tv FOX and Friends FOX News April 3, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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♪ >> brian: you are looking at new york city. >> steve: you are looking at jersey in the background. >> brian: but we are in new york city and that's where the shot is emanating from. that's where we find the camera and that's where we find the inside of the studio. new york city is going to be the center of attention again as the president lands in midtown and tomorrow he will go downtown at which time he will be indicted and we'll find out- >> ainsley: arraigned. >> brian: arraigned because he has been indicted. find out the details of the charges. walk down the 15th floor after that all bets are off. no handcuffs we know there will be electronic fingerprints and send them in electronically take a mugshot and find out what
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happens. >> ainsley: go back to mar-a-lago and speak tomorrow night at 8:15 he says. >> brian: key give a speech on the courthouse steps if he wanted. >> steve: absolutely he could unless the judge imposes a gag order because there is a real good possibility given what the former president has already said about the d.a. and about the judge there could be one. alexandria hoff developments from the white house. plenty to talk about alexandria. >> plenty to talk about. the president has unparalleled 48 hours ahead of him. writing on social media that he does expect to leave mar-a-lago noon today before turning himself in to new york. he ended this post america is not supposed to be in way this follows alvin bragg's 34 count indictment against the former president that does remain sealed. we don't know the specific charges as you mention. we will know them soon according to the associated press and their sources. this includes at least one felony. trump's attorney said yesterday that he expects to make a motion
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to dismiss we will take the indictment and dissect it and look at every potential issue that we will be able to challenge and we will challenge. of course, i very much anticipate a motion to dismiss coming because there is no law that fits this. >> a little clean-up going on at the white house so i hope you can hear me. for days groups of mostly supporters have been rallying around trump's mar-a-lago residence. that is the new york police department busy installing barricades outside the manhattan courthouse. officers have been placed on alert and ready to respond in the event of protests. the potential could be exacerbated by the potential for a judge to implement a gag order that would bar the president from talking about the case. that comes from "the daily mail" that cited unnamed sources reporting that, quote: the trump legal team now thinks that the manhattan judge will take the unprecedented stem of silencing the presidential frontrunner with an unconstitutional gag order tomorrow breaking the order could trigger a final of $1,000
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and a prison sentence of as much as 30 days that is a lot. fox news has not independently confirmed this. but if a gag order were to go into effect, that would really disrupt the president's intention on making a speech tomorrow night as he returns to mar-a-lago. guys? >> steve: that's right. alexandria a thank you very much. and the more the president -- former president has talked about it, the more money he has raised for his campaign. right now north of $5 million that we know of. she referred to the judge who could, you know, impose a gag order. this guy, who is going to be presiding over the arraignment and the trial as well fellow by the name of ron market researchen. he knows more about the trump administration than anybody in this courthouse. last year this judge presided over the criminal tax fraud case against the trump organization where the jury found two trump companies guilty of 17 felonies related to tax fraud and
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falsifying business records. also, he presided over the trial of cfo for the trump organizational len rifleman found it's of tax fraud today the president -- traffic will be wad. they have seats blocked off. >> steve: trump gridlock. >> ainsley: tomorrow around noon he is going to head down to the court hours. downtown 100 center street. it's a one-way street so lots of gridlock there. i think this is going to be on camera because i'm reading during the arraignment tomorrow afternoon, expect a bench ruling by the judge on camera courtroom. then is he going to leave laguardia airport and head to mar-a-lago and have that speech at 8:15 if the judge allows him to talk. he will probably speak.
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>> brian: i think it works to advantage a gag order i is say listen i would love to give you more of my defense. you know where i stand. i will let this thing play out and talk about the issues. we have major issues in this country. we are being threatened from russia and china in a way we have never seen before as well as iran hammering our troops over in syria. as well as economic woes we weren't anticipating. the other party with the current president, most of their party doesn't want him to run again and nobody is talking about it. so, everything is focused on this case downtown from years ago. i think it's smart for his attorneys to come out and praise the judge. but, how they really feel about the judge we will never know. if you look at putting a 75-year-old in rikers island for using money to allow his granddaughter go catholic school or using different company funds for car services, this juvonte any never would have been on the
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organization had he not run and won as president of the united states. they were begging this president toably the -- bloomberg did to buy the bronx golf course to refurbish it, the ice skating rink in central park. this guy was considered a treasure in new york city an enemy to some sure. you would look to donald trump if you were traveling through new york city and you would want a picture. suddenly things flipped with all this stuff going on crime up between 20 and 30%. how could you say an incident from seven years ago that happened 17 years ago is priority. >> steve: just remember, brian, alvin bragg ran on being the d.a. here in going after will they televise the proceedings which probably won't take place until next year, actually.
