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>> steve: live from fox square 51 degrees and as you can see, today is actually draft day, it kicks off in kansas city, missouri at union station and we kickoff on fox square with kids who have shown up for take your child to workday. thanks to clowns for kids for the inflatable football stadium outside on fox square.
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>> ainsley: they are darling. >> steve: adorable and when remember when they were left. >> ainsley: richard and connor. >> steve: and jared. clowns for kids.com. >> ainsley: so exciting, we went to each other's baby showers. >> brian: grab a football, throw it into an inflatable house. >> steve: they are mainly here for the pizza, we have historically provided pizza and often when the movie house was affiliated with this ump can, they show the kids whatever kid-theme movie -- breek i think gutfeld will let all the kids produce his show tonight. >> ainsley: it would be even funnier. busted, president biden caught
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using a cheat sheet during his first news conference. there it is. >> steve: that is embarrassing. on it, it says question number one and points out asks courtney at the l.a. times and shows what courtney would ask. >> brian: peter doocy from the white house. >> peter: president biden is trying to ease concerns about being 80 by saying age is just a number. kind of. >> president biden: with regard to age, i can't say how old i am, i can't say the number. it doesn't register with me. only thing i can say, one thing people will find out, they will see a race and judge whether i have or don't have. >> peter: in 1972, biden thought a 63-year-old senate opponent was too old. he said kale doesn't want to
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run, he lost that old twinkle in his eye he used to have. president biden appeared to have enough advance notice, he could copy and print a question. the words were a close match to this. >> president biden: we're going to take questions. first from courtney of the los angeles times. >> thank you issue mr. president. your top economic priority has been to build up u.s. domestic manufacturing and competition with china. are you damaging a key ally in competition with china to help your domestic politics ahead of the election? >> peter: this white house regularly engages with reporters and outlets about topics they are covering. in our experience, never about specific questions. >> kayleigh: the idea a
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presidential press conference i would be given the questions in advance and have time to write down the question, that is inconceivable thought to me as former press secretary. you are not true members of the press if you are doing that. >> peter: the cheat sheet is press staff trying to prepare their boss. this president likes to take random questions and he's never had a clue ahead of time what it was going to be. >> steve: absolutely true. peter, do you remember we took a tour of the white house and brad blakeman worked for george w. bush and he showed a card with the rundown, the president would know what was going on throughout the day. this is completely different.
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how far often do you see the long cards? >> peter: he has a schedule and random stuff in his pocket. this is formatted to get the president's perspective and have a follow-up question, that is kind of erased if his staff had the time to tell him what the answer is supposed to be. >> steve: sure. >> ainsley: how do you think they choose which supporters can submit questions or do they tell the reporters, this is what the question is to be about. >> peter: i don't know how the selection process goes. my thought it is not the white house planting a question, but might have shopped around on this know wo. >> brian: has unscripted situations, doesn't do sitdowns. >> peter: when he has unscripted press conferences and fox has
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not been giving previous questions. it has generated a ton of news over the last 2-1/2 years here. i think they are in reelection mode and want to know before the event happens everything going to happen. >> steve: all about control. you have asked a million questions of the president and he's answered some of them and yesterday jacqui heinrich asked the president something and got a response from the president, as well. sounds like they are backing up a big truck for take your child to work today. >> peter: big truck of kids, there are 75 kids on there. >> steve: you are a fibber. >> ainsley: this sparked contr controversy. the reporter has been inundated
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with calls. this is not the first time, this happened in june of 2022. he was caught holding instructions on entering the room, you enter the roosevelt room. say hello. you take your seat. the press enters. you give brief comments. in july, he had a card that there was a picture of talking about making kamala harris his running mate. >> brian: he had to jot them down so he didn't forget. >> ainsley: paris hilton is teaming up with georgia congressman buddy carter to reform the troubled teen industry. >> steve: stop child abuse act will be introduced tissuing aiming to prevent and treat child abuse. >> brian: imagine republicans and democrats coming together. both of them will join us now.
