tv FOX and Friends FOX News April 4, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT
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♪ ♪ say hello ♪ hello. >> steve: hello and welcome to hour two on this fourth day of april. you're looking live at north myrtle beach. >> ainsley: do you see a spy balloon? >> steve: i don't. but then again. looking at the water. currently 62 degrees there. it is 47 in new york as you look out the window. the sun rose two minutes ago in
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saw trump tower there were a lot of tv cameras on the other side of the street. i'm sure so many camera crews are out there where you are as well. >> absolutely. this has been going on for days. a row of cameras, tents, producers and teams on each side of us. we will show you a little bit more of that in the next hour there is a lot of steps to happen before we get to 2:15. one of the things our sources have told us that the manhattan criminal court building here behind me where the proceedings will take place will be swept. the secret service will go in to make sure everything is safe. there will be no other court proceedings happening in that window of time when the former president is going to be arraigned. and then you have got the people that are waiting in line right down the street that are now wrapped around the block waiting to get a seat. those tickets are going to be handed out in the next hour after the 8:00 a.m. we are expecting to see this
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large group of people, mostly from the media, getting their tickets to go inside of the courtroom today. now, as you mentioned, fifth avenue has been very busy as well. mr. trump is still at trump tower this morning where he arrived monday afternoon from his home in palm beach. getting all set up. we are expecting to see him arrive at the manhattan criminal court building some time around 1:00. ahead of that 2:15 arraignment. we also are not going to be seeing this in real time. that is a new twist that happened last night. the presiding judge ruled that the court proceedings will not be televised only still photos will be permitted on this. and this after the defense argued it will create a circus like atmosphere at the arraignment, raise unique security concerns and is inconsistent with president trump's presumption of innocence. now law enforcement including the nypd, fbi, they are all working to make sure this process goes as smooth and safe as possible. the secret service will accompany trump at all times and that includes processing,
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fingerprinting and if that mugshot happens he is not expected to be handcuffed as you mentioned and demonstrators are expected here outside the court house in the next few hours. new york city mayor eric adams asked for protesters to keep it peaceful, please. >> new york city is always ready. while there may be some are a bell rousers thinking about coming to our city tomorrow our message is clear and simple. control yourselves misplaced anger while the still under seal planning to dismiss the case. trump will turn himself in to the district attorney alvin bragg before reportedly facing those more than 30 criminal charges. one expected to be a felony. his attorney ready to fight a series of motions off the bait a
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motion to dismiss based on selective prosecution. selective prosecutorial misconduct. there is zero chance where donald trump is pleading to anything here. he mitt nod crime, he committed no wrong. not a misdemeanor, not a felony. not a traffic ticket. there's nothing here. i still can't believe this is going to survive our vigorous motions to dismiss. >> you mentioned after the arraignment the district attorney alvin bragg will be holding a press conference and then after everything settles down here and mr. trump heads back to florida he will be addressing the nation holding his own statements down there at mar-a-lago. back to you guys. >> steve: lots to do. laura, thank you very much. you know yesterday, when we were talking about because we still don't know what these counts are and the story according to mike its that cough at yahoo news is 34 counts all felonies. 34 felonies. and it does sound as if in
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regards, if you believe the story, falsification of business records. so one charge for each record falsified at least. >> brian: going to look to dismiss the judge. going to look to dismiss -- remove bragg. resist a gag order. going to look to dismiss the entire case. you have to figure if i'm that judge. he already did the bannon case the cfo and trump civil case. >> steve: he is an expert. >> brian: why we want to be part of this you see how all those turned against the trump people you see that is not a situation that would be at the very least appearance of bias. but probably stay on it. i thought joe tacopina was smart on sunday saying i have no problem with it. and we also found out that they added key attorney to the trump defense team todd blanch rolling
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stone writes a story that tacopina is ruffling some feathers to speak on the inside of the trump team saying some negative things about his intellect and approach. >> ainsley: brooklyn attorney. >> brian: tough guy. >> ainsley: exactly tough guy. this new attorney todd blanch is going to join tacapino and other lawyers to be what they are calling additional fire power to the trump legal team. he is the guy who successfully got paul manafort's case dismissed in the same courthouse. now they are saying from this report that you were talking about the michael its cough. the reason he is saying they were pumped up to a class e felony. still a felony even though it's the lowest level of felonies here in new york. they are saying because bragg says that trump was intending to conceal another underlying crime we will learn what that is when
