tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News January 14, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PST
3:00 am
for veterans who are homeless. this man is so grateful for this fantastic place that he got live during this temporary period in his life. this is the opposite of the new york city hotel story, folks. this is a good project. >> judge jeanine: this is what we should support. spending money on veterans ♪ ♪ o say can you see ♪ ♪ by 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 ♪ ♪ o'er the ramparts we watched
3:01 am
3:02 am
[cheers and applause] will: welcome to "fox and friends," national anthem along with your photos as we do every saturday and sunday on the fox news channel. keep your photos coming in at friends@foxnews.com. one photo stood out, the photo of the rooster, his wings painted red, white and blue. rachel is back with us after a vacation. she said she couldn't get a vacation from her biggest fear. rachel: i went to an island and there were chickens everywhere. i guess there was a hurricane in the 90s, the chickens escaped, were let loose and nobody could figure out who's was who, so they decided to embrace the chickens everywhere. i was in paradise but a reminder that paradise is somewhere else because there were chickens in my paradise. will: one bird -- hope you got used to them. rachel: a little bit.
3:03 am
will: she has a lot of energy at is pepe this morning. pete: rested and ready to go. good to have you back. rachel: happy to be back. will: people talk about this weekend. pete: we have a viewer across the country who has got a special one hundred first birthday today. his name is clarence bud anderson. he's a retired troop world war ii aaa's fighter pilot. he was recently promoted to the honorary rank of brigadier general. he just became a one star general at the age of one hundred one. rachel: that is amazing. pete: a world war ii hero still with us, watching the show. rachel: happy birthday. will: 161/4 enemy aircraft he took down. he got to 15+11/4 more for his record.
3:04 am
pete: that is a real dogfight. that is knowing what you are doing. great to see him. will: we would rather talk about the triple ace fighter pilot from world war ii, but instead we talk about a guy who wears aviators and has a son who likes to fancy himself -- pete: fly high. rachel: on high. will: you know the story, classified documents found not just data think tank, who knew president biden had one, in washington, but in his garage in wilmington and somewhere else. we are learning who owned is that, who lived in that house in wilmington after president biden left the vice presidency, that four years, at his primary residence, was it somebody else's? miranda devine posted a
3:05 am
screenshot of a 2018 hunter biden rental application which makes it clear it was hunter biden who lived at that residence and according to the documents, paid his father $50,000 a month to rent the house. really? 50 grand a month. it was on his driver's license that this was his location. the documents were locked in the garage with the corvette. who else had access to them? rachel: so much intermingling and weird financial stuff between hunter and his dad. hunter paying wills for president biden. now we hear he is paying rent. $50,000 a month. things that don't happen within families. it is weird unless you are laundering money. you said who else had access to that thing? to that place?
3:06 am
it is a good question because hunter biden and president biden shared an office with jill biden, dear member this? chinese energy executive as well, there were emails discovered in 2020 that said the e-mail was from hunter to the people who owned the office building in washington dc saying make sure this chinese fellow who is the chairman of an emissary of an energy company in china with ties to the chinese communist party, make sure he has a key too. it is not a silly question to ask who else has access to the locations where president biden and hunter biden are keeping classified documents. pete: outside that delaware home the other location we know where classified documents were found were his vice presidential library which
3:07 am
reflects one of the major donors to that was corporations, individuals from china as well. the big question for me the we need to explore, what were these documents about? i am curious how this came forward. i am curious, some lawyers were moving, lawyers have high hourly rates for moving services as you shift from one office to another, suspicious story from start to finish. it leads to questions which karine jean-pierre has no interest in answering. >> we refer you to the part of justice. and refer you to the department of justice which i would refer you to the department of justice. we will refer you to the department of justice. we will refer you to the department of justice. rachel: i get the question you are asking, an excellent question. can we just go back a little bit, first of all, why have there been no raids on hunter biden because nothing has happened in five years of this
3:08 am
investigation, nothing has happened. we don't know anything more than we know from the laptop which we know they tried to ignore and say that it wasn't real until it became clear that it was. all we know is what is on the laptop, the fbi, doj, no one has given us more information, doesn't look like that investigation is going anywhere. where are the raids on these homes and offices of the bidens? that is the standard that was set by president biden with mar-a-lago. where are the raids? will: biden didn't have the opportunity to declassify the way trump did. when you look at cnn and other news organizations regurgitating what the white house is saying, that he was so busy doing the work of the people all the way through the end of his vice presidency, traveling around the world, securing international alliances, didn't have time to pack up. yet as many have pointed out,
3:09 am
where is president biden choosing to travel the last few weeks of his presidency? to ukraine, on behalf of what interests, and who traveled with him? or was he tying up deals that would help him post presidency? you know what is helpful, put those over there next to the garage and i take your point. why are we trusting these lawyers as if everything is aboveboard? we just discovered them while moving from or was this a preemptive move by somebody else? pete: there are two ways the story goes, you're focusing on the unequal justice which is a very legitimate way and this is the point of journalism, ask questions, that could be what the story reveals, the department of justice and the media handled these in two fashions. the other way the story goes, why is this coming out? how did this come out?
