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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  July 17, 2022 3:00am-7:00am PDT

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be sure to follow me on facebook, instagram, twitter, rumble, and@kilmeade for whatever you want. "unfiltered" with dan bongino ♪. [playing of the star-spangled banner] ♪.
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♪. >> "fox & friends weekend." it is july 17th, year of our lord, 2022. i saw the born on 4th of july
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picture there. >> that was a cute one. pete: that means that baby is now 20. makes all of us fee older. welcome, carley. in for rachel campos duffy. carley: first time hosting "fox & friends weekend" out on the planter. that is what this area is called. pete: welcome to new york city. carley: sounds and smells of that of new york city. will: three of us a few rats and you watching us on "fox & friends." pete: could we get someone to trim the hedges here? a little uneven. carley: skip bedell could come out here. workshopping some segment ideas live on "fox & friends." pete: we are complaining. carley is in for rachel campos duffy, that more babies show up on. carley: that is food request.
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pete: my favorite, starting top five list of course the is football pictures. will: i enter the cowboy on a tall horse with the american flag picture. i love americana, you know what, not far behind? the john deere tractor, last shot, the mule, four-wheeler. pete: like a gator. will: for sure. pete: keep them coming in. carley: all food in my book. pete: that doesn't count. if everyone is good no one is god. you have to have a list. >> that's funny. pete: keep them coming in, friends at foxnews.com. all the photos are yours. will, maybe you get the same thing, when i'm out and about i do hear more about the anthem than anything else. you guys love it, we love it. keep photos coming in, @foxandfriends.com. carley: we do have news. president biden back in the u.s.
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after his four-day trip to the middle east. pete: as soon as he got back to the white house he called a lid for the day. he immediately questioned about his fist bump with saudi arabia's crown prince and whether he moved the the needle on oil production. will: alex hogan in jetta. reporter: hi, will, carley, pete. four-day trip to the middle east has come to an end with president biden and speaking and meeting with the kingdom he vowed to make a pariah after the killing of a u.s. resident and journalist. just as air force one took off from jetta i sat down with one of saudi arabia's top diplomat. this was the second time in two days that we were invited to interview jabir i prompted him on the conversation over the murder of jamal khashoggi. biden on his trip spoke to the crown prince saying he holds him directly responsible. how did he respond to those
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comments. >> i didn't hear that particular phrase the president mentioned that the u.s. is committed to human rights because since the founding fathers wrote the constitution. reporter: as the president arrived back at the white house journalists asked him about our interview and whether the minister is telling the truth about hearing the president's accusation. biden swiftly responded, no. he was asked about the way he greeted the saudi crown prince, mohammed bin salman. reporter: you did a fist bumb mr. . president biden: president why don't you guys talk about something that matters a question that matters? reporter: another key focus of the trip was oil, whether one of the world's largest exporters would ramp up production. saudi officials said oil production did not come during the meeting at the summit.
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middle east meetings at a time to curb iran's ambitions, monitor the influence of china and russia according to u.s. officials. the white house also warning that within the last month russian delegates have visited an iranian airfield to see armed drones that they potentially could acquire amid the ongoing war in ukraine. will, carley,. pete: pete alex, thank you very much. congrats on interview as the president on his way back. i can understand joe biden's frustration saying you really want to talk about the style after fist bump? if the trip had been about be is stance and a real takeaway we might be talking about that. but instead we're talking about well he is a pariah. no it is a fist bump. it is we'll could not front them on human rates they say they didn't. there wasn't a lot of substance. carley: now that president biden is back in the u.s. you look at the trip as a whole. looks like saudi arabia tried to
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play the president at a turn. first of all the white house is answering questions whether or not they knew mohammed bin salman would greet the president at the palace. jacqui heinrich pointed out in an email, if they didn't know that could have been the saudi arabia intentionally pulling a fast one on biden because they knew that image would put him in a bad spot here at home. the president touts normalization of relations between saudi arabia and israel because the saudis are allowing commercial air travel between the two countries. right when president biden leaves saudi officials say nope, this does not have anything to do with diplomatic ties to israel. it is not in any way to any further steps. then of course there is the oil situation. president biden said expect some relief at the pump in the coming weeks. saudi arabia turns around said we'll produce a little more but not much. will: if saudi arabia played joe biden they played and won. got the pr victory needed, wanted in the first bump. only promised to increase oil
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production from 10 to 13 barrels for the united states, for the world markets. that is just simply not enough. as pointed out yesterday, less what we can do from our own strategic petroleum reserve. less than what we're already doing. in listening to that conversation with alex hogue hogue you realize way to conduct foreign policy. the rights we have at home you can't impose on the world at large. what is the role of the president at the world at large, serve america first. it is realpolitik. it is cold, steely eyed pursue the interest of the united states of america. nikki haley, former u.n. ambassador was on "one nation," brian kilmeade's saturday night show. the guiding policy is knee evety. >> amazing how biden is acting.
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stop being too nice to the tyrants and thugs that want to kill us. israel is saying you can't have relations with a country saying death to israel, death to israel. the only way you stop a country like that, the only way you stop russias, chinas, irans, north koreas, is strength not running from your own shadow. this is the obama 2.0 the idea he thrown a deal out there, without telling congress, transparent to the american people, makes all of us uncomfortable. puts the world more in danger. i don't know why his team is allowing him to do this. pete: stop playing nice. if you want to put america first, make a trip to texas to talk about oil production instead after trip to saudi arabia. carley: that is exactly right, when it comes to gas prices i cannot believe president biden is playing this fame with the american people. even when he was in saudi arabia he was blaming people that own the gas stations. it is outrageous claims.
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pete: still is. carley: he said it overseas. he killed the keystone pipeline, his administration is killing offshore drilling in atlantic & pacific. killed one of the lease sales in alaska would have allowed drilling on million acres of land. people in the oil and gas industry, save the carbon emissions from your trip overseas and how about come down to midland, texas, to negotiate your with us. will: move to this, fox news alert. nascar store bobby east after he was fatally stabbed at a gas station in los angeles. pete: his shocking death sending ripples across the racing world. carley: christina coleman joins from us los angeles for this story. reporter: condolences are pouring in for the three-time nascar chuck champion. this is bobby east this at technology raceway. he tells me east was
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phenomenally fun person to be around, an absolute talent behind the wheel. he says his heart goes out to his family. >> i'm so, so sorry for his parents, bosh and janice. they have dealt with a lot in the last 10 years. of course bobby's brother-in-law, jason leffler was killed in a racing crash in 2013 at the age of 37. and now to lose their son bobby at the age of 37 is just absolutely tragic. reporter: a motive in this tragic case is unclear. investigators believe 27-year-old trent william millsap killed east on wednesday as he was filling up at a gas station in west minister, 35 miles of south los angeles. east was found on the ground suffering from a stab wound to his chess. they said millsap was a trans sy hint frequented several hotels in the area. sources told me millsap is dead. i've not independently concerned about the circumstances
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surrounding his death. "tmz" was informed that he was holed inside a apartment. s.w.a.t. team executed a search warrant and during the raid officer-involved shooting happened leading to millsap's death. no police officers were injured. we're looking to independently concerned the sucker standingses around the death of the suspect. he had an a outstanding parole warrant at the time of east's murder. they considered the suspect armed and dangerous. will: incredibly sadder to, thank you so much. pete: sad story indeed. talking about los angeles a familiar story, assailant out on parole, are there mental issues. homeless we understood. doesn't look like aboveboard member of society, based, i don't know that photo. who know what affiliations that follow that. should he have been behind bars or not, i don't know. but an innocent lost, at a gas
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station early in the evening, 5:51 p.m. not a lot of red flags to say watch yourself. the only red flag you live in california where the homeless population is out of control. it is directly tied to rising tides of violence. olympian kim glass a attacked by a homeless person, hit with a bolt in the head. carley: happened at noon. going out to lunch with a friend, another homeless person, repeat offender who a attacked women before and comes up attacked her. she was on "america's newsroom" on friday. she said i think we all deserve the opportunity of freedom but if you are a terror to society, he has to let you out on probation he attacks someone else you don't deserve to be along with the public. her message, if you have somebody who is out on bail before justice is served, it is like the previous victim doesn't
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matter anymore. that is what happened in california, over and over again. pete: catch-and-release leads to guys like that being repeatedly released, given new opportunity to assault and in this case kill innocent people. will i caught the same detail. 5:51. i would not have been looking around either. will: no. pete: one of those realities of the environment in california. carley: you know what at a gas station real quickly before we go, last year across the street from the place my husband and i have in chicago, gas station there, there was a shooting where eight people was shot, one of the people shot was filling up his tank as well. happens in stiffs across the country. doesn't matter what time of day. it is because the police are being policed and the criminals are being let free. pete: exactly right. will: turning to additional headlines this morning. start with this, the crisis at the southern border, within minutes of his arrival in eagle
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pass yesterday, fox news correspondent matt finn took the video of hundreds of migrants being processed. border patrol says encounters for the fiscal year already outpaced last year. we still have three months to go. in florida, record number of cubans, haitians crossing into the u.s. illegally. 40 cuban migrants traveling in makeshift rafts were apprehended yesterday. a second makeshift vessel was apprehended carrying nine illegal immigrants. the coast guard said they intercepted 10,000 people since october. as violent crime soars in baltimore the state's attorney marilyn mosby releases video for a news outlet mocking the crisis. parroting the fox 45 report, criticizing mows bito baltimore coach departure in 1994.
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>> no one can account for states attorney nair lynn mosby, many are questioning whether or not she was one of the get away drivers. whether she masterminded the ordeal. will: she posted video same day a teen was charged with murder. baltimore has the second most murders per capita in the country, just behind st. louis. a better note, ice cream fans lining up around the block today because. they took a look at the favorite flavors in the country leading the way, chocolate, really. followed by rocky road i'm out of this list. in third place, one of homer simpson's least favorite flavors. neapolitan. >> hmmm, chocolate. doh. hmmm, chocolate. doh. marge? will: strawberry cookie dough,
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even coconut were among top flavors. surprisingly vanilla didn't top anyone's list. that is my favorite. carley: mine too. pete: vanilla is the best. maybe a little chocolate drizzle. >> how do you feel about cookie dough? that that may be my favorite. will: blue bell vanilla. you ever had blue bell ice cream? pete: in the pail? no. will: not necessarily. yellow container. vanilla bean, it is so good. i will bring you some. it will fly nicely. i don't know the difference between vanilla and have nil la bean. carley: vanilla bean is stronger vanilla with the little specs -- specs. pete: i seen the specs. i don't like the specks as much as the clean. mom, where is my chicken nuggets. will: he knows me. first it was jefferson.
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now james madison has fallen victim to the woke cancel wars. the transformation of madison's estate as it now criticizes the founding father who wrote our bill of rights. carley: plus the inflation crisis now hitting food banks. long lines they're seeing as more people look for help to feed their families. ♪
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♪. will: good morning, welcome back to "fox & friends." there is a live shot of capitol hill in washington, d.c. speaking of our founding fathers which that includes george washington, also includes thomas jefferson, who made the news last week, we found out the jefferson home estate had gone woke for many of the tours. tours encounterd a different form of history lesson. it is not apparently limited to thomas jefferson. pete: no. as president trump said, if they
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start with here, they will if to washington and jefferson. now madison. the "new york post" did the coverage we talked about last week, what is the name of -- carley: mon at at that sell low. reporter: focused on him being a slave owner. same with james madison, with montpelier. james madison wrote the constitution, federalist papers, bill of rights. he was at least central to it at constitutional convention. here is how they describe what they saw at montpelier. the estate made madison, philosopher, farmer, statesman the enslaver the guy said. dozens of interactive staying stations direct line from slavery and constitution to problems of african-americans today. everyone ever the nation's first 18 presidents even john adams and abraham lincoln who never owned slaves, benefited from
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slavery in some way. the only indepth material about the constitution itself, appears in a display pushes the claim championed by the controversial 1619 project, racism was the driving force by the entire american political system. >> now we are trashing our founding fathers inside of their own homes. not sitting well a lot of people going on the tours and expecting a traditional tour where you learn about our founding fathers, the establishment of this country and the constitution. one dad who visited montpelier this week, said to the "new york post" i was kind of thinking we would be hearing more about the constitution but everything here is really about slavery. there no american flags at montpelier anymore. they removed those as well. will: you know i watched "fox & friends" last weekend, pete. i saw you talking about in reference to jefferson. this is something you and i talked about privately. we talked about on air as well. i did a whole episode this past week about the will cain
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podcast. here is the harsh truth. slavery was a constant of the human condition. it is not what shaped the united states of america. it makes it no less unforgivable, makes it no less a sin but it is not what makes us different. what made the united states of america different, in particular what made jefferson and madison different their ability to recognize eternal human rights and codify them for the first time in human history, in some genius document, the constitution of the united states and the declaration of independence f you're telling someone's story you don't tell, i mean you can include it but it is not, it's not the core of their story to tell. what they share with everyone else. what is the core of their story is what makes them unique. if you ran into a pirate you wouldn't say he was a brunette. you would say he had a pegleg. the pegleg of the founding fathers was constitution. pete: bravo. bravo. echoing what will just said. here is google review by greg hancock, one of the visitors
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last week. what are they saying online about the experience. he wrote, they missed the mark talking about the constitution and the role of madison in authoring it, touch dot, the pegleg is touch dot but more energy and apparent focus they want to on slavery which is the way of life then. that was educational but we left disappointed not learning more about the history of the creation of the constitution. guys what changed at montpelier between when they used to have american flags and used to talk about the constitution? a 10 million-dollar donation from a left-wing donor who is a totally changed the narrative of story told there. because a lot of these places are starving for dollars. and just like we see with george soros and d.a. races, find a place where $10 million will go a long way changing the whole story. pretty soon it is all about 1619 and slavery. carley: that is the most important points of this story. his name is david m rubenstein
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according to new york post. he came massive donations to boast thomas jefferson, james madison tours. completely changed them what they once were. this woke revisionist of what the tours are now. that is important, there are a lot of people watching right now that may have a lot of money and say you know what? if this person is going to give that level of donation to completely transform it into something negative i will give even more money to change it back. pete: i hope so. we're doing the same then at universities for years. sending pig checks into the alma mater used for things totally antithetical to what we believe in tiffany cross says to benjamin franklin, this is not a republic worth keeping. >> are you guys familiar with urban myth if you put a frog in a pot of boiling water it will
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instantly bounce. if you put it with a tepid water, thing from will remain in the water until it boils to death. that is fitting metaphor for our democracy. as democrat ric norms erode in america, we must wander will this democracy survive. a yahoo! news poll says no, perhaps when you build a nation on stolen land with stolen nation it would never be a republic it could keep. talk about the possible fall of democracy what if anything can be done to keep it. pete: that is the exact opposite of the view we just shared. if you believe america is irredeemable defined by its sins, not unique sins as you pointed out we're down mil from there. take view of flawed fathers may be hypocritical of what they wrote, what they wrote unleashed the potential for a more perfect union, more equality, which is exactly what happened over that time. the first act of congress
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effectively prevent slavery expanding into the new states. it was in the dna to contest the sin of slavery. they don't want to tell the story. carley: thomas jefferson life was filled with contradictions. yes he was a slave owner. we hold these truths that all men are created equal. why the declaration of independence was used as abolitionist document to get where we are today. that is the full truth. both of those sides should be taught in the estates people go to celebrate our country, not hate it. will: absolutely. pete: well-said. two men are arrested after police say they shot a florida barbershop owner in the face during an attempted robbery. jack brewer knows the barbershop owner personally. his reaction to america's out of control crime crisis, that is next.
