Skip to main content

tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  January 21, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PST

3:00 am
effort to turn what happened in afghanistan and the exit into art so americans don't forget the sacrifices of our troops there go last out play.com. most of the actors veterans still tickets available for show in chicago this weekend. >> judge jeanine: in chicago, good to know. >> jessica: "special report" is not up next. have a ♪ ♪ 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 ♪
3:01 am
♪ o'er the ramparts we watched ♪ ♪ were so gallantly streaming ♪ ♪ and the rockets' red glare ♪ ♪ the bombs bursting in air ♪ ♪ gave proof through the night ♪ ♪ that our flag was still there ♪ ♪ o say does that star spangled banner yet wave ♪ ♪ o'er the land of the free ♪ ♪ and the home of the brave ♪
3:02 am
[cheers and applause] will: good morning, welcome to "fox and friends". thank you for sending those in 2 friends@foxnews.com. good morning. can you see me? rachel: is this going to be a topic of the day? will: we didn't get 20 seconds into the show. rachel: i was told producers thought i looked like a teacher. i will be a teacher to both of you today. here is the deal. my contacts did not come in. they don't account for my astigmatism. pete: these are real glasses. rachel: if you watch my podcast you would see them. will: let's see what you have
3:03 am
here. rachel: i am blind as a bat, let me see them on. you look like -- will: it is making me dizzy. rachel: is kind of clark kent but too tortoiseshell for that. pete: let's read the teleprompter. rachel: we can't. pete: nothing. rachel: by the way -- pete: i have a cut on my hand because i did some outdoor work landscaping. getting the land ready, working the land. i was working the land but watching the show yesterday and saw you in washington for a very important event.
3:04 am
rachel: before i worked for fox i would go with my family, went many years, i went last year but it was remarkable because last year i couldn't imagine that we would be living in a post-roe versus wade arrow, our kids are growing up in that era. did you see the none and that young woman with downs, they are twin sisters, they are twin sisters and it was awesome. i met so many wonderful people, those are all abortion survivors, the women you are looking at. everyone was celebrating. the crowds were thinner than last year and that's a problem for the movement because yes, the battle of the court has been won at the supreme court but now it goes to the states and there was some debate, people said there's not enough people understanding the battle continues, we need to keep
3:05 am
fighting, others said the reason, there's a lot of marches at the state level right now. people are getting that it is at the state. the march for the last 50 years and at the supreme court, this year the march ended in front of the us capital. take a look at the sights and sounds from yesterday at the march for life. >> i have a daughter who has down syndrome and so do y. pre-birth diagnosis. we had have a lot of encouragement to terminate the pregnancy from doctors and a counselor and we felt strongly that we didn't want to and we were said that we were encouraged that way. she is the light of our lives. i hate to think that other people would be scared and grieving and cave to that pressure.
3:06 am
>> i had a miscarriage and then got pregnant with my son and, sorry, i had some complications, and they said it is best you abort your child for you and your child, no. the goal is to make it unthinkable. it was unthinkable, there's no chance. >> both of those women had diagnoses, one for down sent another for some other unknown complication, both pressured by their doctors to have abortions, both did not and they recounted their stories to me. i met an ob/gyn, so important to have our pro-life ob/gyn when you are in that situation who views you and your baby as the patients. it was a great event. pete: it is going to the states which i heard from a friend in minnesota who said they are about to pass the most pro-abortion expansion, it comes down to state legislature.
