tv Fox News at Night FOX News January 13, 2023 9:00pm-10:00pm PST
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>> greg: we are out of time. thank you. "fox news @ night" with dreamy trace gallagher is next. i'm greg gutfeld, and i love you, america. >> trace: thank you, greg. welcome to america's late news, "fox news @ night." i am trace gallagher in los angeles. breaking tonight: the cdc says the safety concern has been identified in pfizer's new booster vaccine that could increase the risk of stroke in people over 65. but wait until you hear the cdc's recommendation. a national supermarket trade
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groups as shoplifters have become more violent and employees more terrified. grocery stores may soon lock up their items. we began with a white house insisting that it's being transparent over the investigation into classified documents found in president biden's personal space. white house correspondent kevin corke is live for us in the nation's capital with more on this. >> good evening. critics argue that the white house's definition of the word transparent is decidedly different than, say, merriam-webster's definition which says it means among other things free from pretense or deceit, to be frank or obvious, readily understood or characterized by visibility or accessibility of information. all right, that all sounds simple. critics say none of that is how they would describe the process that saw the white house make a major discovery back on the 2nd of november and then not divulge it to the public until mid-january. so much for transparency.
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case in point: the infamous garage find of classified documents classified documents of the biden home or at the bidens center in d.c. discoveries made before the midterm elections which the white house failed to disclose, leading to even more questions. do the press office know at the time? did the president no? why were his lawyers apparently rifling through those papers and not the fbi? how about this? is the white house confident that the documents that have been disclosed are the only ones floating around out there or are more proverbial shoes prepared to drop in the not-too-distant future? still, to hear the press secretary tablet, they have handled this by the book, albeit belatedly. >> we have been transparent in the last couple days. there is an ongoing process. we have spoken when it is appropriate. we have shared anything else specific to when the president knew or anything that's related to this, i would refer you to
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the white house counsel's of office. >> not just republicans on capitol hill that aren't buying that. even some legal scholars are calling bull. "painful to watch karine jean-pierre's sugars they've been transparent by being transparently unwilling to answer any questions." it's a very tough thing to say. others on the hill calling for an investigation on top of the special counsel which as you know is underway. >> trace: good to see you. thank you. in case you lost count there are three special counsel's conducting high-profile investigations in washington. jeff paul is live with us to sort this out. >> stick with me, three different ones. you've got one special counsel, john durham, looking at the origins of the trump-russian probe. that's going on and has been going on since 2019 but now you have an additional two special
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counsel to add on top announce within a two month period, looking at the actions of two different presidents. the most recent special counsel investigate the documents with classified markings found at president biden's home in delaware and at an office in washington. attorney general merrick garland has approved and appointed robert her, former trump appointed u.s. attorney. he's been in private practice for the past two years. >> he is an excellent lawyer who has displayed superior legal judgment on all the cases that i worked on with him and he is a man whose integrity just can't be questioned. he's in the political hot seat. he served as the united states attorney for maryland, senior roles of the justice department. he understands what he signed up for. >> special counsel investigating former president trump is jack smith, appointed in november, he'll be looking at the classified documents reportedly found at mar-a-lago as well as any potential criminal involvement with the january 6
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interaction. pierce three special counsel's all of the same time and ag garland says he's confident his apartment can pull it off. >> i strongly believe the normal processes of this department can handle all investigations with integrity. >> ag garland went on to say there will be independence and accountability in the sensitive matters saying decisions made will be guided by both facts and the law. >> trace: i hear transparency and integrity thrown around a lot the last couple days. we are going to find out if we live up to it. jeff, stand by. let's bring in cal berkeley law professor john yoo and california g.o.p. chairwoman, jessica patterson. "the trump and biden cases are similar but they are not the same," saying what is currently known the trump and biden document cases appear less similar than dissimilar. to paraphrase "sesame street," one of these investigations is not like the other and i'm
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thinking, we don't know that. we don't know how similar or dissimilar. that's kind of why we are investigating. fair? >> apparently "the washington post" knows things that the justice department or president biden's lawyers and most of us don't know. what are the result of the investigation going to be? we don't know which documents they are. we don't all have a cot there. we don't know how long they've been there. we don't know who had access to them. sure they might be locked up in president biden's garage next to the corvette. who had access to the garage? were they giving tours? these are all unanswered questions. it's impossible to say that the two cases are not alike. we know there's a federal law that says you can't knowingly take classified information and documents out and they been removed and they are not in a secure facility. need to know whether they harm the national security and we've got to let both councils get to the bottom of it before we can make any judgments. >> trace: kim strassel said
