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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  April 9, 2023 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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♪ ♪ put your right foot out, do the bunny hop, hop, hop, hop ♪ joey: good morning. welcome back to the second hour of this easter edition of "fox & friends" weekend. that's the easter bunny right there. i have on good authority that he got a day off from the white house because joe biden's taking the day off, so he came over and helped us out. he's holding a chick there, that's a real, live chick. lisa: i wonder if this is the same easter bunny that had to man handle joe biden? joey: he got a day off in d.c -- lisa: do you know the easter bunniesome. will: personally? [laughter] yeah, we go back a bit. he and i in college really ripped the top off it. lisa: it's a family show. will: i do know something about -- you ever wonder, like, what's the deal? like, easter bunny, what's that have to do with, you know, the resurrection of jesus. have you ever wondered the
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easter bunny? he's least yeah, where did that come from? will: right. i know the answer -- joey: he's about to tell us. i'm wondering now. will: thank you, joey. it's from germany. german immigrants to america brought it over, apparently, and they used to set out little nests and tell their kids that a bunny would lay colored eggs. i can't speak the german, i don't know why it took off. lisa: interesting. good job, will. joey: -- you did a good job with your translation earlier today -- will: with the latin? joey: yeah. my mom used to tell me, and i don't know if this is true or not, that the egg kind of brings it back to christianity because it represents the holy trinity, the shell, the white and the yolk? will: i've never heard that. jee e jee my mom was like you've got to bring with it back in. we'll celebrate the pay began side but only if it's on the
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christian side. lisa: you guys brought some interesting tidbits. will: there's three more hours to the show. good of you on this easter. let's get to some news. texas governor greg abbott is calling on the state's board of pardons and paroles to recommend a pardon for army sergeant daniel perry. perry was convicted on friday for murder of a black lives matter protester named garrett foster. this was during 2020 the, the massive blm protests. this protest in austin. abbott says he was working as an uber driver -- i'm sorry, perry was working as an uber driver when he encountered these massive protests. an ak-47 was pointed in his direction, and he fired with his legally-possessed handgun. greg abbott is saying e doesn't have, you know, rachel campos duffy yesterday, will, if you were governor, would you pardon him? i did have an intuition, the
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texas governor doesn't have as much power as you think, so he needs this board to recommend a pardon, and ten he can a approve it. joey: i wonder who appoints the board. i wonder what his relationship is with this board. lisa: and abbott also blamed travis county district attorney jose garza for perry's conviction saying texas has one of the strongest stand your ground laws that cannot be nullified by a jury of a progressive district attorney. joey: yeah. foster, the protester who was killed, was carrying an ak-47 when he and others surrounded perry's car prompting perry to open fire. i don't know all the details, but i'm going to take a step back and say i lived in texas for three and a half years. i was promptly told i had to be there for 20 to call myself a texan concern. will: i've never heard a number put on it. joey: the point i'm trying to get to that's more serious is every time i move to a state, i take their conceal carry license
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course. and now those courses are being reinvented into gun law courses. and that's how it was in texas. very responsible state when you look the their concealed carry course. they teach you not just what the laws are, where you can carry, where you can't, but how self-defense with a firearm is legally protected in the state of,. they give you examples. and what a lot of people don't understand, or maybe they do understand, is that most states govern that wholely themselves. listen, you can -- wholly themselves. you can protect yourself in the state of texas with a firearm under these conditions. so from what i know hearing and reading about in this case, i know there are several what you call precedent cases that would obviously cover what danieler perry kid -- daniel perry did. and then you go into the nuance. was the guy 4 feet away, 40 feet away, and there's a lot of gray area to say but this trumps that. all of these factors align, however, there was an opportunity to get away. there are cases in texas where
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young teenage boys were harassing a father's teenage daughter can, and he ends up shooting them through the door after warning them, and he kid the not get convicted. that was considered self-defense even though they didn't pose if a direct threat, they were beat on the door. so texas is a very strong state when it comes to protecting yourself with a firearm. and i would say if the governor of texas who probably has bigger ambitions at some point is willing to put his neck out, he truly believes this person, daniel perry, was protecting himself. lisa: and i also went through a concealed carry class in the state of florida, and you go through different scenarios. if you would shoot, if you would not and what the law states. you've got a guy, servant perry, he's in his car. he's got these rioters, protesters illegally blocking the street, a guy points an ak-47 at you, would you not feel that your life is in danger if you cannot physically move through this crowd? you've got a guy guy with an ak-47? i would shoot in this instance.
