tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News June 4, 2022 3:00am-7:00am PDT
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bright stars ♪♪ through the perilous fight ♪♪ over the ramparts we watched ♪♪ were so gallantly streaming ♪♪ and the rockets red glare ♪♪ the bombs bursting in air ♪♪ gave proof through the night ♪♪ that our flag was still there ♪♪ oh say does that star-spangled banner ♪♪ yet wave ♪♪ over the land of the free ♪♪ and the home of the brave
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♪♪ pete: beautiful rendition from the air force singing sergeants commute deliver fantastic photos on "fox and friends" saturday morning at 6:00 a.m. new york city. carley: happy to be here. will: this is becoming one of the best traditions in morning television. in the middle of those photos was a photo from my cousin in california, longhorn, she said if that is not america i don't know what is. carley: that stood out to me. pete: one of the two homes of the navy seals. if you are in california and up, good morning, glad your dvring this show.
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let's grow the west coast rdo. carley: coming up later in the show something exciting that i wasn't part of last year but you and rachel were, we will do our rematch. can somebody explain? pete: it is called knocker ball, they are friends of the show. the safest way to smash people with little possibility of injury. that is last year, pete, rachel and i, i couldn't get up, but somebody -- pete: we were supposed to play soccer. will: that is what it was, soccer, the goal is the point but it devolved into wwe? carley: who ended up winning? will: i think pete by sheer -- carley: rachel got the trophy
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so no one won. no one scored the goal but look at the i -- pete: i heard that lawrence jones would be joining us. if that is the case -- don't know why you would bring in a 29-year-old 6 foot 4 man. pete: that means we have to dig a little deeper. carley: you guys aren't going to hit me. i just know it. i'm in for a surprise. pete: you are in for the game. carley: my husband plays football and sometimes i'm like so i know what it feels like to be tackled, when you watch football they never look like they are hurt and he is like no, i'm not tackling you, that is insane but with the padding.
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will: on behalf of your husband i will tackle you today. carley: maybe i will tackle you. will: i will allow you. i will tackle you, maybe i will tackle you. isolate that. it is all good. by the way big news alert, brand-new coffee maker in the green room and studio, already broken. already broken, not like the other coffee makers. it has worked very well, this one is not english. gives you an americano but we are in america so i can't i get a coffee. will: i hit long, seemed like the biggest coffee.
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i think it is large. and it didn't like that and it is upset now. i got this much coffee. pete: it is a disease, can't get when if we try. appreciate the effort, fail. carley: you don't appreciate it. longo in english. pete: baby spanish for large. carley: there's a little bit of a coffee maker issue in the "fox and friends" greenroom. >> 6 minutes into the show we haven't talked about anything meaningful, the answer is meaningful but everything after that was filler. carley: gargley. will: looked up and you will see it. today it is $4.81. $0.10 up from just thursday,
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$0.05 up from yesterday, almost $2 up from last year and $2 up from inauguration day. is staggering how much this has impacted every part of everybody's life especially people who drive for a living, who rely on the ability to get from a to b and everything is more expensive. if you ask president biden he took the podium to talk about the state of the economy, job numbers were up, but not back to where we were before covid 19, talking about the economy. >> president biden: recent survey from the federal reserve found more americans feel financially comfortable than any time since it began. >> elon musk has said he has a bad feeling about the us economy. his feeling about the economy.
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>> president biden: elon musk is talking about that, ford is increasing investment overwhelmingly. lots of luck on his trip to the moon. pete: the president referencing a question about elon musk, the world's richest man who wants to put a hiring freeze and cut the workforce by 10% because he has a super bad feeling about the economy, the president being asked about elon musk, lots of luck on your trip to the moon. the new york post characterized this back and forth as follows, to the moon, musk says economy will crash as hand president trade jabs. elon musk came back to the president after that and said the following. >> nasa is giving space x 2. $89 billion in a contract because they chose space x to go back to the moon. i think the new york post
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outdid themselves, if you look at the details of the stock, elon, rocket man -- it is funny but situation is not. in california a regular gallon of gas is $9.45, plus $9.54, almost $10 a gallon. we are hearing about gas stations adding another digit to their display because they are anticipating $10 a gallon gas. pete: you can switch that by not rounding down to 0.49 on the other side. if you want to replace the whole thing. hold up the cover of the new york post, it shows a boxing match and it is not a fair fight if you are looking forward on the future on the economy it is not a fair fight in the president biden's entire
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life talked about politics, money comes from the government, elon musk owns massive companies, has to forecast whether or not they will make money and make tough decisions in real-time to include buying twitter. if he has a super bad feeling he's got to make a call now about what the future is going to look like, president biden can say what he wants and to make snarky remarks, elon musk is planning for the future and that has people uneasy. will: you hosted hannity last night and did a great job, you are longtime friend. on the show he said about elon musk -- >> guys who depend for their livelihood on getting big trucks to follow pick women with diesel most of the time which is higher to get the work done you can't do it. elon musk sees that. he gets that.
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he runs a real business. he doesn't take taxpayer money for his pet projects, he has to use his own money, investor capital to compete for workers to do work, he gets that. is looking at this economy and seeing a consumer strained by energy prices, strained by food prices. the president of the united states is taking our economic livelihood on the president of russia instead of doing what he can do to help us thrive right now, energy market, that is the thing he should be focused on and he is avoiding it like the plague. carley: some people have extra funds because of the $2 trillion stimulus package but that will run out when you look at gas prices and inflation and you are seeing credit card usage going up and savings going down and you have jamie dimon and elon musk on the same page about the economy i would
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listen to them. we are leaving this right here and turning to more news headlines in a developing story, crowds of people seen running from gunfire late last night, in student housing at the university of minnesota, the shooting reportedly started at a house party where two people were hurt, there is no confirmation yet on what caused the shooting, police have anybody in custody. did you hear about this horrific story? a team convicted of plowing a car into a mother at her 8-year-old son will serve just 5 months in a juvenile probation camp for that crime. the life sentence from george gascon's office, shocking surveillance video and initial felony charges against the team, gascon calling the sentence an appropriate resolution but the victim only known as racial saying da gascon is telling him and every other thug in la county that it
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doesn't matter if you tried to murder people, wire his policies prioritizing the livelihood of rotten monsters? it is day 3 of queen elizabeth's platinum jubilee celebration. kicking off events will be there be, they said derby in the uk. unfortunately the queen will not be attending after also missing yesterday's thanks giving service at st. paul cathedral, the royal family did attend the service including harry and megan who received cheers and jeers. earlier the queen did get a chance to meet harry and megan's daughter for the first time. coming up ainsley ehrhardt, martha maccallum will join us from london with the latest on the queen's celebration. they are having a 4 day bank
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holiday in the uk. pete: meaning the banks are closed? four days, thursday, friday. pete: to we have any four? we should have that. will: thanksgiving? thanksgiving, bingo. christmas legals that being that way. we should have one of those, new revelations in the murder mystery in south carolina why police will dig up the body of a former housekeeper who died four years ago for their investigation. this one kills me. no one out wokes the hut, the new drag kids book that made its way onto pizza hut's bookit reading program. ♪♪cr ohn's disease
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jurassic world dominion, in theaters june 10th. rule your home security with xfinity home. pete: we are back, the daily mail is reporting trafalgar square in central london is being evacuated when thousands were set together for the third day of the queen's jubilee celebration, officers are clearing the area, setting up
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and redirecting traffic, no confirmation what is causing the evacuation. we will update you with developments and now to this. a new twist in the murtaugh family saga. gloria satterfield will be exhumed after her mysterious death in 2018. carley: officials say the reports on her death do not mesh with her injuries. >> reporter: the family of the murtaugh's former jasper gave her permission to exhume the body, she worked for the family for 20 years, after she allegedly -- according to the murtaugh family, the coroner says her death wasn't reported to their office at the time and no autopsy was performed, south carolina authority to the corner made the request after knowing her death certificate said she died of natural causes
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which was inconsistent with injuries sustained during the fall accident. alex murtaugh is facing 71 - charges for stealing insurance settlements. he was shot in the head in september by former client but survived. murtaugh admitting it was a conspiracy. the investigations currently ongoing for the death of her wife maggie and son paul who were fatally shot at the hunting lodge in june. a lot coming out on that. will: now to a story to break the part of peter hegseth. pizza hut has gone woke. carley: have you had their wings? pete: yes of course, they really good but it is the deep
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dish pan pizza, pepperoni, when i am someday on death row that is what i'm going to order for my last meal. what i was going to order. they have a program called book it. if you grew up in the 80s 90s most likely you know about book it, you read books and prove that you read books and get a button and a free personal pan pizza. there was a pizza hut a mile from my house, absolutely loved it. notice not enough to promote reading, you have to promote certain types of reading and now there is this. here's the cover of a booklet pizza hut is openly promoting as part of their bookit program called bigwig, it is about a young boy who dresses in drag and here's the publisher's description of bigwig, quote, when a child dresses in drag to compete in a neighborhood
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question competition he becomes bb bedazzled. a wig called with, the unstoppable drag team, but wig feels inadequate compared to the bigger wigs, when with butterflies of her head, she goes from kid to get inspiring dreams, those who wear her and also start to dress in drag so here we are. steve: this really is about teaching children about transgender is some and drag before they even know what the difference is between boys and girls. bill marr talks about this in a really good monologue on it and he set it right, this is children are being used as cannon fire in the culture wars. it is also regional. children in california and new york are saying that they are
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transgender at a much higher rate than other parts of the country. this shouldn't be a regional thing and you have to ask yourself why. pete: i was telling you both watching matt while chapter new documentary what is a woman and it is fascinating and entertaining and it does highlight how incredibly irresponsible and dangerous it is for the society to lean into the idea that children can change and should be enabled to change their gender talking about medical advancements, even in their minds how irresponsible it is to take 8, 12, 14-year-olds and put this idea in their heads but there's a step further on this pizza hut book, this is about drag as much as it is about transgender is demand drag is connected to sexuality. if you see any of these children's shows, they are not
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children's shows, like on a and b, dressing up as a woman, it is risk up into a sexualized vision of a woman, definitely in the vein of a striptease, not something instilling the idea you can change your gender but lean into sexuality at the age of 7 or 8, lean into being a sexual being before you even encounter the idea of puberty. this is beyond irresponsible, this is an inherently amoral step the we are taking our culture enabled by america's biggest corporations. will: you think pizza hut's job is to make good pizza but they are so invested in the gender side of things in their corporate culture they are trying to ram it down our throats, you used to submit 7 or 8-year-olds to their bookit club and they want to submit
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you to this, hyper sexualization of our youngest kids in our culture at pizza hut and classroom. carley: pizza hut started in wichita, kansas, small family business that grew into what it is today and if you think of the history of of and what they are promoting now it is -- blows your mind and makes you feel the world is spinning out of control. if there is one silver lining, usually in these book programs parents are looking at what book do you want to read and there will be parental control over that but that doesn't happen when kids are going to school, you don't know what the kids are going to be learning. will: i wrote a book about this topic. i have one for each of you that comes out in a week. if you mentioned it, covid 19,
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we call it the covid 1619 moment, brought parents into the classroom and ways they had never seen before and they were astonished by what they saw, stuff like this out of pizza hut and they said where did this come from? seemingly out of nowhere. it did not come from nowhere. this is part of a 100 year progressive plot by the left starting with early american progressives, the mantle is carried by cultural marxists to go at the fabric of our country and they did it by removing the most key ingredient first. effectively get rid of god in western civilization judeo-christian values but replaced it with a forgery because if you take got out right away american parents would rebel, replaced it with a forgery, now they get rid of the forgery and it is open season on indoctrination so everything part of a step, you talk about pride month or drag queen our, first it was about power, tolerating alternative lifestyles, real tolerance
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means allowing something you disagree with to exist, now it is not about tolerance. part of the frankfurt school who came from germany and landed at columbia university in part of the teachers college wrote an essay called repressive tolerance which was 70 years ahead of its time in admitting you can't have -- you need to repress the other side if you want the alternate marxist view to eventually win, that is where we are introduced in every single school, not just public schools, private schools, first step to recovery is understanding the depth of the problem. carley: was it purposeful by the people who started to take god out of schools or did that idea did they want to stop there and over time people started to take that idea -- >> it was purposeful because they wrote about it in the 1910s and 20s, openly debated the most effective way to get god out of schools.
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and and they started with pullout periods, and a whole school system called career planning in gary, indiana. understanding how intentional they were and how we got to drag queen book our at pizza hut. pete: you can preorder it right now. still ahead as biden's were crisis rages on republicans are witnessing it firsthand. georgia carson buddy carter was part of the largest delegation to visit since the pandemic began. whatever works border agents told him coming up. ash with parodontax active gum health. it kills 99% of plaque bacteria and forms an antibacterial shield. try parodontax active gum health mouthwash.