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bill barr the former attorney general during the trump administration he said it would be a bad idea for donald trump to testify because he lacks all self-control. it would be hard to prepare him and keep him testifying in a prudent fashion because as we know the former president occasionally goes off script. >> ainsley: his attorney joe tacapino said we will loudly and proudly say not guilty. he is going to backed into the courtroom through the front door and walk out through the front door there there will be so many people from the press out there. we will definitely be seeing that we had ronna mcdaniel on earlier and she was the head of the rnc and she was slamming alvin bragg, listen many
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republicans outraged rightfully so. we are learning in america the greatest crime you can have is to be republican whether you are a parent at a pta meeting labeled a domestic terrorist or the former president the united states, democrats are going to come after you any way they can and i think people are rightfully upset. >> brian: we will see if there is anything else in that indictment besides what we know. something in there surprise about his corporate financing', with his business. we will see. >> steve: got to be a felony. if things are aspect lated, people like is a carla i don't see anything here. senator from louisiana said you can't believe. >> senator joe manchin. >> ainsley: sad day for america he said. >> you talk about the border. know that governor nikki haley is going down to the border today to announce her policy to seal that border once and for
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all because this president opened it up. the human tragedy behind it. check out this video. you have this child on a raft floating across the rio grande by themselves. put out there by a cartel perhaps and just sailed over here to this site. this is what the border patrol does. >> >> steve: and as you can see the person running texas national guard were able to save that child. a child in peril could have easily have drowned. it's a problem down there every day. that's why "60 minutes" actually put secretary mayorkas in the hot seat, challenged him a couple of times. clearly it's a crisis, right? will he call it a crisis? no, this is his spin. watch. >> the chief of the border patrol raúl ortiz testified
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before congress that some areas of the border are in a crisis situation. do you agree? >> i think that we face a very serious challenge in certain parts of the border. >> do you view what is happening now on the border as a crisis? >> i view it as a significant challenge. >> why won't you say the word "crisis"? >> you know what? because i have tremendous faith in the people of the department of homeland security and crisis speaks to me of a withdrawal from our mission and we are only putting more force and more information p energy into it. >> brian: the administration told them not say crisis. that's like saying the people of mississippi are not in crisis now and insulting rescue workers. one thing has nothing to do with the other. you opened up the border in every single way. we all know it and the fact that he lies under oath and gets to keep his job is stunning. he also said this about the wall. he goes look at this wall. why wouldn't you build a wall? well, as can you see it's corroded and doesn't work it's not movable. >> you are not supposed to have
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movable wall. electronics around of the wall. make sure people move around it. >> it's not rod roting. the only thing that's rotting is the pieces of wall bepaid for rotting in the desert you won't but the it. >> >> ainsley: how you cannot call it a crisis people dying from fentanyl poisoning. coming across our border. how you cannot call it a crisis when you look at little children on rafts by themselves or a child standing in a field with a little teddy bear. >> brian: what about the 40,000 here? >> ainsley: the numbers are staggering. look how they have increased and jumped. >> brian: in new york city we are in a crisis because of what he has allowed to happen under the border under this president's administration. he was asked. joe biden doesn't want to talk about it. that's not true. we talk about it. no, no. the president doesn't want to talk about that like doesn't want to talk about afghanistan. maybe he forgot there is an afghanistan and there is a border. i don't know. but regardless, he is so not ready for this job that he currently has. this is just the latest example.