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♪. carley: two suspects have been arrested in coral springs, florida, after police say they shot a barbershop owner in the face while attempting to rob him on wednesday. 18-year-old tray michael butler and 21-year-old richard fowler both face charges of first-degree murder and robbery. they are both on an immigration hold. luckily the barber is expected to be okay. our next guest knows him personally. you know him well. jack brewer joins us now with an update. good morning to you, i'm so sorry about this happening to someone you know personally. first of all, how he is doing and tell us first of all your relationship with him. >> right now he is going into second surgery with a bullet shot in the face doing damage to his jaw, part tells of the bullet still in his throat. it is just a horrific situation. those pictures that you see came straight from our cameras where
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our kids, that we serve each and every day were sitting right there when those gunmen just ran right by them. this is my neighbor at the servant institute at the jack brewer foundation. to see this, this is devastating to all of our kids and just our entire movement. i have to tell you, alan was, is a great man, he cuts these kids hair whenever we need him to. when things happen around the center he is always looking out, letting us know what is going on, letting us know the kids are acting right. this is great man, goes in to work each and every day early in the morning to do his job and see these thugs come into our community, do the type of heinous crime like this, this is despicable, i have to tell you. something has to be done with this crime wave going on in america. i mean these people come over here into our country. we let them run around and just
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threaten the lives of innocent people. imagine my kids, my kids watched these guys. they see these guys walking around the neighborhood and on the street corners. now they're terrified. they have to walk to school. they have to walk to the center. this is just not right to make it force our communities across america to live in fear. i won't deal with it anymore. i won't even leave my house without my gun in my pocket. i tell you what. i will stand for the second amendment because as long as we have thugs on the streets like this america needs to stay armed. carley: jack, i completely understand where you're coming from there. your inker and passion in the story. you were going to bring the kids in the foundation to this barbershop haircuts half hour after he was shot this is it hitting you personally. you will be right there on that very day. we showed the images of the two suspects, 18, 21 years old. they potentially just threw their lives away. that is something you are trying to prevent from happening.
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>> all the time. we have a juvenile crisis, 2019, 2020, we had over 700,000 juveniles arrested. that is 2,000 juveniles arrested every day across america. you see kids like this, there is a new trend across our country, that is called, break-ins. they're going in and robbing people left and right now. home invasions are spiking up in communities across our land. it is scary. it really is, this can come to neighborhood near you. this is not a terrible area we're talking about, you know. to see these type of things happening, to see what these kids are putting into the system through this music, through video games, through entertainment they consume. they are living the life-style, it is becoming part of american culture that needs to end. we need to get law and order back in our nation. we need to start holding these kids accountable. these kids are fatherless. they're going out committing
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heinous crimes. i tell you something else, these kids don't work. when you see these people going out committing these crimes. they do not work, whether homeless crisis you have with people attacking and killing folks, people in the streets, they need to get a job in the united states of america. we need to stop giving out all this free money to people. we need to start holding people accountable so they can be respectable citizens, tax paying citizens in this great country. enough is enough. i'm tired of hearing about racism. i'm tired of hear about all these other isms. this is not the 1950s and 60's. black america, our problem is not white folks, the problem we have young black boys going out committing all these crimes. we need to step up. this needs to stop and come to an end. carley: jack brewer, thank you so much for joining us this morning. we so appreciate you and your message. >> god bless you. carley: god bless you. still ahead inflation has struggling americans searching for help, leading to long lines
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at food banks, president of a texas operation joins us next. plus canadian prime minister, uh-oh, justin trudeau just debuted a new look. the internet can't help compare him to jim carrey in "dumb and dumber." the hilarious reaction to his new haircut coming up. ♪
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♪. will: the cost of everything is going up with inflation hitting its highest levels in four decades. as americans struggle to stay afloat food i think banks across the country are seeing long lines with some struggling to keep up in demand n texas the san antonio food bank distributed food to 1750 households on friday. its president and ceo eric cooper joins us now. eric, great to have you. by the way it should be noted, this is a part of america not often highlighted enough. it is americans every saturday, whatever the day may be, every day in many communities, stepping up to help one another at food banks. tell us what you're seeing on the ground right now? >> well, will, i tell you as one of the many feeding america food banks across the country we're all seeing increase in demand. typically the summer is a busy time because kids don't get access to their nutritional lunches at school but here in
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texas, with the heat, utility bills have been crazy and as you mentioned, inflation on food, gas, rents gone up, families are struggling. they're leaving the grocery store with less food in the grocery cart. they're leaning on feeding america food banks to make up the difference. will: i live in texas as well, eric. the heat is quite honestly for locals. as we are we know. this is not normal. that is really bad. as you said that will rise electricity bills, water bills, everything goes up. the downstream effect of attempting to pay the grocery bill in inflated food markets. what are the lines like? compare this to me from a year ago? >> it is heartbreaking again. it is texas. so it is hot. many of these distributions, we feed about 90,000 people a week. that need has gone up to about 100,000 people a week and it is so hot, families, you know, sitting in their cars, waiting
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to get food assistance, we're doing everything we can to get them quickly the food that they need so they can get home. many run out of gas. because they can't afford that we're having to put some gas in their tanks. it has been humbling to see the need. we thought the pandemic was coming to an end, then the needs would start shrinking and then it had. now it is starting to creep back up as inflation is really taking ahold and families are just struggling again to put that basic ingredient of food on their table. will: well the other side of the equation the heartful message, the inspiring notion that americans, neighbors, and organizations like yourself are there to help. eric cooper, thank you for what you do. also for sharing with us this morning on "fox & friends." >> well god bless you guys. thanks to everyone that is supportings their local food bank. we need you to come out to volunteer, or make a contribution if you can. will: thank you so much, eric.
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>> thank you. will: i believe now we're headed, there he is. head the baton to pete hegseth. take it away. pete: turning to a few additional headlines beginning with a fox news alert, a helicopter crash in las vegas, new mexico has likely left at least four people dead. three police personnel and one fire employee were onboard when the chopper went down. was on its way back from assisting fire crews in east mesa. police are investigating what caused the crash. god bless those heroes. police in new york city are searching for three people accused of bashing a 57-year-old bus passenger in the head. the three women pictured here are being investigated for a hate crime after reportedly yelling they quote, hate white people and quote, hate the way they talk, end quote. police say they began hitting the female passenger after their
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argument escalated. the victim, thankfully, is in stable condition. reporter: canadian prime minister justin trudeau, justin from canada, has a new look. he is facing some mockery online after revealing this drastically shorter hairstyle. many people recalling jim carrey's famous hairdo from "dumb and dumber." one tweet suggesting trudeau asked his stylist for the lloyd christmas treatment. it is not clear what inspired that shorter hairstyle. maybe he did it with a bowl like lloyd. all right. our chief meteorologist, only the most significant headlines, rick, rick reichmuth is someone with real style, we know that in case you missed yesterday, we got a great look at rick's incredible calves, superhuman calves you might say. rick is back on fox square with
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our weather forecast. you have always been known for beasley calves, we all know that. rick: they were called cows in high school. those are not casts, but cows. i want them gone. pete: you shouldn't want them gone. rick: at this point you take it. we have a lot of heat across a lot of the country that story will continue. look at this. it is 85 degrees in dallas right now, is 5:48 in the morning. when low temperatures don't recover, heat really builds. we'll continue to see that all week long again, unfortunately. big showers across heart of america. parts of missouri, st. louis, illinois. that will move across the mid-atlantic throughout today. florida, you're in the rainy season. it will be a little bit accelerated next couple days getting more moisture. big story will continue to
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develop. droughts across parts of texas. heat will be with us all week long. 104 today in dallas. tomorrow up 107. it stays that way all week long. back to you. pete: thank you, rick. still ahead, julie goldstein fought passionately to clear her husband's name when he became the center of one of the highest profile war crime cases in decades. she is taking that drive to inspire others. julie joins us with her new children's book. coming up next, julie. how are you? >> how are you. ♪
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♪. pete: our next guest spent years fighting to free her husband, former green beret matt goldstein. he was the center of a high-profile war crimes case. he was eventually pardoned by president donald trump. now julie goldstein is using lessons from her life to inspire others. in her new children's book, it is up to you, julie shares her guidance for kids. friend of the show, friend of mine, julie joins us now. so great to see you. thanks for being here. congratulations on the book. >> thank you. pete: how was it with the book,
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such a powerful spokesman, how did that go in the book? >> i would stay awake wondering how the people participating slept at night. stew over that. i would figure, i will never figure them out. i decided to focus on people who did step up to do the right thing, like you, like president trump and all of the supporters that we had. we had anonymous tipsters on the inside. everybody saw something was wrong, had the courage, moral courage to stand up in the face of moral cowardice of the people that should have done something. that is how it came from. reporter: how do i communicate that to younger people as well. >> exactly. pete: here is portion, it is up to you, i will not lie you may lose friends. trust me it will worth it, you will find so many others like you, those who stand up for truth and are glad they do. that is an important message for young kids. it is not easy to stand alone to do the right thing. >> no. it wasn't easy for grown men,
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women in that situation. many situations. definitely wasn't easy for them. it is not easy for kids to feel like they're the only ones that will stand up for something. pete: why childrens books. we talk about education, our youngest, we have to feel intentional what we put in front of them these days. >> i'm pa former teacher, i'm a mom, we see a growing trend of all the woke books, definitely not leading them in the right direction. this is not political this is not a side thing this is just timely and timeless lesson that really everybody can use. so it is, not trying to lead them down one path or the other. pete: absolutely. you can get the book. what is the website for the book? >> jeweledly goldstein writes.com. pete: julie goldstein writes.com. if you're looking for the type of thing you want your kids reading, go there right now, we'll put it up on the screen. you have a heavy heart. we have only 20 seconds. >> sure. my sister passed away on
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wednesday. one of the things she told me i needed to take care of, when i had her sign your book, when i had you sign her book the first time, i told you to write she has the coolest sister on the planet. that is what you wrote. she was not happy about that. so we need to fix that. pete: i will correct that. in the break, julie, i'm sorry for your loss. thank you so much for this book. "it is up to you." more "fox & friends" in just a moment. new projects means new project managers. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. when you sponsor a job, you immediately get your shortlist of quality candidates, whose resumes on indeed match your job criteria. visit indeed.com/hire and get started today.
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pete. pete: glad to have you with us. if only beautiful legislation emanates from albany, new york. move the shot. there is a lot of trash behind us. that is pool we have. carley: we'll have fun with pools later. water activities. it feels like a pool, i'm not sitting in water. it is so muggy outside. i'm glad i wore my hair up. will: in authenticity we want to bring you the sights and sounds new york. it is special. a lot of characters out. pete: characters out. will: i was talking to carley about this week. we had a full moon a little earlier this week. i don't know if it now passed. i don't think those two things are disconnected, a full moon. pete: characters fighting imagine airy characters. we had prophets on the corner here. i saw a brief squabble between a
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man with umbrella, who knows what. it is spicy out here this morning. we're glad you're here. it is national ice cream day. it is national tattoo day. carley: is it really? pete: i don't know if you guys know, you're both getting tatoos in the nine hour. take your pick. carley: not hon my face. will: born to lose right across my cheek. >> right. cool. so it is your day, man. you like ice cream. tatted up. pete: its my day. carley: it is sunday, the lord's day. pete: friday for us our weekday is almost over. we are off the rails, carley shimkus is here. rachel keeps us disciplined. carley takes us off. carley: that is right. you know i'm a you know what stirrer. pete: you know what stirrer. there are pigeons over there, will is feeding them.
