tv FOX and Friends FOX News January 9, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PST
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as difficulty swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness may be a sign of a life-threatening condition. do not receive botox® cosmetic if you have a skin infection. side effects may include allergic reactions, injection site pain, headache, eyebrow, eyelid drooping, and eyelid swelling. tell your doctor about your medical history. muscle or nerve conditions, and medications including botulinum toxins. as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. see for yourself at botoxcosmetic.com ♪ ♪ >> president biden in el paso, texas, for his first visit to the southern border. >> critics are saying the settings are a sanitized version. the streets in downtown el paso have been cleared. >> it's a photo op. this is ridiculous. >> newly elected house speaker kevin mccarthy is facing a battle on a contentious rules package. he agreed to a set of rules that may not be an easy sell. >> these things are critical to have a functioning republic.
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>> the husband of a missing mother anna walshe is in custody. he misled the police on new year's day. he has a criminal record, pleading guilty to fraud. fraud. >> prince harry says his stepmother, queen consort camilla, is dangerous, accusing her of manipulating the press. >> on the way to being queen consort there was going to be people or bodies left in the street. >> a tackle, they are taking a past midfield, down the sideline he goes! this is story book! the opening kickoff return for damar hamlin. ♪ ♪ ♪ girl, put your records on ♪ ♪ tell me your favorite song ♪ ♪ go ahead, let your hair down ♪ >> brian: that was knoxville, tennessee, and i requested mostly sky, and i got it.
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mostly horizon. then we had a slow dissolve to new york city. knoxville, tennessee, if you look at the top markets for fox viewers, we have probably -- they are probably in our top five in terms of cities that like us. >> ainsley: pittsburgh. >> brian: pittsburgh is huge. i think jacksonville is three. >> ainsley: naples? >> brian: a lot of florida. >> steve: and of course we thank all of you wherever we are, making his number one for over 20 years. we appreciate it. >> brian: by the way, there's a lot of reasons to go to knoxville and live there. especially because one of the big things is very little traffic. >> ainsley: ut is a knoxville. you can pull up the boats to that stadium, as well. >> brian: that's another reason to move there. today, president biden is set to meet with the president of mexico. >> steve: that visit comes just a day after mr. biden's controlled pit stop and photo op at the southern border on his way to mexico city, as critics
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say the president only saw a sanitized version of the border crisis because he did not see a single migrant. >> ainsley: griff jenkins is live on the ground in eagle pass, texas, this morning. hey, griff. >> hey, ainsley, brian, and steve. good morning. steve, in the last hour you asked me about the migrants, and they are loading up a group of migrants that i just filmed about 15 minutes ago climbing over these containers topped with razor wire. take a look at this video we just shot moments ago. it's a group of nine migrants from the dominican republic. you can see a 7-year-old child being handed down over this container to this national guardsmen. asked where they are from and they said the dominican republic. i asked this gentleman here with the child with his message was to president biden and he said, "i want to thank president biden because our country is poor and i'm looking for work."
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he told me, meanwhile president biden went to a passive yesterday whereupon max indicated he didn't see migrant but he asked about them and the migrant >> how many folks do you have coming through? it varies week to begin day today, but how many people are coming through? >> [inaudible] >> i know you have people every day, but i'm try to get a sense of the flow, the average. >> i would say 300-400. >> the sense you got where cleaned up streets. on wednesday there were homeless migrants all over the place, but then by thursday it had been cleaned up. our colleague, bill melugin, reporting it is unclear who ordered the cleanup and if the cleanup was predated. the senior magician official
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told cnn this, saying, "there weren't any migrants at the center when he arrived. completely coincidental. they haven't had in today." governor abbott met president biden w when he landed in el paso handing him a letter acknowledging the streets had been sanitized ahead of his visit, and he also put in a list of demands from president biden asking him to comply with statutes mandating illegal immigrants be detained and ending the catch and release practice as well as asking the president to designate these mexican cartels as terrorist organizations. here in eagle pass we spoke to a del rio rancher, laura allen, who had this reaction to the president's visit. listen. >> don't come after all the mess has already been dealt with and cleaned up. you come when the emergency is happening. he is supposed to be the chief of this country, and when we have emergencies, we expect our elected officials to show up.
