Skip to main content

tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  May 13, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT

5:00 am
rachel: we begin with the controversial case of the marine veteran death ovdaniel neely. will: alexandria hoff joining us live with the latest. alexandria. >> he was asked to surrender his
5:01 am
passport and not leave the state of new york and he did not enter a plea at that time and the 4-year-old turned himself in yesterday prior to appearing before a manhattan judge and penny faces up to 15 years in jail for an attempt to subdue 30-year-old jordan neely earlier this month. penmy held the homeless -- penny held the homeless man down in what was a legal choke hold after he was making threats to kill fellow passengers and penny's attorney said he couldn't have foreseen his death trying to subdue him and penny risk his own life in an attempt to save his own life and the lives of others. >> he's dealing with the situation with the characteristic and honor of the united states marine corp. and his own integrity and honor. >> neely struggled with mental illness and had over 40 prior arrests and his family's attorney said no compassion was
5:02 am
shown to a man clearly suffering. >> no one on that train asked jordan what's wrong. how can i help you? for everybody saying i've been on the train and i've been afraid before and i can't tell you what i would have done in that situation, i'm going to tell you ask how you can help. >> neely's family feels penny should be charged with murder rather than man clutter because murder means he intended to cause neely's death. his next court date is in july. pete: phrasing as ademented to subdue is what it loom -- attempting to subdue and that's what it looks like. we had more questions thannens as coming out and as more witnesses talk about what led up to it, 15 minutes the aler indication and on the subway train and did it stop and attempt to get him off the train or not. but at the same time there's so much confusion that -- it's like combat in a certain sense. there's so much confusion in
5:03 am
that moment. seconds become minutes and minutes become seconds and you don't lose track of time and certainly trying to protect the people around. if the guy is yelling i'll kill that mother fer and i'll take a bullet. i don't care. you're make ago split second decision and looks like the passenger haves his back for what he did yet the prosecution they're going to try to mis-characterize him. will: i'm so offended by the statements from that attorney. the implication is that human beings, humanity is lacking in empathy, and that's just not the case. in many situations, point to place where is we as individuals or as a society can be more empathetic. that's a total willful ignorance of what takes place on trains and continuing conversation after all we go into the green room and have a conversation with adam klotz. adam klotz was attacked on a subway train when he stood up to guys who were threatening an
5:04 am
elderly person. any of us in new york city knows the situation and people are threatening and ranting and raving and don't make eye contact and put your air pods in and now you have your children with you and you're on guard and looking. imagine if you're a single woman in the situations. pete: adam klotz's offense, hey, guys, knock it off. he made the mistake of looking up and saying something. that got him jumped by teens. will: when people are acting in this manner as the man that's alleged the manner in which jordan neely was behaving, they're not asking for a word of encouragement. they are a threat. it appears that daniel penny stepped up in the face of that threat. rachel: i think about this on so many levels too and i posted on
5:05 am
my twitter act of a video of a woman saying hey, chill out to someone like jordan neely who was threatening and screaming and she got punched in the face and the men around her did nothing to confront that. this is the fear women have. my instinct, i'm feisty i see that and i want to go, hey, stop, you know. i'm the kind of person that might -- i like to think i would jump in to at least verbally step up. i saw a lot of men snow valley not stepping and you happen my fear is what happens to this young marine is going to set a cultural tone for other men to not do that. men inside and outside get streeted differently and he's a rifle micman in the marine corpd
5:06 am
the prosecution would try to use that against him and it should be an asset. we asked him and said as it often goes, a lot turned political. listen. >> smart lawyer and put in his client wants to testify before the jury and they'd ordinarily first go to the grand jury if they're not going to arrest him on the scene, with a criminal complaint and they'll wait for a gap, they'll go to the grand jury and come with an indictment. they didn't here. which indicates to me the decision to charge with a complaint was something that was driven by politics and not by the best interest opportunistic the criminal system. rachel: also the autho authoritd the major saying you shouldn't have stepped in and done that.
5:07 am
but where were the police? they're trapped in a train car with the crazy people and expected not to do anything or protect themselves or others. they're upset this man, homeless crazy man died but what about the passengers? does their life matter? will: you're not always in life going to be surrounded by a police presence. the requirement is just be a victim. you're not just required to be a victim if the police aren't there. off right to self-defense. rachel: that's my point. if you're going to allow -- have a situation or city where you allow crazy people to be on the streets and that's your policy because you think it's compassion and they're on the trains and you have defund the police and you criticize the police because there's not enough law enforcement and what are the people supposed to do? i have to blame the citizens of the town that keep elected people that do this.
