversial
4:48 am
topics. he writes, quote: if you believe in policing your fellow students, i say you're in the wrong room. here to react is professor at concordia the author of the parasitic mind gadd. great to have you here. open exchange is what we should have. is this a good news story because it's happening or bad news story because it takes one photographer and special seminar to actually make it happen? >> well, it's good in that someone is actually doing what should be the default value of universities. it's bad in that we are celebrating what should be the default value of universities, right? i mean, the fact this is a story seems extraordinary to me. we should be building, you know, universities that promote the now an anomaly. pete: could you walk into a are regular classroom in academia today if you are in cancellation this is the wrong class to you or do you really intentionally have to signal to students only
4:49 am
free thinkers in the class. give the caveat at the beginning and have open conversation. >> about three or four years ago i had a sort of satirical trigger warning in my mba classes where i would simply say life is your trigger warning. and let me analogize this. in evolutionary medicine there is the concept called the hygiene hypothesis. if you want your children to not suffer from asthma you expose them to allergens so that their immune system could be, quote, triggered to be able to respond properly to these pollutants. well, your brain needs to be exposed to opposing ideas, right? those pollutants called opposing ideas are needed for our brains to maximally function. that's what we need to return to. pete: man, we know that leftism has taken over our college campuses. do you think they can be recaptured? >> it can be if, you know, the silent majority, most of many whom despise this nonsense if
4:50 am
they all speak up in unison. i receive thousands and thousands of emails from fellow professors, from students, from parents of students, who say that they have had enough. but then they always put at the end of the email now if you read my email on your show, professor, please don't mention my name. you have to lose that reflex. you have to be a hone. if we speak, we will win. pete: honey badger don't give a -- it's true. professor, thank you so much. appreciate your time. >> you quote it cheers. pete: cheers. entrepreneurs are betting on patriotism. meet the couple proudly showing their american pride. ♪ ♪
4:51 am
is now a good time for a flare-up? enough, crohn's! for adults with moderate to severe crohn's or ulcerative colitis... stelara® can provide relief and is the only approved medication to reduce inflammation on and below the surface of the intestine in uc. you, getting on that flight? back off, uc! stelara® may increase your risk of infections, some serious, and cancer. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you have an infection... flu-like symptoms, sores, new skin growths, have had cancer, or if you need a vaccine. pres, a rare, potentially fatal brain condition, may be possible. some serious allergic reactions and lung inflammation can occur. lasting remission can start with stelara®. if you've been financially impacted by covid-19, janssen may be able to help.
4:54 am
pete: as the so-called mainstream media rages against old glory our next guest searched from sea to shining sea for the perfect hand made american flag to fly high above their home. rachel: after exhausted search they came up empty. they took it upon themselves then and allegiance flag supply was formed. will: founders katie and wes lyon join us now. tell us about your search and then your solution. >> absolutely. thank you so much for having us. it started as the flag we were flying in charleston, south carolina where the element strong ripping and tearing and fading and wrapping around our flag pole, all the common flags having happening way too much. flags either buying at amazon or in big box stores and really we
4:55 am
noticed one of two things when we looked into it a little bit more either the flaggies made in china which was obviously ridiculous to us. the american flag should be made obviously right here in america. or if they were made domestically, they were kind of spit out of a big machine, thousands of flags at a time, sort of lower quality material. sort of a lack of attention to detail in what we thought should be in the american flag. rachel: tell us what the flag means to you. >> yeah. i think well, i'm lucky enough to be married to an eagle scout, so wes is my husband. i think he really learned his love for the flag and the flag care really from scouts growing up. and then ultimately becoming an eagle scout. so, but also i come from a family of veterans who so it's always been incredibly important to my family and just really our values, i think we truly live in the greatest country in the entire world. and if someone is proud enough
4:56 am
to show that they lo our country by putting a flag on their front porch or wherever they want to fly it, why not make it the greatest american flag that they can fly and have it support american jobs and have all of the materials come from america. we really set out to do that because we couldn't find it ourselves. pete: it's very cool and i have got to imagine with our nation's independence day coming up a week from now you might be busy a and you are about to get busier. i hope folks watching, purchase a flag made in america at show allegiance.com. and you'll know here they are. the two people you know are putting them together and you know they are doing it for the right reason. thank you for jumping in. you are right. there is nothing more demoralizing than getting a flag that has a tag made in china on it and you said it kind of defeats the point. >> it does. it absolutely does. pete: wow. will: katie and wes, makes
4:57 am
sense. high quality american flag made in america. thank you for joining us this morning. rachel: just in time for the 4th of july order now. the doj is suing georgia over its new voting law. governor brian kemp says this is a disgusting political attack. he joins us live at the top of the hour. ♪ ♪ liberty mutual customizes car insurance so you only pay for what you need. how much money can liberty mutual save you? one! two! three! four! five! 72,807! 72,808... dollars. yep... everything hurts. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
4:58 am
there we go. look for this in-store display of king's hawaiian hamburger and hotdog buns for a chance to win a flavortown-inspired hawaiian getaway. can i get another restock on king's hawaiian bread? again. everything's better between king's hawaiian bread. among my patients i often see them have teeth sensitivity as well as gum issues. does it worry me? absolutely. sensodyne sensitivity and gum gives us a dual action effect that really takes care of both our teeth sensitivity as well as our gum issues. there's no question it's something that i would recommend.
4:59 am
5:00 am
don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen, or if you've had a vaccine, or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. watch me! get real relief with cosentyx. ♪ everybody's working for the weekend ♪ being everybody wants a new romance ♪ will: there is a shot of a highway in dallas, texas. rachel: there is a lot of that in texas. there is a lot of open road like that. will: move people around quickly there in texas. that's lover boy bringing you in to the weekend working for the weekend. will cain, pete hegseth and rachel campos-duffy with you on
5:01 am
this saturday. pete: great it be here. sang at the "fox & friends" christmas party this year you will be singing it with me everybody is working for the weekend care okayy. will: there will be a christmas party this year? pete: there should be. rachel: but we work on the weekend. pete: that's why everybody is working for the weekend. the party is usually at 2:00 because we are a morning show like a thursday or friday if you are catering to the weekday crowd we just have to suck it up. rachel: sounds good. we can do that. will: knock them back and suck it up. that's going to be the theme of "fox & friends weekend" serious news we begin with a fox news alert. crews are still searching for people in that collapsed condo in surfside, florida. pete: that's right. it has been over 48 hours since the collapse and the miami-dade county mayor says crews have not found anyone dead or alive this morning. >> will watson is live in surf side with the latest. authorities are expected to give
5:02 am
a an update in a few minutes. charles? >> yeah, hey, guys. it's still a pretty active search and rescue mission as we learn more about this south champ plain towers according to inspection report from 2018 released by the city of surfside. an engineer actually warned managers of the billing to repair cracked concrete and exposed rebar in the parking garage underneath this 13-floor story. that work was set to begin before the building suddenly collapsed. we heard from rep carlos gimenez on this new development this morning. listen to what he had to say. >> i will think that's something that needs to be looked at and see if that was the cause. obviously we have urban search and rescue teams there around the clock looking for any signs of any survivors. unfortunately, the more time that drags on the less likely that that is going to be the case. and so the fact that you have 159 people that are unaccounted for -- >> now, federal team of
5:03 am
investigators from the national institute of standards in technology are expected on site at some point today so they can begin looking into what happened. in the meantime as you mentioned, rescue efforts overnight have not turned up any bodies dead or alive. >> they have had to deal with a lot of water from the rain there is a fire that they have had to continuously try to put out. so many things have hampered their abilities. nonetheless, you can see they are very beings very active above and below and that continued throughout the night. >> crews out here are really working nonstop to try to find people who may be trapped underneath the rubble at the site of the building collapse the miami-dade fire chief says they are using everything at their disposal to make this process easier they have cranes and other heavy machinery to help them sift through heavy concrete and steel beams.
5:04 am
number of people stood steady 159 over the last 24 hours. so has the death toll which stands so far one of the deceased victims has been identified. she is 54-year-old stacey fang. the mother of the teen boy who we saw firefighters pull from the rubble the other day and, phis, you really have to feel for these families. it's been three days of rescue and search efforts and little answers. a press conference is expected. 8:15 local time with miami-dade officials hopefully those families and the media can get some new answers, guys? >> thank you, charles. pete: when we get that press conference as charles mentioned in about 10 minutes we will bring it live in the latest. rachel: the little footage of the young table boy being rescued they said when they found him he just kept saying please don't leave me alone. please don't leave me alone they said no we will stay right here with you this a reminder this is a very dangerous rescue.
