tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News April 29, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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tanew orleans pizzeria owners andrew white and his wife desperate to get their hands pp. on taylor swift tickets. so they put up a sign asking for a trade for a year pizza. >> it worked.in they got the tickets. they went to the concert. here.should >> here's one more thing ever. i said, ♪ ♪ o, say can you see by the dawn's early light. ♪ what so proudly we hailed at the twilight's last gleaming. ♪ whose brood stripes and bright stars through the perilous figh- ♪ or the ramparts we watched were so gallantly streaming.
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♪ and the rockets' red glare, the bombs bursting in air -- ♪ gave proof through the night that our flag was still there. ♪ o, say does that star-spangled banner yet wave -- ♪ o'er the land of the free and the home of the brave ♪ will: good morning the welcome to to "fox & friends" on this saturday morning, there's your national anthem ask your images of of america. always a great way to start off your weekend. i'm just doing this because i'm, like, saturday morning, the weekend starts on friday night. pete: it does. rachel: we don't really get a pretty night.
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will: we don't get a saturday morning either. [laughter] we do with you, and we love that that. rachel: great pictures for the star spangled banner. i think people should start sending in patriotic pictures of hair mom or grand hama so we can put them out on mother's day. pete: sure. it's a great idea. rachel: in the era of birthing people, let's go all in on mother's day. pete: all in on mom. friends@foxnews.com. will: justice samuel alito approaching the one-year anniversary of the leak from the supreme court about the dobbs decision has a suspicion, he says, about who might have been behind that leak. we can figure out almost anything, but we can't figure out who leaked the opinion from the supreme court. but justice alito has told "the wall street journal" he does have a pretty good idea. he said i personally have a pretty good idea who's responsible, but that's different from the level of proof that's needed to the name
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somebody. those of us who were. thought to the in the majority, thought to have approved my draft opinion were really targets of assassination. it was rational for people to believe that they might be able to stop the decision in dobbs by killing one of us. here's alito saying, in essence, he knows whos the, doesn't have the proof to point the finger, but it was an attempt to stop the dobbs decision. rachel: and potentially asaws mate him. pete: that's exactly what i was going to the say. imagine the feeling that someone in your building who you work with certainly intended that this release would cause harassment and consternation, which it did. but you had to know it would put a target on the back of the people willing to write it. it makes complete sense. he's no dummy, his staff's no dummy, if you know there's an ideological decision around leaking the decision, okay, there's a certain number of judges, some more activist than others, all right, when are the clerks, who are the staff around
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them. there was a whole investigation going on. i'm sure there were people talking. he says to the level of actually charging somebody, no, but i wonder if we'll ever get that name. we probably won't. it sounds like the investigation has been concluded inconclusively, but a alito knows. rachel: was the investigation just done personally by the supreme court or was the fbi involved? will: yes. pete: no fbi. rachel: see, that's the thing, the fbi should have been involved, and i guess that decision was made by the chief justice. do you keep things collegial when you have a at the same time like this where you have a justice saying i think someone working with one of my colleagues wanted to have me killed, potentially. i mean, that's not very collegial. the best thing to do is always bring out the truth. will: yeah, make no mistake, they did not want to solve this mystery. they did not want to solve crime. rachel: exactly right. will: chief justice john roberts
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has shown an increate nation, a priority, to make sure the integrity of the supreme court is above truth and above the right decision. that became clear during the obamacare debate where he navigated a legal theory that wasn't even presented by either side to insure that obamacare stayed passed all rightively because he -- legislatively because he or considered that the best for the court, the best for the country. i don't question his motives, or i just question his priority. it's not your priority the decide what's best for the country, it's your job to to decide the law. ed the really tear the court apart to know the truth. it would be bad for the court. pete: ironically, i think it's the had the other effect. rachel: exactly. pete: sunlight is the best disinfectant. you find the person who did something unprecedented, make an example of them and say we don't tolerate that at this court. instead now you've got whisper
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campaigns, questions, other justices talking about it, we think we know but we don't know, undermining the credibility while thinking he's maintain thing it. will: that's right. because someone else has already torn the a fabbic of the court. someone is tanking the credibility of the court, and today know the identity. if you can find -- i just watched this documentary, if you can find boston bomb orers in, like, 72 hours or whatever it was, 48 hours, you can find the guy who grabbed an e-mail and gave it to the a reporter. rachel: right. it's like they don't want to find the person who planted the pipe bomb as well. i will say the credibility and the way it weakens the institution goes beyond the supreme court. i think that this idea that there is this unequal justice that our elites tend the fave one side or the other, it's really obvious from alito's saint that some of the leaks that came out that, oh, it was actually someone on alito's sid- pete: yeah, i remember hearing that.