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welcome back. good to see you. paris, could you tell everyone what experience you had with institutional abuse? last year you discussed it, as well. >> yes, when i was 16, i was sent away and i was emotionally, verbally, physically and sexually abused and this is still happening at these places and 200,000 people are sent away every year. >> ainsley: were you able to call your parents and tell them? >> i was not able to tell my parents because everything was monitored and if i said anything negative about what happened, they would hangup the phone and punish me. it was terrifying and i wasn't able to tell my family and cut off from the outside world. >> steve: paris, what makes your story so potent is the fact you
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are from a super prominent family and people around the world, when you started telling your story, if that can happen to paris hilton, can happen to anybody, right? >> yes, and that is why i'm doing everything i can in my power to fight for these children because these are children who come from families that can't help and support them and children from the juvenile justice system, foster care system and have no choice. i'm turning my pain into a purpose and using my platform to save children's lives, hundreds of people have died in these places. >> ainsley: congressman, you are introducing this bill. tell us about that and who is working with you. >> this is a bipartisan, bicam ral bill we are introducing and this is so very important. i want to thank paris for her courageous act of speaking up and speaking out about what
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happened to her. look, we witness horrific events that happen or see some of our adults who are struggling and we wonder what happened, how could we have avoided this? this is the situation we want to do. what this bill is going to do is to enhance the collection of data and of information so that we can see what the goals, what the practice issue the ethics of some group homes and facilities are so parents and children can make an informed decision on whether they want to participate or not. >> brian: paris, what would qualify for something you would look to attack and reform? for example, you were having problems, your parents sent you away, i guess for discipline, sometimes people get in trouble with the law. what places do they go? are these juvenile facilities? >> they could be juvenile
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facilities, they -- as paris witnessed and experienced, look, who among us did not struggle as a teen. that is just part of the normal growing up process. that is why it is so very important and we understand, there are some good facilities that provide care and counseling and treatment, there are also some that cause physical and mental damage. >> brian: thanks, congressman, just to ask paris that question, what are facilities identified that need some reform, do you have a number? >> there are thousands of these schools and they disguise themselves as emotional growth school, wilderness camps, these are just names, they have false advertising and people have no idea what is happening behind
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closed doors. >> ainsley: what is your advice for parents that have thought about sending their children to these schools? if you're a parent and don't know what is upon haing behind closed doors, that is horrible. >> my advice is to do your research. there is so much online of what is upon haing at these places and that is why it is important to pass this bill so there is oversight, regulation and transparency so people are held accountable. >> steve: sure. paris, as i think about your arc of celebrity and we've known you for a very long time, america has, you're from a famous family and you have been a celebrity and done a lot of stuff in the public eye. first time i can think of when you have gotten involved in the political process. in that process, you have had to reveal something so personal, so elementary to your soul that had
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to be hard to say, you know what, i know it is important, but i'm going to lay bare what happened to me. >> it's been extremely difficult. this was so traumatic that i held it in for over 20 years. when i found out it was still happening today, i knew i couldn't sleep well knowing that and needed to use my voice and turn my pain into a purpose and make a difference for other people's lives. >> steve: the place you were at, harris, we'll start. what happened to the place you were at, is it still in business? are kids there? >> yes, probo canyon school in utah is still open. >> ainsley: what happened to the people that did this to you? >> the people are still working at these places. there are so many people that are child abusers and no
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regulation in these places. they have evil people running them. >> brian: i'm looking at other sponsors, you have ro khanna, senator cornyn, senator jeff merkley, guys looking to sponsor. can you give us an idea what the bill looks like? >> i'm optimistic we will get this passed. we wait to address the issues this is an opportunity to address it before it happens. this is not a partisan issue, it impacts all of us regardless what party you are in. if you have children, grandchildren exposed to this, you want it to upon to. >> ainsley: other people will be speaking, caroline collins, kaylin, jessica.
