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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  February 2, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PST

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it's game-changing sleep. only from sleep number. ♪ ♪ >> president biden, there is no border. >> republicans taking the crisis at our southern border to capitol hill. >> lawmakers sparring for hours. >> you seem intent on demonizing migrant families. >> you see evidence on which side this administration is on and it's not the side of the american people. >> armed suspects accused of robbing more than a dozen people in new york will be prosecuted in federal court. >> the same repeat offenders over and over. let the judge is judge. >> never seen nothing like this.
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>> at least seven people are dead in texas and another dozen in arkansas as a powerful storm cripples the south. residents are still without power. speak of voters say the country is more divided than ever. >> dysfunctional families were 80% say describing america today. >> when it comes to the economy, 66% disapprove about how president biden has been handling the crisis. >> it is groundhog day. >> a shadow on my stage, no matter how you measure! six more weeks of winter weather! ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> steve: well, i don't know about a long, long time, but six more weeks of winter, according to phil of punxsutawney. he saw his shadow. six more weeks of winter, as the
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lore goes. it was broadcast live around the world. he could have seen the shadows because of the tv lights, just saying. it was 15 degrees there. it's going to be chilly all day long so it feels like a cold cold hard in the deep of winter. >> ainsley: it looked like a fun place to be. if you have an opportunity to go, you should go and take your children. >> brian: and you don't have to bring a stump. they have a stump they are. >> steve: would you travel with a stump? >> brian: if i had to come i would do it. >> ainsley: he travels to the bus. >> brian: no one else has one. gobbler's knob is find her. right now, what happens is they take apart the stage and the stump? it's not a real stump, right? >> you are really cynical, brian! you love going to the super bowl? this is my super bowl! don't diss my super bowl, okay? >> brian: did they hollow out an old tree? is it a real stump? >> i will go check for you.
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i spoke to phil himself. he seems a little hungry and like he wants to go home and see his bride, phyllis, but i also talked to the president of the inner circle, and we will bring you that interview on the 8:00 hour. it was his first official year as the president of the inner circle and he had a wonderful time. i would say most people wanted another six more weeks of winter, because we haven't had much of a winter here in the northeast. i will tell you, i think his prediction, which is not only so great, it's going to come true this year. we had a great time, but i will tell you, as soon as phil gives his prognostication, 20,000 people leave to go to the bar. [laughs] >> ainsley: is like after a marathon. >> steve: did the buyer for close? >> ainsley: what time did they all get there to get in line? thousands of people either. >> 3:00 a.m. the doors open at 3:00 a.m. >> ainsley: for a front row seat, what time do you have to
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get there? to they camp out? >> 3:00 a.m. is when the doors open. i can't speak to whether they camped out. there are buses that come up here, so it's very well-organized. it seems like organized chaos, but it is so much fun. >> brian: janice, i heard it done my governor shapiro was going to be there. did he show up? >> he was here for the full event. people were excited to see him. only the third governor ever to come to punxsutawney? >> brian: right. >> wow! well, he's definitely got to stump up here and have a stump speech! >> steve: goodwin. "stump speech," she'll be here all day. >> ainsley: we all grew up watching them. i called my daughter, she said the only problem she has is that his name is punxsutawney phil. she says, "i don't like that name, i want to name him bill." >> hayden can come with me next year, okay? >> ainsley: i'd love to come, too!