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the following. if the special counsel and merrick garland's election department, if mr. biden is exonerated half the country will lose its weight if mr. trump is exonerated the other half well. likewise if either man is indicted, there is no win here. what a mess. relate jessica, it's a political rock and a hard place. >> it really is. what we have seen is the hypocrisy. we've talked about this multiple times. when we say president trump and mar-a-lago. didn't care who saw that, pictures of documents at the time. and we found out that the documents were found out about for president biden around november 2nd before the election. we are just hearing about this two months later. we are only hearing about it because there was a media leak and there were multiple locations. the hypocrisy is really outstanding and while ag garland may try look like he is appearing to be impartial, he is going to be anything but. it's very different the way he
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treated president trump of the way he's treating president biden. >> trace: we know that hunter biden was living in that garage with that corvette and that was kind of a big deal. >> this is just the start of it. what else are we going to learn? it's a political snowball that's going to keep being added to end added to. >> trace: you think hunter biden was living in the house. we know that. with the corvette. with apparently the documents. we don't know what's in the documents but we know that somebody who has had some shady dealings in the past was in that house with those documents for quite some time. your thoughts. >> if you are mr. herr, the first thing you're going to do is fingerprint the documents, the boxes. are we going to have to fingerprint the president of the united states and compare his fingerprints on his son's fingerprints and their friends fingerprints. it goes beyond hypocrisy. we live in a country with a rule of law. that means the legal system treats like cases alike.
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this encases have to give the same treatment. it goes beyond the trump and biden cases in particular. if our justice department treats two similar cases differently, two people are going to run for the presidency in two years, they will lose the faith of the american people. that's more important than whether trump or biden ultimately gets charged. >> trace: john makes a good point about the hunter biden thing. you have hunter biden, who's already under investigation in the last thing the biden family wants is to have the special councilperson fingerprinting boxes and snooping, sniffing around to see what else might have been associated with this whole thing. >> i think we are seeing a lot of this because we now have a republican-led congress and have already seen this past week where they have put forth these investigations need to happen including the hiding of the hunter biden laptop story back in 2020. this could have all been vetted. he could've been vetted and the american people could have known about these things before that election and they weren't. the mainstream media played a
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major role in that. >> trace: it's amazing. about 30 seconds left. we've got three special counsel's going on. they could be lining up. this is kind of unprecedented. >> the worst possible outcome would be if it looks like 2016 where the intervention of prosecutors has an effect on our elections. that's what we should never cross a line. using the great power of the justice system in our legal system to get involved with our electoral system. but the people here all the facts on biden and trump and let the voters decide. >> they need to wrap it up before 2024 so it doesn't look like they are interfering with either candidate who's going to potentially be running. >> trace: may be well before 2024 so it's not an october surprise. jeff paul, jessica patterson, john yoo. thank you. appreciate it. as we have documented here on, crime is rampant in most of america's big cities but
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new york has seen a rapid increase in all types of crime. ashley strohmier live for us to new york with some potential remedies that might slow down the cooks and infuriate the residence. ashley. >> we'll see but crime across the board is out of control in new york city and now shoplifting is trickling over into the supermarkets. earlier this month, mayor eric adam said it's a two-part problem. listen to this. >> one element, they are doing it out of what they believe are a necessity. want to identify them and give them the help they need. but then there are criminal enterprises that are stealing and selling online. >> however, the general manager multiple stores in the spokesperson for the caps coalition, otherwise known as collective action to protect our stores believes it's one more than the other. >> and people shoplift, most of the time they're not hungry. they're just looking to resell an item at a corner store
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somewhere. >> capps sent a letter to the governor announcing the coalition saying new yorkers expect and deserve to feel safe when they shop right now for too many, they simply do not. something must be done to rectify it before more stores close or workers are harmed. they are also asking for stricter laws to keep these criminals behind bars. >> the consequences these criminals have no fear of consequences. they are going to commit the crimes over and over and over again. there is no repercussions. literally they are putting some businesses, many stores out of business. up and down my row, drug stores closing. >> while caps hope to see some movement with their demands, some stores throughout new york city are considering blocking up things like meat and veggies because of the high volume of shoplifting. >> trace: the cvs is already doing it. it's a hassle trying to get anything in those stores. ashley strohmier, ceo bit later on. thank you.