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that's the thing that, i think, frustrates me in these she their you -- scenarios. left-wingers want to leapt the government control us, but they criticize people and you've got a split second and it's the life or death. and it's either you or them. and if your life feels at are risk which i think most people would feel that way with an ak-47 pointed at their face -- will: and that was part of the argument made by daniel perry's other thans, the amount of time he had to react. they also made the argument that the police, the lead detective in charge of this did not recommend charges for daniel perry. lieutenant governor dan patrick talked about that yesterday. >> you know, it's one thing to have law and order break down in our streets, but to have law and order break down the in the justice system, we should have never been charged with murder. the detective says there was evidence that would have probably not have had him indicted. the calculate argued with the d.a. over there -- the detective argued with the9 d.a. over this. but when you have the justice
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system break down at the d.a. level and the count level, when a country no longer believes concern. >> that's the deal concern. >> that's the gunning of the end of a country. -- gunning of the end of a country. joey: when you often how the charges got brought, how the jury's victimmed, how much control a d.a. and a local prosecutor has over what evidence. austin is the most liberal city by far in texas the, and you start to worrily did this person get a fair trial. but a lot of d.a.s around the country are receiving money from groups that are also receiving money from soros. and to we say that a lot on this network because it's a problem. one person shouldn't have the opportunity to have that much influence over our regional, local, municipal justice system. and when we talk about where that goes to the, fox digital has just learned that george soros' son has visited the white house more than a dozen times since biden took office. so you're talking about someone who's donating to groups who are
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putting in these liberal d.a.s and, oh, by the way, his son is going to the to white house more than a dozen times. lisa: as you can see there, at least 14 times, visits to the white house. i mean, has any one family done more harm to a country? you look at the philosophy of george soros and his family and these groups that he gives money to the, their philosophy so to let murdererrers roam free, criminals roam free, but god forbid you try to protect yourself in self-defense. that is not allowed. but criminals, you coyour thing, you do what you want. and that really is the philosophy of this family. can you think of anything more sick and givessed or more -- twisted or more harm that they have inflicted on so many americans and just the lawlessness that has been rampant in the streets of d.a.s that have received money from these groups? will: yeah. i think the important thing so to understand the philosophy, understand the world view, understand the point of view, and then as a second step understand the political activism that that makes sure that philosophy is reflect frequent -- reflected in your
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local laws. jose garza in travis county, texas, which we were discussed, was receiving funding in part from -- joey: what is the floss biesome. lisa: evil. joey: in what ways to do they think -- the. will: elon musk tweeted yesterday he kid the not understand what george soros was getting a. you have mentioned the political activism. so soros' son, alexander, as you mentioned, visitedded 14 times to the white house since 2021. what you'll see there is a timeline of the the visits. and tease are largely in the fall of 2022 the, and i think to put a button around it, what you're largely seeing are visits to the deputy national security adviser, that shows up numerous times, is and to whoever the is the administrative assistant to then-chief of staff ron klain. lisa: i think i know the philosophy. the philosophy is chaos. when you look at these marxists, they try to divide america, they
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try to divide and conquer and then control. so i think the intention is the chaos we see in the streets. and even more, they've convinced americans that somehow it's to arrest criminals, somehow it is racist to put people, bad perpetrators, behind bars. and is you've got people believing this. so under the guise of that, you know, they're letting criminals roam the streets and kill americans rampant. joey: what we're talking about is law and order. you'll hear a lot of people on this network just trying to get americans to understand the necessity of law and order. not putting innocent people in jail, not taking, not taking action against people in an unnecessary way, but simply if we don't have consequence in our society, we don't have society. we don't have anything to pall back on. the whole point of living together in a society is to have mutually assured security. and something like this really tears away at it. you look at someone who had to use self-defense, you can argue about whether or not he should have been there many this one