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they become unsealed: >> steve: he did get the paul manafort case dismissed that was after he was actually found guilty in federal court. many successfully hey, you can't have double jeopardy in the united states of america. they go yep, you are right cope in mind alvin bragg when he was running for d.a. here in new york city in manhattan he campaigned on i'm going after donald trump. you know what? looks like he is trying to deliver on that campaign promise. >> this is politics he ran and before taking the oath he said he was going to be personally supervising this case. did he not know what the charges were that he was going to bring against donald trump. he didn't know what the facts were going to be that he was going to use. now new yorkers experienced the first few months of alvin bragg's tenure seeing crime in
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many metrics go up. many countries you have the dictatorial powers trying to manufacture charges to take out political opponents this isn't something we ever want to see four country but today we will. >> brian: keep in mind the felonies against trump business is a proactive investigation where there was no complaint. just because they want thed to see if one of the most successful stalwart organizations in new york family run had anything to hide get tax returns as complex as they said they were and find enough to fine him a million dollars. okay. then they take that information try to sue him again looks as those if michael isikoff's reporting is correct it's going to convert to a felony. if president trump does not run for office and continues to host the apprentice or offshoot on
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julio or netflix no one looks into anything. he continues to go to all the celebrity parties. continues to be mentioned in rap songs. continues to be somebody that is looked to as a positive, for example, getting awards from reverend jesse jackson and al sharpton for his work in the minority community. >> ainsley: or actor in home alone. >> brian: only thing that changed he became president and is he a republican. that's it. >> ainsley: he was on truth social last night and he is demanding that bragg indict himself and resign for leaking this information for illegally leaking details of the indictment he says acuferses bragg's wife being the driving force are. because she has retweeted negative things about him. >> steve: we don't know if the news was leaked by bragg's office. it's interesting in michael isikoff's story in yahoo news. it says that the d.a.'s office has been consulting with the secret service and new york city court officials on negotiating what is going to happen other
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organizations lawyers on the inside blabbed. but, we won't know for sure n. until this afternoon. >> brian: we should not have heard about the indictment. >> steve: we heard the anybody last we're cnn 34. >> ainsley: the reason is he not in handcuffs he is not a flight risk. not harming anyone in the courtroom because is he covered by secret service. >> brian: no reason why there are pictures because everybody knows who donald trump is. >> steve: one other thing we have talked about this in the past not the first president who was arrested. the first president ever arrested i was reading a little more about this. and the charge was, you were driving a horse too fast as it turns out one night ulysses s. grant was driving a carriage, a horse drawn carriage through the streets of washington too fast and cop stopped him and said mro fast. i'm going to give you a warning.
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grant says okay, thank you very much. the next night same cop saw ulysses s. grant a second time and said you know what? i'm going to have to write you up. he said i well, i would expect you would. that's how he became the first president ever arrested. >> brian: no radar detectors to know where those red light cameras were. >> ainsley: today is election day in chicago. voting on the crime issue there. seen that in new york. we had lee zeldin on our show earlier and also in san francisco there is a major crime problem. a major overdose problem. a homeless problem there and london breed, who is the mayor there a lot of pro-police critics have said oh, now you are paying attention to the crime problem because apparently she wrote a letter, san francisco chronicle got their hands on this letter asking the u.s. attorney for federal assistance to help mitigate the crime problem in san francisco. >> brian: here is what she says the scale of the problem is beyond our local capacity. we need ongoing fawrts?
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the department of support to arrest drug dealers so residents, families and workers feel safe in their neighborhoods. guess who started it, guess who let everything go to hell and now you want the federal government to step in and reign in crime that's out of control because you won't prosecute anybody. she did have some positive statements over the past year but she was helped cause. this and the person who was mayor before her helped lay the foundation for this chaos. that was gavin newsom. >> >> she was known as defund the police advocate. the problem the reach why there is so much crime in san francisco because they need, they estimate, about 540 more cops under stafferred by 541 police officers. >> brian: just wait until they write that check for reparations. >> ainsley: open air drug market. fentanyl overdoses continue to soar. if you look at the numbers in january and february alone 131 drug overdose deaths.
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>> steve: can you imagine being one of the cops on the street. you completely feel out gunned one of them was on "america's newsroom" yesterday and had this to say about the situation about the city by the bay. >> you want to have a police department. you want morale to be good. you want people here to do this job. unfortunately, yes, you need us to do this job. you know, stop hating what you need. obviously no one else is going to be are go and deal with this problem the police, right? you throw everything on us. so, you know what? stop criticizing us. stop trying to break us down because you know you need us to deal with it. >> steve: they are short 541 officers. they would like to hire, now they have called in the feds, please help us out. but, in the same time. it turns out over the last five or six years they have been hiring people who probably are not qualified work in the police department. >> ainsley: audit of state records revealed that san francisco police department hired dozen was unqualified or undocumented officers.