5:08 am
will: crisis at southern border at boiling point as migrants pour into the u.s. add at record rates after the end of title 42. pete: the border patrol union calling this the worst disaster that any agents have seen and warrants more. rachel: matt is live in el paso with the latest. matt, good morning. >> we're standing outside of the sacred heart sheller and this shelter has been overwhelmed with well over a year now. reporter: the immigration crisis here in el paso and i was able to speak or communicate with some of the migrants yesterday. one of them told me he was coming from columbia and his goal was to get into the united states before title 42 ended this past week.
5:09 am
and z we're now told that a record 83,000 migrants crossed the border this past week. we stood at border wall and watched as hundreds of migrants arrived in the u.s. after title 42 ended and we see so often, they were placed in a single file, put on white buses and they're not clear how many migrants were released but fox news cameras in brownsville, texas, captured many migrants yesterday after they were released there. yet the white house claims it was not happening and slam ago federal judge's written order that now prohibiting border patrol from releasing migrants unless they have court dates. >> the way we see that is sabotage and pure and simple and because cvp putting in mass
5:10 am
violations and it's not occurring. reporter: in morning the news that a 17-year-old migrant from honduras died while in the care of community services in florida. a statement reads "the u.s. department of health and human services is deeply saddened by the tragic death of an unaccompanied minor on may 10 and our heart goes out to the family. a medical examiner investigation is underway". fox news obtained data showing that the u.s. government currently has more than 8,000 un-apompeo pannied minor -- unaccompanied minors in protection and we see so many children crossing into the united states and, you know, dhs and border patrol agents will tell us it's not clear if these minors or these children are crossing with their parents or with a coyote or god knows who. seeing there's 8,000+
5:11 am
unaccompanied minors in custody is a sad layer of the crisis. rachel: thank you, matt. pete: not to mention tens of thousands unaccounted for in the states. rachel: yeah, but no crying at the border from aoc and all those who claim that this is such a compassionate policy. somebody following the crisis and fate of children ending up in the hands of the sex traffickers is sarah carter, fox news contributor and she joining us now. sarah, good morning. >> good morning, rachel. rachel: what's the reaction of the people that you're with and you've been done there interviewing people and talking about that and talk to us about what's going on with the children and it is very dis distressing. >> it is, rachel. i arrived latrias night to my home in texas and i've been with the front lines all day with the texas department of public safety as well as with the national guard that are
5:12 am
patrolling the border and i was in brownsville and i saw the children pouring in unaccompanied minors, families, and this is very important. there were so many single aged males like fighting age males and hearing from the national guard and pouring across the border and loaded onto buses even more important was the fact that department of homeland security with the chief was down there and border patrol was down there and briefing senator ted cruz and senator bud and other senator marshal, ask that we not film where the buses were and people were being loaded and they wanted us not to film the people going on the buses and coming down on the federal level and local level especially here in texas.
5:13 am
pete: is texas deterring people or are they going to other places of entry where there's not crimes? >> this is what we're seeing and we've got 22,000 migrants just right across the border in brownsville in matosmoros, mexico and over 10,000 come over on monday and over 10,000 on tuesday and hitting record level this is week. i think texas governor greg abbott is doing everything he can. they have the wire up and also not only have over 500 national guard at the border here in texas, but part of that is a quick reaction force. the reason there's the quick reaction force, pete, is because they're concerned about increasing levels of violence. they saw in el paso there's frustration among the migrants and the migrants will try to push their way through.