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thank you for getting with us. before we get into the details was this the first time you had been to the border or have there been years in the past you got to see the crisis as well. >> the fifth time since i have been a member of congress, the last 8 years since i've been to the board, last time was a year ago when donald trump was down there and i traveled down there twice, a member of the doctors caucus to make sure the unaccompanied children were being taken care of. pete: you have 5 trips to compare the situation today to. would do. what did you see today that is different from what you might have seen in the past. >> i was hoping i would see improvements but i didn't see any improvement whatsoever, still overcrowding, still the border patrol agents are overwhelmed. one of them described as being like working with a bucket in front of fire hydrant. turn off the tap, that is what
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needs to happen. the biden administration are enabling this by essentially ignoring the situation. president biden has never been to the border, not as vice president, not as a senator and not as president and he doesn't understand, he hasn't seen what i have seen and others who have been to the border have seen and that is one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world right now. pete: you characterize it as one of the worst humanitarian crises in the world, fascinated when you take into account the us is working with spain to help resettle migrants andy's border pressure. that is incredibly shocking to me. how does that work? spain is an ocean away to help us deal with this problem. >> that is really just the biden administration tries to deflect blame and move us off
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of the target here because those people want to come here to america, we are the land of opportunity and they know that, that's why they want to come here, we've got to stop% away you stop at according to border patrol is build the wall, secondly you keep titled 42 in place, thirdly you enforce the remaining mexico policy and forth and most importantly their needs to be consequences for people crossing the border, they are breaking the law and they need to suffer the consequences of that. will: thanks for what you saw on your trip to the border. still ahead the cleanup split. "cavuto" ration continues with two more days of pomp and pageantry, the former press secretary to princess diana joins us on the queen us remarkable rain. the rise of the robots. how the nationwide labor shortage is turning more
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our chief meteorologist is on a summer road trip across america. pete: june is national camping month. rick is kicking it off at acadia national park in maine, he joins us with the fox weather forecast. they are sending you anywhere you want in the country to do the forecast. >> reporter: i will tell you i stayed in a hotel last night. i'm trying to work -- we are here in acadia national park. this is the national park that has the earliest sunrise in the us so it is a gorgeous place, 50,000 acres, take a look at the sunrise, we got a time lapse of the sunrise, sunrise today at 4:50 in the morning. if you like to get up early and have your adventures early in the day, say you are in the plus 40 range this is where you
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want to come for one of your national park adventures this year, seventh most visited national park in the country as well. we will be out here all summer long enjoying places around our beautiful country. in florida, talking about system. it was hurricane agatha that hit the south coast of mexico a few days ago. the same system across parts of south for the. i don't think we will watch it develop into a tropical storm meaning it won't get a name but you see the rain across parts of south florida and we will watch it throughout the day beginning to taper off, east coast of florida 2 to 3 inches left, some spots will pick up, probably 8 inches of rain, we have flooding going on this morning in south florida, be very careful. it gets better later today and tomorrow will be quite a nice day for the cleanup. lots of stories to tell you from acadia national park on morning long.
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pete: i love your summer plans and you are sharing them with us. where are you headed? >> reporter: some stuff is not ironed out. if you get west i know a few of them. we don't give a lot of love to the west coast. but we could do that in the summer and still get some sunlight and show you the sunrise which should be beautiful. carley: acadia national park is stunning. you are highlighting the beautiful places in america. thanks. pete: we will see you. will: don't miss you at all. carley: a quick update, fox news alert out of trafalgar sq. in london it is being evacuated. the daily mail reports a
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controlled explosion involving a suspicious vehicle. we will monitor the situation as thousands are in town to celebrate queen elizabeth's platinum jubilee celebration. as news breaks on that we will bring it to you. that jubilee celebration continues, the queen herself will not be in attendance after experiencing some discomfort during thursday's event. joining us is patrick jetson, a former military officer and private secretary to princess diana. it is such an honor to have you on. i want to ask about the queen missing two days in a row of events. is that concerning to you? how are you reading that situation? >> reporter: the queen is 96 years old. she is very vivacious lady, fully beatty. one of the things that strikes you as you meet her, that and
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her lively piercing blue eyes so she has a heavy schedule for the platinum jubilee celebrations but she is probably wisely pacing herself. we can be sure today she will be watching the derby on the television because she is a very knowledgeable expert enthusiastic racehorse expert herself. carley: you were princess diana's private secretary, what was she like in her quiet moments when cameras were not on her? >> reporter: when the cameras weren't on her she was very similar to the person you saw when she was being photographed. when you saw her doing her public engagements. she was another very vivacious person also with piercing blue eyes, she had next ordinary ability to communicate on an emotional level as well as on a
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cerebral level. she was an extra nearly engaging and perceptive, observant, intuitive and i would say she had many of the attributes of a natural leader. carley: the most iconic people are queen elizabeth and princess diana. what was their relationship like? >> reporter: princess diana came into the royal family not to be a princess but to be a queen consort in due course, when prince charles -- the comparison between the queen and princess diana are always very instructive. different generations of course, the queen is from the greatest generation, the generation that remembers world war ii, she wore a uniform, served in the ats from her eighteenth birthday, her first prime minister was winston churchill. diana who was from a different
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generation, more emotionally engaged generation but sharing many of the same virtues of faith, family and duty, a very dutiful person, she was an english aristocratic lady, she had a family in great historical events and she herself we remember as a humanitarian also took her royal duty, not least her associations with the armed services very seriously. carley: it has been amazing to watch the celebration unfold, still two more days of fun to come and it has been an honor to talk to you, former military officer, former secretary to princess diana, what an amazing life you have lived, thank you for joining us. >> reporter: enjoy the jubilee. still ahead, the rise of robots. as labor shortages plague businesses many are turning to
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so i called the barnes firm. i'm rich barnes. it's hard for people to k how much their accident case is worth.h barnes. t ouour juryry aorneneys hehelpou will: we are back with headlines. rafael nadal after his opponent alexander neverev twisted his right ankle, hips taken off the court and in another match, a climate protester glued and tied herself to the net. >> we have 1028 days left. it took security 15 minutes to detach her. she was escorted off the court and they played on, b stuck to the net.
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to the usfl, dominating the pittsburgh maulers in week 8. here is what running back darius victor had to say after the win. >> nothing else matters, that is my job. will: i'm a football sports guy. if you're running the ball, 8 men in the box, we call it over the field. starting at 3:00 pm today you can watch the stallions take on the new orleans breakers at noon. catch the michigan panthers on fox. at 4:00 pm the bandits take on the one win houston gamblers. i will talk. pete: as labor shortages, more employers turning to automation or robots, this year alone orders for workplace robots are
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up 40%. artificial intelligence being used in every industry. here to react chico, the president and ceo of industrial provider spanish american corporation. you have robots working for you. describe what you have next and what you do with your business. >> reporter: this is an industrial robot called the collaborative robot performing welding task, one of the applications we are seeing a severe labor shortage in so it is providing a repetitive task that can be done over and over again. pete: it can also flip burgers or flip over fries and a friar, we are seeing this all over the place. we have been hearing robots might be part of the future.
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why are we in such a labor shortage, why are we seeing less workers? >> the industry is changing. through covid a lot of people realized what their career path was. where we sit in the labor shortage today we saw a lot of early retirements from our industry and with advanced automation we are seeing a change in the manufacturing workforce, people want to get trained and work on robots. that is the biggest thing, we are seeing a shift in the manufacturing workforce into advanced manufacturing from some of the dirty dangerous tasks that were done in this industry before. pete: what about customer service? i think robots, i think restaurants, there has to be a human component no matter what. >> that's true. the human component is a core
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part of that, we try to use the robot to do most of the repetitive boring tasks and whether human component comes in is in the programming of the robot and the maintenance of the robot so even right now we are sitting in our training center and this area we are training high school kids, kids out of technical school and retraining people that are already in the workforce on how to use this technology so there will always be a huge human component. pete: and those are well-paying jobs, you don't need to get yourself into hundred thousand dollars in debt for a liberal arts degree to do it. >> that's right. those jobs are very high-paying even right out of high school. this type of robot is integrated into many programs and these kids are coming out
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with strong salaries without the burden of debt from the university. pete: it looks like that is sufficiently welded. thank you. doctor marc siegel is here with what you need to know as monkeypox cases have doubled since last week but the republican senate primary race comes to its head. a face-off from pennsylvania in november. ♪♪ to snoring- automatically. so no hiding under your pillow. or opting for the couch. your best sleep. all night. every night. for a limited time, save up to $500 on select tempur-pedic® adjustable mattress sets. ♪♪ ♪♪ ♪ thunderstruck ♪ ♪♪ ♪ thunderstruck yeah, yeah♪ now that's eatin' good in the neighborhood.
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looking at a shot of seaside, new jersey. that's where i spent my summers as a little girl. great nostalgia. beautiful area of new jersey. pete: did you cause problems there? carley: no. carley: i was never a problem causer. pete: you don't strike me as a problem causer. carley: never had a rebellious phase. just normal stuff. do you think i would have. will: i'm all of a sudden picturing what are we looking at probably 17-year-old carley how much trouble did she get into? pete: followed the rules. will: somebody who followed the rules? carley: i'm still a rule-follower. i want to toe the line and not cause trouble. seaside heights that was 2-year-old carley. 2 to 15. so you are not causing trouble. will: you heard us complaining about our coffee machines downstairs. apparently more americans are making coffee at home. that means the market for coffee creamer and specifically candy
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flavored coffee creamer is booming. and in front of us right now we have got some interesting flavors. pete: one i just held up is wily wonka and the chocolate factory. fudgy caramel. carley: mine is twinkie. will: this is almond joy like a candy bar in your coffee. carley: twinkie coffee creamer. i bet it's going to taste like vanilla. pete: at home making coffee not going to work you have got to get trendy at home. carley: during the pandemic people started making their coffee at home and there you have it. pete: switched to almost always black coffee. will: me, too. pete: if i wanted a doughnut i would eat one. will: almond joy coconut in almond joy. pete: this is nice caramel wily wonkca. i have never been an almond joy
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guy because i'm not big on coconut? will: me either did we just become best friends? carley: i want to try this one. will: i love a twinkie by the way. i'm a twinkie over a dingdong. i'm a twinkie over all the other. carley: cut that clip. pete: isolate that clip. not a big dingdong fan. will: i love a twinkie however the winner today in my estimation is almond joy, actually. it's a nice mix with the coffee. carley: this one is not good. will: which one? pete: wily wonka. i'm going through with the twinkie. too much sugar. carley: twinkie very light. carley: i haven't tried the almond. pete: great television. a lot of silence and watching people. will: next flavor. pete: trying to get the real
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flavor. i like that. carley: that was an aggressive pour. will: dingdong flavored coffee almond joy tastes like sun block. got a sun block vibe. will: that's what coconut. carley: especially artificial coconut. twinkie one is the best. it's amazing. pete: really good. will: sampling of coffee creamers you can try at home if you have any left over. pete: put this in your cereal. will: that would be gross. carley: if you did that every morning you would duane 100 pounds. will: coffee based cereal. carley: no, no. pete: actually not bad. [cow mooing] pete: tastes like a milk shake. will: pretty good. got to stop. you are going to make me throw up. carley: then we are doing
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knockel ball later. what could go wrong. will: if you have any money left over after filling up your car. gas prices hit another record overnight. $4.81 is your latest national gas price average. a new record again 5 cents up from yesterday. third straight day of record setting prices. we often compare it to one year ago and we have been doing this for, i would say, a couple of weeks. what's interesting to me standing out stuck last year at $3.04 for a long period of time. wake up every day this year with a new record. carley: yeah. and when things get really bad. americans look to who is in charge, the rihanna. -- theleadership. what going to do about it. president biden had two very different messages on two different days this week. listen to this. >> now, there's a lot going on right now, but the idea we're
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going to be able to, you know, click a switch, bring down the cost of gaffes lien is not likely in the near term nor is it with regard to food. >> there is no denying that high prices, particularly around gasoline and food are real problem for people. but there is every reason for the american people to feel confident that we'll meet these challenges because of the enormous progress we have made on the economy. pete: enormous progress we have made on the economy. that's according to joe biden. when if you look at the job numbers, which were up, we're adding jobs. we're still not out of the hole of covid. if you look at the jobs being added now, it's not wrong to say that these are still adding back the jobs that trump added to the economy before covid-19. carley: first month jobs number over 400,000. you are right to point that out, strengthening the economy is something not something that's happening at all.