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rachel: -- we can now put that to rest. we know that it's somebody who was very much against the decision, the dobbs decision. and so i just think it lends yet another piece of evidence that conservatives have that things always sort of seem to not go get resolved when the perpetrator's on the other side. pete: that's true. on another topic, so you know this week joe biden announced his recampaign, and part of the video included a hot more kamala than usual -- a lot more kamala. not only are joe biden's numbers underwater, but so are kamala's. joe biden's 80, he'd be 82 if he had a second term, 86 by the end of it, so you ultimately could be voting for kamala too, not just joe. and there's been a lot of criticism over the last couple of years of her performance. she has staff turn theover, she can't speak opinion, she can't give a speech that seems to make
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sense, and the big issues she's been given like the border have only gotten worse. here's her approval rating just to remind you, it's underwater just like joe's, it's not good. but how does left explain this way? ron klain, he's the former white house chief of staff, rather than going through the issues of how she's done or her performance or how the team works, this is how they always point the finger if you criticize kamala harris. watch. >> why do you think sexism and racism are part of the problem -- >> no question about it. she was not as well known in national politics before she became vice president. she hasn't gotten credit for all that she's done. she's been very successful as vice president, and i think hopefully during the campaign season the american people will get more of a chance to see her on the stump the -- pete: at the lead it was sexism and racism. rachel: yeah. but if you listen closely just not to the words, but to his voice, he doesn't believe it. [laughter] that wasn't somebody going, listen, she's amazing. remember when she did this and
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she did that? no. service the, like, sexism, racism -- pete: did a lot of hard work. [laughter] rachel: there's no -- if that's her best defense, wow. will: you know, the american obsession with everything on, whatever, sexism or racism, it's such an interesting eraser. it erases your personality. there are people who go through world probably just like morning television, what's right word to use? you know, jerks. the way they drive, the way hay interact with other human beings, and everyone was watching -- knows who's watching he's a jerk. and that jerk walks around, man, everyone else is racist. [laughter] no, man, it's you. ful it doesn't have anything to do with your group identity, we don't like you personally. and the american public has said are repeatedly they don't like kamala personally. pete: yeah. she's overachieved but has underaccomplished, so her arrogance level is pegged to the max.
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rachel: yeah. pete: she has a really big sense of self. of you wonder if anyone can actually approach her in that way, maybe that's where the staff turnover comes from. rachel: exactly. pete: i i think we should really study this topic, we really want to nail this trip, aye been on overseas -- you can imagine the scenario where those around her are trying to coach her and help her, but she has that sense of self that creates a bubble that that other people -- rachel: yeah. and it's that lack of self-awareness a that puts her, and lack of prep that comes with it, that puts her in these situations. >> i think it's very important for us at every moment in time and certainly the one to seize the moment in time in which we exist is and are present. so during women's history month, we celebrate and we honor the women who made history throughout history, who saw what could be unburdened by what had
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been. the significance of the passage of time, right? the significance of the passage of time. finish so when you think about it, there is great significance to the passage of time. it is time for us to be doing what we have been doing, and that time is every day. [laughter] pete: she loves time. that's a big thing for her. rachel: can i i say that likability could coa bit to the, you know, sort of paper over some of this stuff? i was telling you, will, the other day that my husband toll me a story about ronald reagan where they came to him in the morning with a big briefing, kind of like what you just described, right? and they were, like, did you read the briefing from last night for the big gorbachev meeting? and ronald reagan says, no, the sound of music was on last night. [laughter] and, you know, that kind of realness, you know -- will: yeah. rachel: you know he's just a likable guy. there's something about him really great. and i heard newt gingrich last
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night say we've never had this level of weirdness in the vice presidency. will: well, it's time for us to move on -- pete: buckle up. rachel: the passage of i'm. will: you've not to know your moment in time -- pete: exist in our presence. will: it's significant, so we need to move on at this time. now to a fox business alert, federal regulators are ready to seize first republic bank weekend. rachel: that news comes as regulators are calling out textbook mismanagement in the collapse of silicon valley bank. pete: al alexandria hoff is live in washington with more. >> reporter: good morning. investigation investors are clearly predicting a collapse. first republic's stock pushed even lower yesterday following news that the fdic i would likely be stepping in. reuters reporting that the banking regulator found first republic's position had declined to the point of there being no more time of another private entity to come to its rescue.
