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tv   The Big Sunday Show  FOX News  June 5, 2022 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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>> hello everyone. i'm gillian turner along raymond arroyo, dr. nicole saphier and gianno cadwell. this is the big sunday show. >> breaking news, the chicago police officer shot in the line of duty just one of many shootings rattling the country. >> raymond? >> from soaring inflation to a new migrant caravan heading for the u.s. border, some in the media think the country's biggest problem is, wait for it, women suffrage.
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we will explain. >> nicole? >> top gun maverick soars to another huge win at the box-office. it is not just the film that is succeeding. the military may be able to win as well. >> but first, it was a very grand finale to close out four days of london festivities at the platinum jubilee honoring 70 years of queen elizabeth ii's reign with the monarch herself making a surprise appearance to cap it off. take a look. [cheers and applause] >> as you can see, the queen was greeted by cheers as she waved to fans from the buckingham palace balcony after the final pageant parade. she had skipped events earlier on friday and saturday after the palace reported she was feeling some discomfort. the parade was complete with a hologram of the queen early on in her reign when she was just 25 years old.
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that came after a more star-studded party at the palace held in her honor. the royal family was also seen sitting front row. they enjoyed the final pageant in london along with her. that's where our foreign affairs correspondent greg palkot is tonight wrapping up all the fabulous festivities. hi, greg >> as you can see, the rain is back here in england, but for the last four days, it's been gorgeous, including as you noted the crowning moment of this four-day platinum jubilee celebration of queen elizabeth ii the moment she walked out on the balcony of buckingham palace. she walked out by the way with her son prince charles and camilla, her grandson prince william and kate and their cut kids. she hadn't felt too well the past few days but she looked great today. the folks had been watching the
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pageant including the golden carriage that she used 70 years ago to go to her first coronation, her only coronation. it's said there is a bit of a rough ride to this carriage. no wonder she took a pass on that riding in that again. early in the day, and in fact, throughout the whole four days, it really was a holiday spirit to the entire all corners of the country, picnics, street fairs, and several towns vying for the biggest lunch in honor of the queen including just right outside windsor castle. the queen did make an appearance on saturday, saturday night, in a film, very fun. people are still talking about it with paddington bear at that big pop concert outside of the palace. in a final statement that buckingham palace released in the name of her, she said she is humble and deeply touched by all the outpouring, by all the adoration from the people in the
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last four days, with everything else going wrong in this world right now, it was a nice time for people to take a break and express their own feelings of warmth towards this monarch that's seen this place and the world through a lot of times. back to you. >> you're right, greg. she looked radiant out there on the balcony. greg, thank you very much for staying up for us. >> thank you. >> raymond, i'm coming to you first. look at the big picture of this thing, four days of this jubilee. you saw everybody. it was a celebrity packed star-studded event from start to finish. what kind of grades do you give the palace for putting on this shindig? >> straight a's across the board. look watching that concert last night with diana ross finalizing, closing it out. she closed out a mardi gras bowl i rode in the parade here. watching her up there, watching this lineup of western culture celebrated, and that's how we should look at this.
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the queen afforded us an opportunity to celebrate not only british patriotism, but british and western culture at its height. here is a woman who for 70 years has embodied dignity and duty, sort of the anti-kardashian. she has been a rock -- >> yes. >> a solid place in a chaotic world, and it's beautiful to watch her celebrated in this way, and let's hope others follow in her stead, as i read so much this week, leading up to our coverage, a great story writer years ago, when winston churchill died, he wrote we were looking at a past utterly unrecoverable, and that's what i thought as i watched the queen this weekend. let's hope it is not totally unrecoverable. >> i mean, it certainly gives one a little faith, you know. you put that very sus -- succinctly, the queen is anti-kardashian. i admire her for that.