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pete: wages are not growing faster than inflation. that's inflation on top of. reflected in energy prices but on top of. look at that curve. that's the key date there. find me one key place on that curve and you will point to inauguration day. of course joe biden continuing to want to say it's all about vladimir putin and russia. will: this is all weighing on the public's opinion of joe biden. >> leaders have broad shoulders and they take whatever is coming their way and they deal with it and they lead and they get you through it instead what we have the biden white house is just an excuse-making operation built around alliterations the putin price hike. it's an excuse. you are right, laura, people have been paying it themselves. they pay it weekly, daily. they see it and feel it when a politician runs and hides and gives excuses like this it turns the public off the politician even more so. will: what you are experiencing
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at home does outweigh what joe biden tells you from a podium. you know reality and you can feel spin. here's a question i have for the both of you. i think this is fascinating. in the last week or two, we have seen the mainstream media, the corporate mainstream media plush numerous articles that paint joe biden in a negative light. you have them talking about him being tired of walking back or his staff walking back so many of his misstatements. talking about black staffers within the biden administration talking about a hostile work environment. even an admission in the "the washington post" of the existence of the hunter biden laptop. why? why all of a sudden has the mainstream media decided they can now, to some small degree, begin to stop covering for joe biden? carley: yeah. i think that's a really good point. pete: great point bari weiss in her newsletter has a phrase she uses which is time wondering. it's no longer has a bearing on the election. didn't, you know, it was all
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true then. alworth recognizing then. you give it enough time, you can finally acknowledge it. it doesn't have an impact on the narrative. you bury it on page 23. report on it in the future say when joe biden gets shell lacked by the democrats in november. it -- they knew it was true. they just needed to wait because they couldn't pile on a candidate they knew was in his basement and vulnerable at that particular moment. so, it's an unfortunate reality the media environment we live. in. carley: quickly when it comes to gas prices this was a big topic of conversation yesterday, how is the president going to try to alleviate some of the pain at the pump it came out that he was thinking about going to saudi arabia. and now they are kind of walking it back maybe he will make the trip, maybe he won't. he was immediately criticized because when he was on the campaign trail he said he wouldd saudi arabia accountable for prices. this trip would be a photo opportunity where he would have to be shaking hands with the crowned prince.
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pete: begging them for oil. carley: assassination of "the washington post" reporter jamal khashoggi. he is cutting venezuela oil. you are going to saudi arabia, venezuela when we can do this here at home, he is the president of the united states. why are you carrying about the venezuelan economy trying to increase the venezuelan economy or the saudi arabiaen economy when you can do it here and you can do it in a much more green and efficient way? pete: because his party is being run by the girl who glued herself to the net at the tennis match. climate zealots are driving the policy of what they do. so go get the dirty oil from despots. carley: that's the infuriating part if you really cared about climate change you would be promoting american energy and they're doing the exact opposite. will: 1,000 days left. >> 1028 days left now 1027 according to her.
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will: midterms beginning to catch up. former hedge fund ceo david mccormick has conceded to mehmet oz in their pennsylvania senate race conceded on friday night. carley: mccormick ending his campaign acknowledging the recount would not give him enough votes to be the republican candidate in november. pete: alexandria hoff is life in washington with more. >> good morning, yeah. the campaign event in pittsburgh, mccormick said the numbers are just not there. here's what he said. >> today i called mehmet oz to congratulate him on his victory. and i told him what i always said to you that i will do my part to try to unite republicans and pennsylvanians behind his candidacy, behind his nomination for the senate. >> the automatic recount that was triggered by the tiny margin between oz and mccormick will continue through the 7th. announcement comes two and a half weeks after election day.
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dr. mel met oz endorsed by former president trump said this. this evening i received a phone call from david mccormick. grateful for his support in the fall election. we share the goal of a brighter future for pennsylvania and america. oz will face off against democratic nominee and current lieutenant governor john fetterman. fetterman suffered a stroke last month and revealed yesterday he almost died due to not taking health more seriously. it's frustrating because all the more so this is my own fault. bear with me. i need a little more time. i'm not back to 100 percent but i'm getting closer every day. fetterman's doctor disclosed he was diagnosed with cardio myopathy. harder for the heart to deliver blood. proper diet and medication he feels fetterman is fine to serve says his doctor. will: fetterman not very old for these types of health issues. carley: huge scare. i'm sure it was stress-related running for governor of a major
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state. will: senator. carley: senator of a mainly state. will: stress and poor health -- poor choices. pete: now running against a doctor. will: we begin with a fox news alert. trafalgar square evacuated before thousands are set to gather for the third day of the quoon's celebration. daily mail report police carried out a controlled explosion and witnesses report a loud bang after a suspicious vehicle was found. westminster police now saying the incident is concluded and the air rel. reopen in due course. two nurses and a doctor were stabbed at a hospital in inseen know, california yesterday. the suspect barricading himself in the hospital after stabbing three victims. the suspect did have a previous record one victim is still in critical condition. the justice department indictint
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extrump adviser peter navarro for defy ago subpoena from the january 6th committee. weighs handcuffs and leg irons. being charged with contempt of congress. >> what that kangaroo committee is doing right now is investigating for punitive purposes. they are essentially acting as judge, jury, and executioner. will: navarro's arrest stems from the committee is unlawful and any subpoena issued to him is quote unenforceable. second trump adviser indicted after steve bannon. there is no pirates of the caribbean without johnny depp and he might be reprising his iconic role. now that his trial with amber heard is concluded, depp may come back to play captain jack sparrow. >> yeah. >> i suppose you didn't get
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that. >> former disney executive giving people hope since there is a huge appetite to see it happen. however, depp did say in the trial he would not go back to disney. carley: could you imagine if he does? will: those are your headlines. carley: i think if disney cuts him a big enough check he would change his mind. pete: after the circus we just watched that's how weird these things go in the media environment. carley: reactionary. pete: terrible, ridiculous trial where they both look terrible. he ends up winning. now he may win some more and get a role. i don't know. carley: that's a good take. will: yeah, he essentially wins for defamation. pete: correct. will: now he is in that position okay great i won where do i go to get my reputation back? he is saying well, disney you sold me out i think to some extent. you bought all these false allegations i don't want to go back to disney. you may be right. cut the check. you have to ask where is the accountability on amber heard? where is "the washington post"? they published her defamatory
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accusations. carley: i was reading some lawyers have written articles did about that. they do say if johnny kaepernick wanted to they could sue "the washington post" for publishing an unvetted claim. he won't want to see the courtroom anymore. take a win and set on an island. pete: very possible. by the way my stomach does not feel great right now after all of that. [sighs] pete: i will be okay. will: you chugged coffee creamer. pete: not a good idea. carley: and suggested putting it in your morning cereal. pete: maybe we will try that tomorrow. the doctor is in with monkeypox cases doubling since last week. dr. marc siegel tells us what we need to know. carley: where is rick reichmuth. we are checking in with his road trip across america coming up. ♪ ♪ everybody is just getting by
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this is xfinity rewards. our way of saying thanks, with rewards for the whole family! from epic trips... to jurassic-themed at-home activities. join over 3 million members and start enjoying rewards like these, and so much more in the xfinity app! and don't miss jurassic world:dominion in theaters june 10th. carley: back with a fox weather alert. floridians bracing for first storm of the season. 10 inches of rain are likely to fall. brandy campbell is live in
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miami. brandy, wow. look at all the water? my goodness, what's going on? >> oh, good morning, carley. this is what is happening in parts of downtown in miami due to this tropical system that is coming through the area. we are under a flash flood watch and obviously it's happening. we have had quite a few cars trying to make it through this downtown area and just like this mustang right here. some still driving through despite seeing cars stuck. as you can see i'm standing in it. this is i would say maybe two and a half feet of water. i'm this is deep i'm not standing in the street. i met one couple. they just flew in from california expecting great vacation and they started it off by getting stuck in a cab under mcarthur bridge right there. they got stuck and had to swim out with their suitcases. this is not a favorable location or ideal situation to be in right now. so, flash flood watch, stay out, you know, stay inside if you can and of course, if you see something that looks
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questionable with flooding do not drive through but this is happening here in the flash flood watch is really for miami-dade county and some of the surrounding areas around as well as this storm comes through. send it back to you. carley: thank you, will, over to you. will: thank you, carley. the city of philadelphia has identified the first case of monkeypox in pennsylvania bringing the total number of cases in the u.s. to 21. here to react is fox news medical contributor dr. marc siegel. dr. sealing great to see youdr.e it's in philadelphia, what should we know? >> first thing we should know is there is a lot of hysteria tracked to it as usual. we need to track these cases. 21 cases in the united states. probably several more that haven't been diagnosed. they don't have exactly the testing in place yet. but, even then, it's very hard to catch requires very close contact or sexual transmission in the u.k. and all around the
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world over 50 cases are in gay or bisexual men. spreading that way sexually. there is about 200 cases in the u.k. and several hundred cases in europe. i think, will, this has been around for a while. the structure of this virus looks like it's something that has been around a while which means if it tracks back a couple years to nigeria, it's not going to suddenly take off. that's what people really need to know. also something we can easily isolate you if you have it. it's probably been missed for a couple of years because you have flu like symptoms or have lymph node rash is very characteristic very easy to find and separate people out. we have an anti viral drug anti-vaccine if you need it. i don't anticipate this spreading wildly at all. will: you brought this up. i think it's important. you and i talked about this once before. this in europe has largely been spreading gay population tied to a couple of raves in europe. what do we know with this in philadelphia or the spread of
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the united states. it's important to highlight i think as we enter pride month where we will have a ton of parades and, you know, large gatherings, not that this disease is particular to the gay population but is right now largely affecting the gay population. >> that's true also suspected in philadelphia and cases in new york as well. i know that by checking with our epidemiologists in new york. it appears to be male to male sex for the most part. may spread because of the actual rash itself. something on the lookout if you are in that population and if you have traveled recently. traveling and people in the gay population have been much more likely to spread this that's what we need to do have from a public health point of view. we missed that with hiv, didn't we? we don't want to make that mistake again. will: dr. siegel, thank you for being with us this morning. >> thanks, will. will: completely back-stabbed. why the man behind the infamous
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tell me. pete: that's chip slafn. here to react senior fellow at the independent women's network and senior for the federalist asra nomani. thanks for being here. either way the letter came out. he is seaing no, no. they are trying to blame me. isn't the bigger story the fact that the letter was written in the first place in coordination with the white house? >> oh, absolutely. beauty sleep last night i spent last night in reading the 500 pages of emails that the school board association put out in response to the outrage that we have as parents and i got to tell you something. this guy and i love him because he is a fellow mountain near from west virginia, okay? so it breaks my heart to say this but is he in la la land. because does not take any responsibility. when you read in those emails he took no responsibility back then. but, let me tell you exactly
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what happened this was a political operation. this chip slaven got an email from an ohio board board member who said we are going to lose in november. isn't there something that you can do to stop this attack on our school board members? and he mentioned the election. so, yeah. i know, this hasn't been put out there at all. it's like buried in these 500 pages of emails. do you know something else that nobody else knows? they put out this letter that did equate parents to domestic terrorism and then days later after the justice department weighed in and said they are going to sick the fbi on us? guess what? president biden actually called viola garcia who is at the national school board association, one of the leaders, and the white house staffer said we have got your back.
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so, this nonsense that they have put out there that there was no coordination with the white house is -- it's just like what your instincts you are being played, right? and this guy is completely trying to not take responsibility. but do you know what? i wanted to tell the parents that we won. like even now they cannot -- they are trying to gaslight us, chip slaven is trying to gas light us. we won. the shirt i'm wearing says mama bear and on the side it says all the things that we have been called domestic terrorists. he even called us in his emails equated our folks coming to school board meetings as qanon and all that. it goes on and on but we won. pete: you sure did. thank you for doing the work. just a few days later merrick garland came out and affirmed what was written in the letter. we asked for response to the interview you just saw on fox digital.