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>> steve: let's all go. >> let's bring "fox & friends" to punxsutawney! >> ainsley: your sons are a little younger, what did they say? >> they loved it, but i think it was one and done for them. but they can say they did it once. it was a bucket list. >> brian: even at that young age, they had bucket lists. janice, thank you so much. >> brian, people love you here. they want you here next year. bring brian kilmeade! right? >> yes! >> people love you. >> ainsley: thank you, janice. >> brian: now to this. republicans are taking the crisis at our southern border to capitol hill. they did it yesterday and will do it today. >> steve: lawmakers sparring for hours during the first fiery hearing on what's going on in our southern border. >> ainsley: griff jenkins is live with more. they promised these investigations and they are already talking about the origins of covid, finding out if
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money was wasted. >> ainsley, brian, and steve, good morning. you're right, ainsley. if this hearing is any indication of things to come, then buckle up. chairman jim jordan took the gloves off yesterday, blaming the border crisis on president biden, and suggesting it was created on purpose. watch. >> month after month after month we have set records for migrants coming into the country. and, frankly, i think it's intentional. i don't know how anyone with common sense or logic can reach any other conclusion. it seems deliberate, it seems premeditated. >> but democratics ride back with ranking member jerry nadler accusing republicans of being maga racists for highlighting the crisis. >> this shows the tendencies of the extreme maga republican wing of the party that seeks to close the border to places like cuba and venezuela. it almost makes me miss the usual obsession with conspiracy theories and the fbi. >> this first hearing of the
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judiciary committee focused on the more than 4.5 million migrants who illegally crossed since biden took office, an unprecedented record set in december with more than a quarter of million in one month, and the massive spike in fentanyl spilling over the border. brandon done, a father of the 15-year-old who died of an overdose, testified yesterday, and joined "fox & friends" in the last hour, having this to say. >> what i worry about the most in yesterday's hearing is that a lot of attention is placed on immigration. and not a lot of focus is being put on border security. that is the main reason that i came up here, was to talk about fentanyl coming o over the bord. >> now, elsewhere on the hill, impeachment articles against dhs secretary alejandro mayorkas was introduced by andy biggs for reckless abandonment. unclear how much support this will have in this new congress.
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>> brian: griff, i'm a little stunned that the democrats' approach was not to acknowledge how bad it is, but i thought they were going to talk about the cause. it seems like democrats want to call it racist, maga, frustrated republicans, just because they haven't pass any legislation y yet. i can't believe their approach. even in el paso judge says el paso is not overrun? does that astound you? because you are on the border. >> it was quite jaw-dropping, and i watched almost the entire hearing. in the opening statement, jerry nadler, the ranking member, push back. okay, i expected maybe that would come. it's politics as usual. however, your point is really valid, brian, because the entirety of the hearing was really to tell views of what's happening, when the numbers in the images we have been showing for two years -- myself, bill melugin, others, matt finn down there -- simply or
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irrefutable. and yet, the fact that they had this judge presenting a different scenario really defies logic. sadly, it'll do little to bring the crisis under control. there are democrats who agree, at least the minimum, that it's a humanitarian crisis. most, the officials on the border also think it's a national security crisis. it would be interesting to see if future hearings have a different approach from the democrats. >> steve: well put. griff, thank you very much. >> ainsley: it's frustrating for people who did at the right way or people in other countries waiting for work visas to come over here. >> brian: these guys know it's a catastrophe. >> steve: it all depends on what party you are in. according to the republicans, it's a problem. according to democrats, it's not the problem, just the policy of this administration. of course, once they come into the country, what happens to them? as you know, for the last couple of months, a bunch of them have been shipped by bus to other places, like chicago, and philly, and washington, d.c.,
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and here in new york city. famously, over the last week or two, a bunch of the migrants have been housed at a hotel up on west 57th street, the watson. a couple days ago, the city wanted to start moving the young single men over to the brooklyn cruise terminal, where they had also urge of stuff set up for them. but these activists who had been stirring up the migrants, saying they need to demand more stuff, the migrants out on the street are demanding more stuff. they said, "we would rather sleep in the cold then leave this hotel." and they didn't leave until last night from 8:00. the cops came and said, "all right, everybody paid party's over. we are leaving." >> ainsley: if you have a choice between sleeping in a sleeping bag or under a blanket on the streets of new york when it's 17 degrees outside, why would you listen to the activists when you have a warm place to stay in brooklyn? this is a sanctuary city, and they have cleaned out a space, they have put hot showers in ine
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air and warm food, and they are saying, "no, we don't want to go there." so it's making a lot of new yorkers upset, especially people who did it the right way or people who worked really hard to make more money and put more food on the table. we have an interview with this man who was a mexican immigrant, and he sent this to "the new york post." he said, "these migrants expect benefits from the government and they are depreciated with a being given. they are being very disrespectful. i've been here for 30 years. i never got nothing from the government," he says, "but i busted my blank and i have my own construction company. to see these guys sit here and think everything will be given to them with no effort, it's not fair to other migrants who are willing to work and are working for a better future." >> brian: so when you say democrats don't think it's a problem, that the democratic mayor who needs $2 billion to pay for this. the democratic mayor in chicago, overrun. democratic mayor in los angeles that says it's a catastrophe,