3:10 am
it is self-reported by his lawyers doing moving services. is this the beginning of the end for president biden? meaning now he is in the middle of a scandal that means he won't be the 2024 nominee? >> investigations in the house could point to hunter biden as well. watching of a press corps come after karine jean-pierre which has never happened in the biden administration. happen to trump every day. will: this is splashed over everything. a couple months, this story would have been ignored. it felt like that kind of story. rachel: they had the information before the midterm election and didn't want to damage the democrats in election until they hang onto it. it's a good question why -- tucker carlson suggested this is paving the way for a michelle obama --
3:11 am
rachel: it will be interesting. the question peter doocy asked got president biden off script, my corvette is locked, that's the only question he was able to get off and i'm sure biden regretted answering it. peter doocy talking about what it is like to get these questions out of these briefings. >> if i would have had an opportunity to ask a question, the first i have on my sheet was why is president biden going to wilmington today? isn't that a potential crime scene? rachel: all kinds of crime scenes and all the biden residences. interesting thing, dave wouldn't let peter doocy ask a question probably because of what you said. they can't. rachel: to highlight where the story could go, we will play later in the show. on tucker carlson last night, this is the great rovio, the 2-tiered justice system. newsweek is saying this with
3:12 am
this headline, they are saying did merrick garland just doomed 2024 campaign? there is a role for journalism as we continue with this story. will: i wish it didn't feel all cooked on one side. pete: the cdc and fda say their safety system has uncovered a link between pfizer's covid vaccine and strokes. will: it questions whether certain age groups are at more risk weeks after getting the jab. rachel: alexandria half has the details from washington. >> reporter: this is regarding individuals over 65, the pfizer used are the targets the omicron variant of covid 19, the cdc states since launching investigation into primary safety concerns it is, quote, very unlikely this particular vaccine carries a risk of stroke for seniors. that is what the concern has been. the issue was taken on late
3:13 am
last year. one of several surveillance systems met the threshold to prompt the investigation. no other surveillance system detected possible issues, quote, us government agencies used multiple safety monitoring systems to detect possible safety signals for vaccines and other medical countermeasures as early as possible as appropriate. often the safety systems could be due to factors other than the vaccine itself. the investigation will present their findings but this has to do with the biotech vaccine, it is not been identified with the moderna vaccine. thank you. rachel: so interesting that we are hearing about this now as well after they forced people to take the vaccine, smeared doctors and anyone who said
3:14 am
they had a vaccine injury or anything happening with the vaccine, smeared them, censored them and now they are saying there could be a problem. doctor fauci said this is just like with president biden and the documents the white house press secretary, we are being really transparent. doctor fauci is celebrating the cdc for their transparency. listen to what he told me. >> the important thing to point out is how transparent and upfront the cdc has been. this is a signal as your reporter correctly said, most likely not going to be a relevant signal because several of the other surveillance and monitoring mechanisms have not come up and found the signal. no other country has seen it. the cdc feels obligated to let the public know about it.