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>> yes, survivors of the troubled teen industry will be on stage with me at the capitol speaking at 2:15 for a press conference today. i'm so proud of everyone for coming and telling their stories, i know it is extremely difficult, but so important to be the voice of so many who don't have a voice. >> steve: congressman, i know it is bipartisan as you introduce it. who could be against this? >> good question, i don't know who could be against this. we all agree we need to address issues before they become problems and we can identify this and parents and children want to make an informed decision and that is all we're trying to do here, data collection to get information about what the practices are, what the goals are, what the ethics are of the facilities. >> brian: all right. >> ainsley: paris, we're so
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proud of you. paris, we watched your reality show years ago, you had me in stitches, so funny to see two girls coming from california and trying to live on the farm and to see what you have done with your fame. god bless you. you are helping so many other children and informing parents. >> thank you, i really appreciate that. >> brian: have a great day, good luck today. >> thank you so much. >> steve: you bet. we'll be watching this afternoon and bring you tape tomorrow. coming up today, man versus mouse, disney is suing sunshine state after governor ron desantis over the special tax district. a live report from orlando coming up. >> brian: and it is draft day, college football's biggest fans fine homes and we're kicking it off on fox square. >> steve: good job, connor.
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>> ainsley: this morning florida governor ron desantis is set to meet with prime minister benjamin netanyahu in israel and while he's overseas disney is taking him to court. ashley webster from fox business live on how the governor is responding. ashley. >> in a galaxy far, far away disney and state of florida were frnds, no more. disney suing ron desantis and his tax board and other state officials. disney blaming it on this, a targeted campaign of government reital yagsz orchestrated at
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every step by governor desantis as punishment for disney's protected speech and now threatens disney business operation, jeopardizes eco economics. governor desantis on an international trip while this is going on, but earlier today he did accuse disney of trying to gain unfair advantage. listen. >> governor desantis: the idea somehow being pro-business means giving companies their own government, that is not what free market is about it. they do not want to pay the same taxes as everyone else and be able to control things without proper oversight. >> you know issue the dispute goes back to last year, when disney opposed new state law dubbed don't say gay bill. the clash appears to be helping the governor's standings a new
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poll says people have more positive view of governor desantis because of this dispute with disney. ashley moody says she is surprised ron desantis is named in the suit. listen. >> i was pusseled they would name desantis as a defendant in this case. the florida legislature tookac that effectively eliminated a self-governing authority of disney. you wonder if it was an attempt to put pressure on this governor and shut him up. >> as expected, this going back to court will be a first amendment issue for sure and disney has to or the governor has to show there was no retaliation, it promises to be interesting indeed. back to you. >> thank you, ashley. coming up, marco rubio joins us live and who he is pulling for
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in tonight's n.f.l. draft. first, allergies? covid? new strain that could be confused for seasonal symptoms and is ozimpartlyic causing hai loss? dr. nesheiwat has more on that coming up. - double check that. eh, pretty good! (whistles) yeek. not cryin', are ya? let's tighten that. (fabric ripping) ooh. - wait, wh- wh- what was that? - huh? what, that? no, don't worry about that. here we go. - asking the right question can greatly impact your future. - are, are you qualified to do this? - what? - especially when it comes to your finances. - yeehaw! - do you have a question? - are you a certified financial planner™? - yes. i'm a cfp® professional. - cfp® professionals are committed to acting in your best interest.
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(children giggling) hey, i was, uh, thinking about going back to school to get my masters. i just saw something that said you could do it in a year for, like, $11k. hmm. barista: order eleven! yeah, see you at 11. 1111 masters boulevard, please. gonna be eleven even, buddy. really? the clues are all around us!