5:05 am
these first responders, these firemen that are here. they are risking their lives when they're doing this they are not just using heavy machinery. they are using their hands to remove rubble because it's so precarious. will: such a sad story. we will keep you updated as that press conference comes to you later this morning. meanwhile, illegal immigration encounters are at a 10-year high. we have had a 10-year high. a 10-year record here. meanwhile vice president kamala harris says that's because the biden administration inherited a very tough situation. listen. ing in fact right here in el paso the trump administration policy. you saw it as it rolled out on the ground in realtime. we have looked at a system where people have been housed in inhumane conditions over the last many years by an asylum system that has been broken and that needs to be reconstructed. and in five months we have made
5:06 am
progress but there is still much more work to be done but we have made progress. pete: such political theater. rachel: made progress you went backwards. you heard the ranchers saying hello it worked in the trump administration. they have gone backwards. this the is opposite of progress. pete: all about trump. first you pointed it out he is coming to the border. rachel: they had to do that. pete: went to el paso because they say his measures were draconian which are totally and completely mischaracter ipsed and very effective the crisis they had was not inherited it was created. she went to the wrong part of the border if she cared about root causes she have went down to the rbg sector which most of the mostly mexican nationals illegally crossing whereas down in mcallen it's folks from the triangle which she is supposed to be working on root causes. the post notes she didn't each go to the border. now fers, i know there is a depth of the border, miles and miles where border facilities are. she went to -- she didn't
5:07 am
actually visit the border. she went to a border patrol station nine miles from the rio grande, talked to activists posed for photos and left before 1:00 bmw. did exactly what we thought she would do. quick pop in, see what she needs for her narrative and then out of there. >> just to add to that vice president kamala harris also said whether it came to the migrant children held in detention facilities there was increasing optimism and as well progress on that front. there is a cbs news report out right now that dozens of migrant children are now on suicide watch. they have been held up to 60 days. listen to this. they have had pencils, pens, anything metallic confiscated including the nose clips from n-95 masks because they have been used, including i.d. cards issued by the government for slitting their wrist. dozens placed on suicide watch. that's not progress. that's not optimism. and the reason these kids are being held for so long by the way is because for every kid in according to the biden administration's policies, to be
5:08 am
finding a home, finding a sponsor you need an hhs case worker. they don't have enough case workers because they didn't anticipate this massive surge to handle the problem that they created. pete: that they created. rachel: also, she didn't go down to the border to meet with the congressman, the sheriff and the mayors. many of them, most of them, actually, democrats who wanted her to come down to see what was happening. instead, she met with representative escobar who is from el paso area this is not a crisis. this is a welcome center. this is the new ellis island this is the new narrative of the biden administration to say not a crisis, even though as you mentioned it's at 20 year high these illegal interdictions but this is a welcome center. >> this is the new ellis island, that's the new narrative. pete: i didn't see any cartels at ellis island. what a poo gus comparison. rachel: we are doing the work of the cartels. we are doing the final processing for the cartels.
5:09 am
it divofs back to what you said about the children. let's always remember that what we have done is we have made our border patrol, our heroes. become and our hhs become the final leg of the cartel process. and the people profiting from it, the cartels. we have an additional story this the department of justice suing georgia over new voting laws in the state claiming they aim to restrict the rights of black voters. >> our complaint alleges that recent changes to georgia's elections laws were enacted with the purpose of denying or aridging the right of black georgians to vote on account of their race or color in violation of section 2 of the voting rights act. rachel: our next guest is condemning the biden administration for this lawsuit, a move he says weaponizes the department of justice. will: here now with more is republican governor of georgia brian kemp. governor, thank you for being with us this morning. >> good morning.
5:10 am
will: we have talked about this throughout the morning. georgia now the target of a doj lawsuit. is there a silver lining to this, governor? your law was branded, branded by corporate america. branded by democrats. branded by pop culture as racist. now that has to be proven in a court of law is there a silver lining to this. >> good morning. first of all thoughts and prayers go out to all the folks in florida, just a tragic situation. look, i think there is a silver lining here. the american people need to know that the biden administration stacey abrams and their extreme allies are weaponizing the department of justice. i mean, look, i personally think the highest law enforcement agency in the land should have gone down to the border with the vice president yesterday and actually gone to the place like mcallen or gone to the city of atlanta or other big cities to tackle violent crime and deadly shootings that are going on instead of weaponizing the department to go after secure elections in our state are a
5:11 am
crossing the country. they are coming for you next. they are coming forever your state, your elections bill. your ballgame. they are going to cancel your small business. this is the radical agenda that we are fighting. will: just to follow up, governor, when i said there is a silver lining and i assume you mean the same thing, they have to prove in a court of law now the accusations that set the brand for the georgia law. you put, for example, you put, i believe it was delta airlines on the spot. hey, tell me what's wrong with the law. tell me why you have a problem. same with major league baseball and you didn't get answers. so now it will be interesting to see what the department of justice says is specifically wrong with the law. >> look, just one example of that, the attorney general just in your clip that you played was talking about how this is keeping african-americans from voting. this actually adds an additional saturday where people can vote statewide in georgia. gives potential two additional
5:12 am
sundays that every county in the state can opt in holding early voting on. you know, why are they not suing delaware or other states that are much more restrictive than the state of georgia? we are about as good as anybody in the country at having accessible elections. the thing is we just want to have them secure. and i guess they do not. pete governor, we will mention branding, ultimately counting on the fact that this mud december the waters. the doj brings a lawsuit against georgia. in any case people will say they must have done something wrong and then the litigation plays out for months and months. how do you overcome sort of the black cloud of what the doj is trying to do here? >> we have got fight like hell and tell the truth. i have been through this before. i sued the obama justice department twice when i was secretary of state. won over a simple people vote.
5:13 am
i and most citizens in georgia believe you should be a citizen of the states. we are going to tell people the truth. this bill makes it easy to vote and hard to cheat. we are going to take to them and just fight. fight long and hard and continue to tell people the truth. you don't see them answering questions about the bill. you don't see them answering questions about how we have more early voting days than delaware and new york and new jersey and things of that nature. rachel: you are definitely ground zero for all the other states who want to maintain their rights to run their own elections and not have it nationally. thank you very much for joining us, governor. >> have a great day, thanks, guys. pete: governor brian kemp. turning now to additional headlines as well. police reveal the twisted words of a colorado man killed in broad daylight. four page letter the suspect raged against police writing in part hundreds of you pigs should be killed daily. i will kill as many arvada
5:14 am
officers as i possibly can surveillance video shows the suspect get out of his car with a rifle and follow officer gordon beazley before opening fire. the suspect was shot and killed by good samaritan who then was mistakenly killed by police. wow. g.o.p. senators may pull support from the bipartisan infrastructure deal after joe biden conditions that package on democrats passing their reconciliation bill. senator lindsey graham tweeting in part, quote: no deal by extortion, so we give you 1 trillion so can you have 5 trillion? and senator bill cassidy saying, quote: holding the agreement hostage was never discussed with us and was not part of the deal we agreed to. and check this out. me and my four boys recently went on a field trip to henry repeating arms in rice lake, wisconsin, the company makes all sorts of guns, including sporting rifles their motto is made in america or not made at
5:15 am
all. got got to tour the fittings. they gave my three oldest sons their very first rifles with initials and birthdays as serial numbers. a day they will not forget. will: awesome. rachel: rice lake. >> henry repeating arms. they are a great american company. thank you so much for that time. we will be right back in just a moment.no ♪♪ dad, why didn't you answer your phone? your mother loved this park. ♪♪ she did.
