tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News January 15, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PST
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rachel: wow, do i love this song. that's a shot of louisville, kentucky. get ready for the 8:00 hour. i'm here with will and pete, and, you know, they're super healthy now. they had hair bone broth -- [laughter] in the last segment. and already they look just a little less wrinklinged. will: really? if. pete: that's more my style.
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rachel: that's rick. he is making tortillas. these are the aoc style, the ones she wants us, to way she wants us to make it. look at that, he's making to have tee a yas. -- tortillas. that's my tortilla press, by the way, i brought it in today. people might not know this about rick, he is an excellent cook that specializes many mexican cooking. pete: this is a fact. rachel: he's amazing. pete: he is. let's see what he can do in the green room on a hot plate. rachel: we had that big debate about corn or flour. he's making fresh tortillas for us. pete: you said you can't make electric stove tortillas. >> i prefer to heat hem over a flame. you have to make them like that when they're fresh on a skillet, but if you want to reheat them, they're nice over a flame.
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but the point i think -- you guys said you chose flour over corn. let's see if you try fresh corn tortillas, if you peel the same, because that's what rick is making. will: if i want a straight taco, it's a corn tortilla. if i'm at a tex-mex restaurant and i immediate to sop up some -- need to sop um some refried wean -- beans -- rachel: rick speaks perfect spanish, another thing people night not know. pete: never a bad time to go to taco bell. rachel: that's not mexican. pete: we not only had act coe bell, we had taco john's. it's like a poor man's taco bell. will: in the north, because i mow taco bueno, taco cabana, i don't know taco john's -- [laughter] pete: you immediate to get to
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know him. -- you need to get to know him. rachel: okay, listen, we're going to audiocassette a rate aring later, show the next promo, promo the next segment of my series of meeting friends on "fox & friends" with jack i brewer. so we'll get to that a little later. you've bot to stick around this segment from the prison. wow -- can. pete: i mean, part one was awesome. i can't wait to see what -- rachel: this is amazing. this is amazing. pete: great job, rachel. rachel: thank you. will: meanwhile, we're still the keeping up with the number of documents and locations that joe biden has scattered around the country of classified documents. it's up to, lauren blanchard earlier this morning said four different can occasions now that have been found, i believe. twice this week, december and november. and three, at least three locations, is that right? pete: three minimum. because you've got the biden penn center, then you have the garage with the corvette, then
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you have the adjacent room. and now we learned more documents in that same house, but we don't know if it was in that same room, so it could have been somewhere else. rachel: what we also know is that the people collecting these documents are biden lawyers, which is really interesting, because i wonder how democrats and their media friends would feel if rudy giuliani had been in charge of the documents at mar-a-lago. they used armed fbi agents there there, for some reason heir not being used in the biden situation. very, very curious sufficient. -- stuff. representative james comer, the chair of oversight committee, says that the national archives seems also oddly disinterested in this biden document scandal. take a listen. >> unfortunately, i do not know more than you, and that's very concerning because i have jurisdiction can over the national archives. this agency is supposed to do a briefing anytime something like
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this happens. they have not. not only have hay not given us a briefing even though we've requested one, they haven't answered any of our simple requests for information. this is very concerning. we are going to deal with the national archives and this mess progresses. we're very concerned. joe biden promised the american people he would have the most transparent administration in history. i can make a strong argument it's least transparent administration in history. the fact that they had classified documents stored improperly, that's another reason why. pete: we don't know how many locations they were stored in, how long they were there, we don't know how they got there, we don't know who's collecting them now, we don't know who had access to them over the five, six years they were improperly stored. we know hunter biden listed that as his address, how many of his friends did he have over? this is a four alarm legal and political fire for the biden administration. i don't think there's any other