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>> steve: i like the word undocu find. >> ainsley: officers flagged were flagged for not meeting requirements. missing fingerprints. proof of citizenship. graduation records. incomplete psychological exams and background checks. >> brian: at a time in which we think the problem with policing is you should get more training, now they take people who aren't qualified to be police no training and send them out. good luck with that everything that they're experiencing now they could point the fixer at themselves. every time they defund the police, got rid of qualified immunity. said police were the problem. well, political science clearly aren't the problem because you have huge problems now and the biggest one is you don't have enough police and you don't appreciate them. >> ainsley: the positive news is these cities who did want to defund are now realizing that's not a good message. not something that communities around the country want. >> brian: what i would love to see is "i'm sorry and i will empower the police to do their
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job." we just see i need help. apology before the cure. >> steve: they are waiving the white flag. meanwhile, a quarter after the top of the hour, and ashley joins us with news out of florida. >> ashley: yeah. a very, very strange story, guys. florida deputies fear a serial killer on the loose after finding two teens dead and third teen shot in the head all in that same area. deputies think the shootings may be connected. the victims were found near forest lake park 60 miles from orlando. teen boy found dead on the side of the road. body of a teen girl was found inside a partially submirged car in a lake. and a third teen was still alive when she was found shot in a head in the dumpster on thursday. her family said she is brain dead and will soon be taken off life support. the polls are now open in chicago where residents are casting their votes for mayor. the two candidates in the run-off are democrat paul vallas
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and progressive brandon johnson. one resident says the city needs a leader who will be tough on crime. >> you know in chicago the public in crisis right now. the safety plan paul vallas to me reflects who i am and what i believe. in. >> ashley: many residents voicing concerns about johnson's candidacy who previously expressed support for the defund the police movement. google is pinching pennies reducing costs by employee services. pushing back laptop upgrades and pushing back on staplers and tape. the company's new muzzle at this year saving plan internal email. comes after alphabet announced 12,000 in january eliminating 6% of workforce. and dogs are man's best friend but this good boy is a tourist
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best friend. the adorable pickup stepping up as a furtogher. they positioned the camera in its mouth before using remote trigger before tag the shots. the results aren't half bad obviously better than boyfriends on vacation. calling dixie a true artist. >> ashley: i will see if maggie can do that when we get home. >> steve: saw the dog holding looked like a little high. a lot of humans cut people's heads off good job. >> good job how they were squatting down. >> ainsley: don't ask your parents to take a selfie. >> it's on they can't figure it out. ask your dog. >> steve: all right. coming up on this tuesday, the "wall street journal's" editor in chief blasting russia for arresting their journalist over allegations of spying. >> outrage is he an accredited
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journalist. he had visa. he had accredit station from the government. he was out doing his job. >> steve: what does this mean for u.s.-russia relations? k.t. mcfarland coming up on that next. >> ainsley: more severe storms are set to impact over a dozen states across the united states. we will hear from a star arkansas football recruit lending a helping hand after a tornado hits his home, including rescuing old glory. look at that. you know, there's a thousand billionaires in america, it■s up from about 600 at the beginning of my term. but no billionaire should be paying a lower tax rate
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than a schoolteacher or a firefighter. i mean it! think about it. i can't believe it. here we are at the let us do good village. first community like this in america. a hundred families together that lost their loved ones. the kids that lost their mom or dad protecting us. and today is the day that we're going to deliver the first beautiful home to the thornton family. some wonderful people donated. a bunch of land in land o' lakes. to let us do good village. having stood here on this same property with a shovel and now seeing a home where a family is going to move in. built all of our roads, all of our infrastructure is here. we've got several homes are under construction. this is a foundation that you should be a part of because not just helping me, but there's so many people like me that need help. this time next year, we hope to have another dozen houses done with another dozen families in. every inch of this community has meaning.
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the really awful thing be is, it seems to be increasingly the case around the world that journalists, are 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. >> brian: the "wall street journal's" editor in chief calling out russia after they arrested their journalist evan gertz very much after spying allegation. many calling it outrage. k.t. mcfarland joins us. k.t., first time we have had an american journalist arrested in 45 years, why? the russians feel they can do it now and stick their fingers in the eye of the united states. the significance should not be under estimated. this is a reporter who is from probably the most respected journal in the united states if not the world. and the russians feel that they can nab him.