3:07 am
rachel: in michigan they have the most radical pro-choice legislation that put into the constitution can you can't get that you have to fight at the state level in the culture of life so people, whether it is life in the womb off way to the end, euthanasia is on the rise but also encouraging big families not seeing fertility is a curse and babies as burdens, all of this stuff is different in our culture, birth rates are plummeting among young people and that is our fault as a culture. pete: this issue returns to democracy. it becomes more personal. i like that you bring up the most important voice, one of the most important voices in the room is in the room, it is the doctor and you are right, it is a powerful voice that gives someone license or encouragement in one direction
3:08 am
or another. i never thought to ask that in the past. at the beginning of that process when you're talking to and ob/gyn, what is your outlook on life. rachel: one of their biggest concerns in this association is the politicization in terms in this case pro-abortion in the medical schools and the young ob/gyn medical students and residents who show a pro-life point of view are getting persecuted, denied licenseships. there's a lot of things that they are working on. pete: another news dump that we have come to expect, yet another record, not a record you want to achieve. in december of 2022, the third month of fiscal year 2023 for the federal government, we set another record for encounters at the southern border, 251,487 encounters in december of that month, 40% higher than the
3:09 am
previous year. will: what do you do with that number? that could be an annual number. that is a month, 250,000, these numbers are so jumbled you lose track of what they mean and how substantial they are. you have been down at the border, we all have at times, staggering numbers that were almost inconceivable few years ago. here is another thing that seems almost inconceivable, post 9/11, the idea that we would know that people crossing the southern border possibly with ill intent were terrorists. look at the terror watch list arrest at the southern border. we are on track to break the record from 2022 as well, 38 so far in one quarter this year, these are the ones we know about that we encounter at the southern border on the terrorist watch list. pete: three months into fiscal 2023, so far 38, a little over 12 months. extrapolate that to 12 months,
3:10 am
you are looking at the number for fiscal year 2023, total been north of one hundred 40 where last year it was 98 of known terrorists. rachel: in 2019 it was 0. 0. again, these are people who tell you they are in office to protect you, to take care of this country. those numbers should tell you everything you need to know. hard to extrapolate on the number, 250 a month, that is like in scottsdale, arizona, every single month which a large city. i'm from arizona. that's a large city. this is happening, no matter what they tell you, that it is not happening, those numbers don't lie. will: it is your fault, this is to the biden administration is blaming for this abject open borders crisis, they say to fox news digital of course the
3:11 am
numbers will be higher when you are not elected, when republican elected officials like smugglers falsely proclaim the border is open, because of a court order to lift title 42. if you point out the obvious, you are the reason. >> the biggest propaganda shell game one can imagine. you are telling the truth, and therefore it is your fault and the truth according to the biden administration is this lie. it has all been a big success. watch. >> president biden: we are off to a pretty good start. >> i think we are off to a great start. >> president biden: hard to believe it's two years. >> i wish people could see what i see, what you have singularly done based on who you are. you have been an incredible leader these last two years. it is groundbreaking. we've got momentum.
3:12 am
>> they didn't know the cameras where there. impromptu. >> organic, natural conversation. pete: the love in that room, just happening with the camera there. >> what you see at the border is absolutely intentional, it is happening, it is happening in collusion with of the media because the media, if you are not watching fox news, you don't live in yuma, you're not in texas or in one of the city's where some of these migrants are ending up and you might not know it is happening, because there is a blackout on the other channels, they don't talk about it. when the president went down they did something they do in the third world countries, they cleaned up the area so he didn't have to see it. republicans are now calling secretary mayorkas into a hearing shortly, he is going to have to testify and it appears dhs has something to do with that cleanup, they will get to the bottom of that but that is
3:13 am
not what we are paying the federal government to do, to hide problems so our great leader doesn't see them. pete: she went to arizona with a shovel, she didn't go to the border. the borders are. i don't know what she is inaugurating with a shovel, something very important, we will have to find out but it wasn't what we are all thinking about. pete: i know the genre. will: some sort of green energy. pete: yes. will: i have no idea. rachel: zillions of dollars have been given -- will: groundbreaking of green energy. rachel: that's the problem in his owner, green energy. will: police capturing one of the 5 inmates who escaped from a missouri jail, authorities taking michael wilkins into custody days after he was
3:14 am
spotted drinking water at a bar. surveillance footage shows the group running from a detention center and speeding through the gates in a stolen car. the manhunt for the remaining four is ongoing, three of them are convicted sex offenders. alec baldwin spotted for the first time since involuntary manslaughter charges were announced in a deadly rust movie set shooting. the actor is seen yesterday walking into an office building in manhattan, special prosecutor appointed by new mexico da speaking about baldwin's claims that he did not pull the trigger. >> not sure why he was giving a lot of statements, why he made that comment. it is inconsistent with what the fbi report found, it is a prior inconsistent statement. he is coming out with lots of different stories of why this occurred. will: he could face 6.
