tv FOX and Friends FOX News January 25, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PST
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♪ ♪ >> classified documents are on file. >> discovered it over vice president pence's indiana home. >> and sidestep questions with president biden's document scandal. >> i will refer you to the white house counsel's office. >> half of the country is suing the biden administration over border policy. speak what they say administration's parole offers 30,000 migrants per month. >> set for the four men's of the louisiana state student madison broke. according to them and they
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dropped off and she wandered into the street and struck by a car. >> young girls, be careful. >> catastrophic storms bettering southern u.s. with texas, louisiana, arkansas right in the path of destruction. >> an earthquake off of the coast of malibu. and 4.2 and 3.5. >> ticketmaster over the overall concern of tickets of taylor swift. >> several things we could have done better. ♪ ♪ >> ainsley: good morning. that is a live look at rhode island. a beautiful morning there in a beautiful morning here in new york city at 8:00 eastern
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time. so happy and honored to be filling in for ainsley this morning. joining you, steve and brian. >> brian: like waterworld? >> steve: that is the bay right there. so if they turned the camera around, you would see a lot of land. it is beautiful. >> brian: look, i don't see any land. if you were under water right now, pop your head up. >> if the claimant people get their way, there will be a lot of windmills. >> brian: and a lot of dead whales. >> dead whales, thank you. good morning on that note. >> steve: thank you for joining us, rachel great to have you. the white house to sidestep questions and the writer said sidestep but stonewalling president biden's classified document scandal and it is a scandal. all right.
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>> brian: mishandling's of secret materials grow, a batch of classified files at the former vice president's pentz's indiana home. >> rachel: that was self-reported jacqui heinrich joins us live from the white house, what is the latest? the latest revelation comes after the former vice president was on kudlow earlier this month and called president biden's handling of classified documents in proper and troubling. >> before we left the white house the attorneys on my staff went through all the documents to ensure that any documents that needed to be turned over to the national archives, including classified documents were turned over. >> after former vice president pence is revelation he discovered these documents at his home, he is getting some defense from the house oversight chairman who is probing president biden's documents.
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james comer said vice president transparency stands in contrast to the biden white house staff to withhold information from congress and the american people. congress pursuing any information might affect access to the biden home and hunter biden's former business dealings and improprieties they are pure of the white house is referring all questions to attorneys, refusing even to defend biden's visit to wilmington home with a special counsel to investigate. speak with the searched, president biden went to his house in wilmington. what was he doing? >> i will refer you to the white house counsel. >> but something related to this case? >> the white house would not way and whether there needs to be refresher course to handle classified material for staffers and former president jimmy carter reportedly found classified documents in his georgia home after he left office in 1981.
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today on capitol hill, the director of national intelligence avril haines will brief senators pure to we don't know right now if the damage assessment, the national security on this will come up, but people that have run the house side or waiting for those answers and waiting for damage assessment, waiting since january 10th for a response on that and they still haven't got one, guys. >> brian: is there a sense of relief that mike pence is in the middle of this? is there a sense of relief on the white house? >> if there is, they are not trying to give it away. >> steve: talk to their lawyers. >> they did refer all questions to the white house attorneys and karine jean-pierre yesterday said, "i refuse to comment on former elected officials." >> steve: you know, jacqui, we are watched on the briefing room, there are questions i can answer from the podium but just like before the document
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scandal, every answer was, "i can't talk about that because the hatch act." talk to the special counsel lawyers and stuff like that. the reporters will ask the questions until they get some answers. there are answers they can give. like peter asked yesterday, what was he thinking? the president himself has said and it was inadvertent, i feel bad about it but i have no regrets. until the white house starts answering the questions, you guys will continue to pound them. >> it is true. to your point, one of the questions peter asked was well phrased, you know, why did he go back to the wilmington house after the special counsel was appointed? what was he there for? someone might look at that and wonder if he was there for any reason that involved the documents. maybe he was doing something involved in it. don't speculate, but that is where people's minds might go. peter asked the question, i