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and, you know, it has nothing to do with what he did or didn't do. they would have gotten him on a parking violation. it has nothing to do with espionage. they want a prisoner swap. at the same time they want to make it look like they are being tough against the united states. remember, they just come off of a summit meeting with the chinese president and the russian president the big bromance. this is the new world order run by china and russia. they are really wanting to make the point and sticking it to the president of the united states see, what are you going to do about this now? there will be a prisoner swap at the end the point is made that they want to look tough against what they perceive as a weak america. >> brian: last thing they want is evan gershkovich writing another true story about russia's economy. did he a very detailed report about his economy. that might have played a role. a couple days later as he talked about the economy being undone and paying the price, and people leaving the country, next thing you know he is captured at a restaurant. and now he is brought up. we will see what comes out.
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they will look to do a swap. i also think the kremlin comes out with a statement on this. and there their statement if we can put it up for a second those carrying out normal journalistic activity keep working if they have proper accreditation there will be no problems with that obviously that's not the case. do you think this has anything to do with the fact that finland is going into nato today and that's now nato on the 800 miles of border with russia? >> you know, you are really smart to bring that up. the russian rest hue mill nateed by this, right? they thought they would go into ukraine and nato would collapse. that nato would fold. that countries would do nothing about it. well, countries did stand up and nato now seems stronger than ever. a number of other countries which had historically wanted to remain neutral between the united states and the soviet union now russia. they are now clamoring to join nato. again, the timing of this is not a surprise. the russians were going to do something. we just didn't know what. i think it's also important
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though to point out that what russia and other countries have just agreed to is they are going to cut back oil production. as a result of that, prices are going to ride. as a result of that more inflation in the united states, more inflation in the world and the russians will get a bigger pay back into their own covers because they are dependent upon selling oil and national guard oversees the higher price the more money they get. >> brian: crazy thing is we are allowing india to buy it. go into the whereby the west left. go in and open up businesses in russia. they are supposed to be our ally. and then we are allowing japan to buy russian oil. what is going on here? it's crazy. and we're not refilling our covers. coffers. the crazy thing is we have the ability to change all of that within days. and that's if we only turn on measure energy again. >> brian: we are asking. k.t. mcfarnld thank you we appreciate it. >> brian: we are going to break down what we can expect with our panel and the political
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history a former president faces criminal charges. let's have a discussion. got a panel today. it's a good one. fox news contributor reverend jacques degraff along with american first policy institute baambassador, sean duffy. good morning to all of you. >> good morning. >> steve: i was waiting for a delay. sean, let's start with you as a former prosecutor. it sounds like according to michael isikoff at y yahoo news. 34 felony counts. how much legal peril is the former president in? >> well, 34 felony charges, if that's what it is, steve, that is significant time potentially behind bars. anyone has to take that seriously to have these kind of charges pending against you; however, i think most fair minded americans know this is a witch-hunt which donald trump says because it truely is an accounting error.
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this and getting donald trump as opposed to looking for a crime that donald trump committed. steve, what i'm fascinated by is we have had democrats talk for, what, two, four years, six years that democracy is at stake. where those request are those same democrats think have been silent whether party media. this isn't the first time a president will be prosecuted however it won't be the last. there will be democrats, republicans going to prosecute democrat senators, democrat presidents this is goings to be a wave of the future that the democrat have unbe leaderboard on the american future and it's sad. >> steve: stacey, what do you think? we do know of other investigations down in georgia, the january 6th thing, the attorney general of new york there's a lot of other legal peril for the former president. >> yeah. so it appears to be a round robin attempt across the country on the part of democrat legislators and democrat