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here is what the national school board association is saying today. they said the letter was principally directed and approved by mr. slaven. the white house officials discussed the existence of the letter its examine and the contents of the letter with the department of justice officials more than a week before the letter was finalized and sent to president biden. so he may have had an oversize you had impact but they are standing by the fact that there was coordination, the white house wanted it, and they wrote the letter. >> yeah they actually the 500 pages of emails are filled with the executive office email addresses. because they were white house staffers involved in it. and i didn't know august of these people because these are those, you know, unknown people that are behind the scenes in the biden administration right now, but they are all folks that are high up in the education department, justice department. white house as democratic
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political operative. pete: um-huh. >> this was absolutely a political operation and, again, parents, we prevailed. because we ended up dismantling this very toxic, toxic machine that was brought against us. and just to keep it real. i just want folks to know that, you know, we sought parents from texas to massachusetts and oregon still rappingen on the doors of school boards to be heard please do not give up. pete: thanks for keeping it real for us this morning. thanks for breaking it down. you got it. >> thank you. pete: all right, still ahead, the teen accused of mowing down a mom and her infant in this heart stopping video gets just five months in juvenile probation camp thanks to woke d.a. george gascon. that story is next. and where in the world is rick reichmuth, we are checking in on him in his trip across america
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as the mom tries to move out of the way. the california teenager my goodness convicted of mowing down the mom and 8-month-old son will spend five months in a juvenile probation camp, all of this thanks to los angeles county d.a. george gascon. gascon's office explained the move the sheriff's department agreed with the felony charges that were filed. the probation department recommended and the court sentenced the minor to a youth camp for 5 to 7 months. an appropriate resolution. here to react is shay los angeles deputy district attorney. shay, good morning to you. you heard george gascon calling it an appropriate resolution. what do you think? >> >> i don't think it's an appropriate resolution for the crime was that committed. this was an attempted murder. and george gascon should have aroused it to have been charged as attempted murder. carley: i mean, it absolutely was. and it was a woman and her 8-month-old baby. and now she says that she is
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suffering ptsd because of what happened to her. her name is rachel. she released an impact statement on this situation. and you are going to understand really where she is coming from. she said gorge gascon doesn't value my life or the life of my child or any other victim out there and would rather reward the monsters like the juvenile suspect by demonstrating to them that their actions have no consequences. why are gascon's policies prioritizing the livelihood of rotten monsters when my child, my baby who is incapable of protecting himself is left to fend for himself and essentially being told his life doesn't matter. like i said, you can understand what where she is coming from there. what's your reaction to that. >> i completely understand where she is coming from. and i read the victim impact statement in court. i had a chance to speak with the victim. watching the video, it's hard to watch. it's gut wrenching and then to think that our office has to
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charge the lowest possible crime which san assault with a deadly weapon. but it's using great force likely to cause great bodily injury. not even using the car as a weapon which would have been a strike, which would have suspended his license for life. and would have resulted in a much more severe punishment. carley: shae, you have got to wonder what is the rational behind this philosophy putting the criminal over the victim. i'm sure he thinks he is doing the right thing but what is motivating him to make these decisions? >> honestly, i have no idea. public safety is at an all-time low. violent crime is up. it's obvious. women can't walk their babies down the street in gascon's l.a. and he keeps doubling down on policies and then he lies to the media and he puts out statements that either he is lying or he is
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incompetent because the case didn't even -- this case didn't even involve the sheriff's department at all. this was an lapd case. and he puts out a statement saying that the sheriff's department was on board. so that's a complete lie or he doesn't know what he is talking about. either way he is not fit for office. carley: that's a really good point and that's some of the inside baseball that we wanted to know and why we are having you on. there are a lot of people out there who agree with you which is why the recall effort has now 500,000 signatures. what do you think is going to happen there? do you think is he going to get recalled? >> i believe he will be recalled. we will get past the number. signatures are coming in every day. and when people see videos like this, they understand that it's not a certain group of people that are being affected. it's moms just trying to walk their child done the street. -- down the street. they are being run down and a teenager is being sent to camp. these camps aren't like juvenile
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detention centers. it's like ymca summer camp. we got so lax with this rehabilitation, it's not a juvenile detention center don't be confused. he spent five months in a camp. carley: shae, we have got to let you go real quickly you say you spoke to the victim she doing okay and how is her baby? >> she is doing the best she can. she is suffering emotional trauma from the incident. she feels revictimized by it. george gascon and his policies which are understandable. the baby is doing well and okay. no permanent damage that we know of. to the victim. carley: we are glad that she is physically okay but we know emotionally she is not. and it's understandable. shea sanna thank you for joining us. >> thank you for having me. carley: we have headlines, will? will: carley, thank you. 25 pounds of cocaine hidden in a
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wheelchair at charlotte international airport. four packages found inside the wheelchair with an estimated street value of $378,000. the suspect arriving to the u.s. from the dominican republic is being charged with felony trafficking charges as the agency says they are determined to stop these types of drugs from entering the country. no reported connection to the fact that "fox & friends" was in charlotte last weekend. all i want for christmas is a lawsuit? singer mariah carey is being sued for $20 million over copyright infringements over hermanster holiday hit. in documents acquired by the "new york post," a co-writer of the 1989 song all i want for christmas is you is claiming carrie never sought or retained. the song which has different lyrics and melodies got extensive air play 1993 season before carrie released her hit in 1994.
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country version. will: those are your headlines. all right. we are kicking off the summer with one big question and it's where's rick reichmuth. our chief meteorologist is on a road trip across america and we are checking in with him at every stop because june is national camping month, rick is live from the acadia national park in maine. he joins us for our fox weather forecast. i have been to a lot of national parks i have not been to acadia. i need to be going there, it looks like. >> you do. it's absolutely beautiful. this whole june segment for camping and having to hear that mariah carey christmas song isn't the way i wanted to kick off our summer series in the mix here. yeah, we are here at acadia national park. kevin schneider here the isn't of this park. people are planning their summer vacations right now. if you are like me, you haven't planned anything yet. so you still have time. what is the first thing somebody needs to do if they think hey, i want to go check out national parks? there is a system to it how can
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people learn about it. >> one of the best things that people can do is just visit our website go, to the parks website. learn about what there is to do in the park. learn if you need a reservation. campground reservations, hotel reservations. those are feeling up fast at the busy national park like acadia. rick: speak about that because the parks had such a boom with covid with people getting outside. and i think people realized the beauty that we have in this country and there is no slowing down with that pop peculiarity of parks. >> that's right. last year busiest record in akayed i can't understand many of our other national parks in the united states. this year is really show nothing signs of any difference. rick: all right. tell me about acadia, specifically. this is a really interesting national park with so much coast line here in maine and its islands and shoreline and still some towns mixed in it. tell me what makes this park in particular beautiful and special. >> acadia beautiful place. mountains meet the sea. opportunity to go camping and hiking and paddling all with an
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incredible place. rick: back there is the highest point here in along the eastern seaboard and earliest place to see the sunrise on the east coast, a spectacular thing that is here at akayed i can't. thanks some for getting up and joining us this morning. guys? will: all right. thank you, rick. beautiful. carley: great stuff. pete: for sure. still ahead he has been called the biden family fixer. who really is jim biden? we break down the business dealings tied to the president's brother coming up next. ♪ who are you ♪ who, who, who, who ♪ i really want to know ♪ who are you ♪ who, who, who, who ♪ tell me ♪ who are you ♪ ♪ sweet ♪
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will: you know we talk so much about joe and hunter biden shady busy dealings there is another figure a shadow figure in all these dealings and it is joe's brother james biden. pete: right there. he denies he is the biden family fixer despite a "the washington post" article detailing his role in the family, which you cannot tell the story, will, of the biden family, the political business family without including -- he goes formerly by james biden. many call him jim. inside the family he is known as
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jimmy biden. will: in an revelation in and of itself, "the washington post" recently published a story about jim biden. he gives an interview by the way to a reporter which is fascinating. kind of on and off the record the entire time. i shouldn't be doing this and yet i am. he tells this reporter a lot about his relationships within the family. and inside this, there is an acknowledgment of the legitimacy of the laptop that hunter biden dropped off in delaware. where they found some emails. pete: we have a couple of them this morning. to demonstrate jim's essential role in the biden businesses but also how close he was to hunter biden. we have heard so much about hunter biden. james' relationship to hunter was very, very close. if you remember in joe biden's wife was killed he had just became a senator. jim biden took care of hunter and his brother bo for many years. this is october of 2017. if you need to call me now. just got off the phone with your
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father, that's joe biden. we have the two biggest days of our business life in front of us. six exclamation points. we must be smart or everything goes up in smoke. please call me. you must remain calm. timing could not be worse. calm and measured, paybacks can come later. will: before we move onto the next email. if i had a highlighter. i would love just got off the phone with your father. we have the two biggest business days of our lives in front of us. pete: of our lives. will: come on. pete: this is right after joe biden had left the white house. remember the timing october of 2017. a lot of overseas business deals right on the horizon. this is also as hunter is having some serious personal issues so you read into this remain calm, be smart, everything goes up in-i like to do a lot of that. pete: up in smoke. dealing not just with business but with personality issues with hunter as well. will: what type of business deals are we talking about? get into that in just a moment.
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here is an example of who they might be talking about doing business deals with here is another email. california, we have spoken with the governor, lieutenant governor both personal friends for over 45 years. last 15 years very close to hunter, mayors, san francisco, l.a., san diego, they have invited us to come and determine our interest. new york state governor cuomo we'll meet whenever we are ready who is who of democratic politicians potentially involved in all of these business deals. at least according to jim biden in his emails to hunter. pete: emails that we were never supposed to see but by him speaking to them in this interview he recognize all legitimate. they have invited us to come and determine our interest, the investment was in the biden family and the biden brand. we showed that picture of jim biden looks a lot like joe biden and they would push that. will: investment in the biden name and biden brand. what type of deals are we talking about? let's take a look at this. three examples of deals that have come to light from the laptop.
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let's focus in on this one. pete, this is fascinating. this sets the stage. this is in the year 2,000. biden vs. leonard barrick. this ended up in a lawsuit. but it was a deal where this bar rack family. pete: in the lawsuit the clients sued back they were going to use family name and his resemblance to his brother united states senator joe biden. by the way they took on $353,000 loan did the bidens from a prominent biden donor and also mr. barak hired james biden's wife sarah in the deal. will: highlights like a lot of corrupt wealthy families happy to trade on a family name. gets worse. trade on family name do what? here's another example of the lawsuit. this is from a medical services firm that they entered into a deal with. also ended up in a suited. this time though the promise was
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that perhaps once joe biden was in office, you could get some contracts with, for example, the department of veterans affairs. pete: he was supposed to promote the firm's healthcare model in the 2020 campaign as well. the third one which we are not going to have time to get to is the deal we know a lot more about which is the chinese deals overseas as the deals got bigger for the biden administration. ♪ finally. our honeymoon. it took awhile, but at least we got a great deal on our hotel with kayak. i was afraid we wouldn't go.. with our divorce and.... great divorce guys. yeah... search 100s of travel sites at once. kayak. search one and done.
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go up against guy aggression enterprise. only three weeks ago i split my pants doing some of these. pete: you did. putting a lot of effort. we are told that lawrence jones might come in as a ringer at the last minute. carley: should we plan this out. get you one, too? will: that's how it started last year, too. pete: it does. carley: there are four people. who is the fourth? pete: we don't know. this is live right now. these are wonderful people. carley: i thought this was from last year. pete: last year's footage we carnaged not allowed to be shown on tv anymore. carley: always wanted to do this. i think this looks fun and you know these people. pete: i have been to knockerball location. carley: three man operation. >> will turtles eventually. rachel was. carley: look at her tiny
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little -- so low to the ground. pete: try not to go after her but eventually had it 20 happen. will: there is a few weeks ago. will: riding inflatable horses as one does while reading the news. carley: as leith you were wearing underwear. pete: carley said earlier in the show she wants to feel like what it's like to get tackled on a football field. this is about as close as can you get without getting hurt. carley: i'm ready. pete: you stand right there and i will go as fast as i can at you. carley: i'm giving you full permission well, you know, yeah, sure. i'm sticking to it. why not? pete: i'm going to write a waiver here in the break and you will have to sign it. carley: you are anyone flightable ball. pete: you can't get hurt. will: it doesn't protect you from sacrificing being a gentleman. pete: that's true. carley: all right if she is
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down. video of cam newton doing this little kids. one over here and one over there. pete: what i did to rachel last year. carley: she is natural. she got back up. pete: she was a little grumpy at me after that. carley: i heard her yelling at you. pete: we do have a lot of fun. carley: the day that pete hegseth decides to shrug coffee creamer is the day we do knockerball. pete: feeling fueled. leveled out. news here and we are going to show you some wild video. this terrific situation took place in august. it's hard to watch. we want to warn you of that. and the footage shows a 16-year-old driver at the time. he was allegedly driving drunk, speeding, going down the wrong-driving the wrong way and as you just saw he mows down a woman not just a woman but holding her will-month-old baby
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at the time. that's the car that ended up stopping the 16-year-old from going any further. this is a horrible incident. and we had an assistant d.a. from los angeles on last hour and said this really should have been charged as attempted murder. you would think that something significant would have been done to this child. 16 years old when this happened. los angeles d.a. george gascon handed him down a 5 month sentence in a youth detention camp. that's the sentence that this 16-year-old was charged. pete: so. carley: given. pete: what we are seeing in los angeles under gascon and elsewhere under similar d.a.s is siding with the criminal over the victim. you had a young woman, her young baby walking down the street in what should be a peaceful moment mowed down. and you could say he is drunk. you could say he is 16. whatever. that's a weapon as a vehicle. and he drove off.