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instance in the texas, but you have a right to defend yourself, and you have the right to a fair trial the. and when k6789 a.s are coming in and looks like they're talking that away, you start to worry. will: peen while, the nashville metro propropoll tan council are expected to vote to the reinstate the expelled democrat, justin jones, who says the state assembly burned the constitutio- in kicking him out of the state assembly. here is what he had to say on msnbc. >> we are dealing with a body that has completely burned the constitution. we see that they operate without any type of regard for democracy. people, what they saw on thursday, so many for shocked and outraged, but for us, that was just another day at the tennessee general assembly. what is changing are those thousands of young people were at the capitol since this mass shooting occurred at covenant elementary school fighting for their lives, and what they're doing is lifting up a
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generational shift in tennessee that republican supermajority is not going to represent the future of our astronaut. we believe in multiracial democracy. [laughter] lisa: i -- this really gets me, okay? because there is so much focus on the tennessee three when we should be talking about the tennessee six, the six innocent people that were murdered by a trans domestic terrorist. and they sit here and they're trying to make martyrs out of these three people when you have six people that were murdered because of their faith, likely, who were killed at the covenant christian school for simply being there, for simply going to school, three innocent babies. those are the people we should be talking about the, not these losers who were rightfully expelled. and i feel no she many that. the left only responds to power, so i thinks the time for conservatives across the country to meet power with power. jee yeah you know, he brought race in there at the end. i don't know if you caught that. he said e that he talked about taking democracy, he talked about democracy and he talked about the gop party, and then he
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said, basically offered as a counter a multiracial tennessee state legislature. in other words, he's inferring the gop is all white with and all the mull the city racial representatives are in the democratic party. that's not true. he actually attackedded a man, called him the brown face of white supremacy. so they will craft any, today will put any square peg into any round hole they can to bring race into anything. and you know what? tennessee state representatives who voted for this on principle, they're not taking it sitting down. they're not going to take being called a racist. we have tennessee state rep andrew farmer that was on with us yesterday, and he's explaining here why these two were expelled. >> let's think about the three coequal branches of government. we have the executive branch, that'd be the president of the united states or the governor of the state of tennessee. what would happen if a member of congress or a member of the state legislature in tennessee went to the governor's office with a bullhorn or the
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president's office, started backing his desk -- banging his desk saying we've not been heard, we want something done? i believe the secret service would have those folks put in jail or be removed from the governor's office. let's think about the judicial branch. we have the supreme court of the united states. we have the supreme court of tennessee. what if as a lawyer, as i am, i feel like a judge isn't hearing me the way want him to the hear, i go to the podium with a bullhorn, start banging the desk saying, judge, you're not hearing me, what do you think's going to happen then? i'm going to be ruled out of order, maybe held in con empty the, removed from the -- con empty the, removed from the courtroom. let's move to the third branch of government. let's think about the united states congress. of let's think about the congress in the state of tennessee the. the tennessee general assembly. what if a member of the united states congress thought, well, i don't think i'm being heard. i'm going to go down to the podium, right in front of where the speaker sits, pull out my
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bullhorn, start banging on the desk on that bullhorn -- lisa: did you want to say somethingsome. will: i was just going to say so the effort is to pour this entirely and exclusively through the prism of race. and i think that the representative the yesterday laid it out very well that there are surgeon ways in concern -- certain ways in which our constitutional republic conducts its business. and it's not democracy to see who can yell the loudest. so it seems to be a defense of the people's voice regardless of how you deliver that voice, a bullhorn, interruption of proceedings. and if you say is, well that's not right, all of a sudden you're anti-democratic. it's inane. and, you know, people have made the comparison to january 6th. it's been made across the political spectrum, left and right looking for consistency and inconsistency. let me highlight one inconsistency. january 6th individuals that were involved in that riot to this day are involved -- some of them in jail, some of them in the legal process. we're talking about expulsion if