5:16 am
a lot of people think dealing with copd is ♪♪ a walk in the park. if i have something to help me breathe better, everything will be fun and nice. but i still have bad days flare-ups (coughs), which can permanently damage my lungs. my lungs need protection against flare-ups. so it's time to get real. because in the real world our lungs deserves the real protection of breztri. breztri gives you better breathing symptom improvement, and flare-up protection. it's the first and only copd medicine proven to reduce flare-ups by 52% breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor
5:17 am
if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. for real protection ask your doctor about breztri. omega-3 from fish oil is an important nutrient for heart health. qunol's ultra purified omega-3, is sourced only from wild caught ocean fish, not farm raised and comes in
5:18 am
an easy to swallow mini pill. the brand i trust is qunol. discomfort back there? instead of using aloe, or baby wipes, or powders, try the cooling, soothing relief or preparation h. because your derriere deserves expert care. preparation h. get comfortable with it. . rachel: big tech for censoring serve content. congressman jim jordan slamming microsoft in a letter to the company's president saying in part quote big tech including microsoft inc. is out to get conservatives. microsoft has also taken increasingly aggressive editorial control over content on its platform. here to react is fox news
5:19 am
contributor charlie hurt. charlie, welcome, good morning. >> good morning, rachel. rachel: so was jim right that these big tech censors are going after conservatives specifically. >> oh, without a doubt. it's really interesting because over the past 10, 15 years these social media companies were built around the concept of freedom of speech and free speech and connecting people and letting them talk to one another which, of course, is why the government has played great strives to give them leeway and give them sort of plenty of room to grow and to foster that sort of free debate and, of course, what happens is as soon as they get the power, they get close to that authority that apparently i guess they were looking for from the very beginning, they immediately begin to use it against its users, use it against people by censoring anything that they don't want, and it makes no sense. it's not, you know, it's not even like, you know, under the guise of trying to be concerned
5:20 am
about safety or community standards or whatever, what they wind up doing is they silence things like stories about the origins of the wuhan virus, which is a life-saving -- those stories are life-saving stories that could help us get to the bottom of this and figure out what caused it and figure out how to address it. but these companies would rather kill people than actually allow free speech to happen. so that we can get to the truth. rachel: yeah, now we are seeing the ties that big tech had to these very dangerous experiments going on in the wuhan lab. it's not just that, you know, they are censoring because they are worried about people. they are actually implicated in it and they are actually sort of curating the information that we get. i'm really most concerned, charlie, of all the things they have done, i'm most concerned about what they did with hunter biden, because i believe that could have changed the election. what are your thoughts on that? >> no, there is no doubt about it and that's a situation where
5:21 am
you know, and the most alarming to me the most alarming part of that was not just that they did that, you know, our system of government is set up -- it's designed to deal with tyrants and people's tendency towards tyranny, especially powerful people. our system is designed to sort of root out people like facebook and google and these other big tech companies designed -- that are trying to sort of feather their own nest. my bigger concern is the fact that in the mainstream media in newspapers, in most news outlets, they ignored it or went along with the censorship that prevented those very valid stories about hunter biden to come out. rachel: yeah that was actually really shocking. so few media outlets actually showed any outrage towards it charlie, you have always been an open voice and somebody out on the forefront on all these topics regarding censorship and free speech in america so we thank you for that. >> great to see you, rachel. rachel: great to see you, charlie. up next, former entrepreneurship
5:22 am
is back on the road heading to ohio today to help republicans take back the house. lawrence jones checks in with small business owners there and he's going to join us next. stay with us. ♪ ♪ well, well, well. look at you. you mastered the master bath. you created your own style. and you - yes, you! turned a sourdough starter
5:23 am
into a sourdough finisher. so when you learn your chronic dry eye is actually caused by reduced tear production due to inflammation you take it on, by talking to your eyecare professional about restasis®... which may help you make more of your own tears with continued use twice a day, every day. restasis® helps increase your eye's natural ability to produce tears, which may be reduced by inflammation due to chronic dry eye. restasis® did not increase tear production in patients using anti-inflammatory eye drops or tear duct plugs. to help avoid eye injury and contamination, do not touch bottle tip to your eye or other surfaces. wait 15 minutes after use before inserting contact lenses. the most common side effect is a temporary burning sensation. ask your eye care professional about restasis®. now to trick out these lights. visit restasis.com to learn more. ♪♪
5:24 am
[lazer beam and sizzling sounds] ♪♪ [ "me and you" by barry louis polisar ] ♪ me and you just singing on the train ♪ ♪ me and you listening to the rain ♪ ♪ me and you we are the same ♪ ♪ me and you have all the fame we need ♪ ♪ indeed, you and me are we ♪ ♪ me and you singing in the park ♪ ♪ me and you, we're waiting for the dark ♪
5:25 am
♪ pete: on the road again. rachel: former sprurep set to visit lorain county ohio today campaign for miller for congress and policies. will: lawrence jones caught up with local small business owners ahead of the event and he joins us with more. lawrence: good morning, family. i went to ohio the swing state
5:26 am
there about the former president coming there to bring his message up, do you miss me now. you know in the past election we didn't have to have that policy and didn't get to have that policy conversation about tone vs. actual policy. well, i talked to those business owners this is what they had. this is my dream. i pursued dreams 31 years. i have been in business since 1999. anything that can be printed i don't say no to. >> i own massage therapy we have two locations. lawrence: how do you think the economy is going in this area? >> being a local business owner i actually think it's doing pretty well. our business has been booming the past six months. >> things are picking back up, it's not great yet. there is still a lot of losses. lawrence: do you increase your prices? >> twice in the last six months to keep up with the price of wages plus the price of the products. foot prices are the worst right
5:27 am
now. it fluctuates like crazy. >> i will take away from me before i raise my prices. lawrence: what would you say about the current administration as well as, you know, leaders elected leaders on their focus on small businesses? it seems like they don't get enough focus. >> i can tell you that i felt very left behind. i have felt like we have been forgotten about and that shut down for two months was terrifying. >> i want to see the common sense of, for instance, the minimum wage pack back tore and how it's going to affect small business people. >> being paid to stay home and not work is not good at all for anybody. >> used to be america was ran by main street small town america. it's all gone to the big cities and the populated areas. we have to learn that control that we used to have it's waning. >> i want you to follow me this way because i saw something when i came through the door and it's in bright yellow recommendation
5:28 am
yeah. >> help wanted. weekends required. this includes day, evenings, weekends, and you are not the only business that is posting this stuff outside. >> there are signs everywhere that people are needing employees. everywhere you go. you have your pick of jobs. >> wages have definitely gone up because it's hard to find people that want to work right now. >> we are all working to the max. we are doing everything that we can to get as many clients in the door. ♪ ♪ lawrence: obviously the former president is coming to town with his message of do you miss me now. how do you think the current president, joe biden is doing right now when it comes to the economy and what he is doing for businesses? >> the profits are definitely dropped. bottom line definitely moved. i'm hoping it will come back. more conservative policies. >> and when you ask what has president biden done for you?
5:29 am
what has happened that's been beverly to the united states? nobody has any answers. i'm in the middle, i fight for us my business, my family, i try just focus on being successful. lawrence: that feeling of will throughout the entire town. they tonight have a business problem they have a problem of hiring workers. rachel: what rang in my ears is when that business owner said paying people to at a home isn't good forever anybody. it's not good for business butnot good for the people be for the workers to stay home and lose that sense of dignity that comes from work. lawrence: there is so much polling going on out there guys, talks about folks wanting to reinvent themselves or stay home with their families. we are conditioning people to be government dad again. was that part of the design all along or continue to crease the
5:30 am
minimum wage all along? but, as things go up. things are going to going to have to go back down. that he was the law of physics. will: turn people on one another looking look at each other as the enemy. turn to someone else like the government as your savior, your dad as you pointed out, lawrence. he. rachel: thanks, lawrence. lawrence: thanks, family. will: no explanations for dozens, more than dozens, say over 100 reported ufo sightings fueling theories that life outside earth could be real. the all star lineup from the big saturday show joins us live to react. ♪ centrum multigummies aren't just great tasting... they're power-packed vitamins... that help unleash your energy. loaded with b vitamins... ...and other key essential nutrients... ...it's a tasty way to conquer your day. try centrum multi gummies. now with a new look.
5:33 am
go with simparica trio it's triple protection made simple! simparica trio is the first and only monthly chewable that covers heartworm disease, ticks and fleas, round and hookworms. dogs get triple protection in just one simparica trio! this drug class has been associated with neurologic adverse reactions, including seizures. use with caution in dogs with a history of these disorders. protect him with all your heart. simparica trio.
5:34 am
5:35 am
compagno, terrorist and abby hornacek. i described this earlier as let's avoid constipated thinking. let's think outside the box. let's open up our world view to potentiality. i will go around the horn of the big saturday show. i want to hear if a if it's something we should be concerned about and b what is it, griff, first? griff: well, let me tell you i got that unidentified aerial phenomenal report unclassified. unclassified annex part of it we can't see. this may be the only bipartisan issue in washington because marco rubio and adam schiff agree they want to know more. will: all right. i need to you put the big screen up so i can see everybody so i can call on names. i know you are here i know your names emily terrorist. abby you are next. abby: i was excited for this report to come out emily and i share the same love for this topic. unfortunately for the sci-fi
5:36 am
lovers they ruled out the possibility of potential extraterrestrial life they said there is potential. i guess they didn't rule it out completely. good news is they said there was no sign of foreign government activity. , that means russia or china or one of our adversaries, so, that's something that should just be really good news for everybody. i think the biggest take away from this is that whatever these may be, they do pose a potential threat to our national security and our airspace, but as of right now, the government lacks enough technical information to make a proper assessment as to what these are. but, they are flying in our military airspace. so something to be kind of concerned about, i think. will: terrorist is in the square in the middle of our brady bunch. >> only place you can put me. will: brady bunch square. abby: elbow rooms on airplanes. keep in your own seat. will: tell us, tyrus, what are these things?
5:37 am
>> tyrus: honestly i will break it right here kilmeade and gutfeld on drones getting caught on wind storms they are lost. bring them in before mondays because those little guys can't live without us. most likely these are drones. i personally would like to be alien. something fun to talk about. that's neither here nor there. i have a great idea, will, you, me, pete, let's form a panel, beer, baseball, and let's figure this out. women. emily: where is our invite. will: i'm done, i'm in. >> tyrus: guys day out. griff: i'm in. will: we can do this 10:15 i don't know what your. >> tyrus: my commute is going to be rough. will: everybody seems to think aliens. there is other possibilities. hey, what about us in the future? emily: time travel, will, i love where your head is at. abbey, rhyme eight there with you. so you are saying there is a chance to the government.