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aerial rats. will: get some news this morning. president biden returned from the trip in saudi arabia where most of the attention was on the fist bump. he has as pete mentioned earlier perhaps a legitimate complaint that should not be the highlight of the trip in which case you would turn to the fact he only got the saudis to increase oil production by three million barrels. or, any other host of, well non-accomplishments on this trip, he is asked do you regret the fist bump. that is where the attention is. that is a pr victory for the saudis, president biden, do you have regrets? >> do you regret the fist bump, mr. president? president biden: why don't you guys talk about something that matters? i will answer a question that matters. pete: we would to your point talk about something that matters if something that matters was on the trip. you go to israel -- donald trump, on cusp of another agreement would codified the
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relationship, formalized between saudi arabia and israel, it did not. there is nothing of significance other than mostly maintaining the views of the trump administration in israel and reinforcing a relationship that should remain bipartisan. you go to saudi arabia, and a minor increase in capacity, when you said the trip wasn't about increasing capacity. carley: kind of was. very unclear. yes. pete: that is the bar they were held to. yes we're talking about a fist bump with a guy you said was supposed to be a pariah. you made up a covid protocol you didn't have to shake his hand that turned into a gesture that is lot more friendly than a handshake. that is it what we're talking about. carley: i want to know what the conversation at the white house was like if you could be a fly on the wall talking about the fist bump. mr. president, we will need to you fist bump the crown prince, and blame covid. really? president steps in uses better judgment, hand handshake, keep
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it simple. now that the president is back we have to talk about the deliverables. the one thing americans care about, have saudi arabia if we won't do it here at home, have saudi arabia increase the oil production so gas prices can decrease here and around the world. president biden said we can expect some relief in the coming weeks. saudi arabia officials turned around and said well we are producing 10 to 12 millions barrels a day right now. we're goingincrease that by one million barrels or 13 million in total. which is an increase but on a global scale it is not by much. this is something that shouldn't come as a surprise to anybody, including the president, because if you will remember, emanuel macron warned him that saudi arabia was prep at max capacity. this happened just a few weeks ago. watch this. >> joe, mr. . president biden: president you predicted it for a i will whoo. >> excuse me.
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[inaudible] will: pretty stunning video a warning from the french president, if biden requests increase in oil production he is not likely to find from it saudi arabia. pete: it doesn't have to be this way! an american president cavorting with people he says are human rights violators, so he can beg for more oil when we're sitting on it? the whole point of energy independence was not to have to do this! here we are, it is pathetic! it is weak.
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america last. this is a total, total opposite from the way donald trump was received when he showed up. carley: that is exactly right. there are still 105 billion barrels of untapped oil in the permian basin alone. maybe go there. maybe figure out a way to increase oil production here at home. that will not happen under this administration but they are pushing electric cars. >> we're for cutting the cost of electric vehicles, when you have an electric vehicles you will also be able to save on gas but you have to be able to afford it in the first place. >> right. >> we're starting starting to se models, the cost, even if your car payment is little higher, your gas payment will be a little lower, you come out ahead. the prices need to come down for most americans to -- carley: reaction to that was not good. one person said. pete: two models breaking even what it cost to buy one versus plug it in. in my model it works.
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does it work on your model? idiot. this guy is transportation secretary, he is pointing to people who can barely afford food and energy costs. look at your model. i can't stop, driving me nuts. these are the leaders of our country. they are fundamentally unserious. where do you get your electricity for your ev? get it from coal and gas. yet this will, this is going to save us from the climate change and china and saudi arabia pump oil. will: that voice will haunt me tonight, pete mocking pete buttigieg. pete: model is working out great. will: where does electricity come from? comes from fossil fuels producing electricity. you plug the car into garage wall. that is direct connection to coal plants, fossil fueled, that is producing that electricity. carley: electric vehicles are only as clean as the electric grid is. you have to plug this somewhere.
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this solution is a non solution. the point of this whole thing, aggravating pete so much, electric vehicles are a high class solution. not everybody can afford them. he is saying he wants to try and lower the cost but is that really -- pete: he flies by private jet. then they don't have to pay for airline tickets. carley: that is exactly right. pete: save me some money. carley: someone said that on twitter. pete: maybe a model work out that for me. will: go on sale boats. start pushing sailboats for transportation. pete: realistic as asking everyone to buy an electric car in the midst of -- carley: people in north dakota -- pete: we could beg for oil otherwise we could have ourself. not just inflation crisis. well aware, take a breather. sometimes i reach my breaking point. where are the adults? will: yeah. pete: maybe they want it this way. that is the problem. carley: he may run for president too. pete: alfred e. neuman? i hope we goes for it.
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carley: we get that voice four years. that can't happen. will: not just inflation crisis, a crime crisis as well. look what is happening in the baltimore. population around 600,000. baltimore second in the country for homicides per cap pitta. murder rate is 57.27 per 100,000 people. that is device, get this, twice, that of chicago. pete: i did not know that. will: you know chicago, right? baltimore twice that. why are we bringing up baltimore. because there was a parody video, help me get this right, put out by the city's mayor mocking a local fox affiliate. do i have this right? carley: state's attorney. will: state attorney's attorney. marilyn mosby baltimore state's attorney put out a parody video after local fox 45, because of the coverage, she believes the local fox coverage there has been unfair to her. pete: right. will: in the middle of a campaign, she has released a
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parody video about that coverage. this is a portion of the parody video. watch. >> i have some shocking developments that was just uncovered by our baltimore project investigative team. on march 28th, 1984 the owner of the once mighty baltimore colts moved the team to indianapolis in the middle of the night. while we all remember the heart-breaking footage of the mayflower trucks pulling out of town no one can account for the whereabouts of future baltimore state's mayor minute most -- mayor alejandro mayorkas lynn mosby whether or not she was. when i reached out to her office for comment, state's attorney
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marilyn mosby was only 4 years old time. will: they are saying the everything is being blamed on the state's attorney, including baltimore colts moving to indianapolis in 1984 with moving trucks. you're comparing having murder rate twice that of chicago to something that happened in 1984? you have no control, no responsibility for the fact that sure set century are being slaughtered in the streets. it is comparable to losing your football team. carley: marilyn mosby release pad statement after receiving the backlash on video. the parody was intended to bring lefty to the seriousness of campaign season. nothing more than that we all know there are biases in media coverage in baltimore. anyone upset by the video is probably complicit in or complacent by that bias. pete: there it is. carley: this will be our only comment. pete: it is your fault. you're biased because i put out
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a parody video that proves the entire point i don't take seriously this crime crisis, as a result won't do what is necessary to rein it in. it is your bias instead. we can complain about media coverage. media coverage can sometimes be unfair. you can't deny the stats that will read. they're there. the city is dangerous. she is in charge of keeping it safe around yet she wants to bring lefty to a serious situation in the middle of a campaign. carley: we're used to seeing victims being forgotten. that is what is happening across the country. what you rise the needs and desires and wants of criminals so that they get out released on bail reform, they're appraising you if you're george gascon in prison they know your directives will lead them to easier life we're forgetting the victims in that situation. this is mocking video this is a lighthearted video about crime. that is a new one entirely. pete: this will be our only
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comment. do not criticize us again about this this is your bias not ours. will: i don't know about the citizenry of baltimore i would suggest marilyn mosby not sleep easy when it comes to her future career. chesa boudin in san francisco lost his job for ignoring the lives of his constituents, allowing that crime to spiral out of control in san francisco. carley: yeah. will: good news out of san francisco, guy taking over, fired 25 attorneys. pete: fired 25 attorneys in the office. carley: it's a woman. she worked for chesa boudin. she quit herself, joined the recall campaign. she fired dozens of people in the office. she is sick what is coming to the city. will: make accountability coming to baltimore as well. pete: turning to a few additional headlines as if there are more, for people dead, three
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others hurt after three separate shootings in washington, d.c. off-duty police officers saw a man pointing a handgun off a pier overlooking washington channel. that man was shot and killed by officers. they are investigating all three shootings which they don't believe are connected. a "new york post" review of the calendar on hunter biden's infamous laptop revealing at least 30 appointment between hunter and his father joe, the big guy, during his vice presidency. those meetings happening between 2008 and 2016 at the white house and the vice president's residence. they were often scheduled days, just days after hunter biden took trips overseas. the calendar shows meeting with russian oligarchs, former presidents of foreign countries and business leaders. pete: no. get out of here. will: go to country, report to joe. go to country, report to joe. that is what you see in the connections. get this one, do you know
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every state's nickname? will: here we go. pete: fox news digital sharing a quiz how well you know the state nicknames. now i'm going to see how well my "fox & friends weekend" co-hosts do with. carley: no. pete: with some of the trickiest states. will: let's do it. pete: show-me state for which of these. will: ding, ding, ding. pete: you got it will. carley? carley: idaho. pete: missouri. the show-me state. will: we'll done. which state is known -- will: ding ding ding. pete: bluegrass state, carley. carley: a. pete: correct. kentucky. and what state is the magnolia state earnings ding ding ding. don't don't don't know that i would know this one. will: mississippi. pete: will, otherwise known as the human answer machine. carley: wow. proud of you will. mississippi is the magnolia state. which state is called the gem.
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will: ding, ding, ding. pete: this guy is encyclopedia. will: it is idaho. pete: and, this guy that is the human encyclopedia. carley: you're wearing audio. would be bad if you did that. will: the mic. if you dropped it. pete: take victory lap, will. how do you know? if you want to take the full quiz, log on to fox digital. see how many you know. will cain, easy to say 50 for 50. carley: thanks, will. will: i like stuff like capitals, nicknames. i don't think i know all the nicknames. i wouldn't be able to get that. the land of enchantment, new mexico. lone star state, texas. pete: minnesota? will: land of 10,000 lakes. close enough. pete: close enough. there are not 10,000 but 11,000. well-done. carley, you never had a chance. carley: no i didn't.
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that's right. i will get over that loss during the break. a tough story to report this morning. a nascar star murdered after police say a homeless man stabbed him at a california gas station. joey jones joins us on bobby east's legacy and a message to america, to toughen up on crime. that is coming up next. this isn't just freight. these aren't just shipments. they're promises. big promises. small promises. cuddly shaped promises. each with a time and a place they've been promised to be. and the people of old dominion never turn away a promise. or over promise. or make an empty promise. we keep them. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you. from prom dresses to workouts and new adventures
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you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination.
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♪. will: the pro racing community in mourning this week after the murder of three-time u.s. auto club champion nascar driver, bobby east. east was stabbed in the chest and killed at a gas station in crime-ridden california on wednesday. police named trent william millsap, who had an outstanding parole warrant as the top suspect. a s.w.a.t. team shot millsap while attempting to apprehend him on friday. fox news contributor joey jones is here to react. joey, you are not just a nascar fan, you are integrated in the nascar community, pro racing community. shock i'm sure has to be one of the emotions being felt but how is that community internalizing this tragedy? >> you know, guys, this is a community that is not a stranger to tragedy. through the '90s, drivers, stars of the sport killed in
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planes, helicopter crashes, and crashes on the track, that makes sense. when we go to war, we die. we do something dangerous. for one to die in this way in such completely needless way, it is beyond tragic, it is inexplicable. hear about it happening in southern california this is orange county. this is not l.a. county. it's a lot more conservative. you would imagine the judicial system there is little more strict. but when you hear somebody in southern california they're out on parole for armed robbery. they have a parole violation with warrant for their arrest standing makes you wonder why this person was able to do this, even free to begin with. will: nascar gave statement to fox news, nascar is sadden toed to learn the tragic death of bobby east. we extend our heartfelt condolences to the friends of bobby a true racer. joey, some things we talk about in the news. at times can feel abstract perhaps, if not far removed.
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increasingly that is less so as everybody watching as experienced inflation, perhaps even sadly crime. but you see this now in california. it is really, i mean, details of this, 5:51 p.m., filling up gas. what are we supposed to take away, really what used to be maybe abstract or far away is hitting closer to home for everyone? >> yeah, let me just put this in prespective man. i went to war and took bombs apart for a living. i survived that going wrong? imagine if i got stabbed to death at a local convenience store 12 years later, what should be the safest country in the world? will: yeah. >> put that in perspective. this man drove 1000-pound hunk of metal in the living at over 100 miles an hour. probably survived some of the worst crashes you can think of with minimal safety equipment but this is how his life ends, at the hands of some completely
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useless thug, thankfully wiped off the face of the earth now because he was fatally shot when police were trying to arrest him because he was trying to take more lives. this is is comely, completely inexcusable our society allows these types of people back out on the street with known history of harming others. armed robbery, he looked at someone and said, hand me your things, i will take your life. those types of people have no place on streets and sidewalks. no place among the convenient stores. no people like bobby east who deserved to be an old man. richard childress, ray every ham, everyone i talked to say about them in the last 24 hours had nothing but puff things to say. some completely useless life took his. that should frustrate everyone. this isn't a southern california problem. this isn't a new york problem. this is every major metropolis in this country problem.