3:15 am
more likely than not, it will not be a relevant signal. pete: one thing you can't give the cdc credit for is transparency. that the complement they do not deserve. doctor fauci, the nih, the cdc are not willing to admit what other nations have begun to admit which there are, for example, cardiovascular problems when it comes to the vaccine, other countries have started to not recommend it for certain age groups, not make it available to certain age groups. you don't hear that from the cdc here or your media. everybody is not doing it like the united states where it is always recommended? latest i saw was for babies up to 6 months old. will: this is not an issue of the vaccine. when you try to rush an emergency vaccine you know there's potential for problems. you allow people at highest risk to make their personal choice about whether they take the vaccine.
3:16 am
donald trump said we have a global pandemic, let's do what we can, here's the vaccine, are you ask of the cdc is give us the data you have in real time as fast as you can so i can make a decision for my own life. the real sin is the mandate, always has been. forced to take the jab. rachel: to get this at the emergency permission they needed, the authorization they had to say other treatments like hydroxychloroquine didn't work so they didn't have the option to take these that we are learning did work and how many people died because of that? we will never know but the cdc is not being transparent and don't deserve our trust. when they say we are seeing this but don't worry, it is probably nothing, they've not earned trust as far as i -- will: compounding the mandate
3:17 am
multiple times over is the -- what you are saying, you don't get to proclaim transparency today. you've indulged in censorship and propaganda for two years. don't say you are transparent. rachel: on other line of duty, tragedy in southern california as a sheriff's deputy is killed in a shoot out. deputy darnell calhoun, pictured on the right, was just 30 years old, he was a husband and a son, he was going to be a father. calhoun's colleagues escorting his flag draped remains, escorted to the medical examiner's office, the suspect was shot and is in critical condition. this deadly shooting comes weeks after another riverside county deputy was killed by a career criminal. now to a fox weather alert. the number dead from severe
3:18 am
storms and tornadoes in the southeast rising to at least 9. those storms leaving a trail of destroyed homes and businesses across georgia and alabama. 20,000 are still without power. you can follow the story and all the latest weather developments by following the fox weather apps to any of your connected devices. it turned out friday the thirteenth was lucky for a mega millions play are in maine, the winner of the 1.35 billion, is that great? jackpot. the second largest prize in the game's history. friday night lucky numbers were 30, 43, 45, 46, 61, and gold mega ball, fourteen. those are your headlines. billions. pete: i hope someone is realizing and calling their lawyer. will: the cash value minus the
3:19 am
taxes comes away with -- rachel: $600 million. blue unless. lump sum. rachel: the total was 300. will: he's probably right. pete: how is that? will: well, personal taxes, 50% and the cash value you are talking about, one. $3 billion as they pay out over they will discount. ey i am curious. i bet he is right. $300 million, okay, all right. still had, 11 officers rushed to the hospital after being exposed to fentanyl as traffickers use social media to get the drug in kids hands. what every parent needs to know. pete: three children under the age of 10 abandoned by smugglers in the middle of the rio grande. the reality of the border
3:20 am
crisis has one blue city mayor heading to el paso. ♪ ance, so you only pay for what you need. contestants ready? go! only pay for what you need. jingle: liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. paradontax blood when you brush could lead to worse over time. help stop the clock on gum disease now. parodontax toothpaste... ...is 3x more effective at removing plaque bacteria, one of the main causes of bleeding gums. parodontax. the gum experts. (vo) if you have thyroid eye disease and the pain in your eyes burns like a red-hot chili pepper, or...your inflamed eyes are so watery they need windshield wipers... it might be time to discover another treatment option for thyroid eye disease,
3:21 am
also known as t-e-d. to learn more, visit treatted.com that's “treat t-e-d dot com." if you have copd, ask your doctor about breztri. breztri gives me better breathing and helps prevent flare-ups. before breztri, i was stuck in the past. i still had bad days, flare-ups, which kept me from doing what i love. my doctor said for my copd, it was time for breztri. breztri gives you better breathing, symptom improvement, and helps prevent flare-ups. like no other copd medicine, breztri was proven to reduce flare-ups by 52%. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling,
3:22 am
problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. can't afford your medication? astrazeneca may be able to help. if you have copd, ask your doctor about breztri. i screwed up. mhm. i got us t-mobile home internet. now cell phone users have priority over us. and your marriage survived that? you can almost feel the drag when people walk by with their phones. oh i can't hear you... you're froze-- ladies, please! you put it on airplane mode when you pass our house. i was trying to work. we're workin' it too. yeah! work it girl! woo! i want to hear you say it out loud. well, i could switch us to xfinity. those smiles. that's why i do what i do. that and the paycheck.