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>> and, finally, the cbd sources i speak to tell me that they were indeed 518 migrant encounters in the el paso sector yesterday. yet, as we know, the president didn't witness any. he's now on his way to meet with president obrador. we'll see what comes of that and if there any policy change is coming, which is what border officials hope will be the end result. >> steve: thank you very much. we see the border patrol behind you. let's bring in will cain live in el paso. i'm sure you just heard that. griff is reporting there were 518 migrant encounters in el paso yesterday, but apparently coincidentally the president didn't see a single one of them. >> as we speak, a good 50 yards away from me there are seven illegal immigrants crossing right now over the rio grande river, already on the american side of the river.
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if president biden truly wanted to get a sense of what was happening, he would need such a curated and coordinated trip to el paso. the purpose of that trip, i think we all understand now, was to present an image of what's happening to the american public. it wasn't for president biden's eyes. quite simply, it was for yours watching at home. that is why it is so important. i have been down here at the border half a dozen times but the great reporting from guys like griff jenkins and bill melugin who show you the truth of what's happening at the border. let me tell you the truth of where i'm sitting right now in el paso. yesterday on on "fox & friends" weekend, longtime local law enforcement sat down with me, robert almonte, and he said, "let me tell you about where you're sitting right now, will." listen to this. >> they have not as many tunnels as they have in california and arizona, but they have tunnels. we are right smack on the border and i can guarantee is a cartels are watching us right now. >> is that right? from where? >> any of these houses right
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now. they have a look out, and that throughout the border from california all the way to brownsville. they have set up some strategic viewing points around the co corner. >> steve, ainsley, brian, let me give you the context if i might. let's walk over here. right over here is the border wall that he was just referencing. i think you can zoom in right over my shoulder and you will see a home, green with yellow garage, that is why is mexico you're looking at. past the rio grand river, just past the highway, bringing traffic into el paso across the legal crossing for trade. that house or many other sitting beside it have been a staging point according to sources. in the yard, just on the screen to your left, illegal immigrants gather up and prepare to cross the river.
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a month ago, thousands sat on the quiet side of the banks of the river staging a huge encampment, and 300 surge across the river. this morning, now, i can tell you there six or seven right over my shoulder. this drop-off on the on the american side of the border now goes down and there is a line of american military vehicles, concertina wire. one of them, like in speeds reporting, the child, seven individuals walking alongside the concertina wire, not capable of walking up to where i am, but on the american side of the border. they are trying to figure out what to do. those illegal immigrants will most likely be deported because they didn't directly go to a processing center and declare asylum. this is what would have been so easy for president biden to see. this is happening as we speak. >> brian: instead we watched bomb sniffing dogs pretend to find drugs and a car that you could find any police academy. we watched the president look at that for a half-hour. thanks so much.