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>> steve: okay, here is bad news. a new covid var iant has made its way to florida. it comes with an odd symptom, the symptom of covid, red, itchy eyes which experts fear could be related to seasonal allergies. will people know the difference? here is janette nesheiwat. good morning to you. we were talking when covid first came out, do i have seasonal allergies or covid? now itchy eyes is one leading indicator you have covid, this new omicron var iant. >> dr. nesheiwat: this is not
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new, i have had people with covid and conjunctivitis and we see it with influenza or rhinovirus, people also have body aches and fever and feel run down and achy and you don't $10 million to see that with allergies. >> steve: for the millions of americans who suffer from allergies and everybody in the studio, what point do you say, maybe do a self-test? it could be covid. dr >> dr. nesheiwat: if you have a home test, swab your nostrils. if you have risk factors, do it. if you know your body, it is reasonable to take an antihistamine, use a cool compress, if you feel good, greats, probably not covid. swab yourself if you are high
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risk. we are in allergy season and symptoms overlap, you usually feel more run down with the virus versus simple allergies, which is easily treatable. >> steve: one story we've been following is the use of ozempic for weight loss. in addition to people losing weight, people are losing hair and going bald. >> dr. nesheiwat: if you have massive stress or change to your body like a drastic weight loss it disrupts your body's hormonal balance, it can cause hair loss, one of the most common causes due to drastic, immediate weight loss. good news, it is temporary and reversible. normally you and i lose 100 strands per day. this is secondary to ozempic and you lose about 300 strands per
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day. it is irreversible and treatable and you can prevent. maybe you are a diabetic, what can you do? get enough protein and enough sleep and vitamins and you're coping with stress. >> steve: terrific advice. thank you for making a house call. a studio call. switches gears for just a second. my wife kathy and i are going to do a live online event tomorrow night because our cookbooks are available as a beautiful three-book collector set with certificate of authenticity and kathy and i have autographed those. peter doocy is moderating and will take questions. kathy and i are donating 100% of the profit to eye cancer research. visit doocycookbook.com, perfect
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>> brian: fox weather alert, severe storms slamming texas with 90 miles per hour and grapefruit size hail battering cars and homes. check in with janice dean for the fox weather forecast. >> janice: i feel bad for the cow and hail, damaging winds and reports of tornados. severe thunderstorm warning in effect for coastal louisiana stretching from south texas across gulf coast to tennessee and mississippi river valley and into florida. flash flooding is a concern
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through sunday for north florida and into the carolinas and georgia and toward mid-atlantic and northeast because we have several areas of low pressure that will develop across this trough set up across the eastern third of the country, bringing wet weather tomorrow and through the weekend and tuesday. that is not great. if you have travel plans, stay alert on the weather details, including dc and toward raleigh and toward new york city through sunday. there is your forecast. i want to bring connor in from new jersey. you are eating a donut, what kind? >> a jelly donut. >> who brought those? >> i don't know. >> are you having a good day with take your kid to workday? >> yes. >> are you proud of your dad ed? he is the best cameraman ever. >> he is. >> you have a mouth full of jelly donut, bring the map up
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and look at the forecast for the rest of the country. do a couple temperatures for me. >> miami 87. dallas 72. >> correct. >> chicago. >> yep. >> los angeles 72. >> janice: amazing and you did it with a jelly donut, fantastic connor. brian, not too bad, i need replacement when i go on vacation. >> brian: love how he did not stop eating. >> janice: perfect for the weather department. >> brian: he doesn't need a lunch break, he works through breakfast. ashley has the news. >> ashley: we know you will not get a donut and eat on air. two fox news alerts. an oil tanker amid wider tension over iran's nuclear program.
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it had just come from kuwait and list destination as houston. and counter offensive means alliance delivered 98% of combat vehicles to ushg yoo. republicans are bracing for a debt ceiling showdown after the house passed the speaker bill by two votes. it is now headed to the senate, unlikely to gain approval with democrats holding majority. the bill would raise the debt limit to 31 trillion. scientists say playing your favorite song can make tough tasks feel easier. ♪ >> ashley: we asked you, joyce
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says beatles, here comes the sun is great to get motivated by. calvin in virginia likes don't stop believing by journey and maria in florida says my go-to pump-you-up song is barracuda by heart. brian, what is your pump-up song? >> brian: the police, so lonely. >> ashley: what? okay. whatever works. >> brian: i threw it out there and you judge me. you are supposed to be accepting. >> ashley: chris is judging, i'm not. >> brian: if i can get my single back, the pentagon warning of the growing ties between russia and china. >> during this conflict, russia and china have grown closer together. china is diplomatic and political and moral support for russia's illegal invasion has been notable and assisted russians in their position and
