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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  July 11, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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♪ ♪ >> kayleigh: this is "outnumbered." hello, everyone. i'm kayleigh mcenany here if mica hosts, emily compagno and harris faulkner. also joining us, michele tafoya and brian kilmeade. a scathing new report out about president biden's aides and how it's becoming a serious concern. you won't believe where this report is for him. they say he's a liability for the white house and the democratic party. you think? it's "the new york times."
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they are reporting that the white house aides are closely looking out for biden, with some staffers pointing out his verbal and physical stumbles that have become "an uncomfortable issue." the times writing this: "he often shuffles when he walks, and aids where he will trip on a wire. he he stumbles over words at events and they hold their breath to see if he makes it to the end without a gaffe. i think america holds a breath, too. "his speeches can be flat and listless and he sometimes loses his train of thought, has trouble submitting names or appears momentarily confused. more than once he has promoted vice president kamala harris, calling her "president harris." god help us. adding insult to injury, more than 60% of democrats do not want biden as a nominee in 2024. what is so troubling to me, brian, if you be the start of this piece, the questions about
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his age and acuity are actually affecting his official plans as president. he starts by saying, when he goes to the middle east he will presumably be more rested than he would have been paid he called the original plan tacked onto the european trip, but his aides called it crazy to put biden through that at the age of 79 years old. when it affects your official duties and your ability to go on the international trip, that says a lot. >> brian: i don't think people should watch this and say it's a republican or democratic issue. nor should people say, wow, that's being nice to someone in his late 70s and will be 83 by the time they run for election again. they should think about the country. you have to be able to do your job effectively. for him to take off every single weekend -- they sent averages five days a week and he doesn't do anything at night. how is that effective for the country? but i also think it's important to get ageism out of this, and that is something we've been
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watching at home, because it's the last thing we want to do. they say 60% of the study of those 65 and up also think he's too old. for those 65 and up, also it was pointed out in the book is david gergen says "i'm 80, and i can't run anything anymore." "i've noticed a decline." and you should not be president and be 80, nor should you seek reelection at 80. maybe it's a tactic but i sense that he absolutely wants to run again for another four years. >> kayleigh: i think you make an important point because our elders are the wisest among us. in this case, when it is affecting the job performance on an international trip, to your point, they talk about in "the new york times," harris, how they safely guard his delaware trips. the aides do. they want him to have those weekends. and as you point out, he's a five days a week president. we need a seven days a week president. we need someone around the
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clock. steel and so i guess he's not going to take that 3:00 a.m. call. >> brian: you'll get voice mail. if that. the president is sleeping right now! >> harris: for jill biden, it's not the octogenarian number that he hits this fall that worries me. it's the 83, january 20th of 2025, should he win reelection. you are starting to get into a zone where you can start to believe some of the reports where the aides are being told, not just on foreign trips, though when he goes home to delaware, just keep a good eye on him. what does that even mean? we don't know. but with this, the calculation -- of course we took it lives on "the faulkner focus," talking about guns and be able to handle out the details about the new bipartisan legislation. i had so many questions. he doesn't take any, though. >> brian: non. >> harris: i would have asked,