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and then you have henry cuellar -- in washington, too. henry cuellar says, "i've been on the border. it's never been worse." so it's not an option to say it's not a catastrophe in a crisis. what you are his total incompetence, unless -- which is more diabolical -- this is intentional. "i care so little about american cities, people, and tax dollars, i will attract people from 140 nations to invade our border, overrun our border patrol where they are overpaid and often underpaid and often ridiculed. >> ainsley: those individuals were on the terrorist watch l list. >> steve: regardless of what was said yesterday, it's a big problem, especially in places like new york city and elsewhere. meanwhile, let's move from new york to florida. it was after florida governor ron desantis was critical of the college board's new curriculum for the advanced placement course on african studies that they decided they
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were going to change them, and now the college board has gotten rid of the names of many black riders and scholars associated with critical race theory, the queer experience, and black feminism, and added something new. black conservatism is now being offered as an idea for a research project. this, all after ron desantis said, "what's going on with these advanced placement classes?" >> ainsley: if you talk with some of the people involved in riding up the coursework and syllabus for it and explain what it's going to teach the children, they say some of the articles that have been written are false, that they changed the course before ron desantis got involved. the point is, ron desantis doesn't trust this parade when he read some of the wokeness in the course, he has a problem with it and that he doesn't want it tight in their state. but they went back and made some changes. "we are going to fix it." so it can be taught in florida now. we're just waiting to see if ron desantis is okay with the
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curriculum now. >> brian: here is the ceo of the college board, coleman. "this is the facts and evidence of african american history and culture. no one is excluded from the course. the black artists and inventors whose achievements have come to light, the black men and women, including gay americans who played pivotal roles in civil rights, and people of faith and backgrounds, everyone is seen." here is bill proctor, though, on the college board attempt to put the curriculum and to begin with. >> ainsley: he lives in florida, too. >> brian: this is the woke curriculum he has a problem with. >> it saddens me and hurts me that the college board does not come under the auspices of the u.s. department of education out of florida. they are not accountable. they are a private organization, supposedly and presumably for nonprofit. however, they account and report to thousands of universities, and they stand as the gatekeeper between children all across
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america. and their role has been to assess the aptitude and what young people might have in terms of having college abilities to matriculate. and i believe, in this instance, this board has not had the expertise of african american historians. >> steve: the pushback started in january when governor desantis said that he was going to ban the curriculum. state education officials said it was not historically accurate, and it violated state law that regulates how race-related issues are taught in public schools. so now that's why it's all different. >> ainsley: i can't believe there are so many ap courses taught now. i remember in high school you could either take ap english, or calculus. and you had to make a 4 or 5 on the test to pass. it only counted for college credit if you had a 4 or 5. >> brian: you can save some money. >> ainsley: it's cheaper to take it in high school and going to college.
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sometimes -- >> steve: that's right. on my daughter, mary, graduated from high school, she had 17 ap credits, which was one whole happy year. >> ainsley: wow, she's brilliant. >> steve: she worked very hard. >> ainsley: what classes did she take an xp when she took everything. our school had all sorts of ap classes. she was a triple major. philosophy, english, and history. >> ainsley: interesting. i couldn't speak a lick of spanish. i took five years. i don't even know how it got through five years. i took that class and just filled in bubbles, and it exacted me from my foreign language. >> steve: what a scam! >> ainsley: i was shocked! >> steve: you must speak a little "un poco. >> ainsley: un poquito. >> brian: let's go over to ashley strohmier. >> ashley: good morning. we are going to start with tyre nichols' funeral. he was laid to rest weeks after his death following a traffic stop beating. thousands attended the service held at the same church where
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martin luther king jr. delivered his final speech. nichols sister delivering a heart-wrenching eulogy. listen. >> my brother was robbed of his life, his passions, and his talent, and has left me completely heartbroken. i see the world showing him love and fighting for his justice, but all i want is my baby brother back. >> ashley: tyre nichols died last month days after the beating. body camera footage of the incident released, the officers were fired and charged, and sparked a nationwide protest. kevin mccarthy says the house will hold a vote later today and whether to remove ilhan omar from the foreign affairs committee. he first bound to remove the squad member back in 2021 over what many call anti-semitic comments she made about israel and its supporters. congresswoman omar leaving her
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attempted removal as political payback after democrats impeached donald trump. now to a live look at the international space station as astronauts conduct the second spacewalk of the year. american nicole man and another astronaut from japan just closed the hatch. they are all suited up for roughly 7-hour spacewalk to work on a solar array, and overnight, spacex launched a falcon nine rocket carrying 53 styling satellites. the launch marks the rocket's 200 successful flight. and a green comet passes over earth for the first time since the stone age. this photo taken last night through a greek astronomer's telescope showing the comet making its pass over our planet. nasa discovered the green comet last year when they spotted it moving on the edge of the solar system. it was last visible from earth 50 years ago. that was such a cool story. >> steve: 50,000 years ago. >> ashley: excuse me, i missed the thousand. my bad! [laughs] >> steve: that is something. thank you very much.