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thought, rightly so and she refused to answer that one. even the president come obviously as a human being can go to his house, you know and had she said that, it might have raised fewer eyebrows than refer you to the counsel's office because, you know, if it is related to something involving this case, that means something different and the reason he went home. >> steve: when you say, "talk to the lawyers" it just means you are hiding something or guilty. >> it is frustrating for us, but we will keep trying. >> steve: thank you, jackie. >> brian: inadvertently boxed and transported documents to his house and he was unaware of them here they called archives and archives called the department of justice. they quickly put the documents into a safe and the department of justice was going to pick it up themselves and take it back. they have no idea, it could be a daily briefing from one day. but it's not something that even the vice president not that he
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wasn't told, but classified and nobody knows. >> rachel: her report and jacqui heinrich's report, she showed a clip of representative james comer's showing there is differences. one of the differences where these documents are and who had access to them. vice president pence has a daughter named charlotte who accesses his home and she writes children's books about work out. hunter biden has a crack problem and a habit and has dirty deals with russia, ukraine, and china. some of the documents appear to come from ukraine. we know he was auditioning to get on the burisma board and according to miranda devine had a lot of detailed information that only came from the classified documents. so, if hunter biden is giving 10% of everything he makes to the big guy's dad, this is a very serious crime from a potential crime. because his father would be
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compromised. >> steve: ultimately the fact that mike pence is involved in the calculus, there is zero chance that they will prosecute joe biden or donald trump. or mike pence. mornings will pop up because it can happen to mike pence, it can happen to anybody. meanwhile, the coverage of "the new york post," the bronx is turning. not too long ago up in the bronx, they had an american eagle. because they were being robbed 20 times a day, they left an area pure the worry is it will be a domino effect. and that gives people in the bronx fewer choices. so what did they do? these five men right here are referred to as the ambassador program. it is run by the people up there. these guys are getting paid $18 an hour. i wish they hadn't told people when they were working the store. i'm not going to say it, but they gave the exact hours.
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so, if you were an evildoer, you would know, "i can get them after 6:00 p.m. because that is when they go off duty." it is a sign of the times. things are so bad you can't rely on cops and you hire someone $18 an hour. >> rachel: it is not the only place my daughter has been reporting in a hispanic neighborhood where the mall vendors are getting robbed with guns pointed to their head. >> steve: and on the street? >> rachel: yes i'm on the streets and all stores closing in the neighborhood. they have also what they called the brown paredes, local residents who are patrolling the neighborhoods because the cops aren't doing their job h here there isn't enough people patrolling. what she learned was the most troubling to me was that the vendors and other people who have vendors are accepting protection from the latin king . this is the kind of stuff that happens in third world
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countries. they leave these countries and come to the united states and this is what they have. >> brian: like the mob training in new york. so they will work with the cops, but do they have guns? will they get prosecuted if something goes down? can they attack a guy if he is running away with the stuff? the problem is with the security guards and you will see them in cvs as they serve themselves but the guards are told not to do anything. my sense these guys are windbreakers who work wednesday through saturday 2:00 until 6:00, $18 an hour, so what you do, the prophet of march and is so small that what you do is pull together with other strip malls, the dry cleaner, the deli, the bodega, probably next to each other and now you have security for five hours. that is how desperate it is purer than new york city cops should be at $37,000 but they are at 34,000 and retiring rapidly and everybody is on overtime. the transit cops are way
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understaffed and everybody is working overtime. this whole thing is unsustainable. this will get were sent to list more people are hired and nobody is signing up for the academy. >> steve: who in their right mind would open up a shop these days? >> rachel: you wouldn't. >> steve: you would so everything online, good social media presence online because it is unsustainable. when you are robbed 20 times a day, like american eagle was, you pull out. a councilman from the bronx said this to "the new york post," "a few months ago american eagle -- no business can survive like this. we are concerned about a domino effect on other businesses, which are facing similar challenges. i spoke with employees who had been threatened with pepper spray and they are quitting. no one can work under the circumstances. this is a black eye for the city of new york that we cannot protect people who run." >> rachel: it is a black eye for those who want to defund the
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police. these are the results and the poor suffer the most here they are the ones least able to protect themselves. >> steve: mentioned the brown berets but in chicago reminisce of the red berets, the guardian angels started in this town, i believe back end '80s. we don't hear so much about them, but it is the same idea, people taking things into their own hands with the city doesn't step up here and speak to the wild west. >> brian: he text me because of the adam situation and they are thinking reconvening the guardian angels for the subway system right away. and right now cops are so strung out that it will get worse. >> rachel: who would want to be a cop under these conditions? >> brian: you will have to want to serve and protect. you don't do it for the money. >> steve: who wants to serve and protect or be a cop? >> rachel: four charged with the rape with madison brooks. >> brian: that community