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and he drove off and tried to flee the scene. what often gets nixed is how this impacts victims. we are actually getting a chance now to hear from the victim in an impact statement. her name is rachel. that's the name she is using. she described what the incident was like. this is what she said: i thought those were the last moments of our lives. we were dead. that feeling along with the memory of a car accelerating directly into us will haunt me forever as the car approached me and my child i stopped walking and moves the strohl and myself up against the building on the right side of the road to make sure we gave the reckless driver plenty of room to pass. as the car got dangerously close to us the juvenile suspect turned the wheels in our direction and accelerated as he aimed to kill us. will: wow, that's what she is telling you today when we, as you point out, want to think it's a 16-year-old. he was drunk, was it an accident? from the eyes of the victim
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through that windshield it was purposeful. now, the los angeles d.a., george gascon is telling fox news this: fortunately the baby was uninjured and the mother received an laceration to her elbow. the probation department recommended and the court sentenced the minor to a youth camp for five to seven months. an appropriate resolution. juvenile justice is meant to rehabilitate young people. carley, a little bit earlier, had an l.a. deputy district attorney on. here's what he had to say. >> it's moms just trying to walk their child down the street. and they are being run down and a teenager is being sent to a camp. and these camps around like juvenile detention censors. it's like cmca surgeon camp. public safety is at an all-time low. violent crime is up. it's obvious. women can't walk their babies down the street in gascon's l.a. and he keeps doubling down on policies. and then he lies to the media and he puts out statements that
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either he is lying or he is incompetent. will: this story is horrific on its own. let's expand this beyond los angeles if we might for a moment. so there is a trend right now, as you approach election season, for democrats to begin giving voice to the idea that they need to be tougher on crime. i want you to watch how this conversation evolves. what you are going to hear are things like you are hearing from the mayor of new york eric adams we need to focus on gun violence. gun violence is out of control and obviously that's a national debate in the wake of uvalde, texas. gun violence and crime are not -- they are not -- you are not being repetitive by using those same phrases. they don't mean the same thing. in fact, if you look at stats from new york and the statute in new york are similar to those in chicago, philadelphia and los angeles. burglary, robbery, transit crimes, all up 30 to 50%. in some of those cities, for what it's worth, gun shooting is actually down. the point is, we have a crime
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problem. it's not particularly or exclusively a gun problem. but it will be used by democrats now to position their politics to focus on one of their pet projects which is gun control in an attempt to convince you they are now focusing on crime. pete: it's great point. we have a culture of crime around it permissiveness. vagranty. the imld that anything goes when you see someone mowing down a mother and child and they get five month at a summer camp, that's not rehabilitation. that's a free pass. that's no consequences. if you want to has been, you give them hard time you better rethink your life before you get back out into the real world. carley: hit the nail on the head, pete. i asked the deputy d.a. of los angeles that we had on what is motivating george gascon i'm
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sure he thinks he is doing the right thing. he says he has no idea what the motivation is. it's this world view that america is a racist country and there are, you know, the haves and have nots and you shouldn't punish people for their bad behavior because they were set up to fail. unfortunately, when you don't punish somebody at 16 years old. for almost murdering a woman and her baby, they wind up thinking that there are no repercussions or ramifications for their bad behavior. and that's why you see repeat offenders constantly committing crime after crime. we have seen it so many times with these horrific stories of somebody who, you know, commits a violent atrocity and then you look at their rap sheet and it's like they have been arrested 30, 35 times in their life. pete: so well said.
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if you believe the system is systemically racist. you would not work in it you would seek to dismantle this. carley: baby formula shortage appears to be getting worse rising across the country. will: there is hope as the abbott's laboratory plant reopens today. pete: grady trimble is in michigan at the plant. >> good morning carley, pete and will. this is certainly a step in the right direction. reowning this facility is by no means a quick fix to the baby formula shortage. abbott has said it will start by producing a specialty brand of formula that was not part of that voluntary recall back in mid february. the good news is they say that product, elecare will be available as early as june 20th. the company has not said when it will start producing its other baby formulas that were part of the voluntary recall. it also hasn't said when those products will be on store shelves. while the plant has been down, abbott has been shipping in
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formula from its facility in ireland. the biden administration has arranged for formula to be flownin from australia and unitd kingdom. despite those efforts the shortage in the last couple of weeks has actually gotten worse. nationwide, the out-of-stock rate is nearing 74% and some states are getting hit harder than others. nine states now are seeing more than 90% of their formula out of stock with georgia and arizona getting hit the hardest. we're also learning that the department of health and human services is launching an investigation into the fda and its oversight of this whole process. specifically looking into whether the fda followed the correct policies and procedures when inspecting this facility which ultimately led to the shut down of this plant as well as its oversight of the recall. back to you. carley: grady trimble live for us. thank you so much. keep in mind when the baby
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formula shortage became a national news story, we were at a 40% out-of-stock rate. now it's 90% in some states and nationally like grady said -- pete: it's getting worse. how long can you use the it snuck up on excuse and here a month later almost twice as bad in stern places? still having babies. mothers still need formula. will: even though that plant is coming back on line that doesn't solve it tomorrow. carley: solves it two months from now. it will get worse which is an absolute tragedy. speaking of tragedies. we have another one here. turn to headlines now. starting with this a naval special warfare officer was killed in a traffic accident outside of coronado, california. four others were injured during the crash friday morning which happened while returning from training. names are being withheld in accordance to navy policy until 24 hours after a next of kin has been notified. california highway patrol is currently investigating this
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tragedy. the largest ever migrant caravan is set to leave tapachula monday to walk through mexico to the u.s. fox news griff jenkins is at the border and says as many as 11,000 migrants could take part in that caravan. officials say that caravan could swell to over 15,000 migrants as they make their long, hard journey north. get ready lebron james reportedly the first active nba player to hit billionaire status the laker shooting guard joined the elite list after making more than, wow, $385 million in nba salary over his 19-year career. but it's off the court where he really rakes it in making nearly $900 million in endorsements and other investments over his career. the only other player to rake in a billion dollars is michael jordan who didn't hit billionaire status until after
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his retirement. there is a try element to this story. pete: there is. and if lebron could buy as many championships as michael jordan but he can't. will: such an impressive country. pete: such a depressive country. carley: feel sad for lebron. pete: massive chinese angle. will: billionaires tell us how systemically unfair this country is. floridians are bracing for the first potential tropical of the season. pete: forecast are saying up to 3 feet of coastal flooding and 10 inches of rain are likely to fall. carley: fox weather brandy trimble is live in miami. what's the latest? >> good morning, guys. well, i just got word that the flash flood advisory for this area has been extended to 10:00 a.m. we are still seeing areas like this completely flooded over. there has been a lot of traffic coming through this morning
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despite how much water you guys can see. there is a black van back there that is stuck. it's been there this whole morning since i have been here. there is a taxicab under the bridge that is stuck. and i actually spoke with the couple that was taking that taxi to go to their hotel. they just got in town from california. and this is what happened. they ended up swimming out with their luggage until they found me trying to find higher ground. this is an issue that's happening in some parts of miami. of course, this isn't everywhere. this is in a portion of the downtown location. another area that is common to find flooding is brickle an area nearby. stay out of because you can get stuck. the police have been out here trying to stop people from driving through. of course it still happens. we are keeping an eye on things. i was told by meteorologists we are expecting another, i guess, band of rain to come through pretty soon so that will just add on to what's already happening.
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i have been out here for a couple of hours. and it really doesn't look like the water has gone down much. sending it back to you all. will: thank you. carley: thank you so much for that reporting brandy, we appreciate it. pete: still ahead, police in seattle are so under staff they can't investigate some crime. the crime reported being ignored as jason rantz warns there is no end in sight on that next. will: later, ainsley earhardt, brian kilmeade and martha mccallum will all join us live. ♪ ♪ ♪("i've been everywhere" by johnny cash) ♪ ♪i've traveled every road in this here land!♪ ♪i've been everywhere, man.♪ ♪i've been everywhere, man.♪ ♪of travel i've had my share, man.♪ ♪i've been everywhere.♪ ♪♪ ♪♪
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♪ pete: seattle's crime crisis continues with police now warning that they are too understaffed to investigate sexual assault. one sergeant saying they are expected to respond to reports of sexual violence but at current staffing levels that objective is unattainable. meaning it's not happening. with 226 sex and child crimes so far this year but only five detectives, will seattle's woke leaders step up to protect their citizens, radio host jason rantz
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joins us live from seattle. good morning. you talked about how understaffed this department is we are now learning we just got access to this memo where the department effectively admits we can't investigate crimes. >> yeah. this has been going on for a really long time. that particular case we lost 100 detectives. but understand that this department as a whole is down just this year 75 officers through may. and i know of four more resignations that happened in just the last four days. and the problem is when they defunded, they also decided over on the council side to demonize these cops and denigrate them and go after them. police officers to the tune of over 400 since the defund movement started. leaving us with just about 850 officers in the department that needs about double that. so, we are across the board in deep trouble. and what's really going on here and what's been going on for a
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while is that just to meet the staffing minimums to respond to 911 calls in each precinct in seattle, the city has had to beg officers from non-patrol roles like detective to go and respond to 911 calls. they are pulling people off of the cases that they could be working on and instead of going after the rapists or sexual assaulters who are out there right now, they are not able to do that. they have to respond to basic 911 calls. pete: amazing. we have done it to ourselves. five detectives in the sexual assault and child abuse statement from the seattle times. here is a statement from the police chief we asked for one and actually did get a statement from. what i learned from staffing concerns sexual assaults in april i bolster the unit with detectives. we will bulk up that work despite the many challenges remain ahead. pretty self-explanatory. they still have the challenges you just laid out. i want to get your topic on one
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more particular aspect on policing. car chases and people they would like to talk to or arrest. in washington state, over 934 failure 20 yield incidents were reported by the washington state patrol. drivers who will not pull over for the police. why is this happening, jason? >> well, and that's just the washington state patrol. this is happening every single day in different agencies. it's happening because two legislative sessions ago. the democrats in the house and the senate decided to pass a bill that pretty much banned all vehicular pursuits. the only time an officer can actually pursue a fleeing suspect in a car is if there is reasonable suspicion of dui. that doesn't change; however, you have to have probable cause for a violent crime. you have to have probable cause that it's an escaped felon or a sex crime had been committed. now, to get probable cause in these situations pretty much means the officer would have to
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witness the crime occurring. because there is no way that you are going to be able to establish probable cause before you go ahead and chase this vehicle. and so all of these folks are deciding, yeah, i don't have to pull over because they cannot legally pursue me. in fact, if they are going to pursue me, they could end up losing their jobs and i can sue despite being a criminal. so we are seeing this rise in smash and grab crimes for this reason. get in, get out, flee. pete: house bill 1054 you pass a law that says can you run from the cops? guess what, people are going to run from the cops. >> shocking. pete: jason rantz as always you reveal this stuff and we are glad you come report on it, thanks, jason. >> you got it. pete: still ahead the queen's platinum jubilee continues with two more days of pomp and pageantry. ainsley earhardt and martha mccallum are live in london as the queen has to sit out another event today. plus, we are gearing up for one of the most competitions in "fox
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& friends weekend" history. wow, that was a dramatic read. will fisher -- official knockerball rematch still ahead. ♪ your spirit is stronger than your highs and lows. your creativity can outshine any bad day. because you are greater than your bipolar i, and you can help take control of your symptoms - and ask about vraylar. some medicines only treat the lows or highs. once-daily vraylar is proven to treat depressive, acute manic, and mixed episodes of bipolar i in adults. full-spectrum relief for all bipolar i symptoms. elderly dementia patients have increased risk of death or stroke. call your doctor about unusual changes in behavior or suicidal thoughts. antidepressants can increase these in children and young adults. report fever, stiff muscles or confusion which may mean a life-threatening reaction, or uncontrollable muscle movements which may be permanent.
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♪ will: queen elizabeth's platinum jubilee with the royal family set to celebrate. carley: today's event derby the queen will not be in experience after experiencing some discomfort curing thursday's event. pete: joining us from london is our very own co-host ainsley earhardt and anchor of "the story" martha mccallum. two of our favorites. good morning. ainsley: hey, everyone.
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pete: good to see you both. over the last two days, three. what has it been like to be there? what are some of the highlights? ainsley: it's been wonderful. the weather has held up for us. >> we are very fortunate for that. there is nothing like visiting europe. it is just beautiful and the buildings, the architecture, everything is just so old and i have a great appreciation for that and so does martha. it's been wonderful to be here to make history 70 years as the queen. everyone here loves her adoors her and appreciates her steadfastness. to be the queen over the years she put country before happiness and her own children. there is so much to learn about devotion to her country and to the monarchy. it's just been fabulous. i have had a wonderful time. we have worked most of the time. had some nice dinners. tonight we are going to the concert, see diana ross and rod stewart. martha, how has it been for you? >> martha: it's fantastic.
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really interesting to just walk through the streets and get a sense to get a people of how committed and how grateful they are. it's very interesting. you know, thinking about in this morning. i will just show you front papers this morning if you guys can take this. this says we give thanks, this is from the service service that we watched yesterday. the papers here are all over this story. here is one more for you. from the sun. harry and meghan snub party for her mag and dash back to windsor. what i'm hearing today they are anxious to get back to the united states and that i think it's a sad story, really. just one more i want to show you here. painfully distant at saint paul's still so far apart with the image of two brothers and their lives. this has been, i think, probably a very bittersweet two days for the royal family. because there is this deep division that appears to be
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unhealed at this point. and i just think a lot of gratitude for queen elizabeth and you know i was thinking this morning how unsettled the whole world is and you have this war brewing, happening in ukraine. you have all of these inflation issues and economic issues all over the world covid for the last two years. i think the thing that makes them so passionate about adoring her is just the stability that she has shown over the 70 years of her royal life as a princess and as queen and really the ability to overcome tyranny in world war ii against nazi germany and also the breakdown of the soviet union. margaret thatcher, ronald reagan, queen elizabeth. they have had victory over tyranny twice in the european region thunder reign. there is a craving for that kind of leadership and stability. i really do. carley: martha so well said and such a joy to watch both of you
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cover this event you are both encyclopedias of knowledge when it comes to the royal family. i truly want to know how you prepare for four hours of tv straight, no breaks when you are covering a british military parade because that was your day on thursday. but, you know, i do think you touch on something really important, martha about why the royal family is so important to the u.k. and it does feel like when the world is spinning out of control, you go back to queen elizabeth and she a constant. she is steady. almost like a throw back to a by gone era. this is a really patriotic weekend for them. >> you know, carley, your faith is so important to you. will and pete, same with you. we always talk about that when we are sitting on set with "fox & friends" and same with martha raising her children catholic and loves being here and appreciates the church. so, for me that's so important. when i'm reading about her life and reading her quotes, she talks a lot about her faith and god above all.
