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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  September 6, 2022 9:00am-10:00am PDT

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>> we come in with this fox news alert now. memphis police wrapped up their news conference. they have confirmed they have identified the body found in the search for eliza fletcher. a heartbreaking end to the tragic case. this is outnumbered. i'm harris faulkner. joining me today.
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police say the write mains were discovered yesterday near a home with ties to kidnapping suspect. he made his first court appearance in the case a short time ago. he's expected to be charged with murder tomorrow. there were state charges against him, and a list of other crimes against him unrelated to this case. there are two stages showing up in court for him. fletcher was seen saturday morning on a predawn jog. something she does often. chilling video shows her forced into a dark suv. henderson was arrested the next day. saying his black tkw-rbgs mc terrain matched the car in the video. neighbors say he was cleaning it out and washing the carpets. month word yet on exactly why he
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did this. he has a past that includes kidnapping. we had get to that in a moment. meanwhile tphrefp i remember's family is devastated as you may imagine. her two young children without a mother. her young husband will have to raise them alone. she left that morning for a predawn jog never to return. mercedes. >> harris, it's such a tragedy. special lie foyer women in these suburban areas, in the cities going out for a morning run. you would never suspect you would have to face this horrific situation. lits be real. you see in cities like memphis crime is increasing. a record number of homicides over 349 this year. also the individual, the suspect he has been released early from prison. serving 19 of 24 years. this brings up a lot of questions when it comes to should he have served his whole
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time for his crime record. as we know it goes back to when he was young, a skwrauf nile. this raises questions on the criminal justice. >> it's an important point you bring up. brian, i want to further this with you. i want to pop something up. i know we have the time. some line now. i want to bring up information about henderson's past record. he was given 20 years. he didn't serve all of it. he served 20 almost. he didn't serve the 2 for kidnapping a prosecutor. before that charges with rape and assault at age 12. you can have all different discussions on soft on crime da skp*z all of that. why in the world is this guy walking around. >> i have no idea. i was in memphis three weeks ago. one of the things they said to me the bicest problem hire.
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crime. post of the big cities have the same issues. i'm think ing about the cover of the new york post six weeks ago, about a dozen criminals are committing over a hundred crimes. it's the same repeat "fenders over and over again. now you have horrific circumstances. if this happened in memphis. you have to rethink if you go for a run in suburban area you have to look out for yourself. you want the predawn in to get your workout in, you have to worry about security. it's a sad state of affairs this. is what happened. this is someone waiting for the moment, got it, knew exactly how to do it. >> what is interesting about what you're saying, we don't want to get ahead of the facts. they do have surveillance video of the vehicle sitting some
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time. police would call that stalking a victim or stalking a circumstance f you will, an opportunity. >> yes. who knows what he was on and what the circumstances were. that was her regular running route. cheryl knows this. cheryl works almost in the middle of the night when you have a schedule like that. you have to fit it in when you can get it, especially if you're a driven person. especially like eliza was. she was doing the right things. starting her day, getting her stuff out of the way before taking care of her kids and going to the classroom as a kindergarten teach i remember. she's on a typical route. people do, you know how long you have and what you can fit in. he has probably seen her, stalked her, knew what he was tkaeblg with, the path she would take. he was ready to overwhelm her. she's probably listening to
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music, think ing about her day, the kids starting school, early full. she's excited about that. women shouldn't have to think someone is lying in wait to abduct us and harm us, take our life. that's not the country we should live in. we have lost the plot if that's where we are. if women are forced to stay inside, work out inside because wire not safe enough to go for a jog before getting the kid to school. >> that makes me want to cry. so many women are doing that today. in the southwest they started a couple of weeks ago. today the day after labor day the country fills out. by the -p eupd of the week they will have all started. we all do the dance in the morning. i got up two hours early in the morning. kennedy, you're talk ing about the suburbs. you started with that, mercedes. this isn't just big city crime anymore. >> she was comfortable, knew the
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route, knew the track, went to that school. likely knew the distance, the time she had. by the way have you ran in memphis heat in august, and the stifling humidity. you don't get enough oxygen in your lungs in the midday. i can't believe how people are judging her on-line. i'm upset about it. she was doing everything right. she was living her life. other track and field athletes from that school have been interviewed and they say which run on campus because it's safe. we're safe on campus. should i went to that school. should i knew the track, the route, the moment. a bicycle found her phone not long after this happened by the way. took it to her family's house. when it's your home. when it's your place, yes you feel safe. is it wrong to maybe not call a friend and run with a friend, i don't know. i am rethinking that now.