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domestic political position, as well and appears to be uneven romance, as you put it, in which russia could become the junior partner. >> brian: or is. republican marco rubio joins us now. how significant after all these decades it was soviets and rus russians superior power, that is not the case now. >> that is not the question you are supposed to ask me. >> brian: head shot on that card to see what i look like? >> you know, interesting, what you are pointing to, we are living in this moment of historic shift like the world is literally changing and this is things they will write history about. china is the senior partner in that relationship and china is richer, more powerful than the soviet union ever was. it requires us to reeshg valuate
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politics and how we respond to the world. it iss china, russia, iran, you had an update about iran seizing a ship, that is in retaliation for a ship that will be seized because of sanctions against them. this is under the chinese world order, it won't be identical to the cold war, china is a much bigger threat to america know that the soviet union ever was to america or the world. >> brian: on the same page on that and any legitimate presidential candidate has to tell me their plan. let's talk to another thing in eshg m, 21-year-old decides to be tough in a chat room and shows teenagers classified information. we know the damage is significant. it is now out there. we know that two air force officers seem to have lost their
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job. what can you tell us about the commanders? >> i don't know about the commanders individually, it is not enough to have -- it. as i'm speaking to you now, hundreds of similarly situated people have access to important information relevant for two things. if our adversaries can see it, it tells them how we got it, where you got it from and allows them to cut off access, so we won't be able to find out stuff more important down the road. it undermines the confidence of countries that share intelligence with us. and the third thing that is damaging, when people read these things, a lot is analysis, i don't know which are credible, maybe some are doctored or not in the public domain, a lot is analysis. this is what we're hearing from
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some people, there might be conflicting points of view that are not part of the leak. it creates a lot of confusion. it is not good and the fundamential question, how could someone with that age, access, rank cause such strains in our relationship and more damaging than what the biden administration has admitted it is. >> brian: and why it took so long to find out it is out there. on the desantis disney battle, i know former governor rick scott and jeb bush don't think ron desantis should be taking on disney. where does marco rubio stand? >> i don't have a problem, if disney had an arrangement giving them governmental power, it is legitimate thing. when you start creating the idea and not saying we're there yet, the idea if you run crossways
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with us politically, you may wind up in the cross hairs of the legislature for political purposes. i don't think disney is going anywhere, they invested money and time. i do worry if this happens too many times, businesses thinking of coming to florida will not want to go there. they may come after our business. again, hypothetical ub issue. i don't know why disney should have government powers, that was given to them a long time ago. >> brian: i would love for corporations to stay out of this, they have no business weighing in on any type of bill. >> ask budweiser. >> brian: today is draft day. it is getting bigger every year, so many good quarterbacks in this draft, including anthony
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richardson of the florida gators, tell me about this guy. >> the guy is knowa athletic freak in terms of what he can do athletically. i think he started a year and a half, two full years of starting and had a change in coaching. he needed to come out, he is very talentd and can play the modern quarterback position. if he winds up in the right place, they do not have to start him right away and he can have early success, he does a lot to extend drive with his legs and athletically. >> brian: do you have a monitor there? >> yeah, why. >> look down, you used to coach football. we have football players on the square and you are probably good at spotting talent. are you seeing perspective n.f.l. players or division i players in fox square? they are excited about draft
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day. >> i wasn't able to see, we have to see how their hips move and tough to tell how big the kids will be. never wrong to dream. >> brian: absolutely. you live and work in the world's most deliberative body, you do see potential and you give us drills to run through. next year we'll have them in drills on take your kid to workday. senator marco rubio, thank you. fox news alert. u.s. economic growth slowdown in first quarter of 2023. you probably felt that, according to report of bureau of labor statistics. the gdp rose just 1% down from 2.6 in last quarter of 2022. predicted 2% growth. there is consumer spending still high. we have money and looking to buy stuff. uch next on our show, back to the n.f.l. draft with joel
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klatt. and guy who had a big decision to make when he left college, become pro or become a sportscaster, bill hemmer. >> bill: thank you, he gave a good answer, see how the guys develop and grow. >> brian: you don't want to pick out one player. >> bill: good morning, give a good answer, know the question first. kevin mccarthy gets a win in the house and elon musk talks shop on capitol hill and no homework, no problem. that might be a big problem for american students, join dana and me 10 minutes, top of the hour, big thursday coming your way. we switched to liberty mutual and saved $652. they customize your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. with the money we saved, we thought we'd try electric unicycles. whoa! careful, babe! saving was definitely easier. hey babe, i think i got it! it's actually... whooooa!
