Skip to main content

tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  November 27, 2022 3:00am-4:00am PST

3:00 am
i'm now on rumble. every time i watch the dan bongino show i think rumble. dan is always ready to rumble. "unfiltered" ready to star ♪. ♪ o say can you see during the dawn's early light, what so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming ♪ ♪ whose broad stripes and bright stars through the perilous fight ♪
3:01 am
♪ o'er the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming and the rocket's red glare, the bombs bursting in air ♪. ♪ gave proof through the night that our flag was still there ♪. ♪ o say does that star spangled banner yet wave? ♪. o'er the land of the free and the home of the brave ♪.
3:02 am
will: big family photos in america. welcome to "fox & friends" on this sunday morning. keep sending the photos in. we love featuring them every saturday and sunday at 6:00 a.m. it is friends@foxnews dot-com. good "morning joe which, good morning, rachel. i saw a photo of kids in an inflatable. did you decide to get your christmas tree? rachel: we do it today instead. i was tired. sean is hosting "sunday morning futures." he is in for maria today. so i just melt felt like we do it after he has done that. will: get a real tree. rachel: with the lumberjack, after the show. joey: first thing we do next town over and the fire department sells them. fire department bag them up for you there. >> i believe pete also put up his tree because he sent me a
3:03 am
picture of the let's go brandon on ornament i governor him last year. >> ours is up. first year we did a fake tree. rachel: i'm surprised. will: i'm full of surprises. >> is it prelit? will: it comes with, yeah the lights. joey: i have eight christmas trees in my house. when we moved from texas to georgia a company put all my stuff in box. i could take 1/8 of my stuff with me. you know what went in the trailer? all the christmas decorations. dom december we got our you stuff out of storage. we didn't have winter clothes. the christmas stuff was important. will: eight trees? joey: pretty much every room there is a christmas tree. rachel: our neighbors are the same. the kids remind me that the
3:04 am
neighbors have one in ever tree, every room. we want one too. joey: you can buy them in hobby lobby they're not very expensive. will: we moved past thanksgiving we're allowed to go all-in on christmas. meanwhile the white house announce as new solution not to go all-in but find new avenues for energy as rising energy costs of course contribute to out of control inflation. the white house has given chevron a permit to pump oil in venezuela. they have come to an agreement with venezuela dictator nicolas maduro. while energy has been somewhat restricted here at home i guess we're allowed to try to negotiate a deal with iran and to go to our if not enemies our adversaries in venezuela. rachel: and by the way just to add insult to injury the oil coming out of venezuela is dirtier. the processing is dirtier as well. so here is joe biden, this is official statement on why it is
3:05 am
environmentally okay to get oil from venezuela but not here in america. he said, this action is not being taken in response to energy prices. this is a limited license as we have said in the past. this is about the regime taking the steps needed to support the restoration of democracy in venezuela. so do you get that? this is about democracy. just like the last election. will: they're saying this in response, joey to opening of discussions between nicolas maduro and his political opponents. joey: i guess god smiled down, you know what we'll do? i will change the heart and heart of this dictator just in time to help you with your energy crisis. that is what happened. makes complete sense. it is divine intervention. god is on biden's side i suppose. rest of us should shut up and take it. that is their position. >> treasury department had this to say. the longstanding policy to targeted relief based on
3:06 am
concrete steps to alleviate the suffering of the venezuelan people and support the restoration of democracy. so anybody who believes that this is this about the suffering of the venezuela people. look how the biden administration treated the cuban people under duress and didn't let them get a satellite to get internet to show the atrocities committed against them fighting for their democracy. they have done nothing but appease ma turow regime by the way, the castro regime which is running venezuela. secret service in cuba is running venezuela this is all the bad players, will, we're messing with right now in order to deal with this green energy utopia that america or, the left at least says they want to be part of. will: bad, bad players on the world stage top this tune right here. here is some of the atrocities and human rights violations in
3:07 am
venezuela. political opponents are jailed disqualified from running for office. detainees have been tortured, family members arrested. armed security groups have committed brutal attacks on demonstrators. extra executions, harrassment of human rights defenders and unlawful or arbitrary killings under the regime of nicolas maduro. rachel: not to mention they're starving their people with their socialist policies. i had marc murano from climate depot, we had him on prime time, we talk about the slave labor, human rights abuses green energy perpetuates across the globe. here is what he had to say about it. >> lower human rights standards. whether you're talking about the uyghurs in china. kids as young astute, nine years old in the congo mining cobalt. this was reported by cbs news,