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and last night we missed it. we didn't see it. >> ainsley: we were asleep. still had come a veteran journalist bob woodward reveals the media essentially ignored his warnings about the steele dossier, claiming readers were cheated by russiagate coverage. buck sexton is a former cai officer and will join us next. >> brian: bye-bye, brady. what's next for the goat? after and i think he's retired for good, i hope he's going to be okay. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> steve: veteran news man bob woodward arguing the media
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failed when it came to fairly covering the now debunked steele dossier. in a report about the russiangate coverage, a columbia journalism review reporter writes, quote, "bob woodward of "the washington post" told me the news coverage of the russia inquiry wasn't handled well, and that he thought readers and viewers had been cheated. new york newsrooms to walk down the painful road of introspection." former cia buck sexton joins us from florida. buck, what do you make of bob woodward, one of the best-respected news men in history, saying, "i tried to warn "the washington post" back in 2017." he said, "this is a garbage document," and now we know, as we have been reporting, there was no "there" there. >> well, he's talking about a journalism that no longer exists and hasn't for some time.
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some argue if it ever really d did. this was the mainstream media's kamikaze mission. they were doing everything possible to destroy donald trump, and even places like cnn made it clear. they openly would say that reporting the truth, and "washington post," as well, meant being anti-trump. this was the mission. it's fine for him to say this now. i would have been a lot more interested in hearing him say this years ago, and i think what you are seeing is that people who have been in journalism, among elite journos for a long time now, are looking at the wreckage of their former profession and understand that they burned it down to get tromped. they weren't successful, but this was the plan all along. we also have the hunter biden laptop now, with hunter admitting, as if anyone didn't know, that it's real. those officers redoing effectively the same thing these journos dead, which would serve the bidding or, rather, the interests of the democratic party, and do its bidding in the process.
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this was all about politics. it's never that they couldn't figure it out. they knew exactly what they were doing. i'm sorry that bob woodward just figured this out now. he went to your point, you used to be an officer at the cia. when they were in office, they didn't say that. it was later when they go, "yeah, the laptop was russian disinformation, misinformation." and it was after they left government service. nonetheless, when you see the resume that those 50 guys had, it's like, well, you've got to listen to them, right? you have to wonder how many votes that might've changed when that full-page ad came out and said, "hey, don't blame hunter. this is fake from russia." >> yes, well, the intel officers also served their purpose for the democrats, and sort of "the washington post," cnn, "the new york times," and all the rest of them, with the russia-gate, trunk collusion lies. the real collusion, as we know, was between media interests and people who want to donald trump out, and people in the
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deep state. that's really all it came down to. all this other stuff about how, "oh, we failed with our integrity. we failed in our goal of being true and honest journalists." that's nonsense. they knew it they were doing, i think, the whole time. and you have to look at the time and here, too. it's not enough to turn around after you have tried the soft to attempt, or the sabotage attempt to save the hunter biden laptop was fake. we all knew it was real. it's not enough to turn around after you've gotten what you want out of it and say, "maybe we shouldn't have lied to you about that one." i think people realize, the integrity and believability of the media has been destroyed a lot of these institutions, and it shouldn't come back. >> steve: hindsight always 2020. funny how that works. thank you for joining us from miami. good to see you. still ahead on this thursday, border showdown, lawmakers clashing on capitol hill as house republicans hold their first hearing on the migrant crisis. congressman wesley hunt coming
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crisis. >> brian: g.o.p. texas congressman wesley hunt was at the whole thing, south fireworks. i love one of your comments, you've been black most of your life. because you were pretty amazed that they were bringing up racism as the reason the republicans are concerned about the border. >> absolutely cannot believe that, because this has nothing to do with race. when they are talking about fentanyl, fentanyl doesn't care about race, either. when you look at what's happening at our border end human trafficking right here in houston, texas, where i am the caucus meant congressional district 38, you look at what's going on in our community and this has absolutely nothing to do with race. when you become the boy who cried wolf like the left has become, it weakens when race is an actual issue. one of my goal on this committee is to make sure we don't allow them to use race as a scapegoat for everything, and let's get down to brass tacks as to what's important to the american people