3:24 am
rachel: a dozen new jersey police officers hospitalized after being exposed to fentanyl. will: traffickers are using social media to sell the deadly drug. pete: ashley drawings us with the details. >> reporter: 11 officers in new jersey were exposed to fentanyl thursday and executing a search warrant. officers were investigating an apartment and a home when they were exposed, one suspect tried to destroy the evidence, they were rushed to the hospital, treated, all 11 have been released. officers found more than 1000 bags of fentanyl, $40,000 in cash and the handgun at the scene. 5 people were arrested on possession charges, the situation is similar to a scene in december in central florida, gripping body cam video shows officers saving a collie's life after she was exposed to
3:25 am
fentanyl during a traffic stop. officers say they heard breathless, choking, they found her unconscious at the scene slipping in and out of consciousness. three doses of narcan had to be used to revise -- revive her. in a lawsuit alleges 8 fentanyl debts stem from teens and young adults buying pills through the apps. the social media victims law center writing, quote, snapchat needs to take action to stop connecting drug dealers with minors and young adults who have no idea they are playing russian roulette with their lives when purchasing medications with deadly levels of fentanyl. a harrowing new analysis shows kids under 14 are dying of fentanyl poisoning faster than any age group. death in kids between age 5-14 quadrupled from 2019 to 2021. scary stuff.
3:26 am
rachel: that is the group that is dying fastest, more than any other group. pete: they are just old enough to be dangerous but too young to know what is going on. rachel: you need to have that talk with your kids. rachel: letting them know that it is like a grain of salt that can kill you. pete: the thing i was most terrified, remain terrified, drinking and driving. don't take a pill, do not take a pill. no matter what, that somebody randomly gives you. rachel: are you sure these poisonings are from a pill? but could be -- i think there's a lot of poisoning with these gum use, these adults who leave
3:27 am
them around, kids are getting them. they look like candy. rachel: you've got to have that talk with kids. they trust a friend. pete: there are 70 legitimate prescription pills, everything is scary and dangerous. we will take that. who runs this process? the cartels. will: they are trafficking things like drugs and trafficking humans. we have images of a 9-year-old, a 6-year-old, and a one-year-old at the southern border, authorities rescuing them. they were abandoned by cartels or whoever is trafficking them in the middle of the river, ultimately thinking they are safe but imagine being 9, 6, and one, where are the parents? what is the situation? rachel: if you saw a video, we
3:28 am
should be aware of who the victims are in this open border policy the president biden is pretending isn't happening but we know it is. i have a 9-year-old, we all had little kids that age. she's in charge at 9 years old of a one-year-old baby she cradles like she's the mama and she has this 4-year-old even as they are being rescued. you see her caring for the baby, such a responsibility, so terrible, the situation. her parents put her in in hopes of getting onto our side. also these cartels when they don't want to deal with these kids, their parents coming in the hands of these cartels they abandoned them. they are lucky they were rescued, what a scary situation to be by your self with a
3:29 am
one-year-old and the 4-year-old. rachel: we are talking fentanyl and human smuggling. last weekend i was in el paso hosting the sunday show, a former el paso us marshal, deputy chief of the police department put it in scary context. >> not as many tunnels in california but let me tell you we are standing on the border and i can guarantee you the cartels are watching us. >> from where? >> any of these houses. they have the look out and that dropped the border to brownsville. the cartels, from strategic points along the border. no doubt in my mind. rachel: when i was there i
3:30 am
talked to texas law enforcement. i asked them who runs the border? who is in control? imagine how you really eating it is to be an american law enforcement officer who has to say operational control is run by the cartels. will: eric adams is on the case. 38,000 migrants, illegals have been in new york city since last spring. there are photos of a hotel room being trashed, taxpayers are paying for it. and md migrant tent city is there. will: the faa blaming human error for the meltdown. out dating systems are hurting air travel. it could warn -- it could happen again. before lack of trust and low morale. and fbi agent expense how politics forced her to quit the agency. she will join us live coming
3:31 am
up. i have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. now, there's skyrizi. 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.