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>> so do i. >> dr. saphier there's the flip side on this which is that monarchies across the world are on the wane. there's only 30 royal families left in the world over. do you think dr. saphier this will sort of inspire some enthusiasm for the monarchy among people that may want be exposed -- may not be exposed to it on a daily basis? >> well, sure, gillian, first of all, when you talk about the concept of a jubilee, it dates back to biblical times. it was a time of celebration, to rejoice and to come together and be grateful. this celebration is what the u.k. has needed after the last two years. the u.k. has some of the most strict covid restrictions like new york city did. they were just calling for stay at home orders as late as december 2021. so these four days of pure celebration is just incredible, and it just -- you know, it shows the love for the monarchy. i think the younger generations coming in maybe will
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reinvigorate some of the support. as you know, there's been some controversy with the monarchy. some people thinking it is fall ought of date. -- falling out of date. i think will and kate will do an incredible job eventually. you will see more support for the monarchy, especially after the way the entire world has been watching this celebration. >> dr. saphier points about the monarchy, it was a tough year for britain, and then also the queen getting hit after hit from her grandson harry and his wife meghan markle, for everything from racism to being stingy when it comes to supporting them in their lifestyle. this kind of repairs a lot of that, doesn't it? it generates a lot of goodwill. >> i absolutely agree. it does repair a lot of it. it brings about unity. i have been speaking to many of my friends at buckingham
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palace -- i'm joking. i'm not raymond. [laughter] >> but i will tell you, i have been speaking to friends over in london as i stayed there for several months last year and come back this year, and they're telling me they're partying like it is 1999. so i'm excited to see what's going on there but i'm also intrigued on what coverage will come out of meghan markle and prince harry especially considering the fact that they have not been joining too many events. i would have thought they would have wanted to go to the platinum party, especially there's a lot of global a list celebrities from america that were there. i think this will be an intriguing story moving forward. we're right in the midst of the festiv festivities. i'm interested to see coverage in the days to come. >> after the fact. take a look at this montage from the platinum party, say that ten times fast, at the palace last night. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> raymond, do you think you could prevail upon your friend to get us some tickets for the next one? >> next one. what's after platinum? uranium? i don't know what's after that. [laughter] >> we will see what we can do. i got to tell you, this was such a beautiful celebration of who the british are and the tradition that the queen has kept alive and the monarchy she's preserved, almost unilaterally. it is a miraculous thing to watch. i still can't get over diana ross closing down the evening. we had young kids watching at our house. when you have got young and old, my parents and my kids all bopping along to the same music, there's an iconic moment being
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celebrated, and the queen certainly deserves that kind of adoration from artists around the world. she got it the past four days. >> she did get it. >> well done all around. we're going to come back. we have still have more royal family coverage later in the show. coming up next, something completely different. a fox news alert, a chicago police officer has been shot in the line of duty. we have the breaking details for you next. e you can track us ande exactly when we'll be there. >> woman: i have a few more minutes. let's go! >> tech vo: that's service that fits your schedule. go to safelite.com. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ your record label is taking off. but so is your sound engineer.
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>> back now with a fox news alert. a chicago police officer has been shot in the line of duty. police say the officer was shot during a traffic stop. he is right now hospitalized in serious, but stable condition. the suspected shooter is in critical condition. this is the third time this week an officer has been shot in chicago in the line of duty. over in chattanooga, tennessee, this weekend, at least three people died in a chaotic scene outside a bar after being shot at and hit by cars. in philadelphia, surveillance cameras captured people running for cover when multiple shooters opened fire in a crowded south street neighborhood. listen. at least three people were killed in those shootings. so far, police have not made any
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arrests. but now philly's district attorney is calling for immediate gun control measures, tweeting this morning, quote, the terrible crimes last night on south street tell our pennsylvania legislators it is time for real action. boycott nra lobbyists. boycott nra donations and bring real common sense gun regulation to pennsylvania now. meanwhile the l.a. district attorney is walking back his pronouncement that the sheriff's department there agreed to a five-month probation camp sentence for a teen who mowed down a mom and infant with his car. gascon now telling fox news digital, quote, need to correct our statement from yesterday. lasd was not involved in the decision on the felony charge as they were not the investigating agency in that -- [inaudible]. gianno, taking it to you first, chicago being, you know, your hometown, what do you think? >> i'm disgusted by the violence that continues in my hometown.
