tv Outnumbered FOX News October 12, 2021 9:00am-10:00am PDT
9:00 am
at fisher investments we're clearly different. >> on the bazaar back story behind the vice president paned space travel video, we learn that the children featured in it were actors who had to audition for their roles. one thing that he had to send in a monologue to get that part. this is "outnumbered." i'm emily compagno joined by harris faulkner, carley shimkus, former state department spokeswoman morgan ortagus and in the center seat, special report anchor bret baier.
9:01 am
the author of the new book "to rescue the republic." critics of vice president kamala harris are not only slamming her appearance and that nasa video for children but also poking fun at the name of the production company behind it. "sinking ship entertainment." noting that it's based in toronto meaning the border -- teaming up with the canadian company. the vp facing heavy criticism that kid actors were used in the video. >> i wonder who the head of the space council is. >> the head of the space council is the vice president. >> my mom was a scientist. i love the idea of exploring the unknown. you're going to literally see the craters on the moon with your own eyes. with your own eyes, i'm telling you. it's going to be unbelievable. have big dreams. >> emily: bret, this is a
9:02 am
vice president whose distinguishing feature has become how tone-deaf and inappropriate she is. we have our calling memorial day a long weekend, passing out cookies with her face on them, talking coins and going to bakeries while the southern border implodes and americans die in afghanistan. she pushes back, snapping at any journalist that tries to ask real questions and then we have this. a fake mobile with fake kids for the very real purpose of having us buy into her authenticity. >> bret: when i first read this, i thought it was a babylon b story. kind of joking about this. i'm then realized, that it was true, even the name of the company, sinking ship, really is quite something. the vice president has managed to stay out of the headlines, missing a lot over the big legislative battles along the border, other places. by doing that, in september,
9:03 am
into october, her gallup poll ratings were six points higher than president biden. this effort in this kind of inauthentic pitch is really a tough thing politically. >> emily: morgan, she is also the border czar. we have are trotting around with child actors in canada and ignoring what we are about to show a photo of which is dozens of unaccompanied migrant children have downed another border. she has maintained that she is dedicated to underserved children and yet there were no real children interested in space on that video who she could have lifted up. she ignored suffering children on the southern border. psaki any of you watch the show veep? i love that show. when i read the story yesterday, a guy sent me a story and i
9:04 am
immediately texted "no way. no way." can't be real. we had our share of issues in the trump administration. sometimes it felt like a cross between the west wing and veep. poor kamala harris and her staff, it's just every week it's a new veep episode. there's things a lot of times and i think its poor staff work. you don't need to hire children, child actors. normally if a corporation does that in a commercial they have to disclose. and you would see in the commercial, mandated by the regulators, these are child actors, that sort of thing. it's like constantly missteps by the staff that i don't understand. just the performance. there's a reason regular big time actors they don't act with kids in the movie. when you see the vice president acting in this particular nasa video, you know i say that. >> emily: the internet is
9:05 am
having a field day to drill down about that further about morgan's point between the just juxtaposition. tweeting "they couldn't hire an actor to play the vp too?" tweeting virtually in distant washable, veep episode. "oh, stop it. i heard the children or child actors. everything in the biden administration is fake." including their white house that they like to broadcast from. >> carley: i think we learned, they are child actors. it's a nasa video. take that point however you want to. you do have to kind of reflect on the trump administration and whether you like president trump or not, he was authentic. what he said, he said it was coming from him. there's a lot of micromanaging
9:06 am
going on with president biden. as for the vice president, people have said it's one of the worst jobs. you don't have a lot of authority. you're not a senator. you're not a governor. not the president. the president gives you a lot of jobs he doesn't want to do which is why president biden give kamala harris the border job but imagine if she owned it and imagine if she went to poverty-stricken countries and delivered speeches on anticorruption. >> harris: why can't she go to the border? >> carley: i'm saying for her politically if she wants to spin it, conservatives are never going to like her but if she wanted to spin it into a progressive political win, she could've honed in on it. instead she ran from it. i think if you're the vice president, the one thing you can't do is become a political liability and she is quickly becoming that. >> emily: wanted to ask you, something carly and morgan referenced, the team aspect.