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and country is after that and family is after that. so, she -- her priorities are in order. behind us big ben, it's not under construction anymore. you have parliament right here. on the other side of parliament is westminster be abby and can you take a tour of that. london eye if you can see on that side behind martha and tower of london where can you go and visit the jewels how they tortured people. so much history has happened here. her faith is so important. you have done that carley? carley: i have done the torture thing before. it's very interesting. carley: see where they stretched people. and you are not allowed to use cameras when you are looking at her gels. jewels. and i took a picture. i need to see your phone we have to delete that i'm sorry, i didn't know. but, yeah, the country is full of history. and when you read about her faith and the church, that is something that really resonates with me. i think the people love her for that she has taught that to her family and passed that on and today is lilibet's birthday.
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she turns 1 today and they are celebrating that at frog more castle. that's where the queen is she unfortunately was not able to attend the events yesterday because of discomfort. apparently she has good days and bad days she is 96 years old. i think there is a bittersweetness to this event because people know the likelihood of her surviving another 10 years for the next jubilee is, you know, you never know but she would be 106 years old at that point. >> martha: her mom lived to be 101. no one knows what the next jubilee would be called other than in the record industry it would be a double platinum. carley: that's true. >> martha: we will see. will: i like what you had to say about the consistency of this queen. fascinating the british public is interested in holding on to this tradition while so much tradition is being attacked as somehow shameful. this is a tradition that the british public seems to be united still behind. we have a little surprise okay?
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because ainsley we feel for you you have been separated from brian for a while because i was sitting with ainsley all last week. so brian kilmeade has not been reunited with miss morning co-host for quite a while. ♪ will: we thought let's bring them together here on the weekend. ainsley: brian. >> martha: oh, brian. ainsley: martha and i went shopping for you and we got you gifts. brian: really? i'm just getting a little emotional seeing you. [laughter] brian: sorry. just to be able to almost talk to you in person. ainsley: well, i want you to know shopping. >> martha: she went all out. she got you. brian: what did i get? >> martha: a little piggy bank. ainsley: double-decker bus. >> martha: there might be tea in there for you, brian. brian: that's fantastic. ainsley: when you get your dunkin' donuts coffee. i have nothing to offer churchill's famous line. i have nothing to offer but
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blood, toils tears and sweat. ainsley: that's what brian says every morning. brian: i always use the word toil. ainsley: history buff. what a force can you imagine back in the day it was churchill and you had -- he was a prime minister under elizabeth. also, then there was margaret thatcher time when ronald reagan was our president. thatcher was the prime minister of london. and then you had queen elizabeth and who was the third one, there were three. it was a force of. >> martha: end of the soviet union you had poppy john paul ii. brian: poppy 41. ainsley: most popular poppy, you had thatcher and ronald reagan all fighting against socialism. really changed the tide for london. obviously for america, too. but, it prevented socialism from really much more than it already is pouring through this country.
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>> martha: we are confronting some of those same destabilizing issues now. brian: we liked margaret thatcher so much more than the british. ainsley: i know. brian: doesn't seem like the british liked margaret thatcher. ainsley: the iron lady. will: those gifts will make their way back from london to long island and you will be drinking tea out of your winston churchill. ainsley: he has become a tea man. pete: and using the word toil. ainsley: brian, i was trying to find a toy store this morning because to identify bring hayden back some gifts. the security guard was walking with me because fox is so nice to provide that just for safety reasons. he said we just got a call. the reason i'm with you this morning we got a call that in trafalgar square there was a suspicious package and they're investigating it really what is it was it a bomb? they said we are not sure. we just came on air learning this situation. hopefully it will be fine there
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was a lady that was shopping with her son. she said they were told to get out of the area. but we will continue to keep you posted on that. a. >> martha: a lot of security all around the city as can you imagine. the royal family moving around at all these events as well. carley: we will check back in with you next hour. thank you so much for joining us in this hour. i also have to say every morning since you have been doing this i have woken up and said i thought what they are going to wear today. you haven't disappointed you both are so beautiful covering this special event. so we'll see you coming up next hour. brian, you are going to stay with us. ainsley: brian, are you going to stay? i need to talk to you. where have you been? brian: in other words, instead of texting me. we will just use international television to catch up. ainsley: i miss you. i have missed you all. will: all right we will see you later ainsley and martha. see you in the next hour. >> martha: see you all later.
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pete: brian you are stuck with us. are a car you are stuck with us because on this side of the pond commencement season america's colleges and amongst the leaders taking the stage is dr. anthony fauci used his speech city college of new york to take a veiled swipe at republicans. listen here. >> fabrication, conspiracy theories, and outright lies are becoming commonplace from radical fringe groups as well as from people who you would hope would know better. and you know who they're. pete: okay. take a listen what fauci said just days earlier on our network when asked about whether donald trump would run again. >> i'm not going to get involved in any politics about who is or is not going to the white house by the way by the time that happens, i think i won't be around no matter hot president is. will: so i woke up this morning wondering what the host of one nation with brian kilmeade would be wearing.
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and luckily for us he is still with us. carley: he looks great. no tie. will: he is actually going one button open. carley: that's chilling. i'm scandalized. will: you can address your wardrobe or dr. fauci. brian: i would like to do both. first off, will, four to come out and admit something that pete has told me in confidence that you do look to mirror my action ware, and my wardrobe is something i give you great credit and great courage. will: he told you about that. brian: yes he did. thank you, pete. pete has a book coming out. if i have some time i would like to promote that as much as possible because it's extremely important. nobody in public life that gets me more angry than anthony fauci because as he is characterized the exact opposite as he is. they say that he is above it all. the grandfather type figure. the one had will bring you down calm in time of panic. he has done absolutely the opposite. i will give you one overwhelming stat to nobody everyone in city college. everyone in city college knows
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he was talking politics by the way. it wasn't veiled. they want to talk to some of the students afterwards so bold for him to come on. we all knew he was talking about our expresident. we thought it was so great. now, what is anthony fauci? he comes out as phil, the money store guy who is the tremendous shortstop new york yankees everyone love. the problem is phil was actually a nice person and i think anthony fauci is just the opposite. because in his nice collegial way at 81 years old, he really extended america's pandemic and did us injustice while vilifying people that would go against him while a compliant press borned everything he said even though he was contradicting himself onen almost every tv appearance he never turned down. remember 6 feet apart? okay. i guess we got to do it. that came from the first pandemic. never admitted he was wrong. remember don't wear masks? i guess masks only give a false sense of security. i guess we are not going to wear averagema. you got to put a mask on. then two masks on. then some beam saying other
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masks don't work. excuse me you never admitted any point you are wrong. overwhelming stat when joe biden took over, the adults came back to the white house with a vaccine. with a vaccine and anthony fauci fully in charge. we have more deaths than donald trump before he even knew what hit us. he never called out china. never called out the w.h.o. never came out and said well, you came out and said a lab leak while tom cotton said first he dismissed it. he defiled it they tried to destroy his account and credibility. now we had a plat must had sex with a bat and we were supposed to believe that. that's what caused this whole thing? now we pretty much understand this came from a lab leak. pretty much conventional wisdom. he never called out anybody with the real enemies, took shots at donald trump. came out and said basically has been wrong a lot. that's why they sidelined him because he has been wrong a lot. he did not care about the mental health of the kids or you or
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your family. all he cared about was sit back, listen to me as i try to figure out and hold everybody off to the this virus came out. for him to take a commencement address at city college make it about him, his track record, and still try to cover his tracks is horrendous. you book a commencement speaker make it about the them and giving them advice. pete: cancel the opening of your show tonight and replay that that was very, very well said. what else do you have on the program tonight on one nation? brian: a couple of things. joe's luck has run out. the luckiest guy on the face of the earth got the presidency only because bernie sanders they know would lose 45 states. i'm going to talk about how it's run out. you had that earlier segment about jim and hunter how they used to be protected, that's running out. his own white house has turned against him. cnn, nbc, and cbs all are asking aggressive questions writing
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divisive articles about what is happening in his white house. you are seeing what is happening with the economy. our foreign policy, the luck has run out. dave portnoy has -- is going to be on from barstool. the end of the militant me too movement, we'll discuss that william barr will expand on why he thinks durham is anything but done and susan li will do the news duel. i do have to talk to pete. pete, you told me you have been locked up with dan bongino for the rest of your natural life. but when the book comes out are you allowed to do my show? pete: yes, i will talk to dan. i think, yes. i think yes. i have got the book right here, brian. we are going to do it. breaking protocol. one nation. let's do it. brian: is carley as nice in person as she is on television?
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[buzzer] pete: on tv he i think she is. she is pretty nice. on the scale you have got carley and ainsley. ainsley is like unattainable level. she is really close. [laughter] carley: if i'm in the same conversation as ainsley i will take it as a win. will: what did you with your eyes. brian: right? will: what was that thing did you with your eyes when pete said ainsley unattainable level of niceness. are you say she go is not as nice. brian: my nonverbal way of agreeing, will. very good. you are trying to divide the monday through friday show. will: no, no, no. carley: that is what he is trying to do. brian: how dare, i'm so offended. i agree. unattainable nice. will: definitely. brian: carley, you are a close second. carley: thanks. i will take silver. brian: rachel a close second. i don't know how i got in this conversation. will: ranked the host. you are in bad spot. pete: started with royals and
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rankings and button on the shirt and crying. i have never seen kilmeade cry on tv. brian: i will do another button. [laughter] will: oh my gosh. this is getting x-rated a lot of chest hair. brian: never got chest hair until three years out of college all of a sudden it just came in. carley: you show off that chest hair, brian. will: it's an asset. brian: watch the show at 8:11 tonight keep it on "fox & friends." will: that's a tease. pete: brian kilmeade never dispoints. never disappoints. carley: wow, three buttons. president biden takes a swipe at elon musk after the trillion narrow admits he has a super bad feeling about the u.s. economy. >> elon musk has talked about that. ford is increasing their investment overwhelmingly. so, you know, lots of luck on his troop to the moon:
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carley: joe concha is here to break down the space slam next. ♪ ♪ we're a different kind of dentistry. one who believes in doing anything it takes to make dentistry work for your life. so we offer a complete exam and x-rays free to new patients without insurance - everyday. plus, patients get 20% off their treatment plan.
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♪ will: president biden brushed off elon musk's super bad feeling about the economy yesterday. >> elon musk has asked -- has said that he has a super bad feeling about the u.s. economy. >> well, let me tell you. while elon musk is talking about that ford is increasing their investment overwhelmingly. so, you know, lots of luck on his trip to the moon. will: so though that elon responds thanks, mr. president remind go ahead nasa just hired spacex to go to the moon. fox news contributor joe concha is here to react. hey, joe. >> happy wednesday -- so used to say wednesday, saturday. will: almost wednesday four more days to go. what do you think about this bought between the president and the world's richest man? >> it's bizarre when you think about the fact that tesla and spacex they employ something like 100,000 people. tesla last year produced more than 1 million electric cars while ford only produced 1/3 of
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that. so you have this president in biden who is mocking musk, right, who is sending us back to the moon for the first time since 1972. do you know what 1927 represents? 50 years ago and the year that joe biden was elected to the senate? will: wow. >> the bottom line joe biden has never run a business in his life and musk has run several very well to the point he is only the world's richest man, instead of embracing someone like elon musk, thank you for employing people and thanks for innovation and saving the planet with electric cars he is seen as the enemy. isn't that odd for u.s. presidency to go after elon musk like that. will: makes our ears perk up when elon musk says heading for super bad economy or has super bad feelings about the economy. you know, joe, i think obviously elon musk is going through some type of conversion like many people, actually. bill maher, whoever it may be, didn't elon musk just tweet, i believe, a quote from a rock and roller, and i can't remember what band he was from where he said i never thought i would see
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the day when the right was cool. and the right was the one standing up against the establishment. and the left is full of the school marms how to live our life. >> elon musk says look i have never voted for a republican in my life. i have always been left of center. but the party has left me. they have gone way over here and now i'm going to be a republican moving forward. look, elon musk isn't the only way thinking on the economy. talk all the time: all say we are headed toward recession or we are already in a recession. when you got inflation, think about what inflation is right now. it's six times higher than it was when donald trump left office. six times higher. gas prices through the roof. i just paid $78 for gas for my stupid little 2006 acura. people feel what's happening in this administration. when you have joe biden as a top economic advisers brian deese
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out there say no things are actually very good. no the sky really isn't blue right now. trying to convince you of something isn't real because people feel inflation and will result in red tsunami in november, will. will: setting the political effects aside. everyone worries as well what the solution to this inflation may be. you raise interest rates and here comes if we are not in the recession then here comes the recession. >> damned if you do, and damned if you don't. each like mothers out there who may not vote or apolitical or vote democrat. they can't get baby formula for the kids right now. again, things can you feel doesn't feel good, will. will: don't go anywhere. joe concha isn't going anywhere. is he sticking around. is he going to be part of our knockerball rematch. did you know that? >> all i know is lawrence jones somehow involved in this? will: everyone is running afraid. i don't want to pump up lawrence's ego but we really don't want you to step in all 6'4" 220. >> lawrence, right. i'm doug flutie, he is lawrence taylor. not lawrence jones. this is not going to go well. there i go i'm the guy on the
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be competing at the end of this hour. it's not clear what it is, usually a soccer ball -- carley: the only time i've had eye glass on, the number of people playing knockerball is growing by the moment. joe concha, the three of us and lawrence jones. i wonder how that's going to work. will: nobody was in my ear saying, will, get there. it was the very laid back. i spilled my coffee on battle for the american mind, which is released next week. pete hegseth, sitting right there. you can preorder it right now. carley: you're a little out of breath. [laughter] i've been out of breath before running to do headlines. it is so hard to read the teleprompter when you're trying to catch your breath. pete: you can't do it.