3:08 am
by cnn the mainstream media are aware of it. they have not connected any dots. they hardly talk about it although they did cover it. essentially we're empowering china by more and more mandates for green energy we're not allowed to do the mining here in the united states. so we have to rely on them. there is very little oversight, very little human rights interventions for what is going on particularly kids in africa and human rights in africa with the chinese owned companies. rachel: the cobalt used to be mined in the united states. donald trump opened that up. when joe biden came in, he closed that down. the mining for those products we need for solar panels, et cetera, evs -- will: the world energy demands remain f you contradict supply here, not as though demand changed. they will go somewhere else to find the demand. apparently we're okay with that. we'll get the demand, attempt to get satisfied with venezuela or comes to the or the products, you squeeze the balloon where does it pop up?
3:09 am
in places with human rights violations like africa. china doesn't care about these types of issues. their demand remains. joey: that is what is funny about this. it is not about the net gain or net loss. not about being morally correct in the world stage. it is about what can we do to suffice the progressive leftism that is very radical and loud. what can we do to make them feel good? what do we do to make them feel like the right people for the job for them? you look at the biden administration. they pushed things to iran and venezuela when it comes to oil and gas but american liquid natural gas is the cleanest fossil fuel you can find. we have six-term unless. don't know where they are now. we had a month ago, six natural gas terminals properly applied for to be approved. three were built. the other three needed to be built. the biden administration was dragging their feet on purpose. what terminals, you have to the pipeline you have to have a place to bring it up or bring it on a railcar, ship it, sell it
3:10 am
domestically. we had plans in place during the trump administration to amplify our liquid natural gas which again is the cleanest fossil fuel we have. instead we have slow rolled, shut at that down. now we're looking to places that do a whole host of other things that are not good for human rights and the world. as long as they have their hand the dirty our hands clean -- rachel: that is the thing. our hands aren't clean and that is the thing that has to end. the idea of allowing the biden administration put forth somehow they are compassionate, whether at the border, congo africa, seven-year-olds are mining. in iran, protests going on. the protesters are begging us not to be in deals with the regime. now in venezuela. you know what at least if they're going to have this green energy policy, let as least be honest about the cruelty and the human rights abuses that come with it. expose it. i wish the media would. i wish it didn't just happen on fox news. will: it has been two weeks since for university of idaho students were found stabbed to
3:11 am
death inside of their home. joey: investigators are still searching for answers as they reveal a dog was in the home when the police first arrived on scene. rachel: so interesting. arcly strohmier joins us now with more. ashley, what do you have on that story? reporter: as you said it has been two weeks since those four college students were murdered and police still have not named a suspect however authoritied have admitted they are keeping certain vital pepieces of information out of the public eye justifying it is critical to finding out who is responsible. police are refusing to reveal which of the victims was targeted and why. they are ruling out the idea that one of the girls could have had a stalker either. the father of one of the victims now telling fox news private investigators are involved and in addition to local law enforcement and the fbi. on the night of the crime police found a dog inside of the house but they are not saying if the dog was there when the murders took place. >> was the dog present for the crime? >> so i don't have the
3:12 am
information and we're not sure. we do know that the dog was taken to animal services and responsible person came and took the dog. >> is the dog any part of the investigation at this point right now? >> i mean i don't have the answer for you. i'm not sure. reporter: kaley con salvos sister said she shared a dog with the ex-boyfriend, but it was unclear if the dog on scene was hers. >> if the dog barked, if the dog didn't bark, that would be another indication that he was, the perpetrator was known to the assailant who comes in, seems to know the layout of the house. reporter: investigators revisited the scene of the crime numerous times throughout the past week as the probe into these four mysterious deaths drags on into now a second week. back to you guys.