9:07 am
30,000-foot view point, yeah, her team has released an official response which only consisted of him saying we didn't hire that child actors. but the end of the line, they are still responsible for that project. who is studying all of these projects? why did they turn out the screens worthy things? >> harris: we have seen something go progressively worse but i consider to be progressively different. she hired a whole new crisis communications team. what we are seeing is everybody is flexing. everybody trying to come up with a better idea than the previous idea. you keep trying until you start to win. it's like an nfl game. you lost all three quarters and it's the fourth quarter and they're putting the backup quarterback and they're going to try to make it different somehow. different isn't always good end in this case, canadian company, they handled the casting, i think that's right. you couldn't even go american. you can't convince me that her team didn't know that these kids
9:08 am
were not the children of parents. what do the vice president do that a vice president is often tasked with? no matter who you're with, no matter what administration, you are at liaison. my goodness gracious. you want off-camera time with those kids, learn about those families. fold up some real relationship so when the cameras are on you can say billy, i love it when you tell me about the blah, blah, blah. i know you love space. we couldn't even get them to help off-camera genuine moments that would give the on camera better. had they done it, we would have seen it? i want to take it back something morgan said. i didn't see "veep" because i didn't have time to watch the series but i did see "titanic." i see the irony, as bret pointed out, sinking ship entertainment handling this. i do see that. i don't want to make fun of it. i just want to pointed out. okay, let's rest our minds for a second. your ship is going down. your communications are terrible
9:09 am
on seven if not eight jobs the president has given you. this is the cry for help. you hired sinking ship entertainment. >> bret: listen. the other thing is, the title of the effort, the title of the video is "get curious with vice president kamala harris." get curious? they paid the actors to get curious, these kids. it's a major misstep and one that she's going to be hearing about for a long time. >> emily: i don't think it's going to be the last. coming up, the tide turning. bad poll numbers for the president and his party has the g.o.p. seated -- sees its widest margins.
9:11 am
to turn your home equity into cash. because home values have climbed to all time highs. and so has your equity. turn it into cash now, while mortgage rates are near all time lows. the newday 100 va cash out loan lets you borrow up to 100% of your home's value. you could take out more than $50,000. use it to improve your home. pay off high rate debt. pay for big expenses. or put it in the bank for real peace of mind. now's the time to use your va home loan benefit to get cash before mortgage rates begin to rise. call now.
9:13 am
>> are you ready to start a great career? >> safelite is now hiring. >> you will love your job. >> there's room to grow... >> ...and lots of opportunities. >> so, what are you waiting for? >> apply now... >> ...and make a difference. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ >> man, i love that song! ♪♪ three times the electorlytes and half the sugar. ♪♪ pedialyte powder packs. feel better fast.
9:14 am
working at recology is more than a job for jesus. it's a family tradition. jesus took over his dad's roue when he retired after 47 year. now he's showing a new generation what recology is all about. as an employee-owned company, recology provides good-paying local jobs for san franciscans. we're proud to have built the city's recycling system from the ground up, helping to make san francisco the greenest big city in america. let's keep making a differene together.