3:15 am
5 years behind bars. the division one of the playoffs begin today. this young philadelphia eagles fan is going to tonight's game against the giants for free. after doing a good deed the 12-year-old got two free tickets as a thank you for picking up a woman's keys that she lost during a rainstorm. coverage of the eagles/giants divisional playoff game starts at 7:30 eastern on fox. fans between 12 or lawrence and jaguars taking on the kansas city chief's. bills preparing for their big game against the bengals in buffalo, that comes weeks after the regular-season game was canceled after damar hamlin suffered a cardiac arrest. coverage starting at 6:00 pm eastern time on fox. those are your headlines.
3:16 am
pete: you know what the glitch in that matrix is? rookie quarterback. will: you hope he wakes up, comes back to reality, turns back into a pumpkin. >> if he falls over, their defense -- your defense. >> i don't know anything about this topic but i will say this. maybe it is controversial but i feel bad for alec baldwin. i don't think he intended to shoot that woman. will: i don't think you did either. will: we are going to talk about it later on the show. i have had similar -- are you supposed to know, but i will say this, i was talking to greg jarrett about this last night, fox legal analyst. it is not -- we are very familiar with guns. it is not a reasonable standard, how you handle a gun in the real world which you handle with care, these guys
3:17 am
onset go through specific training, they are supposed to. and specific protocols. rachel: there's someone in charge to make sure. will: everything was broken in this scenario. pete: how did a live round make its way onto the set. >> they were shooting beer cans. that doesn't mean alec was, don't know about that but there should not be live rounds. rachel: coming up, and american mom, maybe she's not so american, praises the communist party for helping co-parent her kids. we will take on that outrageous claim next. ♪
3:18 am
nope. keeping my eyes on the road is paying off with drivewise. bo-ring. get drivewise from allstate and save for avoiding mayhem like me. flu symptoms hit harder than the common cold. so it takes the right tool for the job... to keep it together. now there's new theraflu flu relief with a max strength fever fighting formula. the right tool for long lasting flu symptom relief. hot beats flu. every year we try to exercise more, to be more social, to just relax. and eating healthy every single meal? if only it was this easy for us.
3:19 am
for copd, ask your doctor about breztri. breztri gives you better breathing, symptom improvement, and helps prevent flare-ups. 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, problems urinating, vison changes, or eye pain occur. if you have copd ask your doctor about breztri.
3:20 am
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. pst. girl. you can do better. at least with your big-name wireless carrier. with xfinity mobile you can get unlimited for $30 per month on the nation's most reliable 5g network. they can even save you hundreds a year on your wireless bill over t-mobile, at&t, and verizon. wow. i can do better! -yes you can! i can do better, too! see how easy it is to
3:21 am
save hundreds a year on your wireless bill over t-mobile, verizon, and at&t. talk to our switch squad at your local xfinity store today. ♪ something stronger than i am used to
3:22 am
♪ will: you saw that? a comeback? will: he never left. pete: here is -- i have been talking about this. i did this, i minute specific kind of country. i have a playlist and haven't won you over yet. for people who like what i like, would call it a little more -- i don't know. you like new country. i'm not a snob. i love all country but i can't build out my new country playlist very well. what i know for sure like is morgan wolin, he's awesome, and eric church and i can't, on the new country, i need to find some others. >> i will send you a few thongs. songs. >> i love some songs but -- >> i'm more of a songhai than
3:23 am
an artist guy. once i find a bunch of songs from one person that i like -- i listen to a lot of radio. i let the radio tell me, much like our next topic. i let the radio tell me what is good and i don't try to go find what is good. rachel: heather k is letting the chinese government help her raise her children. she's a fashion designer, living in china for a while. she had to decide do i want my kids to go to the american ex-pat school or do i want them to learn mandarin and the ways of the chinese, she made the choice to send them to public school and what she noticed but liked was that her kids were becoming little communist robots and she liked that and she wrote an op-ed for the new york times. everyone should read it because
