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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  January 26, 2023 5:00am-6:01am PST

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♪ ♪ >> outrage on capitol hill with classified documents. >> a briefing by the dni and congressional lawmakers. >> the administration's stonewalling. >> president biden today is going to discuss economic progress. more americans find them -- >> the latest with massive layoffs. >> the labor force to drop out. >> willing to overlook some awful [bleep]. >> gaslighting viewers about violent riots. >> there is a blurring of the
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line and the use of the word violence. >> lighting court houses and schools on fire. it was mostly peaceful. speak with the domestic policy reversal regarding the ukraine. >> the equivalent of one ukrainian tank. >> what is our goal? i don't see any path to drive russia out. >> check out the bottom right of your screen. >> who order the burrito? >> i like how the referee is talking to him, like how cool is this supposed to be? ♪ ♪ >> steve: that look so pretty. let the good times roll on this thursday. live from virginia beach. you know what, you see that and wouldn't it be nice to walk along the beach and stick your toes in the water? absolutely! they are wearing wet suits
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because currently it is 47 degrees down there, daytime high of 53. they want to stay warm here they don't want to freeze to death. welcome live in new york city where here in midtown manhattan, it is currently 42 degrees on this 26th day of january. if you are doing dry january, it has been 26 days. just hang on, we are almost there. tuesday is around the corner. >> ainsley: we have seen good results. have you lost a few pounds? >> steve: it is good for you. >> ainsley: i did damp, just to be honest. >> steve: i did dry and it is harder. >> ainsley: good for you. >> steve: i did keto too so i got them both out of the way. >> ainsley: i just drink on the weekends. >> brian: out-of-control drinking on the show. >> ainsley: that would be better. there is a big party going on behind the scenes. >> steve: talking in my ear, she said she definitely needs it. >> brian: we used to have a
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monitor to see the control room and we could click that often that is when the beers could come out. meanwhile, 2 minutes after the hour and we know that 2,000 employees are on the chopping block and joining ibm major companies announcing layoffs. >> ainsley: more americans find themselves unemployed because biden to travel to virginia to discuss economic progress and the term. >> steve: lucas tomlinson with all the details from the nation's capital, lucas, he will take a victory lap while these big companies are laying people off. >> that is right. he's not going to virginia beach, but he is crossing to springfield and as brian mentioned chemical giant dow jones to lay off 2,000 workers, just the latest americn corporation slashing its workforce as president biden prepares to speak later today about the economy. the dow jones other blue chips,
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ibm, microsoft, amazon, 3m, bed bath & beyond and others with layoffs and the world later say a recession is moving. white house spokesman karine jean-pierre had a positive spin. here is fox business from yesterday. >> when the president speaks about the economy tomorrow, how will he address those fears and the written fears of a recession? >> we are building back up. there is data out there that shows the economy is growing, that shows we are, indeed, going to a stable and steady growth, which is important. it is something the president has worked with and we have seen work towards the last two years. >> for national action network, president biden slim to republicans on martin luther king day. >> we talk about big spending democrats again? guess what, i reduced the deficit last year $350 billion.
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these guys are fiscally demented, i think. [laughter] they don't quite get it. >> credits say that debt is $21 trillion in rent, food and electricity have soared. in another economic indicator that is troubling. nearly 90% rise in spending at dollar stores across the country. gas prices have also gone up and credit card debt and all time high, high interest rates. >> brian: lucas, the board's preview of the speeches he will attack republicans. does he know the election was just over a few months ago? this as his time to set a vision. do you find that odd? >> safe to say glenn youngkin will not be attending for sp speech. >> brian: he does have a counter narrative. thanks, lucas, to me, this is the person i'm just say listen, the numbers are not perfect but we have better numbers than in a
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country in the world. compare yourself to china. comparing yourself to europe. compare soaked it in with lower infection but our numbers look good. and you can pretend for a few months. >> ainsley: you think if they heard that, we don't care about comparing yourself to other countries but we wanted to be better. interest rates lower. >> brian: that is a good point, but i'm saying is choice his attack republicans and how bad their ideas are and listen, look at me. i know countries, we have challenges but compared to everybody else, we have worked our way out of it. >> steve: to answer your question the election a couple of months ago, why? he was not on the belt a couple of months ago but he's about to put himself on the ballot at the state of the union and what he's got to do, when you look at the numbers, the numbers aren't good when it comes to unemployment and stuff like that, job creation and things like that. but when you look in a deadly about the people being laid off,