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morning her death after she was killed. apparently she was hit and killed by a car following the alleged incident. todd piro has all the details, todd. >> realty of in the community shattered over the death of lsu student madison brooks. 18-year-old heavy on washington an unidentified 17-year-old charged with third degree rape. washington's bond set at $150,000. the other two suspects 28 and 18 charged with principle to third degree. and held on $50,000 bond and $75,000, the suspects have been placed on house arrest and are under a gag order. according to the police, the victim had been drinking at a bar and left with all four men in a car. after the alleged rape by two at the suspects they dropped her off a subdivision where she wandered into a street, was hit by a car and died. and the two suspects proves she
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was not too drunk to consent. "can you tell she was intoxicated? yes. to the point under the law you say your in a drunken stupor to the point you cannot lawfully give consent or answer questions? absolutely that was not the c case. the toxicology report reveals the blood alcohol content four times the legal limit. following the tragic death lsu releasing a statement: what happened to her, "pure evil and promising change for the louisiana office of alcohol and tobacco suspended the bar that they had the mic the suspects were at the might of death." >> brian: todd, thank you very much. >> rachel: thank you, todd. i just interviewed earlier in the show one of her friends from high school. here is what she had to say. >> she was amazing. she really loved me and the one thing that kindness and love is always the answer no matter what. i was going through the hardest
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times where i felt bullied and everything. and she showed me love in a way nobody else could peer that is how i want her to be remembered. i want her to be remembered for the girl she was. she was nice. >> rachel: such a sad story but lots of lessons for young women about drinking come about having your friends with you at all times, and about getting ino cars with people you don't know. know. obviously, this case has to be investigated. we don't know all of the details but based on her blood alcohol level, i'm sorry, it doesn't seem that possibly there could be consent. >> brian: 60 minutes after they our correlation because all go to. >> importantly another bad story here. listen to this, a 15-year-old girl sentenced 3-9 years in prison for stepping this 16-year-old cheerleader to death after a school celebration in mount vernon, new york last april. sheila green was attacked during april by her cheerleading rifle at a ceremony for the school
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state basketball championship. jeremy renner is being praised as a hero as we learn he was saving his grown nephew from being hit by a snowplow when the actor was pulled under and crushed, wow! that is according to nevada sheriff's office. the nephew was able to help jeremy renner until the responders to arrive and then airlifted to the hospital undergoing two surgeries being treated in the intensive care unit here now i fox news alert, an earthquake waking up residents across los angeles county early this morning. 44.2 magnitude quake off of the coast of malibu quickly followed by three aftershocks. no reports of injuries or structural damage so far. there was no tsunami threat either. the l.a. fire department is conducting a survey by aircraft and by c. vilma lucian on the west coast, that felt like a decent earthquake and it woke me up. the nfl is recruiting more fake
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name talent for the big game starting with the super bowl pregame country superstar chris stapleton to perform the national anthem and rmp start babyface's will sang "america, the beautiful." britney spears the most wanted guests to perform alongside rihanna during the halftime show and if you don't have tickets to the big game, the only way you can watch will be on fox, of course, those are your headlines. i get it and i see why people would want to see her perform again. >> steve: i would love to see her live at the super bowl. >> brian: didn't she have a meltdown in a restaurant? >> steve: that is why we want to see her live. >> britney is pe pete's favorite artist. she's the only one that matters to him. >> brian: has he ever spoken to her? >> no, but he wants to. >> steve: she has actually been on that show. >> rachel: has she really? >> steve: my daughter, mary,
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who has a larger probably 12 bids cut the mic because the biggest britney spears fan and fox nation and she did the interview during her tour in the mid-'90s. >> brian: jamie is a real superstar and i can't really say that. and on the special forces show. she had a couple of good days. >> steve: i will see if mary can interview her. carley, thank you very much. >> rachel: thank you, carley. >> brian: coming up the drug crisis and one little city is getting so bad that at capacity why seattle is seeing a number of people die from overdoses. >> rachel: plus tornadoes touching down in texas. we will be tracking all at the extreme weather that is hitting america southeast. stay with us. ♪ ♪ right here in our hometown of moulton, alabama. from our heirloom inspired sheets to our super absorbent bath towels, to our 100% cotton quilts.