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aerohoo. we're not talking about the same level of accountability. lisa: i also just want to note that kamala harris doesn't visit nashville after those six people were murdered, joe biden did the not invite those families to the white house, but hay took this action. so i think that tells you what these -- this administration's prities are. yeah jee and the sheriff's keep the is that saved the rest of the kids, they should probably deserve a trip to the white house. their heroes. lisa: you would hope so, but not in joe biden's america. joey: a former drug dealer is now fighting the opioid epidemic. his mission to the save lives in his own city. will: plus, brian catches up with timothy cardinal dolan, his special easter message coming up. ♪ when you cosomebody wrong, make it right. ♪ don't hide in the dark ♪
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city -- 491 people in the city alone last year. poncho joins us now. >> good morning, thank you. will: can we talk about the transition from the work you kid previously -- you kid previously? how do you go from a drug dealer to one who is fighting to stop the ill effects of drugs? >> as many of you guys know throughout the country, our state prison system don't have the resources to actually help rehabilitate someone. it wasn't because i was involved in the juvenile system here in wisconsin, in milwaukee, but it wasn't until i got federally indicted for dealing drugs when i went to the federal prison system that, to get involved with psychiatrists and psychologists so they actually look done keep down within a person, and they can help you find the reasons to why you're acting out which is what brought an awakening to me. i was able to identify why i had
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went from a gifted and talented student to a gang member, drug dealer, etc. will: and really quickly, i'm -- just out of my own sheer curiosity, what is the why? i'm curious about the mindset. today you see the damage it does, right? >> yes. will: what was your mindset back hen? >> as a kid, i was being molested by our catholic priest, father bob here in milwaukee, from the allege of 8 to 12. i had blocked it out, and the only recourse my parents had at that time being, you know, mexicans from mexico was to accept me to mexico when school got out. and when i came back, i rebelled because i was, like, i didn't do nothing wrong, you know? i'm only a kid. and that led me to crime, you know, to act out, to lash out. will: yeah. i'm sorry to hear that about your past, poncho. tell me then what, after you have seen this, after you've
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reconciled this internally and seen the damage that the drugs can co, i know you've had some personal experience in seeing what fentanyl can co, what is it you're doing with team havoc to try and help and change the world for the better? >> first of all, it's an acronym for together everyone achieves more helping another volunteer or cause. we go out into the community, and we give out free narcan, we give out free fentanyl testing strips, free life-saving literature as you can see in the picture. we get it all donated. i run a painting and remodeling company here in milwaukee, so i use money that i earn will this to purchase the stuff ask concern went we can't get it. and we just tie to -- try to tend to the addicts to hear their stories, try finding the whyses within them to help us help them like i was helped. a lot of these people don't have access to treatment centers especially here in milwaukee, wisconsin. as many of you guys know, we're
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the most segregated city in the united states. anything and everything for treatment is outside of our city. we tried bringing a community group here that runs 24 hours a day, 7 days a week community medical services, and we were shut down. will: well, poncho, i don't think it escapes anyone that today is a day of resurrection, of recedges, of forgiveness, and i think that's perfect with your story today on how you have changed and look to rechemoyour past and making the world better tomorrow. we really appreciate you being with us on easter, poncho. >> i appreciate you guys having me. thank you very much. will: all right. more fox and friends next. we were loading our suv when... crack! safelite came right to us, and we could see exactly when they'd arrive with a replacement we could trust. that's service the way we want it. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ mmm, popcorn. (alternate voice) denture disaster, darling! we need poligrip before crispy popcorn.
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like what makes your lawn thrive, paint that adds color in one coat and a dishwasher that handles all the dirty work. you got this. and we got you. it■s hard eating healthy. unless you happen to be a dog. will: today's easter sunday. jesus has risen. lisa: that's right. it is one of the most important days of the year for christians around the world. joey: brian kilmeade got to catch up with timothy cardinal dolan. let's take a look.
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brian: st. patrick's cathedral, midtown manhattan. no better place to be on easter week, especially with the person i'm about to meet, cardinal dolan. i have a long item standing invitation just about now and a special interest to meet him. ♪ ♪ >> brian, how are ya? brian: so i asked you on christmas, can i come by on christmas? you said, how about easter? i thought, wow, that seems to be forever. it's finally here. >> it's the here. thanks be to quod. can you remember easter 2020 the? -- thanks be to god. three years ago, empty church. we're glad that through live streaming so many of you can be with us at st. patrick's cathedral, america's parish church here on fifth avenue in new york city. we miss you though. now, thank god 2 the million people tuned in to live stream, our mass that was broadcast.