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way to put it. and even the other networks are covering it because they realize how terrible it is for him. let's bring in someone who knows a lot about four alarm fires, and that's "fox news sunday" anchor and chief legal corps responsibility shannon bream. >> i like to put those fires out, not start them. [laughter] pete: you are a four alarm firefighter, absolutely right. [laughter] shannon, great to -- what do you make of -- i mean, it was staggering yet another tranche. they didn't want the first revelation, presumably, now we're on the fourth time. what does it tell you? >> we know that the first discovery and conversation about these documents were november 2nd, so it's before the midterms. and that's something that republicans are making hay out of here in washington saying not only that, but there was other discovery in december. so there were several of these that then clocked in, the third. the fourth yesterday we get word from special counsel to the president himself, and, gosh, coming against the juxtaposition
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of former president trump and the mar-a-lago case, it presents a problem simply because president biden came down so hard on that calling it irresponsible and asking how it could have happened which then leads our peter doocy, of course, to ask how it could happen just using the president's own words. so we're getting this trickle of information a little bit more. the white house has said in the briefings, okay, the search is complete. but, clearly, it hasn't been. we'll see if there's another revelation. special counsel's on both of those cases now. will: shannon, i saw this pop up this week, and you being here reminds me of a conversation you and i once had on the will cain podcast, i think we've talked about it on fox and friends as well. is it true that maybe we are we are pull honing in on some potential suspects on the supreme court dobbs case leak? it's totally disappeared, right? >> yeah. will: but i think i read this week they might be honing in on some potential people including
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some clerks? >> yes. so our amazing supreme court producer bill and i have been on this, obviously, for months, and we have pressed. and we did find out a month ago that there had been a narrowing of the universe of people it could have been. we pressed again for more information this week about what we could find out if there's been even, you know, a winnowing down of that suspect. we can't get anything from the court, and the interesting thing is the chief justice decided to keep it in house, that's his purview, meaning there's no justice department, fbi, outside law enforcement agency that we've been able to ascertain has any piece of this which, of course, makes it harder to get leaks about the leak because the supreme court has decided to keep it in house. so what we found out in recent weeks and months has been from the justices themselves, justice gorsuch saying, hey, there will be a report at some point. we don't know if that goes to the justices, if it goes to all of us. we had looked at the chief's end of year report hoping there would be some mention, nothing.
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so we continue to press the court, but we really have no idea with other than we know they've narrowed the universe of suspects, but it's been months and we're still waiting. rachel: i'm show glad you're -- so glad you're pursuing. i'm sure their goal is for us to forget about it. i'm glad you're on it. i want to go back to the biden documents really quick. we talk about transparency and the lack thereof in the administration. one of the statements from the white house, they were sure, they noted that the lawyer who found the additional documents, that he had a security clearance. >> right. rachel: but i notice they didn't say that about the people who found the other documents in u-penn and the other documents found in the house. the fact that they didn't say they had security clearance, does that mean maybe they didn't because they would have said so. >> >> well, i think that you've got a lot of different people work on this, but if you get to a certain classification of documents, very few people probably in his legal team are going to have that. this special counsel to the president, not to be confused
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with the special counsel investigating the president, is the one who put out the statement and said, listen, when we found this document on wednesday, the lawyers on site, we knew they didn't have classification to go any if further. i showed up there on thursday, and that's when we found even more of these documents. so different members of his legal team are going to have different classification permission, and so the special counsel to the president had what appears to be that highest level, and that's the person hadi absolutelied to us yesterday that on thursday they found additional documents somewhere near the garage. rachel: but there were other people who found other documents, and that's the question, did they have the classification. san morning you're always so thorough, i just love it. and i'm really glad that will brought up that question, because i've been curious about that as well. will: what do you have coming up today on "fox news sunday"? >> we've got members on both sides of the aisle to talk about all these looming battles, the debt ceiling. we're about to hit it. what are they going to do?