5:38 am
here's the thing you guys, there were five different categories that all of these phenomena were placed in. one squarely for adder is sailor phenomenonna. and another for other. i feel like it raises more questions than it answers, i feel like the questions that i keep asking myself are like which movie i do wish they were from? are we talking about aliens? are we talking about e.t.? are we talking about the abyss, cacoon like my neighborhood robots. i'm going through the litany of 1980s movies, specifically and i feel like there is a whole range so i think i should be careful what i wish for. will: did you find some where they were kind of friendly. at first i was like what's a friendly movie about this. e.t. cacoon. were they friendly in cacoon. >> tyrus: kilmeade and gutfeld. everyone knows that. emily: not friendly. will: not friendly treat them as adversaries. >> tyrus: two little angry men on drones. griff: we have got to run clearly the smolder anyone who watched the x files in the
5:39 am
1990s. abby said the report says that it, quote, clearly poses a safety of flight issue. which means ultimately we are not going to get the truth from the government until one of these aliens crashes into one of our navy pilots. will: they have given me wrap like five times. they have told me to wrap this thing like five times. we will have to continue this conversation at the beer summit which we will do. big saturday show. >> tyrus: gremlins, it will continue on the saturday show tune in 5:00 p.m. eastern time. pete: well done five people who have no idea like we don't. and your idea that it's our futureselves coming back? will: what's wrong with that one? if aliens are in the table. pete: how ineffective we are in the future and we can't notify the past? we should be so advanced. will: they don't want to. they don't want to disrupt the continuum. by the way if aliens are on the table, everythingson othe table. rachel: that's what i'm saying
5:40 am
that's the best part of it adam schiff and marco rubio together. the only thing that can unite american politics is aliens if we were actually going after -- unite humanity after the aliens. i love this. pete: if aliens is on the table then everything is on the table? rachel: you are such a cynic. pete: nothing is on the table then. rachel: by the way, navy pilots? you don't believe the nay navy pilots? pete: maybe army pilots. turning now to your headlines. the defense attorneys for scott peterson are fighting for a new trial in the 2002 murder of his pregnant wife lacy and unborn son. a judge is deciding whether to order a new trial after allegations came out that a juror in peterson's first trial committed misconduct by falsely answering questions during the selection process. toledo g.o.p. lawmakers called to end mask requirements on public transit. crews releasing a statement saying in part it's long past
5:41 am
time for joe biden and the cdc to follow the science and end this mask mandate for fully vaccinated individuals. how about everybody? the senators susan collins, jerry more ran, marsha blackburn and others signed a resolution backing cruz end the mandate and those are your headlines. rachel: that is welcome news. will: it sure is. there he is on the screen chief meteorologist rick reichmuth with our fox weather forecast. rick: good morning, guys. all right, so tons of rain across the central part of the country. see where this is see the temperature between the yellow and green back there. that's where a front has stalled out remain that way i think probably about the next five to six days so we have flood watches and warnings in effect. flash flooding going on right now. continue to see heavy rain today. out in front of that things drier. florida you will see scattered showers. south florida working on the issue surfside continue to see scattered showers and thunderstorms in the area not an all-day washout. >> we have heavy rain across the central part of the country and
5:42 am
even some signs that we are going to see a little bit of monday soon coming in across the four corners even arizona this he can would. the other story we are going to watch the heat because of cloud cover and moisture is cooling down a little bit in the four corners, building farther off toward the west and pacific northwest. the highest all-time record temperature in seattle, 103 degrees, take a look what happens tomorrow, 107. maybe pushing 111 by monday. so blowing away your all-time hottest temperature you have ever seen there this week across the specific northwest. guys? rachel: thank you, rick, we are praying for the rain to stop in south miami. it's not helping with the rescue efforts. pete: up next, joe biden says he will relocate thousands of afghan translators. what does the future look like in that country? one translator who i worked with in afghanistan joins us next. ♪ welcome to allstate. ♪ ♪
5:43 am
you already pay for car insurance, why not take your home along for the ride? allstate. here, better protection costs a whole lot less. you're in good hands. click or call to bundle today. at aspen dental, today is the day you're in good hands. to take back your smile. why wait? we're here nights, weekends and right now, to give you exceptional care and 20% off your treatment plan. new patients, take the first step with a complete exam and x-rays that are free without insurance. because our nationwide network of over 1,500 doctors at 900 locations all have one goal — to make you smile, today. start now. call 1-800-aspendental or book online at aspendental.com
5:45 am
shingles? oh... you mean bill. he's been a real pain. again with the bill... what? it looks like a face. ...hearing about it 24/7 is painful enough... i don't want to catch it. well, you can't catch shingles, but the virus that causes it may already be inside you. does that mean bill might have company? - stop. you know shingles can be prevented. shingles can be whaaaaat? yeah prevented. you can get vaccinated. oh, so... i guess it's just you, me and bill then. i'm making my appointment. bill's all yours... 50 years or older? get vaccinated for shingles today.
5:46 am
pete: joe biden attempting to assure afghan leaders that the united states will continue to support the country even after the withdrawal of the u.s. troops in september. >> the partnership between afghanistan and united states is not ending. it's going to be sustained. and, you know, our troops will be leaving but support for afghanistan is not ending. pete: the white house also saying they are planning to relocate thousands of afghans who worked with the u.s. military as interpreters during america's longest war as the taliban continues to make territorial gains and some fear it may only get worse. here now is afghan translator an interpreter who i worked with in afghanistan along with james, the chairman of no one left behind. you know why i butchered your name because you were abdul with us. that was the name you used on base and we were dear friends. spent a lot of time together.
5:47 am
you are a brother of mine. when you think about afghanistan. now you are here in the states, when you think about afghanistan and the future there, are we going to be able to get all the people who helped american troops? you saved lives for us. you talked to people for us. can we get them all out? >> well, i certainly hope. so and thanks for having me on the show, pete. it's great to be able to talk to you again. but, i certainly hope. so and i think this is -- the united states has a moral obligation for a lot of interpreters who served alongside service members of the united states armed forces and not just the united states but also the coalition forces to make sure that they fulfilled their obligation towards the allies that stood alongside soldiers and to be able to bring them to safe haven. you and i both know how dangerous it is. you and i both know, you know, a lot of these interpreters and allies of u.s. forces who served in afghanistan are walking around with a target on our back. pete: absolutely. abdul, are you in touch with
5:48 am
people there? do they think they will get out. >> i have been in touch with a lot of people. but the level of hope in which how optimistic they are about the future and whether or not can fulfill promises is a little bit shaky, you know. you are talking about insurgency group who have a long track of killing civilians, journalists, interpreters, you know that we have been called traitors. we have been called infidels and so you are dealing with a group of extremists that are not fond of rules that they will do whatever it takes to kill individuals who stood in front of them. pete: so well said. you are right abdul. james, this is your business at no one left behind. your job is to help folks who have been alongside troops get home. where are we? do you believe the biden administration when they say they will get them out? >> good morning, pete. thank you so much. let me begin by just letting your viewers know how much we appreciate fox news covering this ever since we were on "fox
5:49 am
& friends" four years ago. i need to give a special shoutout to jennifer griffin and dana perino, the whole fox team has moved the needle on this issue. so on behalf of us thank you very much. i believe the biden administration. i think we are going to modify but we need to move faster. right now there is still no one person in charge. and, pete, you have lived this. right now thousands of u.s. veterans are anxiously awaiting to find out if their saboors or abduls are going to make it. we are inundated from requests from afghans and service members. i want the audience to know this is affecting the u.s. service community very greatly. pete: thank you for your work, ed, no one left behind. you are on top of trying to speed up this process. abdul, real quick, the u.s. intelligence is estimating that the afghan government could fall one six months. is that your aseasment? >> it's a sad reality of what is happening in afghanistan. you know, you and i both have worked alongside afghan soldiers that we know what they are doing with limited capabilities there.
5:50 am
but, honestly, what i see, you know, going back and providing your viewers a little context. you know, close to a trillion dollars of u.s. dollars have been spent in afghanistan. 2,000 u.s. soldiers have been lost. hundreds of thousands of afghans' lives have been lost. so, i see this as a great opportunity. each back in 2010, 2009, close to 2012 when we were there, one of the things that we would always talked about was this when do we start to transition our security duties to afghan security forces. right? so one of the things we talked about was that at one point the rubber was going to meet the road. at one point the afghan security forces were going to be up for the challenge and they have to show this. i think this is a great opportunity not only for the afghan security forces but the afghan leadership themselves because this is an opportunity for them to come together to solve the critical condition that afghanistan is, whether on the table, with the negotiation, or out on the battlefield. pete: let's hope. so abdul, keep us posted, all right?