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we will check with you again, will. let's bring in the congressman from texas and the el paso area. of course, uvalde. congressman, how disappointed are you that when the president saw you at uvalde, you said to talk about the board and he said, "i will, tony." but when he reached out to the white house, what did they say about this visit? >> they told me i couldn't attend. the president essentially lied to my face. this shouldn't surprise anyone. i think it is important that we have republicans that are constantly pushing the administration to go, "no, no, no, i want to work with you and find solutions." they want all republicans to just give up, but this wasn't about solving problems. this was a partisan trip that was just made as a photo op. it took the president 80 years to get to the border. i suspect it's going to take another 80 years before he comes back. clearly this shows the administration has zero interest
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in solving this. they think it's a political problem. they don't think it's a policy problem. the videos i shared a few weeks ago highlight that this is not a political problem. bush, obama, clinton, trump certainly never had problems like this. this is a policy issue. >> steve: well, it's interesting, because he didn't do it in his first two years as president. he did it as he probably is about to announce he is running for reelection in 2024. so essentially he needed a photo op to check the box and say, "look, the republicans are complaining about it so i went down to my southern border and some of my own two eyes." and then he said the system is broken and congress needs to act. so he's putting the ball and the house republicans' court, but whatever you guys come up with, he's not going to like it, and neither is the senate. >> that's exactly right. it's politics 101, always blame somebody else for everything that's wrong. the other part of this story,
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too, he's in mexico today. what is that conversation going to be like? is he going to talk about woke programs, climate change? or is he going to talk about this cartel or that is happening in sinaloa? there was a major prison outbreak there in juarez across from el paso. the people i represent, we do not feel safe. there's a lot to this story but it highlights the fact that it turns out the administration ever wanted to work with republicans. shouldn't surprise anyone, but it's good to finally see them get exposed. >> ainsley: i know you said over the over the week and you don't plan to support the rules package in the house because of a possible cut in defense. you see there are a lot of military hospitals and bases and posts in that area. and nancy said she's worried about the backroom deals. we interview the majority whip and he says he believes he will come around. let's listen to this. >> the rules, which has not been
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widely reported, literally are the rules that our conference voted on after the election with one exception, and that is the motion to vacate is being restored to where it was for 100 years before nancy pelosi changed it. tony has said he is not willing to vote for them yet. nancy, on the other hand, has said she's on the fence. i do believe both tony and nancy will come around tonight, when they realize the things that they want to talk about are in this separate agreement. >> he said you are not willing yet. if that's true, what will it take? >> i appreciate his leadership, and this is only the beginning. these are the easy parts, the speaker vote and the rules vote. i guarantee you know an expected 15 rounds of voting. we discussed, hey, what are some things will be able to take? no one said it'll be four days, 15 rounds of voting, and your families are going be run
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through the wringer. also, as bad as it was to watch it, it was even worse to be part of it. who wants to see this fiasco get played out over and over again? so i am against the rules for a couple different reasons. one is the defense, it's a terrible idea. but the other is to vacate the chair. i don't want to cs every two months being locked down. this isn't the parliament. the american public accounting on house republicans to be the one savior. if we can't get this right, it's going to be a nightmare after nightmare. >> brian: nancy may said that matt gaetz is a total fraud. do you feel that way? >> you know, i don't like to attack my colleagues. there's a lot of flawed people in congress, and it's very frustrating to serve with these people, but that's across the spectrum. i look at it, whatever happened yesterday happened yesterday. how do we go forward?
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and this rules package vote isn't just about the rules, it is about what next week looks like, what next month looks like. i do think there's an opportunity in the house for rank and file members to lead, and i think that's what it's going to take. it's time for us to take back the house, take back this country. we have all these different factions, i get that, but we have to represent t the american people. >> steve: and it starts today. congressman, thanks for starting your monday with "fox & friends"'s. >> brian: and being so candid. >> ainsley: and for your service. he was in the navy. >> steve: indeed. quarter after the top of the art, and ashley joins us with news from out west. >> ashley: a story out of idaho, students returning to class after winter break as videos from the vigil for the four slain university of idaho students. online sleuths claiming the murder suspect, bryan kohberger, was present at the vigil just two weeks after he was accused of murdering kaylee, madison,