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>> steve: well, look. mayorkas is simply doing what the white house wants him to do. >> brian: lying under oath? >> steve: listen, if he were lying under oath, they would be able to catch him. >> brian: you don't think is he lying under oath when he says it's not a crisis. >> steve: it all depends on what your version of crisis is. >> brian: the border patrol says it's a crisis. >> steve: we heard his version. it's spin. tom homan who has dedicating his life to enforcing the border says the fact that he refuses to call a crisis is this. watch. >> look, the mission is securing the border. he withdrew from that mission the day he took the job because he hasn't done a damn thing to secure the border. only thing he has done is create illegal policies that he is losing in court to bring thousands in every day to make illegitimate asylum claim because he knows 9 out of 10 doesn't qualify. the other reason he says he has tremendous faith in the personnel at dhs. no he does not. every day et guess on tv says
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there is not a crisis and border is secure. is he disrespecting the men and women working their butts off every day dealing with the historic crisis. >> steve: crisis in new york. number of people migranting who are being brought to new york city and staying in a number of hotel we heard antidotal stories about how dangerous these migrant. hotel cleaner been in country 22 years. >> ainsley: grand mother has four grandkids. >> steve: just doing her job. she was assaulted by one of the migrants. apparently she was cleaning a room and then this migrant's necklace went missing. and she accused the cleaner of doing it. the cleaner was absolutely cleared by the hotel. but next thing you know the migrant sees the cleaner down in the lobby, slaps her in the face.
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>> ainsley: yeah. so now she is suing. city officials supervising the migrants knew about the volatile situation and did nothing to protect her. her attorney is saying. >> brian: yeah. this is what he said i treat all people with respect. i'm grateful for my job. i work hard every day. i don't understand how someone could do this to another person. and then the lawyer went on to say my client is hard-working. senior citizen, union member, success story. threatened assaulted and battered of while performing job duties to support a family. our city rewards back actors at the expense of good hardworking people who pay taxes for a designed political fiasco. the defendant obviously should be deported we shouldn't put them in luxury hotels and feeding all these people who are ungrateful for the most part or every time they are in accommodations they seem-to-booze it. ask people in these hotels. the hotels should walk away even though they can sell out the whole place and get a big check. allegiance could be for the people and tourists and people of the city and say i really
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can't have my place destroyed. what happens is the city, on taxpayer dollars, writes a check, buys out the whole hotel and in come the immigrants there goes the neighborhoods. >> processed 51,000 migrants coscost $4.6 million a day. expected to reach 4 continue to 2 billion by the middle of next year. >> they are trying to impeach him but they don't have the votes. they know it's going to be just an exercise in futility. he should be forced to cooperate if he had an ounce of self-esteem. >> steve: meanwhile the alleged slapper and her male companion, who is staying in the same room with her have been moved to another hotel. beware. >> ainsley: great. >> steve: it is a quarter after the top of the hour and ashley joins us with breaking news about the spy balloon. >> that chinese spy balloon shot down in february reportedly gathered intelligence from several sensitive u.s. military bases before it was brought
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down. that is according to a report from nbc news this morning it john kirby and others repeatedly denied this was possible. reports say china controlled the balloon so it could make certain passes over certain sites and transmit the intel back to beijing in real time. the los angeles county board of supervisors is considering a plan to decars rate city jails the plan would allow anyone with bail $50,000 or less to be cited and released essentially slapping jail full-time for a sloan the race. humanitarian crisis mental health and overcrowding issues at the jails. missouri state representative justin hix, a black republican, depending off questions about his ethnicity from a democratic lawmaker. the confrontation happening because he backs a bill against the diversified, equity and inclusion. he joined us earlier on "fox & friends first." take a look at that exchange and then his reaction. >> can i ask you what you identify as?