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and how we can fix some of these issues happening at the border that are killing people every single day. >> steve: of course. and when you say things that are killing people, you're talking about fentanyl. to the democrats, they made it very clear, yesterday, that most of the seizures of fentanyl are at the port of entry. and it is stuff in cars being driven by americans, and relatively -- they said, for the most part, it's pretty much zero for the people who are trying to travel and come into the country between the ports. do you buy that? >> absolutely not. the cartels have full control over our sovereign border right now. they are funneling in fentanyl killing americans at a rate we have not seen in the history of this country. and of fentanyl has poured into our country to kill every single american five times. we know better than that, but they are also working in cahoots with china, that's providing the fentanyl to the cartels that are
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now killing our young people. that's the bottom line. they can try to tell us whatever they want and filibuster and say it's not about that, that we are racist and xenophobic, but quite frankly, we have the truth on our side as long as we are willing to tell it. i think we are going to do that over the course of the next few months on this issue. >> ainsley: after listening to adam schiff ante jerry nadler and some of the democrats that were there, you are just like, what in the world? they pull the race card and they say that biden has continued trump's policies, yet they have ended remain in mexico, they're not allowing to build the wall, and what are those big containers? >> steve: the shipping containers. >> ainsley: the shipping containers. but they are saying another thing. he has continued trump's policies. when they look at the numbers and they know that 98 people on the terrorist watch list came in in fiscal year 2022, how do they justify allowing so many people to come into our country without letting them? >> it's completely un-american. when 9/11 hit i was a sophomore
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at west point in one of the first classes to go to afghanistan and iraq to fight against terror. what we did is we took a vow to say "never again on our watch." now i have a president allowing people on the terrorist watch list -- by the way, they are on the terrorist watch list for a reason. we are allowing them to enter our country indiscriminately, and that puts a solid risk. it's very frustrating to me. because, like many of my classmates at west point, i'm someone who decided to serve our country to read the threat to our country from terrorists abroad. now we are allowing them to physically walk across the border? the answer is no and i think jim jordan and our committee have a plan getting this back on track and keeping our country and the american people safe again. >> brian: just a few people like henry cuellar, a democrat who understands the problem -- they can't see a place where they could come and join you in this because it's so important. thank you. >> ainsley: i was talking to someone from mexico and they
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said, "we think america for this, because a lot of these guys are drug dealers, they are leading our country to come to america." we are glad you are cleaning it mexico. haven't thought about that perspective. >> of course, ma'am. this is a great place to become of the greatest country in the world, and there's a reason why people are risking their lives to get here. >> steve: congressman, thank you very much for joining us on this thursday. >> thank you very much. god bless you. have a great day. >> steve: the news broke yesterday at this time. bye-bye brady. he's hanging up his jersey for good. fox news contributor and sportscaster jimmy gray breaks it all down, on what's next for mr. brady. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ start your day with nature made. the #1 pharmacist recommended vitamin and supplement brand. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> i'm retiring. for good. really, thank you guys so much, to every single one of you, for
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supporting me. my family, my friends, my teammates, my competitors. i could go on forever. there's too many. thank you guys for allowing me to live my absolute dream. i wouldn't change a thing. >> brian: tom brady retired from football just about 24 hours ago, after 23 seasons in the nfl. our next guest hosts a podcast with the goat called "let's go with tom brady, leigh fitzgerald, and jim gray." he joins us now. the show is a can't-miss. it's unbelievable every week. even after the biggest win and loss, that he is every day, and you're bringing the biggest nams in sports. when he released a video, i was surprised. it was happening during our show. was jim gray? >> i wasn't surprised, no. he contemplated it last year, he thinks about it every year in between, and i just think it's time, brian. he's played 23 years. he's really played 26 years on his leg and arm because he had
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48 playoff games. if you take that into account, he just completed his 26th year. and it was a tough year personally, a tough year professionally. they did to enact the division. he did set a record for completions in the nfl. but he had an 8-9 record and it was just tough all around. plus, the personal trouble that he has. he's got little kids. it's just the right time. he wanted to play until he was age 45, and he completed that goal, as well. 7-time super bowl champion. five super bowl mvps. ten super bowl appearances. i don't know really what much more could be accomplished on the field. >> brian: plus, the tb12, and a lot of people say, man, as great as an athlete have to be even to get drafted into the nfl, he was not considered to be anything like what he ended up becoming. so people say, how did he do it? the plyometrics, the nutrition, less weights, more stretching. they had people saying, "man, i've got to watch this guy."