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if first republic falls into receivership, it will become the third bank since last month. silicon valley bank and signature folded, but some degree of stability has been seen after 11 banks injected $30 billion into first republic among other measures. those march failers prompted questions as to why federal regulators did the not see those massive issues coming. yesterday e the federal reserve offered its analysis in a letter. michael barr, the fed's vice chairman for supervision, wrote that svb, quote, failed because of a textbook case of mismanagement by the bank. its senior leadership failed to manage interest rate and liquidity risk, board of directors failed to oversee leadership and and hold them accountable, and federal reserve supervisors failed to take forceful enough action. "the wall street journal" reporting that jpmorgan chase and company and pnc financial services are hoping to buy first
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republic oncest the seized by the government which reportedly could come as soon as this weekend. will: thank you, alexandria. let's turn now to a few additional headlines. u.s. army grounding all of their nonessential flights after two helicopter crashes over the last month claimed the lives of 12 service members. the grounding goes into effect immediately and requires all aviation squadron to undergo more training. two apache helicopters collided in alaska op on thursday killing three u.s. army pilots and injuring a fourth. nine were killed in march when two blackhawk helicopters collided in kentucky. a fox weather alert, a huge supercell tornado moves through central texas. the powerful storm system also threatening the military base at port hood. but for dallas -- fort hood. for dallasst the rain that's wreaking havoc. officials are telling residents to urgently find shelter.
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rachel: -- hasn't been spared from severe weather either. this video shows the moment lightning struck cape canaveral. download the fox weather app to follow this story and more. [inaudible conversations] [laughter] will: look at the weather in dallas. pete: i was thinking about you too. rachel: i know. okay, sorry. will: on to day two of the nfl draft. it didn't come off for will levas. meanwhile, the pittsburgh burg steelers took joey porter jr., remember his dad, joey porter, played eight seasons with the steelers. pittsburgh had a photo of the two, really cool. and the detroit lions take quarterback h her ind -- hinden hooker. and those are your headlines.
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pete: those are interesting developments right there. will: i stayed up. i didn't watch the third round, i watched the second. he has a lot of support. pete: yes, he does. [laughter] all right, coming up, land of 10,000 lakes and 0 speech writes. minnesota lawmakers weighing a bill that would track biased language, what that really means coming up next. rachel: what's happening many minnesota? plus, can a.i. replace human relationships in we don't think so, but it appears it's starting to, and so there's a moral dilemma about it, and we're going to often that coming up. ♪ ♪ i need you to need me. ♪ i'd love you to love me ♪ o. starting with the sound system... [autotune] that's caaaaaaaaash.