3:32 am
when aspen dental told me that my dentures were ready, i was so excited. i love the confidence. i love that i can blast this beautiful smile and make the world smile with me. i would totally say aspen dental changed my life. aspen dental makes new smiles affordable. right now, get 20% off dentures. we do anything to make you smile.
3:34 am
i'm not a doctor. i'm not even in a doctor's office. i'm standing on the street, talking to real people about their heart. how's your heart? my heart's pretty good. you sure? i think so. how do you know? you're driving a car? you have the check engine light, but the heart doesn't have a hey, check heart sign. i want to show you something. put both fingers right on those pads. there you go. in 30 seconds, we're going to have a medical grade ekg. -there it is. -that is you. look at that. with kardiamobile, the fda cleared personal ekg device. you can take a medical grade ekg in just 30 seconds from anywhere. kardiamobile is proven to detect atrial fibrillation, one of the leading causes of stroke. and it's the only personal ekg that can also detect normal heart rhythm, bradycardia and tachycardia. how much do you think this device cost? probably $1,000. $99. wow. that's impressive. it's never been more important to check your heart at home. kardiamobile is now available for just $79. order at kardiamobile.com or amazon.
3:35 am
pete: a fox. 6 other, 9 people dead after severe storms and tornadoes ripped through the south. the powerful system destroying homes across georgia and alabama as rescue workers search for survivors. officials estimate 35 tornadoes may have touchdown thursday. let's turn to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth. >> one of the most active days we've had in january. look at all of these storms that popped up, 300 storm reports of severe weather, wind, hail and tornadoes. we are looking at the recovery and weather for the next few days looking pretty good, we have dry weather, temperatures warm up the next few days. temperatures in the 60s.
3:36 am
by tuesday temperatures are good but more rain in the forecast again. the storm moved through, colder air is coming in and snow. this is the front all the way through florida and the east coast. behind the circulation you see on the western slopes. that will wind down throughout the day. we talked about the moisture, another storm comes in, we are almost done, some spots up to 35 inches of rain, many areas pushing 20 feet of snow. we have a few days to get through by next weekend. we will be in the clear for a while. rachel: i still want to know what the dewpoint is. and faa system failure forced the agency to ground all flights in the united states
3:37 am
for the first time since 9/11. the faa is building incompetent -- incompetence for the outage as follows years of warnings and outdated software, partly to blame. thanks for being here, we woke up wednesday and saw a stoppage across the country. what's going on? takes a few days to figure out what happened. what did happen? >> thanks for having me in the conversation. we found out the system started to fail at 11:00 pm and they went over 7 hours before they issued the ground stop and additional 3 hours that they claim was a rebooting system. there' s deep concerns that the system rolled through or was a catastrophic failure at 11 p.m. pm and they waited 7 hours.
3:38 am
a lot of questions for secretary in the administration needs to be on and active with coming up with answers today. pete: the notice to air missions, apparently that is sexist. it is ridiculous what they care about when they have this antiquated system and they are renaming it. you say they had the on/off switch, rebooted it. >> what they told us, they had a problem with the code. i don't think that matches what occurred. the real question is what is the secretary going to do today? setting up a working group that has answers a month or two from now, as i talk around the
3:39 am
globe, there are people around the globe that are interested in what we are going to do and when. pete: buttigieg likes to say he is on the case. ed bastion is calling more funding at the faa. what is the answer and is the secretary of transportation doing enough? >> i don't think he's doing enough. fibers the secretary, i would have said to make a gigantic financial decision for the country in terms of the fallout making all aircraft stop and then immediately say in each of the departments, they met 2 or 3 times already, we have a
3:40 am
solution not just rumors that bob in it had a problem. pete: they hit control alt delete and hope we can get where we are going on time. that is where we are. pete is on the case. thank you for joining us. still ahead, the doj response to biden's classified documents, some asking why wasn't his house rated like mar-a-lago. a former fbi agent breaks down the department's double standard coming up. a payroll td of up to $26,000 per employee. all it takes is eight minutes to get started. then work with professionals to assist your business with its forms and submit the application. go to getrefunds.com to learn more. 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.