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meantime first up in tonight's crime crisis front of, two men shot at each other in the bronx, one from the backseat of a sedan on the other return fire on f foot. both fired multiple rounds but nobody was hit. the unidentified suspects are still on the run. if used in the thief held up a convenience store clerk and demanded money. the clerk complied but after the cashier emptied their register, the thief pointed his gun at the clerk and pulled the trigger. with the pistol did not fire, the thief redirect the gun and fired again, hitting the clerk of the chest. the clerk is expected to survive at the criminal remains on the run. crazy images out of a south carolina grocery store where a man wildly waved around a knife demanding $20 and then threaten shoppers. his tirade was decisively ended when a military veteran grabbed a line divider and hit him over the head from behind. the veteran described what happened to jesse watters tonight. >> he was screaming out. when you call the cops, i'm
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going to start cutting you appear law enforcement can't do it by themselves all the time. they are not there at every moment. if you're a concerned citizen and you see something happening, i would suggest you probably try to step up and help. >> trace: good philosophy. the trump organization will pay $1.6 million after the organization was convicted of fraud and other felonies in december. the fine is the maximum penalty allowed under new york law. we are learning that the authorities have executed search warrants in the case of missing massachusetts mom anna walsh. the warrants are not public and officials won't say how many are. walsh's husband brian was arrested this past weekend and accused of misleading investigators. we are also tracking the quadruple stabbings case out of idaho where fox news digital learned that washington state university where suspect bryan kohberger was a phd student has access to a crime lab
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database with police body cam footage and live streams of surveillance cameras. this is all according to an insider at the school. the tools are supposed to be for research but could be used in the wrong hands to view unredacted footage of crimes and even deaths. genetic genealogy was a major factor in tracking down bryan kohberger, with more on how the investigative technique works, let's bring in dna detectives found her cece moore. it's so nice you on. you are talking about genealogy. this is from fox business. idaho murder suspect nabbed by genetic genealogy, some sites were with law enforcement, going on to say the alleged perpetrator arrest came after authorities matched dna from the crime scene to a sample wanted genealogy testing website that was submitted by a family member of his. they have gone a long way to
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actually helping to solve this crime. correct? >> yes. genetic genealogy has mostly been used in cold cases. but this is the type of case where it can be the most powerful because it can stop a criminal in their tracks, and it can keep additional people from being victimized. in this case, it's unlikely that it was only one of his relatives that led to his identification. typically we are working with a dozen, two dozen very distant cousins, and that helps us zero in on just one family or one individual. because he's the only sound in this family, if they were able to connect to both his mother's side and his father's side with those distant cousin matches, that would have pointed right at him and only him. >> trace: fascinating. will the genealogy, genetic genealogy be admissible in court? if so, is the jury ready to hear this kind of evidence? >> that's a great question. investigative genetic genealogy is only a tip. it's not to be used as evidence
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against anyone, no one should be arrested based on it. it is really just pointing investigators in a certain direction, just like if you called in an attempt to crime stoppers. they have to do the full investigation, which includes collecting dna from the individual or in this case, someone very close to them, taking back to the crime lab, and comparing it against their court admissible evidence. we have over 50 convictions in cases where the suspect has been identified through investigative genetic genealogy, and the court case law that we've been seeing is that charges are agreeing that this is simply a tip. it's not court admissible. he doesn't need to go in front of a jury. stu and i am fascinated by the fact that anybody's dna can be used to literally put one of their family members in jail. >> it certainly could but what's important to understand is that a lot of misconceptions out there.