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the police superintendent said there were over 76 officers either shot or shot at in 2021 alone. there were over 800 homicides in 2021. i think back to just several years ago, my younger brother on a memorial day weekend was in a car with two of his friends when two men walked up and shot the car 25 times. thank god my little brother lived, but his best friend died in his arms. >> oh my gosh. >> these policies -- it is terrible. these policies that have been perpetrated by the cook county prosecutor kim fox where she's allowing people with felony cases of murder and rape, she's dropped 25,000 of those particular cases. if you're going to have these soft on crime measures, you will never get the crime problem under control, whether it be in chicago, philadelphia, detroit, wherever it may be, these policies must change, and they got to get tough, and they got to get tough immediately, otherwise we're going to see more and more people dying in the streets daily. >> i'm so sorry about that,
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gianno. >> thank you so much, i appreciate that. >> shocking horrific. raymond, over in philly, the district attorney is calling for gun control. take a listen to what steve scalise said this morning on fox news sunday. >> look in california, they had a bill to raise the age in the state of california, and a federal court ruled it unconstitutional. so instead of trying to go down unconstitutional routes, why don't we look at why more young people are doing this? we need to get more kids engaged in alerting authorities if they see something they're concerned about and let authorities take action if it's necessary and try to intervene and stop something before it happens instead of immediately rushing to take the rights of gun owners away. >> what do you think? >> steve scalise is my congressman. he was victimized in that congressional baseball yard shooting -- >> i forgot to mention that. of course. >> they opened fire on steve scalise, so he really speaks
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from authority here. what he's saying we should bear in mind, as anybody who has gone to gun shows, as i have, you will find they say they want to create more background checks. when you get in line and go to purchase a gun, many times you will see grandmothers or girlfriends buying the guns for other people, so i don't know how those background checks will clear up the problem guns spreading through the community here or anywhere else. it seems to me when you look at these cases, whether in chicago, chattanooga, philadelphia, or here in new orleans, there's a cheapness to life today and our young people somehow believe that life can just be thrown off over a disagreement and that cops have no value at all and they can open fire on police or take them on. we as a community have to stand up and teach our young people this is unacceptable. we're not going to tolerate it. and the prosecutors have to jump in and prosecute these crimes, and we as a community have to
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stand behind them or this will never go away. >> crimes like this have many victims, not just the people who were directly physically hurt. dr. saphier, that brings me to you, while raymond was talking, i was thinking you know who has to clean up the mess is your colleagues in your profession who have to take care of these people who are shipped into emergency rooms in all these cities every night with gunshot wounds, stab wounds. what is the thinking among your colleagues about how to confront this epidemic? >> gillian, i spent over a decade training at a level 1 adult and pediatric trauma center. i can tell you, violence is not new to our country, but we are certainly having a crime wave right now. it is more than that. we are having a violent surge. we have to look at why. we have historic homicide rates in 2020. bloodshed continued throughout 21 and we're seeing it in 22. covid happened. the basic of our lives were upended, rise in unemployment, children being taken out of
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school, no extracurricular activities. there's nothing for these young people to do. we haven't made it a priority to get them back in structure. children, young adults, people require structure and also require economic stability. when you have negative emotions, anxiety, depression, and fearful that maybe you are not able to pay for your family, with that will come crime. with that will come violence. the priority needs to be what can we do to make sure that americans feel stable and secure and they are not going to be predisposed to go out and have violence? what also happened in parallel was the complete devaluation like raymond said for respect for cops through all the movements that happened throughout covid and unfortunately it's left us in a very difficult position, and hospitals are struggling with it. you just saw we had shootings at a medical center. you know, it is -- it's very frustrating when you hear we need to talk gun control, gun control, gun control. yes, okay, we can have those conversations. but checking little boxes like raymond is saying by just doing stronger background checks, that's not going to fix it.