3:24 am
this is a real lesson that indoctrination works. when your culture becomes overrun by this you start to breathe it and be leave it like it is air. this is what happened to this woman. pete: china helped raise my american kids. our stringent government coparent made its present felt. the girls chinese can do gotten lecture us on how many hours our daughter should sleep, how they should eat, their optimal weight, they were on loan to us for evenings and weekends and delivered back to school. pete: what i take away from this is something of the hit home for me during the pandemic. there are a lot of people out there, i truly believe this, that find comfort, stability, security in being told what to do. they like being told what to do. if i have to sacrifice and
3:25 am
freedom, it is like a warm blanket for some people. she makes the argument the restrictions and guidance they put on her kids essentially took stuff off her plate. rachel: they restrict the amount of time kids are on social media and control the kind of social media they have access to. on tiktok, i like it a little bit but the point is it becomes a dangerous slippery slope and you sometimes give me a hard time. i always say everybody, 45 and up, we still know what freedom is like but everyone younger sort of took in as normal what happened during the pandemic. what i think is happening is not exclusive to young people. what you see here is little girls came back like little robots, read the article, you will understand, what the little girls would say when they come home from school but
3:26 am
the parents started to like it too and this is my fear, we think because we have a constitution and the bill of rights and this wonderful history of liberty in this country and our founding that everything will be fine, we will return to the liberty mindedness after this weird post obama post covid lack of liberty period we are living in right now. i believe that if you do enough of this anti-liberty stuff you actually change the psychology of the people and that is what i believe happened in this family. the whole family, covid restrictions, they couldn't see their family so they moved back to virginia and pined for their communist chinese overlords, as she talks about in this op-ed. pete: i need to read the whole op-ed but i basically agree with her and that every government is going to push a particular theory on kids. the question is what is the theory and in china they have a coherent system which i don't like at all, they teach it to
3:27 am
their kids. here, today, in america, we are teaching theories to our kids. it is antithetical to what we actually believe as parents and families. if we could get to the place where our government was reinforcing virtues and wisdom and truth the way we want, then great. instead we can't trust that outsourcing and we should be -- >> we should never trust the government, she starts the article off by saying when i got back to the states i was so surprised to hear people saying they don't want to coparent with the government. i don't want to coparent with the government. i don't. i want things at a very basic level, my family, my community dictates what is going to be in the schools and then go from there. pete: if you are -- government and society reinforced itself, what it actually believed in. that would be a nice thing but almost impossible to have. this is a topic we talk a lot
3:28 am
about on the next season of the miseducation of america, season 2 is coming out monday. we have alive summit in nashville, a lot of people involved in that film and this season is an eye-opener. it starts with a disclaimer that says viewer discretion is advised. what you are about to see this season is offensive for adults but is taught to kids every day because it is true. some of the stuff you watch, you go that is disgusting, but it is -- videos or curriculums that fourth-graders see and it will blow your mind, miseducation of america on fox nation. will: rachel: a new record set at the southern border with a quarter million encounters in december alone. we will talk to an arizona official on how the surge is contaminating farmers crops next. pete: a dad goes viral for
3:29 am
bowing out of his busy family group chat. was he right to mute the messages? we will talk about it coming up. ♪ oh. yeah, that's nice. can i use apple carplay to put some music on? sure, it's wireless. what's your buick's wi-fi password? it's buick envision. that's a really tight spot. i used to hate parallel parking. me too! the buick envision. built around you. all of you. get 3.9% apr for 5 years and no monthly payments for 90 days on buick envision models. sometimes you're so busy taking care of everyone else 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.