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>> ainsley: the 2023 n.f.l. draft is getting ready to kickoff tonight. >> steve: that's right. with the top 10 draft picks set, who will be the first off the board? >> brian: ask college football analyst and draft analyst and n.f.l. guy who is a key guy with the usfl. joel klatt. welcome back. so many exciting things with this draft, everyone focused on the quarterbacks, top prospects, anthony richardson, bryce and cj stroud, can you give the top how you would pick them? >> bryce young will probably be the first pick, talented player, think about steph curry on
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grass. cj stroud, quarterback from ohio state and anthony richardson, will levis and hendon hooker. going from college to the n.f.l., it is how they fit in the next level. >> ainsley: i know aaron rodgers had a presser yesterday and we have a sound byte, listen to this and we'll get your reaction on the other side. >> i'm here, i believe in this team and i believe in coach saleh and the direction of joe douglas. obviously he's drafted really well, having offensive and defensive rookie of the year. big thanks to the jets organization and green bay packer organization, for incredible run. that chapter is over now and i'm excited about the nee advunture in new york. >> ainsley: joel, he is excited
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to be here, what is your reaction? >> he should be, that is a good, talented young roster, he has garrett wilson, offensive rookie of the year. look what aaron rodgers had to deal with in green bay, they were decent, but not the roster the jets have. they could be one of the better teams in the afc and this is one of the best quarterbacks in the game and could lead them to the super bowl. the jets have super bowl aspirations now with aaron rodgers and the players they drafted over the last couple years. >> steve: that is fantastic, gigantic area. joel, with draft kicking off tonight, aren't you amazed this has become a big deal? a three-day festivity. >> yes, and if you remember, it used to just be in radio city
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music hall, down the street from you a couple blocks. and it got televised and became a thing. when you turn on your television tonight, guys, it will look like woodstock met the super bowl. it is going to be absolutely insane. there is going to be well over 100,000 people at the draft, it is an absolutely insane event. i don't know if anybody does big events quite like the n.f.l. and tonight will be amazing in kansas. >> brian: can you give me your first three picks? >> bryce young to carolina. houston number two, i think they will take cj stroud and arizona will take will anders on, that is least confident i've been in probably the last 10 years. there is a lot of intrigue what houston will do at number two.
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>> brian: one thing, do you have a question for a man that knows everything about football? >> yes. >> brian: go ahead. >> is money worse than zurline? >> steve: you didn't arrange this? >> jar ed, who are they? what are their names? >> maher, bret maher and zuerline. both cowboys kickers, got traded to the jets, where aaron rodgers is going. probably -- >> all right. if lbj goes, that is amazing, jared, i did not have a cheat card, first time i've been asked about kickers live on the air, pretty amazing, i love it. >> steve: you do know we're going to ask about usfl on fox
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this weekend. what team are you watch something >> i'll be doing both games, i'll leave kansas city and do tonight's first round and tomorrow second round and then back doing usfl both games memphis and houston on saturday and new jersey and michigan on sunday on fox. that memphis and michigan team, both are undefeated early in the season and good teams. >> brian: improved from year one to year two, doing a great job. >> jared, watch brandon aubry, the kicker for the birmingham king. he is your guy. >> ainsley: jared is a great kicker, show him how you cannic can. >> let's see it, jared. >> ainsley: i'll take your microphone. >> hi, darling. all right. go through all the kids that
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came to the show for take your child to workday today and everybody wants -- kids! come over here. everybody over here. jared is going toic can the ball. run, run, run. kids, run, run. jared. >> brian: thank you clowns for kids.com. take it now. >> steve: kick the ball. >> bill: president biden in his first press conference in more than a month relying on cheat sheets and pre-written questions. how does that work out? probably pretty well if you are the guy getting the questions. thursday, good morning, bill hemmer. about two hours starts now. >> dana: this is "america's newsroom" and i'm dana perino. not the headline the white house wanted out of their visit yesterday, a successful meeting with the president of south
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