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about which dna we have access to for these purposes. if you've tested at the big commercial dna testing companies like ancestry dna or 23andme, they borrow law enforcement from using their databases so we can't access those 40 million profiles in those databases. we are limited to the two smallest databases which are called gen match and family tree dna. it's only about 2 million people in those databases and those of the only ones who might be the ones that helped lead to one of their relatives being arrested. the vast majority of cases, these are distant relatives that they have never met, i don't know their names, et cetera. asked extremely rare that it would be a close relative. >> trace: talk about the idaho case, the massachusetts case. it seems to me that nowadays if you are committing a violent, intimate crime, it's almost impossible to get away without leaving dna. is that a fair assessment? >> that is exactly true. i think that's important for
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anyone to know that is considering perpetrating this type of crime, you will live dna behind, as bryan kohberger has apparently learned. and probably in anna walsh of austria's case, her husband will probably learn that as well so hopefully it will help deter cr. some individuals seem to do this type of thing only once and then move on with their lives and live pretty normal lives. we are seeing a lot of that in genetic genealogy. i do hope this can help deter someone who is making this type of decision in the future. >> trace: cece moore, very, very insightful. thank you for coming on. we appreciate it. >> thanks for having me. >> trace: the cdc says the key safety monitoring system has linked the new pfizer covid booster to a potential increase in certain kinds of stroke. yet the cdc is still advising yet the cdc is still advising people to take the shot.
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>> trace: a new warning for the cdc about a possible safety concern for people in a certain age group receiving one of the covid-19 bivalent vaccines. that's a booster shot if you don't know. "haiti sees vaccine safety datalink in near real-time surveillance system met the statistical criteria for a conditional investigation into whether there was a safety concern for ischemic stroke in patients 65 and older who received the pfizer covid-19 vaccine bivalent. let's bring in houman hemmati. i want to play this sound bite. >> we feel on the city feels obligated come appropriately so,
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to let the public know about it, it's more likely than not that it's not going to be a relevant signal and that's the reason why they are saying we are not changing any of the recommendations. i'm getting people vaccinated with the bivalent booster. >> trace: remind me of these democrat newspapers with this classified documents. it's more likely. you don't know. you don't have enough information. you can't say that it's safe with these kinds of flakes coming up. can you? >> no, not at all. someone who is a clinical researcher, when you see a safety signal that is statistically significant enough to trigger a warning like this in a large population, the entire u.s. population, you can ignore it, you can't dismiss it and say it's probably nothing. when you do that, you're throwing out everything that we learn in statistics. this is statistics 101. something called a null hypothesis. you can't just reject it and say no, it's nothing. you have to investigated. it's not a side effect like
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itching or sneezing or little bit of pain. this is stroke. it causes death. when you see a signal like that in safety, even if it's for a benign product, let alone for something that everyone is getting, they are recommending for everyone over age six months to take, you campus to visit -- you can't just dismiss it. saying that we looked at other databases and didn't see it. it's apples and oranges. very different patient populations. who knows how they are designed, they are differently conducted and you can't just analyze it in such a way. they have to make the open data, release it so we can have independent statisticians and epidemiologists evaluated. spin on the liability has got to be astounding because you're talking about, they've already acknowledge there was a flaw. they acknowledge this red flag came up and testing in this warning system and they are saying it's fine. if this turns out to be as bad as this warning system, it's big trouble. >> it is but where's the
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liability and accountability? i don't think there is any. the government has already told the drug companies that they are immune from any liability in this karin housley government going to be liable? you're not going to be of list to the cdc or fda. you're out of luck and that's the problem. there's no accountability as a result they can politicize the decisions. >> trace: even if they knew ahead of time there might be something wrong. and we've got to the documentation, they knew there was something a little bit amiss, there's no liability is what you're saying. >> i don't think we have any precedent for that. someone is going to have to create a precedent setting case. i'm sure there'll be lawyers looking at it. why allow the risk of additional harm. if you're going to recommend it, that should be accompanied with big warning this is we have a safety signal here. we are still investigating it. eventually rule it out fully we have to leave the warning in place. they do that with every other drug. how can they not do it with this especially when that safety signal is related to the stroke. >> trace: i want your take on this. covid cases in china touched