3:13 am
will: thank you, ashley. you know, you, it's a process of piecing together bits and pieces of information none of which feel solid enough to actually hang your hat on. i'm not convinced, for example, that my dog would bark. i've been continuously disappointed in my dog's home protection instincts but i don't know if the dog didn't bark that necessarily means they know the person who was in the house. joey: feels a little reaching at straws in the sense i have a little bit of friends at training. i had to do it when we were prosecuting what we call ieds in afghanistan, even training to do it here, every little piece of forensic adds up, forensic evidence, hair left behind, serial numbers on parts, that kind of thing. this idea of the dog may help them know a direction to focus but if they need something that tertiary to do that, that means there is not a lot coming up from what they're leaning into which is the forensics.
3:14 am
rachel: which is why they added private investigators, probably the families are saying. will: no person of interest, and no suspect two weeks later and don't they say the golden period, there is a show named after but the first 48 hours is when you first when you understand or have some idea. kaley's carter was asked about this by lawrence jones on cross-country, asking for the public's health and where this investigation is leading? >> we're the same family that found the original timeline. we're the same family that broke into the phones. we tried everything in our ability to try to get into this system because a court order is not the fastest thing. so we broke in and we did what we did. we know that we have some family passwords that we all share. so we broke in and we helped them. it is hard for me to give up as a father my protective to ability to other men. i implore people to come forward, especially when you
3:15 am
know, you're even close to that timeline because technology is the only thing that really doesn't lie, it is just data. rachel: he talked about how there may be clues, young people are taking selfies all the time. maybe they're afraid to happened those things over because maybe they're underage, it shows them drinking but like no one is interested in that. send forth anything you have because there could be something in the background of that picture, a car, a license plate, anything but it speaks to what you're saying, will, which is how desperate they are. that they are pulling at straws here. joey: it's sad. the idea that that man is sitting there saying i feel like i have a better opportunity to help fix this than anybody else, i understand that fatherly instinct but also i think what he is really saying without our help they would have nothing you know. that's a probably a feeling of despairty, without us at least
3:16 am
cracking open her phone what do they have? man, i really hope they get a lead, something turns up for two reasons. one, those families deserve justice. two, we need to make sure it never happens again at least by that perpetrator. will: no doubt. joey: turning to your headlines, one person is dead and five others are dead in the atlantic station neighborhood in atlanta late last night. a group of people were being escorted out of a property in the district by off-duty police officers when a shootout began between two groups. multiple shooters were involved. police say the victims are between the ages of wow, 15 and 21 years old. to a fox weather alert, post-thanks giving chaos in new orleans. the city is hit by a tornado. the powerful wind flipping over an rv, damaging roofs. storms tearing up a local church, leaving 10,000 residents without power. advisories are set for millions of people in the southeast that low pressure system is moving towards boston, chicago and
3:17 am
new york. it which could have major impact on holiday travel. for more, download the fox weather app or stream fox weather on your favorite connected tv device. to the world cup, argentina superstar call him by one name, m-essi keeps argentina hope of reaching knock out round alive against mexico. don't know much about soccer. i know he is a superstar. >> in the middle for lionel messi. will: yeah. that is a big deal. i know that will, tell me more about later. i don't know a lot about soccer. argentines needed to win to stay a alive. they won the game 2-0. the u.s. will follow up the tie against england when they face iran. coverage of that game begins 1:00 p.m. tuesday on fox. those are the headlines. usa. go team usa.