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adam lanza's guns were lying around his house. his mom purchase those. this is not the situation he described, that's not how it broke out. but we are not allowed to ask him anything and they just put enough words on the prompter for him to get through it. it's what we are watching. it's not our opinion. these are the facts and the facts don't have feelings. >> kayleigh: at the facts are the most devastating when you look at "the new york times" poll. 13% believe the country is going in the right direction. 33% approval to biden, the lowest i've seen it. not just in "the new york times" poll but more broadly. 64% of democrats say he shouldn't run and half site age reasons. speak to you as you touched on in the beginning, as peter baker pointed out in that article, it's his public appearances that have fueled that perception. he touches on the clear confusion and the gas and things that have real policy for us. that they have to clean up, that's a lot we are seeing. this isn't just a stumble that
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happens all of us. this is a considerable barrage of information to us, perception to us, that he can't handle it. the question frankly isn't whether he has or can sustain that mental acuity and mental capacity, because frankly i think we know the answer to that. it has nothing to do with his age. i think the question is, why is the mainstream media now releasing this onslaught of articles and points about this now? why now? wisest such a surge? who does it benefit? now there are sharks circling the chum, citing ro khanna and governor pritzker who got to montana all of a sudden. >> brian: gavin newsom. >> emily: so the question is always his being benefited by the stories right now that are all of a sudden taking space. >> harris: reports are about alexandria ocasio-cortez, shall be eligible. she was mentioned along with governor pritzker. >> kayleigh: these sharks in the water, perhaps the biggest
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is vice president kamala harris. to her credit she at least does press interviews, she walks up to the plate, she slings, but she misses royally. watch this one. >> i do believe that we should have rightly believed, that we certainly believe, at least certainly shouldn't have settled. there's a connection between what we are -- what we want to have happen, and the power of congress actually make it happen. when it comes to changing the laws, when it comes to writing and putting in effect laws -- >> another run by former president trump as possible. he is signaling that. with that make it more likely? that the president runs? >> he did it before. [laughs] >> michele: there is that laughter again that we've all come to love and feel warmed by. let's stop the science deniers. when you reach a certain age or chances of having a baby dwindle
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because age affects your ability, and i'm speaking of -- >> brian: you are speaking is a birthing person. [laughter] >> michele: i'm speaking as a birthing person who had trouble conceiving because i waited so long. >> harris: same. >> michele: when you get to be a certain age, your cognitive abilities begin to decline, although kamala harris looks at a scheduled. [laughter] that's just how it is. i'm not sure that we should set a number and have a number. we do half to be of a certain age in order to run. but do you cap it? i think there are some really wise people who are 80 and older. the wisdom is one thing, the ability to do the job is something huntley different. both my parents, my aunt is 91. incredibly wise woman, and gives me advice on the time. would she be able? no, she can't run for president. granted, that's 91, but i think we need to accept that with age
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comes this decline no matter how much privilege and take. like he said, he proves it all the time. he doesn't want to be a lame duck for the rest of his term. >> brian: but i think he thinks he's running. because people are so angry when they bring up his age. [laughter] >> michele: it is so sad! >> harris: it's not the age of 83 when he would take office again if you were to win reelection. it's what you talked about. we miss out on his wisdom, whatever that would look like at this point, because he's got to concentrate on just walking. >> kayleigh: and when he lost the far left, he lost independent playlists, you bless everyone, even hollywood. they have conference calls with him, like debra messing. and he's even lost snoop dogg. stephen oh, no!
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>> kayleigh: "sleepy joke won't even remember what country you are in." the riding is on the wall! >> brian: grandpa corona and sit back. >> kayleigh: straight ahead, a left-wing group is now offering bounty play arrest for public sightings of the supreme court conservative justices, after protesters targeted justice kavanaugh at a steak house this time. in the white house is silent all this. the silence is deafening. ♪ ♪ veteran homeowners, home values are at all-time highs. now's the time to turn the equity in your home into cash. we called and got $76,395. the newday 100 va loan lets you borrow 100% of your home's value to get you 25% more cash than you get from other lenders.