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>> identify? >> yes. ethnicity. >> i identify as an american. >> not an african-american? [applause] >> this is not an issue of race anymore. and i think they look for words to divide us instead of unite us. and i think that really sets them off is looking the lines of all of us being american first and not divide us based on race. that goes against what they believe in all together. >> hix was arguing for a bill that would ban equity spending in missouri's department of agriculture. bud light raising eyebrows after tiktok star dylan mulvaney new found woman hood. >> i kept hearing about this thing called march madness it turns out it has something to do with sports. this month i celebrated my day 365 of woman hood. and bud light sent me possibly the best gift ever a can with my
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face on it. >> the post left many online scratching their heads with some scratches it was an april fool's prank. those are your headlines. >> brian: i'm not sure how that's going to be selling. go a local distributer and see how much they are going for. >> thank you, ashley. >> i think budweiser should come out and say either yes it's me or no, it's not. i don't think they can remain silent any longer. we're going to follow this story throughout the day and maybe break out of commercial. coming up, secretary of state antony blinken can calling for immediate release of "wall street journal" reporter evan gershkovich. his editor and chief joins us next as russia calls on the u.s. to respect its authority
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will. >> ainsley: secretary of state antony blinken is calling for the immediate release of two americans that are being held behind bars in russia. one of them, our colleague, "wall street journal" reporter evan gertz very much. >> brian: in a call with russian foreign secretary sergey lavrov over the weekend blinken conveyed grave concerns over their intentions. >> steve: the editor and chief for the "wall street journal" emma tucker joins us live in new york. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> you know, ever since the news flash that he was taken by the russians we have seen the picture. we don't know a lot about evan. tell us about him. >> seven a young man, very, very popular in our newsroom. a lot of the journalists that work with him. they enjoy working with him because he is a good collaborative colleague he is young, he is sitting his stride as a very, very talented reporter. he is -- evan is american born and bread.
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is he an american boy grew up in new york. his parents are russian-jewish immigrant from soviet union. i met them yesterday and he was telling me he became very interested in russian heritage. he spoke russian at home with his parents and then even though he had a very good job here in new york he decided to go off from-to-russia because he wanted to report from there. is he passionate about russian culture. passionate about the people. spoke the language. that made him an absolutely brilliant reporter. we were lucky enough to scoop him up in 2022 to work for the "wall street journal." >> he had a really detailed column his last story was written by evan says the headline was. this russia's economy starting to come undone. and next thing you know most thorough low rarl russian economy really since the war started. you just wonder if that
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reporting played a role. >> well, i'm glad you highlighted that piece. it was a fantastic piece of journalism. it was. >> brian: so detailed. >> so detailed and so knowledgeable. i know it got widely shared and picked up that pete's it. really gave you insight into the russian economy post sanctions. we don't know why he has been arrested. >> brian: they call him a spy. no way. >> it's total outrage. he was credited. he was out doing his job. completely unacceptable for journalist not to be able -- >> ainsley: is he able to talk to his parents? do we know how he something treated? what are his parents saying? i'm sure they are a mess. >> they are wonderful people. they are very, very proud of their son. they are coping but they are very distraught principally because they can't get a message to him they have written
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letters. hoping to be read out to evan by the prison guards or so we're told. the thing that's really distressing them is this feeling that they can't get any message to him let alone -- >> brian: would you like to see more muscular response from our state department. >> the state department have been very supportive so far they have rallied around every level of government has got behind this. you know, we'll see where things happen next. we are hoping that they will label him as being wrongfully detained, sooner rather than later. i think when that happens things could move more swiftly. >> steve: just more complicated because russia is prosecuting a war with ukraine. so, you know, it's just more complicated. more challenging. but, ultimately. before you go this kind of journalist off the street can have a chilling impact on getting stories out all around the world. >> yeah. exactly. it's not just russia. i mean, russia is -- has become
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not a great environment for journalists, either russian or foreign. >> brian: terrible, the worst it? >> is the worst. it's not alone. the really awful thing is it seems to be increasingly the case around the world that journalists, reporters who are out there, trying to give eyewitness accounts of what's going on, doing their job faithfully are operating in increasingly difficult circumstances. >> ainsley: i know the washington bureau pulled other journalists with the "wall street journal" still on the ground there. >> there are some people linked to the journal there. we have got plan for them as well. we are working, look, the safety of our journalists comes first but at the same time we remain committed to reporting fairly and squarely from all over the world. >> steve: thank you for coming we appreciate it. >> ainsley: former president donald trump is expected to arrive in new york city later today ahead of his arraignment tomorrow.