3:18 am
will: absolutely. fox news alert overnight more unrest in china as people protest lockdowns in shanghai, even calling for president xi's resignation. the latest on the uprising against the communist regime. joey: plus you don't see this every day. an ostrich runs wild in the streets. how it got lose coming up. everybody's wondering. it is riveting. ♪.
3:19 am
3:20 am
the virus that causes shingles is sleeping... in 99% of people over 50. it's lying dormant, waiting... and could reactivate. shingles strikes as a painful, blistering rash that can last for weeks. and it could wake at any time. think you're not at risk for shingles? it's time to wake up. because shingles could wake up in you. if you're over 50, talk to your doctor or pharmacist about shingles prevention.
3:21 am
3:22 am
♪. will: back with a fox news alert, protests erupting in one of china's biggest cities, shanghai over sharp covid lockdowns in the country. rachel: after 10 people were killed in an apartment fire. residents believe the people were forced to stay inside of the burning building because of the extreme lockdown measures. will: wow. alexandria hoff joins us live from washington with more. reporter: these really extraordinary acts of defiance spread throughout the country with crowds demanding freedom from the isolation that china's communist party has been enforcing. those fiery deaths of those 10 people in a room have come to symbolize the chokehold in the
3:23 am
remote regional capital. millions have lived under strict covid lockdowns more than 100 days. social media users say restrictions caused a delay putting out the fire. in shanghai beijing protests resumed today as they did with dozens of universities throughout the country as well. police were seen shoving demonstrators who called for an end to pcr tests. some chants included demands for president xi xinping to step down. this is rare showcase of disobedience prompted by three years of lockdowns under china's zero covid policy. this strategy is tested as the point this social and economic toll of lockdowns being more costly than the benefits of trying to contain a virus proven to be uncontainable at this point. there has been some talk from officials about possibly easing some zero covid policy measures the national health commission is reporting a new record high case count. so lockdowns are once again being expanded. in the city where iphone
3:24 am
factory workers clashed with police last week, 6.6 million people have been ordered to stay at home now through tuesday. guys? will: thank you, alexandria. she used a word there so -- it is uncontainable, this disease, uncontainable. everything what we know, 99.7%, 99.8% survivable yet china takes this zero covid lockdown philosophy and what are we, three, approaching three years? joey: yeah. will: of this? rachel: i was reading in the city of shenzhen, by the way where the uyghurs are, locked down since august, not able to leave their homes. some reports they said they are chaining the doors shut. can you imagine? will: no. a little because we did it for a few months. rachel: exactly. as you said it keeps going. "the washington post" tweeted this, coronavirus outbreak on the verge of being china's
3:25 am
biggest of the pandemic has exposed a critical flaw in beijing's zero covid strategy. a vast population without natural immunity. will: "the washington post" is trying to say it's a lapse in vaccination status, also people not getting it. everyone is crushing taylor lorenz, i think she still works for "the washington post." imminently mockable. >> explain who she is. will: technology reporter for "the new york times." joey: technology culture. she basically, has made herself a career out of reporting on tiktok stars, things like that. will: she was a leader in the cancellation movement. very much canceled. rachel: yes, she was. will: everybody is mocking her today. she cried on camera. joey, docked after doxing people. will: gone after libs on tiktok many occasions. she gets this part right. there is no lasting natural
3:26 am
immunity to covid. you can get covid over and over and over again because there so many endlessly evolving strains and anti-bodies wane. that part is correct. rachel: true. will: choosing not to kill off millions of vulnerable people as u.s. is doing is not critical flaw. she is endorsing lockdowns. she is endorsing the chinese policy of lockdowns. joey: there is so much about our culture this 18 to 34-year-old demographic democrats leaned into, i said this yesterday on the show, they have begun to confuse the difference between a dystopia and a utopia. the idea, there are so many places in the world who are better ran than we are because they consider our freedoms inherently dangerous to all. so my freedoms, protect myself with the second amendment is dangerous to everyone around me because they have no trust in me. by having no trust in me. they have to trust in anyone. saying perhaps through their own vulnerabilities bad thoughts maybe they're projecting that?