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around supreme court justices seem to get even bolder, prominent democrats are mocking and downplaying the political harassment of the court's conservative justices. on friday the liberal group "shut down d.c." essentially offered bounties for sightings of the justices, treating that they would pay up to $200 for tips on the location of the six conservative justices, so protesters can go to target them in public. that tweet just came out two days after protesters got a tip that justice kavanaugh was dining at a d.c. restaurant and showed up there, forcing him to leave through the back door. congresswoman alexandria ocasio-cortez mocked the justice, tweeting, "poor guy, he left before his souffle because he decided half the country should risk death if they have an ectopic pregnancy within the wrong state lines. it's all very unfair to him," she rode. "the least they could do is let them eat cake." and they defend this on "fox news sunday" yesterday. >> when public officials go into public, we should expect two
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things. one, you should always be free from violence, harassment, and intimidation. two, you're never going to be free from criticism or peaceful protests. people exercising their first amendment rights. and that's what happened in this case. >> emily: sure, but the reality is just one month after there was an attempted murder charge brought against someone on behalf of justice kavanaugh, now we have leftists on twitter and elected officials who are essentially mocking him for having to flee a restaurant out the back door. take a look at this twitter where people write, "i can't get over the fact that a right was taken away from half the country and about 75% of the country think the real problem of the 25% of us who are angry about it and using whatever voices we have to protest and not comply with that." the tweets go on. >> brian: they do. and i find it astounding that people find is acceptable. by the way, the secretary of transportation, pete buttigieg, the violence has already happened, so forget that. the violence has happened, an
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assassination attempt is deplorable and should be a warning sign to all those people who want to protest, and number two, he says, "i get protests all the time." i haven't seen any of that so i'd like to see evidence of that, when and where. end of they understand it doesn't stop with justice kavanaugh? don't they understand this is the latest? and it might be republicans or conservatives, the homeland security secretary, or transportation secretary, because they can't get on a plane or they can't because their flight is canceled. they might decide if it's okay in that residence it's okay in maryland, it's okay in virginia, it's okay in tulsa, and now this is out of control. it's like the me too movement. next thing you know, al franken needs a job. people have to realize it doesn't stop here. i can't believe that the president with this experience doesn't realize that. >> harris: but you know they are okay with it though. look at kyrsten sinema in
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arizona pay don't think she was little geo-located that she was heading into the ladies room at that event sang? some of those events may be public knowledge -- >> brian: but with the president be speaking out if it were aoc? >> harris: of course not. he didn't speak out when brett kavanaugh's life is under threat, attempted assassination. he's not going to speak out. but the left is comfortable and some of this. he says it comes with the political territory. he said that because he was mad at kyrsten sinema because she was not supporting him on his build back better. and he was a kid with the people who showed up at senator manchin's boat where he was living, he was okay with all of that, because that was what his narrative was. all of that is not guarded carefully. you can't have people geo-tagging and doxxing. >> emily: he was trying to punish her for her position on build back better, because earlier today he thanked her by name and for her courage.
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i think she exhibited a lot more courage in the restroom, being followed there by the videographer and having it all over the internet and having her president say, "that's just politics, honey." i paraphrased that last part. let's talk that would level of condemnation the president has or has not undergone. let's watch between her own peter doocy in the press secretary. >> if these protesters can go to the justice's house and a restaurant, where do you not think it's appropriate for a group of protesters? >> when he condemn intimidation, any violence. peaceful protests, people should be allowed to do that. >> and restaurant? >> if it's peaceful, for sure? >> really? its potentially creating a bad situation when their people, even if they are being peaceful at the time, they are angry. >> we have contempt and intimidation and violence. i'm done here, peter. >> emily: but who does she
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mean by "lee," kayleigh? when we listen to the president himself now. >> it's a critically important. we can do a lot of things to accommodate the rights of women in the meantime. >> yes, so the press secretary went on to say this is democracy. okay. let's put this to the test. it's democracy, give us your address. pete buttigieg went on to say people are upset. let's see what happens of people come to your home. i seem to be just like other leftists. by the way, we all get threats. every person on the scout has gotten threats paid leftists, however, are the first to loudly complain about it. when they do, they won't stand up for kavanaugh, who is not just had threats, but an assassin come to his home. the only way they can get away with this is the mainstream liberal media. reuters, i googled this morning, biden condemning kavanaugh
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assassination. i know he has and i just wanted to verify. and then i see this reuters headline. "biden condemns actions of men who harassed justice kavanaugh." this is a headline from june 8th. when you read the fine print, he condemned the actions of this individual in the strongest possible terms, says his press secretary. but the headline says that he's himself condemned it. that would have not stood, where he refused to condemn. >> emily: that matters because i argue it's part of the duty of our elected officials to help temper down the rising, inflamed emotions of this country. not just throw gasoline on the fire. instead we have aoc and the like who are throwing more logs on the fire not realizing that the actionable threat that is already happened. we have graduated from perceived to actionable threat as the person sitting in jail right now under an attempted murder charge will tell you.