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>> if a person from minnesota writes an a article claiming that covid-19 is a chinese bioweapon and someone reports that article to the department of human rights, is that something that the department of human rights could put in their bias registry under your bill? >> that is bias-motivated, so that can be considered a bias
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incident. pete: free speech advocates are sounding alarm as minnesota lawmakers weigh a measure that would create what they call a thought crime database. many call it that that. a provision is would allow people to report perceived biases-related speech including claims that covid came from a wu ap hand lab and possibly -- wuhan lab. the minnesota state representative we saw calling out the bill joins us now. thank you very much for being here. >> thank you, pete. presidentth so they really are interested in the name of ec by -- equity, safety or control, they want a thought crime database. what would qualify? what wouldn't? >> absolutely. that's the big question. what wouldn't qualify? and i asked several questions in a very lengthy floor or debate about this idea. they make very clear that they don't want to limit this to things that are crimes, that they want to include things that would be purely speech. and i asked questions even about
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things they advocate or things that they haved said that are offensive to people on the other side of the aisle, and they don't seem to be concerned because i i think they are confident that the bureaucrats at the department of human rights are going to be on their side. and that should be really scary. it seems like they read "1984" as inspiration, not as a warning, you know, the far-left activists that have taken part of the state, and it's good to see you, pete, being from minnesota. pete: good to see you too. they count on being in control, so they'll be the ones deciding what speech is acceptable. does something like this have a possibility of actually passing and becoming law in minnesota? >> unfortunately, yes, pete, it does. although the omnibus bill that this was part of the exact same bill has not passed through both houses, so there has to be a conference committee. both the house and senate have passed as part of their, quote-unquote, public safety and
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judiciary omnibus bills language that has in it this speech surveillance database. pete: terry, this is -- i mean, so what about if you post something on facebook about the election or post something about your thoughts on critical race theory or your thoughts on books and libraries that are inappropriate? all of that could count for minnesotans if the governor signs it, you're saying. >> that's exactly what the debate on the house floor demonstrated, yes. pete: wow. >> minnesota really is a caution flare -- cautionary tale for the rest of the country about what happens when with you give these extreme leftists even just narrow control in a purple state. they're going to move very, very quickly to try to consolidate control by controlling the marketplace of ideas by stifling paris amendment rights, trying to punish their enemies and reward their friends. pete: yeah. their ideas. one other topic real quick, i
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want to get to teachers -- this is another staggering development many in minnesota. teachers licenses, if you want to become a teacher in minnesota, you're required to push critical race theory and trans identity. from the minnesota educator licensing board, every teacher has to demonstrate the ability to create opportunities for students to learn about power, privilege, intersectional i and systemic oppression. are you hearing from teachers on this? what if you have a different view on these topics and you want to become a teacher in minnesota in. >> yeah. we're hearing from teachers and from the schools that educate teachers this is going to definitely exclude good teachers from the classroom at a time where we should really be focused on educating kids and not indoctrinating kids. again, it's part of the same effort to control the marketplace of ideas in order to consolidate power. we have half of our kids in the state of minnesota can't read at grade level, but this is the focus of our education policy,
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of the walz administration and their activist friends in the legislature and outside of the legislature. we're pushing good teachers out, we're focusing on indoctrination instead of teaching kids how to read and do math and how to catch up on, you know, what kids have lost -- pete: yeah. they don't want a marketplace of ideas, as you know. they want a monopoly on ideas. our ideas only, the rest of you sit down. thankfully, someone like you is standing up and fighting. representative, really appreciate your time. good to see you. >> thank you. pete: you got it. all right, coming up, or damning new whistleblower testimony reveals the truth about child trafficking at our southern border and the government's complicity in it. we'll talk to two survivors of human trafficking who say the administration must act now.