3:30 am
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. your brain is an amazing thing. but as you get older, it naturally begins to change, causing a lack of sharpness, or even trouble with recall. thankfully, the breakthrough in prevagen helps your brain and actually improves memory. the secret is an ingredient originally discovered... in jellyfish. in clinical trials, prevagen has been shown to improve short-term memory. prevagen. healthier brain. better life. (vo) if you have thyroid eye disease and things are a no go because you keep seeing double, or...your bloodshot eyes have you seeing red,
3:31 am
it might be time to discover another treatment option for thyroid eye disease, also known as t-e-d. to learn more, visit treatted.com that's “treat t-e-d dot com."
3:32 am
i have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. now, there's skyrizi. ♪things are getting clearer♪ ♪i feel free to bare my skin♪ ♪yeah, that's all me♪ ♪nothing and me go hand in hand♪ ♪nothing on my skin♪ ♪that's my new plan♪ ♪nothing is everything♪ achieve clearer skin with skyrizi. 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months. in another study, most people had 90% clearer skin, even at 4 years. and skyrizi is just 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses. ♪it's my moment, so i just gotta say♪ ♪nothing is everything♪ serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections
3:33 am
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. ♪nothing is everything♪ now's the time to ask your doctor about skyrizi, the number one dermatologist prescribed biologic. learn how abbvie could help you save. pete: december border encounters coming in, 251,000, the highest month ever recorded. farmers telling fox news their livelihoods are being threatened. >> this is not just the border community problem. this is a united states problem. i had 40 haitians living in the field for a week. >> whenever anybody enters our field we have to cordon that
3:34 am
out and flag it. we don't harvest that area. pete: jonathan lines joins us now. great to have you on the program. good morning to you. let's get some sense on the ground. we have the numbers. they are staggering, border encounters for the month of december. what is it like on the ground in arizona? >> it is a little bit overwhelming. our hospitals, our local 911, ngos, staggering to see the numbers continue to climb. we have a little bit of a pause the last couple weeks for bad weather but we anticipate those numbers to continue as they have been out over a thousand today. it is unprecedented to see this type of traffic and people coming from all over the world specifically in areas where the federal administration or washington has still shown to
3:35 am
act to keep the border secure. will: we talked about the impact on local communities. one of the things that is coming into focus is the effect it has on the food supply. this is a fascinating statistic, 90% of all leafy vegetables in the united states, grown in yuma county, what is the impact on those leafy vegetables? >> farmers, growers, harvesters had to take extraordinary measures to protect the product. there's undocumented entry into a field, farmers have to go back and test and as has been mentioned, cordon that area off, call it the arizona ag department and make sure all the protocols are being followed. it costs a lot more money in an
3:36 am
already expensive time for food supply. the border is directly as you can see in front of a lot of drone areas. we tell the federal government to step up. mayorkas was here last year, he failed to act, those gaps are open again, we are concerned, our growers are concerned, just because we are extremely focused on the food security issue, we have the best protocols in the nation. that is something i want to emphasize and every time there is undocumented entry in the field they go to extraordinary measures to make sure nothing is contaminated. will: it is farmers putting other things onto the plate.
3:37 am
thank you for getting up early in arizona and letting us know what is happening. it is not just a problem in yuma but everywhere across the country. coming up, thousands gathered for the fiftieth annual march for life, first since roe versus wade was overturned. we will speak with a pro life father his biological mother gave him a chance to live, now he has two adopted kids himself. next.
3:38 am
3:39 am
3:40 am
3:41 am
>> i really believe all life is precious. >> it is not about being legal or illegal, it is i want abortion to be unthinkable. >> i'm here to pray for all the unborn babies. >> as long as it is in the minds of some women, we will march and fight. >> pro-life advocates gathering across the national mall for the fiftieth annual march for life for the first time since roe versus wade was overturned. it was a celebration. the pro life movement marching with optimism while setting new goals as they turn their focus to congress. joining us, someone with a close connection to the issue being given up for adoption and adopting two kids, the cofounder of radiance foundation, welcome to the show. i should note it is not just
3:42 am
that you were adopted, you were the product of rape, adopted at 6 weeks old. how that has impacted your views on life and tell me more about that. >> good to be with you. people ask what makes you pro-life? my very beginnings, my birth mom gave me life and experienced rape but she didn't make me a victim of the violence of abortion. i grew up in a loving family of 15, white, black, american, stable, and we were loved like crazy. being a father married to my favorite person on the planet we have four amazing kids, two were adopted, all four from -- loved like crazy. it is great to celebrate this huge victory of row being overturned. rachel: i look at your parents? who are they? they sound amazing.