3:27 am
i'm not sure what it is but they have really cornered this projects generation to run our country and made them believe places like china is a preferrable system. now this is a little bit off topic but i want to explain the depths which culture can be influenced by this china has a problem of people who accidentally hit someone with their car. they will turn around, back up and run over them to make sure they're dead. the reason why is the way china's culture values life versus money, if you hit somebody with a vehicle, you don't go to jail, you have to pay for their rehabilitation and their livelihood for the rest of their life. so it is better to make sure they're dead so you don't have to spend that money because you probably get off on any kind of charges anyway. so that is the type of culture you create when you take what we have, which is this idea of personal liberty and freedom, how valuable every single life is, turn it into well the government can handle it. rachel: there are dissidents from people who have come from china who are really great example, they are warning of
3:28 am
what can happen. i think we have a clip here of -- are we going to play that? will: might be out of time. here you go. >> china is not a normal country. it is a communist country through and through. ever since its founding in 1949. communists do not respect private property. they do not respect human rights. and human lives. when the big tech and the government work together to control information people lose freedom. rachel: that's right. >> americans should take notes. rachel: that is what she is warning about the normalization what he is talking about. will: implication what you're seeing in china can make its way around the world. leave it with this the world economic forum's klaus much global reset past couple days has been complimenting china. rachel: so many of our elite leaders by the way, even in our
3:29 am
country, we have bill gates did that. justin trudeau as we know, another little mini tyrant up in canada, a lot of people are. joey: unfortunately lebron james was not available for comment. we'll get him on record. rachel: coming up canada's prime minister, justin trudeau i was speaking about facing backlash for defending the use of emergency powers to end the "freedom convoy" protests. >> we saw trucks used as, as potential weapons. iabsolutely, absolutely serene and confident that i made the right choice. rachel: a man who was there believes trudeau's ego only made things worse. he joins us next.
3:30 am
i got tai last december. i've spent almost every minute with her since. when i first brought her home, she was eating little brown pieces in a bag and it was just what kind of came recommended. i just always thought, “dog food is dog food” i didn't really piece together that dogs eat food. as soon as we brought the farmer's dog in, her skin was better, she was more active, high-quality poops. if i can invest in her health and be proactive, i think it's worth it. see the benefits of fresh food at betterforthem.com [ marcia ] my dental health was not good. i had periodontal disease, and i just didn't feel well. but then i found clearchoice. [ forde ] replacing marcia's teeth with dental implants
3:31 am
at clearchoice was going to afford her that permanent solution. [ marcia ] clearchoice dental implants gave me the ability to take on the world. i feel so much better, and i think that that is the key.