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prosecutors to attack this former president in an effort to prevent him from beating their candidate in 2024. so the wind is at his back. is he very strong on the campaign trail. the rallies are back and super fun. they are charging him all over the place with things that are beyond the statute of limitations really honestly distract away from the real issues americans are facing at the kitchen table with their bills, inflation, high costs and shortages. we still have shortages in america, the greatest country on earth. this is an attempt to will so he can't be candidate in 2024. >> steve: gas prices is going up because opec is cutting the supply. reverend, what do you think? >> stacey is on to something in this regard. this and 2024 and whether the most incompetent president in united states history will be held to account previously. >> steve: which president are you talking about. >> i'm talking about the ex-president donald trump. more people died under his watch
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trial stuff manifest. >> politically speaking, there is no reason for him to put himself in competition for the spotlight. right now the attention of the americans people ought to be on this trial in new york, which 60% of americans support. and so the president of the united states people's business reminder that we're at peace. the job creation at all-time high. and there is no need to distract with that by getting engaged in politics and right now, he is doing his job. >> steve: so, stacy, you know, there is always a possibility not declaring because is he not running. >> i mean anything is possible. since when do we exact justice or prosecute potential criminality based upon polling? this is america. you are innocent until proven guilty because you anglo system form of government and our anglo system anglo saxen form of jurisprudence. this is not about polling and certainly if i were biden i
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would hold back on announces as well he doesn't have anything to run on. he has driven this country in the ground. the border is wide open. he can't come in promises made and promises kept because he hasn't promised anything and hasn't delivered. >> excuse me the voters already spoke on this in the last election in november. that's why the democrats. gained seats in the senate. it's a referendum on the presidency. >> and the house is in the hands of the g.o.p. >> steve: sean, go ahead. final word. >> joe biden has said i'm going to build this economy from the bottom up and middle out. middle income americans are poorer off. gas prices are off. crime is rasp pant. the crime is rampant. the reverend says joe biden running on his record? it's a horrible record and one last point, donald trump, reverend, killed more people almost as many people as we had in the civil war? that's the kind of garbage that people said on tv. >> i said they died on his watch. they died on his watch. >> we should all stand up for democracy. reverend, you will be the first one to come on television and
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condemn the prosecutor that goes after joe biden or goes after hunter biden or go after hillary clinton. you would condemn them as politics. you should do the same thing here. it's wrong, it's persecution. donald trump should be left alone. let him run for president and stop this charade. >> steve: we wanted a spirited discussion about the day's event and we got it. reverend, stacy, sean, thank you vvery much for joining us live. >> thanks for having us. >> thank you. >> steve: you bet. coming up on this tuesday. football star to hometown hero arkansas recruit lends a helping hand after a tornado hits his house including helping rescue that flag. that's next. ♪
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star defensive lineman and future arkansas razor back quincy rhodes jr. who got up the very next day with his family and some of his teammates to go and help with the recovery effort, salvaging a large u.s. flag. you can see there underneath the rubble. quincy joins us now. good morning to you, quincy. >> good morning. >> good morning. what an inspiration you are to so many around america. tell us how you decided to get involved on saturday morning. >> i knew once the tornado passed i had to make sure my family was okay and my community and everybody else were okay. i knew there might have been people in the worse situation than i was. >> ainsley: that's very sweet of you. i know your mom's house, your grandmother's house were okay. they weren't hit. you got the call. was it a text from your high school coach that said do you want to come and help? >> no, ma'am. i really took it upon myself. my dad really didn't want me out there because he was scared that at first it was supposed to be
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two. but i know my dad feared for me going out there. i kind of just wanted to -- i kind of went against his rules. >> ainsley: well, you were helping out so many families. tell me about salvaging the american flag. >> i know the american flag means a lot -- i'm sorry. >> ainsley: that's okay. >> i know it means a lot to me due to us, you know -- it represents everybody coming together to me. united states. >> ainsley: where did you find it? underneath the trees? >> yes, ma'am. >> ainsley: wow. i noticed some of the local news coverage. you had a cast on your hand. what happened and how were you able -- you were using a saw to cut some of the branches just one handed. >> yes, ma'am. i know -- i wasn't going to let one injury stop me. just an injury on that. i had -- football season a small minor injury. >> ainsley: i know you are a remarkable player.