9:15 am
>> [bleep] >> harris: their chanting, directed at president biden that big sporting events. you know all across america. college games and elsewhere. including this week at the arkansas-ole miss game. this is the president and fellow democrats hit with more bad poll numbers. most americans view the republican party is better than the democratic party on several key issues. the newest gallup found americans say republicans are better able to protect the nation from international threats via 54%-39% margin. the same poll found americans believe the g.o.p. is better to
9:16 am
keep the country prosperous by a nine-point margin. it's on your screen right now. gallup says these are the g.o.p. is widest margins ahead of the dems on either issue in the past six years and if the polls were not negative enough, today's "new york post" detailing the slew of scandals hitting the biden administration in the first nine months. the paper calling it "joe biden's cabinet of horrors." another movie title. >> morgan: i think what you're saying across the country is an enthusiasm gap. republicans and independents, if you look at all of the latest polling on independence for the president has taken double-digit dip in favorability with independents. you look the country, like in virginia where terry mcauliffe is running, he might be the first victim of this enthusiasm gap. also what i found really interesting, i talked to someone
9:17 am
at the nrcc, the republican version of republican seats. the sense of being able to take back the house and maybe the senate, there's 180 women candidates running as republicans. 155 minority candidates and 163 candidates who are. those are record numbers for the nrcc. that's one little tidbit to show where the mind-set of the republican party is versus that of the aquatic party. >> harris: for mcauliffe, if only it was just a lack of enthusiasm. youngkin giving him a run for his -- a run for his money. >> policy positions, biden and harris are losers. nobody wants the policy positions of joe biden pinto their donkey. they don't. you don't see their cabinet
9:18 am
vehemently arguing for their policies. where is pete buttigieg with all the containers and shipping problems we have the tracking problems we have? >> harris: looked! where is pete? >> bret: if you add up all the things that have happened in a short period of time for the biden administration. >> harris: just this hour. >> bret: we should point out it's not that they are happening to them. the president and the administration is making decisions that result in some of this stuff. the afghanistan withdrawal chaos. concerns about inflation. the situation affects every family. border chaos, boosters or not. there is about vaccine mandates for businesses. crime in big cities, legislative stall on capitol hill and a battle between progressives and moderates. you add all that up miniature terry mcauliffe in virginia, you look and say yes, i have to say president biden is not that
9:19 am
popular here in virginia. if you look at the list of people who are helping campaign with terry mcauliffe, it does not include president biden or vice president kamala harris. >> harris: yeah. i mean, defund the police. sometimes on "the faulkner focus" we scroll it. bret, you are inside the beltway. i am always curious to know what the chatter is really like among someone's own party. how bad is it for biden right now? >> bret: these past three weeks have been really bad. democrats will openly tell you that. they think that this democrat on democrat slaughter, if you will, on capitol hill. going after manchin. everybody going into the bathroom after kyrsten sinema. it's bad looking. the administration and the president, to your point, not stepping up and saying these are the solutions were going to get
9:20 am
across the finish line. we are a long way away from 2022, though, harris. i think in the short term terry mcauliffe is running into some headwinds. but it's a long way from november 202022. >> harris: everybody following senator kyrsten sinema into the bathroom. it's worse than that. they are following her and joe manchin because they see the politics is different and we see something similar with parents. they see that their advocacy for their children is important. the biden administration sees it differently. they keep telling us that now the doj. a single after parents who dissent and become a so-called threat. >> carley: we keep on talking about virginia. parents shouldn't tell schools want to teach their kids question what you've got to be kidding me.