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instead i discovered that children are being trafficked through a sophisticated network, it could be argued9 that the united states government has become the middleman in a large scale, multibillion dollar child trafficking operation. rachel: h health care s whistleblower telling lawmakers this week that our government has become a middleman for child trafficking at the border. in the past two years, more than 2 the 5,000 -- 250,000 children have come into the united states alone. a recent new york times report indicated that the administration has been unable to contact over 85,000 of them. and just look at the difference between last year and 2020. number of unaccompanied minors has more than quadrupled. our next guests are survivors of human trafficking, and they are using their experience to help others. let's bring in trafficking survivor tammy and chandra. they are, she's a former chair
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of the international survivor of ask thing advisory council is. let's start with you, chandra. tell us your story. >> so in 1998 -- pell out in indonesia, and i was hired to work in the united states for hotel industry. and i pay $3,000 u.s. for this job, and i get to the united states. actually, it wasn't a cream, but it was a horror for me because i was kidnapped, i was taken and i was bought and sold in new york city and also surrounding states into sex. and -- so many people knew that i was traffic ared, but they didn't do anything even though i was. when i was out, i said, how? nobody understand i was a victim. nobody cared that trafficking is
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happening in front of hair eyes. their eyes. is so i work with law enforcement, finally they rescued -- arrested the pedophiles and i was safe. rachel: well, your story is remarkable, and i can only imagine that that you being able to be involved in ultimately convicting those who were, you know, trafficking you must have been a part of that healing process. it's an amazing story. tammy, tell us your story. >> so i come out of hawaii. i live in the united states. i was early childhood sexual abuse, mental abuse in my hem and removed from my home at age 13 to foster care. and within the foster care system, i met -- we called it a pimp because it was in the '70s. and so then i, you know, i was on the street with him, you
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know, being sold for sex at age 15. and then i ended up going, you know, escaping from him but at age 18 going back in, at age 32 going back in. and so service a sr. very long -- it was a very long period of time even though, you know, when i was out of it with pimp control, i still ended up going back in. lack of services, people not asking me, you know, what was, you know, what happened to me and where, you know, where had i been for the nine months that i was out of care. rachel: right. >> yeah, so that's kind of how it went for me. and, you know, i wish that people would, you know, even though it was a long time ago for me, it still happens that way with some of my clients that i see today. rachel: yeah, i mean, it's remarkable what you've gone through, but i guess the question i have, for example,
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with you, chandra, how can -- what can the everyday person do about it? what can, how can we find somebody like you and save you? i see what's happening at the border. our government's clearly complicit in this. but what can everyday people do if they see somebody somehow do they recognize the signs? >> okay. it's very important for everybody to learn the sign and to identify the victim. because the victim is hidden many plain sight -- in plan sight. [audio difficulty] and also the dynamic of the -- actually in the trafficking, but many, many, many trafficking happening many front of our eyes, you know? rachel: yeah. >> and you see it. but we didn't do something. rachel: so what should someone
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co, chandra? should they just walk up and say somethingsome. >> no. they just let it go even that they saw, just let go. and we saw in front of our eyes that children work in the stores. is so in new york we have -- the city is packed with children that work whether in the tore, in the cantina, as a sex slave. so we saw it but we didn't do anything. law enforcement didn't do anything. this is -- so we need to be aware that children not supposed to be in that situation. rachel:my, knowing what you've gone through and seeing that our government as this whistleblower says is actually acting as a middleman, is it changing the policies that are making it easier for the cartels and the sex traffickers and the human traffickers, what's your message ott government? -- to the government?
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>> i think that being able to provide more financial resources and escape, you know, when somebody does escape, we need to have a long-term plan. only, oh, one i'm the, one month, 30 days, you know it's a very long process to heal, and, you know, we have so many other, you know, programs, government programs, government funding for different social problems, you know? substance usage, for example, domestic violence is another example. these are our children and women is and men and boys, you know? trafficking does not, isn't one only women, only girls, only boy, only men. it's a human issue, you know? and i i often look at it and say human to human, these are humans
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doing this to other humans. so it is a human issue. rachel: yeah. >> we are not talking about some kind of animals. we are human beings. and so providing care for those who have been hurt. rachel: yeah. providing care and also making sure that our policies aren't enabling this. and as you can see from both of you, there are long-term scars and healing. you're both very courageous, and and i really thank you for join us this morning because i think it's really helpful for our viewers to understand and put a face to this. you are the victims, and we need to put the perpetrators behind bars and stop enabling hem. tommy, chandra, thank you for joining us this morning -- tammy. >> thank you. i do want to say that we are only representing a very small portion of victims who are survivors, who are thrivers, who have continued on many life -- in life. and i will hope that, you know,
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our whole world will be able to see the many a faces that represent people who have been exploited. rachel: thank you for saying that and god bless you for, you know, using your pain and making the world a better place through that. thank you. coming up, a potential game-changer in the fight against obesity. we're going to break down the new drug with a weight loss expert. plus, experts say a.i. companies may revolutionize relationships, but is the healthy for an already tech-obsessed generation? we're going to discuss that that next. ♪ hey, man. nice pace! clearly, you're a safe driver. you could save hundreds for safe driving with liberty mutual. they customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need! [sfx: limu squawks] whoo!