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the white house says no negotiations. republicans are, like, not so fast. how do we work things out? if also we've got the youngest governor in the country, governor sarah huckabee sanders to talk about the whether she's going to endorse her former boss. and you guys know these executive orders she put out this week, a lot of critics coming for her. we'll ask her about hem. will thank you so much. we'll be watching. rachel: thank you, shannon. pete: all right. we'll turn now to a few additional headlines starting with a fox news alert. at least 68 people are dead after a plane carrying 72 people crashed in nepal earlier this morning. this stunning video appears to show the plane's final moments before going down. and video from the scene shows crews trying to rescue those onboard and extinguish fires from the crash as crowds gathered around the wreckage. officials say 10 foreign nationals were on the flight, no americans that we know of at
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this time as an investigation into the cause of the crash remains underway. wow, that is scary. we begin with new details about the case of missing massachusetts mom ana walshe. "the new york post" revealing her husband brian kept handwritten notes with praise for him on the walls of their home. the notes from friends and family said things like, brian, i just love you. you are what a man, a friend and a father is. and a friend of the missing woman talked to lawrence jones last night about her kids' future. >> they need to be out. they need love -- to be together. they need love, they need home, they need to be together. everything they have is, frankly, each other, right? and they need familiarity with the children who were interacting with them before. we all deserve to have justice, to know what happened and especially her children. pete: that friend saying she thinks it's a once in a million
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chance walshe is town alive. former texas congressman will herd is set to visit new hampshire month -- [laughter] rachel's reaction is correct. sparking speculation he could be gearing up for a presidential build in 2024. he will address the new hampshire gop annual meeting on the 28th. before serving three terms in congress, he was a clandestine officer in the cia. he now plans to be a clandestine presidential candidate. [laughter] according to a new government-funded study, get this, a bowl of sugary and yummy lucky charms is healthier than a steak. that's according to tufts. is that tufts university -- rachel: yes. pete: -- supposed to be kind of reputable but the total
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left-wing think tank? will: encouraged consumption. pete: the tufts food compass meeting measures food on whether experfects encourage, moderate or -- experts encourage, moderate or minimize -- that's a real graphic? rachel: minimized consumption of eggs and and meat. pete: haley processed lucky charms got to score of 60 while steak only got a 33. that -- have they just inverted the food pyramid? rachel: no, no, i think -- will: it's a problem, dude. pete: that's not what the food pyramid if looks like. will: this was off air before the bone broth segment which you loved so much -- [laughter] no, and i told you? 's happened with our food over the last 50 years, and part of it is this what can a doodle food -- whack a doodle food pyramid. rachel: this is the problem with so many government studies and so many of these studies done by universities and all the government money that goes into
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universities, i bet that general mills probably sponsored that. pete: they probably did. rachel: it is absolutely ridiculous. pete: it's the also anti-meat. rachel: part of the whole climate thing as well to make you think that eating lucky charms is better for you than steak. i'm not boeing to lie, i do like the marshmallows, they're amazing. will: it was a a taste pyramid. pete: there are serious people somewhere saying you should eat more lucky charms instead of steak and eggs? rachel: yeah. yeah. there's the people that a want you to not eat -- pete: are they just rationalizing our poor choices? rachel: the lucky charms that is all marshmallows -- pete: are hay just trying to help people rationalize their poor choices? rah ray it's all a cycle. but you're right, will, the culprit for so many of our physical and health ills are -- will: there's a lot of things
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going on there. pete: rachel: it's in our food and, by the way, steak is good for you. you have to balance everything, but steak and eggs, good for you with. pete: i hear it all the time. rachel: coming up, family of an american -- will: [inaudible] if. rachel: that's right. an american businessman who was hocked up overseas -- can locked up overseas is slamming the biden administration claiming their case was abandoned. we're going to talk to that family next. will: plus, bill de blasio, beto o'rourke, hillary clinton, just a few progressives that could be teaching your college kid. pete and i go off the wall on that coming up. ♪ ♪ they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. contestants ready? go! only pay for what you need. jingle: liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. this is what real food looks like fresh real meat and veggies.