9:21 am
the kyrsten sinema bathroom chase and president biden's response was "it's part of politics." no, it's not. >> harris: maybe it's part of his politics. he has been around for 49 years and he has seen it all and he's anesthetized. >> carley: the problem with president biden as he is listening to the loudest people, the progressives, not the majority of the party. that's not why he was elected. people didn't vote for bernie sanders for a reason. he sort of swing in that direction when he strained past this social spending package, build back better, a european-style socialist movement and a majority of americans don't wanted. >> harris: the loudest voices in the room, progressive. people start to shout and cuss and follow you into bathrooms, that to me is a breakdown of debate. what's that pressure like for
9:22 am
president biden behind-the-scenes? a group not putting his best -- its best face out there? >> emily: we might not see how that pressure is being communicated to him specifically but it's working because he capitulated to them on that spending package. bret mentioned mcauliffe's comments in virginia saying he was facing headwinds from d.c. specifically blaming biden which created another tiny storm among the larger storm where he is saying i recognize i'm not popular here because of president biden. remember, biden won virginia by ten points in the last election. >> harris: what happened? >> emily: biden. morgan mentioned the independent decline, 19% drop and that's with the democrat party will need to eke by in 2022. it's a long way to go until there but i think every day has been a dog day in between. the amount of destruction we have seen, the amount of liberties infringed, tax dollars increased that we have seen is absolutely mind-blowing in the
9:23 am
last ten months. the crises, lives lost. this is ten months. 2022 can't come fast enough for the majority of americans. >> bret: 2009, the virginia governor was democrat. a republican won. that was the canary in the coal mine into 2010, which was in the words of president obama then, a shellacking by republicans on democrats. >> harris: wow. more than a much after gabby petito went missing, the coroner is about to release details. nancy grace has been reporting. they told us that it was a homicide but she said the cause of death is what we wait for the end of that report. what the coroner may reveal about gabby petito cause of death today. is struggling to manage your type 2 diabetes knocking you out of your zone? lowering your a1c with once-weekly ozempic®
9:24 am
can help you get back in it. oh, oh, oh, ozempic®! my zone... lowering my a1c, cv risk, and losing some weight... now, back to the game! ozempic® is proven to lower a1c. most people who took ozempic® reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. and you may lose weight. adults lost on average up to 12 pounds. in adults also with known heart disease, ozempic® lowers the risk of major cardiovascular events such as heart attack, stroke, or death. ozempic® helped me get back in my type 2 diabetes zone. ozempic® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes. don't share needles or pens, or reuse needles. don't take ozempic® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop ozempic® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. tell your provider about vision problems or changes.
9:25 am
taking ozempic® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may increase low blood sugar risk. side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. looking to get back in your type 2 diabetes zone? ask your health care provider today about once-weekly ozempic®. oh, oh, oh, ozempic®! you may pay as little as $25 for a 3-month prescription. that spin class was brutal. well, you can try using the buick's massaging seat. oh. yeah, that's nice. can i use apple carplay to put some music on? sure, it's wireless. what's your buick's wi-fi password? it's buick envision. that's a really tight spot. i used to hate parallel parking. (all) me too! the all-new buick envision. built around you. all of you. pay no interest for 72 months plus current eligible buick owners get $250 purchase allowance on 2021 buick suv models. hi, my name is cherrie. i'm 76 and i live on the oregon coast.
9:26 am
my husband, sam, we've been married 53 years. we love to walk on the beach. i have two daughters and then two granddaughters. i noticed that memories were not there like they were when i was much younger. since taking prevagen, my memory has gotten better and it's like the puzzle pieces have all been [click] put together. prevagen. healthier brain. better life.
9:27 am
veteran homeowners, with mortgage rate near record lows and home values at record highs now is the time to use the equity in your home to pay off your high rate debt. the newday 100 va cash out loan combines your mortgage, credit cards, car loan and other high rate debt into one simple monthly payment near the lowest rates in newday's history. it's only for veterans and it's only from newday usa.
9:28 am
>> emily: we await new details from gabby petito's final autopsy report with the acorn are set to hold a news conference about two hours from now. more than a month after the 22-year-old was first reported missing. her boyfriend, brian laundrie, who she was traveling with, initially returned home to the house they shared with his parents in florida. he is missing too, he is a person of interest in the case but hasn't been charged in petito's killing. the coroner has ruled her death a homicide but has not revealed the cause of death. private investigator who visited the site where petito's remains were found in wyoming claims she may have died from asphyxiation. currently, focusing on the manhunt for brian laundrie, some are arguing this is already becoming a close case. others say as long as the tips keep coming in, they will pursue investigative leads. because all probative evidence and leads have not been
9:29 am
exhausted yet, there's no way this will be cold. but i think that's sort of emblematic that some people might be losing hope. >> carley: the other thing is i really feel like the tone is changed with the police. the police spokesman recently said that the parents' story is weird and that's a change in tone from when i was there. they were not really giving their opinion as much. now they are saying okay, listen. brian's parents said he went missing on a tuesday. reported him missing on friday. weeks later saying wait, actually we hadn't seen our son since monday. as for this information today, i remember when her body was found and it was ruled a homicide. okay. the obvious part that we all felt and knew confirmed. how did she die?