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carley: and pretend you're not out of breath. pete: it's better to just acknowledge -- carley: no, you up all the time on "fox & friends," and we just tell everybody about it. [laughter] way better. you just happen to do it in front of 2 million people. carley: that's a nice moment. i like that. pete: i'm a nice person. my wife texted me, you just told carley she's not as nice as ainsley -- carley: no one is. will: right away she's second. will: you're in an awkward position. you can't get mad about not being nicest because it affirms you're not the nicest. carley: i'm okay with it though. pete: by the way, today is national play outside day -- carley: is it? pete: national cheese day as well and also national hug your
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cat day. so why don't you go home and try to hug your cat and see how that goes, because it's not going to go well. carley: it's the also national cheese day -- pete: we haven't had any cheese yet. we'll find some. we're really glad you're with us. will: the fourth hour of "fox & friends." here's what you're waking up to, a new record yet again for gas prices, up 5 cents for the third straight day, 5 cents overnight, putting you -- i believe now -- $4.81. from 4.76 just yesterday. pete: i was down in georgia yesterday, i saw it 4.40. in california, as high as $8. they're pointing out above the minimum wage level in some of these states. carley: california's getting hit the worst. look at those prices, almost $10
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a gallon. and by the way, the national average has been -- it's increased by a nickel for three straight days, and that continues to happen in four days we'll hit $5 a gallon of gas officially. four days, in this trend continues. pete: yeah, look at that trend line right there. the dotted line is inauguration day, and it has been up, up, up ever since. so what kid joe biden -- did joe biden have to say about it? he's back at his beach house putting a lid on the whole weekend, he did provide some mixed messages on all in the inflation and gas prices yesterday. listen. >> now, there's a lot going on right now, but the idea we're going to be able to, you know, click a switch, bring down the cost of gasoline is not likely in the near term, nor is it with regard to food. there's no denying that high prices particularly around gasoline and food are real problems for people. but there's every reason for the american people to feel confident that we'll meet these
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challenges because of the enormous progress we've made on the economy. carley: enormous progress we've made on the economy is a great note to continue talking about the biden economy. keep in mind when he was elected president, inflation was at, what was it, 14% -- 1.4%, now 8.3%. wage growth is 5.3, inflation 8.3, i believe those are the rough estimates, so that's a tax, and it's really hurting the american people, especially lower income. pete: and a lot of this is the still digging out of the hole of covid. we still don't have plaintiff more people -- more people employed today than before covid. when you look at labor shortages, businesses are still struggling to find people to work which makes doing business in this great country difficult to do. will: i think the president attempted a victory lap based upon that jobs report of 3903,000 jobs added in the month
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of may, it will be a misstep when with not only are you experiencing the reality at home, as has been pointed out gas prices and inflation, but it's true as many are pointing out include colluding -- including elon musk, he has a super bad feeling about our economy. if it's true we're headed for recession because of the necessity to raise interest rates because of inflation or whatever may be, the cause of a future recession, joe biden's going to the look back at this moment and stay what a misstep. pete: he's been taking victory laps from the beginning like inflation is transitory. when jamie dimon, ceo of jpmorgan chase, says we've got a hurricane we're about to face -- carley: and it could be superstorm sandy. really quickly about gas, apparently there are a lot of oil rigs that are in production right now, in operation, 727
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versus 457 a year ago, and oil is also going to be extracted from the permian basin in west texas and new mexico. all of that sounds really great. the problem is that we don't have the whats i to refine it from oil -- capacity to refine it from oil into gasoline because so many refineries have been shut down the or turned into biofuel facilities because of these green policies. it's like the administration can't get out of its own way. it dates back even further -- pete: we were reading the same stuff, it was either exxonmobil or chevron -- will: chevron. pete: -- ceo that said we'll likely never build another refinery again in this country which means we're only digging a deeper hole. joe biden may go to saudi arabia and go beg those autocrats, theocrats -- carley: yeah. and they're already loosening the strings around venezuelan oil and gas, and chevron is
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going to be, apparently, importing some of that, or they're working on some sort of deal. so the point there is just going to another country as opposed to producing oil right here at home. we have so much of it, we could be doing it here much more effectively. pete: absolutely. so we're going to go from gas to something else you consume which is pizza. and and my favorite pizza on the planet is pizza hut. i've been open on this show about wanting to be a spokesman for pizza hut. i have asked for that sponsorship directly. it has not only been met with science and denial, but now it's not going to happen either way -- carley: no. pete: because i went to pizza hut at a kid, and in order to get my personal pan penny, we were -- pepperoni, we got in the book-it program. well, now pizza hut has gone full on woke by through their
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reading program tout thing a book called drag kids. the book is called "big wig," but it's about kids in drag. here's a portion of the publisher's description of big wig promoted by pizza hut. when a child dresses in drag to compete in a neighborhood competition the, he becomes bebe bedazzle. together they are an unstoppable drag queen team, but wig feels inadequate compared to the other bigger wigs. when wig flies off b.b.'s head, she goes from kid to kid instill thing confidence and inspiring dreams in those who wear her. not the book-it program you remember of yesteryear. will: i know how disappointed you are in pizza hut. pete: i just want good pizza. will: i mentioned this earlier in the show, i think it's worth repeating.
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last night i got to watch the new documentary, "what is a woman," and they talk about the rise in transgender ideology and the push on children. that in and of itself is worthy of not just examination, but condemn the nation because we have no idea what we have done to young people and how it will play out in the coming decades, the effects of puberty blockers, the encouragement mentally and emotionally to embrace this idea that you are the wrong gender, not to mention the ones who actually go through surgery. but to the point of the story, this is a story about a drag queen and a drag wig and a kid dressing up in drag which is not just a costume and not just, as you pointed out, tolerance. it is also embedded in the culture of sexualization of children. watch i any ftion the show, picture or be familiar with the drag movement, and it is tied to sexualization. and that's fine for an adult.
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that is not fine to be the encouraged by pizza hut for children. i don't care if it's drag or any other sexualization, we've got to call it out for what it is, and it's grotesque that we're in a culture that the not just tolerates, but encourages the sexualization of children. carley: yeah, it's true. kids are now being taught about transgender issues and drag queens even before they know what the differences between a little boy and a little girl. it's under the label of acceptance, and everybody -- i want everybody to feel accepted no matter who you are, but it also should be parents' decision on when you introduce those really sensitive topics to your children. pete: and you assume if your kids are participating, at least you could assume in a program like book-it with pizza hut, we're going to get a benign set of topics. parents have to realize they're confronting the most complex and possibly damaging views for young kids. will, you mentioned my book earlier, i appreciate you doing it, but this topic pertains
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directly to my book "battle for the american mind" which comes out on june 14th. you can preorder it now. if you look at drag queen story the hour or pizza hut and parents' involvement, it's not an accident. and it feels like it popped up out of nowhere. how did we get to this insanity at this moment? no, no, no, it was intense at over the course of 100 years. the left may not have known exactly where it would end, but it had to start with removing something, and this 100-year plot that myself and david goodwin, we worked on together, when you get a sense of how overt the left was in changing all of our educational institutions over a hundred years, it's jarring. yes, protesting at school boards is a good thing, but it's the utterly insufficient when you consider how -- every aspect of the educational pipeline they control. before there was critical genderrer theory or critical race theory, there was create --
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critical theory. at columbia teachers' college, now our teachers are taught that. so theories like in the are the norm for what kids are confronting inside the progressive pipeline, and i think as parents and grandparents, kids are getting out of school, as you consider where you want to send your kids, i humbly submit take a look at this because you might think your school and your school district is okay? it's probably not. i went to a conservative public school in the '90s, the same kind of progressive ideas that were repressive there, they're even worse today. the book is "battle for the american mind." hopefully it motivates people to find a better solution. will: this is an exciting and also important book with. go check it out. pete: i appreciate it. will: now to a fox weather alert. the first tropical storm of the season. pete: forecasts are saying up to 3 feet of coastal flooding and 10 inches of rain are likely. carley: heart.
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brandy campbell is live, it is wet. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, guys. it really is. as a result, this is what we're seeing. some areas have seen severe cases of flooding. we're actually under a flood watch. we have this mustang right here, maybe they're coming to help these guys out. we haven't seen the owner of this car at all this morning, but we've had a lot of cars towed out of this area. i've met with a couple that actually flew in from california to come here, they got in a taxi and, well, they also got stuck in these waters. let's take a listen to what that experience was like for them. >> we got stuck the through water. we asked him not to proceed, and he said, no, it's okay, he went through. then our car became flood, and is we had to get out of the car in waist-deep water. >> we imagined the entire cab of the vehicle being flooded, possible drowning. didn't mow if the doors were
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going to open. it was pretty scary. >> reporter: so they were pretty shooken up. they found me on higher ground and came to me because they had been swimming through the water with their luggage. really a terrible situation. and, again, here we go. this mustang has been sitting there the for hours. however, i'm told in the area, met with a resident, he mentioned he's only seen it happen like this maybe a couple of times a year, only during big storms which is what we're having. it's not a normal occurrence, but it's also not the first time. but when it does, it's just sad. we're seeing people come out, the police department, they're been helping these cars get out all morning, and they're almost all cleared. back to you as we continue to get this rain and wind. will: wow. carley: we saw the car being how thed away away too. will: you took a wide shot of
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brandy, that's a a real, that was a real car being pulled out. carley: stay safe, brandy, thank you so much. will: with we turn now to some headlines. another bottom in an overnight shooting at the university of minnesota. a 15-year-old boy was found shot in the leg after gunfire caused crowds at a house party to scramble. the shooting happened at a student housing just off of university avenue. suspected vehicle was located and tow thed from the scene. still no arrests have been made. and the abbott baby formula plant in sturgis, michigan, is set to restart manufacturing today after a 4-month closure. no word on how quickly the restart will get formula back to shelves. meantime, the u.s. is supporting or -- importing bottles from mexico, but the fda says it will not be available for families to
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purchase until july. 9 and the usfl, the new jersey generals.com do nateing the pittsburgh mahlers many week eight. here's what darius victor had to say after the win. >> i call myself ceo. that's my job. [laughter] will: so here's the deal, box boy ceo, pete and i were debating what that meanings. he's referring to the end zone. pete: you guessed that. will: i've never heard the end zone called the box. starting at 3 p.m. odd the, birmingham taking on the new orleans breakers and tomorrow at noon, the michigan panthers, and at 4 the tampa bay bandits take on houston. and those are your headlines. carley: all right. coming up, the baltimore naacp is calling on the governor to deploy the national guard to help curb gun violation. you heard that right. lawrence jones is here to react.
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pete: plus lifeguard not on duty, how labor shortages could impact your summer swim. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ make way for the first-ever chevy silverado zr2. with multimatic shocks, rugged 33-inch tires, and front and rear electronic locking differentials. dude, this is awesome... but we should get back to work. ♪ ♪ this good? perfect. if you're gonna work remote... work remote. find new workspaces. find new roads. chevrolet. i'm steve. i lost 138 pounds in 9 months on golo and taking release. golo saved my life. i was way overweight, and that's what sent me down the path, was i--i wanted to make sure and live for my kid.