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oh, my lord. what a difference. there's resurrection that comes from that. proven brian what's the cardinal dolan easter week message? >> the message is the supernatural version of spring. the death of winter is giving way to new life that. 's spring. that's passover. that's easter. so death, evil, darkness does not have the last word. life and goodness and light has the last word. and that gives us hope. and i don't know about you, but when i listen to the news, we need help. like the shooting in nashville. brian: three 9 years lose their lives. >> when you think how can somebody go in and is the shoot up a school? how can somebody go many and shoot up a shopping center? how can somebody go in and shoot people in a synagogue? how can russia invade an innocent country? i know why, because we don't value human life. now, the one side of their mouth
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heir say what's wrong with the world, why can't we get along? why all this division and violence? on the other hand they say but i don't go to mass anymore, and my trust in tradition and patriotism and morality and religion is down. brian: in 1998 they say 62% of the people say religion is important many in my life. >> i've got to take that seriously. that is, that's sobering. i'm in the enterprise of faith and religion. we learned from the bible that the best thing to revive a sense of faith and religion is a calamity. in our history when there was prosperity and peace, that's when we were tempted to forget god. when there was calamity, we return to him. well, i'm thinking, good lord, why aren't we? we've sure got enough of them. >> when we took prayers out of schools, guns came into schools. [applause] >> boy, did he ever get blasted.
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i thought he was right on argument. he wasn't saying the church has to have prestige or clout in society, he's just saying our people immediate to be guided by faith. >> we need to build children that's better for our world. [applause] and the means instill thed in them -- instilled in them some level of faith and belief. pleasure. brian: do you worry about what we're teaching in schools, whether they're catholic schools or not? >> do i have? brian: what do you think about it? >> that's another reason why people are coming to the catholic schools. brian: it seems like you're having a hard time keeping hem doing. >> it's nigh to impossible if you've got less than 200 kids, you just can't do it. bad news is we're as afflicted as anybody else with the shifts. so in this city as you would know, we've got a huge demographic shift. the neighborhoods where we had families and kids aren't there anymore because they're moving. they're leaving the state or
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they're moving beyond. ♪ ♪ >> we have overturned roe v. wade with the mississippi dobbs case. finish. [cheers and applause] brian: over or the last two years, one of the big missions of the catholic church has been to overturn roe v. wade, right? >> yep, that's good news for us. brian brian some people say republicans might not win another national election. if it costs you seats and influence, did you do the right thing? >> we did. and, of course, the sense of right and wrong doesn't depend on the political implication. if we don't value the innocent life of the baby in the womb, good lord, no wonder this sense of achieving of human life, the dignity of the human person is becoming lessened. good canness and right and virtue -- goodness and right and virtue prevails at the end. that, too too, is the message of spring and easter. ♪ >> of my church outside of rome -- brian: right. >> -- the one most visited by
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folks is, ta-da, st. at rick's cathedral. when patrick's cathedral. when the pope was here, i had a great seat just right with him. brian: you should. >> an exuberant hundreds of thousands of people, and we came down the in the pope if mobile, he's still not looking at the cathedral, he says to me why we stop something i said -- peek speak owning because the cathedral is here. ask he turns around and looks up at st. patrick's, and he said, but it's in the middle of everything. finish and then he smiled and he said, and that's where it should be. st. patrick's smack dab in the middle of manhattan. that says something. brian: is it wrong for you to have ambition for the next step, to be pope -- [laughter] is that wrong? >> it would also be stupid of me because i'm not claiming false humility, i don't think i got what it takes. i'm 73 years old.
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of i'm very happy here, and as i said earlier, all i want to do is get to heaven, right? brian: you're on your way. [laughter] >> i hope so. a blessed easter. will: that's good stuff from brian. least lee yeah, it's beautiful. and it's important because this was a poll that i says hose who say -- that says those who say religion is very important to them has dropped to 39%, so an important message for all of us. joey: i think i can agree especially on that last part there, all i want to do is get to heaven. i mean, that's a pretty good thing to end on, a pretty good way to the frame it. we talk about ambition within his own position. he just wants to get to heaven and save souls along the way, and that's a pretty good thing to do. all right, still ahead, activists demanding the university of chicago pay reparations for harming poor and black residents. alveda duffy went to that college and joins us next. will: plus, how brad if pitt
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lisa: activists are calling for the university of chicago to pay for end reparations claiming the college harmed or forced out poor and black residents. demands from the activist group youth chicago against displacement includes for the
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college to provide $1 billion in grant funding for affordable housing and have a $to 20 the million annual fund for rental assistance in local schools. here to react is university of chicago alumni and the federalist staff writer, vid the a duffy. great to see you. >> thanks for having me. lisa: why are they blaming obama and his presidential center? >> yeah, absolutely. this is so typical of white, liberal arts students. they want to make themselves feel good and not actually affect real change. the reason that black families on chicago's south side are being displaced is barack obama and his presidential center, the temple of obama. if you will. it's causing the displacement of black families in that area. and i think -- and also the doubling of the median home price so people can't live there anymore. and this is the very normal for