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we have people that don't understand how necessary it is to put violent criminals behind bars. we have bleeding hearts who carry their emotions on their sleeve who have nothing but empathy for bad people. have empathy for innocent people trying to raise their family, do their jobs, live their lives and not face things like this. will: joey jones, very well-said. great to talk to you this morning, joey. thank you for putting that into the proper perspective. >> absolutely, brother. will: take care. all right the doctor is out. health experts are quitting government health agencies in droves claiming that those agencies failed to follow the science. dr. marty makary broke that story. he joins us live with the vaccine data he says is being totally ignored. plus pool party. here we go on fox square. all of the safety tips you need before your kiddos dive in. ♪
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♪. pete: welcome back. a health expert exodus, top doctors and scientists are apparently leaving agencies like the cdc and national institute of health, nih in droves. what are they citing? bad science. one nih scientist explaining the department has quote, no leadership right now. high level cdc official doubled down saying there has been a large bout of turnover. morale is low. fox news medical fox news contributor dr. marty makary helped break the story. he is here to explain more. doctor, explain, are they not following the science in these agencies, what is happening as a
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result? >> good morning, pete. there are a lot of smart people at the agencies at very senior levels. they're not taking the political hand-down from the white house. they see problems with the data and many are leaving. all three leaders of vaccine research center at nih are leaving the agency after long careers. they quit in protest over political interference. people are getting bad advice and we can't say anything. they're not allowed to go to the media. at the center of it is the treatment of children,. pete: pete the treatment of children. here is portion what you wrote in the article as an example of the treatment of children. i quote. in the subgroup of children age 6 months to two years, the trial, based on the trial, found that the vaccine could result in 99% lower chance of infection but, that they also could have a 370% increase chance of being infected. in other words pfizer reported a range of vaccine efficacy so
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wide that no conclusion could be inferred. no reputable medical journal would accept suchsloppy and incomplete result with such a small sample size. you point out with the clinical data they're pushing vaccines for infants and toddlers, for people who already had covid and boosters for young children. >> that's right. parents are not falling for it. after nearly a month of the government heavily pushing vaccines in kids under five, only 3% parents chosen to get their kid under five vaccinated. more parents believe in uf-es. dr. john said we know people are eager to get their kids vaccinated. not the case, why? because the vaccine trial in kids under five failed. vaccines in babies and toddlers, that study was done and it showed no benefit. why are we even doing clinical trials if when you get a negative result showing it has no benefit, they're approving it
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anyway? you're making a mockery of the process. this is what people in the agencies are frustrated b this is why they are leaving. moderna vaccine had 4% efficacy. pfizer, the results were sew bad with no one people told me inject the child with the having seen or squirt it in their face you will get the same benefit. pete: what you get is political science instead. you get skepticism from the public. in the future when you really do need the cdc or nih deliver you still have the skepticism. incredibly dangerous. >> that's right. one person said it is like a horror movie they're being forced to watch and they can't close their eyes. if cdc wants to win respect that, apologize, show some humility. made so many mistakes. closing schools, boosting young people, vaccines in babies. show humility and less absolutism. i believe the american people are forgiving people. pete: that is absolutely right.
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i don't know where we would be throughout this without the work you have done. thank you for continuing it. hopefully we get accountability there. thank you, doctor. >> thanks,.pete. pete: a day in the life of inflation. will and i go off the wall to break down everything in your life costs right now. the total in one day, will shock you. ♪ [sfx: ding] [message] hey babe, meet us at the bottom of the trail. oh, man. hey! open up! the redesigned chevy silverado. with a sophisticated, high-tech interior... open the door! it's easy to forget it's a truck. ♪♪ - thanks. - nice truck! it was. find new style. find new roads.
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♪. will: 40-year high, inflation now at a 40-year high. obviously it is impacting every part of your daily routine. pete: how much are the expenses stacking up compared to a year ago? let's go off the will to find out. weally said if you bought today everything you could have bought a year ago this is how much more it would cost you if you did it today. some are daily items. some are more infrequently, today, got after a to-do list, i pay all my bills today, what would that look like compared to one year ago. you wake up, obviously first thing you do to pay the lights. you decided to pay your electricity bill, it is 14% increase over last year. the monthly bill would have been 125, this year 142. pete: imagine if you bought one
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of pete buttigieg's electric cars, the model thing you would be paying a lot more. how about bedroom furniture? you took advantage of memorial day sale on a mattress. year ago versus today it was 500 bucks a year ago. this year, 550. will: got at it, remember, i went to the store. i need a new president stress. i'm going to get one. pete: 10% more. getting after it like we could have a year ago. will: turn on the lights, make a cup of coffee, what is that coffee? up 1% over year ago. $9.36 for a bag ever beans. pete: last year would have been eight bucks. you go to the stove, i don't know where we live here, we live in some swank kitchen in maybe california looks like. probably more expensive in california even than it is here. increase in breakfast sausage, related products like eggs, it is up to $2.28, up from two bucks last year. every portion of what you're doing, you go through this get after it morning is so
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expensive. will: so far we're up $69 from a year ago. what we would have spent on these same items then. now we're up almost $70. this is the big one. this will hurt. time to go to work what do you have too do? fill up at the gas station. a 60% increase in gasoline over a year ago. $100 to fill up your tank. 104 to be precise. $60, 65 to be precise one year ago. pete: look at that up total, $757 on commuting expenses overall. say will said, you're getting after it, tireses are getting worn, have to change your tires. 15% increase in the cost of tires. it was 150 bucks last year. this year it will cost you $172 if you find an honest tire salesman sell it to you at cost. will: maintain your car, last year oil change, $40. this year, $47. the total increase now.
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we're running a tally. you got after it. year ago, versus now. now you're up $138.29 on what you would have spent year-over-year. pete: you commuted over this gigantic bridge we have on the wall here. now you're at the office. when you're at the office, or at home, at work, everything you're confronting there, personal level is more expensive as well, including supplies and books. 4% increase on educational books and supplies from last year. so last year would have been just shy of $18. this year, 1.71. will: this one hurt as lot of people. look at this 4% increase in day-care, preschool. have to drop the kids off. last year you would have spent $226 on day care. now up to $235. run the tally, run the total, $448 over one year ago. pete: you got up, turned on the lights, cooked breakfast, commute to work, bought a mattress, changed your oil,
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bowed educational materials. now you're spent. what do you have to do? you have to take a vacation. everybody needs time with or without the kids to unwind. how will you get there? probably taking a flight. driving more expensive. if you're flying it is really more expensive. last year a flight my cost 250 bucks. this year, 335. will, you fly a lot, there is no doubt airline tickets are a lot more expensive. will: way more. every aspect of travel is up. every part of your vacation. many of you are taking summer vacations, preparing to, coming back from, you saw the bills. it hit you every step of the way. hotel rooms up 12%. last year you paid $200 a night for the hotel room? now up 224. you went out to eat, you got hit, got stuck. look at this another 9% increase in eating out at a restaurant. pete: buying the rip eye steak you will pay a lot more. depends on item after item how much more you're spending.
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we added it all up if a year ago you done all of these things and bought all of these things because you got after it a year ago, it costs you this year, $263.35 more to do all of those things. will: we know you experienced that actually in much higher pressure points because you're filling up twice a month, maybe three times a month. so you're getting the gas price more often. if you average that out, doing a lot of this on a daily basis, that is what you're experiencing, $263 on a daily basis more oaf where we were a year ago. pete: business is experiencing it because all of their energy costs going up, they have to pass those increases on to customers. that is where you see it across the board. will: hurts, inflation hurts. right now, no relief in sight, none. go to carley i believe who has some additional headlines. carley: i certainly do, will, thank you very much we're going to begin here with this, six-year-old girl is dead and four family members are injured
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after a murder suspect crashes into their car after fleeing from police. the crash flipping the family car on to its roof. police say the suspect who was arrested at the scene was driving fast as0 miles per hour on a street with a speed limit of 30. the girl's mother and three siblings are expected to recover. what an absolute tragedy. npr is facing mockery after announcing the launch of the disinformation team. many remember npr refusing to cover the hunter biden laptop ahead of election. they said at the time we don't want to waste listener and reader's time on stories just pure distractions. one tweet we already know everyone at npr is all disinformation all the time. you don't need a special team for it. spokesperson for governor ron desantis pulling a story npr falsely reported on florida's
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response to the pandemic saying, oh, my god, that is great. they can start by addressing the disinformation produced by npr. to a fox weather alert. europe dealing with one of the most severe heat waves ever. temperatures reach as high pass 117 degrees fahrenheit in some parts of europe with the uk reaching record high of 104. the high temperatures sparking wildfires in southern france, portugal an spain. at least 27 square miles have burned in southern france, forcing thousands to evacuate from their homes. with that we will hand it over to rick reichmuth with our fox weather forecast. rick, images out of europe are unbelievable. rick: think of places don't normally get that hot, might not have air-conditioning, old infrastructure might not be built for it. that is more taxing on bodies. take a look at the maps, here is what is going on across areas of europe, here is high
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temperatures, 107 in bordeaux, 107 in madrid. the heat moves toward the north. highest temperature ever in england was 101.7. forecast in london, 103, tuesday, potentially 105. might break in downtown london the highest temperature all of england haas ever seen. 102 in paris. you get the idea the heat is there we have heat across much of the u.s., heat breaking all kinds of records. look what happens tomorrow, rapid city, 105. north flat, 106. there is a lot of heat in july. we're dealing with it in so many places. carley? carley: thank you. we head out to fox square for a aqua swim lesson for safety tips to the best back stroke. we dive in after the break. ♪.
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♪. carley: summer is heating up here on fox square. so we're having a pool day.
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pete: as we do, but before you and the kiddos are ready to dive in it is important to know the abcs of swim safety. here to break it down aqua to ts owner lindsey. >> thanks for. we brought the whole crew. pete: kids are in the pool. what should we think about. >> abcs of water safety. our job to watch kids at all times in and around the water. to be focused and undistracted. parents are the first line of defense when it comes to water safety. will: you have to remind yourself to do that at a party, where there are so many people, so many adults, assumes somebody has their eye on the pool. >> hanging by the pool, put away the cell phone be present. be sure any body of water has encloserred fencing with self-latching gates and locks. 69% of drownings occur when kids
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are not expected to be in and around waters. barrier and fencing is important. c is swim classes. having your child enrolled in a year-round, consistent program until they are safe and confident swimmers for life. swim lessons reducing the risk of drowning by 88% of children between one and four. just as important buckling your kids in a car seat. carley: when should they start. >> early as four months. start at four years old up to 12. anytime is the good time. carley: see video of little babies in the pool. you did that with -- will: i was infant swim lessons. >> your mom did a good job. will: my wife is extremely passionate about this as well, lindsey. kids think they can swim but they actually can't. they think they can swim because they can stand in water. >> that is exactly right. at aqua tots pat this age
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instill trust in the water but they have to have permission in order to get in. parents are right here, this is aqua tots mom, jen, with her two-year-old. she has to wait for mom until mom gives her permission to get in. she gives her, one, two three, come on in. carley: who are the other children? >> we have a couple other kiddos anywhere between ages four and six. water is a little bit more cold than we're used to at aqua tots. the water is normally 91 degrees at aqua tots. they're a little cold. they're being troopers. >> they absolutely are. one of the things i was taught in difficult situation in water, back stroke. go on your back. >> at aqua tots we teach chicken, tarp, rocket. a survival stroke you use it for a lifetime. it doesn't take a lot of energy from point a, point b, on your
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back, breathe, get your air. pete: i have, a lot of people have had personal scares with water with kids. one moment you look away. you can assume they can swim at age of three, four, five, to your point, will, they can swim a little bit, if they get stuck that is the problem. >> absolutely, absolutely. will: lindsey's stuff is at aqua-tots.com. she has only been outdone. these are serious troopers and some seriously cold water right now. pete: they are. they are. >> thank you for coming in the water. >> thank you for having us. pete: stick around. love you to stick around. highlighting all of this. >> get enrolled in some lessons. thank you, lindsey. if swimming isn't enough to cool you down this summer today is also national ice cream day. we'll introduce you to a cool shop that is for americans with disabilities. that is coming up. ♪
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pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. can't afford your medication? astrazeneca may be able to help. if you have copd, ask your doctor about breztri. oh, hey. buying a car from vroom is so easy, all you need is a phone and a finger. just go to vroom.com, scroll through thousands of cars. then, tap to buy. that's it. no sales speak. no wasted time. just, straight up great cars. right from your phone to your driveway. go to vroom.com and pick your favorite. wooo. oh yeah, she digs it. buy your car on vroom.com vroom. get in. from prom dresses to workouts buy your car on vroom.com and new adventures you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b.