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former trump attorney jim trusty reacts to the unprecedented arrest live. lowe's knows the first step to motivation is inspiration. so, we've got new everything. new flooring, new paint, new patio sets, new pillows. i can keep going if you want me to. you got this. and we got you. we pulled people off the street and asked them about their hearts. how's your heart? my heart's pretty good. you sure? how do you know? you're driving a car you have to check engine light. but the heart doesn't have a hey check heart sign. with kardiamobile. the fda cleared a personal ekg device. you can take a medical grade ekg in just 30 seconds from anywhere. kardiamobile is proven to detect atrial fibrillation, one of the leading causes of stroke. kardiamobile is now available for just $79.
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arraignment of donald trump. he will come shortly. jim trusty represents donald trump in a different case but joins us now. jim, can you give us an idea of the sense around the former president as he heads to manhattan today? >> yeah, i think he is surprisingly resilient guy. you know, he is very aware of the historic significance of this moment and, again, not about him but about the criminal justice system being turned on its head where prosecutors can get elected upon promises of targeting people. and that's just, you know i was a prosecutor for 27 years. that's not the way you are supposed to act as a prosecutor. you are supposed to be judicious. follow the evidence and rule of law instead of pinning charges on political enemies. he is aware that obviously it's an indictment geared towards him and political persecution. but he recognizes the historic significant of this moment and it's a really scary moment for the country as far as i'm concerned. >> going to be a press
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conference after the indictment announced to add some flavor to it that a seeds indictment is. is there a big sense of unknown around his legal team like we do not know what's been handed up? >> i think there is kind of a cautious approach of we think we know. i mean, look, we are talking about a sealed indictment that shouldn't even be public at this point but, again, the rules don't seem to apply if you are targeting donald trump. the grand jury was similar there was an awful lot of public discussion of what was going on in the grand jury and what their legal shors are. i welcome that last part the legal theories. we see a lot of frailty and we suspect that the indictment will have fundamental problems but we do have to take a wait and see. see what we get and file appropriate motions on the back end. >> brian: again, you are an observer of this but on the trump team for the j-6 and mar-a-lago documents i'm sure you saw "the washington post"
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lead story the fbi investigators fresh evidence pointing to possible obstruction by the former president. they have will, who is evidently one of the president's valets still there. who talks about how he was told to move certain documents away and possibly conceal things from the attorney. stunningly, for me, i can't believe the attorney has been told to testify against his own client in this case. are you getting worried about what they're doing and what do you think the strategy is here to have a massive detailed leak about an ongoing investigation on a former president? >> yeah, not the first and unfortunately, probably won't be the last. i mean, look, from the beginning, we have seen leaks, particularly to favorite mouthpieces, "the washington post," the "new york times," where they will take any bit of evidence or suspected evidence and spin it into a story of presidential obstruction. our investigation is showing it's just not true, not fair,really a pressure campaign to go after particular witnesses and try to force them to
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cooperate with the government's bad assumptions and it's just, again, it's not due process. it's not the rule of law. it's a doj or, remember, brian, this started off with the attorney general having a press conference to talk about the search warrant. that was unethical moment four days in. you know, four days after the raid at mar-a-lago and ever since then, there has been a whisper campaign designed to pressure witnesses designed to make this president look as if he is somehow obstructionist while joe biden was just happily holding on to papers up in delaware. you know, it's an amazing double standard but not the first time or the last time we will see it. >> brian: i think they are trying to separate the document case for the president and the former president. they want to show that the former president obstructed and the current president didn't. we don't know any details about that investigation but we know a whole -- we know it's a 7-page detailed account of how this investigation is going. final thought?
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>> yeah. well, don't confuse the media accounts and "the washington post" or other outlets as being actually truthful. you know, this is a really sustained decision made by either the doj or fbi or both to publicize their investigation every step of the way. to pressure witnesses. you know, we think if the full story comes out about how these prosecutors -- and i mean, new york, georgia and main justice how they conduct themselves is going to be a bad story for all of them. >> brian: you have got your hands full. the pressure is on everywhere. jim trusty thanks so much. >> all right. thanks, brian. >> brian: biggest names in country music converge for the cot awards. abby hornacek hit the red carpet. we pay her expenses. here is tyler hubbard performing dancing in the country during last night's show. let's watch ♪ ♪
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if you switch to cabenuva, attend all treatment appointments. and i'm good to go. ask your doctor about every-other-month cabenuva. ♪ thank god ♪ you love me when you didn't have to ♪ you did ♪ you do ♪ he knew ♪ thank god for giving me you ♪ >> steve: beautiful song. that was cmt award co-host cane brown and his wife kaitlin performing thank god last night. >> ainsley: that song took home video of the year. they weren't the only big winners. >> brian: that according to abby hornacek watched the last show she was on the teal carpet last night, abby. >> ainsley: hey abby. >> i was on the teal carpet.