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it is a foundational problem that the president, the white house, the federal government needs to do something about to make sure americans can afford the basics of life. >> there seems to be some consensus on capitol hill now between republicans and democrats gathering that mental health is a major epidemic that needs to be looked at especially among kids, those people under 18, a lot of that coming on the heels of covid. we could talk about this the rest of the hour but we will need to leave it there and move on to something else. after the break, coming up next, top gun maverick is soaring to another huge box-office weekend. it is not just the film if that's succeeding. the u.s. military says they may be able to capitalize on the film's success. we will break that down for you next. ♪ ♪ (burke) a new car loses about ten percent of its value the minute you drive off the lot. or more. that's why farmers new car replacement pays to replace it with a new one of the same make and model. get a whole lot of something with farmers policy perks. ♪ we are farmers. bum-pa-dum, bum-bum-bum-bum ♪
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>> welcome back to the big
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sunday show. top gun maverick is soaring into the record books this weekend. it passed 290 million dollars in domestic ticket sales, making the film tom cruise's largest domestic grossing movie ever. >> you will never forgive yourself. >> no turning back now. >> come on! >> and amid all the chaos happening around us, political magazine thinks the reason it is so popular is the movie gives people an opportunity to feel good about our country. according to a new article, quote, this film's appeal comes from the mere fact that it's about normal people doing things within the plausible boundaries
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of reality. a large number of americans are desperate for permission to collectively feel good about our life, country, and culture without any of the political baggage. now that the queen's jubilee is over, and diana ross has left the stage, do you have your tickets to see maverick yet? >> i've already seen it, and i took my kids, and i have to tell you, part of the reason this is breaking through is it's awakened hollywood to the reality of an underserved audience. people want patriotic movies, and there's something iconic here underway. and that is scrappy heroes overcoming incredible odds. that's what this is about. and i think, look, mel gibson's new lethal weapon movie which he's making now is going to be the next big hit because we're in this cultural regurgitative moment where we're looking back and want the nostalgia of the past rg but this is old school -- but this is old school big hollywood story telling
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coupled with feel good nostalgia without political lectures. this is what america wants, and they are improving it. in fact, the whole world embracing it. >> isn't tom cruise about 30 years too old to play a fighter pilot? >> no, he's not. no he's not. did you see him? [laughter] >> he's not aged 30 years. it's a little ridiculous. gianno, we all know that recruitment for military has gone down throughout because of rising obesity, chronic medical conditions and even recently because of covid vaccines. we had a commander air force recruiting a little more hopeful that maybe we will see a rise in recruitment from maverick. he said we did a good -- he said we did a good recruiting bump from top gun in 86. we expect top gun maverick to do the same. what do you think, gianno? do you think maybe they will be able to see some of the bump? >> you know what? you're right. they did struggle this last
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fiscal year to attract national guard and reservist members, and i think that's in part because of what's been pushed by the left, which is hatred for our country, hatred from our values and our traditions. and that's another reason why i'm especially opposed to teaching critical race theory to children, which we know would then also get them to ka tich -- capitulate to hating the country and maybe hating themselves and viewing themselves as the victims. there have been things against african americans in this country, we should learn those lessons and be educated to make sure they don't happen again, but we need to be a country about bringing people together. because this time especially post covid which i hope we're in post covid, we need to unite as a country and move things forward. i'm happy about top gun. i haven't seen it yet. i'm planning on seeing it. if there's tickets available today, i will go see it with a
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friend. i'm looking forward to more movies like this. >> we saw the queen jubilee and the celebrations going on in the u.k., for me, when you watch something like a top gun, and you really get that -- you start to feel, you know, patriotic. i personally get the goosebumps when i start seeing some of these moments of the american flag, it is something that maybe we haven't been talking about as much in the united states with a lot of the controversy, people not standing for certain things during football games and whatnot. how does it make you feel when you see some of these movies? >> i haven't seen this one, and if i'm being 100% honest with you guys, i probably won't. it is not my kind of genre, but i'm very glad -- >> shame on you. [laughter] >>i'm very good for top gun if they can rev up interest and help recruitment for the u.s. military. i think that is an incredible service, something that hollywood could do a lot more of, if they so chose to, for the country. i am not like a big tom cruise fan. i'm not really -- i don't know, i'm not --