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♪ rachel: the family of an american imprisonedded in the united arab emirates, the the uae, for the past 15 years, says the u.s. abandoned him for breathny greiner. -- brittney griner. he was abducted from a business meeting in 2008 and charged with fraud. then he was sentenced to 53 years in yale. -- jail. his family calls the charges false, politically motivated, and they are begging to get help to get him freed as his health is deteriorating. joining us now is zack shahin,
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his son and daughter-in-law aida along with a british activist who met zack in prison, martin. thank you. i'll start with you, tell us about case and i why you think the uae imprisoned him. why did they arrest him? >> i'm sorry, were you asking me that? rachel: yes. why was he arrested? in the first place? >> so i believe when the former ruler passed away in 2006 and a power change happened with the younger brother taking over as the president of the united arab emirates, my dad was used as a scapegoat for the shift in power. and then also when the economic disaster happened and everything crashed in 2008, they needed somebody to blame it on, and they pinned some things on my dad. rachel: aida, what do we mow
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about, because i guess there's a law called the levinson act that you can get help from our government. you put in that request as a family, and it was denied in five days. why has our government denied help to get him released? >> i demand answers from the lawmakers. actually, only one criterion out of eleven are requested and ordered to grant the levinson in order to be considered, i mean, wrongfully detained american. we have seven criteria out of the eleven, and we did not get any form of response. we just got ignorance. in fact, we're getting neglect and ignorance from the state department, from the biden administration. this complete silence, we are demanding answers. why was he denied? i mean, president biden promised to take care of wrongfully detained americans. he is very much wrongfully detained. i mean, we don't want to talk here about how innocent he is,
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because he is, you know? it took them the nine and a half years to convict him. they had nothing against him. the big four auditing firms went through his accounts. there was nothing, no privileges, nothing. we're not here to talk about his innocence. he is a sick man. he's been in the hospital for the last three months. i'm appealing to president biden, to secretary of state, to all the lawmakers, governor abbott in texas, please, pick up the phone, talk to our friends in the uae. they brokered the deal for griner. heavy got zack. zack is dying in the hospital. send him over to the states, to the medical center in houston, his hometown. that's all i'm appealing to, just, you know, that's all i can say. i mean, he's in very poor health. we're not here to discuss his innocence. if anyone is interested, go to bring zack home.com. that's his web site. he is an innocent man, but we're
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talking about his health now. rachel: martin, speaking of his health, you were perhaps last person that we know of who can speak to what you saw. you saw him in prison. how was he -- what did you see? what were the conditions? >> zack's kept in terrible conditions. he's currently in hospital because parts of his body were rotting, sores and ulcers which wouldn't heal, so they took him to hospital to have them cut away and returned to the prison within 24 hours of the first surgery. he then was taken back to an emergency department where they cut away more flesh. he's remained in hospital now for almost three month, hay can't stop the bleeding on the wounds from weeping, and he's now starting to suffer from kidney and liver failures. he's had pneumonia. i mean, the man is 58, in terrible health. probably his physical health is the equivalent of someone 10 or 20 years older than him.
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he's lived with these conditions for 15 years. he never goes outside, he never has access to fresh air. i was there for 10 months, never had to change -- well, you don't have any bedding. i had a dirty blanket to sleep under for 10 months, and i lost 35 key lows. i -- key -- kilos. it's disgusting, the conditions and squalor that he lives in. the nutrition is nonexistent, and zack's, zack is dying. i mean, there -- i don't know how much longer he'll last. his mental health is failing. he's tried to take his own life several times recently, his conditions are so harsh. he's a wonderful, amazing place full of five star hotels, but down the road there is a hell that you can't imagine, and it's the hard to believe it's the same city-state. and nobody's interested, nobody wants to listen. human rights watch have investigated the case.
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i handed them the documents signed by a director at human rights watch listing all of the abuses -- dan foley -- [inaudible] everybody has approached the state department. i walked 2,000 miles last year from houston, texas, to hand in -- application with the support of bill browder, and the sate department wasn't interested. it took me 65 days. i was on fox news -- rachel: yeah. i want to just give one last word to rami, really quickly i'm running out of time. how did it feel to see brittney griner released and your father who is really on the verge of dying will and has spent so long in prison? >> i feel like the fact that the united arab emirates helped broker the deal for her release was kind of a slap in the face to my family and i. they gave my power's case no, not an ounce of respect. if -- i feel like his name
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should have been mentioned during those discussions. my dad's been sick and dying for the last three and a half months all while i was submitting mercy pleas to the ruler of the uae for my dad's relief lease, and they -- release, and they delayed us left and right, and they completely ignored us in the end. and now it's been 15 years. i'm 30 years old. my dad went in when i was 14, and i'm just asking for him to come back here, get proper medical treatment and live out whatever days he has left in the u.s. he's been abandoned by the biden administration as well as the state department. nobody has answered our plea for help, and then seeing brittney griner get all the attention, maybe we're not focused enough. we're just an ordinary american family, and they completely ignored us. rachel: yeah. an abandoned american who, sadly in the eyes of this administration, doesn't fit the ideological boxes that they require to give their full attention to it. we're going to be praying for
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your father, for your family. we hope that this interview helps to bring some attention among lawmakers and is brings him home. he belongs many america. thank you so much for joining us this morning. >> thank you. >> thank you for having us. rachel: god bless. coming up, the biden administration on defense as more document drama rocks the white house. so will biden face consequences? retired marine bomb tech joey jones says if he took home a single piece of paper from explosive schools, he'd be punished in a heartbeat. were driving when they got a crack in their windshield. [smash] >> dad: it's okay. pull over. >> tech: he wouldn't take his car just anywhere... ♪ pop rock music ♪ >> tech: ...so he brought it to safelite. we replaced the windshield and recalibrated their car's advanced safety system, so features like automatic emergency braking will work properly. >> tech: alright, all finished. >> dad: wow, that's great. thanks. >> tech: stay safe with safelite. schedule now.