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>> rachel: seattle is running out of space to store dead bodies. many of which a direct result of drug overdoses. the city has seen 81 fatal overdoses just this year after setting a record high of over 1,000 deaths last year. the majority of them related, of course, to fentanyl. here to react jason rantz. great to have you this morning. sad on such terrible news for your city. this is a city that decriminalize drugs. is this a policy, a law that residents of the city are now regretting? >> yeah, it's not even the city but the state. the democrats chose to allow the decriminalization of drugs to move forward and while at the exact same time, it is legal.
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even if you are caught smoking fentanyl in downtown seattle or in a park, you know you will not get arrested and you know you will not get persecuted. prosecuted. so they have enabled people to continue this addiction that ultimately will kill them. we are starting to hear from more and more people that say, "enough is enough." but it is still a legislative problem. democrats don't seem to want to change their tune just yet. there is a potential fix in the state legislature that has bipartisan support. but we have heard that before. generally, it doesn't go anywhere. so i'm not holding my breath just checked. >> rachel: it is so fascinating to me. obviously the loss of life is terrible. the family left in the wake of these addictions and the fentanyl abuse, but what fascinates me, i have been following you and you and i know each other for a long time. you have been reporting on the deprecation of this once beautiful city, you know,
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turning into some parts what looks like a zombie apocalypse. when will the residents have enough? i get that the politicians are committed to their woke, liberal ideology and their la la land to ideas about drug enforcement. but at what point does quality-of-life supersede that for those who put them in office? >> my experience has been the people who are either directly impacted or know someone who is directly impacted, that is what gets them to change their mind. because unfortunately, those politicians who are committed to wokeness, so are the voters. that is the unfortunate reality but when family takes their kid to a park and they see some drugged up, homeless addict just taking things over, then all of a sudden, they start to shift their thinking again. we actually now have the opportunity coming up in this next election for seattle city council and the vast majority of them have decided they are not running again. so we could go in one or two directions. we could actually fix things.