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>> what do you like? >> -- buying playing the fighter pilot. if i can watch it onnetflix, i will watch it at home. i haven't been to a movie theater in i don't know how many years >> we respect all opinions. >> i find tom cruise -- he's so high maintenance and owns hundred million-dollar homes. >> let's get back to the air force, the navy, the military, that aspect of it. forget it is tom cruise. >> all right. >> it is going to be a feel-good movie. i hope that we see the rise in military recruitment. we certainly need it for our country. i plan to take my three sons to go see it. we must move on from tom cruise. from inflation to the border, the crisis mounts for president biden, but some in the media says the country's biggest problem is women's ability to vote? that's coming up next. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> welcome back to the big sunday show. from inflation to the influx of migrants at the border, the crises are piling up for president biden. another migrant caravan with up to 15,000 people is set to leave mexico tomorrow and head for the u.s. while some in the mainstream media are starting to ask questions about biden's crises, others are focusing on what they see as the biggest problem facing the country, women having access to vote. >> what would you say is the biggest challenge facing women today? >> 103 years after the passage of the 19th amendment in the senate, the challenge and frankly the threat is the white men who have had a monopoly on our society, our democracy, and
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our country who continue to block our access to the ballot and our liberty as citizens of women and everything that comes with it >> nicole, there are many women in the supreme court and more women in congress than at any point in history. there are also two women in line for the presidency. so is access to the ballot the biggest challenge facing women in america? >> raymond, unfortunately, when people make blanket statements like that, they're quite ignorant, and they negate essentially everything that the women for the last century have done to make sure that we as women today can have some of these freedoms. is everything completely fair? like i tell my children every single day, life's not fair. okay? and whether it's man versus woman. whether it is certain other things. at the end of the day, when we're looking at the crises that our country is faced with right now, women suffrage is not one of them. but as a woman, who is raising three white males, i have a huge problem with the fact that for
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some reason, it is okay to make these universal negative statements, stereotypical statements about the white man. we continue to talk about the fact that the family unit is broken, and that is why you are seeing so much violence, especially among young males. but if we continue to beat down the young males, who are growing up, and you're not lifting them up, you're telling them because they're born a man, that they are bad. this is part of our fundamental problem. we need to be looking forward. we have to be grateful for what we have right now. we still have issues when it comes to equality. there's still more work to be done, but to say that women's right to vote and access to voting is one of the biggest issues that we're dealing right now, it is a laughing [inaudible], and to be honest, it is embarrassing for coming from a woman. >> what does she mean? i'm confused. >> she doesn't know what she's talking about. that's the problem. >> i need to get back to what we mentioned a little earlier, gianno, the largest migrant
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caravan ever, 15,000 people strong is headed up towards mexico and the u.s. border. given biden's border policies, what do you expect to see there? >> more people coming in, and i'm going to tell you, raymond, i think joe biden is just about as serious about fixing the border issue as captain crunch is about joining the military. it's laughable at this point. [laughter] we've got all of these people coming in -- >> maybe after seeing maverick. >> maybe, but these folks are crossing over, and they're bringing drugs, fentanyl, for the first time in our country's history, 100,000 people have died from overdose of a drug within a year's time. that's insane to me. it breaks my heart because i grew up with a mother who was addicted to crack cocaine. and it reverberates throughout the entire family. even now with me, i'm still dealing with issues in therapy, abandonment issues and other things. you may not know what this may lead to with someone who may not
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be as strong as me, they could take a gun and do things like a school shooting or whatever the case may be. we need to get this border issue under control immediately because lives are literally at stake. >> you made such a great point, illegal immigrant trade, drugs fuel a lot of it. they become mules or distractions so the drug cartels can move their drugs. just over memorial day weekend, 4,000 people illegally entered country just in the del rio sector. that's an incredible statistic. gillian, you're a mother of a baby. while the democrats think they can ride roe v. wade to election victory with women and mothers, there's more of an immediate concern here that they seem to be ignoring. i want to play you something the commerce secretary said.