5:51 am
i appreciate everything have you done for me personally. and for your country in afghanistan and now here in the states. and, james, the organization is no one left behind folks can check it out as well. dire straits. it's now or never when it comes to following through on the promises we have made to so many people have done so much for us. more "fox & friends" on the other side. ♪ ♪ flexible cancellation. kayak. search one and done. is now a good time for a flare-up? enough, crohn's! for adults with moderate to severe crohn's or ulcerative colitis... stelara® can provide relief and is the only approved medication to reduce inflammation on and below the surface of the intestine in uc. you, getting on that flight? back off, uc! stelara® may increase your risk of infections, some serious, and cancer. before treatment, get tested for tb.
5:52 am
tell your doctor if you have an infection... flu-like symptoms, sores, new skin growths, have had cancer, or if you need a vaccine. pres, a rare, potentially fatal brain condition, may be possible. some serious allergic reactions and lung inflammation can occur. lasting remission can start with stelara®. if you've been financially impacted by covid-19, janssen may be able to help. another day, another chance. if you've been financially impacted by covid-19, it could be the day you break the sales record, or the day there's appointments nonstop. with comcast business, you get the network that can deliver gig speeds to the most businesses, and you can get the advanced cybersecurity solutions you need with comcast business securityedge. every day in business is a big day. we'll keep you ready for what's next. get started with a great offer, and ask how you can add comcast business securityedge. plus, for a limited time,ask how to get a $500 prepaid card when you upgrade. call today.
5:53 am
talk to me. what do we got? when you have xfinity xfi, with blazing speed... [ screaming ] a powerful connection. that's another level. and ultimate control. power us up. you can do more than you ever thought possible. yes! hold on. get a powerful and secure connection you can count on. only with xfinity xfi. and see f9 only in theaters. ♪ ♪
5:54 am
5:55 am
200 feet say below the ocean. >> nothing, zero, zip. what counts is the content of your character. todd: content of character one and air second. rich, big back the blue supporter. you saw a columbus statue protest. what did you see happen. >> what i saw happen was the people against the statue wanted to take it down the disrespect they had for the police officers and the older folks like myself there at the event trying to prevent them from taking the statue down. and i saw them go nose to nose swearing at the police officers and it's amazing how they held themselves back and just listened to them and just the disrespect was horrible. and also they took our older people 70 years old they are taking our signs save the statue which just unbelievable. todd: you can imagine what the mood of police officers must be. you oversee police officers, what's the mood?
5:56 am
>> in the town of branson i'm very proud to say we have one of the best police departments in the state and the officers have great relationship with the people in the community. todd: what you see around the country, i mean, what's the mood of these officers people are so angry at them? >> well, obviously i think that's a little bit hard for them to take. but we don't see a lot of that in brandford. i think the relationship speaks for itself. it's a good solid community. i think they ever impacted by the police accountability act and they are trying their best to work within the confines of that. todd: branford connecticut cops there great shape. unfortunately that is not what we are seeing right now, with that another huge hour of "fox & friends" come up after this. don't go anywhere. ♪ you know i'm here for the party ♪ yes, i ain't leaving until they throw me out ♪
5:57 am
dream sequence ending no! in three, no! two, keep packing! one. it's the lowest prices of the season on the sleep number 360 smart bed. it's the most comfortable, dually-adjustable, foot-warming, temperature-balancing proven quality night sleep we've ever made. the new queen sleep number 360 c2 smart bed is only $899. plus, free premium delivery when you add a base. ends monday new projects means new project managers. you need to hire. i need indeed.
5:58 am
5:59 am
serena: it's my 3:10 no-exit-in-sight migraine medicine. it's ubrelvy. for anytime, anywhere migraine strikes, without worrying if it's too late, or where i am. one dose can quickly stop my migraine in its tracks within two hours. unlike older medicines, ubrelvy is a pill that directly blocks cgrp protein, believed to be a cause of migraine. do not take with strong cyp3a4 inhibitors. most common side effects were nausea and tiredness. serena: ask about ubrelvy. the anytime, anywhere migraine medicine.
6:00 am
♪♪ they got the beat, yeah, kids got the beat ♪♪ pete: welcome to "fox & friends." [laughter] it is saturday, june 26th. year of our lord, 2021, and we're not upstairs, we're downstairs in what is known as -- rachel: the liveing room. pete: will, this is your first experience. will: it's crazy on fox and friends. rachel: and you've got the beat now. will: you like the '80s throwback music. rachel: people in the control room know i love that. pete: we've got a spot on the book shelves for a picture of the weekend crew. now it's the empty. rachel: we should take that picture right here -- will: oh, i wasn't hooking.
6:01 am
pete: that'll be on the book shelf. [laughter] will: stick with us for this fourth and final hour of "fox & friends". fox news alert, crews are still searching for people in that collapsed condo in surfside, florida. pete: man, it's been over 48 hours, and no additional survivors have yet been found. rachel: i just read they stopped hearing tapping,s which is so sad. charles watson is live with more. charles. >> reporter: hey, guys. i know we were promising an 8:15 news work was apparently about
6:02 am
to get underway before the building is suddenly collapsed. a team of investigators are expected on site at some point so they can begin looking into what happened. in the meantime, rescue efforts overnight have not turned up by bodies dead or alive, and the mayor of miami-dade. >> they've had to deal with a lot of water from the rain. there's a fire that they've had to continue to try to put out, so many things have hampered their ability. nonetheless, you can see they're very, very active above and below, and that continues throughout the night. >> reporter: we've seen it all night and throughout the morning, crews are working nonstop to try to find people who may be trapped underneath that concrete and twisted metal. the miami-dade fire chief says they are using everything at their disposal to make this
6:03 am
process as easy as possible. they have cranes and other heavy machinery to help them sift through heavy concrete. the number of missing people right now is steady at 159 people. the death toll has stood still as well, it is still at 4. so far only one of the deceased victims has been identified, 54-year-old stacy fang, the mother of that teen boy who we saw firefighters pull from the rubble. at another day, another day of search and rescue. i've been saying it all morning long, you have to feel for family members who are really hoping and wishing that they get some good news today. again, another press conference is expected at some point this morning, hopefully officials here from the miami-dade provide us with new information, certainly some information that could help quell the concerns of family members. guys? will: charles watson, surf, florida, thanks for that --
6:04 am
surfside, thanks for that report. pete: dan bongino, so tough seeing this, just your reaction as they try the make their way new collapsed rubble. >> yeah, we need the really recognize the heros that are this there. first, recognize the souls that appear to be lost. god bless their families. i hope they have the strength to get through this. it's only an hour or so south of me. it's obviously been all over the local news here as well. until heroes, i do a segment every week on my show, and this week it was an obvious one with. can you imagine if, pete, think about this, right? these heros, these fire-rescue teams going in this collapsed structure. there's no guarantee, none at all, it won't collapse further. it may, this pile. you're dealing with not only that, the potential for fires in an enclosed space, dangerous chemicals down there. florida rains which come down
6:05 am
torrentially. you know, and you're doing it for, what, 50, $75,000 a year? these people are real, i mean -- you want to talk about heroes in live time, you're seeing right now. and for whatever my being proud of you, my gratitude is worth with, i say to everyone doing it a big thank you, and really it gives me a lot of pride in america we've got people who do this. rachel: absolutely. we saw that little boy, the teenage boy coming out of the building there and the rescue workers that he was saying please don't leave me alone. can and now we know his mother as well. so, yeah, that's -- we'll move to another topic with you, dan, which is the border. kamala harris, vice president kamala harris just got back from texas. she chose to go to el paso. she also chose to visit not with henry cuellar who's been begging her to come down to the rio grande area, down to the border where he's been needing some
6:06 am
federal help with the policies down there, but instead she met with representative veronica escobar who, while she was with the vice president, said that this is the new ellis island. listen up, i want to hear what you say on the other side. >> welcome to my community, to the new ellis ellis island. we finally have an administration willing to tackle the big challenges, challenges that our country has dealt with for decades. and if el paso's front door is one that has always been one of dignity, humanity and compassion. rachel: what do you say to that, dan? >> yeah. the july 4th holiday is coming up, i'm headed up to new york. i'm going to discover things about the border crisis. i'll learn just as much as kamala harris has learned in el
6:07 am
paso. i'm going to go to new york, study the border crisis up there. i'm going to see effective messaging. i read this op-ed in the "wall street journal" a couple weeks ago, it was a good one. it was talking about how to detect communist propaganda, and you always have to, what they say, read the story upside down, the author said. the chinese communeist party puts out a story, communist party rescues 8 miners. they collapsed it. you have to learn to do that with the media and the democrats. veronica escobar says this is the new ellis island. ellis island is where we processed people legally, okay? it was an inspection station. that was an inspection point where people entered the country legally. [laughter] none of that's happening now.