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>> michele: exactly. pete buttigieg says when you run for political office you expect certain things. well, when he went back political office, we expect certain things. like you guys telling us the truth. when she says half the country should risk death if they have an ectopic pregnancy within the wrong state lines, it's all there in fair, that's intellectually dishonest. an ectopic pregnancy has nothing to do with abortion. again, infertility queen right here, you and i. we have been through certain procedures. that is intellectually dishonest and you are now saying, oh, my god, if you have any kind of reproductive issue at all, you are going to be thrown to another state to have it taken care of. this story about the 10-year-old girl who needed the abortion? >> brian: not true. >> michele: a single source story we don't even have. >> harris: you side in "the washington post." >> michele: when i first came out i was like, where is the second source on the story? and yet it's being quoted as report. this is the kind of stuff that
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we expect better from elected officials. i want the damn truth. >> emily: and at a minimum we expect condemnation of violence across the board. >> brian: what if a protester showed up at catania brown's house because he didn't know what a woman was? he be condemned and two seconds. >> emily: there would have been media uproar. coming up, elon musk response to twitter's threat to sue him over backing out on the $44 billion deal. that's next. ♪ ♪ grandparents cut a rug, with a jitterbug? or returned from war, dreaming of the possibilities ahead. ♪♪ where your dad waited for his dad to come home from the factory. is this where they gathered on their front steps, with fats domino on the breeze... ancestry can guide you to family discoveries in the 1950 census. see what you can uncover at ancestry. if you have type 2 diabetes or high blood pressure
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information he claims was withheld on fake accounts. love that. michelle dum x11, that was your favorite topic during the commercial. >> michele: he wants to know who is real and twitter and who is fake, because you can't monetize fake accounts. you can't charge them for the advertising and you can't get them to buy stuff on twitter. he wants the number of real people, and in his takeover he wants to make sure that only real people are tweeting and that they are accountable. for people who don't know what bots are, they are software that can propagate all this false material, right? hillary clinton blamed them for you losing the election. so bots are bad. i think he is still going to get this done, elon musk. i think he's going to force twitter to expose how many they have come to get the price down, and buy it. >> harris: i'm amazed how long it's taken twitter to capitulate to this. if they really wanted this deal to go through, he told us he
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wanted the number of bots like 2.5 months ago. it's been so long that we could've hand counted the bots. [laughter] see if that's true. if it was possible, but we are in the virtual world. >> harris: well, you are! >> brian: thank you. you're welcome to visit. [laughter] how weird is this? it went from, uh-oh, elon musk is the majority holder of our company, panic, i'm going to quit, then he goes, i'm not going to be on the board, now he's going to own your company. now i'm going to buy your company, okay, you can have it. he goes, "i don't want it." "you don't want me? i'm going to force you to marry me. and if you don't, you have to pay me a billion dollars." he's going to get the price down. i think you're right, that he's trying to get the price down. that would be good. in the meantime, twitter can't win because it has destroyed and been outed. >> harris: like you say, maybe
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some of the people relishing the fact that they were going to have a reason to go woke and quit this place and do all that, then it's like, wait, can i have my job back? there's one more tweet i want you to see. it's got a chuck norris reference. apparently that's hilarious. [laughter] chuck mate. emily? >> emily: just to get into the xs and os, elon musk is arguing that because they weren't honest about the bots that is materially affected the valuation of the business. so in court he is essentially saying, this is not what i agreed to buy. and that is really high to cross and taking place in delaware, the leading state for u.s. and international corporations. when they are -- so, twitter's only option was to either sue for specific performance, which they are. "you said you were going to buy it, you have to buy it." what he signed a billion-dollar