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what he learned in nutrition and fitness is also remarkable, don't you think, jim? >> he changed the whole thing for nfl players and longevity. for young kids growing up and coming up to see how you can last a long time in the national football league. he was so very rarely injured. of course he had a torn acl back in 2007-2008, and he was unable to play that season because of that. but since then, he's been on the field virtually every game that he was eligible to play. and he has changed that. he credits alex guerrero, his personal trainer, and the tb12 method, which he developed. he was consumed with what he consumed. everything that went into his mouth, everything he digested, everything he did all day long, he was programmed, and he stuck by it. he had amazing discipline, and it is a lesson for all of these other guys to play the quarterback position at age 45, with no injuries, in an injury
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where there's a 100% injury rate. so he was injured, but he was on the field. everybody is injured. everybody out there has something wrong. >> brian: i saw him at 39 coming out thinking he was ancient to any of that being a kicker in his last years, and i look at this. now he's got to go focus on something he knows, football, but not as a broadcaster. a lot of great players weren't able to make the transition. you know tom brady so well. what do you think? >> brian, i had the great fortune in my career to be able to travel with john madden. i lived at john madden's house and saw what he did. tom brady has tremendous, tremendous wherewithal, instantaneous recall. he will study hard, he will work hard, and he will be as diligent as any broadcaster in the booth when he puts his mind to it. i have no fear that he will be great at that, as well. >> brian: will he be on your podcast monday?
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>> he will. "let's go, with tom brady and leigh fitzgerald," monday at 6:00 p.m. we'll be talking about his retirement and about the super bowl. and we have a very special guest, too. >> brian: who is it? >> special. tune in. you'll like it. >> brian: you're not telling me. i'm sure i will. thanks so much, i appreciate it. >> see you in phoenix. >> brian: a great broadcaster and friend of tom brady, too. it's groundhog day and punxsutawney phil made his big prediction. watch. >> i see a shadow on my stage, and so, no matter how you measure, it's six more weeks of winter weather! >> brian: janice dean was here to bring us that moment. she is still tingling, according to reports. she is at gobbler's knob in western pennsylvania. janice? >> well done, brian kilmeade. i have friends with me from virginia. what's your name? >> my name is ridley.
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>> what's your name? >> my name is rye. >> did you like it today? >> we did like it. >> first time? >> yes. >> would you come back again? >> yes, i would. >> excellent answer. i got to talk to the president of the inner circle, it's his first time doing this job. let's see what he has to say. >> dress warm and just be ready for the best time that you ever had. it's moving, it is so much fun. because everybody that's with you, the person standing to your left and right, i just excited to be here for a once in a lifetime thing for them. >> here is punxsutawney phil. do you stand by your prediction, phil, of six more weeks of winter? [laughs] okay, i think phil is tired and probably hungry, would you agree? >> i would agree. >> do you think we will have six more weeks of winter? >> it's possible. >> "it's possible." brian kilmeade, that's a good way to wrap this up here at
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gobblers knob, and next year you're coming with me. >> brian: right, sorry, starting to lose your feed, janice... thank you very much. janice dean. still he had, a watch that can survive it all. this event-owned brand has timepieces tested through every phase of seal training. we will introduce you to the brand that's fit for a hero next. speaking of heroes, the hammer has a great show all queued up. >> bill: i'll keep that recording for a long time. we will see you in arizona, as well. new fox polling shows a dim picture of how you see the country, america. what hunter biden said about this infamous laptop now. how's your republicans on a roll with these hearings. will they get anywhere on the border, on covid? the list is long. a greatly in app to to a great lineup. dana and i will see you at the dana and i will see you at the toh, hope to have you then. i choose airborne. unlike some others, airborne gives you vitamin c and so much more.
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♪ ♪ >> brian: all right. we are back with a couple of quick super bowl headlines. talk about supporting the birds, a school district in a philadelphia suburb grants a two hour delayed opening on the monday after the big game. on the other side, a chiefs bar in south philly finds itself deep behind enemy lines. i will pause. >> now it's -- there you go.