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900 million going on some 900 million people in china been infected with the coronavirus as of 11 january according to a study by peking university. that's a big number. your final thoughts. >> it's a massive number. china is a country of over a billion people. are you surprised so many people are getting infected? a country that was locked down and reopened ten when you reopen and release all those people they have no natural immunity, no herd immunity. you're going to get a lot of people infected but guess what's going to happen. we are going to see a huge pecan eventually it's going to crash, just as rapidly as it went up and we'll see nothing. the problem is that health care system is probably going to get a little overwhelmed right now. the only thing in their favor is it's a weaker virus that's less deadly so it's not going to cause the types of devastation we saw in other parts of the world when they opened up. >> trace: dr. houman hemmati, we hope you'll stay for the nightcap. good to see you. in memphis, tennessee, friday, flowers and signs and fees are being left in a makeshift
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memorial for lisa marie presley who died suddenly of an apparent cardiac arrest thursday at the age of 54. the only child of elvis presley was a singer and songwriter. she will be buried at graceland alongside her father and her son, benjamin, who committed suicide back in 2020. it looks like the child of a man charged with murdering two young girls in delphi, indiana, back in 2017 is not going to be moved out of carroll county. in the interest of objectivity, it looks like the jury will be made up of citizens from outside the jurisdiction. here is the senior correspondent laura ingle. >> the judge overseeing the high-profile case of richard allen who has been charged with the murders of 13-year-old abby williams and 14-year-old liberty german in delphi, indiana, is working to keep the upcoming trial in the county where the crimes occurred for a number of reasons. while also finding potential jurors who don't live so close,
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they could be biased in the case. the case has been followed closely by many in the true crime community. >> her trying to find a compromise that perhaps got them a less biased jury pool. >> i think it would be almost impossible to see a jury in carroll county, only a few thousand people in the city of delphi and back when the girls first went missing, several hundred people got involved in the search for the girls. >> the judge issued a ruling after richard allen's attorneys asked for a change of venue, citing extensive media attention that could possibly taint a jury. she gave the prosecution and defense one week to agree on a county where a jury could be selected. eboni williams and liberty german vanished very 17 after being dropped off for a hike along a popular abandoned rail bridge in their hometown of delphi. their bodies were found of the woods. court documents found a bullet
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found near the girls had been linked to a pistol owned by allen who pled not guilty in the case. the judge ruled that a temporary gig order would stay in place. of bail hearing was set for february 17. >> trace: laura, thank you. you are not supposed to put electric things in the water so how did this tesla and up in a swimming pool? we could all use a little help shoveling the snow, right? the day's best viral videos are next. and it's natural. treat it that way with aveeno® daily moisture. formulated with nourishing, prebiotic oat. it's clinically proven to moisturize dry skin for 24 hours. aveeno®
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>> trace: first up in tonight's viral videos, woman is seen wiping windows on a high-rise apartment land with no safety harness. you can see her go back inside her 12th floor apartment building will move to go back outside to clean another set of windows. not sure she's thinking this through. this dramatic video out of north los angeles shows the moment a car slammed into the outdoor dining section of restaurant
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where it narrowly avoided to pedestrians. after busting through protective barriers, unclear what led to the crash, passenger was hospitalized but no other injuries were reported. in another wild crash, tesla driver in pasadena, california, drove through a wall and landed in the pool. firefighters don't place blame on the tesla. they say that it was human error. the driver hit the accelerator instead of the brakes and nobody got hurt and all three people in the car were rescued by good samaritans. practice makes perfect. earlier this week the broomfield police department in colorado went out to a frozen lake tutoring with instructors on a nice driving course, officers took a run through cones to practice keeping control of their vehicle as it kind of spins out. looks like fun. >> i think you're going to be fine. i drive on this every day. >> trace: that's a tall wall of snow to navigate. this video taken in soda springs
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california shows a driver trying to make their way up a hill surrounded by snow, higher than the car. if that's not enough, this area of california is under a winter storm warning all weekend long with three to 6 feet of snow, maybe 8 feet in some areas. wax them up, skiers. when it snows, you have to go out and shovel. this jack russell terrier wants to help in the worst way but he may have bitten off more than he can shoot. this video was taken in ontario, canada, so we got to believe this isn't the first time this pup has seen a snow shovel come out of the garage. if you have a viral video, hit me up @tracegallagher or @foxnewsnight. we have new information tonight about just how effective russian propaganda on twitter turned out to be. during the 2016 presidential election, as it turns out the answer is not mary.