3:43 am
we talk about roe versus wade overturned, this amazing victory. now it goes to the legislator, the u.s. congress and on the state level, what looks like, the movement talks about making abortion unthinkable and all kinds of things from birth all the way to euthanasia and end of life issues. what looks like a victory for you? >> victories every single day, saving an unborn child, saving a woman from being excluded by the abortion industry, victory looks like 3,000 pregnancy centers across the country that care for mother and child and the father. the 450 maternity homes across the country, adoption agencies, single mom, sickle parent ministries, it looks amazing because people pouring out love and compassion to those in need, facing the unplanned. these things are not insurmountable. the pro-life movement is comprised of people who have been where those pregnancies
3:44 am
are. will: the pro-choice movement tells women you can't do that and the pro-life movement says these circumstances are difficult, you can do this, we are going to help you do this and that needs to happen at the state level, more resources but also the private sector, helping your neighbor who is in need. i've been thinking of building this culture of life and what does that look like to me? i think i would love to get your thoughts on this. it is about revaluing fertility, revaluing children, motherhood and families. we are living in an era where the idea of having a family, young people, no longer something they aspire to, we see birth rates crashing. >> when you're told the world is going to end, by aoc, we are all doomed, puts this nihilistic mindset in people's
3:45 am
heads and parts and it is ridiculous. human life is precious and something to celebrate. families are a blessing, motherhood is a blessing. we live in a day they are trying to erase women and pretend motherhood is a disease. we love life and we will do everything to elevate it. rachel: your organization radiates hope like the pro-life movement, thanks for joining us this morning. pete: that is an impressive dude, great guy. we begin our headlines in new york city where a man is dead after police say an ex-con pushed him onto the subway tracks in manhattan. the nypd says the deadly shove happened in an argument between the suspected victim who died of a head injury, police say the suspect who faces manslaughter charges has a history of mental health charges, he was released from prison last year after serving
3:46 am
7 years for attempted robbery. elon musk taking the stand in a class-action suit over a controversial tweet that tesla shareholders say cost the millions. the billionaire tweeted, quote, i am considering tesla private at $420, funding secured. yesterday musk said just because i tweet something does not mean people will believe it or will act accordingly. he added his messages are limited by twitter's character count. musk will resume his testimony on monday. a no-nonsense dad going viral over his decision to bow out of his family's group chat. his daughter sharing his text on twitter. it says i can't keep up with the pressure of always having to lol or like or heart everyone's random thoughts, pics, and amusements.
3:47 am
for all future texts, i love them, laugh at them, or like them unless it is bad, then i dislike them. in perpetuity, i cannot live with this pressure, i am out. turns out the father, who is an i surgeon, was just bluffing. 's daughter says he is still part of the busy text chain. those are your headlines. rachel: i love this story. will: on group texts people have about out. pete: i just ghost them but people are tired of it showing up. but you have a thousand unread messages, so it doesn't matter. pete: the cannot stand my e-mail. will: how many does he have in his inbox? rachel: he is part of that generation the doesn't read their email. i am too. i will check mine. i bet mine is similar. will:-99. rachel: you are so a and all.
3:48 am
pete: let's ask rick how many emails he has? >> reporter: i am fully will on this. this week, i cleaned it up and it felt good but this week finally, got to do something about this. try it, you might like it. this is the outlook for the next three months, this comes out from noaa, above average chances of precipitation in the ohio river valley, a little dryer in the four corners. temperaturewise, a little cooler across the pacific northwest. chances of average whether -- weather across the country. up the eastern seaboard, things are looking warmer than average. that is what we will see today. enjoy the east coast today, tomorrow rain moves in. snow across the central plains. especially kansas.