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and who screaming when you're walking down the street. you've got red, they are hollering at you. normally we would have something crazy outside, but because we respect, we will keep it in-house. >> brian: they have to pay big charlie saloon has been nicknamed "arrowhead east," in a nod to kansas city's home field. and this texas army national guardsmen will be in the stands of the super bowl after getting tickets from his favorite player. it's dallas cowboys quarterback, micah parsons. he gave him the seats as a thank you for his service. sergeant watson joined us earlier. >> we are known as the quiet professionals, and that is what micah is. he's a quiet professional. he goes out, he does his job, and he gets up and goes back to the huddle. he doesn't grandstand, he doesn't flex, pose. he takes care of business. not only on the field, but also in his personal life. >> brian: be sure to tune in tomorrow. steve will be live outside kansas city.
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and next week, which has been widely underreported, i will be hitting the road and going to arizona. >> ainsley: we can't wait, brian. >> brian: i understand. >> ainsley: did you know you can buy a watch that has been field tested thoroughly through every phase of navy seal training? >> brian: a navy seal an american watch brand design, assembled, and tested in the u.s. >> steve: the co-owners, rob and nicole smith. rob is a retired navy seal who served 20 years active duty as nine deployments, and nicole served ten years with the u.s. coast guard. good morning to both of you. >> good morning. >> good morning. >> steve: what a great set up. tell us how tough this watch is if it's a navy seal tested. >> the first thing we had done, we decided to put these watches together. i was working as an instructor in the first phase, and i strapped a couple of watches on the belts of some of our students. now, they weren't allowed to
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tell the exact time during some of their training, so i didn't have any hands on them. i would test them when they were done. but i did, i put their watches on the belt loops of some of our trainees, and that's how we did our first testing. >> ainsley: you know, i love your story, nicole. when your husband, rob, told you that you were going to start this business, he was dealing with deployments, you had babies at home. you knew it would be a challenge. in the beginning, yell did on your own. i know you girls are now in high school , but this inspired your girls, as well. what do they want to do after high school? >> we have two high school daughters, finishing up high school, and their plan is to come into watchmaking and come alongside us and assist with the business. >> brian: and how did you convince the military that you are allowed to take that technology and bring it to civilians like us? >> well, it's not really high technology. it is standard automatic switch movements. it's been around for quite a long time. >> steve: the watches are so
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cool looking. do you have a website? how can the people -- that's where you are tinkering at home. how can people get your watches and your instruments? >> they can go to rescoinstruments.com. nicole is the heart and soul of the business. i actually teach high school at the moment and run the rotc program and coach wrestling. nicole has really taken charge, and you will be contacting her directly through rescoinstruments.com. >> ainsley: your love for watches dates back to your dad's ears when you go to estate sales. and he brought back 60 watches for you to take apart? >> right, i would take apart some of his instruments. he is a machinist, and i would take apart a lot of his instruments and mess with the gauges and things. one time he brought home a bunch of old busted gauges and watches and that is what sparked my interest in tinkering and watchmaking. in 2006 i went on deployment, and instead of playing
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video games like the rest of some of the fellas to decompress after operations, i would tear apart watches and fix them and sell them on ebay. >> brian: that is some kind of patience. and diamond-cutting on the side. thanks, rob. thank you for sharing your story. >> steve: they also do knives. check out their website. >> ainsley: they are designed, assembled, and tested in the united states. >> steve: we are stepping aside. more in a couple. ♪ ♪ at adp, we understand business today looks nothing like it did yesterday. while it's more unpredictable, its possibilities are endless. from paying your people from anywhere to supporting your talent everywhere, we use data driven insights to design hr solutions and services to help businesses of all size work smarter today. so, they can have more success tomorrow.
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>> beautiful sunrise out west. join me tomorrow at the big biscuit in kansas as "fox & friends" broadcasts live. a lot of chiefs fans will be there. >> stay within yourself. >> bill: good morning. here we go. we have a grim snapshot of america. fox news polling on the country's direction. this is what you are saying. you are saying that an overwhelming number are dissatisfied. that number is at 73%. i guess it could go higher. i don't want to see it. good morning, everybody. thursday, you made it this far. i'm bill hemmer. >> dana: i'm dana perino and this is "america's newsroom." the number is interesting. you talk about how there is not a lot of bipartisan agreement in the country. that's a pretty high n

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