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the dell, google, talking about google in a moment, this will give him an opportunity. it is a spring board essentially to beat republicans up. he will say republicans want to raise your taxes. there is one guy that float that idea, social security, medicare. so, he's got his speech and it's based in fact, but again for the average american, they don't feel like things are good when you go to the grocery store and eggs are $7. it is like, okay, joe biden, he did that. >> ainsley: google employee named nicole, she is young and on tiktok. she was a day and the life of my job. >> steve: she was living high. >> ainsley: now she has 4 million viewers as of yesterday and probably in the fives today. she found out she was laid off at google and it was random. her boss did not know she was going to be laid off. she started sobbing because her boss come i didn't even have input but they were selecting
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people like russian roulette. here she is from the beginning to when she found out she was fired. >> come to lunch with me at the google office. they had everything plaited so beautifully. and i feel like i'm eating at a fine dining restaurant. i'm headed over to this first feeding and send the confetti room to take my neck sync up more room done. i headed to the massage chair to wrap up my day. so i woke up to this really ominous text from my boss and i honestly had no idea what it was going to be about. i called him the moment i woke up and he said to check the news in my email. i called my boss back and we subbed over the phone because she found out my layoff the first time. i wanted to go eat my feelings. so i started off with a seminoma galaxy at euro and then a turkey leg. >> steve: over the last number of years, these companies have these freebies, people across
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the company, man come i would love to work there. and about 1.5% of those who know were masseuses at google. they were let go because like everybody else, do you see every session around the corner? >> brian: when i had to let go of my masseuse yesterday. i told her eye will give her unemployment. >> ainsley: maybe not have the masseuses or confetti room or free dinners, then they wouldn't have to lay people off. >> brian: i don't know if you noticed over the weekend the blizzard information, but he did this horrible thing in atlanta and that is open a new police academy to enhance training and a dispirited force undermanned. because of that, they thought it would be a great idea for antifa to break out the stocking masks and go and start an organized fashion start terrorizing the local town. they did it in a coordinated organized fashion which makes
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you think they rehearsed peer they have a way to interact and communicate in high stress situations aiming at cops. do you remember that? i thought we were over that fever around the country outside cori bush, the congressman from missouri. as the violence broke out, which was astounding to say even as americans, even as americans, we cannot agree what violence was. listen. >> i think there is a real blurring of the lines in the use of the word violence. you keep using these words "violent, violent, violent, violent!" and the only violence that really acts of violence against people that i saw were perhaps police tackling protesters. >> steve: so, what happened when it was all done and the smoke cleared, the police car was set on fire, windows smashed, a lot of property damage and things like that, six protesters charged including
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felonies. a couple charged with domestic terrorism, two on bond, four denied bail and they are not from atlanta. so the question becomes when you look at something like that in downtown atlanta, that looks violent to me. does it look violent to you? it did not look violent to the person on cnn or look violent to somebody who worked with stacey abrams. >> ainsley: smashing windows is not violent. you cannot commit violence against a window or a car. killing a human? now, that is violence. shameless to the leaders to the same tired path of protecting property while our people are murdered by their police. >> steve: so murder is violence but everything else, is that fair game, not to be punished? joe rogan says "america is being ghastly." watch. >> you were willing to overlook some awful bleeps on your side and willing to exaggerate some [bleep] on the other side.
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>> but everybody is on the same team so you have to [bleep] pretend lighting church is on fire. [bleep] and lighting schools on fire and lighting courthouse is on fire. mostly peaceful, it is mostly peaceful. [bleep] i saw someone i can say this. what happened in atlanta. speak with the cops city thing. >> they were putting a cop car on fire. >> they were calling it mostly peaceful. >> in cnn's backyard. >> you are not the [bleep] propaganda and you cannot define things in a way to calm people down. that is not what your [bleep] job is. you are [bleep] boring people in your acting as a propagandist. but that is not mostly peaceful when a car is on fire. >> brian: cnn should know better peer they smash their windows a couple of years ago in the middle of those rights peer they wouldn't admit it but they closed their headquarters and don't seem to be able to get an
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understanding what violence is. most of these kids when you take their stocking mask off or ski mess off they were from rich backgrounds privileged white kids standing up against the man of society. i would love to see them can be held accountable to fix some of those windows. >> steve: some of them were denied bonds but nevertheless, what does violence look like to you? charged with domestic terrorism and some of them not. >> ainsley: really? they came from elsewhere? >> brian: the governor said this was an outside operation. so that don't even care. they create havoc and don't want to be a part of society but destroy it. >> ainsley: imagine owning the store where your windows are smashed. you have to pay or insurance pays in your insurance payment goes up here those are hard working team was trying to put food on your table and violence. >> steve: was your store looted? >> brian: antifa, how can they commit violence? that was just an idea.