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documents home? say a marine corps bomb technician, for example. let's ask fox news contributor, joey jones, who did that very job. joey, you can't help but look at it through that lens. imagine if you brought just some of your classified homework home. >> yeah. listen, pete, i don't expect the president of the united states to be the held accountable. we've seen time and time again for generations that they play by different rules. maybe you could ask richard nixon what it means to be held accountable from time to time, but not president biden. we don't expect that. but what we do expect is some honest, a little bit of integrity here when talking about what's happened and what would happen to somebody else. so the american people can take that in consideration when they get ready to vote in about two and a half years. so here's the deal, man, i was many eod school down in florida for ten and a half months. the entire time i was there, i was exposed to every single bit of information i was exposed to was classified top secret or
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lower, but all classified. and if i brought one piece of information, one sentence written down on a notebook home, that was a violation of a security protocol that would get me kicked out of that class, kicked out of that school, it would revoke my security clearance, possibly kicked out of the marine corps and eventually ruin my career as i knew it. and the reason that's important is at 24 years old, i couldn't bring information home for the specific purpose of helping me study so that i wouldn't die when i became a bomb tech. that's how important this protocol was. it wasn't about taking it home for malicious intent or share with somebody else, it was for my own needs to try to stay alive. but it was that important that my own life was worth risking over this information. but the president of the united states or a vice president actually can take home boxes, it looks like, of stuff, put it in his garage and say what's the big deal, man? my corps event was there -- corvette was there, and the american people are supposed to turn the eye? what really bothers me is people
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in the media, some on this network who want to act like this is no big deal? let me tell you something, the only reason you get to act is that's no big deal and, more importantly, my peers that don't have my platform risk their lives every day playing by these rules. go out and do a job that could kill you today but still the playing by these rules. and if those 24-year-olds, why mt. world can't a 60-something vice president do it? pete: exactly right. the double standard is play tax, and it's going to get worse as we learn who might have had access to it. hunter biden lived there, how many years they were actually stored, it's sheer recklessness. [laughter] >> if i had someone like hunter biden living with me, i'd be kicked out of the marine corps -- pete: that's true. >> too much cocaine and drugs. pete: we had the wife of a navy lieutenant on earlier, her
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husband's been in jail in japan for six month, has a three-year sentence. here's what she said about what's happening to him and what's happening still. listen. >> we went hiking as a family up mount few iffy, and as -- fuji, and as we were driving down the mountain, he was mid-conversation with my daughter and he just blacked out. and my daughter tried to wake him. it did not work. we were many a car accident. that did not wake him at all. he was convicted of negligent driving resulting in death or injury, but a medical emergency like a heart attack, a stroke, a seizure, that is not a crime in america, and it is also not a crime in japan. it's unimaginable. you dedicate a decade of your life to serving your country, and they've abandoned my husband. pete: joey, it was a tragic accident. he's still in jail. they feel like the dod turned their backs on him. japan's an ally. what should be done here?
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>> yeah, talk about feeling abandoned, we can't get people to enlist into the military, and then we have stories like this every single day. you know, maybe if have just went to russia and did some drugs, it would be a different story, i don't know. i don't think they had the opportunity to present their case to that court to show his medical emergency, so medical testimony was not allowed in. and that enough, that alone is enough for the president to step in. and let me tell you, our relationship with japan, boots on the ground relationship is very tenuous. we have japanese protesting all the time that we're there, and we should really reevaluate there. pete: yeah. there are sensitivities there, but then there's having the back of a guy who should not be this prison, no doubt. >> if we're going to provide that their military for them, they can the send him home. that's what i see. pete: and i see that pin, congratulations on your dogs.