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we could actually put people in this council that choose to run who are reasonable, or it will get worse. >> rachel: , let's hope they choose wisely. jason rantz, always good to talk to you, think you. >> thanks rachel. >> rachel: california residents fling the state but they may not get out of paying taxes there. that is coming up. in a clinical study, once-daily rybelsus® significantly lowered a1c better than a leading branded pill. in the same study, people taking rybelsus® lost more weight. rybelsus® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes. don't take rybelsus® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2,
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♪ ♪ >> brian: we are back with fox weather alert. the southern u.s., tornadoes, and mr. louisiana and arkansas don't have power this morning. meanwhile, some areas in northern texas and southern oklahoma got as many as 3 inches of snow. chelsea joins us now from it a look at the damage. chelsea. >> hi, there, these are areas southeast of houston that sustained the most damage from a tornado that hit here shortly before 3:00 p.m. our time yesterday. now, taking a look at the damage this morning and the sun is out. we are seeing people out and
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about assessing and starting to clean up. we are here at the catholic church in deer park here are the devastation is incredible. you can see the roof has been torn off and amazingly, the little miracles, the statue of jesus still standing but the roof torn off of this large catholic church thrown into the yard along with tree damage. we are seeing the ac unit, plenty of the inside of the insulation being thrown out here. that is what we have been seen throughout the area. more than a dozen homes and businesses sustained major damage. so, we are here keeping an eye on the progress this morning as we see the cruise out trying to restore power to the thousands g from deer park, chelsea edwards, fox news. >> brian: mama, that is unbelievable, thanks, chelsea. let's check in with janice dean over my right shoulder with the rest of the fox were there weather. >> we are tracking for severe
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weather storms and southeast texas, incredible in louisiana have reported tornadoes not out of the woods just yet but this is a springlike pattern so the risk for damaging hail wins and tornado watch for the florida panhandle including panama city. we have a couple of tornado worn storms. you see the red polygons towards alabama and georgia. so that is going to be a line of thunderstorms that we will monitor throughout the morning. then on the backside of that, that is where we see the snow in parts of texas and oklahoma. moving into the ohio valley. that is the severe risk for parts of florida up to mid-atlantic. then we will check the snow storm as it pushes across the northeast and new york city, you could get less than an inch, but then the rain comes in and it will be washed away pretty quickly. so we will be tracking that appear there is the snow forecast. right on the cusp they are but parts of new england, certainly connecticut will get measurable snow. all right steve doocy come over
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to you, my friend. b3 a progressive democrat wants to push a wealth tax on california's very rich. people with global net worth of $1 billion would be taxed an additional 1.5% pure of the proposal would force those who recently moved out of california, you still have to pay california. how crazy is that! that could potentially put our next guest, abc managing partner who recently left california and joins us live from the lone star city. hey, joe. >> good morning steve. >> steve: okay, the whole idea of a wealth tax is you are a rich guy, a billionaire in you can afford it. but here is the thing committed so un-american because you have already paid taxes on the money you have made. >> it is fundamentally un-american. the french tried to do it and lost a bunch of billionaires. you will see this as more of a fiasco production going on in california. this is one of the most
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mismanaged dates there is a peer at the top 1% already pay about half of the taxes there. most people waste the money on crazy things with their friends, half a million dollars for a toilet, dollars for ngos, stuff like that in l.a. but the states a total mess what they are doing here is signaling something crazy. and they probably shouldn't compromise and do it some other way. it is really ridiculous. >> steve: you are right. if you have more than $50 million, you will get hit with 1% annual tax on wealth. joe my know your family initialy moved to california because anye there. and you made a lot of money. why did you move to texas? you can afford 1.5%, you can afford that. but obviously there is something, it is not about the money. it is about the place. and i'm getting the hell out. >> you know, there's a lot of things culturally with
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san francisco and with california. it is really hard to build there. it is expensive to hire people they are. basically you are some sort of billionaire or surface worker driving two hours to work. not a healthy place to raise kids. technology is spread throughout the country and we can build things from so many different states, texas is a much healthier place to base your business in california these days. >> steve: i understand a lot of your friends in the san francisco area, they have moved to austin or texas. they have moved to miami or nashville where they move to las vegas. how many people do you think will say, i will start a big business i will go to cali california? knowing there could be a wealth tax and also regulations and all of this stuff you did have haply detailed. >> a lot of us, elon is out here in texas. it is something where it may be
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the best technology in silicon valley, you might need help to start something. you will certainly not build a big business that stays there. as soon as you can with these kind of people in charge, you will get out someplace less corrupt. it is hard to tell with the violence and dealing drugs, totally legally. so you have the cartel up there with their territory and sally just killed the whole family anf san francisco. and new mexico, it is a mess. >> steve: joe, who lives in texas, thank you very much for joining us live. >> thanks, steve. >> steve: coming up on this wednesday, it has been called a kick in the face to the men and women who serve. and fired over the covid vaccine and now forced to pay back a bonus they got. you know who doesn't like it?s h that guy, clay, next. veterans. when i think of the veteran out there that needs to refi his home, he may want to purchase, we can help them and provide that financial solution
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hi, i'm katie, i've lost 110 pounds on golo in just over a year. golo is different than other programs i had been on because i was specifically looking for something that helped with insulin resistance. i had had conversations with my physician indicating that that was probably an issue that i was facing and making it more difficult for me to sustain weight loss. golo has been more sustainable. i can fit it into family life, i can make meals that the whole family will enjoy. it just works in everyday life as a mom.