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a coordinated event and a well oiled gang. just an idea of going ahead of the fbi. meanwhile, let's turn -- just an idea. let's turn to the news, police arrested 26-year-old meant for february 22 murder of microsoft executive jared bridegan. henry tenon faces charges including second-degree murder and conspiracy to commit murder. the state attorney general said he did not act alone and ambushed style attack jacksonville beach. and pence had been renting a home owned by the man married to the victim's ex-wife. an jared bridegan widow slamming the late husband, her late husband's ex and the excuse of interview with fox news digital, "they charged him with conspiracy and this was orchestrated, planned, specific to jared." the southwest airlines takes on
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$800 million hit to pretax results after the christmas travel chaos booking for the battle carrier slowing as it faces federal investigation for possible deceptive scheduling of fights. the transportation department, if we have one isn't the initial phase of rigorous and comprehensive investigation into the southwest airlines holiday debacle that stranded millions. take your time. you may want to enjoy ice-cold beer after a big workout but a new study says nonalcoholic beer is a better alternative. you think? the study from cooper clinic -- how much did this cost? the study from cooper clinic finds those who workout regularly often drink more for replacing a beer with nonalcoholic one is bound to have a slew of benefits including anti-inflammatory properties. [applause] and also found to be useful for hydration. the advantage of being all-natural. but it is impossible to get those that didn't take that study. a family from pennsylvania wants to make eagles players dream of signing a baby come true.
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>> i will sign a baby. give me a baby. >> he thinks i am the forehead to come about, lived, belly, whatever he wants. >> brian: chasing kelsey loves babies, not just holding them by autographing them and signed a fans doll last week and wants to sign the real thing. he and the eagles -- listen, he and the eagles taking on the 49ers this sunday 3:00 that afc championship game on fox sports. this is why you have saturday optimo your long. >> ainsley: a strange desire but if you are a parent of a baby and a judgment, that would be fun. >> brian: you have to watch the baby, right? >> steve: the helmet on the baby. we had on f "fox & friends" for one of the quarterbacks and i apologize i don't know if it was for the giants are the jets. that is right it was eli manning. eli manning was on
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"fox & friends" and signed a baby. speed to wear? a baby doll. >> steve: a baby doll. for the summer concert series and i kept the baby doll. >> ainsley: what, you didn't give it back to the baby? >> steve: 's we know it, >> steve: xp 30 body it. >> ainsley: what did you do with a baby doll questioning >> steve: it is in the basement. >> ainsley: you should save it for your granddaughter. >> steve: that will be coming this week. >> ainsley: really? >> steve: it could be today. >> ainsley: a baby born into the "fox & friends" team. major retailers flee the windy city has high crime inflation takes a toll on businesses. a chicago reporter on how parts of the city turning into a ghost town. >> steve: plus, electric vehicles adding speed bumps. white car companies may need to slam on the brakes. you are watching "fox & friends" live from new york city.
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♪ ♪ >> steve: we saw this yesterday, shocking videos captures blocks and blocks and blocks of empty storefronts on chicago's once vibrant state street. but the city's retail citibank 20%. crime plus -- lori lightfoot seeking reelection in a month. the chicago reporter boasted that viral video, william jay kelly joins us right now from chicago. william, it looks like a bomb went off because the businesses are just gone. >> dystopian and someone born
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and raised in chicago, it breaks my heart to see vacancies on state street, that great street. well, now it is not so great. and even old blue eyes can't turn this around. the policies that really destroy state street and honestly michigan avenue, the magnificent mile was the one-two punch of the lockdowns but also the policies that continue to this day. believe it or not, have someone shoplift up to $1,000, there are no consequences. so imagine, steve, how long can you stay in business if someone is stealing a thousand dollars from you every single day? you know, in a month, that is $30,000 and a year $300,000. you won't be able to stay in business. >> steve: william, you got it all wrong because according to a tweet from your mayor almost four years ago you would like to
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meet to be your mayor. every day i have waking up grateful to the city for believing in my vision to make the city stronger for all. i don't think if one in five storefronts is empty, that makes for a strong chicago. i know they closed in 2015. old navy come i think blick art materials, disney, new york and company, foot locker, they said you know what, not worth the trouble. >> every time i went to a city hall press conference to ask our mayor what her plan was to stop the crime and support the business, she screamed at me. every single time she threatened to have the police dragged me out of city hall. she didn't do anything to stop the looting or the shoplifting right up to today. so, she revoked my media credential. i filed a lawsuit against mayor lori lightfoot. the question she didn't want me
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to ask her at city hall come i will be asking her under oath. we have arrived at the discovery phase. and you want to read the lawsuit against lori lightfoot, it is at my website. i intend to get these answers and i intend to cover the mayor's race. and i intend to expose what really is behind the destruction of our city. >> steve: when you look at those video images, it is graphic just to see how chicago has evolved. william, thank you for joining us from chicago. >> thank you, steve, god bless you. >> steve: coming up when yuriko benjamin hall was gravely injured covering the invasion of ukraine. now, benjamin has got a big announcement and will be joining us live to share it coming up. ♪ ♪ to conquer the high road, or the off road.