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>> two in a row. pete: take care. you got it. coming up, they say those who can't do, teach. will and i go off the wall next as some payments progressives take jobs -- famous progressives take jobs teaching your college kids. we'll bring it to you. ♪ don't know much about science book, don't know much about the french i took ♪ 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.
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give up on myself and become a teacher because those that can't do, teach. [laughter] pete: it's not just dewey finn from school of rock who's turning to teaching. so are many failed democrat politicians. will: let's go off the wall to see who might be your child's next professor coming semester. this is not a shot at teachers -- [laughter] pete: no, it isn't. will: this is to everyone who thinks they can be a teacher, how about that? pete: they failed at their day job of being a politician, they have no discernible skills otherwise, so they attempt to teach kids how to fail themselves, and this is not the teachers that teach you, like, math and stuff like that. here's one of them. here's hillary clinton. >> the fact is we had four dead americans. was it because of a protest or because of guys out for a walk one night that decided they'd go kill some americans? what difference at this point does it make?
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>> what do you always carry with you? >> hot sauce. [laughter] >> realliesome. >> yes. >> i want you to know, people are going to say, okay, she -- black people. [laughter] >> okay. is it working? >> are you to karaoke? if. ♪ i am a champion, and you're gonna hear me roar ♪ [laughter] will: 0% chance there's hot sauce in her purse. pete: she will teach a sub course on pandering, maybe on abandoning u.s. ambassadors in benghazi. she'll be doing that at columbia university, the school of international and political affairs where bill clinton used to be the chair. will: the funny thing is, pete, the truth is i don't have a big problem with hillary clinton or any oh big democratic politicians that we're about to
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name teaching at universities if it were balanced out by the students being able to hear another point of view as well. pete: good point. will: you and i both know if, say, i don't know, george w. bush or donald trump were offered a teaching position to sort of be with paired with hillary clinton's course, there'd be a massive protest at columbia -- pete: not allowed. not even if you worked for donald trump, by the way, which brings us to the next individual, bill de blasio. the famed former mayor of this town -- will: i do mind this one. what canned he possibly teach us? -- what could he possibly teach us? pete: here's what he taught new york city, or a portion of it, when he was mayor. watch. >> you say free fries when you get vaccinated? i got vaccinated. you're saying i could get this? these delicious fries? mpm. mmm. vaccination. i've got to make sure there's social distancing and limits on how many people can be in each
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subway car and in each bus. not always the chance to help everyone all the time in terms of their transportation needs. people are going to have to improvise, and i believe they will. [speaking spanish] will: mmm, vaccination. pete: yum. he will be a visiting fellow at the institute of politics at harvard's kennedy school of government. this is where i sent my degree can back, by the way, the harvard school of government. they can't -- if you worked for trump, you can't be a visiting fellow at the institute. will: is that right? pete: i tried, and there was absolute rebellion. that's the double standard. will: totally -- pete: like, you read the press release on kennedy's school, oh, his handling of covid, oh, his handling of education, oh, his handling of crime and homelessness, it's how to fail as a mayor. will: the reason we're talking
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about this is because your newest professor out there in the land is a guy we've been asking the question about lately, what will he do next? he failed at running for president, at running for senator, at running for governor. he failed at all those things, so he gets a teaching gill. pete: let's -- gig. pete: let's go to bait toe -- beto and get a reminder of his prowes on the campaign trail the. >> hell, yes, we're going to take your ak-47 -- [laughter] [cheers and applause] ♪ thick in the hips, come get in my car ♪ [cheers and applause] will: university of chicago, congratulations. pete: he will be teaching the young children threats to
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democracy -- will: of course. we know that's a place holder, a bucket he can pour anything he wants into. president president this is the exact definition of someone who failed at everything, never had a real job and is now winning to profess his wisdom. wail. will: for what it's worth, i asked about republican politicians, any of those? not really. pete: well, in honor of beto, you showed your skateboarding skills the other day. i figured you should skateboard us out to the next segment. make it look good. oh, look at that. uh-huh. will: rachel and rick, over to you guys where i think we're making tortillas. rick: look at that. will: look at, that's skills. rick: that's some serious behind the scenes fox and friends stuff right there. rachel: he's skateboarding right over to the mexican food. rick: yesterday, rachel was,