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xana, and ethan. a former homicide detective said it's not unusual for suspects to stay close to the investigation. >> without getting too deep into this, it's almost like a spike-the-football moment for the sick people. you can see where the suspect stays at the scene and looks and enjoys what he has caused in these types of situations. >> ashley: it has not been confirmed whether kohberger was actually present at the vigil. the nypd is looking for these three men accused of stealing $300,000 from a brinks truck. they were making a money drop into suspects approached him and asked for directions. that is when -- that was the ruse while a third suspect reportedly grabbed a bag of cash that was left unattended. the ex-virginia tech soccer player whose field time was cut after refusing to kneel to support black lives matter before a game will reportedly receive a $100,000 settlement. kiersten henning said she was
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also removed from her starting position and pressured to leave the team by her coach after she had declined to kneel while a statement from black lives matter was read before a game. her coach is not forced to admit he did anything wrong and he said he's happy the case is closed. apple is releasing its 2023 plans, saying it may finally be ready to launch the much-anticipated augmented reality headset this spring after years of delay. today marks an astonishing 16 years since steve jobs introduced the iphone to the world. that first phone had a camera with just two pixels and had a 3.5-inch screen. critics said it was too expensive and it would never catch on. to date, it is estimated over 2.2 billion iphones have been sold. i was so upset when the blackberry disappeared and it was only the iphone, but -- >> steve: i still like the keyboard on the blackberry. >> ainsley: it's easy to hold and use both thumbs. >> steve: so they are coming
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out with augmented reality headsets. that's probably for gamers, right? >> ashley: i would assume so. i know they've had issues getting it launched, so maybe third time's a charm. >> steve: thanks, ashley. >> brian: soon you won't have to have any real expenses. you can just experience virtual experiences and get the same result. >> ainsley: keep your pajamas on, stay in bed, and go to aruba with goggles. >> brian: don't even get on the airplane. >> ainsley: exactly. do it right in bed. >> brian: i guess that's what they're hoping for. >> steve: i like to leave the house. >> ainsley: a lot of people are staying at home. more so than ever. >> brian: if you l would rather live a virtual live or real life, write us. >> steve: my real-life friend is in aruba right now with his wife, erica. they got into an airplane and flew there. >> ainsley: that is so old school. >> ainsley: get dressed, get out of bed. coming up, superman dean cain
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honors the real heroes of our country, law enforcement. >> steve: and prince harry sparing no details on the feud with his family. but don't expect him to drop his title anytime soon. >> why not renounce your titles as duke and duchess? >> what difference would that make? >> brian: welcome i just don't be a duke and duchess. piers morgan is not royalty, but he is to us. he shares his uncensored take on the growing royal rift. ♪ ♪ ♪ to all the queens who are fighting alone ♪ ♪ baby, you're not dancing on your own ♪ joint pain used to keep me out of these moments. but not anymore.
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as duke and duchess? >> and what difference would that make? >> why be so public? why reveal conversations you've had with your father or with your brother? >> every single time i've tried to do it privately, they have been briefings and leaking's and planting stories against me and my wife. the family motto is "never complain, never explain," but it's just a motto. >> ainsley: prince harry defending his decision to speak publicly about his family and suggesting he and his wife, meghan, will keep their titles despite breaking away from their royal duties. he is piers morgan himself. hey, piers. stick a happy new year to you. >> ainsley: i thought about you last night watching the "60 minutes" interview and i wanted to get your reaction. i'm sure you have a lot to say. >> well, this year started like last year finished, hasn't it? with prince harry whining and moaning and slamming his family
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and being deeply unpleasant about almost all of them, whilst pretending that what he really wants is privacy and freedom from this family and from the institution they represent. what a telling moment it was, ainsley, with anderson cooper, wasn't it? when he was asked the obvious question, if you hate the institution that much and is so awful in this family so terrible, why do you want to be called the duke and duchess of sussex? why do you want to remain with the titles? what difference would that make? i'll tell you what difference it makes. it makes $100 million' worth of difference, because that's pretty much what he has raked in in the last year from all his own media relationships. he has spent most of the time with his british tv last night, and probably anderson cooper, but probably spent most of that time, as well, complaining about intrusion by the british press. and yet, who has been the single most intrusive person into the lives of the royal family? who has talked about private
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conversations with the new king at the funeral of the king's father? who has talked about all the behind-the-scenes machinations of the frantic trip to bell moral as the queen was dying who has talked about being beaten up by his brother and having his poor little neck was broken? et cetera, et cetera. the answer is prince harry. he has turned out to be the single most intrusive person the royal family has ever been exposed to, and i'm not just going to sit here on behalf of the british media and take any more of his hypocritical guff about him saying it's all down to us. when he clearly is on a one-man mission to dismantle the monarchy. >> ainsley: you know, everyone has stuff that happens and their families, but you don't go out and spread it all to the world. so a lot of people on social media have a problem with that. they do say, look, there are a lot of celebrities out there were things going on behind the scenes within their families. we all have things we can work on with her family and we don't go out and broadcast it.