9:30 am
brian laundrie is the only person of interest. it would be irresponsible to assume on tv that he killed her. we don't know. if he did, was she pushed? did she hit her head? it could've been an accident. was she strangled? a crime of passion. nobody has suggested drug use but did that come into play? we will find out today, so we will get a lot of questions answered. >> harris: you bring up good points about the questions that could be answered. the time of death. it has nothing to do much with the parents unless they were there, right? like you said, they haven't been consistent. and they aren't saying much. close to zero or 100% not true? don't know which is less valuable? if you can narrow down the time between september 11 when she was reported missing, right? in august 24th, 25th, the last time she spoke with her own
9:31 am
parents. a post on instagram, we don't know if it was her. maybe we do. maybe they do. and then her body wasn't found until september 19. that's quite the timeline. possibilities of time of death. if they can narrow it down, that answers a lot of questions. you talk about how she died. that will also tell us about, you know, they were supposed to be in love. that will tell us some details. he had real issues. her people have seen him slap her. they were having a violent relationship for the end that people knew where she was. how she died. was she covered meticulously? we went into this. when you love someone and they die, you take care, in some instances, of the body. he said the condition she would be in, having been left out.
9:32 am
there's a lot of things that we will learn today with the report. they won't give us all the answers but it could potentially be a lot. >> emily: great point. bret, you have covered so many of these. being a person of interest is not a legal or law-enforcement definition. it's almost just satiating the court of public opinion that the police are working on it. we have got someone. don't worry. i doesn't afford legal protection. what do you see here with that designation for brian laundrie? the fact that if we do never find him, what then? >> bret: i think harris is right. this is going to tell us more today but it's not going to paint the whole picture. i think the parents of brian laundrie, there's more to that as far as asking them questions and getting the more involved in where he is. to your point, this can't be a cold case. it's been quite something to watch since august 26, 27.
9:33 am
i think this is going to be another piece in the puzzle. it definitely won't fill in the whole thing. >> emily: so much to uncover. we will be standing by for that. farmer daily show host jon stewart says cancel culture isn't real. it's a myth. no one is being canceled. really? we have so much to say on this. stay with us.
9:34 am
when you're looking for answers, it's good to have help. because the right information, at the right time, may make all the difference. at humana, we know that's especially true when you're looking for a medicare supplement insurance plan. that's why we're offering "seven things every medicare supplement should have." it's yours, free! just for calling the number on your screen. and when you call,
9:35 am
a knowledgeable licensed agent-producer can answer any questions you have, and help you choose the plan that's right for you. the call is free, and there's no obligation. you see, medicare covers only about 80% of your part b medical expenses. the rest is up to you. that's why so many people purchase medicare supplement insurance plans, like those offered by humana. they're designed to help you save money, and pay some of the costs medicare doesn't. depending on the medicare supplement plan you select, you could have no deductibles or copayments for doctor visits, hospital stays, emergency care and more! you can keep the doctors you have now, ones you know and trust, with no referrals needed. plus, you can get medical care anywhere in the country, even when you're traveling. with humana, you get a competitive monthly premium and personalized service from a healthcare partner working to make healthcare simpler and easier for you. you can choose from a wide range of standardized plans. each one is designed to work seamlessly with
9:36 am
medicare, and help save you money. so, how do you find the plan that's right for you? one that fits your needs and your budget? call humana now at the number on your screen for this free guide! it's just one of the ways that humana is making healthcare simpler. and when you call, a knowledgeable, licensed agent-producer can answer any questions you have and help you choose the plan that's right for you. the call is free, and there's no obligation. you know medicare won't cover all your medical costs, so call now. and see why a medicare supplement plan from a company like humana just might be the answer. veteran homeowners. newday usa has dropped their rates again. the newday two and a quarter refi is the lowest rate in their history. two and a
9:37 am
quarter percent. just 2.48 apr. these rates could cut thousands off your mortgage payments every year. with their two and a quarter refi, there's no money out of pocket and no upfront fees. newday's holding the line on those low rates so every veteran family can save. >> harris: jon stewart says cancel culture isn't real. the former "daily show" host pushing back on the idea that people can be canceled for sharing their honest opinions. >> people to talk about cancel culture never seem to shut the [bleep] up about it. the internet has democratized criticism. what do we do for a living? we talk [bleep]. we criticize. we postulate. we opine.