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termination fee, but that's only triggered in certain instances. so their only option was to see you and say, you broke it, you buy it. and essentially hope you won't reach that high bar in court, or the most they will get is frankly that billion dollars. i don't know if it's going to be successful, you guys. i don't actually know if that bots situation, him arguing -- speefour of disclosure. see one he has to pay what i called the prenup? >> emily: i think the result will be a settlement or the court will say that it's worth less but you still have to buy it. in delaware, a business from the corporation friendly state, they are loath to break up any contract. >> michele: does he still have to buy it at that set price or can you buy it for what it's worth? >> emily: he can buy for the lesser price if the -- >> harris: why don't they get rid of the bots at the same time? >> kayleigh: i like many other conservatives remember where i was when this was announced, and
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i rejoice. i couldn't show enough people that maybe we were going to be given a level playing field and that twitter would be punished, it if their stocks sell, they have to expose this information. but it's not about punishing twitter, it's about ensuring that we have elections where the information is out there like hunter biden, that was wiped away. we want an equal playing field. elon musk was our hope, and it's a disappointing day. >> brian: michele, your presence has been held here and reflected in two sports analogies have never heard you use before. [laughter] they are really -- >> michele: we are on the same team! >> harris: we do what we can. up next, video showing elementary school children in san francisco getting off the bus and making their way past a crowd of homeless drug addicts shooting up in broad daylight. ♪ [beeping]
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>> harris: during the commercial break i had to get the couch to consult. this has me so upset, and no one seems to be fighting over this or fighting for the right thing here. california's homeless crisis is spiraling out of control including in san francisco, where shocking new video now shows elementary school children just off the bus forced to walk by what appears to be one of the city's open-air drug dens on their way home. the man who took the video is a self-described recovering addict who could not believe his own eyes. watch. >> get home safe. get home safe, all right? i'm sorry y'all got to see how this [bleep]. get home safe. they've got to walk through this [bleep]. oh, man.
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[bleep]. these little kids got a walk through this [bleep]. it's crazy. >> harris: i'm glad he's showing us. maybe people will become incensed enough to want to change it. >> kayleigh: this is child endangerment. who is endangering the child? not the parents, the state and the city of san francisco. this looks to be eight to 10-year-olds when you can blare their faces and they are walking by a drug addict on the side of the road. the state has told us they want to be a parent. remember, the teachers union was meeting and they wanted to get rid of mother and father. they want to be a mother and father. they twist and contort the minds of the child and teach them critical race theory, teach sex to kindergartners, and they send them through this. this is where they drop off from the bus, in this area of san francisco by an open-air opioid den. welcome to blue america. this is what they'll do your kids. >> harris: michele? >> michele: i grew up in
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california. my parents were northern californians. they were so proud of it. my dad called san francisco the jewel of the western hemisphere, he was so proud of it. he's turning over in his grave right now. my mom is so sad about this. how this got this dad, it leaves so many question marks floating over my head. what is the point of enabling all of this? because this is a result of government enabling this stuff. who benefits? who possibly benefits? the drug addicts, because they are free to do what they want to their bodies? what is the benefit? what is the upside of teaching kids this stuff? what is the upside of exposing people to this? i'm trying to get my head around this leftist viewpoint. who it benefits, whom it benefits. >> brian: the answer is, "i have a big heart, i'm not to mention people just because they happen to be homeless." but what they forget is these aren't families of four who couldn't make the rent. these are people who need mental