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we support one another. he was asked if he asked his dad not to marry camilla come and he said yes. "my brother and i both said don't marry camilla. we do want him to be happy." but he also said this. listen. >> maybe she would be less dangerous if she was happy? how was she dangerous? >> because of the need for her to rehabilitate. >> that made her dangerous? >> that made her dangerous because of the connections she was forging within the british press, and with her being on the way to be queen consort, they were going to be people, or bodies, left in the street because of that. >> ainsley: do you think that's true? that she is the british press? he says his dad does, too come and uses his sons to make himself look better. >> of course the british family will work with the media in the same way a presidency does. but the idea that camilla is the bad one in this picture to me is absolutely ludicrous.
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i was at a private lunch with camilla, the queen consort, just before christmas. you wouldn't meet a more down-to-earth delightful woman who i think has made king charles extremely happy, and they have been very happily married now for 17 years. but here we have again the hypocrisy of harry. he says this dreadful woman is using the media to improve her image. what the hell is he doing? he spent the last years trashing his family with oprah winfrey, james gordon, a 6-part netflix series, a book with penguin random house, countless interviews now. it is him, on the record, and viciously against his family, whilst pretending, "i don't wish to do them any harm." it's laughable. >> ainsley: piers, we are watching on fox nation. he has a show called "piers morgan uncensored." if you haven't seen it, it's wonderful. he has great guests, every day, monday through friday. thanks, piers. great to see you.
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one word answer, are you going to read the book? >> unfortunately, yes. >> ainsley: i'm going to read it, too. i'm curious. a bipartisan group of lawmakers are visiting the border today. will cain is live in el paso with republican senator jerry moran on what president biden didn't see there on his 3-hour trip. nexium 24hr prevents heartburn acid for twice as long as pepcid. get all-day and all-night heartburn acid prevention with just one pill a day. choose acid prevention. choose nexium. at adp, we use data-driven insights to design hr solutions to provide flexible pay options and greater workforce visibility today, so you can have more success tomorrow. ♪ one thing leads to another, yeah, yeah ♪
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that helped with insulin resistance. i had had conversations with my physician indicating that that was probably an issue that i was facing and making it more difficult for me to sustain weight loss. golo has been more sustainable. i can fit it into family life, i can make meals that the whole family will enjoy. it just works in everyday life as a mom.