9:38 am
we make jokes. now other people are having their say. that's not cancel culture. that's relentlessness. >> harris: more again. is he right or wrong? >> morgan: i think he's wrong. the difference here is the ability of someone to have money or celebrity following. dave chappelle over the past week, for example. he has got enough star power of decades being in the entertainment industry. people tried to cancel him. others backed him up. the danger of the movement is for average people, average americans who feel like they can no longer express a political opinion. of course no one should be expressing any opinions that are racist or misogynistic or homophobic. you shouldn't do that. but you have a right in this country under the first amendment to do so. you may just look like an idiot if you do.
9:39 am
>> harris: bret, do you think it's a legitimate concern that people who are comedians. dave chappelle is one of them. that they feel like they are being canceled and that funny is being targeted. >> bret: yeah. it's a tough business. everything is scrutinized. bill maher has spoken out about this a lot and he was canceled from his show based on what was said. talks about how this is getting overboard. part of politically incorrect led to the feeling that people were getting overly politically correct and there was a lack of freedom of speech. that led to a lot of political populism, including donald trump. >> harris: emily. >> emily: i think jon stewart is totally missing the point. it's not about him more people going after others in the comments section. it's about ordinary americans who are losing their jobs and
9:40 am
getting canceled from their livelihoods because of things they say or do. forbes covered a security guard, african-american security guard who used the n-word when telling a student not to use that word to call them that. he was fired. he locked his benefits, pay, and he has a family to support. a teacher in overtly failed to use the right gender pronoun that a student identified as is- identified as, and she was fired. it's about real americans, ordinary americans who are being canceled from their livelihoods. it's not about those who are wealthy and lose a couple tickets or get barraged on the internet. >> harris: i'm still trying to wrap my mind around what exactly jon stewart is saying. i know he's got a new tv show on apple tv and i know some of this is performative. if you want people to click on you. i am trying to figure out what exactly is his point. if he hangs out there long
9:41 am
enough, he has been gone for a while. you come back. the show was called "the problem with jon stewart." if somebody has a problem with him, he's going to get a flavor. maybe he welcomes it. >> carley: it could happen to him. he's wrong. cancel culture is a real thing. it's always existed to a certain extent. if you're openly racist or you sexually harass someone at work. i don't want to be your friend. i don't want to be your employer or employee. what's different now is liberals have move the bar to a much lower standard. things that are still within the mainstream think that you. fired. even innocent mistakes. >> emily: accountability is different than cancel culture. >> harris: right. nobody wants to shut down free speech. that's not what the argument is. the argument is that if you're not agreeing with someone, they will boycott you. the georgia election law. you don't have to agree with what's going on there.