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the country music fans have spoken. actually the first time this award show was held in austin rather than nashville. we were right there to capture all of the energy ahead of the big night. take a look. ♪ ♪ we are in the live music capital of the world where one of the biggest nights in country music is about to kick off. i hear the stars are starting to arrive so let's go say hello. >> hey, "fox & friends." >> hey, "fox & friends." >> "fox & friends." >> hey "fox & friends." watch you every morning. we love you. >> fun to be here. it's amazing. >> everybody is having a good time. >> the best dressed of tonight so far. >> i'm trying to glitter. >> i want you to be real with me. >> more intimidating playing on the tmz stage tonight or "fox & friends"? ♪ rock me momma like a wagon wheel. >> tha definitely the cmt stage. >> how dare you. >> i think performing on "fox &
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friends" is a thrill. especially during 34-degree weather. we have done that. >> you have part of the lynyrd skynyrd tribute tonight what does that mean to you. >> i'm honored to be paying tribute to them. honest music live forever. >> what's it like to be here in austin, texas. usually in nashville moved to austin. >> good. i'm from texas. >> everything is bigger in texas. i threw up some hock elms. >> everybody come down here being in texas is awesome. >> who are you looking forward to seeing tonight. >> laney wilson. >> jelly roll. >> again stephanfully performance i'm a hollow back girl through and through. >> shania tywain. >> why known that judd. >> kelsie ball ler written any kerry wood. >> look at the excitement. through the roof. >> you are will be on stage tonight with shania >> it's an exclusive. we are going to church tonight
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y'all >> you won the first award of the night. >> i got it in my pocket. >> winner. might have to be the next tattoo. >> baby, listener, tonight is the night the losers win. we are changing the game. >> most nominated artist tonight what does that mean to you. >> oh my gosh, my head is spinning, my heart is racing. i'm glad to be here. i feel humbled and excited and honored. grateful. >> i love y'all so much. thank you. >> what does it mean to you being a fan voted award show your fans are the ones that decided you deserve it? >> that's that's the best part. >> our fans make the world go around. >> what does country music mean to you. >> country music gave us a shot. it means everything. >> country music is for everyone, you know? >> we all have a lot more in common than what you think. >> what we do is all about the music and about the song. >> it's part of the fiber of this country. i think country music heals and helps and lifts up and parties
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like no other genre. >> i got say that is what i love about country music. every single person i talked to was so humble, down to earth, and gave credit to everyone except for themselves for why they are there. all around a feel good night. >> steve: as we just heard, country music loves to party and it's great that you were there on the big night. >> why did they decide to do it in austin instead of nashville? >> well, this is the live music capital of the world so i can imagine that played some sort of decision. some sort of role in making that decision. i don't know, guys, it was pretty successful. they might keep it here. who knows? >> that really hurt the darius rucker since he didn't have that same tingling performing on our pavement as it did on their stage. >> ainsley: give them a break. darius rucker from south carolina he does so much from me
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university there. he never forgot where he came. >> lynyrd skynyrd says "fox & friends" was more of a challenge because they were in 30-degree weather. might be the biggest. >> steve: not only freezing but on the plaza while new york city traffic drove by at 5 minutes before 9:00 in the morning. so it was noisy, but they were great and, of course, our plaza is always open. >> ainsley: they are so nice to us. we love lynyrd skynyrd they are wonderful. >> steve: thank you for joining us live from austin. >> brian: now you can go party. >> thanks, guys. >> ainsley: brian was wondering when a husband and wife have to sing together. what if they fight before? >> brian: thank god for each other. what if they have like a little disagreement? i'm not singing, you go sing. >> ainsley: adam they still have to perform the show must go on. >> brian: that's why dawn and i did not go on singing. >> adam: good morning. the show must go on. i don't know why darius rutger's