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i run in central park in new york city, sometimes weird hours. even during the day i don't feel safe anymore. i live in new york. this is memphis, a beautiful area of memphis this. was her home. it's a tram die. i feel like i know her, i know she put the running clothes out the night before, before she left the house, she knew she had to be out the door with coffee at 4 amg capital to get her miles in and get home to her kids. she is never going home to the kids. >> we will move on. we will cover the story as the facts unfold. they will as you heard the da, they're looking at it very closely. they have also picked up his broth, the suspect's brother. the police chief of memphis was careful not to say nobody else has been charged, but they're looking at mario too. president biden is trying to clarify again how he feels go
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maga republicans. don't we know? >> yes, we do. >> my goodness gracious. he has new words and now a new name for them.
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>> say it aeubt so, joe. this is enough to give anyone whiplash. first he vilified prime time listeners last woke, remember this. president: no question the republican party today is driven by donald trump and the maga republicans that. is a threat to the country. maga seek carnage, darkness and
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despair. they sprayed fears and lies. that's why respebgtded federal conservatives have calderon trump and the extreme maga republicans "claire and present danger to our democracy." >> that doesn't sound political. the next day he claimed he didn't feel that way at all. watch this. >> -- a threat to the country? president: come on, look guys, you keep trying to make that case. i don't consider any trump supporter a threat to the country. >> huh. >> that settles it. >> okay. great he tried to clarify everything yesterday. his comments sounded more like a return to his maga bashing ways. make up your mind, joe. watch this. president: i want to be clear up front. not aoeufr republican is a maga
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republican and embraces the extreme ideology. i have worked with mainstream republicans my whole career. these extreme maga members have chose to go backwards with hate and division. the biggest contrast from what maga republicans, the extreme right, the trumpies. these maga republicans -- >> oh, trumpies. burn, mercedes. >> i'm waiting for the tattoo. kennedy, it will never end. which thought biden was senile. he's not seen i'll. i think he's pushing forward this intolerant agenda where he's trying to insult every single maga republican. you're talk ing about millions of americans this. is a man that is obviously
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dividing us. not bringing us together as a country. the mere fact, you don't attack the plan people. that's not a winning strategy. the advisers telling him to go after maga republicans won't work. i think it will backfire for him. he has to decide will he continue to moving down the aggressive path. if you don't act isn't the democratic rules they make you illegitimate and everything that is negative. i think the millions of americans will basically, more geared up and energized now for the midterm elections. >> it's not very welcome can. brian, you can tell the measure of a man by how he responds to a heckler. as the former first lady michelle obama said "when they go low we go high." i don't think the president is any different. let's watch his responding to a
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heckler at an event, taking the high road. president: we remain in the battle for the soul of america. by the way, oh, right god love you. everyone is entitled to be an idiot. >> the high road, brian. that's what we're looking for. >> i learned a lot. kids, get your pens out and jot this down if someone comes up to you in the playground. a couple of things, nobody knows this better than you. if you don't like people strong on boarders, looking for trade deals, cutting taxes for americans, america first, you don't want a strong defense you don't use on foreign wars that's the donald trump agenda. if you don't liking january 6 put that here. those who support january 6 tear extremists. i understand what you're saying. that was a crazy day. that was an anomaly. post people getting beat up are