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although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination. ♪ ♪ ♪ carrie: carley: good morning. we are having pun with a pool, a very cold pool at that, so thank you for all the children and the instructors who are in the water. we just had a great with segment with lindsey of aqua tots who taught us about pool safety. number one lesson is adult
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supervision, and that's actually really important, guys, especially this year because there's a shortage of lifeguards across the country. we're going to be talking about it later on in the show, but it was great to have the kids in the pool out on fox square. pete: classically freezing cold water -- carley: we just saw a great cannonball though -- will: here's the good news, it's good for them. you know how i am. i'm into some, you know, personal experimentation. right now i'm trying what's called whim hoff? if have you heard of this? pete: no. will: cold showers. boosts the immune system, you can see it's working -- carley: that may be why you're sick, will. [laughter] will: cold showers. i'm telling you, i hate cold water, hate cold water. i'm sort of liking the cold
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shower. you're invigorated. pete: how long? will: i've been increasing it. i started with 30 seconds, i'm up to a couple minutes. pete: you do breathing techniques? will: i just started that part, so -- pete: breathe in the water or out of the water? will: i'm still learning, pete. the long and short, what i'm getting at is the cold water, it's good for you. carley: in what way? will: this is what i was told. i'm going to be real with you, i haven't read a lot about this -- [laughter] carley: you're torturing yourself -- will: but i've been told it helps the nervous system and boosts the immune system. i'm going to tell you, your senses come awake. you smell everything, you are alert -- carley: you're happy to be alive. [laughter] well, you know -- pete: i will take, i will turn the knob just a little hotter on my showers because of you. carley: when you live to be 110 years old, the joke will be on
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us. will: but you won't be here for we to lord over you. some actual news, president biden is back in the u.s. after his four-day trip to the middle east. carley: and the president was immediately questioned about his first bump with saudi arabia's crown prince and whether he moved the needle on oil production. pete: alex ho-ho began is live in jeddah with the latest -- hogan. >> reporter: president biden is back on u.s. soil after his four days here in the middle east, and he touched down here in jeddah meeting with the kingdom. now, keep in mind years ago he had vowed to make the kingdom a pariah for the killing of a u.s. resident and journalist. just after air force one took off from jeddah, i sat down with one of saudi arabia's top diplomats. this was second time in two days that we've been invited to interview him, and i prompted him on the conversation over the brutal murder of jamal
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khashoggi. biden, on his trip, spoke to the crown prince if saying that he holds him directly responsible. how did he respond to those comments? >> i didn't hear that particular phrase. the president mentioned that the u.s. is committed to human rights because since the founding fathers wrote the constitution. >> reporter: as the president arrived back at the white house, journal is asked him about our interview and whether the minister is telling the truth about hearing the president's accusation ises. biden swiftly responded to that question saying, no. he was also asked about the way in which he greeted the saudi crown prince, mohamed bin salman. >> do you regreat the fist bump, mr. president? >> why don't you guys talk about something that matters? ask a question that matters. >> reporter: another key concern on this trip was oil and whether one of the world's largest oil exporters would ramp
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up oil production. saudi officials claim that oil production did not actually come up during the summit itself. u.s. officials also say that the middle east's meeting came at a time to promote stability in the region as well as curbing iran's ambitions and monitoring the influence of china and russia. this also comes as the white house says that it's learning that in the last month if russian diplomats have visited an iranian airfield twice, seeing the armored drones that they potentially could acquire for the war in ukraine. this comes as we are now nearing the five month mark since russia first invaded ukraine. will, carley with, pete, back to you. will: thank you, alex. let's bring in dade -- david green, former ambassador to israel, to address the news we just heard. ambassador, thanks for being with us. >> thanks, will. will: let's start, perhaps, the news of air space being opened up over saudi arabia for flights
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to and from israel. the saudis say not significant. president biden says significant accomplishment. which is it? >> it's not significant because we were flying over -- i've flown over saudi arabia lots of times already on the way to abu dhabi, bahrain are, on the way to dubai. and i think most significantly i don't think the saudis themselves, you know, view as incident. -- significant. they've made it clear that this has nothing to do with any normalization or reconciliation with israel, so they've walked it back already, you know? by the time the president was on air force one,-being walked back. so, no, it's not significant, and i think we would expect much more in the future with that relationship. pete: mr. ambassador, you look at this four-day trip in a region you've spent a great deal of time in. you were a part of the abraham accords. there could have been follow-through on that. what's your big takeaway?
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if. >> missed opportunity on every level. i mean, president biden wouldn't go to the western wall which is the iconic symbol of the jewish people in the land of israel. president trump did that on his first trip to israel, biden wouldn't go. what does he do instead? he goes to a hospital in jerusalem, takes down down the israeli flag and refuses to acknowledge that a jerusalem is fully the capital of israel so right away insults the israelis. the israelis were looking for more on iran. la field, who's no hawk -- lapid, says there has to be a credible threat of force indicated from biden. the palestinians, as soon as biden leaves town, within minutes they're firing rockets into israel, sending the signal, you know, we're not happy. so he really got nothing done in israel, nothing -- the body language was good because israelis love americans, and
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they'll always are respect the american president, but beyond that, he didn't get much done. then he goes to saudi arabia with, right, and gets nothing on oil, gets nothing on iran, you know? by all accounts the saudis are now walking bark as will pointed out, there wasn't, there really wasn't anything done with the air space that hadn't been done before. so, you know, you look at this four days of what the president did, i'm really hard pressed to find an accomplishment. carley: iran has enough enriched uranium to create a nuclear bomb if they wanted to. what happens to the nuclear deal? and more importantly, the president is pledging to not allow iran to become a nuclear-capable nation. is that on possible? >> well, it'd be possible, i think, if the president showed some resolve. but when he says i'll use force as a last resort, that's kind of a meaningless statement. every civilized country uses
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force as a last resort. i don't think the iranians heard anything over the last four days that gives them any pause to reconsider what they're doing. now, if he were to say, you know, united states isn't credible anymore post afghanistan, post-ukraine, but if he said i'm going to at least give the israelis everything they need, you know, because the israelis still have credibility to act against iran, that would have been something. but even there he, the israelis ended up empty handed. will: well, mr. ambassador, we appreciate you jumping on with us and putting that trip into context, what was and was not accomplished. pete: yeah. so much you accomplished during the trump administration, frustrating to see much of it got squanderedded -- >> the opportunities have not been advanced. pete: yeah, exactly. ambassador -- carley: thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you. pete: turning now to a few additional headlines starting with a fox news alert. prayers and tributes pouring in for nascar driver bobby east
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after he was fatally stabbed at a gas station in los angeles last week. the suspected killer had a long record and an outstanding arrest warrant prior to the today -- to the attack. that man was killed during a standoff when police tried to arrest him. east was a three-time national champion driver, investigators are still trying to figure out a motive for the stabbing. and the new san francisco d.a., brook jenkins, is cleaning house, laying off 15 employees who were part of the soft on crime staff. jenkins saying, quote, i made difficult but important changes to my management team and staff that will help advance my vision to restore a sense of safety in san francisco. good stuff. some hope. and in addition to being national ice cream day, today is also national tattoo day.
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that's right, the popular form of personal expression, body art getting some national recognition. i've got a few tattoos myself, many dedicated to, you know, love of life, liberty and this great nation. i didn't know we were going to show some. maybe we are, maybe we aren't, hopefully we're not. i can't show my tattoos, i'm wearing a suit. will: i think i have this stat right, in 197 a 5 there were only 40 that tattoo parlors in the united states. by 1980 # it had explodedded to more, and now they're everywhere, incredibly popular. what was sort of, i don't know, rebellious or, you know, taboo, not anymore. pete: not at all, no. very common place are. carley: i see a little one. there's a -- >> neck tat. carley: what's your favorite one? pete: my first one, cross right
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here, we, the people. i'm probably not done. i've got to find -- carley: i've heard they're addictive. pete: i know. i look down at piece of skin, and they're empty. [laughter] i've got to fill that, it's got to be the right shape -- carley: clean skin for me, you? will: no that -- tattoos. pete: you don't really want to soap off -- carley: will's taking 30-second showers. will: no, i go with hot afterwards. yes, no tattoos. carley: well, pete has a lot of patriotic tattoos, even one that says, has a portion of the declaration of independence on it, right? pete: correct. not the constitution, not there yet. carley: well, that could be the next. yeah, yeah, exactly, and last week we learn that tours of thomas jefferson's monticello home no longer celebrate him as one of our founding fathers who wrote the declaration of
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independence and the line we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal. they turned into woke tours that trash him. and now we're learning that the same leftist billionaire who paid for this transformation of monticello also paid for a transformation of james madison's month if peelier home. -- montpelier home. "the new york post" took that tour and reported the state made madison the philosopher, farmer, statesman and enslaver that he was, the guy said. dozens of interactive stations seek to draw a direct line between slavery, the constitution and the problems of african-americans today. another exhibit bans every one of the nation's first 18 presidents, even those like john adams and and abraham lincoln who never owned slaves or having benefited from slavery in some way. the only in-depth material about the constitution itself appears many a display that pushes the claim championed by the controversial 1619 project that
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racism was the driving force behind the entire with american political system. will: you know, we talked about this earlier and i pointed out, pete, works for me asen -- as an explanation. if you were asked to describe someone, to define someone, to identify someone, to tell their story, you would look for the traits they hold that are unique, not the traits that they hold that were common place. to the point of tattoos, increasingly, it's not something that distinguishes you from someone else. if you were asked to describe a pirate, you wouldn't does his hair color, you would discuss his peg leg. you're looking for what makes someone unique. sadly, underlined and emphasized, slavery was common place for much of human history. it did not set our founding fathers apart. what set them apart, their identifier was their ability to recognize and codify these eternal freedoms and rights in the constitution and in the declaration. that's the definition,
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description and story of james madison. pete: they were typically flawed people as we all are, but they were brilliant men when it came to political philosophy of their time, which was not as, quote, inclusive as it was -- as it is today. but the brilliance of 1776 and 187 was an understanding that we, the people, and we hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men were created equal was not manifest then, but it had to be a chance to be manifest later on. that's the brilliance that we celebrate. that's why we teach it in our classrooms and tattoo we the people on our forearms, because those promises were left to us to improve them. but now you go to montpelier to study james madison of the federalist papers, of the bill of right, of the constitution, you notice if something different like this dad who spoke to the new york post and and said i was kind of thinking -- [laughter] be hearing more about the constitution, but everything here is really about slavery. the 1619 project at the
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forefront of the home of the man who was central to the 1776 project. carley: and i think this is really indicative of where we are as a society today. we had jack with brewer on early on in the show because a barbershop owner to who he knows was shot in the face during a robbery, and his message was i'm sick of this victimhood mentality that leads to crime, because with when you go to college today or when you go on these warped, woke tours, you learn that america is a racist nation. so don't even try. if you know, don't even try. you deserve a government handout, and if you commit a crime, well, it's not really your fault because the deck was stacked against you to begin with. as opposed to teaching that the united states is the greatest country in the world and, yeah, some people have it more difficult than others, but if you try in this country, you can succeed. pete: amen. and the new york post points out not one american flag to be found at james madison's -- carley: but you can press a button to find out which
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presidents were slave owners. pete: there you have it. and and it's all because a wealthy leftist gave them $10 million, a struggling foundation, and as a result rewrote the list roy of the -- history of the very home where james madison lived. skip the trip. all right. we've to got a great announcement this morning. save the date. speaking of patriotism and celebrating our country, fox nation does it, and we'll be hosting our annual ate rot awards. the date is november 17th -- patriot. the location is the hard rock live in beautiful hollywood -- not california, hollywood, florida. be the first to know about tickets and other information for the patriot awards featuring your favorite fox news personalities. head over to foxnation.com/patriot awards. foxnation.com/patriot awards. you'll be the first to know when tickets are available which will be coming soon. in the meantime, you want to book a flight, a hotel? you can. that's the date, and it ain't changing.
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november 17th, 2022. the awards show america deserves for heroes that really matter. carley: exactly. celebrates the real heros, not the ones that play them in movies, and you do such a great job. pete: the whole thing is such an honor. will: i've got to hit the tables this year. i didn't get to one table -- pete: okay, i'll join you. will: you will in. pete: we'll carve out some time. carley: a shocking report the detailing the dozens of meetings hunter biden had with his dad, then-vice president biden. the controversial timetable coming up. will: and we've all heard our's interesting speeches? >> we continue to work to work together on, we must together work together to see where we are, where we are headed, where we are going together. will: now her chief speech writer's calling it quits. wouldn't you? joe concha op the white house exodus -- on the white house exodus next. ♪
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>> tech: when you have auto glass damage, trust safelite. this dad and daughter were driving when they got a crack in their windshield. [smash] >> dad: it's okay. pull over. >> tech: he wouldn't take his car just anywhere... ♪ pop rock music ♪ >> tech: ...so he brought it to safelite. we replaced the windshield and recalibrated their car's advanced safety system, so features like automatic emergency braking will work properly. >> tech: alright, all finished. >> dad: wow, that's great. thanks. >> tech: stay safe with safelite. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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>> you need to get to go and need to be able to get where you
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need to go -- the significance of the pass only of -- passage of time, right? so when you think about it, there is great significance to the passage of time, and there is such great significance to the passage of time. we will work together and continue to work together and to work together as we continue to work together, to work together on -- pete: some things get old, some things get better like those. vice president kamala harris has been known to make some interesting speeches, but now her chief speech writer stepping down. that's just one of two resignations announced in the vp's office this week. her longest serving adviser, her domestic policy adviser, also joining the long list of departures since harris took office a. here with reaction, fox news contributor joe concha. joe, thanks for being here. we've heard the clips but, you know, someone is writing those speeches presumably, and now that person is out after four months. what do you make of it all? >> i'm thinking, i'm not putting
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that on my linkedin page, that i was a speech writer for kamala harris. oh, can you send us some clips? if sure, no problem. that's my dream job now. i'm trading up to speech writer for kamala harris because when you listen the to her word speeches at this time, it's not exactly a high bar to to get over, pete, right in and given how little we see the vice president, this is like a four hour a week job. but this terms of the number of people leaving the office overall, we haven't seen an exodus can like this since biblical egypt or california recently. and the reason why is because it's been widely important that ms. harris is a very difficult person to work with. she's like the gwyneth paltrow of the west wing. it's also like being carley shimkus' assistant. [laughter] i know, that was unfortunate. pete: she laughed. >> i know. when you're polling in the low 30s and nobody thinks you're a good opportunity to the
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sitting -- good turn to the sitting president, you might want to get off that exit as quickly as possible. pete: there's also a sense through reports that she doesn't do her homework and often is not prepared for these meetings and speeches, so you get this word salad. if you're the one doing the homework and writing the speeches and yet she goes out and does that, it's pretty demoralizing. and you see that across the spectrum of not just the vice president's office, but the president's office. and if you have that kind of turnover, it's pretty tough to get things done, which is maybe a good thing, joe. maybe the less things they get done the better. >> absolutely. i was on vacation recently, and i forgot to the to pack a book, but the house we were staying in had a couple books around, so i started rereading seal team 6, and they have a good line, the more we sweat in training, the less we bleed in war. it's the same with any job. the more you prep, the less problems you're going to have. and it seems like, to your point, kamala harris just shows
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up and kind of wings it. and given all the criticism she gets for it, i would think that would motivate her to do better. but we see it over and over again. and this is why from a messaging perspective whether it's the president, the vice president, his transportation secretary, his dhs secretary, you could go down the line in terms of all the president's men and women. people have trouble communicating basic things in this administration. and when the performance is horrible on top of that in terms of the results, that's why they're polling where they are. pete: yeah, you're right. when the president communicates the way he does, she communicates, the press secretary might want them to be a good communicator, not so much, you're in trouble. joe concha, you're not in trouble. we appreciate you. >> happy national tattoo day, by the way. i would throw my f and f that a too -- pete: it's right down here, hip flexor, right?