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turned off offers from oklahoma, that would you have. you decided to go with the razor back. will your injury be healed by the fall? >> yes, ma'am, i will be ready i think i will start may when i start heading up to arkansas because school starts june 2nd for me. that's when i be back. >> ainsley: what's your reaction to all the fans? i know so many people are so proud of you and you are hearing from a lot of people. you were on local news and now made it to the national level. >> it's really -- i'm really not paying attention to it -- not a lot. due to me just kindness of my heart. not expecting a pat on the back from anyone. >> ainsley: quincy, i'm going to be pulling your team because of you. you inspired others. >> yes, ma'am. >> ainsley: thank you for going out there and helping your community. >> thank you. no problem. if any of you want to follow me on instagram or twitter. 97 under score tura and my name
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quincy rhoads jr. at 3. >> ainsley: thank you for coming on this morning. >> thank you thanks for having me. >> ainsley: what nice manners you have. thank you. check in with janice dean for the fox weather forecast. quite the man can look up to. >> janice: thank you for showing us quincy and what a wonderful man he is. i hope everyone follows him on social media. good story to learn. more severe weather in the forecast unfortunately the threat for tornadoes that could cause life-threatening weather not just today but overnight into tomorrow. area of low pressure. we will see the chance for yes. strong tornadoes again this afternoon through the overnight and then we also have the cold side of this storm with a blizzard setting up for the northern plains and the upper midwest. so here's the severe storm threat ahead of this cold front. we have got way above average temperatures. temperatures in the 80's. and then behind the cold front, that's where we have our artic air still settling into the northern plains winds in excess
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of 40 to 50 miles per hour. that's going to cause crippling travel. people are prepared here across the rockies, towards the northern plains and upper midwest where we have ice storm warnings in effect for parts of the up of michigan. tracking that look at the snow. holy moly, 12 to 18 inches. i have heard from folks on social media, that they're preparing to hunker down for the next couple of days as rescue crews it's going to be hard to get out to those regions. look at the highs today. temperatures in the 80s ahead of this cold front. i'm really concerned with the threat overnight tonight. know where you will get those watches and warnings fox weather.com we'll help you out certainly. all right, ainsley over to you. thank you, janice: the biden administration preparing to implement a nationwide ban on commonly used light bulbs as part of its costly agenda. raymond aurora knows a thing or two about light bulbs and he is
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♪ >> steve: okay, listen to this. the biden administration is pushing forward with a nationwide potential ban on america's commonly used light bulb the incan sent kind spartan of sweeping climate agenda. >> ainsley: while led are efficient and longer lasting they cost more than incan descent bulbs and interior for certain functioning like dim dimming. >> brian: fox news contributor and light bulb expert joins us now. we thought we would reach out to you because you are friends with thomas edison. >> steve: you wrote the book. >> i became friends because of
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my book. wait until the government finds out that microphones use too much electricity. we will be using bull moderns to do "fox & friends" from now on. this is absurd. look the lead lights are two to three' times more expensive. they throw off that gassily blue light. and you are looking at edison's greatest invention. the incandescent light bulb who is the government to decide you can no longer have a choice? what happened to freedom of choice in the way that you light your home or you light your office or you light your world? i'm sorry. there intrudes into your personal decisions. it's a little bit like vinyl albums. you know, look, yes, technology surpassed the vinyl album that mr. edison again created, we give people the choice believe the sound is purer on vinyl albums. they continue to be pressed. i'm sure that, too, is a climate faux pas. but let people decide. let the marketplace decide. this intrusion into personal decisions whether it be gas stoves or appliances or light
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bulbs, it goes too far. >> steve: here's the problem. we wouldn't be talking about this had thomas alva edison invented the led bulb. no, he did the other kind instead like that. all right. so, you mentioned. >> darn it. >> steve: it's a perfect segway to your new book, which is also a fox nation special. what do people not understand about thomas edison from new jersey? >> well, look. >> thomas alva i wanted to tell this story because many don't realize he probably had adhd. he was deaf from the age of 12. told he was a dunce and thrown out of school. if not from the love and devotion of his mother, guys, we would never have our greatest inventor. we have turned this into a complimentary fox nation special where you can read the book but delve into his creation. we went to the edison labs. here is a little bit of the fox nation special based on the book. watch this. >> it is incredible to think
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that a man who was practically deaf created what he called talking machines. >> he was working on something that gave him an idea working on the telephone and he heard something which is ironic considering his very bad hearing and he writes it down really quickly. >> it's a rough sketch. and it just sort of sketches out his concept of what it was or what he wanted. >> and it's the only invention edison said that worked the first time. and it's his favorite. >> ainsley: that's fascinating. can you actually go visit the lab? >> yes. look. in west orange new jersey, the edison labs are there. we will take you there. here's the cool thing, guys. i got to hold in my hands edison's first sketch for the phonogram. and it shows you he learned not only with his head but his hands. that thathe used to say when people call him genius, sticking to it is the genius.
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he was willing the fail and he built his creations and refind his recreations out of the others. to go to the lab and touch and see it and stand in the place he stood in the 20th century. it took my breath away. this will turn about tale that i think is lost in time. >> i love that you include his middle name, too. we noticed him as thomas edison. >> put it full out there. >> you can't find it anymore. larry kudlow is one of our great guests the next hour. >> congratulations, raymond. ♪ the season that makes you feel lighter than air? ♪
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