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♪ ♪ >> take a look at this real quick, there's a group of seven illegal immigrants on the american side of the border, just on the other side of that concertina wire. again, on the american side of the rio grande. juarez, mexico, the background. these are illegal immigrants encounter national guard. this is the american southern border. if we look this way, there's the border wall. right here. as we speak. not hard to see. >> steve: exactly right, not hard to see. moments ago, the cameras catching more migrant encountering agents at the border as we learn more than 500 tried entering through that el paso crossing just yesterday alone, but the president didn't see it. >> brian: today bipartisan group of senators are heading to the border just a day after the president made his own trip,
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spending just three hours on a stop critics say did nothing to highlight the real crisis. >> ainsley: lets head down to the border to el paso, texas, where will cain is live with one of those lawmakers visiting the border today, senator jerry moran. hey, will. >> good morning, ainsley. that's right, i'm sitting here with senator jerry moran, part of the bipartisan senatorial committee trying what's happening on the border. thanks for being here this morning and here in general at the border. >> i'm pleased to be here with you and i am especially glad to be here at the border. this is my third visit in recent times to the border. i want to see if there's any progress being made, but mostly want to hear from the people who are involved in enforcing our laws, what tools they need, what help they need to get this crisis situation under control. there's a humanitarian issue here, a law enforcement issue here. there is a national security issue here, and this place needs
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a lot of attention across this border. >> senator, you are in a unique position to be able to answer this question. would be the purpose of a trip to the border by a high-level government official? the president united states, where the senators, like yourself? the president is not deprived of any piece of information that he needs or wants, so what to accomplish, what could he have accomplished, by visiting el paso? >> i don't know how we complain that the president visited the border. we have been insisting that he see what goes on here for a long time. but what strikes me is that there was no outrage, no recognition that we have one of the most significant crises in our country right here on this border. again, it is humanitarian, it's a law enforcement, its national security. the president didn't come away, at least publicly, with any sense of outrage that the circumstances here need to receive his significant
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attention, his administration's effort. we have two years of the biden administration and things have gotten worse, not better. nothing like an admission that says we have got a lot of work to do here and i'm rolling up my sleeves to get this done. from my perspective, to be here, to talk to actual border patrol agents, sure. we can get people to brief us in washington, d.c. there's a lot of opportunity for them to tell me what i want to hear what they think i want to hear, but there's a different fear when you can have a conversation face-to-face and you get a sense of follow-up questions, and it's more difficult. you recognize when you're not getting the truth whenever you're talking to somebody in person. so it has great value, and there's also just the emotion of this, the challenges people face crossing the border. there is an emotion to that. but there is an emotion to the people who are here working to protect our lives and the security of our country. >> you said this is your third
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trip to the border, but this trip will also include democratic senators. does that give you hope, promise? >> i always have hope, and it's the new year. i licked every new year, new resolutions, working together to solve a crisis in this country. that has value. so i am hopeful. it takes 60 votes to pass anything in the senate, and therefore if we are going to do something it does take republicans and democrats working together. >> we are out of time. hope you don't mind me sharing this piece of information. with the law enforcement angle, the support of what's happening at the border, you are saying you have learned through intelligence, chinese illegal immigrants have a special place when it comes to the cartel. >> a lot of focus over the years has been on people coming to the united states to take our jobs, and that is clearly an issue, as well. but what strikes me is so critical is this is a national security issue where the chinese
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are the guest of the cartels crossing our border, and with what damage they can do to our country, and that relationship. the cartels at issue here. the president needs to engage mexico and more than just law enforcement to demonize the cartels. >> senator jerry moran, thanks so much. good luck on your trip. steve, ainsley, brian, the senator told me if you are a chinese illegal immigrant, you cross the border in a suit and tie on a boat. we just saw seven cuban illegal immigrants wade across that border moments ago. he saw the video. it turns out they were from cuba. >> steve: look at that. we've got to have the senator back to talk more. from the great state of kansas. gentlemen, thank you very much. >> brian: provides fentanyl to the cartel, you get special treatment. >> steve: coming up on this monday, superman dean cain is also a reserve police officer and deputy sheriff. he is going to talk why the men and women in blue are america's
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true superheroes as we celebrate today, which is national law enforcement appreciation day. good morning, everybody. welcome to fox & friends. ♪ ♪ with skyrizi 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months, after just 2 doses. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to. ♪ ♪ it's my moment so i just gotta say ♪ ♪ nothing is everything ♪ talk to your dermatologist about skyrizi. learn how abbvie could help you save.
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cole hauser is an award winning actor. beyond his impressive career, he is a proud supporter of the tunnel to towers foundation. i was able to spend some time with cole and his family to reflect on those who have sacrificed so much to defend our freedom. you know, as i started to be more and more successful, i was like, how can i help? but when i heard of the tunnel to towers and i met brandon in idaho and his family, i was like, wow. there's actually a charity where we know where the money's going to go. you saw all the stuff we put in these homes? i was i was blown away. why should americans help tunnel to towers foundation? i mean, is there any better organization to help the people that has fought for this country and freedoms that we have? and you're going to join us on that mission. thank you. hey, i'm cole. hauser.