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trump supporters. that was bizarre. he's taking the trump agenda. very similar to every republican agenda that i know of. p-lg a wall, low taxes yielding low inflation, job growth pandemic aside. he took the agenda and said it's extreme. that is so bizarre about it. he's trying to lump it in with january 6th. it makes no sense. >> it does make sense. it seems to be an act of political desperation. who was behind this, who was behind the message can? it seems all the president ask trying to do is distract from issues driving the country. >> it's a great question who is fashioning the messaging. usually that's done based on polling or data. what are they looking at? if they're looking at the resent history like 201 calling people deplorables and spewing hate
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there is data showing the opposite of that being a winning message. i'm curious, kennedy who is fashioning this? who is lying to him and telling him this is a good idea? it's not good to have 71 million people against you. there will be a red wave. democrats are coming back in their intensity to go to the poles. it won't ion the score to losing seats on the left. it won't even the score to them losing seats in the house. let's see how that shakes out and if he gets things done. meanwhile he's the super hero with no super power. he needs a villain. he's trying to make trump the villain again. that villain had 1.99 gas. gave us a covid vac sign, safety at the border, reigned that in,
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tariffs on countries if they didn't play along to make us safer that. villain in his eyes is who he wants to run against. he's running against history that wasn't broken. >> if the former president doesn't run again is it possible who ever takes over the mantle of the republican party to run on that and what people rub, not necessarily with donald trump but with the ideals that formed his policies. >> what made the policies strong, stock market strong, got us out of the paris cloy mat accord, funding nato. all of the things good for our country financially. all of the things good militarily. let's strip that away the last two years. you asked the question earlier, harris, it it's a strategy. don't look at what is happening over here, my economy and my bad
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polling numbers. how many democrats joined him in wisconsin yesterday. how many? not many, right. they're running from joe biden. they have good reason too. look over here, get mad at donald trump. it's his fault. get up set about him. they're galvanizing the wrong people. they're trying to gal vannize their own base. they're galvanizing the republicans. >> i don't know who he is appealing too. it may fall on deaf ears foyer those experiencing their own personal recession. coming up border agents see rainbow fence to lure kids over the weekend. isn't this for kamala harris to handle? we will discuss all of that next.
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>> well another major drug bust at the border. face it, we're fighting to keep up. more than 200 200,000 pills were
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seized. over 47,000 of those pills are rainbow color. the dea officially named last week, a dangerous new trend meant to drive young people to the deadly drug. according to officials the brightly chord drugs have been found in 18 states in the past month. it's moving. it's easy to move it too. where it kamala harris on this? her critics say she has all but abandoned her border duties. you're very familiar with this. >> i grew up in texas and arizona to be clear. the cartels are very smart. it's a billion dollar business. 50,000 to transport one chinese national over the border. they make money on the migrants. they use that money and the diversion tactics, then you use the arizona side, what they're
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doing to move the tkreugz. drugs, in thetunnels. as far as the rainbow colored fentanyl it's on the streets of arizona. found, packaged smaller, rainbow colored to appeal to children, it's easy to move and sell. it's already out there. we're behind. >> kennedy. >> it's not just kids. s in mill in kwralz and gins those over 18 and 21 who like flavored sraeupz. it's really important for parents to have conversations with their kids about what is out there and making better choices. i think parents tend to be naive. they assume if they're not talking to kids they wouldn't find out about it, and they won't try anything. those most at risk are suburban kids without this stuff in their systems. they're overdosing and dying.