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here is fox news media analyst and host of fox's "media buzz," howard kurtz. >> it was one of the biggest media maelstrom's of the 202016 campaign. >> russia, i hope you're able to find the 30,000 emails that are missing. >> a new study by new york university says russian trolls have little influence on twitter during the donald trump-hillary clinton race. this follows the latest edition of elon musk's twitter files with internal documents showing the democratic senators dianne feinstein and richard blumenthal kept pushing the tech giant to find signs of russia helping trump despite being repeatedly told there was no such evidence. twitter executives complain this was like the book "if you give a mouse a cookie" with rejections finding endless new request. the study by nyu's center for social media and politics finds a 70% of the exposure to russian troll accounts reached only 1%
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of twitter users. this was dwarfed by regular media and political content and highly partisan republicans were exposed to nine times more russian content than nonrepublicans. the center's codirector josh tucker told the post that russian influence on twitter was way overhyped. still, the alleged russian interference led to two years of saturation media coverage and a report by special counsel robert mueller the study is clearly not looking at facebook and other larger sites, just twitter. russian hackers did leak plenty of democratic emails to help the trump camp. >> russian intelligence officers were part of the russian military, launched a concerted attack on our political system. >> it's just a continuation of the witch hunt. it's the worst witch hunt in political history. >> the study's bottom line, no evidence of a meaningful relationship between russia's twitter campaign and changes in american attitudes are voting but six years after trump won the presidency, no single study
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is going to quiet this polarizing debate. trace. >> trace: thank you. time to shine the friday night media spotlight on the highs and lows of media coverage. with us now, stephanie hamill, townhall.com managing editor spencer brown. thank you. i want to get your take on what we saw from holly because twitter made it very clear to these lawmakers did this russian thing was b.s. and they still propagated this and so did the media, spencer. the media was complicit in this, as howie just laid out. >> completely. i think this is another example of how twitter not being real life is just not recognized by a lot of people both in the media and in politics because look at what the reaction was, you have the biden administration come in and the disinformation governance board to try to solve a problem they didn't really exist and so this is just another case where twitter is not real life releasee is not are presented in what the rest of the country seeing it is really not representative of
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what americans are thinking usually. >> trace: stephanie, your high first. you are high. cnn was skeptical that president biden when he went to el paso did not see any migrants. here is cnn. >> the white house as there were no migrants at the time. they says it was a coincidence but reporting shows there's hundreds of migrants living on the streets of el paso including children, as we have been showing you. >> trace: reporting that lasted like a week. your thoughts. >> it was incredible to see this rare moment of honesty on cnn on their morning show where they are calling out president biden over his trip to the border. cleaned up el paso. we saw her openly be skeptical about the fact that there were no migrants to be found at this migrant facility, as biden walked through. this is supposed to be a learning trip, and experience for biden, it was supposed to be
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eye-opening for him as he has not been to the border for over a decade before this trip. kudos to cnn for pointing this out, that if you wanted to be seen with migrants, he could've been seen with migrants. >> trace: i'm not sure he's ever been to the border so ten years, i don't know, i would like to see the video of the 10-year visit. i haven't seen it. you are high, spencer, the mainstream media, journalists and the white house briefing room going after karine jean-pierre about these classified documents, here's an example. >> you have said repeatedly, the president has said he takes classified documents very seriously. if that's the case why were these classified documents being stored in his garage. >> trace: and she would say something about transparency. your thoughts. >> we are coming up on the two-year anniversary of biden taking office may set on day one this would be a transparent administration and they would tell the truth even when it hurts.