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take a stand, and start a new day with trelegy. ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy, and save at trelegy.com rachel: experts say the new a.i. companion is here. pete: oh, boy. but how healthy think is that for basic human connection? one expert says it could devalue the authenticity of people. >> long term we run this risk of people relying so heavily on it and kind of having a disconnect between who they are or what a.i. says and presents to them and almost showing up as this kind of alter ego. that gets really dangerous because we start to squash the authenticity of people. will: here to react is software engineer david -- thanks for being with us this morning. >> thanks for having me. will: recently had a conversation with several a.i. experts, i said give me your prediction about the next five
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years, and they said you'll have personal concierges and people will be on the road to having a relationship with artificial intelligence. how does that change? satisfying a need we all have to the connect, how does that change who we are as humans? >> well, there are already chat bots out there that are people are, of course, a acting eau plantically with them -- romantically with them, and they were devastated when they were turned off. so one of the issues is when you have people manufacturing these things, create that level of emotional connection with a human being, well, you know, that's a pretty powerful force. but whether it's five years or ten years from now, i think it is coming. people got attached to their tam gash chis if you remember those old devices that had the little virtual pets. people would cry and be devastated when they ran out of batteries. so -- [laughter] you know, i think this is just
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the latest version of a long tradition of giving people what today want emotionally. will: wow. pete: wow. let's get your take, reid blackman was on the program yesterday on "fox & friends" highlighting the future of a.i. and relationships. listen to what he had to say. >> people form relationships with hem the, there was one chat bot company that cut off their companions, and people were really upset because they had formed emotional attachments to these things, and when you combine it with the faces that look hike they're speaking,st it's going to be -- steve steve it's yeah, it's too real. >>st not going to be some arbitrary face, it's going to be a face that speaks to the preferences of the person they're speaking. to they learn to trust hem and form relationships with these things for better or worse. pete: david, as you pointed out, people are is have formed relationships with little digitized dogs. when it's a real human face and a voice and sounds emotional, i end mean, how much more attached people get?
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>> it could be very, very powerful. if there's a benefit, it's that these a.i.s aren't going to act quite human. they can be a little weird. if you've looked at some of the transcripts of what people have said, the a.i.s are aren't quite convincingly human, and the longer you talk to them, the more that shows up. will yeah. >> you can get them to say all kinds of crazy things -- rachel: i was just going to say yet, but also the longer you think that something that has no soul is real and the more detached you become, the more you just can't recognize the real deal anymore. i mean, i just think, i mean, you're a technologist. i think we need a lot more theologians on this beat because there's something really scary, i think, in our future when we start can devaluing -- >> i think we're already there. rachel: -- awe innocent inhuman relationships. >> i think we're already there. i think that, you know, a lot of
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online conduct that happens toddler already even without -- today already is some of the most superficial and inhuman aspects. just because there's a human on the other end doesn't mean a the that you're dealing with the best part of humanity. will: that's really interesting. >> you know, one of the points i make in the book i just wrote is that these systems tend to reinforce the parts of us that are most computable. is so we're already being encouraged to strip ourselves down to a bunch to labels -- of labels and identifiers and be seen if those terms. 56789i.s extend that even further -- a.i.s, but the irony is that we were already ahead of that. will: wow,ing a that's really interesting. pete: it is. you've got us thinking about it this morning, david. appreciate your time, and this is only the beginning. thank you. >> thanks for having me. will: you got it.