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lot. we are struggling financially because of this. >> it is from mental health, diversity and inclusion but we are still in this position. >> didn't have any issues until recently when i was discharged and have the subsequent $13,000 bill. >> brian: unbelievable talk about adding insult to injury, those military members were fired over the vaccine mandate. they didn't want to get it and now forced to pay back the original recording bonuses. what a joke. kick founder clay travis is here. so now you don't need the vaccine but those who stood up and said, "i don't want to" for religious reasons or health reasons, they have to get back there bonus. does that make sense to you? >> no, it is indefensible. every member of the house of representatives and the republican party right now should be outraged. to kevin mccarthy's credit, the whole speaker and all of those members, they managed to get this covid shot requirement
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removed to enlist in the military. the next step is certainly, we can't demand that people repay their bonuses when they were forced to leave the military. it was not their choice at all. that is indefensible. but the next step here beyond a shadow of a doubt, every single military member who was discharged for refusing to get the covid shot should be rehired with back pay and have those against their service removed from their record and they should get an apology from the united states government for anyone trying to force them to get a covid shot that they do not need. if they are young and healthy, likely provides limited if any benefit to them whatsoever. they will have detriments as the data continues to reflect. >> brian: 80-100 service members kicked out. we need a lift them thousand 411 navy seals, 2,000 army
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soldiers and while we miss every recruiting coal and every branch of the surface, we kick out people that have proven themselves to us. the army 15,000 short and the national guard 7500 short, it may be 10% of their recruiting goal and marine 30% of its goal and we kick them out. it makes absolutely no sense. your sports mind for a second, but still with the covid thing. aaron rodgers immunized but didn't get the shot famously. he says the whole perception of the elite in the country cha changed. listen. >> there are heroes and villains. in sports and entertainment, i think because of my stance on covid and maybe some other things, i've been cast as a bill and especially the last few years. and go online and find something you don't agree with. i'm offended, how could you possibly say that? i don't really care. i don't care who it's coming
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from or cited. >> brian: unless he's on twitter, how many people think he is a villain or am i wrong? >> there are some people that would consider him a villain but idiots like joe scarborough who said and he went that will not get a covid shot the rest of their life is a -- and there were people that believe aaron rodgers' eight -- but i think has the time goes on and as you will know as the data continues to come out, the people who chose not to get the covid shot because they have concerns about what their health would be particularly young and healthy people like aaron rodgers. time will vindicate them in a big way and a hero not a villain. >> brian: most likely will not be playing for green bay. >> come to nashville because the home titans need him to come to nashville. >> brian: very personal and you have to think about his future. clay, we'll see of the super bowl. meanwhile -- >> it will be a fun time. >> brian: i think it will be a
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good game whoever plays. out kick.com is the place to go, thanks, clay. carley shimkus who also likes clay. >> i love clay. i want him to be happy. i want him to get the players he wants on his team. can i continue with the news? okay, let's do it. microsoft cloud is back up and running after a worldwide outage overnight. an apparent hack attack shut out users from programs like microsoft, outlook, and teams. xbox live network was down alsoo appear in services in china and microsoft platform for governments were not affected. right now german cybersecurity experts are investigating potential culprits responsible for the outage. walmart is raising its minimum wage for store employees who stock shelves and cater to customers. base pay will start at $14 an hour. that is the $2 raise from their current average hourly pay and workers will have the opportunity to earn up to $19 an hour. the move comes as retailers across the u.s. struggled to recruit and retain employees.