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chicago students and privileged liberal arts students in general because they always are missing the target. so for years the chicago activists have been demanding that we abolish the police many in chicago. i've interview ised many south side residents, and they have said overwhelmingly we need more police in our area, not abolishing them. so this is just another example of them being completely off base and out of touch with what the people on the south side of chicago really need. lisa: what do you account for that disconnect? local residents are saying something different than these university students, so what do you account for that disconnectsome. >> yeah. i think it's a lot of privilege. i think that they, one of their own words, right, a lot of privilege. they a come to this university, they read karl marx can and they think that they know everything, and the truth is that they don't, and they don't really do the work of actually talking to people in these areas. and i also say obama is a huge
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problem here as well. he's supposed to be the king of equity and anti-racism, and here he is actively displacing black families on chicago's south side is. and this is so typical of democrats in general and especially in chicago because you have the unito oncartels forcing -- the union cartels forcing the black students to stay in the worst cities -- the worst schools in the city. curl covid lori lightfoot and j. j.b. pritzker destroyed black businesses. my favorite restaurant on the south side shut down and never reopened because of those democrat policies. so typical of liberal students at these universities, so typical of barack obama and the democratic party to continually victim his poor minorities. lisa: so well said. yet these residents voted for brandon johnson, so the it's just, you know, it's sad. but e south korea a the duffy, thanks so much for joining us, great job to. and we reached out to the university of chicago for a statement, but we kid the not hear back. joey, take it from here.
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joey: thanks, lisa. turning now to your headlines, tiger woods has withdrawn from the 2023 masters. woods struggled through cold, rainy conditions yesterday shooting 6 virginia through his first -- 6-over-par through his first seven holes before play was suspended. as the day went on, woods a ' limp got noticeably worse. he also withdrew from last season's pga championship. as he continues recovering from his devastating february 2021 car crash. wildfires breaking out in western florida causing a major highway to shut down. smoke and flames erupting yesterday along the interstate outside of fort myers. helicopters dumping water on the expanding flames with officials saying it has taken about 20 acres. an extended drought in the state has led to an unusual rash of wildfires. you don't think about wildfires in florida. and actor brad pitt9 reportedly let an elderly
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neighbor live rent-free for years. pitt buying the house from the el elderly neighbor telling him he could live out the are remainder of this his life there without rent. but the man lived for years, passing away at the ripe old anal of 105. the touching -- age of 105. the touching story coming to life as pitt sells his estate for $40 million. that's an inspiring story, and he probably made out wit principle on the deal overall anyway, so good job, brad pitt. those are your headlines. let's turn to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for our fox weather forecast. rick: easter sunday service if you're heading out, things looking so good today. show you what's going on, temperature wide we're -- wise, we're still a little cool with a big warmup coming this week, but we've got a lot of sunshine today. we're going to see some really nice sky isessing all that rain across the southeast, you're getting a little bit of a broadway break for the next down
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of old -- couple of days. nothing that is going to cause problems. on sundayingss i love to show you the rain over the next seven days or snow maybe. things are a little calmer than they have been. we still have some snow coming across the pacific northwest, or but at lot of moistures and and and we're going to see flooding going on north dakota, south dakota, northern minnesota, there is a lot of snow on the ground right there, and that is going to start to rapidly melt with the warmer temperatures and additional rain, i think we could see significant flooding along the red river there. more rain later this week across parts of the southeast, but much of the mid-atlantic and the northeast is looking really good. all right, or it is easter sunday morning, i've got sam here. tell me where you're from. >> rose bridge farming sanctuary. rick: who are these guys? >> we've got to our little chicks here to celebrate easter with us, give us some love. rick: how old are they? >> only a couple of days old. rick: a couple of days?
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>> yeah. rick: they must be cold. >> yeah, they are, but don't worry, we have heaters and blankets. rick: how long until they're full grown? >> a couple weeks, but we'll keep them incubated, lots of nutrition. rick: sam, hang so much. all right, joey, back to you inside. joey: the difference wean a peep and a chick, a peep you can eat right away, but a chick, you've got to wait a couple of weeks. [laughter] coming up, shannon bream joins us arrive at the top of the hour, but celebrity chef george duran is here with sweet and savory dishes for the perfect easter brunch. that that's all next. ♪ ♪
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king's hawaiian sliders are ready. great - i invited a few more friends. ♪ thanks, mom. i am groot. nothing brings the galaxy together like king's hawaiian. see guardians of the galaxy: vol 3. in theaters may 5th. even if you like a house, lowball the first offer. the house whisperer! this house says use the realtor.com app to see three different estimates. also, don't take advice from people who don't know what they're talking about.