3:41 am
if i can invest in her health and be proactive, i think it's worth it. visit betterforthem.com as someone living with type 2 diabetes, i want to keep it real and talk about some risks. with type 2 diabetes you have up to 4 times greater risk of stroke, heart attack, or death. even at your a1c goal, you're still at risk ...which if ignored could bring you here... ...may put you in one of those... ...or even worse. too much? that's the point. get real about your risks and do something about it. talk to your health care provider about ways to lower your risk of stroke, heart attack, or death. learn more at getrealaboutdiabetes.com
3:42 am
if you're on multiple medications like i am, you should know that there are millions of people across the country using singlecare to drive down the cost of their prescriptions. so whether you have medicare or you don't. or whether your drug is covered or it's not. just check the singlecare price first. singlecare often beats co-pays and a lot of other options out there, so it pays to check! visit singlecare.com and start saving today.
3:43 am
3:44 am
and stay...together. ♪ will: your shot of the morning sponsored by walgreens, looking at the superdome all hit in new orleans just before sunrise. to our top story. several parallels in the discovery of documents in president biden's home and donald trump's residents. wise it biden's home being rated as well? our next guest was in fbi agent who investigated high profile
3:45 am
cases like marjory stoneman douglas shooting in parkland, florida and the airport shooting, the caesars say out pipe bomb case. good morning. >> reporter: how are you? pete: do you see disparate treatment? many people say look away the biden scandal has been handled, look at how donald trump's mar-a-lago residence was handled? do you see disparate treatment? >> is a former special agent with the fbi, our goal in the fbi should be to do unbiased investigation. take the names off the charts, look at the evidence, look at the crime. every crime should be treated the same. when there is a disparity between how investigations are handled based on political purposes that is when americans question things and wonder can we trust what is going on here? the keys that america deserves a politically impartial law enforcement agency operating in the united states of america.
3:46 am
look at what is happening and respond accordingly. it shouldn't matter if it is trump or biden or whoever it is. take the names off and look at the evidence and follow the evidence. pete: do you feel that is happening with the agency? >> the current environment there are instances i don't see that happening at americans don't believe it is happening because time and again there are different investigations where it seems one side is being treated differently than the other. i don't care what side you are on, follow the facts, follow the evidence. will: you have a new op-ed on this subject. you wrote 3 months ago i walked away from the fbi, a career i once loved. here's why i felt i had to leave. why did you leave the fbi?
3:47 am
>> i came to serve this country, witnessed the terrorist attacks on the world trade center september 11, 2001. it made a lasting impact, i was a young individual at that time and it changed my life. i knew i wanted to serve this country. i had an interesting career in finance and made the decision to leave a lucrative career to serve our country. when you put everything on the line as we do at the fbi we want to serve with honor and everything to be fair and a lot of our investigations, my investigations never touched anything. but as an agency there seemed a constant pattern of a difference of treatment based on a political persuasion. when you take the oath to uphold the constitution of the united states of america justice is blind and should be blind. will: i talked to other fbi agents about this, many agents are surprised at the decisions made higher up in the command chain. why haven't we heard from more
3:48 am
fbi agents on the ground level like your self? why haven't we had more, quote, whistleblowers? >> i would not call myself a whistleblower because i left the fbi. it takes a lot of courage to come forward and speak the truth. there are so many amazing individuals there and the bulk of the work done at the fbi is not political. people on the ground doing casework, protecting americans from violent crime and public corruption and things of that sort, a lot of people see things going on, don't have the luxury to speak up because they need the pension. why speak up and have a target on their back when they work throughout their career. will: fear and self-preservation are the primary motivations, appreciate you sharing your perspective on the latest things going on. thank you so much.
3:49 am
still ahead, the suspect criminology student accused of killing four idaho students may have had access to a crime lab database. the information he may have seen before the crime. plus, the media praising prince harry's royal tantrum doubling him the mail raw model, but our next suspects is men deserve better. ♪ meet leon the third... leon the second... and leon... the first of them all. three generations, who all bank differently with chase. leon's saving up for his first set of wheels... nice try. really? this leon's paying for his paint job on the spot... and this leon, as a chase private client, he's in the south of france, taking out cash with no atm fees. that's because this family of leons has chase. actually, it's león. ooh la la! one bank for now. for later. for life. chase. make more of what's yours. 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.