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doesn't still get the continuing imels when he stands out here. i do. much like it was cold for lynyrd skynyrd it's cold here this morning. temperatures down in the 30's. most cold lingering off to the western part of the united states. the side of the country the system we will be talking about. see that snow sweeping over towards of the plains. that is going to turn into a big winter weather system. blizzard warnings in place across south dakota lyfting up into north dakota. that is our frontal boundary. get into tuesday, the front side of that storm, severe storm threat is there. significant threat getting back into portions of northern illinois. back into portions of iowa. a very similar set-up to the severe weather we saw just back on friday. so, guys, those are your weather headlines download the fox weather app. and track that system as it moose across the system. >> steve: it is holy week. a lot of people will be traveling and there will be
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travel delays. so great weather advice. coming up on this monday. pennsylvania senator john fetterman is owning up about his struggle with depression. >> i will be going home and be the first time ever to be in remission with my depression. >> steve: fox news medical contributor dr. marc siegel on the early warning signs every american should hear coming up next. ♪
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he says he has always had depression for a long time. we didn't know that. the severity of the depression is very disturbing. couldn't get out of bed. that is a sign of severe depression. not eating, losing weight. loss of happiness. it was his son's 14th width day. a unfortunately the chance of recurrence is over 06%. why was he in the hospital for six weeks? that's such a long period of time. it's usually 7 to 10 days. i remain concerned even as he returns to the united states senate at what level of function he is. he certainly seems like he is in remission. it seems it from how is he talking. i certainly hope he stays that way. >> ainsley: i think it's one in three stroke victims suffer depression. >> absolutely. >> ainsley: here is what he said about using captioning because he can't hear. listen. >> when i talk, what do you hear? >> i hear you talking and i can understand much of what you are saying but my hearing has
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deficiency that makes it difficult for me to fully understand 100 percent of it. >> at some point, you described what you hears a like charlie brown's teacher. >> yeah. early on that was more -- months and months ago, whatever. but right now captioning is helpful for me. >> ainsley: that is so scary. what's your reaction for that. >> that's probably something called the acoustic nerve. he has had that from the time of the stroke. obviously something they tried to rehabilitate not entirely successfully. i have a feeling it's going to be with him. at this point, you know, up to a year afterwards, he has probably done most of the rehabilitation he can do. the fact that he needs cues, in the senate, it doesn't bother me. the question is how is he going to function now and at what level? >> ainsley: can he function as a senator? what would you say as his doctor. >> i'm concerned. after the stroke, the heart disease. this degree of depression. look, we have to care about him but we also have to care about
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the 14 million people in pennsylvania and the rest of the country that needs a fully functioning senate. so i don't know the answer to that. >> ainsley: we do care about our military. >> absolutely. >> ainsley: new research come out 10,000 army soldiers packed on the pounds during the pandemic and led to obesity. we are also seeing similar numbers in the navy and in the marines. >> you know, when i was up for "fox & friends" last year at west point, i saw the cadets running early in the morning, marching at top speed with lights on their heads. that was getting back to it the problem is for the first two years of the pandemic gymies closed. organized exercise wasn't going on. people stays in the barracks and ate comfort food. eating chips and put on bounds. talking about one quarter of the military is obese. i will tell you why i'm concerned about that as a physician because it leads to injury leads to lost hours of
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effect tiff work. they have to defend our country. it's a huge problem. not ending even with the pandemic. the military has to focus on this directly because the bad habits that started during the pandemic have continued. >> ainsley: and recruitment is down as well. >> also because of obesity. one of the reasons recruitment is down people don't qualify. ebees city is a huge problem. >> ainsley: still ahead, federal judges are refusing to hire clerks from stanford after woke students and the diversified dean ambush a conservative member of the bench. ♪ (tony hawk) skating for over 45 years has taken a toll on my body. i take qunol turmeric because it helps with healthy joints and inflammation support. why qunol? it has superior absorption compared to regular turmeric.
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♪ all i wanna do is have some fun ♪ >> ainsley: that is aisle of palms, south carolina. aisle of palms and sullivan island. >> steve: that big bridge out of charlesston and you're there. >> ainsley: that is right, they do the bridge run every year, she lives 10 minutes from aisle of palms. there were a lot o
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