3:49 am
pete: rachel has 187,000 unread messages. 187,000. rachel: in my defense, i have tween 9 kids. pete: only two of which can e-mail you. >> reporter: that is 10,000 per kid. rachel: if you need me, text me. or call me. pete: we are going to talk about that, stay with us. up next, actress octavia spencer said she felt more racism in liberal los angeles than her red home state. >> to be honest, i felt more racism when i first moved here than i ever had in alabama. pete: our friend rob smith on their eye-opening comparison. ♪
3:50 am
this is a leading healthcare system with five nationally ranked hospitals, including two world-renowned academic medical centers. in boston, where biotech innovates daily and our doctors teach at harvard medical school and the physicians doing the world-changing research are the ones providing care. ♪ there's only one mass general brigham. even if you like a house, lowball the first offer. the house whisperer! this house says use the realtor.com app to see three different estimates. also, don't take advice from people who don't know what they're talking about. realtor.com to each their home.
3:51 am
trying to control my asthma felt anything but normal. ♪ ♪ enough was enough. i talked to an asthma specialist and found out my severe asthma is driven by eosinophils, a type of asthma nucala can help control. now, fewer asthma attacks and less oral steroids that's my nunormal with nucala. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. nucala is not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. talk to your asthma specialist to see if once-monthly nucala may be right for you. and learn about savings at nucala.com there's more to your life than asthma. find your nunormal with nucala.
3:52 am
3:53 am
pete: academy award winner octavia spencer said she experienced more racism in los angeles than she did growing up in alabama.
3:54 am
>> i felt more racism when i first lived here than i ever had in alabama. pete: here to react is rob smith. great to have you here. explain this. isn't alabama supposed to be redneck racist, and la is so woke? >> reporter: it is preceded by the most inane inside hollywood liberal conversation you will ever hear in your life, but what this really does is speaks to how the left needs black people to be perpetual victims. you've got octavia spencer who won academy awards for acting and producing. instead of asking about her craft or the movies she produced were the industry, they talk about racism. it is this thing, the left needs black people to think racism is on the present and that's how they push the
3:55 am
agenda. you have a wealthy, famous, successful hollywood actors like octavia spencer talking about racism so she can signal to blacks no matter how good you do or how far you go in life that racism is a problem. >> is this because you are not defined by that? she shows up in la and that is who you are. >> it does speak to this liberal hypocrisy because she does talk in the podcast how in alabama, he thought she was going to go into how awful and racist alabama is, people pretty much know each other and interact with each other and that is something about the south that is so much more racist but when you look at it, you have more people of different calibers, backgrounds. pete: rob smith saved my credit card last night. i left it, my wife and i went to dinner, he saved it and brought it to me.
3:56 am
>> ruth chris steakhouse. it is incredible. pete: still had. it has been two years since a teenage girl participated in pfizer's vaccine trial, and today, her mother joins us in the next hour. so you only pay for what you need. contestants ready? go! only pay for what you need. jingle: liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. after advil. let's dive in. but, what about your back? it's fine. before advil. advil, dual action bites, pain, two ways. advil targets pain at the source. acetaminophen blocks, pain signals, advil, dual action. ever get a sign the universe is trying to tell you something? the clues are all around us! not that one. that's the one. at university of phoenix, you could earn your master's degree in less than a year for under $11k. learn more at phoenix.edu.
3:57 am
in one second, sara yes! will get a job offer somewhere sunnier. relocating in weeks. weeks? yeah, weeks. gotta sell the house. don't worry, sell to opendoor, and move on your schedule. yes! request a cash offer at opendoor.com
3:58 am
3:59 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 or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia,
4:00 am
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. pete: that is lincoln philadelphia field, that is philadelphia -- lincoln financial field and that's philadelphia and the site of today's game of the eagles versus the giants. it's on fox and it'll be a good game. i'm sad my team is not there, but if your team is there, good for you. 7:30 tonight on fox.

141 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on