3:50 am
learn more at phoenix.edu. in three seconds, this couple will share a perfect moment. is that? oh wow! but we got to sell our houses! well, almost perfect. don't worry. sell with confidence to opendoor. yes! -done. request a cash offer at opendoor.com you didn't live this strong, this long to get put on the shelf like a porcelain doll. but one out of two women over 50 will suffer a fracture from osteoporosis. you should know you can build new bone with evenity® for postmenopausal women with osteoporosis at high risk for fracture. ask your doctor if you can do more than just slowing down bone loss with evenity®. want stronger bones? then build new bone; evenity® can help in just 12 months. evenity® is proven to reduce spine fracture risk by 73%. evenity® can increase risk of heart attack, stroke, or death from a cardiovascular problem. do not take evenity®
3:51 am
if you have low blood calcium, or are allergic to it. serious allergic reactions and low blood calcium have occurred. tell your doctor about jaw bone problems, as they have been reported with evenity®. or about pain in your hip, groin or thigh, as unusual thigh bone fractures have occurred. don't let a break put you on a shelf. talk to your doctor about building new bone with evenity®!
3:53 am
rachel: prince harry setting records with a tell all memoir, spare, selling one. 4 million copies in one single day. as the duke of sussex makes his media rounds, some call him, quote, the male role model men desperately need. our next guest thinks the generation deserves better than that. cj pearson joins us now. great to have you. you are a young man. tell me why you think young men like you deserve a better role model than prince harry? >> thanks for having me. it goes to the issue of what i coin the commercialization of the is a. this is a time in which it is profitable to blame things like
3:54 am
racism, oppression at all of that and make a pretty big pay day because of it. that's what we see from prince harry. this individual was born into literal royalty, has unimaginable wealth but somehow found a way to make himself a victim. young people like me deserve someone better to look up to especially when it comes to the fact that i think a lot of us should choose to be a victor and not a victim. rachel: the media likes hairy because he's bringing up colonialism and imperialism and racism with his wife and i think the monarchy is in jeopardy in some regards. its longevity is in jeopardy because of what harry is doing. you talk about other reasons he might not be a good role model. he's a week guy. the media culture, they call masculinity toxic. is that another reason you say he's not a good role model or is that a good thing?
3:55 am
>> exactly right. he is a beta male. the introduce a new word to the "fox and friends" audience, he is a sap. one of the biggest things here is the media and the culture can try so hard to demonize masculinity but that is what my generation is looking for, strong men to look to. providers, protectors and all those things. the more people demonize it, the more young people like me are flocking to it and prince harry is the opposite of that. what is virtuous about turning your back on your country? what is virtuous about turning your back on your family? nothing at all. it's interesting we see people in the media and society demonizing people like jordan peterson but upholding people like prince harry is a champion. rachel: he is trashing his family and making a lot of money and it is not the way to
3:56 am
deal with family things. great points. women also like masculine men. this whole thing is not going to work. have a great one, thank you. don't go anywhere. a big show still ahead on "fox and friends" weekend. ♪ contestants ready? go! only pay for what you need. jingle: liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪3, 4♪ ♪ ♪hey♪ ♪ ♪are you ready for me♪ ♪are you ready♪ ♪are you ready♪
3:58 am
if you have copd, ask your doctor about breztri. breztri gives me better breathing and helps prevent flare-ups. before breztri, i was stuck in the past. i still had bad days, flare-ups, which kept me from doing what i love. my doctor said for my copd, it was time for breztri. breztri gives you better breathing, symptom improvement, and helps prevent flare-ups. like no other copd medicine, breztri was proven to reduce flare-ups by 52%. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition
3:59 am
or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. can't afford your medication? astrazeneca may be able to help. if you have copd, ask your doctor about breztri.
4:00 am
pete: good morning. welcome to "fox & friends," the second hour. it's january 14th. year of our lord 2023. beautiful shot of jacksonville, florida, where we'd all rather be, but we're here. we're happy to be together and happy to be with you. rachel: we just wish we were all in florida. pete: we'll just leave it right there. that's t
198 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on