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this is from earlier today talking about that baby formula shortage. >> when did you first learn of this problem? >> i first learned about it, you know, a couple of months ago, so this is -- >> so april? >> -- a difficult issue -- yes, probably in april. i'm not involved in the administration's response here. >> she's not involved. she's a member of the cabinet >> that's not what the white house said either. >> yeah. they knew about the problem at that baby formula plant in michigan in october, and she didn't wake up till april? how d this baby formula -- how will this baby formula shortage affect the midterms and mother's votes? >> it depends on if they clean it up in time before people get to the polls. it is looking like it is going to be another two to three months before the formula, even though -- by the way, the abbott plant is up and running again, but it is going to be two to three months the execs say till
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that formula hits the shelves and parents can get access to it. we're creeping up on the midterms here. that memory will be fresh on everybody's mind when they go to the polls. when you were talking this now, this is exactly one of those issues we talked about yesterday where there is an underlying crisis, a real policy problem, and then there is also a major messaging problem because we have now heard from the white house press secretary and the communications team iterations of the story that are wildly contradictory. a few weeks ago, it was the fda knew about this crisis, this looming crisis and saw it coming, but the white house didn't know. then it was the president didn't know, but the white house -- or the white house staff knew, and then now it is some iteration of actually the whole thing is the manufacturer's fault in the first place. >> yeah. >> it is the kind of situation that can be made worse by bad messaging because it sows chaos and fear. and that's what's happened here.
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>> no accountability from biden. his poll numbers, everyone, including african americans -- >> this week the democrats will try to get everybody to focus on january 6th this week. i think when your baby is hungry and gas is through the roof, that's the hard thing for america to focus on. still ahead, there's no i in team. a new study reveals the positive impact playing team sports can have on children much later in their lives. that's straight ahead.
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♪ ♪
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>> welcome back to the big sunday show. i love that song. we're the champions. i love it. one to have best parts of -- one of the best parts of being a kid is playing sports of course. >> come on! >> i'm going to score a touchdown! >> now, researchers say children who play team sports show fewer signs of anxiety, depression, withdrawal, and social or attention problems than those who don't participate in sports. this is a big conversation here. we have our experts here at the
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table, and i want to go to you, first, nicole, if you will. the coronavirus pandemic side lined more than 60 million athletes between the ages of 6 and 18 across america. the data has shown an increase in students requesting mental health services from their schools. what can we do to get you back on track and healthy -- what can we do to get youth back on track and healthy? >> the fact that children participating in extra curricular activities like team sports has a positive impact on them. this isn't rocket science. we know that, which is why people were angry during the pandemic when these things were taken away from the kids. why is anyone surprised the kids are suffering right now? the kids aren't okay. the best thing we can do as a society is make sure get them back to that level of normalcy. we saw declining testing scores, the widening of the achievement gap. the best thing we can do is make sure children have access to schools, also these extracurricular programs.
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not every child is going to play sports. we're not all athletically designed the same, but the bottom line is making sure that they have an involvement in something, they feel a sense of belonging. that's also going to keep them off of the screen times and the video games, all things that we know actually does increase rates of depression and anxiety. i mean, that's why we are seeing higher suicide and overdose rates in these kids. we need to keep them occupied. having physical activity is good not only for their physical health but mental health as well. >> i agree completely. raymond, you have school-aged kids who have participated in sports. what impacts have you seen covid restrictions have on fair play and real competition when it comes to youth sports? you seem like one of those american dads where you're coaching. you are doing everything. >> i have to confess, gianno, they my kids play some sports -- though my kids play some sports, they weren't all that great at them. they excel in other areas. i have a singer in the family.
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i have kids building things and into clubs. they all played sports. here's why it is so important. we live in new orleans, so it was fairly open. they had in-person schooling as well as sports and extracurriculars, which was so healthy and good for them. but i love that my kids played sports even when they were younger. though they weren't the best it taught them something. i taught them empathy, how to work with a group. how at times even when you try hard, you lose. that's not such a bad lesson. in fact, it shows you you compete. you strive. there are going to be people in life and in sports that are at times better than you. how do you outmaneuver, how do you work together to get better as a team? i think those skills, empathy and closeness, togetherness is so important for not only their development now, but as adults and soon to be parents, i hope. so i can see where this is so important and needed today. i hope we see more sports >> absolutely, well said.