6:08 am
so take the story, turn it upside down, and now you learn to read through escobar's propaganda here. it's not the new ellis island. whatever they say, it's the exact opposite. will: a little glimpse of opportunity there, why would the: border need a capital? it's not a state. i think we're getting some insight into the philosophy. >> but, will, think about this too, they discuss immigration as if there's not a legal immigration process. will: right. >> they talk about it like -- will: all one and the same. >> right, right. like you can just walk in and cross the river and come on in. they talk about that like there's not a legal process like my wife went through with -- are where you just pledge allegiance to the united states. it's is weird how people fall for this. will: hey, i want to ask you, what's going on right now in i
6:09 am
want to say the left, but i think it's even bigger than the. [laughter] so critical race theory, it's like there's a con job right now. it's not really happening. it's not happening in your school. it's not a real thing, it's just in law school. it's sort of a pull the blinders over you, you know? don't believe what you see right here. aoc is saying the same kind of thing or playing the same kind of trick when it comes the crime. she's saying that's all being overhyped. listen to ao to c real quick on the crime spike. >> we are seeing these headlines abouter sentive increases. now, i want to say any amount of harm is unacceptable and too much, but i also want to make sure that this hysteria, you know, this doesn't drive hysteria and we look at these numbers in context so that we can make responsible decisions about what to allocate in that context. will: so we can put the numbers up on the screen so the audience can see. people in big cities experiencing this firsthand, no,
6:10 am
you're being duped by right-wing talking points. reality isn't what you're experiencing, dan. >> well, again, read it upside down, right? i have a debate coming up on my show with a liberal commentator about just this topic. are they missing this? will, there are actual body bags. people are dying. do you think people relying? do you think people are walking into these liberal cities in the police stations and saying, hey, i was robbed on a train, my house was burglarizedded, do you think they're making this up? the upside down trick they do, well, you know, crime goes up everywhere. i know they're going to try this with me -- no, it's not going up everywhere. it's going up where liberals are in charge. when you coddle criminals and is you attack the police, crime goes up. like, they're genuinely scratching their heads like, my gosh, what could possibly go
6:11 am
wrong in this is only happening in liberal cities. just look at the fbi uniform crime statistics, the cities are all run by lunatic liberals. did you take a statistics course, aoc? she said she was an economics major, right? this isn't hard to figure out. statistics 101 -- rachel: but more than statistics, she lives in d.c., but the crime spike is happening in her district in new york. i mean, like, why doesn't she just go to her home district see it? >> rachel, she knows better. believe me, for as much as it would pleasure me here to say, oh, my gosh, she's so dopey, she's not. she knows exactly what's going on. this is what bothers me about democrat propaganda. they know it and they lie to you. she's lying to your face like, oh, let's not be ridiculous about this crime spike. no, let's be ridiculous,
6:12 am
families are dying. pete: real quicking what have you got coming up on unfiltered? >> i've got ufc former champ matt cera, john ratcliffe on the ufo thing and crystal knight, hot debate, and sean parnell, one of the best candidates in the country running for senate in pennsylvania. and, will, i just want to say i enjoyed your debate last night, i thought you did a great job dismantling that guy. will: thank you. >> no, you didn't let him wiggle out of the answer, and that's exactly what we as conservatives -- they play the word dance game, and you didn't let him have it. will: i like taking the on the ideas that tell us we're wrong. all right, dan, take fit on tonight. -- take it on. rachel: bye, dan. >> see ya. will: all right. i believe we have a fox news alert are. we are monitoring the latest on the florida condo collapse. as rescue crews search through
6:13 am
6:14 am
if you have postmenopausal osteoporosis and a high risk for fracture, welcome back, america. now might not be the best time to ask yourself... 'are my bones strong?' life is full of make or break moments. that's why it's so important to help reduce your risk of fracture with prolia®. only prolia® is proven to help strengthen and protect bones from fracture with 1 shot every 6 months. do not take prolia® if you have low blood calcium, are pregnant, are allergic to it, or take xgeva®. serious allergic reactions like low blood pressure, trouble breathing, throat tightness, face, lip, or tongue swelling, rash, itching, or hives have happened. tell your doctor about dental problems, as severe jaw bone problems may happen, or new or unusual pain in your hip, groin, or thigh, as unusual thigh bone fractures have occurred. speak to your doctor before stopping, skipping, or delaying prolia®, as spine and other bone fractures have occurred. prolia® can cause serious side effects,
6:15 am
6:16 am
♪ rachel: as we await a press conference in about an hour, rescue teams worked tirelessly overnight in surfside, florida, searching for survivors more than 48 hours after the deadly condo collapse. loving wife and mother judy spiegel is among the 159 people who are still missing, and her family is praying for a miracle. judy's husband kevin spiegel can and her children joshua and rachel join me now. just, i have to first say i am just -- my heart is broken. everyone here on the set and across the country are praying for a miracle for you. let me just start by saying, asking you what kind of updates have you heard so far?
6:17 am
>> we actually haven't heard any updates. we were at the scene pretty much all day watching the workers try to peel off pieces of the building. but the problem is there's a lot of smoke. you know, they're also hosing down the area, and every second that ticks by, it looks -- it's getting worse and worse. >> yeah, it's unimaginable, and we're hoping for the best, but we just want them to find our mother and to get to her as soon as possible because we know that time is of the's essence. rachel: rachel, i saw your interview yesterday with martha maccallum, and i guess my question to you, it must feel so surreal that you're on television talking about this, talking about your loved one in
6:18 am
danger. how are you holding up, all of you? >> we're not doing well. i don't think anybody can be doing well under these circumstances. you know, it's -- we are just holding on to hope. we know that it's day three. i mean, we're on the scene, so we know, we see the smoke in the air. we still want a positive outcome, but, you know, we know that time is of the essence. >> right. and, you know, we're a health care family. rachel is a hospital administrator here in miami. josh is a senior resident in surgery here in orlando, and i'm a health care executive in california. this is, you know, this is kind of horrific. my other son, he was a firefighter, and now he's an x-ray tech in north carolina. you know, we're a health care
6:19 am
family, we're, you know, always there serving our communities where we live, and for this to happen to us, it's really a shocker. rachel: can you tell us a little bit about judy? >> of course. >> absolutely. my mom meant -- means the world to me, and she is my everything. i talk to her multiple times every single day. the last three days of not being able to talk to her has literally been killing me. she was the type of person that would drop everything no matter if she was in a super important meeting with whoever, she would drop everything to take our phone calls. every single time that we saw each other, just big hugs and kisses. she literally did everything for us, and we're here to do
6:20 am
everything to get with her back to us. rachel: yeah, rachel -- >> she was -- rachel: go ahead, i'm sorry. >> that's okay. she was a philanthropist. she helped raise money for the children's hospital in chattanooga. she created the arts program in chattanooga. she raised money in new york at a children's hospital and helped get it started. she's an unbheeivel, giving -- unbelievable, giving person to the communities, and she volunteered everywhere. always helping and giving things. i have a 90 -- i mean, 89-year-old mother, and it's really judy who always took care of her. rachel: yeah. rachel, you talked about that yesterday, you know, that during the pandemic it was your mom who really stepped up for your daughter during all those times. >> yeah. rachel: he sounds like an amazing wife, friend, mom,
6:21 am
grandma. >> yeah. i mean, everybody that knows my family, knows my kids, everybody knows my mom. i talk about my mom all the time. everybody at our school, everybody knows my mom. this is the, this situation is so devastating. she didn't deserve this. we don't deserve this. obviously; we have a lot of questions that we'll never get answers to, you know? but, you know, she is the most incredible and giving person. >> right. rachel: you all sound like an amazing family, and i hope you know that we're all praying for you, and we're all praying for that miracle to happen. and we're also encouraged by the bravely of so many of the first responders and firemen who are there and risking their own lives to, hopefully, fine your mom and others. thank you so much, i know this is a really painful time, and we're really grateful for your insight into this situation, and we are praying for the best.
6:22 am
>> thank you. and thanks to the fox family. >> thank you so much. rachel: god bless you all. >> keep praying for us. rachel: we won't stop. we're praying for judy and her family and all those affected by the tragic condo collapse, and we'll be back. have teeth sensitivity as well as gum issues. does it worry me? absolutely. sensodyne sensitivity and gum gives us a dual action effect that really takes care of both our teeth sensitivity as well as our gum issues. there's no question it's something that i would recommend. pain hits fast. so get relief fast. only tylenol rapid release gels have laser-drilled holes. they release medicine fast for fast pain relief. tylenol rapid release gels.
6:23 am
6:24 am
don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting, get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infections and lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms, if your inflammatory bowel disease symptoms develop or worsen or if you've had a vaccine, or plan to. serious allergic reactions may occur. call us or visit us online. we're here for you.