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help, they should not be amongst us, and they are violent. we see it all the time. this is unbelievable. they are invited there. they know they are welcome there. there are mini societies there. this is why the new d.a. there, if you want to distinguish yourself, the one who put that up, think about this -- if you think it's not going to be you or those kids are going to be protected, what about this volleyball player hit with a tire iron or something in the face, and almost blinded, just by walking down the street after going to a restaurant in los angeles? state he grew up in the east bay and i lived in the city for five years and went to law school there. i was recently hang out with a group of my law school girlfriends. they have different political and social views and what we talked about the entire time with the state of san francisco, because most of them still live there, and how their children -- what they have
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navigate walking down the sidewalk. at the end of the day, their constituents. they are citizens. it doesn't matter what party they vote for. they are voting to have their children be safe. and i blame -- my answer to your question is it's all gavin newsom, because we had to rot today or under his leadership and how the state is running under him as attorney general. you know that nationally homelessness has risen paid in california over 16%. it has the largest veteran homeless population. you talk about compassion, when he was mayor of centro cisco heated everything about compassion. the cost per homeless person at that time was $21,000. after that program, it doubled. >> harris: they don't realize any of that money. where is it going? >> emily: they are spending billions on a new plan called "acting with compassion." everything out of him talks about compassion and care, but it's recklessness with funds and it's absolutely endangering the children like you said. >> harris: changing the
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landscape of these cities, which is what we are getting too, it's very different. we see it here in new york and brooklyn paid park slope, beautiful area. and the hypodermic needles are on the ground outside of establishments, restaurants, all over the place. it's changing the landscape of what it means to stroll through american cities, the biggest ones. the beacon for what we used to think, change, skyscrapers, all that the world would want. >> michele: possibilities. >> brian: maybe we should look into that. >> harris: that's a good idea. coming up, trust in the media is at historic low according to a new poll. the reason for it should be no surprise. ♪ ♪ i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein.
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riders! let your queries be known. uh, how come we don't call ourselves bikers anymore? i mean, "riders" is cool, but "bikers"...is really cool. -seriously? -denied. can we go back to meeting at the rec center? the commute here is brutal. denied. how do we feel about getting a quote to see if we can save with america's number one motorcycle insurer? should flo stop asking the same question every time? -approved! -[ altered voice ] denied! [ normal voice ] whoa.
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>> john: a bodega worker in new york city is attacked and defend himself, so why it is he in jail for murder? and why are students in san francisco for us to walk through homeless drug den to get home? crime in america. we've got you covered today. if you say the word recession enough, will become true, or is
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the die already cast? charles payne with his thoughts on that. and the latest on the border. record numbers of unaccompanied children watching democrats in. intimidation tactics against supreme court justices, and the real story behind the latest employment numbers. i'm john roberts. sandra and i will see you at the top of the hour for "america reports." ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> kayleigh: welcome back. american trust in the news is not what it once was. the latest annual gallup survey of trust in institutions reveals a credibility crisis in the media. only 50% of americans say they have trust in newspapers and a mere 11% have confidence in tv news. these are all time lows. should this be any surprise? the media was so quick to dismiss all, and they told us
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the whipping migrants, which turned out to be totally false, they didn't whip at all. michele? >> michele: it was a present worked for and the hoax that got debunked. we have had so many stories debunk that we wonder who is telling us the stories and why they are telling us the stories and where they get their information. if it's not true, why are they printing this information? he continues to happen and it bothers me as a journalist, as a former journalist. even in sports. we were required to know what we're saying, to quote people accurately, to double source our stories. these are journalistic requirements and they seem to be being bypassed. we talked earlier about that 10-year-old who supposedly needed an abortion. we don't know, and now it's this viral story. this is what is driving people a little mad. >> harris: and the story is coming out of out of the white house.