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>> lower back area. it's a long story -- pete: postit on instagram. thank you, brother. all right. grandma is on duty. meet the 70-year-old suiting up to stop the lifeguard shortage. her plan to keep kids off the streets this summer coming up next. ♪ if. ♪ ♪
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and you're up and running in no time. it connects via bluetooth to my phone. you can stream music and you can answer phone calls. the audiologist was so incredible she's full of all kinds of little helpful hints i love it. 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 this is john. he never gives up—no matter what life throws his way. high cholesterol. heart disease. 17 fad diets... 5 kids... 3 grandkids... 1 heart attack. and 18 passwords that seem to change daily. with leqvio, john can lower his cholesterol— and so can you. when taken with a statin, leqvio is proven to lower bad cholesterol by over 50%
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and keep it low with two doses a year. common side effects of leqvio were injection site reaction, joint pain, urinary tract infection, diarrhea, chest cold, pain in legs or arms, and shortness of breath. with leqvio, lowering cholesterol becomes just one more thing life throws your way. ask your doctor if leqvio is right for you. lower. longer. leqvio. carley: grandma is on duty. our next guest is suiting up to stop the shortage of life imards. 40 -- rather, 70-year-old robin orlando is philadelphia's newest lifeguard, and she's on a mission to create a safe place to keep kids off the streets this summer, and robin joins us now. robin, good morning to you. you were a lifeguard when you were 16 years old, thousand you're doing it again.
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what -- now you're doing it again. what motivated this decision? >> good morning. first motivated by, i was sort of somewhat retired. that didn't work for me. i could only clean so much, and then with everything that was happening in the city with the kids and the killings, unnecessary if tragedies, this was just something i wanted to do. i was going to do it last year, but i wasn't trained for it. and when i heard they needed help year, i went out for it. carley: so crime really was a motivating factor for you. there have been over 100 kids, 17 years and younger, that have been shot in philadelphia this year. i know that, i understand that you witnessed one of those shootings. >> this was a few months ago in southwest philadelphia. it is the scenario in any part of philadelphia. we heard shots, we came out, and everything was quiet, and then we heard the sirens, we came back out. three young men were shot, and they took bodies out trying to get them to the hospital this many three separate cars, and
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they died. carley: so i'm sure that when you're on duty, and you said you see the kids playing in the water and they're safe and they're being kids and doing what kids should do, i'm sure that's a very satisfying feeling for you. >> you know what? it is satisfying to have them here. any pools that are opened, we've opened up 80% of the pools, so it is satisfying, but more so satisfying is that my, i'm able to help them. there's a little girl that didn't have a suit, and you can't get in you don't have a suit. they have of to sit at the side of the pool with clothes on. so i started this campaign not knowing that the city already has a campaign called suits for the summer for philadelphia. in place. but when i put that call out to friends, they answered, they blew my phone up. it was just great. carley: so you're having a bathing suit drive so that a lot more kids that may not have a bathing suit can actually go into the pool and swim? that's such an amazing cause can.
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>> exactly. it's not only bathing suits. it's swimmers, goggle, flip-flops for some kids that are walking the streets and don't have anything on their feet when they come in. and also bathing suits for the little chunky kids too. [laughter] carley: and where can people donate if they want to? >> they can go in the city of philadelphia to suits for the summer. there's a web site there, and they can just really donate anything and everything, all sizes. floaters too for kids, for toddlers. not the inflatable kind. there has to be foam in it, but everything is a help. carley: we're highlighting pool safety this morning, so that's a very important reminder. you're such an amazing person, you're doing such a unique thing to keep kids safe in your community, and we commend you for it. robin orlando, thank you so much for joining us this morning. >> thank you for the opportunity. i appreciate it. carley: oh, we appreciate you. all right, turning now to this, more than 200,000 migrants illegally crossing our border in june alone as we learn 6 of them
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hit on terrorist screening databases. senate ron johnson just -- senator ron johnson just returned from the epicenter of the crisis in texas. he's coming up next. what's guy fieri doing at the neighbor's house? it's sliiiiiiiiii-der sunday! we've got cheeseburger sliders on king's hawaiian pretzel slider buns. sliiiiiiiiii-der sunday! [crash] everything's better between king's hawaiian bread. especially now with king's hawaiian pretzel buns!
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♪ pete: new reports paint a devastating picture of the worsening crisis on our southern border. filings from june show officials
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encountered more than 200,000 illegals for the fourth straight month. carley: and even more disturbing, 56 of those apprehended year have been flagged on the terrorist screening database. will: senator if ron johnson just returned from the rio grande valley, and and he joins us now. senator, great to have you, thank you. >> good morning. will: number 56 on terror watch list. i believe that number doesn't just exceed where we were earlier this year month by month, but the total last year. it's -- however it is, it's an astounding number, senator. what can you tell us about these 56 individuals? i don't know if there's any more information out there, but what type of individuals are on the watch list getting flagged that we're now encountering at the southern border? >> well, what i would say is that's probably just the tip of the iceberg. those are the people that we've encountered. we don't even call it apprehensions anymore. since the biden administration, more than 3 million people have crossed the border illegally,
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over 6,000 people a day. the last four months t -- it's been over 7,000 people a day. there's a large of people that are the known or unknown gotaways, and that represents the mass security threat are. again, we're so overwhelmed by the apprehensions that there creates openings for deadly drugs as well as very unsavory characters coming from over a 150 nations now, is what we've encountered. over 150 nations. we have a completely open border. this administration so believe yous to it. they won't even admit it's a problem. president biden, vice president harris haven't even been to the border. it's important for people to realize the southwest border is 100% controlled on mexican side of the border by drug cartels, by human trafficking cartels. it's about an $18 billion business by back of the envelope
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calculation from one of our briefings, $18 billion, and and that just accounts for the people we've encountered. so this is -- we are pumping, you know, there's billions of dollars being pumped into these organizations being facilitated, this multibillion dollar business model is being facilitated by president biden's open border policy. it's sick. 9 and the human degradations, i wish i could convey to your listeners how profoundly disturbing it is to encounter a 6 or 7-year-old girl unaccompanied, all they have is their birth certificate and a phone number and address of somebody known in the u.s. if they lose that, what happens to them? bill melugin is doing a great job reporting. he was at the border with us, told us that a few weeks or a few months before that very spot a similarly young girl had just been raped x if they were being given medical attention bid border and custom patrol.
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the sex slaves caused by this illegal flow, that that needs to be highlighted. but, again, other than fox news, a few other outlets, the mainstream media's not down there. they're covering up for joe biden. they are complicit in this, they are corrupt. pete: speaking of -- well said, by the way. thank you for going there. i wish administration officials would actually go, talk about it. of course they won't so you are. thanks for doing that. you've also been all over the story, speaking of not telling the story, of hunter biden. that story was suppressed, we know, by social media against "the new york post." now "the new york post" if has another data point. here's a portion of what they've now learned in looking at the laptop. hunter biden often would huddle with his dad in the dayses or even minutes after of high profile meetings. hunter biden was wined and dined by billionaire oligarchs in moscow including one now wanted for murder. four days after his return, hunter biden met with vice president biden again at the
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naval observatory. it goes on with example if after example. yet joe biden continues to say he knew nothing, senator. if. >> well, the media continues to cover up for him. senator grassley and i, we tried to warn americans. we issued our report in september of 2020 to hoe the vast web of foreign entanglements, the corruption of biden inc., but the mainstream media not only ignoredded it, they accused us of russian disinformation. so we had 50 intelligence professionals also perform their own information operation. as they said, the hunter laptop was basically a russian information operation. so it's been covered up. it shows the compress felicity -- complicity and corruption of not only the news media, but our federal agencies. this is a huge scandal, but the mainstream media's covering it up, ask is we know now conclusively because the laptop is such a treasure-trove of
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information that president biden was lying to us as a candidate, he continues to lie, the mainstream media cover up for him. carley: if republicans take back control of the house, i think hunter biden should be expecting a subpoena, so more information to come. senator ron johnson, thank you for joining us. >> have a good day. carley: you too. a helicopter crash in las vegas last nighted had likely left at least four dead. police say three police personnel and one fire employee were onwith board when the chopper went down. it was on its way back from -- in east mesa. police are investigating what caused that crash. a cargo plane operated by a ukrainian carrier has crashed in northern greece according to officials. greece's civil aviation say people saw a fireball in the sky when the plane went down last night. the pilot reporting an issue
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with one of plane's engines, requesting an emergency landing before losing all communication. the exact number of passengers aboard is still unknown, but at least eight people were believe to be onboard at the time of the crash. the plane was mostly, was carrying mostly explosives as residents say they heard explosions for hours after that crash. according to elon musk, life on mars might not just be fantasy. he says scenes like this one could happen in the not so distant future. >> how's it looking over there? >> well, you'll be happy to hear that in 1428 the -- predominantly -- carley: only about 20 or 30 years from first stepping foot on mars and explaining the red planet and examining, rather, the red planet up close and personal. musk also tweeting that, quote, mars may be a fixer upper of a
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planet. it has great potential. we've got to fix it on up. [laughter] those are your headlines. let's turn to rick reichmuth for our forecast. rick: doesn't that seem like it's nearby after seeing those pictures this week? we've got to go far past that. will: mars isn't ambitious enough in. pete: mars, it's not good enough, rick? rick: you guys saw pictures. pete: what are we going to do about it, rick? i don't know. rick: it actually kind of freaks me out. it's too to big. [laughter] all right, this is way too much philosophy for this early in the morning. take a look at the temps, it is really hot. 84 in dallas. the temps are not recovering overnight, that just really a makes the heat during the day even that much worsen. it's also been really dry. drought conditions are spreading rapidly with that kind of heat and, obviously, all of the ranching that goes on, their really strug -- they're really struggling. unfortunately, it's going to
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stay dry and warm this week. one batch of storms is cutting across parts of missouri and illinois this morning, billion ugh -- pulling off towards the east. enhanced moisture across much of florida today, things destroy out a little bit by the time we get to tuesday. 104 today in dallas, tomorrow up to 107. we are hot all the way across parts of the high plains. guys, back to you inside. pete: 107 in dallas. will: it's not good. thanks, rick are. pete: you confessed to me you've had trouble keeping your lawn -- will: i'm not joking about this, this bothers me. [laughter] there's yellow spots, my sprinklers don't get there. it's not good. carley: well, i think a lot of people in texas are going to be celebrating what today is. pete: correct. we're going to help will out because it is national ice cream day, and we're serving up one sweet treat. up next, we share ice cream shop's heart warming mission to
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every move you make, every step you take, i'll be watching you. the internet doesn't have to be duckduckgo is a free all in one privacy app with a built in search engine, web browser, one click data clearing and more stop companies like google from watching you, by downloading the app today. duckduckgo: privacy, simplified. will: well, a sweet story for
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national ice cream day. virginia ice cream parlor is employing and empowering those with special needs and help adults with disabilities thrive. live from jake's ice cream many palls church, virginia, robin reinerson with her employees, sarah and tim. if good morning to you all. if so, robin, tell us about the business and the inspiration. >> the inspiration was my neff pew, jake, who this place is a named after. jake is 29 years old, he's got cerebral pal su -- palsy. he had a job for eight years working for a company with 17 other young adults with disabilities, and when covid hit, that company basically remained open, but they sent all the 18 people with special needs home. they made no accommodations. i am a newly retired op tom risk, and we kept our practice open and made all the accommodations necessary with masking and air controls, and so
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it was very aggravating to me that he not only wasn't going to be delayed, but it wasn't going to happen. so for a year and a half jake was unemployed. i had a long chat with my brother, and i said, look, weave been very fortunate, we need to come up with a business for jake and other people like him that nobody can take away from him. so we came across this ice cream parlor, and it's been a opportunity of fun. the first 11 people i hired were actually out of my patient base with. so these two have been my patients since they were little kids. [laughter] if. will: so what type of disabilities, what types of jobs can you find right there inside jake's? >> well, there's a variety. there are kids on the autism spectrum, kids with cerebral palsy like jake, kids with downs sin chrome, kids with fourth chromosome deletion, there's just a huge variety of things. it doesn't really matter what their diagnosis is.
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i have an expectation that there's nothing difficult in this business, so everybody needs to learn how to do everything. now, for some of these young adults it's a long, steep learning curve but, you know what? they can do it. they can absolutely do it. and if they can't do it by themselves, we pair them up with a bud key. we make sure everybody that works here can do everything, making ice cream, making cake pops, running register, you name it. will: tim, what kind of jobs are you doing at jake's? >> i run register and i scoop ice cream. will: nice. and you enjoy your job? >> yeah. st a great work environment. everyone feels like family. great people to work with. will: yeah. sarah, i see you enjoying that ice cream cone right there. tell me about, you know, tim brought up people the that you work with. tell me about the environment and the team and the friends you have at work.
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>> i have a lot of nice friends at work. will: who's your favorite -- >> i don't know how to -- will: sarah, you know, robin said you get teamed up sometimes. what, went with when robin tells you you're teamed up with, who are you hoping? who's your favorite to be teamed up with that day? >> say it. >> emma. [laughter] will: emma. to to one will have their feelings hurt, sarah. emma's going to be honored today to know that she's your favorite work partner. robin, it's a really cool concept. it's not just serving ice cream,st doing a rot for the -- a lot for the community. thank you, all three of you, for joining us on "fox & friends". >> thank you. will: take care. still ahead, we're having more fun in the sun.