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those are your headlines, brain, back downstairs to you. >> brian: all right, very good, carley of next celebrating nascar 75th anniversary season, ryan blaney exclusive announcement for us. but first, exclusive dana perino will tell us what bill hemmer and her have over the next few hours. >> all the exclusives on "america's newsroom." is it okay when everyone does a question mark a new batch of classified docs discovered it formally vp mike pence's home. plus andy mccarthy and congressman jim nordic. can ticketmaster fix the bad blood with taylor swift fans? what you missed in senate judiciary antitrust hearing. new kids on the blog, dagen mcdowell and john duffy explain cheating in schools. we will see you at nine. at 9:00.
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also tell us past, present, future and something for the next guest knows all about as a third-generation driver. >> brian: joining us with exclusive announcement, nascar ryan blaney. are you pumped up for this? >> i am. 75 years and has car, that is pretty amazing. >> brian: your family, also spoke. >> my dad was a race or my grandpa was a racer. you see a lot of people involved in the sport of nascar appeared to carry on that racing tradition is very special. we look forward to get to 100. it will be here before you know with. >> steve: put it in perspective and your family lineage, your grandpa what was the top speed of his car in the top speed of your dad's car and the top speed of your car? >> mike rambles speed and the '60s, 120-130 miles an hour. >> steve: stock are. >> now 200 miles an hour. it progresses as technology advances peer to beget faster and faster and you have to keep
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up with the times. >> was your dad jealous your car was tricked out and can do amazing things? >> that is a big thinker, building things, engineering stuff. he is so amazed with the technology side of it now that he loves still being around it, even though he has seen it growing up. and he loves getting involved with the times. >> rachel: i love hearing that you started to drive, basically going in the backyard and your dad's property. what does that look like? so people are watching, "i would like to help my kid become a race car driver." what do you do for your kids so they can get or start to learn how to do this? >> i started, i was fortunate because it was there. the right steps to take >> rachel: how young were you a? >> i was eight when i started. >> steve: you started driving when you were eight? >> go carts, not on the road or anything. >> rachel: you started in the backyard. >> we had to go big oak trees that we raced around. >> steve: that is a tv show.
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>> go carts are a good way to start your son or daughter off racing. see what they think about it. >> brian: so the family still has a role and they start embracing 75 years ago. but last year, was it last year when you guys took over the coliseum? >> yes. >> brian: took the truck down at that historic arena. now what are you doing in chicago? >> we go to a coliseum week and a half and we are excited to be back there. the first time ever we are racing on the streets of chicago. that is a massive, massive announcement. we are still coming. we are shutting it down and the family, they have been incredibly and wanting to evolve. tried to make 75 years without changing with the times and doing new things. the street course of chicago. >> steve: you will actually be in the streets? >> in the streets. >> brian: you will get carjacked 120 miles an hour. [laughter] >> steve: earlier this hour we
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were talking about performance of the super bowl. tell us about the super bowl at the concerts for nascar this year. >> chicago, a massive event with major entertainment that wee weekend. miranda lambert as well as the black rose and charlie crockett. not only amazing atmosphere with the race but a concert in an event, a venue for your whole family. >> steve: you have something for everybody. >> we always do. >> rachel: those are solid stars and an amazing line of. >> a fan of all of them. >> steve: you don't care about the racing but more about the entertainment. >> they have to go hand-in-hand. >> rachel: something for everybody. >> steve: he how close are you o converting from fossil fuel to electric car? >> i will come on you might comment on a different time. i can't give you information. maybe next time. speed to dad tinkering with the car. >> brian: think you very much.
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>> yes indeed. >> not much. >> one of them is. the other is not. >> attention birds, look out, you will die. >> they kill eagles. >> eagles stay away. you heard me the first time. >> rachel, thank you for joining us today and don't be afraid to run to the radio. great roster of guests including martha maccallum who i will meet for the first time. [gunshots] >> bill: knows are scenes from a war use south of our border. cartel violence threatening to spill that our country from mexico and the president is doing nothing to stop it. where we begin today midweek
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