6:25 am
pete: turning now to your headlines starting with a fox news alert, a fugitive is captured after days-long manhunt. police in daytona beach, florida, have arrested him for allegedly shooting an officer in the face earlier this week. the shooting was captured on the officer's body camera footage. the footage shows the officer trying to get wallace are out of
6:26 am
a car, then he suddenly turned and opens fire. daytona police organized a parade to show support for the officer who is still fighting for his life. republican senator josh hawley accuses a democrat group of harassing his sister at her workplace showing a billboard truck with a negative ad outside the dermatology office in springfield, missouri. senator hawley claims it's from a left-wing pac group saying, quote: this is disgusting and cowardly behavior. if they have a problem with me, they can come to my office and take it up with me, but to target and harass my sister is shameful. rachel: it is. they've gone after his wife and kids outside of his home and now his sister. it's shameful.
6:27 am
will: former nba star jalen rose is catching some flak for saying kevin love only made the olympic basketball team because he's white. >> kevin love is on the team because of tokenism. i'm disappointed by that. will: criticses say the comment is not only in9 accurate, but racist as well. clay thomas joins me now. good morning, clay. >> morning, will. will: i'm going to say something i said last night, be honest with you, i consider jalen rose a friend, i worked with him for many years, but for years i spent at espn i looked at friends and told him they were wrong. i looked him in the eye and said, hey, this is bad. lay out for us what jalen got so wrong here. >> well, first of all, his facts are inaccurate. there was an all-black olympic team in 2000, 2004, 2008 and 2016. so the idea that the olympic
6:28 am
team or the nba is afraid of having an all-black team is just 100% not accurate. he should know that because he covers the nba more than any other sport sport. also he said that kevin love should be replaced by deandre aiden, he's not actually an american citizen yet, he is from the bahamas, he is not eligible to represent the u.s. if you want to criticize the roster, you can, but remember a big part of this roster may be a little bit more depleted than usual. they've had two rapid nba seasons and lots of guys who could have been on the roster are choosing not to. kevin love was on the 2012 roster. he's a big man who can play euro style and cover the outside shooting big men. it actually makes sense needing a big man on that roster. everything jalen rose said, i think, is not only inaccurate, it's racist. if a white guy said it about hockey and there was a minority on the team and he called them a
6:29 am
token, that man would never work in sports media again. we have the start applying the same standards to people regardless of their race. will: totally agree. i think jalen got caught up in the moment where our society is engulfed is really some racist assumptions. and, by the way, you're exactly right. i don't know that ken love deserves to be on the team, he's not great right now, but he's a veteran. there's a lot of reasons, and the least among them is he's a white guy. i want to move on to another story i know you're passionate about, and i am as well. texas is on the verge of making the world series finals. vanderbilt got there, i don't like the way they got there, and i don't think you do either. north carolina state had to -- they got canceled. they pulled them from the competition because it went down to two players tested positive for covid. two unvaccinated players. according to d-i baseball, they
6:30 am
didn't it's all the players. this is an injustice, man. this is wrong. >> yeah, it's absurd, will s. and four players that you're mentioning who tested positive have already been vaccinated. people are saying, if you just get vaccinated, there are not going to be any issues. chris paul reportedly has tested positive, bill maher, famous people, after they've already been vaccinated. this is not cleaning up the situation. all of these guys could go sit in the crowd in omaha and watch the game. they're not testing the soldout staled yum. they're playing outdoors in 90 degree weather. we need to stop all covid testing, in my opinion, certainly of young people who are playing sports because we know it isn't a major threat to them. but if you've been vaccinated and later test positive for covid, you should be able to play otherwise we're not giving any of the guys an incentive to actually get vaccinated in the first place. this is pure, unadulterated
6:31 am
madness, and it needs to stop. we don't need to be testing for covid for these young athletes, and i'm fired up about it. will: i am as well. let me get this straight, if texas beats mississippi straight tonight, my law school takes on your law school? i have that right, right in. >> that's right. vanderbilt against texas. will: i would say it's wager time, but i know how good vinedder built's top two -- vanderbilt's top two pitchers are. but let's do it. >> what's also tough -- will: i know you're rested. >> because of all this absurdity with the rules. they don't want to advance this way. will: i gotta run. >> they'll beat your longhorns. [laughter] will: okay. the risking tolerance rises. it's on. we have a bet. i'll see you. vice president harris takes a quick trip to the border and says progress is being made. is that true? house minority if leader kevin mccarthy next.
6:32 am
6:34 am
6:35 am
you, getting on that flight? back off, uc! stelara® may increase your risk of infections, some serious, and cancer. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you have an infection... flu-like symptoms, sores, new skin growths, have had cancer, or if you need a vaccine. pres, a rare, potentially fatal brain condition, may be possible. some serious allergic reactions and lung inflammation can occur. lasting remission can start with stelara®. if you've been financially impacted by covid-19, janssen may be able to help. ♪♪ >> of you are aware that the president has asked me to focus on issues of the root causes of migration to the united states. as you know, we inherited a tough situation, and in five months we've mading progress, but there's still much more work to be done. pete: that was kamala harris in el paso, texas, yesterday making
6:36 am
her first visit as vice president to the border. let's bring in representative kevin mccarthy to react. mr. minority if leader, thank you very much for being here. what's your make on the location, the timing and the messaging of the vice president yesterday. >> well, it seem like she spent more time at the airport than she spent at the border. but to literally say that they inherited a problem and they've made progress? none of those facts play out. you have a border that was secure. you had a new administration that changed executive orders and invited people to rush the border illegally. now in may we had 180,000 encounters. that was a 21-year record of illegal crossings. for the last three months, it has increased. the time that the president asked the vice president to take on this job, half a million illegal individuals came across this border. those are the people we were
6:37 am
able to encounter. think there's going to be more than a million individuals that get through here that we don't encounter from the more than 160 countries. and what's worse, pete, you would understand this, we are catching people who are on the terrorist watch list from yemen. pete: well, it's open for some, it's open for all. and why, if she's in charge of root causes, which is what she said, how she characterizes it, why go to el paso e where most of the controlsings are coming from -- crossings are coming from mexico as opposed to mcallen? was any of this actually about getting to the truth of what's happening in. >> we know why she did it, because president trump is going in a few days. she cackled and said she hasn't been to europe either. i'm wondering if next week is a trip to europe. pete: yeah. >> she needs to take this serious. there's so many ramifications. one, the safety and security of this nation. it's never right to come here
6:38 am
illegally. but fentanyl has now increased by 300%. that's not just affecting border cities. every city in america now having people die from the fentanyl that is being brought into this country because of the border. the cartels that are overtaking these cities. this is a real threat to everyone in america. and she's not taking it serious. you know by her denying going there, denying the facts of what's happening and not going to the place that she really should be, why only go to one place on the border? that border is very large -- pete: why spend an hour or two, you know? absolutely. so many questions. i've got to get your take on one orr topic, mr. minority leader. covid-19 showed how much of our scientific community is compromised by the chinese. the nike ceo was talking to a series of investors, talking about the brand of nike. here's -- this is what nike's
6:39 am
ceo, john donahue, said just recently. we're the largest sport brand there, meaning in china, and we are a brand of china and for china. and the biggest asset we have in china is consumer equity. consumers feel a strong connection to the nike, jordan brands in china, it's real. last time i checked, nike was an more than company? >> yeah. you would think that. i wonder if google would say the same thing. pete: that's right. >> think about what china has just done to the world, killed more than 3 million people, killed more than 600,000 americans. the country that china -- that nike was created in. remember what -- china is a communist country that you have to have a communist representative in every single business. and remember what china does too. they also have slave labor. do you know i put a bill on the floor recently that said if any company manufactures in china or contracts with somebody manufacturing in china that uses slave labor, they have to report
6:40 am
to the treasury. 217, every single democrat voted no on that and denied that from coming forward. we need to hold china accountable. i just rolled out eight pillars. we need to stop the gain of function. first of all, we need to get all our intel and declassify it so the world can know where this covid came from in wuhan. next what we need to do is actually change the sovereign immunity, the ability for americans to hold them accountable and sue for their loved ones. but why would the world reward china with the winter olympics coming up? why wouldn't we move that? and i would think nike, being a sports outlet believing in the ability of holding people accountable wouldn't want to hold that in china. now that they're a company of china, for china, i would question their ability to stand up to them. pete: yeah, of course they have no problem with it. it's just amazing to me that the entire political party in this country appears to be unwilling to take on the single greatest
6:41 am
threat to humanity, which is the communist chinese and their ambition. thanks for standing up for it, representative kevin mccarthy, the really appreciate their time. >> thank you. pete: rachel, over to you. rachel: we're relitigating slavery and our country's history but they voted to -- [inaudible] former officer derek chauvin is sentenced to 22 and a half years behind bars for the killing of george floyd. floyd's family says it's not enough. >> it's a schaap on the wrist. -- slap on the wrist. rachel: chauvin spoke briefly at his sentencing, he offered his condolenceses to floyd's family. senator diane fine stein puts her lake tahoe estate on the market for $41 million. the compound sits on nearly 5 acres and has three separate properties, the main house, the two guest houses. together they have 11 bedrooms and 9 bathrooms. it's realtor.com's most
6:42 am
expensive south lake tahoe property at about $15 million. reducing stress can reduce gray hairs. researchers at columbia university say time for relaxation allows gray hairs to naturally grow darker again. scientists say the change is only possible for a certain demographic before gray hair became inevitable with anal. as for me, will andpete, here's what we'd look like with completely gray hair. [laughter] i didn't know this was coming up. i actually kind of like it. interesting. will: they didn't doctor yours. [laughter] rachel: can you put that back up? pete looks like bill clinton. [laughter] will: oh, my gosh, you're right. you're right. pete: really? rachel: yes, you do. i'm sorry about that. pete: i think i had a little bit
6:43 am
of stress. will: and hack of relaxation -- lack of relaxation. pete: i've got a lot of gray hairs in the last couple of years. in three years -- will: that's going to happen. a. rachel: to we get to see rick? pete: speaking of gray -- rick: i've got the real stuff, guys, but i'm way older. it happens to all of us. no reason -- there you go. all right, guys, the west coast really heating up again. i've been talking about this drought for a number of weeks. water levels are at their lowest levels across lake mead, lake powell. that's horrible news for much of the southwest, and now we see the heat building. so when you have the dry temperature that are going to probably break all-time high records here in the pacific northwest, really dangerous conditions here. fire a danger. but people don't have much a/c.