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medical attention. >> brian: his brand-new memoir "save the mission to make it home," he shares the dramatic rescue and ongoing recovery. most of which nobody knows. benjamin hall, put that altogether while trying to get back on the air. first off, how overall, how are you doing? >> brian, steventon, ansley, a pleasure to be here today but i think when you go through something like i've gone through, the highs, the lows, you have something to fight for and trying to get back to speak to you, trying to tell people the story. at the moment, i've got one leg, no feed to come i see through one eye, one workable hand and i was burnt all over and i feel stronger and more confident than i ever have. i think you learn a lot going through things like this and surrounded by 70 wonderful people and that is why i am here today. and looking forward to what
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comes ahead. >> ainsley: what is your message for people at home that her watching and not in a good place in their life. we have watched you and text you throughout the process. you have such a positive outlook on all of this. >> i think it is important when you are feeling low. there was a lot of times i was at the bottom. you have to know there is good on the other side and if you work hard and dedicated to getting somewhere and don't stop trying to achieve that, you will get there, no matter how painful something is or how hard it is. if you really want to and you have the support to do it, you can get there. never give up and never assume it is all over. i was reached by thousands and thousands of viewers and they helped as well. people reach out and tell me they are thinking about me and praying for you, that give support as well. so anybody else going through difficult things, keep going, never give up. it is inside you and always good on the outside. >> steve: so well put.
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you know, benjamin, for the folks at home, this is the first time you return to live television. you used to be live on television every day. but two months ago, when you were eventually affect everything you must've thought to yourself i will never make it back. but you did. and every dave must just be a gift to you. >> that is right. i remember the very day this happened, i remember thinking, "i will get back." i remember lying there when it happened in the middle of nowhere very badly injured and set i am going home if i have to. i will call if i have to. i thought that way throughout. that is what got me here. it has been life-changing event. >> brian: benjamin, the book is not out yet. you can preorder right now but here is an excerpt that you gave to us. so maybe you can read it for everybody at home. >> the first explosion tore through a stand of pine birch a
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few feet away and barely turned to look before the second bomb whistled overhead and landed right next to us. everything went dark. if i had the slightest iota or consciousness, it was a distant sense of shock wave and the feeling every part of my body, bones, organs, my soul had been knocked out of me. i did not exist. except the part of nothingness. it was all but dead. but then, probably out of this crippling nothingness, a figure came through and i heard a familiar voice as real as everything i had ever known. "daddy, you have got to get out of the car." in that moment when that happened to come i was totally out and very badly injured. i had shrapnel in the eye and throat. i saw my own daughters, my young daughters. they brought me back and i found the strength. i open my eyes and managed to crawl out of the car. and since the third bomb hit the car itself.
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if it weren't for them bringing me back, there is no way i would be here today. i was alive and saved, thanks to pierre on camera who had gotten out of the car before me. and for two of us laid there about 40 minutes and talked. he passed away. but the journey continued in it was about me being saved. i was saved by allies, american veterans, special forces who risked their own lives to get me out in a covert way. an incredible story. then come i was saved by the u.s. military that said if i could make it to poland, they wn their arms. and finally days later i found a way out. i was in the military medicine facility, and san antonio, texas, and an incredible team of doctors and nurses who helped all the wounded in afghanistan. they rebuilt me and some strength. and for me this book is about
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being saved come about being saved by all of these people. it is that understanding that can give you so much strength. and we all think about peer every day. i think that is really important for us to do. and i think of my family every day but i went through everything thanks to them. you have to remember that those things and keep fighting every day. >> brian: you are somebody not new to war. i remember the first time reading stuff with ices and you didn't know what isis was but you were over there the worst of the worse. how is this different and give you a different perspective? >> well, in some sense in terms of the job, the job has to be continued. i think it is absolutely and's essential to tell the news wherever we can come of the atrocities that are going on. we have to keep telling the stories of the heroes out there as well. i would like to say i'm heading back at this point, but suddenly encourage everyone.