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pete: all right. turning now to a few additional headlines starting with this one, the united states evacuating 300 americans out of khartoum, sue can, late last night if as the war continues to ravage the country. "the new york times" reporting a convoy taking them more than 500 miles away to the red sea. the move comes a full today after the u.s. evacuated nearly 100 government personnel from the country. and a florida judge recusing himself from disney's lawsuit against governor ron desantis due to the conflict of interest. judge martin fitzpatrick says he's related to someone who's employed by one of the parties involved. the lawsuit was filed wednesday by disney alleging that desantis and state lawmakers have violated the company's first amendment rights. and, rachel, the birmingham stallions are looking to stay the undefeated as a attack on the 2- 0 new orleans breakers today. they kick off week three. that that game is at 12:the 30 this afternoon, and later today
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the memphis showboats will take on the houston gambler withs at 7 p.m. eastern on fox. both teams looking for their first win of the year. someone will get it x. those are your headlines. let's turn to the chief, chief meteorologist rick reichmuth, big fan of a.i., who will be replace by one shortly for our fox weather forecast. [laughter] rick: are the lights turned on? i just realized it seems really dark here. am i wrong? rachel: your a.i. replacement never complains. [laughter] rick: exactly. here's a look at the weather right now. some really interesting weather that's happened this week, a lot of severe weather. if you are across parts of the mid-atlantic and northeast, an incredibly gloomy weekend in store, unfortunately. the eastern half of the country is going to continue to see a lot of activity. across parts of the northeast a rough morning to start the, once this line of storms very slowly moves off towards north, we'll still remain cloudy and showery
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for much of the day. severe weather yesterday across parts of texas, later today that moves across areas of florida that has seen a ton of severe weather, a lot of large hail, tornadoes as well, a that threat continues later on today. guys, back to you. rachel: thank you, rick. will: technology's really put me into a tail spin. i have to take a break. [laughter] pete: he was really affected by it. rachel: yeah, me too. will: still ahead, a new drug is set to revolutionize the weight loss industry. the medication that has the potential to upend ozempic. ♪ muck
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♪ will: experts say a new drug called monojar row could revolution the market for weight loss. test results showed 48% of subjects lost 15% or more of their body weight. joining us now is weight loss specialist dr. sue. >> good morning. will: let's just pick up on the conversation because i'm following my natural curiosity of our conversation during the commercial break. do we feel, whether or not we're talking about monjaro or ozempic at this point, we have the long-term studies that the we can confidently say we know the
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racings? >> we really don't just yet. ozempic has only been around since 20 to the 17 and monjaro six months. we know that the drug works, so far everything looks good. we haven't had serious side effects. 9 the thing is patients have to be monitored carefully, and many times they're not especially if they seek help with an online platform. they're not seeing a physician who knows them or maybe not a physician if at all, and a lot of times they're sold a bill of goods. they're sold, oh, well, you sign up and we'll get you this drug, and they can't get it. and patients are left in the lurch. , or that they can't get the drug anymore due to a shortage, and they have to stop it cold turkey, then they can gain a lot of weight back. will: why is it supposedly better than ozempicsome. >> well, studies have shown that it's better because it inhibits appetite a lot more because it looks -- works on insulin systems in your body. i used ozempic first many the my
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practice, and a lot of patients weren't getting the appetite control that they wanted, and they weren't losing as much fat. with monjaro, they're losing more fat. tease drugs are heavy hitters, they have to be taken seriously. patients have to receive the prop if or care. will: is this through or not, one of the concerns is you're not only losing fat, you losing weight, muscle weight as well -- >> you shouldn't be, because these drugs enhance the way insulin works. it fills the body. so when you keep insulin levels stable, i've seen my patients gain muscle. but it's very imperative that patients are followed by a body comp or decision scale. will: what happens when you go off east of these drugs? you talk it, you lose in some cases 15% -- >> what i do is i taper people, and due to the shortage, i get my medication compounded which gives me a lot more options for customizing the dose, which is very, very important.
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bill: and, by the way, it seems like a lot of people are taking this stuff for weight loss. >> that's true. will: all right. it's fascinating, a lot of people want to know about it, we have a lot to learn about it. >> we do. will: appreciate you helping us. all right, coming up, gas stoves being smokedded out in new york. will other states follow suitsome stay with us. unlike some others, neuriva plus is a multitasker supporting 6 key indicators of brain health. to help keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger. 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 have patented gel waves that absorb shock to hard-working muscles and joints, for all-day energy. i bought the team! kevin...? i bought the team! i put it on my chase freedom unlimited card. and i'm gonna cashback on a few other things too. starting with the sound system... curry from deep.
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♪ ♪ all the small things -- [laughter] pete: that's the '90s right there. rachel: has '90s. pete: sun is rising over the city of atlanta. thank you for being with us morning. it's the 7:00 hour in manhattan. atlanta's also eastern i'm the, right? 7:00 there? will: yep. pete: i get really confused down in this that
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