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carley: warning, lifeguard not on duty. for the second summer in a row, pools and beaches nationwide are struggling with a lifeguard shortage which could possibly force a third of all public pools in the u.s. to close. that's 100,000 pools. here with more on the impact, manager for bellevue parks and community services jen newton. jen, the backdrop that you're standing in front of is is so beautiful. >> thank you. carley: tell us what's going on. why is this happening? >> well, you know, there's several reasons why there's a shortage of lifeguards. we, you know, covid didn't help. there was the a shortage prior to covid, but cosid exacerbated the issue with us -- covid exacerbated with us not being able to offer the certification classes. learning how to rescue people, you've got to hold on to each other and do skills and drills. we're also in competition for
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those scarce, part-time summer job staff with all the other industries that need them for their summer help too. carley: well, i know the that your organization is looking for 15-20 lifeguards to open up all the pools that you have available. how is that search going? >> we're trying really hard to fill those the slots. we're offering lifeguarding classes every weekend along with other agencies in the area. we are, you know, getting the word out through the news so that we would really like to hire more people for the summer in our lifeguarding -- carley: well, hopefully this segment can help you out. you know, this is a really important job. so what is the training like to become a lifeguard, and what sort of criteria are you looking for in people who are interested in? >> well, as far as the certification, it's a 40-hour
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certification, and you need to be a strong swimmer in order to do it. and be a team player and be willing to work with the public and be a public servant, and, you know, be responsible. carley: and if to you don't get enough lifeguards, what happens? is it a swim at your with own risk, or do you shut down the pool? >> well, our -- the way we're kind of thinking through the situation right now is that we will gradually open according to how many staff we have onhand at the time. we've talked about modifying the hours of the beach parks. and worst case scenario, we would put out the swim at your own risk signs. we're trying to educate the public on good water safety. we're going to have lifeguard -- i'm sorry, life jacket loaner stations at all of our beaches this summer. and then we're just encouraging
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families and individuals who do want to swim in the water to go to one of our lifeguarded beaches. carley: yeah. and, of course, that's something that families look forward to. summertime, you've got to go into the pool, into the water, so hopefully we can just alleviate it, and it makes so much sense that it all goes back to covid. jen, thank you so much for joining us. >> no problem,-fun. it was good to meet you. carley: still ahead, new video just in of members of the royal family as the queen's platinum jubilee celebration continues. ainsley and march that join us live from -- march that join us live live from london. plus, the stage is set for a knockerball rematch on fox square. can't wait. don't go anywhere. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ will: celebrations for the queen's platinum jubilee are still underway. prince william, duchess kate and the young royals, young prince louis, however, is not with them after stealing the show earlier this week. cr the queen herself will also not make an appearance after experiencing discomfort during thursday's event. pete: joining us live is ainsley earhart and martha maccallum, both back even after having to deal with brian kilmeade. [laughter] we appreciate it. you know, what a neat time to be able to be out there covering this celebration of queen elizabeth's 70 years. you both used the phrase bittersweet a little bit many that there is this other track
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of stories about the relationship inside the royal family. is it, is it mainly focused on celebration, or have the tab the loidz grabbed hold of -- tabloids grabbed 408 of the whole thing as well? maria: martha: i would say it's mainly focused on the queen and the celebration. i would say americans have a little more of an obsession with the social drama of the family, but i codo think it's interesting kate and william and two of their children are at ther thety -- derby today because there is this birthday party for prince harry's daughter, and that's happening, apparently, over at frogmore cottage at windsor. and originally kate and william said they couldn't go to that because they were going to be the traveling somewhere else in the country, probably in wales, on behalf of the royal family. but they got to choose this option instead. ainsley: and going to the derby to represent the family and to
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represent her mother, queen elizabeth, anne is her only daughter. but i think what people are feeling here, this will be the last female queen for a very long time. already only six that have reigned, and she will be the last because all the heirs are men. that's the way it looks now. many of the people we interviewed said she's been our queen, the only one we knew, and what's fascinating is she's the queen that shouldn't have been. if her uncle had not abdicated the throne, he a married an american, she was she have she went through a divorce and the family was furious and said you're the head of the church, that will never be louded. if he had married her and they had had children, their children would have been in line for the throne. but instead it went to the brother, it went to george vi, and that was elizabeth's dad who died at an early age, 56 year
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years old. she became queen at 25 years old. so she was young. it took 16 months to get the coronation together because they had to have the heads of all the commonwealth countries come in for that event. so she didn't experience coronation which is in the eyes of god when she becomes queen for another 16 months. so she's the queen that shouldn't have been, and she's the queen that lasted the longest. martha: i was thinking today just walking around this morning you see the monument to her husband, albert, victoria rained for 63 years -- reigned. it's a simmer rah because queen -- similar era. a whole period of time of time in history, and i think it's going to be the same with this second elizabethan age, every gate has an e.r., you know, in iron in it. so eventually they're going to have to change those to the
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c.r.s and w.r.s at some point. but they will reflect the second elizabethan age with this huge 70-year reign. will: i want to ask you about the attitude of the british public. i want to ask you two questions, because if i don't, carley won't let me talk. [laughter] we were joking a moment ago. harry and meghan, the attitude of the british public, i heard they were booed. i'm curious about the british attitude towards harry and meghan. but also martha, you talked thed about this earlier and i brought it up, it seems that the british public is still all in on the idea of the monarchy. in an era when we're tearing down traditions, specifically traditions of the west, this seems to have been exempted. is that the case? is most of the public all behind the tradition of monarchy? ainsley: not the entire country. i've watched the bbc continuously because they don't have fox news here in the u.k.,
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and every reporter says we realize not everyone is a monarchist, and i'm shocked by that. i thought everyone was. when you talk to the taxi cab drivers or the people at the shop, they'll say, no, not everyone believes that. we believe in evolution, and we believe profession and we need to change as a country, and we don't need to bow down to the any one kind of thing, and they're just sitting high on their thrones. the majority of the people out on the street, obviously, they're for her. they love the queen. i was a little shocked to know that because we love the queen and we love, you know, just the idea about it. she can't vote, she doesn't talk about her political opinions. there's something refreshing about that. and as little girls we looked up to her. the china and silver and her jewels, things we all couldn't afford necessarily but things that we dreamed about. and she gave us hope for the future and a reason to work really hard. i love the family and i love the stories and i love the history
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of this family. it just dates back for is so long. and the love, queen victoria, if you watched the recent movie of her, she was madly in love with albert. and he died of a bee sting, and she was left with these children, and she wore black for the rest of her life. and look at queen elizabeth and philip, their love story. they went through some rough times apparently in the middle of it all, but then they patched their relationship back together if those rumors are true, and they had two more children and lived a long life together. what do you think, martha? martha: as for your question about harry, i think there's a lot of disappointment that he and meghan moved back to the united states. i think people loved watching william and harry grow up together and they the obviously have fond memories of diana, their mother, as well. i almost feel as though that country -- this country has moved beyond them and that story, and they hook at the balcony and they see a monarchy
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that has quite a strong line. they've got charles, they've got william, and then they've got george. and after george you've got charlotte and louis. so there's a pretty solid line there, and i think that is the most important thing to queen elizabeth because, you know, they do seven. you're talking about people -- they do serve. you're talking about people that are not monarchists, and the queen says we only serve because the people allow us to. so if that changes, and there's pushback in scotland and in ireland right now, in northern ireland, against the monarchy and against the united kingdom. so it's a fragile thing. there's royal families that are no more all over the entire world. this is the only one that anyone has any real awareness of. they understand this is not a gimmick. carley: i absolutely love the coverage, and i've also fallen in love with the arbiter -- martha: he's a great guy. carley: he's amazing. and i'll always exremember him
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saying the queen has a dazzling sense of humor. thank you so much for bringing us this coverage. ainsley: see you all this week. carley, i heard the conversation earlier, you're the nicest. [laughter] pete: big endorsement. ainsley: we were trying to call into the control room, and i was going to be the voice of god -- carley: even being in the same conversation is an honor. [inaudible conversations] [laughter] carley: love you both. ainsley: we love y'all too. pete: we love you. ainsley: we actually do have a lot of fun, don't we? i do miss y'all. carley: truly a big family. that's why i feel so lucky. all right. speaking of family, still ahead, rick reichmuth is on road trip across america. coming up, we're going to check in with him at acadia national
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they're a game changer for me. i feel like i can take on anything. it feels great to be in control of my hearing. better hearing has never been this easy. try lively risk-free for 100 days. visit listenlively.com will: with the city of baltimore set to pass 300 merchandises, a nearby nacc -- homicides, naacp
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is urging the mayor to call in the national guard. carley: adding, quote, criminals don't care about borders, they don't care how city-county lines first and foremost, and so the way that baltimore city goes is the way that the the region goes. we're concern about the crime in the area and region. pete: "fox & friends" enterprise reporter and e host of lawrence jones cross country, lawrence jones joins us now. so naacp is calling for the national guard -- >> i'll say welcome to the party, realizing that baltimore has a crime problem. i've been covering that city for years. the homelessness, the lack of law and order, the corruption in the city. the city council is corrupt, the mayor was corrupt, you've got the district attorney in baltimore county that is corrupt that has been indicted, last
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mayor was indicted. and. of course, members in the police department that are corrupt as well. so you've got this city that has criminals that are running the street, all of the people that are in government are essentially corrupt, and there's disarray. do i think the national guard is going to solve this problem? no. it's just going to put them in a difficult situation. the national guard, as you know, pete, aren't there to implement law and order -- the. pete: they can be useful. >> exactly. so i don't understand what bringing them in is going to do this in situation. i think they need to get rid of all the leaders, put new leadership in place and start protecting the streets. but this is not going to do anything. will: but what a testament to the scope and the characterization of the problem. to get to a point where we need the national guard, even if the national guard can't do anything, the imagery of we need the national guard to stop in the problem. >> well, i would say this, where has the naacp been the entire time when all of this has been going on in the city? to be fair to the less kent,
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they've been -- residents, they've been begging for help for years. the naacp has almost been a part of the problem, demonizing different officials that are trying to implement some law and order -- pete: [inaudible] >> i mean, like i said, i'm glad they're finally at the party, but the residents have been begging for help for years now, and no one is really listening to them. we go out there with our cameras and we talk with the folks, we bo to the barbershops, we patrol the streets to see what's actually happening. type in baltimore on foxnews.com, but the other media stations aren't doing it, they're not listening to the local residents, so thank god that they finally woke with up. carley: i think that's a broader point here, naacp is saying under democratic leadership, there is a crime problem. we need the national guard to step in. lawrence jones cross country tonight the, what's going on? >> we've got a timeline of what's happened in uvalde.
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i do not want that story to die. there's a lot of questions unanswered. uvalde's police chief is not cooperating with the texas rangers' investigation. it has been reported that he did not have a radio on the scene. i mean, that is just ridiculous when kids are begging for help that he didn't have his radio. so we're going the to have a timeline on that and talk about all the details happening on the ground there. will: 10 p.m. we won't miss it -- >> before i go, can we talk about these -- [inaudible conversations] will: we've got to go. >> i come on the set -- under their seat, i've never seen something that is more -- because carley is tall ther than you guys or it appears on tv. y'all put these little boosters under your seat. yes, exactly. will: thanks, lawrence. carley: he called it a booster
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seat. i understand. >> it is unbelievable. you should be embarrassed -- pete: lawrence, i thought you were friends. >> we are friends which is why i'm heart broken. these are the guys i'm going to go to war with them, are y'all going to bring these to the battle? pete: if i need to. [laughter] >> unbelievable. [laughter] [inaudible conversations] wow, wow. carley: yeah, yeah. >> i want the the record to are reflect i'm still -- will: all right. let's bring in another member of the fan club. we're asking the question, where's rick reichmuth? he's on a road trip across america. carley: because june is national camping month, rick is live in acadia national park in maine. hey, rick. rick: good morning, guys. it's also the place where the
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sunrises earliest. take a look at this shot, it's an absolutely sun thing national park. a lot of -- stunning. i lot of it has this incredible rocky coast. tide levels come up around 12 feet, so really dramatic weather, dramatic scenery, and this entire park was privately owned. it was the made up of a bunch of private landowners, wealthy people like the rockefellers, the vanderbilts and astors, and they donated this land in 1916. it's now up to 50,000 acres. it is also, guys, about 50 million people are within a day's drive to this national park. because of that it's a busy one, the seventh busiest national park but also that means you've got really no excuse to get up here and enjoy spectacular scenery. i'm so glad we could show a little bit of it to you this morning. guys? will: thank you the, rick. pete: beautifully done, rick. just a couple of guys watching a
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guy outdoors holding their booster pillows. only slightly maas calculated right now. will: now he's going to look like you with -- make you look like a a beta out there the in the knocker bill tournament. -- knockerball tournament. why do we let people on set to disrupt the false reality that we've crafted for everybody? will: i don't know. pete: i don't know either. big show ahead tomorrow on "fox & friends" weekend including rick scott, joni ernst, stuart the varney -- stuart varney, all serious people. will: we're about to go knock the slobber out of everybody with knockerball and booster seat on fox square. let's suit up! ♪
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literally. none of us got a goal, so we've got to do a rematch. carley, lawrence, joe concha, myself and will. what are the rules? >> just gotta keep the straps on your shoulders, hit the -- hold the handles, try not to blindside anyone if you can resist. pete: fair point. knockerball nj.com. i don't know if there are any rules, i think it involves kicking a soccer ball. >> hey, lawrence, get those straps down on your shoulders like a backpack. will: carley -- pete: you wanted it! [laughter] >> and it looks like carley went down first. >> oh, you got a running start. pete: you've got to get a running start. >> this is supposed to be bubble
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soccer. pete: i got joe. where'd he go? >> all in -- pete: do not team up. [laughter] will: met me from behind. [laughter] that's it. pete: we got him! >> and will goes down the hard. pete: is this on tv? will: that's good. [inaudible conversations] pete: carley, i want to give her a free shot. carley, free shot. will: show's got to be over. pete: carley -- >> that's a goal. there it is! [cheers and applause]
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♪ will: and your "fox & friends" champion, carley shimkus! [applause] carley: i've never won anything in my life! pete: have a great saturday, everybody. ♪ ♪ neil: fox on top of two storms, one in florida where severe weather could be making an early arrival of what is -- ahead of what they're calling a busy hurricane season. even though that coast is ache thing a pounding as we speak, severe flooding could be an issue here. up to 15 inches of inrain. that other storm is of a manmade
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