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i wouldn't regret for one instant the work that i have done, the jobs i have done in the places i have been. and i have become a stronger person. i will keep fighting for that. >> steve: absolutely and the title is perfect, "saved a war reporter's mission to make it home." it hit shelves march 14th and you can preorder it right now. >> ainsley: benjamin, thank you i never heard that story that you were next to pierre in his last moments that gave him great comfort to have a friend right next to him. >> we think of him every day. >> steve: absolutely. welcome home. it is great to have you home. >> thank you very much. >> ainsley: lots of prayers lifted up for you benjamin. thank you for sharing a positive message. please order that book which comes out march 14th. god bless you. kim reynolds signs a bill into law empowering parents and she will join us live. >> brian: new york city pushing for more but drivers are
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♪ ♪ >> ainsley: iowa is the latest date to publicly fund school choice for parents. >> steve: the students first asked signed antelope was $7600 for families who want to send their child to private school. >> steve: after tuition it can be used for materials, testing fees online education programs and life skills trading. the woman who is behind this, the governor of the proud state of iowa, kim reynolds joins us right now. good morning, governor. >> good morning. it is great to be with all of you. thank you for the opportunity. >> steve: absolutely. so many people around the country are looking in and thinking come i wish my kids were in a school in iowa because now the school choice, you can take that $7 $7,500 the state is spending to send them to public school and you send them to any
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school you want peer that is amazing! >> yeah, it was an exciting day on tuesday. i walked into that rotunda, signed a bill, it was packed with families and kids and supporters. it was such an exciting day. we have been working on this for three years. it is a bold plan and gets us to universal school choice in three years. i'm really, really proud of that. it is about $7,600 that will transfer to public cost to private now. the first year it is available for all four kindergarten kids to all public school kids and then the kids in the private school based on income needs, 300% at the federal level, they qualify and for next year the same group at 400% and then universal, year three. >> ainsley: 70 families want to send their families to private school during covid and many couldn't afford it. single moms and working several jobs. this is so amazing if your child is dyslexic, you can spend on
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the spectrum where a faith-based don't like faith-based education. what do you hear from folks living in your state question marks because they are so excited about this. i continue to hear covid was a game changer and gave parents a front row seat what was happening with the education. so really, they got engaged and we add to that crt, woke agenda, we had school districts that were saying seventh graders would make decisions whether their parents would know if changing their name or changing their gender. it continued to pound and pound. we continue to have parents reach out to us about giving them the choice, especially low income. because only people that have a choice in their child's education where the people that have the resources to have that choice peer that was just wrong. now every individual, every family will have that choice. in addition to that, we provided opportunities for public schools
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as well. that is how we finally got the bill across the finish line. we provided them flexibility, removed some burdens they were trying to operate under and gave them an opportunity with some of the funding and programming that was being spent to put that towards teacher salaries and that is a game changer. >> brian: governor, the biggest one that we understand is the teachers unions. they don't want this freedom. so how strong is the union in iowa? a place like new york, they would never pass a bill like this. >> never say never. i said in my remarks, never, never, never give up. we make progress each year. we passed a collective-bargaining reform in 2017, which was also a game changer. but all they had to offer was more money, more money, more money. push the easy button and that will fix everything peer that is not the case. we reached out, as i said, to parents and i held zoom calls
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and went into districts. we talked to superintendents and principals in our public school system. i said, you are the foundation of our education system. but it's not a zero-sum game. we want to make sure that every parent has a choice. >> steve: excellent question for you, governor is your phone ringing off the hook and people saying, "how do we do that?" >> i think it is model legislation and the governor abbott is looking at it, spencer caucus is looking at it in utah. so i hope this is a wave of giving parents the choice in child's education. it will elevate all education. >> brian: make it competitive and make the schools compete against each other. >> make it competitive and it is a good thing. >> ainsley: caring about the next generation and the show will have a voice. they will be able to get a good education because of you. >> steve: thank you, governor reynolds. >> brian: there was a red wave