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we have a big race still ahead. you know how that goes, it's going to be competition. what this means, may be -- may the best friend win. let's find out. ♪ if. ♪ just gotta keep your head up, oh. ♪ and let your hair down, yeah ♪♪ . . .
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♪ ♪ you know i'm here for the party. ♪ and i ain't leaving until they throw me out. >> coming up, we're celebrating national ice cream day with our friends at friendlies, those look scrumptious. they're mere feet from us right
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now. hopefully soon they'll be with us on national ice cream day. thank you, friendly's. carley: i didn't even know they were there. >> they snuck in. they're special ops ice cream friendly folks. thanks for being here. carley, great to see you. carley: great to be here, as always. >> "fox & friends," outdoors. beautiful day, little humid. we can't complain. it's always great to see you. will: i'm glad you got to see me as well. it's a beautiful morning. it's better in the 9:00 hour than it was at the 6:00 hour, not as humid. it's mostly clean, it's looking a little more fresh. carley: on a scale from 1 to 10, what would you give it? >> this, the immediate vicinity of new york city, give is a solid 3. >> that's what i was going with. i was waiting on a 3. 3.carley: i was going to say a 10. >> i give fox a 10, i give new york city a 3. carley: meet in the middle, you've got a 7.
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>> it's june -- excuse me, july 17th, about square in the middle of the summer. we hope you're enjoying your summer. thanks for spending some portion of your weekend mornings with us and making "fox & friends" the number one rated cable news morning show in the greatest country in america. >> fourth hour. >> fourth hour always as number one. keep sending your pictures in for our national anthem which airs every saturday and sunday morning at u67 a.m., friends -- 6:00 a.m., friends@foxnews.com. it gets better and better. if you don't see it, dvr the program. it's worth starting out your day. carley: you've got to wake up early, that's the way to do it. >> absolutely. carley: we've got news to get to. president biden just returned from his four-day trip to the middle east. it was the first time he visited the middle east as president. a lot of the news coverage had to do with the greeting he gave the crown prince, instead of a
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handshake they chose to fist bump. he received a lot of criticism from it. the editor of the washington post said it was a worse choice than giving a handshake. it seems even friendlier than the traditional handshake. the president was asked about it when he landed yesterday. hes was not happy with the question. watch this. >> do you regret the fist bump, mr. president. >> why don't you guys talk about something that matters, ask a question that matters. >> so he's saying why don't you ask about something that matters, beyond simply this cordial, intimate, friendly moment of the fist bump with the saudi crown prince. it is of note if he wants to talk about substance that matters, if he comes out of the meeting with the you saudis with a minor commitment of production of oil and gas, roughly perhaps north or south a bit but 1 million barrels in production the saudis promised to increase their production in the global markets which is less than or in
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the same vicinity of the united states strategic reserves. make no mistake, we visited saudi arabia, asking for an incompress in oil production -- increase in oil production. it's interesting to compare that to president biden who said nothing encouraging about domestic production and yet visited, according to times, visited oil producing states in the united states of america, the top five oil producing states and has said nothing and visited nothing to do with domestic oil and gas production. >> we fly halfway around the world to beg the saudis for oil even though we said that wasn't what the trip was for. when we could have made trips to these states for more production and unleashed the liquid gold beneath us. joe biden has been to texas three times, new mexico once, colorado and alaska twice, north dakota zero times. was it about oil exploration when he went to those places? carley: no. >> when he went to texas, it
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was about a winter storm, the uvalde shooting and the last was for refueling go to stop for gas. >> for gas. that's interesting enough. i'll say this, if you want us to talk about something that matters, then do something that matters with the trip, instead we are talking about the formalities that you brought about by bringing up fake pretexts of covid so you can't shake hands, instead you fist bump. there were no take aways. we had ambassador david freedman on the program earlier. the former ambassador to israel. he worked on the abraham accords, understands the dynamics. there's things to get done with our friends in israel, with our strategic partners, not friends in saudi arabia, but people that we can rely on to be a bull work against iran, their mortalen p mys. we got no take aways on iran or oil exploration, the state of
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israel and normalizing relations so we're talking about a fist bump. carley: the president could be a helper when it comes to how expensive gas prices are. there are, what, 105 billion barrels of untapped oil in the permian basin alone. any of that getting touched? no. no increase there. and the president, he vowed to kill the fossil fuel industry, he started off his presidency by saying by killing the keystone xl pipeline, saying there's not going to be anymore foreign drilling or offshore drilling in the pacific, in the atlantic ocean. so when he blames the people who own the gasoline stations and he does it even overseas it comes across as tone deaf and quite frankly a lie. there's so many problems in the country right now and unfortunately the president is unwilling to commit to solving them. >> the first lady, jill biden, is speaking up for her
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president. she was at a private fundraiser. here's what she had to say. >> i'll take it. so here's jill biden explaining away the reality of her husband's presidency. she said, quote, the president had so many hopes and plans for things he want todd do but every time he turned around he had to address the problems of the moment. he's had so many things thrown his way, who would have ever thought about what happened with the supreme court overturning roe v wade. maybe we saw it coming but didn't believe it. the gun violence in the country is absolutely appalling. we didn't see the war in ukraine coming. >> he didn't see anything coming. >> so excuses time and time again. he didn't happen not to mention the war in afghanistan and the retreat there. you could go on and on with crises, every president faces crises. carley: absolutely. she said it in a past tense. the president had so many hopes and plans for the things he want todd -- he wanted to do which
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signals knows what will be happening in november. here is someone saying give democrats a little more grace because governing is difficult. >> it is much easier to be the opposition party. give the democrats some grace. governing is hard especially when you have tiny margins. but that's the challenge for democrats, they need to go to the same page because the republicans are going to hammer them with that. >> give them some grace. governing is hard. it would be easy to point out the hypocrisy in that statement, based upon the coverage of the previous four years. however, what is interesting to me is not hypocrisy but it's running the cover for a failed administration and that's a fairly objective analysis of what's happening. in fact, this just came out as we speak moments ago. there's a new fox poll asking americans their concerns, what is concerning them right now either extremely or very concerned about and you can see there 93% are concerned about inflation, higher prices, 85%,
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coming in second, higher crime rates. these both are attributable to the policies of that governing that cnn is asking for grace. >> you're exactly right. i can't help but go where you were going too, will. can you imagine john king calling for grace for donald trump's attempts to govern the country when it was donald trump who got things done, responding to what he said he would do on the campaign trail, the razor thin margins, with opposition parties, with opposition media that he had from cnn and john king and the like. those concerns are a result of printing money, of das, governors, mayors who turned their back on police and law enforcement. donald trump talked about being a law and order p he was a businessman who understood economics. you rejected that with the bureaucrats and lawyers who are in charge who don't have the experience. the numbers brand-new from fox
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news don't surprise me at all. carley: speaking of crime, one of the biggest cities in the country, it has the second highest crime rate in america, is baltimore. and we're going to show some crime stats right now, population around 600,000. baltimore ranks second in the country per capita in 2021, murder rate in baltimore is 58.27 per 100,000. baltimore's murder rate is twice that of shy can grow and more than -- chicago and more than 10 times that of new york city. this parody video was posted that's mocking the crime coverage that the city is receiving and the criticism that she is receiving for how much crime there is in the city. it's mocking our local fox 45 coverage. take a listen to this. >> i have some shocking developments that was just
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uncovered by our baltimore project investigative team. on march 28th, 1984, the owner of the once mighty baltimore colts moved the team to end nap- indianapolis in the middle of the night. we remember the heart breaking footage of the may flower trucks going out of town, no one can account for the whereabouts of the future attorney. many are questioning whether she was a get away driver and if she master mined the entire ordeal. her spokesperson said she's was only 4 years old at the time. not a direct denewel of her involve -- denial of her involvement. >> that was a parody. it was a babylonb type skit. 85% of americans, according to the new fox news poll, said they
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were extremely or very worried about crime, second only to inflation. the statistic is that the baltimore murder rate is two times, twice chicago's which we hear about constantly, twice as bad as chicago and for that, any suggestion that her policies might be accountable, that she might hold responsibility is worthy of a parody video that compares it to her responsibility to the baltimore colts leaving for indianapolis. >> their critique is with the coverage of their failure to provide a safe community in bald more. in the middle of a campaign, here's what marilyn mossby's state attorney said. they got blowback for putting out a parody video. here's how they defended it. they said the parody was intended to bring a little levity to the absolute seriousness of campaign season. nothing more than that. however, we all know that there are biases in media coverage in
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baltimore. anyone upset by the video is probably complicit in or complacent by that bias. this will be our only comment. so if you don't like this video because it makes fun of something that's not funny for people that are he beseiged by crime, it's your implicit bias, it's your fault. carley: she posted the video on the same night a 15-year-old was arrested and charged with murder which a lot of people say is really inapa brett. i want to read -- inappropriate. i want to read reaction a, juvenile, that's what this is, says one political analyst. i find it ridiculous says a radio host. some say posting this on the same day a kid was charged as an adult stemming from the tragedy is a choice. hopefully there's more adults in charge of the city at some point. somebody said spending resources to produce a mock news segment targeting a specific reporter,
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down to the name, i am cringing. i don't know if they spent city resources, but where did the resources come from. >> a parody that becomes a parody. carley: maybe campaign money. >> we have a few additional headlines as well. a gunman opening fire at a comedy club in charlotte, north carolina last night where the star of the show, craig robinson, was set to perform. >> there's an active shooter at the club i was at. >> it was just wild. i was in the green room and they're like everybody get down. it was wild. it was a moment for sure. >> robinson posting the video from a concert he went to after fleeing the shooting. thankfully no one was injured at the gunfire. the suspected gunman is in custody. south dakota's governor running an add in iowa, new hampshire
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and south carolina. >> here, freedom runs free. so saddle up. we're just getting started. >> i wonder why those states, interesting states. the ads detail. they -- the struggles she faced after losing her father as a child and highlights how she helped them navigate through the covid pandemic. she could make a trip to -- is it vermont? no, new hampshire, fueling specraise of -- speculation of r making a run for the presidency or vice presidency. carley: what are the nicknames. >> new hampshire, palmetto. >> iowa. >> hawkeye. hawkeye state. >> correct. >> will knows them all. >> it doesn't count as a -- carley: it's tough. >> she might be running for president. no surprise her name is on the top of the list.
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whether you like soft serve sundaes or a normal waffle cone, americans are celebrating national ice cream day. we know joe biden loves having a cold one or two, stopping for a frozen treat seems to be one of his favorite priorities when he's on the road but what's hiss go-to order? >> mr. president, what did you order? >> chocolate, chocolate chip. >> one of my favs. carley: that's what pete likes. you have one thing in common. >> we love ice cream too and godiva has new flares, brand-new flavors for us to try. >> salted caramel brownie. carley: i have praline cone crunch. what's yours. >> salted caramel brownie. carley: i would have chosen that one. >> i like praline and a crunch. >> what is that. >> i don't know but it's good. carley: i think it's a nut.
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thank you, godiva. >> oh, man. >> by the way, i said new hampshire was freedom state. i believe it's the live free or die state which is awesome. carley: it's the granite state apparently. >> it's the granite state. >> but live free or die is the motto of new hampshire. that can be confusing, mottos and -- what is it called? if it's not a motto it's a what? >> nickname. >> nickname. >> i got a praline in my throat. carley: i got a cone. there's little pieces of ice cream cone in it. >> i hope you enjoy national ice cream day today. >> keep enjoying this. carley: let me say one thing. if anybody's on a diet today and they want ice cream, have it. because you have to celebrate. >> it's national ice cream day. carley: you've got to do it. still ahead, are oil rigs
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actually good for fish? the stunning new report that debunks the left's climate superstition. >> plus, it was a story that shocked the nation back in april. a 15-year-old girl was allegedly kidnapped from a dallas mavericks game when she went to the bathroom. nancy grace takes us behind the scenes of that story, next frank is a fan of fast. he's a fast talker. a fast walker. thanks, gary. and for unexpected heartburn... frank is a fan of pepcid.
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>> a new fox nation special, nancy grace is exposing sex tasking in america. it follows the abduction of a 15-year-old girl and her rescue by the texas counter trafficking initiative. carley: that nonprofit was able to find photos of this 15-year-old in a series of undress all the way down to nude in a hotel in oklahoma, 200 miles away. within imagery they were able to determine what type of hotel she was staying in, using identifying markers in the room. >> nancy grace joins us with more. nancy, glad to have you on the program. i'm interested in your new program, taken. it's appalling, as a sports fan, dallas mavericks fan, i would take my kids to a game and a let
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them go to a game and not think twice about it. clearly, i'm mistaken. what's the latest you learned in the investigation? >> it's heart breaking and very surprising. but i took my kids the braves game. i went to the bathroom with them. my son is 6'6". i stood outside the bathroom, calls his name until he came back out. that's crazy, right? it's not. this teen girl goes with her dad to the mavericks game, goes to the bat room. -- bathroom. can you imagine you're sitting looking at the clock and you realize she doesn't come back. he starts looking for her frantically, goes to security, goes to police. finally, six days later, he goes to the texas counter trafficking initiative, a nonprofit. within a couple hours they go online, all this time is she dead, is she alive, going crazy,
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they find her completely nude, online, with a bunch of hookers. they're teen girls, online, naked with a bunch of hookers and they're torn. thank god in heaven she's alive but what has she lived through. she lived through sex assault, rape, false i'm prison -- imprisonment. they finally find her. they had call the police. the lieutenant gets up in the middle of the night, goes to an extended stay america. i think they turned a blind eye to the whole thing. they find the girl in the room with a registered sex offender. why is he a registered sex offender, because he sex assaulted a 3-year-old child. bam. >> gosh, that's just awful from start to finish. i'm glad you have been all over this, nancy. look, i think people need to understand the story not just from the perspective of
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curiosity but as a psa. you can by the way, nancy has an entire investigation, called taken the nancy grace investigation, on foxnation dock. -- foxnation.com. it didn't escape my attention that your son is 6'6" which is another shocking thing to find out and that you stand outside the bathroom calling for him to come back out. i don't want to find myself in a situation with nancy grace outside the bathroom calling for me to come out but i will. >> you can imagine what i'm going through with my daughter who is the age of this little girl and i'm telling you, we think it's not happening. it's happening under our noses. >> it's desperately serious. we'll be watching, nancy. thank you so much. >> thank you for inviting me and good morning. >> all right. taken, the nancy grace investigation on fox nation. still ahead had, we've all heard it before, the left claims drilling for oil is bad for the environment but our next guest says that's actually not true.