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i want you to join me in supporting our nation's heroes and their families. it's only $11 a month. go to t2t.org ♪ ♪ >> ainsley: good morning, everyone. it's national law enforcement appreciation day, and with me is the new jersey state police. thank you so much for being here. thank you for being here. if people want to get involved in law enforcement, what advice would you have for them? >> i would absolutely say do it, especially for the younger generation. have the explorer program. it is a career, not a job. follow your heart and i would absolutely recommend it. >> do you feel appreciated today? >> absolutely, i do. thank you for your support. >> "fox & friends" has always been supportive of our men and women in blue. i know your phone is blowing up this morning. we love you all. thank you for being here. a quick reminder, we are talking
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about the weather, the west coast, still more rain in the forecast and wind and snow. that's our top story on foxweather.com, and we have the potential for a nor'easter later on this week, so we'll be tracking that come as well. sending it into steve. over to you. >> steve: all right, j d, thank you very much. consour next guest played supern on tv but suggests real heroes that were capes. actor dean cain is also a pocatello, idaho, reserve police officer, and a deputy sheriff in virginia. he joins us now from somewhere here in the universe. look at that. you are wearing the uniform. good morning to you, dean. >> good morning, steve. how are you today? >> steve: i'm doing okay. i love that we are doing the story because i have family in law enforcement, as well. why was it so important to you? i know you wore a cape, you essentially where the law but wn you plate superman, bc the guys
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and gals in uniform either to superheroes? >> for me, just the fact i was able to play superman, i'm associated with a character all the time. the fact that i wear this uniform, it's a statement in itself. in a time when anti-police rhetoric is out of control. i've been an officer now for about five years, five or six years now, and i forget. the years catch up to me. but when i was a kid, it was, "don't talk to strangers on this a police officer, because they are good." but it has turned into something complete different. knowing the kind of people who are in law enforcement and how they are regular, every day wonderful people who have gotten such a bad rap, i decided the strongest statement i could make would be to join their forces and speak about them and talk about how wonderful and fantastic they are. since you got family that are law enforcement, you already understand that. i want others to understand that same idea. >> steve: over the last couple
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of years there's been a lot of anti-cop rhetoric, which you are referring to, but two years later, three years later in some cases, people are realizing, "wait a minute, what do we do? we actually need those guys!" >> and they were talking about defund the police, i remember being on "fox & friends" 100 years ago saying, "what could go wrong?" the first thing any civilized community needs is to have security, safety. who provides that? police officers. it's funny, because those who sort of badmouth police officers and most of the first ones to pick up the call for 911 with is a problem in their life is on the line, and the hero will show up. that's what they do, they are these regular wonderful people who are -- whenever you see a police officer, law enforcement personnel, it's not because things are going well. so you're always catching people on their worst day, in the worst situation, and it takes its toll on the officers, too. people have to understand they are regular people and they are
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wonderful people. sure, you can have a basketball team and there will be a bad apple, that happens. but by and large, they are fantastic and wonderful people. i am as thrilled to wear the uniform and stand side by side with these. >> steve: they are wonderful people come and that's why you don't just say thank you to them today on national law enforcement appreciation day. if you see someone in the uniform, i know dean cain. he says thank you every time. >> it's true, every day should be law enforcement appreciation day. not just today. that's not enough. >> steve: amen to that. thank you very much. coming up, switching gears on this monday, a year on planet earth. our next guest spent eight months on a subarctic island with penguins for a new fox nation special and we are going to talk about that. first, let's check in with bill and dana for petey of the show at 9:00. >> bill: the video is amazing, by the w way. you have to see this show coming