9:42 am
stacey abrams comes out, boycott this. mlb game. it really bit georgia back on colorado was the one, they took that mlb game, the all-star game. then it turned out they are election laws are more strict than georgia. >> carley: it's him much wider >> emily: it hurt ordinary georgians. losing all those jobs in the revenue. >> bret: i think social media has changed the whole thing. you get a reaction to something. there's a social media mob that company's answer to. if you're not a company that stands up to that, depending on what happened or what was said, then people get canceled. >> harris: you know, i guess it is reflexively where people are going. that's one thing. but when you're talking about, people do lose their livelihoods. you go after somebody on twitter and you put up something that's
9:43 am
not true based on the fact that you didn't agree with them, you can crush them. it's more than just their spirit. people have kids. they have things to lose, as emily pointed out. the coronavirus pandemic apparently causing us to dream more. what are we dreaming about? work. what? some may call it a nightmare, depending on what their job is. up next, what our work dreams say about us. oh! are you using liberty 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. ♪ ok everyone, our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition for strength and energy. whoo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, now introducing
9:44 am
ensure complete! with 30 grams of protein. years. ensure complete! making monthly mortgage payments doing the right thing. well, that investment can give you tax-free cash just when you need it. learn how americans 62 years and older are accessing $100,000s in tax-free cash with a reverse mortgage loan to pay bills cover medical costs create emergency funds and more if i thought a reverse mortgage was just some kind of trick to take your home i wouldn't even be here. it's just a loan. call now to get your free information kit! look, reverse mortgages aren't gonna work for everyone. but, if you're looking for some extra cash for whatever reason. your home's equity just might be the right talk to aag for the best reverse mortgage america's leader in reverse mortgages is ready to help you reach your retirement why don't you give aag a call?
9:47 am
>> carley: autopsy results for gabby petito. the average american family deals with sky-high inflation and empty store shelves, will you be able to get a christmas tree? also, that video with kamala harris talking to kids about space, as it's revealed those kids were hired actors. bret baier will join us onset here in new york as "america reports" top of the hour.
9:48 am
>> ♪♪ sweet dreams are made of this ♪♪ >> emily: people say work is invading their sleep. workers having dreams and in some cases nightmares about their jobs. here's the good news. experts say these dreams can help you think creatively, solve problems, and help your career. bret, have you been dreaming about fox? >> bret: i have had some dreams about the handover from "the five." it's a bit of a nightmare. depending on whether greg is doing it or who is doing it. i've had some dreams where i am running to the anchor desk and i am running late. the countdown clock is going. i think that might get me in the seat faster. >> emily: it works. my favorite handoff was when we said something on cleanup on aisle five and you go, that's what i do every night. i have never laughed that hard. it was amazing. morgan, what about you? >> morgan: the best handoff
9:49 am
ever was when bret said that my granny was a hottie. she is the biggest fan of bret baier. i hate when i dream about work. it drives me nuts. i don't usually dream about work or school. if i am stressed, i dream my husband did something wrong and i wake him up and i tell him why i'm mad at him and he says, but it's a dream. i try to watch seinfeld or friends before bed so i stop thinking about life. >> emily: blaming the spouse. >> carley: my favorite "the five" handoff, i loved when you turned your head into a cartoon bear. >> harris: that was great. >> carley: i have a recurring work dream. a lot of people and tb have
9:50 am
this, similar to bret. i am trying, i have a segment coming up and i keep on forgetting and it's hours later. "but i've got to get to --" and i have no makeup on. it's a stress dream. i have one that i am in college and finals are coming up that i haven't taken any classes, and i don't have any of the books and i have -- how have i failed so greatly? those are my reoccurring dreams. >> emily: thankfully that's total fiction. you're always well prepared and you look gorgeous. >> harris: i do not dream of work. plain and simple, i don't. i dream of shopping for work. those are like dreams come true. but i do not dream of work. >> emily: the points of this analysis was these dreams, these fear dreams, stress dreams, they do help you allegedly perform better because you are early to the chair. you make sure that the feeling
9:51 am
you had while dreaming isn't repeated in real life. i definitely have had my share of dreams. i wake up and i'm like, thank goodness, that was a dream. i am prepared. i am on time. maybe it's a standard overachiever type dream. our worst nightmare is not being there on time. >> morgan: it's because we value our jobs so much. >> harris: it's also because of the clock. this one says that we have to go to commercial. >> emily: coming up, bret is going to tell us about his new book available today at his fox nation special that's sure to be a hit with history buffs and civil war junkies and all of us here on the couch. a veteran who may have served in my time, during the vietnam era, would be eligible today for a va home loan. so many do not know that. there's no expiration date on your eligibility for the va home loan.