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parents have to stop being naive. have conversations with their kids. let them know what is happening to people who get a little bit of fentanyl in their system and overdose. be honest with them about what they might encounter. it's not all capri suns and snicker bars. >> which can be delicious. twice we have mentioned suburbia today. it came up with the him if is, tennessee tragedy with eliza. the hit has come up with this, t the criminals know this. the enemies, drug cartels know that our soft spots are outside of the big cities over ran by crime. >> yes, let's impact and target families and children this. particular issue of fentanyl all of us know families impacted with the loss of a loved one or a child because of a little bit of fentanyl that could of been
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in a medicine they took, a prescription drug or something along those lines. we have to be prepared and have awareness around the issue. what we have to watch as parents is the drug cartels. they're using social hide ya too gget to our children and sell drugs on-line. it's coming through the border, which is ignored by this administration, it's about the selling of drugs to kids on-line. >> if children want to be sneaky on-line you want watch for every second. real quickly c-pac i know you know so much about. do you talk to young people? you talk with a group of young people every year at the conference. urplts we do. we have panels where people come in who have lost loved ones to
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the fentanyl a crisis. also the wirer perspective. you have to start making sure we stop the drug cartels that are profiting and using vulnerable families crossing the border and getting drugs to our communities. >> i know you and your husband are always working to reach that younger demographic at the conference. so, brian, let's talk about what cheryl mentioned. you have texas, you have know ns and you have the tunnels. as soon as they get rid of one another one pops up. they have time there. they flooded the gates over in texas. i didn't think about this until you said it. it's actually on purpose, a strategy by the drug cartels and
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it's working. >> yes people can get drugs across. look at the apprehensions and videos and pictures displayed. they're liker that doing a good job capturing. wait it's because the volume is so great you're capturing and wopd i remember what got through. victor was on our channel last meet. he said he worked on the border for 20 years. he says when i see a huge increase of seizures we're swamped with tint signal, meth and heroine in other places. what they have to do, tariffs on mexico until you straighten out your act. 20,000 mexican marines on the southern border. >> that's right. >> remember the free agent gall mall and others, no others. it stops tomorrow unless we find out you're stopping your population from coming hire. they got everyones attention. it wasn't anti-american or
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bullying. >> why can't this administration look -- >> they don't ask there, call or contact. congress machine gonzalez said he met with the tkpwaut mallian president and has the been contacted by anyone. >> it's not like she would have that on her cell. i'm not convinced she has those numbers on her cell. >> if that's unfair get her to call me we can talk about it. she hasn't been where she needs to go yet. >> you don't have physically show. you have to show ager. >> they use the word irony about this. a group of coal minors helped a group of people in a broken down electric car. pushing it to the mine to get it charged up. clear
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>> calf electric carmen date would spread to other states in the nation. these evs are not without their problems. a bit of an eye ron i can twist. one broke down near a coal mine in west virginia. you can see a group of minors ms had to push the car to the coal mine to charge it up. energy secretary is praising california's ban on the sale of new cars, hoping it becomes a national model. >> i think california is leaning in. the if i did ral government has a goal, the president has announced by 2030 that half of the vehicles in the u.s., new ones sold would be electric. do you thinker what california is doing could or should be a national model?
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>> could be. >> okay, mir said he's is california the national model on how to operate a power grid. >> i'm sure certain states would agree with california. what is troubling is why not find a balance between the gas cars and the electric vehicles so people don't feel comfort in that direction. quite frankly the electric vehicles, the middle class can not afford a electric vehicle. you're talk ing about a global supply chain problem with the rare earth metals in the batteries. if you're driving from california to new york you may not make it in a electric vehicle this. is no model for the country. it shows the administration, the biden administration is focused, cloy mat change to demonize and get away from follow is fuels. >> one of the points they're talk ing about here is colorado. electric vehicle batteries don't do well in cold climates.
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you can't push that on other states, a national model. >> same with minnesota there. is a big push back on this law. it will reek havoc. the govern i remember of california now is asking people not to charge the lick trick vehicles because the grid can't support it california is in the middle of a massive heatwave. they're asking people not to run anything between 4:00 p.m. and 9:00 p.m. when the grid is over ran, that means electric cars. i'm looking at this, as a california. i love calf kaflt. despite the leadership they have to get on nuclear. they have to write invest in nuclear energy. it's plentiful, clean and cheap it will power the state. the environmental movement has
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lobbied so hard that the state will continue to suffer. poor people will be stuck there. rich people will live. >> by the way the average electric vehicle. the cost now may of 2022, $51,000. that has jumped 22 22% year ovr year, harris. i wonderful that driver on the screen had to get themselves pushed to a coal mine to be charged up. smart on that driver's part. >> you want to know if they're think about the money sunk into the vehicle. no they're think ing about the fact that everyone around them was right. the infrastructure is not ready for this yet. >> if you live on the east coast particularly, south to north, we don't have enough options now. you can put one in your home. buy an electric vehicle. i think amazon has pooled with car companies to put something. if you're in california. it's not a option to plug the car in now. you can't do it at home.