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like, what do you think, corp. or flour? gotta be corn. somehow it turned into an electric versus gas can thing that i want no part of -- [laughter] pete: america has learned what a great cook you are. rick: well, we'll see here. rachel: look at this. now, you guys have to tell me whether you're now a corn tortilla person. will: i do. these look good, rick. rachel: this is rick's salsa that he made himself. will: oh, my gosh, rick. seriously -- pete: really good. rick: answer? will: rick, these a awesome -- are awesome. reduction inning if they're good, they're great. the. pete: you made these tortillas? raich rick rick yeah, but i bought the dough. rachel: the mats saw is made same day -- [inaudible conversations]
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[laughter] pete: rick, you have solved the debate. rachel: it's so good. pete: you are a professional. rick look at that. that close-up -- rachel: i know. it tastes even better than it looks. bravo, ricky. bravo. will: more "fox & friends" -- ♪ ♪ my name is wendy, i'm 51 years old, and i'm a hospital administrator. when i talk to patients you can just see from here up when you're wearing a mask. and i have noticed those lines beginning to really become not so much moderate but more severe. d i i'm still wendy and i got botox® cosmetic. and i'm really happy with the results because they're very subtle, prow on the campaign trail. but. botox® cosmetic is fda approved, to temporarily make frown lines, crow's feet and forehead lines look better. the effects of botox® cosmetic may spread hours to weeks after injection causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away, as difficulty swallowing,
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will: a new form of quitting. gen-z workers proudly going viral with the growing trend of leaving their jobs without two weeks' notice. but not all think it's the right way to go. campus reform correspondent and penn state student call lay -- the cal lay are joins us now. have you seen this in our own personal life or only through the lens of a tiktok trend? >> i've seen this mostly on social media. i'm not going to say this happens all the time in real life, but the problem with social media when things go viral, it just snowballs, and more and more people are encouraged to do it. will: i mean, employers do check references, you know in they go to social media as well. how do these kids think this isn't going to be something that ends up hurting them in the long run? >> one of the most interesting
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phenomenons with my generation is that everything needs to be posted, and this is definitely going to be one of those trends that comes to bite an entire generation in the back given just a few years, just like you say, because a lot of bosses do check social media. there is some kind of backlash, maybe this trend will start. then again, no one on tiktok is going to champion the negative things that happened to them because of what hay do, they're only going to talk about the positive things and look at me, i just got out of my job in a disrespectful manner. will: what's behind it? why do kids feel the need to quit without two weeks' notice? >> okay, is so if i had to boil it down to two things, i would say social media, instagram, tiktok, or for people who do end up going into higher education, universities. as reported by campus reform, schools like stanford justs a few weeks ago released a list of words that college students should be offended at, and of those words were, like, american
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and hispanic. and just teaches my generation how to be victims and does not prepare us for the workplace or the work force. will: i will say, kale, we talked about earlier in the show and a9 -- a lot of times the boss says good-bye anyoneway when you give your two weeks' notice, but the respectful thing is to give them option of two weeks. you're right, victimhood elevated, respect lost are. >> absolutely. absolutely. so it's more than just being respectful, it's being respectful to people who are not respectful to you. most of the people who are on tiktok are are complaining about these terrible bosses, but at the end of the day two wrongs do not make a right. go talk to somebody and figure it out. will: really, really good perspective, kale. thank you so much for being with us. >> thank you. will: coming up, even more classified documents found in the possession of joe biden. former director of national intelligence john ratcliffe joins us live at the top of the hour. ♪ the tide is high but i'm
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♪ happy dance. >> i guess it's okay. everybody is like like will, ths so good. it doesn't look good, tv wise. >> it's good tv. rachel: were you a little skater when you were in high school? a little bit? >> middle school. rachel: is that your band? >> i still like a good pair of vans, a good pair of shoes, made in america, i think, one time in america. rachel:
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