6:44 am
13131 by monday -- 111 in seattle by monday. guys? pete: thank you, rick. rachel: thank you, rick. todd piro having breakfast with friends in connecticut, and he's next. ♪♪ one, two! one, two, three! only pay for what you need! with customized car insurance from liberty mutual! nothing rhymes with liberty mutual. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
6:45 am
centrum multigummies aren't just great tasting... they're power-packed vitamins... that help unleash your energy. loaded with b vitamins... ...and other key essential nutrients... ...it's a tasty way to conquer your day. try centrum multi gummies. now with a new look. so many people are overweight now and asking themselves, "why can't i lose weight?" for most, the reason is insulin resistance, and they don't even know they have it. conventional starvation diets don't address insulin resistance. that's why they don't work. now there's golo. golo helps with insulin resistance, getting rid of sugar cravings, helps control stress and emotional eating
6:46 am
and losing weight. go to golo.com and see how golo can change your life. that's golo.com. ♪ ♪ sometimes you wanna go ♪ ♪ where everybody knows your name ♪ ♪♪ ♪ and they're always glad you came ♪ welcome back, america. (man) i've made progress it with my mental health.u. so when i started having unintentional body movements called tardive dyskinesia... ... i ignored them. but when the movements in my hands and feet started throwing me off at work... i finally had to say, 'it's not ok.' it was time to talk to my doctor about austedo. she said that austedo helps reduce td movements in adults... ...while i continue with most of my mental health medications. (vo) austedo can cause depression, suicidal thoughts, or actions in patients with huntington's disease. pay close attention to and call your doctor if you become depressed, have sudden changes in mood, behaviors, feelings, or have suicidal thoughts.
6:47 am
common side effects include inflammation of the nose and throat, insomnia and sleepiness. don't take austedo if you have liver problems, are taking reserpine, tetrabenazine, or valbenazine. austedo may cause irregular or fast heartbeat, restlessness, movements mimicking parkinson's disease, fever, stiff muscles, problems thinking, and sweating. (man) talk to your doctor about austedo... it's time to treat td. td is not ok. visit askforaustedo.com ♪ rachel: we're back with breakfast with friends this morning this connecticut, and todd piro is live at the south fork. diner talking to diners. todd? >> reporter: hey, guys, you've been talking about it all morning long, that u.s. congressperson who called the southern border the new ellis are island? peter is an immigrant who literally fled persecution. his father was killed in albania. how insulting was that comment? >> i think she completely
6:48 am
ignored the fact. we processed millions of americans, we became americans. in this case when we're talking about the southern border, she's rewarding chaos. this administration is promoting chaos at the border, the southern border. ellis island was an orderly, organized immigration station. >> reporter: thank you. steven, media loves critical race theory. does the black community? >> the black community really shouldn't. the reason why is it keeps oppressed, whites the oppressors always. so if your mindset is being a victim, you're never going to accomplish anything in life are. say, for example, barack obama. if he thought he was oppressed, would he be president of the gliets no. same thing with tyler perry. if he always felt oppressed and
6:49 am
a victim, he never would have engaged anything, so we can't teach our young black children that they're always going to be the victim. and and what does that do for children who are mixed race? >> reporter: steven, thank you. we've got about a minute left. going to plow through here. patrick, quickly, what's your take on the vaccine for kids? >> i'm not against vaccine, but my point is that if you've already been exposed to the virus, you have natural immunity. that's borne out with our history with coronaviruses. so health care workers who have been exposed to it and have natural immunity should not be forced to resign or be fired or mandated. and with all, everything that the students have have gone through in this last year, i mean, to be banished and told you can't go to the university if you've already been exposed to it, they should go and get their antibody -- >> reporter: we've got one of those students.
6:50 am
quickly, in the 15 seconds, tyler, should you be wearing a mask in school this fall? >> no. most kids have gotten covid and it's gone unnoticed. and whatever we do, it's usual we don't get it. and whens there is a string, we always take the mandatory precautions. and if it's for seven hours a day, then we shouldn't have to. we should at least have breaks. >> reporter: i feel like tyler's one of those kids that he would want to take home, rachel, you've got too many -- rachel: oh, no, no. [laughter] todd, i want to replace that kid -- dr. fauci with that kid. he's talking sense. will: i think they're celebrating the size of your family. [laughter] and i don't take kids home. we've got our own kids. we don't kid pharynx okay? [laughter] kidnap. >> reporter: pete's got enough
6:51 am
too. will: i wish i had more kids. his family sitting right there. all right, p if iro, nice -- p if iro, nice job. pete: summer is here. chip wade joins us next. ♪ sipping whiskey out the bottle -- izes. each with a time and a place they've been promised to be. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you. if your walls could talk... they'd say... help us. today let's paint. let's paint our houses. and our fancy doghouses. it's a fancy dog home. right now, get incredible savings
6:52 am
6:54 am
6:55 am
an an applicator tool, ton of applications. next up, let's get rid of those drippy hose bib. you just turn the water on and off with this easy adapter. it's frost-free. all right, wall to wall carpet, still a pro installation, but check out an easy lay carpet from drop and go floors. this has a patented hook and loop system. it's the only carpet that is machine washable. again, great for kiddos and so soft. next up, let's talk saw smart home and clean home -- talk smart home and clean home, this is an air purifier, filtration gets air in all directions, easy to maintain for a rental house, it connects to the carrier at-home app. we have got an awesome thing for
6:56 am
your bathroom, this is called surface shield. led antimicrobial technology. it's going to cast that light all over the bathroom, clean up the viruses, fungus, mold. it even changes color. good multipurpose fan that installs from below. and last project here, sandpaper, diy-ers like me, they're sanding every day. this is called sand net. this is not sandpaper, it actually is a mesh net. you can see through it. it's going to last ten times longer because, look, you're going to take it off, blow it, vacuum it, even rinse it with water coupled with a reusable sanding block, this is going to work ten times longer. diabl o'tooles.com. we've got all this up for you, let's get out there, get to work. will: awesome, chip.
6:57 am
thank you. more "fox & friends" moments away. stay restless, with the icon that does the same. the rx crafted by lexus. lease the 2021 rx 350 for $449 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. pain hits fast. so get relief fast. only tylenol rapid release gels have laser-drilled holes. they release medicine fast for fast pain relief. tylenol rapid release gels.
6:59 am
if you have moderate to severe psoriasis, little things can become your big moment. that's why there's otezla. otezla is not a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. it may cause severe diarrhea, nausea or vomiting. otezla is associated with an increased risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. tell your doctor about your medicines, and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ♪ ♪ otezla. show more of you.
7:00 am
muck. pete: great song. fox shop, you get 20% off, made in america right here. rachel: these are great socks. will: we, the people. pete: happy saturday, everybody. ♪ neil: we are minutes away from an update on that condo collapse in florida. the latest figures remain what they were late yesterday, 4 known dead, 159 yet to be accounted for. we'll be speaking know men tearily -- know men tearily with a man who's awaiting the fate of his mother and grandmother as well as the mayor of miami-dade county. but in the meantime, we are getting the first word of lawsuits being filed o
260 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
![](http://athena.archive.org/0.gif?kind=track_js&track_js_case=control&cache_bust=398594703)