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in iowa. meteorologist. >> we have two storms and storm alerts, this one new england and one waiting in the wings. wrapping up the snow in maine, lane along the along the i-95 core door but new york city and d.c. remain snow was so far 48 hours away from breaking the record of the latest snow measured in new york city this winter. we will have snow through the evening 1-3 inches and that is the next storm. if you think cashing in on a warm winter because the heating bill has been a little bit lower this changes everything and brings a little dose of snow, 1-3 inches across the great lakes but what it does is unleash a cold to class affair that takes the temperatures by saturday peer at the northern plains down to the single digits to bismarck. cold conditions all the way to denver and the rockies. this blast of cold air makes all the difference 20-30 degrees below the average once we get to early next week. a major drop as much as
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40 degrees, places like bismarck down to 19 below by monday morning. back to you guys. and that is without the wind. >> steve: stay inside, watch tv. watch fox weather. >> great idea. >> ainsley: in front of a fireplace with your heat cranked up. >> steve: thanks, amy. is it time to slam breaks on electric vehicles? jeff tells us the latest speed bumps in the the push to get everybody electrified. >> ainsley: but first, let's check in with bill hemmer at the top of the hour. >> listen, amy there, steve, a cold game in kansas city. >> ainsley: that is true. >> sunday night so maybe if you want to get a little wager, little action. you think about it. both sides, just saying. i agree. we take it one week at a time, one game at a time. >> ainsley: are you going? >> i will be there. bill, will you put the tiger
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stripes on your face? >> no. but i will represent. >> ainsley: do you have a warm coat and gloves? >> yes. thank you, buddy, i will be in touch. the cartel south of the border wreaking havoc there and here. what do we do? the double murder case in south carolina has captured the attention of millions. court resumes there 40 minutes and we will be live. new numbers on the economy, disney is changing wild rides. i will tell you why, join dana and me 12 minutes at the top of the hour. go! only pay for what you need. jingle: liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. 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
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>> ainsley: america's electric -- they are finding chargers for the cars. jeff flock from the sister network joins us now to tell us more. hey, jeff. jeff, can you hear me? jeff, you are on error. >> sorry, guys. there you go. sorry about that. i'm in new york and not in my home in new york, but i tell you, we are talking about the upper side. we are talking about the first
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curbside charger in manhattan. you know, if you live out in the suburbs and you have a garage, a charger, electric cars are outstanding. if you live in the city, have of you park your car into the street. this is not third street, by the way. but it is the need to charge overnight when you park your car in the streets. this is the first one of these. here is the problem with that, as you know new york is a complicated place. finding locations for these is difficult. the city has made spending 40,000 of these pen has about 1500. it needs about 6,000 fast chargers, the ones that charge up 25-30 minutes. currently we need 6,000 and so there you go. these are great and we came here early this morning and somebody had parked, can you imagine people in new york park in a place where they are not supposed to park? this is only for electric vehicles. so you can charge your car when it is parked here.
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unfortunately, some people parked here who are not driving electric vehicles. so, there you go. that sort of thing happens. >> ainsley: they will get yelled at in new york, jeff. we were all just talking like if you live in the city, it is hard to have an electric car. >> if you have a parking space inside, there is a lot of chargers inside buildings or parking locations, but you know, as i said to him at the city percent of you, new york, park your car is on the street spirits of these chargers, open to i think we have a list of some of the things people said about this charger may be put them up. one guy said it slow and expensive often blocked by ice. another guy said it is blocked by a car. an ice from this morning until now. and another guy says a tesla is parked there but not charging. >> ainsley: yeah. if every new yorker bought one of those cars, they would have
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to put chargers all along the streets. we perk on the street because it is a lot cheaper and the grudges are expensive. how much is it 800 to $1,000 a month to park your car in a garage. >> great city. >> complicated city. >> ainsley: do you have to pay for the electricity to park there? >> how much is it? did you ask him much it was? i think it is -- let me see here come i can't read it. $250 if you charge during the day and $1.25. >> ainsley: much cheaper than gas. thank you, jeff, very interesting. we have more "fox & friends" moments away. ♪ ♪ your heart is the beat of life.
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♪ >> if you can't get on that ride it looks like the lines right now haven't opened up yet in new jersey. you might as well run to the radio. carley shimkus was supposed to be first but i have to sub her out. >> she will have her baby soon. >> this will be -- we'll reach the conclusion that alex murdered maggie and paul. >> what is more believable, the night he comes home and finds his wife and son butchered. he goes over and tries to get a pulse out of maggie, no pulse. calls 911. he didn't do it. he didn't kill, butcher his son
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and wife. >> bil

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