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honestly they've not done that over the last two years but for whatever reason this situation with his mishandling of classified documents was enough that the mainstream reporters put their hands up and said what a lot of americans have been yelling at their tvs this week which is there's no way you can claim president biden took these documents seriously when he was throwing them around his garage, his office and he didn't even know he had them. >> trace: stephanie, your low is cnn, panel saying that when sarah huckabee. right? sarah huckabee has said she was canceling latinx. >> her base, at least what she's doing, it's very xenophobic. it's very anti-immigrants my belief very anti-hispanic. >> trace: latinx, your thoughts. sarah huckabee sanders. >> this is my media low over the week. we have cnn predictably melting down over the newly elected
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governor of arkansas, sarah huckabee sanders. herb banning the use of latinx and state documents. if cnn were being honest or if they did their research, they would realize that actually latinos don't really support the use of that word or they are unfamiliar with it. i am latino. my mom is from mexico. hadn't heard that word until democrat started pandering and using that campaign events. it's not just my opinion. poll after poll suggests latinos really have no ideas what it means. the reason we take issue with it is because it's offensive to our language. it's offensive to our culture. they have created a gender-neutral term and it's been replaced with english they are trying to use it in spanish and lump us all together. it's really bizarre. >> trace: spencer, "new york times" is whining because ron desantis won't do an interview with them. surprise, surprise. >> this is another case where
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they can't get their way, they are whining. governor desantis is one of the most accessible leaders in the country and a reporter should be there to a report on what's happening and what our leaders are saying and doing. if dinner times wants to do that they have everything they need already. >> trace: stephanie hamill, spencer brown. thank you both. digital subscriptions that matter most to you and would you be willing to cut any of them out? if so, how many? the nightcap grew next. e you don't do enough for yourself, or your mouth. but eventually, it will remind you. when it does, aspen dental is here for you. we offer the custom dental treatments you need, all under one roof, right nearby. so we can bring more life to your smile... and more smile to your life... affordably. new patients without insurance can get a free complete exam and x-rays, and 20 percent off treatment plans. schedule your appointment today.
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hi, i'm darlene and i lost 40 pounds with golo in just eight months. i gained an enormous amount of weight due to a medication i was put on. when i started the golo plan and taking release, i was surprised at how easy it was for the weight to come off. i've never done anything better in my life. realtor.com (in a whisper) can we even afford this house? maybe jacob can finally get a job. the house whisperer! this house says use realtor.com to see homes in your budget. you're staying in school, jacob! realtor.com. to each their home.
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>> trace: we are back with the night cap crew. ashley strohmier, kevin corke, jeff paul. dr. houman hemmati. digital subscriptions. which are you most are less likely to cut? these are the most popular subscription categories. streaming, delivery. everything from amazon to doordash. music. kevin corke, you have to take one of those away because money is tight these days. you can have all three. which one? >> i hate to say it even though i love my music, it will probably be music.
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>> trace: really? i'm the opposite. delivery is done. i can get my food and i can wait for the mail. i've got to have music and something to watch. houman hemmati. >> it would be a tough decision. he would have to be streaming. my kids are in front of it. we keep them away from the screens as much as we can. if i had to get rid of one. it would be painful for me but i would get the kids to listen to more music. >> trace: your daughter is over there crying right now. ashley strohmier, which one? which one do you leave behind? >> i would 100% leave the music behind. i think i already left it behind. i don't listen to a lot of music. >> trace: oh, my goodness gracious. jeff paul. >> i'm keeping music. the most simple one. i've got spotify. i wouldn't get rid of it. i think he would be delivery. >> trace: i am with jeff. we can go get the burger.
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amazon, donated. the next category is, most popular subscription services. netflix, amazon prime, hulu, disney, hbo max, spotify. kevin corke, you can only take one of these with you. >> that is a tough one. can you put them back up? i can't remember all of them. i literally have every last one of these. >> trace: hbo max, spotify. >> i'm going to have to say hbo max. >> trace: ashley strohmier come you can only take one. >> i'm taking amazon prime. solely because of the whole foods delivery, i do not go to the store anymore. >> trace: you want delivery of amazon prime and you are set is what you're saying. >> easy, amazon prime. it's not only just the packages which we get almost every single day. groceries as well. it comes with the streaming
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video and music. it's a little bit of all combined together. >> trace: jeff paul. >> i'm going to go with hulu. you can do who live and watch fox news, especially this wonderful program. >> trace: me and jeff paul are on the same page. i would take below. thank you all. thank you for watching america' late news, "fox news @ night." i am trace gallagher in i am trace gallagher in have a good weekend. when you need it most, it's not habit forming and powered by the makers of nyquil, zequinha ultra, when you really, really need sleep. ne >> p and doug imman, myspace, clearly you're a safe driver. you could save hundreds for safe driving with liberty mutual to customize your car mutual to customize your car insurance so you what you need.
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