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for "the washington post" to then be in a position to question a single source on it is more than awkward. it's like, why are they the single drumbeat? why isn't everyone asking why the president is putting this out there with a single source? but that's part of it for me, the slow down, the delay between what we see, what we know to be true, and the liberal media. and they get that label because it seems to only happen to counter a narrative that exists for them. so why are they so slow to call stuff out when it's blatantly obvious? you start to lose trust, that's what children do. if you don't say that this is green, they believe any color is green. you teach a child with consistency and being honest about the things that they know and feel are right, and you teach them what the facts are separately. >> michele: and the press is supposed to do that. >> harris: it's not to be popular, it's not for clicks. >> kayleigh: every january they put out the trust barometer. but when it came out, 67% say
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journalists are purposely trying to mislead people by saying things they know to be false. it's not that we don't trust you, we believe you are actively making things up. >> brian: a couple of things. he think about it, this used to be common for people outside the media. i read in the newspaper," you think it's true. "you see it on the news." now, what news? where did you watch or read it? "i don't know, i read it online." and the average person, not just as it does this every day, they go, "i don't know." you got to look at where you read it. after a while people throw up their hands and say, i don't believe anything. that explains the 16%. >> kayleigh: it does. and we the reasons for why this is the case. pew found that 55% of journalists do not believe that every side deserves equal coverage. they said it outright. it was 12,000 journalists. i think -- >> emily: we had a montage
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earlier of certain liberal talk show hosts and journalists who have essentially said that. november when don lemon said the other side doesn't deserve to be heard at all? >> brian: you can't say that anymore if you want to keep your job according to the new guy in charge. >> emily: and according to joe concha, or contributor and media analyst, he says the tide is going to change and might restore trust little bit but it's really difficult to unring. he talks about willie inciting here, that they need to make a better delineation between opinion and actual reporting. not to infuse an conclusion, like the dobbs decision, and stop serving at the pleasure of one particular party. and people might start to get a little more faith. more "outnumbered" next. ♪ ♪
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♪♪♪ >> last but not least, nothing like the iconic sound of an electric guitar, especially in the hands of one of rock and roll's all time legends. from jimi hendrix' iconic edition of "all along the rock child," to prince's "purple rain," and who started it all, american named adolf rickenbacker. designed the first commercially sold electric guitar, not knowing how it would influence rockers to come. shout out to fox news digital. so, kilmeade, top of mind, jimi
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hendrix/peterson, nancy colin, lenny kravitz. >> i regret -- they said to me do you have somebody to name quick, doing a radio show at the time, so edge from u-2, and governor huckabee. he should be on that wall. >> nice. >> we have a little thought of one of the best bands, guns n roses and a guitar solo that's pretty epic. ♪♪♪ >> living the dream. >> there are so many, yes. mark knoplor from dire straits, and prince "purple rain,">> let's cue that up. i love that one. >> all right, here we go. ♪♪♪ >> and the best movie of all
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time, too, right? "purple rain." >> my third date with my husband was to see him in concert. it was not an out party, i don't roll like you, michelle. no, no, it was in an arena, unfortunately but he was amazing. and i didn't realize how much taller i am than prince. >> you are a lot taller than prince. >> he was the first opening act for the rolling stones retirement show, and prince and his band got booed off the stage. but genius. >> and the catalogue we keep enjoying. >> we are missing someone. hail southern rock here,
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lynnard skynard, allen collins and "free bird." >> he had covid, tested positive. >> and the plane crash. >> last year we did the tunnel to towers concerts across the water here, it was amazing. >> you know there was a plane crash, several of them passed away. my favorite block we ended with. because after this a lot of good music is in my head now. >> i thought we would see the video, i didn't know we would have to listen to the songs. like the joe franklin show when he used to do that. >> brian, you remember when "outnumbered" started eight years ago, we had pat benatar and her husband on, and you talk
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about somebody who can riff. >> lit me with your best shot. >> don't make me karaoke you. >> that's next. we are going to karaoke next. thank you to everyone for watching and listening along with us. here is "america reports." >> john: emily, thank you. an video going viral showing how serious the homelessless crisis is in san francisco. a man falling off their bus and making their way in squalor. >> and passing out on the sidewalk, joe gimaldi will be here to react. >> john: and many on the left demand the president move more forcibly to protect abortion rights nationwide. i'm

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