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they moe how much energy you use. >> by the way electricity runs on 20%, electricity ask produced by coal. just putting that out. coal miners are nice people. >> by the way -- >> helping this driver. >> there was something with the under carriage you can't toe it. they had to push it. when they got there they had to plug it in. this is why you should have an -- everything all in push. it can't be just electric or gas. >> not that kind of a push. >> it's not ready yet. the infrastructure is not there. by the way do you have a phone cat pwa*try. you know what happens, you have to charge longer and it runs less that. will happen with the car. we have to get new batteries cost ing about $20,000 for a car that cost thirty. why would you do this?
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that's why governor knew so many in a disaster. the states wanting to follow in his wake are nuts. >> he doesn't care he wants to run for president. >> elon musk said we need to continue where we are and do a slower transition. he's a in on the electric vehicles. >> the ramp is by force. the ramp to be all electric is too quick. it will have disaster cons kweupbss. it has to be slower and more logical. >> imagine a pwhr-pbs. i use to live in minnesota. in cold temperatures the battery slows down and loses a capacity to slow a charge. a ambulance comes to the house and needs to plug in. it's 32° below. feel it. >> shout out to the coal miners. you're awesome.
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total sweethearts helping this poor person out. coming up a young hollywood star speaks out on social mediae tickets on society. especially young people like himself. businesses have to find new ways to compete in order to thrive in an ever-changing market. the right relationship with a bank who understands your industry, as well as the local markets where you do business, can help lay a solid foundation for the future. pnc provides the resources of one of the nation's largest banks and local leaders with a focus on customized insights to help your business achieve its goals. that's how we make a difference. ♪ in a recent clinical study, patients using salonpas patch reported reductions in pain severity,
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>> a huge bust of candy colored fentanyl on the border. why isn't president biden doing more to attack this. where is the boa border czar. we have charles pane and gone tkpwres man byron donald and the editor and chief of the pwab long g joins us and the sensorring of legitimate information. join us for "america reports" we will see you then. >> oh, such a great song.
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alright timothy sounding off on what it's living to live in a world obsessed with socially ya. the "dune" star saying this. to be young now, i can only speak for my generation, to be intensely judged. i can't imagine growing up without the onslaught with social hide ya. it was a relief to play a character absent the ability to go on-line to figure out where they fit in. i think it's tough to be alive now. i think societal collapse is in the air. interesting. he's promote willing a movie about time age cannibals. he's happy it took place in the 10s where they couldn't compare on-line. >> the good old days. good point. he talked about disasters, tornados, and floods. never had a flood. i think moses would feel differently about that. i think he had a rough time.
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i would say this he has to stop reading social media. if anyone can afford to take the slings and arrows it's a international known actor who can handle this. if you don't want negativity don't wear a jump suit backless. >> to his credit he has a sexy back. >> we all found out. >> is it time for a commercial. >> yes. >> what would life be like. >> i thought about something -- >> i thought about something the other day. what would our lives with like without social media. >> i think they would be happier. i think they wouldn't have to hear me constantly telling them which couldn't do that at the dinner table, we make eye contact. we would be happier, not worried about them or where they're going. they have controls on their social media.
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the 15 and a half-year-old. you know mom of teenagers, there is only so much you can do. i know every generation has their challenges. how you get the hips like elvis to move. my mother found out. where we are now it's the drug connection, the face less with the fentanyl. mercedes, i didn't think about that. it's the face less bullying. it's all of that toxic mix that hurts them. that they wouldn't have to deal with unmasked as they do with social media. >> i don't have disagree with him. i can't imagine the pressure at his age. i know what we del with on social media. a lot of people try to penetrate our collective exoskeleton. it can be tough, for someone that visible and a generation ally con i'm sure it's tough. is there a direct correlation he's making between social media and the society collapse?