9:52 am
every veteran, every service member out there if you're thinking about buying a home if you're thinking about a cash out refi whatever you're thinking with a mortgage, you should come to newday usa first. veteran homeowners. three reasons to do a cash out refi right now. home values are high while rates are low. newday lets you borrow all of your home's value. and you could take out $50,000 dollars or more. >> tech: when you get a chip in your windshield... trust safelite. this couple was headed to the farmers market... when they got a chip. they drove to safelite for a same-day repair. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech: that's service the way you need it. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
9:54 am
9:55 am
people with moderate to severe psoriasis, are rethinking the choices they make like the splash they create the entrance they make, the surprises they initiate. otezla. it's a choice you can make. 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. ♪ >> yes, roland's books are
9:56 am
flying off the shelf. the new book, the rescue. the fragile union and the crisi of 1876, available today. you probably know this, all books dropped on tuesday. grants explains during the civi war led us to a union victory. he tells the less known, but equally gripping story of how grant held the country together through a decade of racially charged terrorist violence during his presidency. starting sunday watch on this incredible story on fox nation. >> and still thinks that the country is lurching toward civi war again. they're are some horrible thing happening in the south. you have a whole series of massacres where and some cases there are straight out fights
9:57 am
because you have african-americans who had serve in the union army, who had weapons in new how to use them. the case of the colfax murder. in other cases you had people being killed you didn't have an weapons to protect themselves with. >> former speaker newt gingrich what a great historian. where there any child actors hired for the documentary? to get there were some actors that were provided some of that video. the documentary is really great great i saw it aired on sunday. it's now available on fox nation . i commend it to people because we put a lot of time and on it. the book is really the forgotte history of how ulysses s grant saved the united states. we know when we focus on him as the general, the commanding general of union troops in the civil war and how popular he wa because of that, but his two terms as president for really consequential. and it really climaxes in the
9:58 am
1876 election as he's leaving office, he has this grand bargain to really keep the country together into prevent i from falling back into is i can civil war. >> we should show this to president biden, he is having some unity issues in the party. >> i was just thinking, i have lots of people who are watching right now if you like america today has never been more divided in their lifetime, so i there anything you took from your research that can help in today's bided culture? >> i think so. and that is to remember we've been there before in a bigger broader case. this was tilting towards anothe civil war. and this was a leader who was really trying to keep the union together above all else. grant was humbled. he was really a leader who didn't get a lot of credit for his presence. there was scandal, there were corruption issues, but for the biggest part, he did the 13, 14
9:59 am
15 amendment. and really kept our country together. they're our lessons to be learned that we have to keep fighting for a republic. our freedom isn't free. if they keep on fighting again and again. >> freedom isn't even discounted . last question for you. i'm curious to know if there is somebody in the book because somebody always has that i don' want to call them a sidekick, but we never do anything alone. so he was that for granted? >> grand had really amazing relationship with his wife, who was his real partner. a lot of these successful presidents and figures, they alienate themselves from their family. grant grant was the exact opposite. he was close to his wife and kids. 1 million people show up for hi funeral in new york city. union and confederate former soldiers lined the streets in
10:00 am
their uniforms from the civil war. that's how big of a figure he was. >> everybody can watch this before they pick up the book, o do it after because it's on fox nation. go to fox nation.com and sign u today for that opportunity and get the book. to rescue the republic. thank you for joining us, "america reports" is now. >> a fox news alert to kick off "america reports" on this tuesday. democrats cannot decide how man trillions they want to drop on president biden's massive socia spending plan that could dramatically reshape the countr for generations to come. we are seeing new pictures ever day of how americans are alread feeling the ripple effects of the presidents economic policies . to get millions of jobs remain unfilled after extended covid relief programs kept people at home, in some cases people are still home. cargo ships stranded at sea as
127 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on