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up on fox nation. hey, steve. good morning. went to the present learn on his three half an hour to her, the lieutenant governor of texas coming up. >> dana: and we are going to find out what changes republicans have in store. >> bill: also, students returning back to school at the university of idaho. our team on the gun has the latest on the investigation. >> dana: and what do you think of 45-year-old american should look like? we will find out. >> bill: the new week begins in a few minutes. come join us at the top of the hour. if you have heart failure, entrust your heart to entresto, a medicine specifically made for heart failure. entresto is the #1 heart failure brand prescribed by cardiologists. it was proven superior at helping people stay alive and out of the hospital. heart failure can change the structure of your heart, so it may not work as well. entresto helps improve your heart's ability to pump blood to the body. and just imagine
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♪ ♪ >> steve: all right, this is simply amazing. shot in more than 60 locations around the globe, filmmakers tell the stories of communities across the world working to protect animals and a brand-new fox nation special. >> narrator: an annual journey around the sun. extraordinary changes are set in motion which impact all life. meet the incredible animals that face the seasons head on, over a year on planet earth. >> ainsley: documentary cinematographer tom hartwell spent eight months on a tiny sub antarctic island with the
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penguins to film part of this film. it's called "a year on planet earth." >> brian: tom, why did you pick island and that duration? what were you going for? >> we were there to film the king penguins story. over a million penguins go to that island to breed, of various different species, but we focus on the king you can see here. beautiful animals. as you can see, that colony is just enormous. it's a really unique story that hasn't really been told before. that was why they decided to go for that one. >> steve: because the story really hasn't been told. if you would, summarize what we need to know about them. >> king penguins are remarkable animals, and this is marion island, a thousand miles off the coast of south africa down toward antarctica. the million penguins go to the island to breed and we told the story of the king penguins trying to raise a chick all the
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way from an egg through to being an adult. hence why i was there for such a long time with the rest of my team. >> ainsley: what are some of the stories you can share with us that will be in the documentary? >> i saw every different stage of a penguins life. he faces different challenges, even at the egg phase. obviously there's lots of animals on the island that would love to eat an egg, so it's about the parents trying to protect that egg and nurture it. then, once the egg hatches and it is a chick, there are also different animals that would then like to eat it. it's a very, very tough place to grow up, and we tell the story of that chick surviving the winter on its own and then eventually the following year going out to sea as an adult. it's an incredible story. >> brian: what is the approach of the series? what are you trying to get across to the viewer? >> we are covering lots of different species. i was fortunate to go spend eight months on this island, but of course there were many other
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shoots, over 60 different chutes that went out for the series. you can seal the other animals that were featured. we are focusing on how the change in seasons affect the animals across the globe, how the tilt of the earth affects us, and just all these incredible stories that are so remote and so far-flung that the audience wouldn't get to see them otherwise. so that is the key. >> brian: and if you're a penguin, look out for the walrus, right? >> those big things are elephant seals, and they will squash a penguin if they get the chance. >> steve: and in the series you follow black tip sharks, turtles, reef mantas, and pandas. after people watch all the episodes, what do you hope they take away from it? >> you know, the final episode of the series is a science episode, and it focuses on these incredible people that dedicate their lives to try to protect
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and conserve these animals in these remote corners of the world. that's a hard-hitting episode that shows the state of affairs that we are in at the moment with planet earth. yeah, it is just -- to fall in love with nature, and see these incredible stories. >> ainsley: thank you so much. it's great to watch with children, too. this is on fox nation, and it's called "a year on planet earth." tom, thank you for sharing this. >> it's a pleasure. >> ainsley: the pleasure is ours. more "fox & friends" moments away. ♪ ♪
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? ? >> we are is the the battle ship? >> somewhere in there. >> look close. i should have brought my telescope. >> thanks for joining us at the end of "fox & friends", cape fear. >> run to the radio. have a great show. >> bill: good morning. well, president biden went there. he finally set foot on the southern border. republicans saying it is a crisis of his own creation. how we get out of this is anybody's guess today. hope you had a great weekend. i'm bill hemmer. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." it was significant, the first trip in an entire political career, one of the most difficult problems to solve and only spent a few hours there. he has been in politics for 50 years, first visit to the
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