3:32 am
3:33 am
♪. >> we saw trucks used as, as potential weapons certainly in
3:34 am
in ottawa with their presence and unknown interiors. there was no, you know, serious violence. i am absolutely, absolutely serene and confident that i made the right choice in agreeing with the indication. will: canadian prime minister justin trudeau defending his use of emergency powers to end the "freedom convoy" protest against vaccine mandates. he claimed trucks were being used as potential weapons. our next guest was at the "freedom convoy," said trudeau could easily ended protest stopping his mandates. owner of solid rock, inc., chris clark. great to have you on the though this morning. you heard the clip from justin trudeau, is that true, were trucks potential weapons in ottawa? >> not at all. you saw throughout the inquiry, through testimony, you saw real dressic difference between those on the ground physically,
3:35 am
spending time with truckers, with people that would come to see what was going on and that there was never threats of violence. in fact what you really began to see throughout the testimonies was a stark difference between reality and a therapy tiff that seemed to being pushed by, by our government in trying to say that there was a potential for violence. when all of trudeau's law enforcement agencies, including cisa, said they hadn't found any threats of violence, trudeau's response was basically manipulate the law surrounding the threshold in order to invoke it himself. even in you saw that clip, trudeau said i was confident i made the right choice in invoking it. so it really painted that it was an egotistical man that did not want to come out to meet protesters as he has done in the
3:36 am
past met other protests that have come. he chose not to. will: chris what we saw, by the way was testimony on an inquiry you said. that is like an after-action report what happened a year ago in canada. i believe he is the final witness. the point is you should have at least, you would hope you would have some accountability one year later what took place there in canada. you striked at the attempt to craft a narrative. i'm curious in canada, how is it viewed today, the "freedom convoy," the truckers convoy from one year ago? is trudeau successful? were you seen as belligerence on the edge of violence? how does the average canadian see this in retrospect the "freedom convoy"? >> a lot of people said the inquiry didn't really change a lot of opinions on people that were sort of fence sitting on the topic but what i hope it does is show the world based on what actually happened in ottawa
3:37 am
that our government not only had been overreaching but with this invocation they didn't have law enforcement's backing in order to do it. so i think it's, my hope that people are going to see our government is not listening to law enforcement agencies. they are, you know, we saw the clips of china there, they're borderline getting into a regime that's not going to care what anybody else says. they're just going to do what they want to do. so the sense on the ground i think is, people did realize that the convoy was all peaceful. all of their worry about about the violence never came to fruition and they overstepped even further than they were before. will: really quickly, chris, what about on the underlying issue? canadians still in support of vaccine mandates? >> from the communities i'm in not at all. even people i know that have been vax -- vaccinated it they're never doing it again. will: chris, thanks for john
3:38 am
jumping on and responding to your prime minister justin trudeau. >> thanks very much for having me. will: coming up a group funded by billionaire george soros buying up conservative talk radio stations. another attempt to stop the right's point of view. what is coming up next. this der one to remember. together. happy holidays from lexus. ♪ can he stand on his own... once he's all on his own? this is financial security. and lincoln financial solutions will help you get there. as you plan, protect and retire. ♪ the best surprises are found where you least expect them. at a price that you won't believe. where? lowe's, actually. black friday is here! get our best deals on everything
3:39 am
for the season while you can. >> tech: when you get a chip in your windshield... trust safelite. this couple was headed to the farmers market... when they got a chip. they drove to safelite for a same-day repair. and with their insurance, it was no cost to them. >> woman: really? >> tech: that's service the way you need it. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
3:40 am
3:41 am
ever get a sign the universe is trying to tell you something? the clues are all around us... not that one... that's the one. at university of phoenix, you could earn your master's degree in less than a year for under $11k. learn more at phoenix.edu ♪. rachel: a group linked to billionaire george soros is buying 18 spanish language conservative talk radio stations
3:42 am
including miami's iconic radio mombi, a prominent voice on the airwaves. she is quitting over the sale telling fox news digital, quote, america is a free country. even an avowed global socialist with a clear radical political agenda can buy our media outlets to silence their opposition. joining us to react to this move by george soros is the host of the keisha king show, keisha king. keisha, why is george soros suddenly so interested in latino media? >> well, you know, i think we know what george soros is up to. he is trying to control the, control hispanic-americans much like, the left has tried to do with black americans. they're going to propagandize in a massive way through the media which is you know what we've seen time and time again and my concern is with republicans, what are we doing to counter
3:43 am
this? rachel: yes. >> how are we going to engage, continue to engage hispanic-americans and making sure that we don't lose the vote that we just had these massive wins particularly here in florida? governor desantis warned about this deal that was going through back in july. you know, it looks like it is still going through but hasn't already closed. it looks like it is going to. it is very concerning. we know what the left is going to do. i want to make sure that the right is on track and we're doing something to counter this big power move and influence move of culture by the left. rachel: yeah. i mean conservatives have very few outlets and one of them is conservative radio and radio mombi. this will not just affect southern florida. buying these outlets means he is going to, soros fill at or these soros group is going to control hispanic media in l.a., in chicago, new york, san antonio. so it is not just you know
3:44 am
reserved to miami. i think what the reacting to of course is as you know, there was a significant move of hispanics towards conservatives in the last election, mainly for economic reasons. 18-point increase. we see here, you know, the some of the statistics here. so this is what is clearly upsetting the left and they know they have to move in. you ask a great question, why hasn't a rich conservative group gotten together to counterthis? >> yes. yeah. we have to. we have to do it offensively, not always behind the curve. we have the right message. we have the right things, you know, our values align with what make as society work. rachel: yes. >> we just do. we need to do better at selling that message so we can encourage more hispanic-americans to take a look at the republican party. more black americans to take a look at the republican party. asian.