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there was a recent poll that came out about 1300 teens were polled, and they wanted to know in the poll would you prefer in-person learning, 65% said they wanted to be in person. 18% said they wanted a mix of both online and in person. 9% said completely online. 7% said not sure. i'm sure covid has impacted those numbers, so i want to ask you, gillian, there's been attempts to move education online for youth even before covid. as a new mom, and i know we have been talking about you being a new mom, would you advocate for more online learning or in-class learning? >> i think the move for online learning for young kids would be a big mistake, unless there's extenuating circumstances, health conditions, they need to get in class, learn how to interact with their peers. it's crucial. i am already thinking about. my daughter is 10 months old. i'm like i can't wait for her to go to school and make friends her own age.
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>> that's it. thank you so much for that. i'm a single man. if i'm ever blessed to have a wife and kid, you have educated me. thank you so much. big four is next. ♪ ♪ okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete balanced nutrition for strength and energy. woo hoo! ensure, complete balanced nutrition with 27 vitamins and minerals. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. ♪ ♪ >> tech: when you have auto glass damage, trust safelite. witin one easy appointment... ♪ pop rock music ♪ >> tech: ...we can replace your windshield and recalibrate your advanced safety system. >> dad: looks great. thanks. >> tech: stay safe with safelite. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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welcome back to the big thunder show. it's time now for big four. our pick for the biggest stories everyone will be talking about this week. the platinum at the palace party had plenty of stars. but prince george stole the show by singing along too sweet caroline. take a look at this. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> love that song. >> those and kids stole the show that little prince louis stole my heart should. what you have raymond? >> i hope rod stewart gets a better song next time, neil diamond does that better than anybody. i will leave that aside bring the story of the world be wrestling with natalie next week probably for years is the absence of global leadership. this weekend we covered the queens platinum jubilee it's clear she's going to be stepping
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aside and abdicating soon. who holds that void can can charles holding of the commonwealth the 54 nations look to the british monarchy? at the same time there are reports today that pope francis is considering resigning. john paul ii wants that a father does not abandon the family even when he is ill where the queen has certainly taken that sentiment to heart. time waits for no man we still need nonpolitical leaders that preserve our traditions and reflect the best of our character. let's hope some of them are coming soon. >> this was going to leave you scratching your head. a shocking new survey finds eight and ten delivery workers admit to eating customers food. i know you all have gotten uber eats your sink wait there's fries missing or looking around, 73% of them say they do this because either the customer does not typically give a bad tip. so i'm imagining arraignment
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your food is nearly always gone. [laughter] >> how did they know if you're going to tip or not before they eat the food? >> video to the apple of uber eats it automatically asks you to tip. when the family says you go pick up food force that is my tip i take pieces of their food it's just not fair but i suggest everybody do that in the family. strangers note. >> i do not do gross you guys out. a growing boy has to eat i still fries i'm sorry grandma. >> rapid tell you guys are because i got a sushi roll with two of the sushi pieces missing the other night. and that's what i was thinking i didn't want to eat it. get this you've seen kangaroos fighting each other. look at this video this is a grandfather fighting off a kangaroo that attacked his dog, no. [laughter] i cannot. i think kangaroos are what is
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animals you think they are soft and cuddly but they're actually vicious and turn you into a million pieces together the opportunity. >> that kangaroo he was look like he was in the trenches appeared. >> guys are gotta leave it there. have a great time with you this weekend for that does it for us. we'll see you next weekend at 5:00 p.m. on saturday. ♪ 362 deadly mass shootings. this time and philadelphia and chattanooga, tennessee. good evening i am jon scott and this is the fox report. ♪ also had tonight new details coming to light about the man accused of killing a retired wisconsin judge for the suspect allegedly carried a hit list of several high profile politicians. another tough weekend ahead for the white house with inflation driving up food and gas prices

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