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realtor.com to each their home. hi, i'm michael, i've lost 70 pounds on golo. i spent thousands on other diets that didn't work. on golo, i spent a couple hundred bucks and got back down to my high school weight. you're not gonna believe this thing is possible but it is.
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he's he's what better way to celebrate easter than with a accomplishes family meal? joey: celebrity chef george duran is here with some perfect sweet and savory dishes for the perfect easter brunch. >> guys, i am hungry. i can finally eat whatever i want -- [laughter] in this case, we're making some apize theres and desserts as well. we're going to start off with apple slices, a creative way to
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make, quote-unquote, apple bagels, so to speak. in this case, we're using envy apples, a nice balance of sweetness, floral arrow that, very satisfying crunch. you're going to grab it, core the center and take some cream cheese. now, this is not just for easter, but i did do it in pastel color and add some of that cream cheese to the it. it could be savory, salt i the, sweet, hover you want it -- will: i've never done cream cheese and apples, but i'm about to the. >> that one right there? the whites remain whiter longer, so it's great for kind of serving. will: very sweet. >> you can also bake an apple and turn it into a stuffed apple right over here. joey: oh, boy. >> i have a chocolate-sufficient thed apple, that's a great way to entertain. lisa: and these are really beautiful. >> and that's the thing, you're eating with your eyes too. we're going to make some carrot
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cake cupcakings. i'm using sorghum flour, it's a gluten-free, ancient grain. it's a beautiful, nice grain. you can go ahead and start eating those. it's quick quinoa, think of it as a protein. a lot of antioxidants, fibers. lisa: protein's good. >> i'm going to take my carrot cake and you're just going to, again, dc rate it and give that a bite. lisa: i might get involved with this. >> it looks like cues cues, it's kind of a chewy texture. rick, i made a risotto for you -- this is what i love about sorghum, its nice, chewy texture, and it remains so nice. it has a nice combination of flavors with the mushrooms and the ham is inside of there. rick: i had no idea that's what sor gum was. >> yeah,st it's going to be chewy in there. it's a nice, nutty flavor. great all year long, not just easter, all the holidays. it's a fantastic concern he's
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least this is delicious. >> isn't that great? it's gluten-free, and sorghum allows more protein the, fiber, or iron and it really flavors foods incredibly well. lisa: what's your trick for not drying it out? >> you want to use sometimes applesauce in there. any fruit purées -- lisa: that's cute. >> it's just carrots, any fruit or vegetables that have -- joey: it help ifs you don't get wine crunk and forget about it. lisa: well, that was college -- >> my chocolate fountain has solidified. [laughter] let me tell you something -- rick:st the always about the weather. >> you can still dip it into the very top. lisa: i'll still eat it. >> who's going to give it a taste? the chocolate mountain's solidifying. it's not there yet but we're going to get there very soon and maybe heat up a little bit. i'm sorry, easter bunny, the chocolate fountain -- don't worry about it. rick: george, thank you for bringing all this for us. will: we also want to thank betty's bounces, all the kids
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having a good time. we appreciate them bringing all that out. i'm trying to finish my chocolate apple. [laughter] laugh czech 'em out at betty's bounces.com. lisa: that's right. and stay iewn thed, cain joins us live for a special easter sunday faith and friends concert performance. ♪ ♪ what the? good morning hallow makes it easy to build a daily habit of prayer and meditation want to start with a five minute daily gospel? sure. take a deep breath and focus your attention on god in the name of the father, and and of the son and of the holy spirit. amen. need relief for tired, achy feet? or the energy to keep working? there's a dr. scholl's for that. dr. scholl's massaging gel insoles
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wow. (vo) request a cash offer at opendoor dot com ♪ ♪ pete: good morning welcome back to your third hour of fox and friends this easter sunday. we're having a good time i'm still tasting that beautiful bagel apple i had out there with all of the cream cheese in it. >> worried i got something -- pete: might have given them a few away. >> i'm sorry i wasn't -- i was thinkingut

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