3:45 am
i mean i think everyone should take a look at conservative republican values because we just have a better, solid message. your kids are not going to be you know, transed when you go to school. you will have an economy that you can, that can better fit your family. you can fill your car up on and get what you need from the grocery store without spending tons of money. so this is, you know, this is a bit concerning for me. they truly want to get back that power that they lost. you know, what they always do. they don't believe that minority voters, hispanic-americans, black americans, that we can you know, move over to the right. that we can think more for ourselves. they want us right there on the left, stay here and now they're going to send out this massive media to try to get hispanic-americans back on their side. i don't think it is going to work. rachel: it might not work. there clearly is a vacuum, an opening for conservative media. hispanics are craving it.
3:46 am
they know it aligns better with their cultural values. we'll see what happens. we'll keep an eye on this. get you back when we have more developments, keisha king. we reached out to the latino media network for a statement you about did not hear back. thank you. will. will: thank you, rachel. additional headlines, one person is dead, a dozen people are missing after an deadly landslide on a italian resort island. 31-year-old woman died. media reports at least 13 people were hurt. the landslide happening after heavy rains on the island. strong rains and winds are impacting are rescue efforts. now to america's crime crisis. seven carjackings reported one one hour of each other in chicago on friday. at least five taking place within three miles of each other on the city's west side. the string ever carjackings as mayor lightfoot is accused of
3:47 am
not addressing crime rampant in the city. self candidates are throwing their hats into the ring ahead of tomorrow's filing deadline. a ostrich sent 20 officers on a wild chase after they escaped from a farm in canada. one of the birds here avoiding capture. police say the ostriches created traffic hazards. no word that all the birds were caught much to rachel campos-duffy's nightmares. those are the headlines. rick reichmuth for the weather forecast. rick: tell you what we got cold air out in parts of the northwest. snowy weather coming in across the west coast. we'll get a lot more snowe you love to see this time of year. a lot of ask resorts across the west doing so far because of the drought. we want that one big storm. this is the airport delay map. no airport delays we're looking at or concerned about right now.
3:48 am
we might see that across parts of the northeast. this storm we're watching, brought a tornado warning to the area. this moves throughout florida throughout the day today. the northern side is little more active. this could cause some delays eventually this afternoon in places like philadelphia, new york, up towards boston. this rain may total half an inch or inch or so. it won't be a major problem. get ready behind this. we'll talk a lot later today about a potential severe weather outbreak for tuesday. will, send it back to you. will: thank you, rick. coming up tomorrow is cyber monday. we have some of the season's top gifts from tablets to ninja turtles. kirk the cyberguy joins us next. ♪
3:49 am
with unitedhealthcare my sister has a whole team to help her get the most out of her medicare plan. ♪wow, uh-huh♪ advantage: me! can't wait 'til i turn 65! take advantage with an aarp medicare advantage plan... only from unitedhealthcare.