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>> think that goes too far. remember facebook and instagram, the wallstreet journal expose it did. they did the resaeur skp-fp knew what they were doing to young teens and how they affected young girls in their emotions, in securities, stat awes hong peers. so look, the social company, soeurbl hide ya companies need to figure out what to do? yes. should they be libel and sued as they do in california? no. there has to be a balance though. companies understand they do have a roll to play in this. even google in london, the uk excuse me, are changing their al gore eualgorithms. there is a path forward. >> is there a positive one. are we past the point of no return as parents and consumers is it. >> it's a bill big challenge for parents. i'm the mother of five girls. it's a constant challenge to z.
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get off the phone. you have to set boundaries. when you're at the dinner table, no phones. i see many parents that let kids be on the i pad while they eat. no, you need to have direct conversations. direct relations, strong relationships with your children. we can say it's a big task. they need to be involved. we have to make sure not to create the social media addicts. they know what matters is who you are as a person. you are loved. you don't have to find love on social media, although people do. >> they do. >> they find something on social media. >> the reinforcement of the dopamine, the identity is based on that. you're right. it's incumbent upon parents to help kids find identity away from that. it's tough. the older they get, the more of an uphill battle it is. >> the drinking and driving how do we stop.
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a generation comes by and it's under control. it's not that it is sire "times. we get over it texting and driving. when texting came out you couldn't stop. now there is text stop, don't text and drive, there is a push for it people are stepping back and say i can control my life. i'm being manipulationed. "social dilemma" was popular and came out. we're getting use to it and i believe the surge, we're getting coal of it we know how to, whether we implement it it's in the grass. >> you have gave me more material to use, it's about your pride. don't you have the pride to exist without all that. >> without them telling you what to think or like. >> be a skeptic, think for yourself. >> i love that.
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♪♪ >> kennedy and i are '80s girls. pandemic had an unprecedented impact on fashion. many, i won't say many of us, i didn't do this, turned to pajamas and sweat pants or even just a professional look on top only. those trends could be fading as the world finds the new normal, leading to the question are we ready to move on. brian kilmeade. >> no, i am. we worked through it but a lot of people don't want to go back. some have legitimate i'm worried about crime, i understand that. >> i'm worried about crime so i don't wear pants? >> don't want to go back to work, that's what i'm saying.
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i do think that one of the first things you do if you are worried about crime is take off your clothes. >> ok. you know what? >> other people are -- >> i'm moving on. >> other people are lazy. >> nudist. >> if i was not on camera right now, i would be in yoga pants and a ponytail, full disclosure. >> my friend heidi is a designer and she loves when people overdress. so this week i'm making a point to overdress every day. >> you look georg. >> we have been locked in, shut down, bring it back. >> i'm into the hats and the cowboy boots. >> kentucky derby. >> brian kilmeade has a new show on fox nation, and it's called "who is joe rogan." >> the whole series is back, we don't talk to the people, we talk to the people who know the people. so, yeah. >> you can't get the interviews
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with the people? >> how dare you unwind the magic, secret to my success. no, can't give it away, but it is the people that knew them best. joe rogan might be the most interesting person on the media landscape today. >> i love that, you know i'm teasing. >> no, i don't. of course i do. i'm kidding. >> here comes "america reports," that will be fabulous. thanks for watching. >> sandra: thanks, harris. massive fentanyl bust at arizona's border. more than 200,000 fentanyl pills seized from the secret compartment of a car around 47,000 of them disguised in rainbow colors. >> john: this as the migrant death toll rises an of a massive group took their chances swimming across the rio grande. what is the white house response? tom homan is standing by to react coming up. >> sandra: first, a fox news alert on the death of th

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