5:14 am
reports from people on the ground and some migrants we have mexican migration fishes on the other side of the board their are apparently coordinating and i say apparently, with department of homeland security. security officials and these report haves been established and they're coming out and what they're doing is they're trying to maneuver large groups away, the texas department of public safety away from national guards and -- pete: who's coordinating this? >> center for immigration studies had a reporter on the other side in matamoros and appears it's department of homeland security. department of homeland security officials with mexican immigration officials. so this is very, very concerning. as rachel said earlier, we have
5:15 am
a number of children being trafficked into the united states and we have reports, i have actually done those reports for fox news where i've spoke ton smugglers and i've spoken to law enforcement officials and intelligence officials that people are being brought into the united states as pseudo modern day slavery and 85% of children released from custody from health and human service haves disappeared into the united states. there's nobody checking in on these children. there's nobody vetting. we also have record levels of fentanyl and counterfeit pills coming into our country and killing our own citizens so i think the big concern here, and this is what i hear from everyone, you know, not only the senators on the front lines watching this catastrophe, but from border patrol officials, immigration and custom enforcement officials as well as those in the national guard on the front line. that the biden administration is
5:16 am
proliferating this behavior and allowing and perpetuating this here and both human smugglers and cartels and needs to stop. will: these are important moments here with the lifting of title 42 anduate you being here with -- appreciate you being here with us this morning. rachel: thank you, sarah. will: what saratoga ray is saying and hearing, it took awhile for me to gather. dhs, our own department of homeland security is coordinating with mexican officials to help stearyl legals to places where texas dps or texas national guard isn't. so we're working against the state of texas to help people get into the country. if that's true, that's asto astonishing. rachel: nothing shocks me anymore and yet that one actually did. pete: little bit. will: this one might as well. homeland security -- rachel: you're really trying to
5:17 am
get me on fire here. will: it's not hard. homeland security has a new document out where they are essentially asking people to go through this situational quiz if you encounter someone that fit this is profile. hey what, do you do? we wanted to bring this to you and see some of the profiles they're talking about of people being radicalized. let me introduce you to dhs's anne. anne is a hypothetical middle-aged pro-life mom. she's an advocate for pro-life causes and reads as follows. this is anne, resident of elkville in rural america. anne has always been religious but since the death of her mother increasingly devout. a regular in small town community and active in several church groups and protective of four kids and become increasingly more concerned about the welfare of other children un-arkansas including the unborn. rachel: sounds totally -- she's very dangerous. that's a very, very dangerous person. i'm sure you know people like
5:18 am
that. alert the fbi. pete: she's a resident of new jersey. she's always been religious ever since working at "fox & friends" has become increasingly devout. by the way, these are profiles from dhs obtained only because of america first legal, which does anne donovan - tastic work. they push. i don't know if it's freedom of information request or what. they're using for training of people inside homeland security. another one. meet meet's friend. meet pete east friend. pete: you are pete's friend chris sitting in front of computer looking at pete's social media posts and been friends online for a couple of years and pete always seemed like a decent guywire cently noticed changes in his behavior online that alarm you. you've seen him post on radical sites with violent tendencies. will: what do you do?
5:19 am
rachel: there's a comical aspect because the profiles are stereotyped and shows somebody that doesn't understand who these people are, but it's so serious because this is the same one helping the mexican government get people >> our country. they're training how to profile and show that pro-life moms are potential radical terrorists. our government is being weaponnized against pro-lifers, against christians because they can't meet don't meet the narratives or ideological purity test butt through by the auditory systems -- put through by the biden administration. this is the same fbi who are doing the profiles.
5:20 am
the same one letting all the domestic terrorist goes and fire bombing pregnancy centers. none makes any sense. pete: she's been protective of her four kids and now really cares about the unborn too. rachel: wouldn't want that. pete: lookout for anne. rachel: if someone gets more devout after someone died in their family, lookout. i suspect i'm on their list as well. pete: newest reparation from the panel and leo terrell coming up. pete: where they found a suspect in a major drug bust. that's coming up. so aaron's folks could help hook him up with a new ride. we'll drive you happy at carvana.
5:21 am
(vo) in three seconds, this couple will share a perfect moment.
5:22 am
(woman) is that? oh wow! but we got to sell our houses! (vo) don't worry. sell and buy in one move when you start with opendoor. (woman) yes! (vo) close in a matter of days. start with an all cash offer at opendoor dot com i have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. now, there's skyrizi. ♪ with skyrizi, most people who achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months... had lasting clearance through 1 year. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections, or a lower ability to fight them, may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine or plan to. ♪nothing is everything♪ talk to your dermatologist about skyrizi. learn how abbvie could help you save.
5:23 am
give your small business one tech solution that checks all the boxes. it's all here with the comcast business complete connectivity solution. peace of mind with cyberthreat security. the power of the largest, fastest reliable network. plus, save up to 75% a year with comcast business mobile. the complete connectivity solution. from the company powered by the next generation 10g network. get started for just $49 a month. and ask about an $800 prepaid card. comcast business. powering possibilities™.