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how states' oil rigs can actually help fish, fisheries, the wildlife, still ahead. ♪ ♪♪ i got into debt in college and, no matter how much i paid, it followed me everywhere. so i consolidated it into a low-rate personal loan from sofi. get a personal loan with no fees, low fixed rates, and borrow up to $100k. sofi. get your money right. ice cream is like whooping cough, it's not just for kids. whooping cough is highly contagious for people of any age. and it can cause violent uncontrollable coughing fits. ask your doctor or pharmacist about whooping cough vaccination because it's not just for kids.
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carley: president biden wrapping up his trip to saudi arabia yesterday, looking to increase the global flow of oil but here at home our country continues to limit energy production over environmental concerns. but our next guest argues ignore the greenies, offshore drilling produces not just oil but fish and lots of them. here with reaction, cuban american author umberto. i think some climate communities will have a heart attack when they hear you say offshore drilling is not just safe but it's also good for the environment. share with us the facts on this one. >> it's true.
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louisiana has by far the best salt water fishing in the nation, not if in spite of the oil drilling platforms, but because. and we have to make a distinction. what we call oil rigs, we call them rigs just for simplicity's sake. the rig is what drills the well into the bottom and starts. and once the oil starts sucking out that's a production platform that goes up there and it's essentially a gigantic artificial reef that attracts fish and the science settled folks. you know how greenies like to follow the science of they've done studies at lsu and university of southern alabama. they attract fish at 10 times not just attract but produce fish at 10 times the rate as do coral reefs where all their pretty little fish, the coral reefs have the colorful fish and
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we've got those too. we've got valuable fish at the oil platforms which is to say ones you can put on the grill. carley: and a cook them up and eat them. those are the fish we all love. that's an interesting fact, i'm sure a lot of people don't know that. a big concern is an oil spill, like the bp oil spill. what are the chances of that happening? >> there's a chance. we've had several minor oil spills but we're talking about 70 years, folks. let's take the bp oil spill as an example. the doom sayers, you won't believe the completely idiotic statements coming from greenies, experts at the time, 10 years ago, 12 years ago. they say this is going to affect the north sea because of the gulf stream is going to take this poison and bring it up into half the atlantic, all kinds of nonsense. folks, one year later the effects were barely apparent and i know because i'm out there
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every week, fishing. it was just two months after the bp oil spill, things were basically back to normal as louisiana fishermen were out there, hauling out fish by the bushel full. carley: what your thoughts on the offshore drilling plan, he wants to allow 11 offshore drilling leases but ban drilling off the atlantic and pacific coast. >> it's really -- that's even a pin prick because according to the american petroleum institute, 93% of the oil of the offshore oil off our coast is off limits to exploration. we're talking atlantic, pacific, and around alaska. we've got a few portions of the gulf of mexico that are open and he's thinking about opening up a couple more but it's still a pin prick. we've got so much more oil out
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there. carley: we certainly do. >> that can provide excellent fishing and a minor detail, help solve our nation's energy problems. carley: that's a very interesting education in offshore drilling and how it can actually be good for the environment. you heard it here. thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you a lot. carley: you're very welcome. all right, still ahead we love to start our mornings with maria and she is coming up next and the u.s. open going to the birds, two players sinking eagles to head into the final round. the best moments from saint andrews, still ahead. ♪ >> tech: when you have auto glass damage, trust safelite. in 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.
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>> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ it■s hard eating healthy. unless you happen to be a dog.
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carley: we are back with headlines. at least four people are dead after a shooting at a houston, texas apartment complex last night. the violence started after an argument broke out. the sheriff said the victims were between the ages of 16 and 25. it was not immediately clear how many shooters were involved. within minutes of his arrival in eagle pass, texas yesterday, fox news correspondent matt fin takes this video of hundreds of migrants being processed. border patrol reports this leak showing encounters for the fiscal year have outpaced last
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year with three months still to go and in florida a record number of cubans and haitians trying to cross into the country illegally are alerting the miami border patrol sector, over 40 cuban migrants were apprehended yesterday. a second headache shift vees i'll -- second makeshift vessel was apprehended. the coast guard intercepted more than 10,000 people since october. eagles highlighted a thrilling third round of the open championship at saint andrews in scotland. >> i believe he would have practiced from here. what a shot by mcilroy! carley: mcilroy and victor hogland tied for the lead at 16 under par heading into today's fourth and final round. they're set to tee off at 9:50
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a.m. eastern in today's final pairing. there you have it, one more day to go. rick, over to you. >> we've got a lot of heat. i was talking about what it's like in dallas right now, it's incredibly hot. let's take a look at the map. the heat is going to continue to build today, 108 in lauden, 105 in tulsa. tomorrow we're at 103 in amarillo and places like western south dakota, western nebraska, you talk about temperatures around 105, 106. by tuesday, dodge city, kansas, 110. so that heat is on. it's also really dry. we're dealing with drought. we don't have relief in sight. some rain cutting across the central part of the country, southern illinois. the moisture heads across parts of the mid-atlantic today and tomorrow, and a rainy start of the day tomorrow parts of the northeast. back to you. carley: thanks, rick. >> you know and love her but not even sunday morning futures
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anchor maria bartiromo knew all the family history wait forge her in the 1950s census. maria: what is the 1950s census showing about my mother's family and my grandmother who i'm named after. >> it shows she's widows, raising four kids on her own in the 1950s, working as a factory worker. in the census you can see the neighborhood as well, you can see who is helping with her kids, who are her neighbors, who is she talking to. >> here with more from her ancestry findings is maria bartiromo. maria, good morning. pretty fascinating stuff. carley: that's so cool. maria: sofas nateing -- so fascinating, you guys. i have to give a big shoutout to ancestry. they did an incredible job, coming up with documents they found of my great grandparents' wedding in italy and the notes
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on my mother's family coming to this family in 1898, buying a house on 17th street in brooklyn, that's the house my mother grew up in. that's my aunt sarah, my mother's sister right there and that's my grandmother and my mother behind her and all of the grandkids. it was incredible to learn so much and also to learn so much, that's my sister and my mom, about how military -- how much the military was important to my family. both sides, the bartiromos and the morialis served the country. my grandfather came to the country in 1906. first thing he did was fight in world war i, serve our country. he came to brooklyn and built a restaurant with his own hands and named it the rex manor after the ship that transported italians to america. that was my first job. this is my sweet 16 at the rex
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manor before we sold it. it you was an incredible opportunity to look at our history. i'm grateful for ancestry for doing this and telling me so much more about the history of my family than i knew. it's great. i can't thank them enough, with all of the documents and it really tells a story of really how i was shaped as a girl because all of our upbringing and everything that happens in our lives shapes us and that is why i feel so strongly about america and i talk about it and you talk about it because we know the struggles that our ancestors felt, they left a place they knew and loved so much and came to america for the promise of opportunity and that's exactly what they gave the next generation. that's what we're talking about this morning because we're taking it the next step further and looking at leadership in america today. and on sunday morning futures this morning i'm going to talk with dr. ronnie jackson to talk
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about president biden's mental capacity because unfortunately this is being watched by adversaries and supporters alike across the world. when you look at your history, you recognize why you have such strong feelings about this love of america and this freedom and liberty experiment that we're all involved in, representative maya flores is here to talk about the hispanic vote. she's not happy about nancy pelosi's shove of her daughter and she's not happy about jill biden calling hispanics tacos. we'll talk with representative mike waltz and blake masters in arizona. a lot going on in arizona, guys, just 120 plus days away from the midterm elections. carley: you show you do not want to miss. thank you for joining us with your interesting family store as well many to learn about your family history the 1950 census, visit ancestry.com. you will not regret doing that. >> love it. now, what's faster a boat or a gator? well, at least today that
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depends on who is controlling it. "fox & friends weekend" competition is next and may the best friend win. ♪ ♪♪ is this where your 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. ♪ ♪
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[ applause ] >> we are wrapping up this hot july day with a remote control race on fox square. carley: before we get to that, kurt the cyber guy, he has his favorite summertime gadgets for us. >> fun for the pool, the beach, the lake, wherever you're getting of on the water. we start with real cool breakthrough, especially if you put in a new pool. many states require a safety device when installing a pool. this is camera ai, it can detect when somebody either enters the perimeter of the pool, okay, or if somebody's in the pool and in distress. it doesn't replace proper supervision so you really have to use it with common sense. have you to keep an eye on it. the alert inside the house will notify you something bad is going on. they have a subscription which goes to different phones if you
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want to do that for the family. let's jump to our friends at polar bear coolers. we know they won the ice challenge they did which was inspired by an article in the wall street journal. we did a test with these, and we did various different brands, the exact amount of ice inside of them and this lasted over five days worth of ice with the hard chest and the solve packs that are award winning are amazing and they have the topper which is the latest one, the 30 can holder thing in the bottom. those are all with the code fox at polar bear kurt coolers, 50% off, only for our viewers for a limited time and while supplies last. >> they're expensive so that's a good thing. >> it's a really good deal. they will sell out. i apologize if you can't get them. carley: flotation devices. .>> this is from bombora. it's called -- it's a bogo inflatable belt. so will is modeling the belt.
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you get out on the water, you don't want to be cumbersome with a giant life jacket but you having like this and if you get in the water and something happens where you need help -- don't pull that. >> don't pull it. >> go ahead. >> wow. that inflates and then you strap it above over your head and that becomes your flotation device in the water should you need additional inflation, you know exactly what the flight attendants tell you to do and these also by the way, 50% off at cyberguy.com or on their website and you go to this, you're out at the beach, by the pool. you're -- your phone is running low. this is the charge card. this is from shark tank, with code fox, two for one. they're about $59. you get two of them, fits in your wallet, will give you a complete charge of the phone and it has a built in cable, whether you have android or iphone.
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just plug it into your phone and gets the whole phone charged again. who is green, i think that's going to be you. you're red and the gator or crocodile is here. i'm going to hand those to you. this is god willing green and a this should be -- sorry, that's green. this is red. >> testing it, yep. >> carley, this is you. let's get in position number two. >> rick and i are on the same team. >> here is the goal. carley, right here, you need your remote. carley: okay. >> all right. so those two buttons go forward. don't go yet. >> just go around this thing. >> go to the end, circle your flag. not yet. go to tend, come back. .carley: why am i going that way. >> let's go. >> not here, carley. >> you have to circle a flag, come back on this side. i think pete's got the lead here. >> i got this easy. >> got you.
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>> carley is struggling. her gator is out -- i think the gator's hungry, looking for food. boom, look at that we have a winner. >> thank you. >> chicken dinner. pete, congratulations. you have won and not only that, you don't just win the race check this out. you end up taking home that prize. carley: all right. >> your own gator of your own to take home. cyberguy.com is where you find all this stuff. carley, we're going to do some gatorade training. it is fun. alright, limu, give me a socket wrench, pliers, and a phone open to libertymutual.com they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need... and a blowtorch.
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carley: it is national ice cream day, and we are celebrating on fox square. we're joined by craig ehrlich. good morning to you. happy national ice cream day. great to celebrate with you. what do you have in store for us? >> oh, wow. not only are we celebrating national ice cream day, but we were born in 1935 tomorrow, so we're celebrating our 87th birthday. pete: wow. >> so in celebration of ice cream day, i wanted to bring some of our signature treats. we have our conehead sundae, we have our monster mash sundae, the jim dandy sundae, everybody loves that, and my if favorite, in celebration of our birthday, we're giving away free frivels. carley: even in this inflation. >> yes. we have a club, it's a sweet rewards club, and we layer in
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promotions. rick: can you sign up same day and get it the same day? >> great question. download the app, go to the friendly restaurant app, you're going to download, sign up for the sweet rewards, it'll automatically be plugged into your wallet right on your app. will: what's the secret to the longevity, friendly's? >> memories. when you think about friendly's, everybody had a great story, great memory, whether it was a first date, birthday celebration, hitting the home run at the little league game, this is no reason not to create new memories. pete: absolutely. rick: you hit that answer, by the way. will: yeah. rick: came up with that questio- will: right before we came on air -- carley: when i was a kid, the truly only thing that mattered to me was friendly's. that was it. that's all i wanted. >> love that. pete: you delivered for us. one of the best t-shirts on the
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show too, fox and friendly's. >> we've got one for all of you guys. will: appreciate having you with. carley: happy birthday. rec rick go to friendly's after you go to church, as pete would say. pete: yeah. go to church, and then go to friendly's. have a great day, everybody. ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone, welcome to "sunday morning futures. "thanks so much for joining us, i'm maria bartiromo. today, weakness on the world stage. president biden coming home from the middle east with no commitments from the saudis after an embarrassing fist bump with the man he promised was a pariah to the world. and instead, biden receives another lecture, this time from the saudis who say the u.s. has made human rights mistakes, and oil is not even part of the summit, so

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