3:50 am
3:51 am
i was hit by a car and needed help. i called the barnes firm. that was the best call i could've made. i'm rich barnes. it's hard for people to know how much their accident case is let our injury attorneys know he how much their accident cget the best result possible.
3:52 am
i had no idea how much i wamy case was worth. c call the barnes firm to find out what your case could be worth. we will help get you the best result possible. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ ♪. joey: tomorrow is cyber monday and we have some top deals on tech gadgets. rachel: all right, here with inflation-busting savings is the cyberguy kurt knudsson. what do you have for us? >> don't overpay. use social media. look at all the brands you're
3:53 am
looking at. set a deal alert after you buy something if it goes down, let you know the price went down. hey, i thought i got a best deal on cyber monday, give me a better price. you get your money back. this is way to get something for absolutely nothing. this is tcl, this tab 10 the way you get it for nothing, metro buy t-mobile, which is a discount brand. if i'm reading it right, three months of service and you get this for nothing. will: really? >> check the rules yourself. could vary from town to town. 300 bucks normally. zero if you play the game with them. games are on sale. these are the winners this is tony hawke pro skater 1 and 2. every format out there, roughly average price 49.99. seeing this 50% off, 24.99. rachel: that's good. >> if you live somewhere where cell phone is not always great
3:54 am
inside of your house, number one choice here. this is sure call flare 3.0. this parts goes inside of your house. this goes inside your kiss. outside of your house. data and calls are remarkably faster once you do that. this one 379.99 normally. cyber monday deal, $80 off. you never see this on sale. look at this game, even more. teenage mutant ninja turtles, every format 50%. this great here for stem learning here. learning resources switcheroo right here. these little things come out. 36% off. identity guard ultra. rachel: go on down here. >> only at cyberguy.com. we have the deal normally 359 for a year subscription. 179.88. this thing keeps your identity -- somebody steals your identity, gets a card, take your
3:55 am
tax refund this is the protection that catches that stuff for you. rachel: this is what you're most excited about. >> this is our friends in georgia, at polar bear coolers. it won our cooler challenge inspired by the "wall street journal" and it just is a great product. will: what do they do, how long it keeps it cool? >> five days in the hard ones. two days in the soft ones. these are 50% off. i'm very, very sorry in advance if they're sold out because he only had so much. last time we had these on they sold them all out, you don't get this price. rachel: i love the card. >> you put in code fox when you go there. a lot of those things code fox. this one you have to link at cyberguy.com or you won't get the deal. joey: with all this technology, this is about my speed of technology. i know how to operate a cooler. the rest of that stuff i need somebody to install it for me. that right there would be a lot of help in my house but this georgia company.
3:56 am
you got my ears up. >> he is a good guy that runs the plates. all these online. good luck shopping. >> good stuff, kurt. will: thank you, curt. good to see you. will: joey: three big hours still ahead. stay right with us. i will check the cooler out. ♪
3:57 am
("this little light of mine") - [narrator] in the world's poorest places, they're shunned, outcast, living in pain.
3:58 am
you can reach out and change the life of a suffering child right now. a surgery that takes as little as 45 minutes and your act of love can change a child's life forever. please call or visit operationsmile.org now. thousands of children are waiting.
3:59 am
psoriasis really messes with you. try. hope. fail. no one should suffer like that. i started cosentyx®. five years clear. real people with psoriasis
4:00 am
look and feel better with cosentyx. don't use if you're allergic to cosentyx. before starting get checked for tuberculosis. an increased risk of infection, some serious and a lowered ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor about an infection or symptoms or if you had a vaccine or plan to. tell your doctor if your crohn's disease symptoms develop or worsen. serious allergic reaction may occur. best move i've ever made. ask your dermatologist about cosentyx®. ♪. ♪. rachel: good morning, everybody. that was a beautiful shot of miami. i think i wish i was in miami right now. good morning, joey. good morning, will. joey: good morning, guys. i was down in south fl

195 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on