5:24 am
>> reparations are not only morally defiable and long standing disparities and reparations. >> equivalent of 1860s and 40 ac acres and hundreds of millions for each and every african american. will: if that's not enough,
5:25 am
reparations calling to amend the state legislation and known as affirmative action and known as leotleo terrell and fired up and joining us now. what about the reparation and amendment to the constitution? >> i'm upset about this and been a civil rights attorney for 30 years and i believe in the practice of looking at someone going like content and color of their skin and i'm a public school teacher and this racist, racist committee wants to legalize discrimination and want to make white people, white males a dangerous species and even within the blue and state. this city and state has rejected by the affirmative action in 1997 with prop 209 and i was on the committee that i posted in 2020 and they don't want legal -- racial references
5:26 am
placing one group over another and it's illegal. pete: talk about the reparation side of this and california budget running a deficit of $31.5 billion. they guess the deficit talking about it with state levels for reparations and at some point, i'm curious. leo, don't you think you're familiar with the concept of monopoly money and not monopoly promises and you're a black californian, the reparations conversation was a pander and it's not real. you're getting the check and it's pandering and the highest degree. >> it's a game plan by the democrats and gavin newsom to keep blacks within the democratic party and news flash, will, democrat blacks are
5:27 am
leaving the democratic party and going for republicans. i'm one of them and i left the democratic party and they're desperate. if you don't have blacks within the democratic party, you have no party. gavin newsom basically pushed this in case he runs for president. it is very insulting and it's basically exploiting black voters in california. will: leo, this reparation committee called for the reparations and this is what you want to touch on and saying change k through 12 education and institutionalize the curriculum of justice and task force recommends adoption of k through 12 curriculum and introduces students through the concept of race and racial identity and systemic racism and honors black li lives and fully contributions of black people and ideology and highlights particular contributions of those who are dissent dents of
5:28 am
individuals that -- descendents in the united states. a lot is already done. we do honor african american history and the question is do we adopt this ideology as educational indoctrination. >> absolutely not. in california public school. we had black mayors and black police chief and people of all colors within the school district. i challenge any of these individuals to show me a single department within the state of california that is systemically racist. they don't use that -- they use that term and don't know what it means, will. it does not exist. will: yeah and they conflate the idea of not wanting to indoctrinate our children with critical race and those are not one in the same. leo terrell, always great perspective. you were fired up. thank you for being on "fox & friends". >> i was. say hi to rachel.
5:29 am
say hi to rachel. will: rachel, leo said hi. rachel: i, leo, i was thinking how i missed you. >> i'm coming to new york. rachel: you come. will: 18 years later and main suspect in the disappearance of natalie holoway is being ex--- holloway is being extradited to the u.s.. nancy grace is next to unpack in all. they're promises. promises of all shapes and sizes. each, with a time and a place they've been promised to be. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you. (janet) so much space!... that open kitchen! (tanya) oooh definitely the one! (ethan) but how can you sell your house when we're stuck on a space station for months???!!! (brian) no guys, opendoor gives you the flexibility to sell and buy on your timeline. (janet) nice! (intercom) flightdeck, see you at the house warming.
5:30 am
5:31 am
5:32 am
this is going to be great. taking the shawl off. okay i did it. is he looking at my hairline? my joint pain isn't too bad. well, it wasn't this morning. i hope i can get through this. is plaque psoriasis or psoriatic arthritis making you rethink your everyday choices? otezla is a pill, not a cream or injection that can help people with plaque psoriasis achieve clearer skin. otezla is also proven to reduce joint swelling, tenderness, and pain in psoriatic arthritis. and no routine blood tests required. don't use otezla if you're allergic to it.
5:33 am
serious allergic reactions can happen. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. some people taking otezla had depression, suicidal thoughts, or weight loss. upper respiratory tract infection and headache may occur. doctors have been prescribing otezla for over 8 years. i'm so glad i made it through the day. ♪ don't hesitate. ask your doctor about otezla today. will: twister touching down in nebraska yesterday and more than three dozen tornadoes reported across the great plains but no injuries so thankfully. check in with adam klotz for a foxfires weather forecast.
5:34 am
tim >> temperatures in the west and the middle where the warm and cold hair are meeting and storms are fired up and covered in showers and we see severe storm risks across illinois and iowa today and also across portions of south texas and those are your weather headlines and before i toss it back to you, guys, you came here from the uk; right? for what? >> to be here and see you. >> happy birthday. you want to say back to you. >> one, two, three, back to you. >> tossing it back in. pete: well done. happy birthday. >> pete says happy birthday. >> oh, thank you. pete: 18 years later and main suspect in the 2005 disappearance of natalie holoway is finally being extradited to the u.s..
5:35 am
the peruvian government agreeing to temporally hand jordan vanderslew aallegedly scamming holloway's family. she was seen with him before she disappear the on a high school garage ways trip in aruba. manicy grace is joining us -- nancy grace is joining us now with more. why is he the prime suspect now after so long? >> well, in 2001, an extradition treaty was growed upon between -- agreed upon between the u.s. and u.s.. a defendant serving time for another offense in peru can't be temporarily extradited to the us on other charges and that is what is happening now. five years to the day after the judge's son murdered an american
5:36 am
sweet heart, notly holloway, five year tots day after he murdered her, she then murdered another young woman he met in a casino, his mo, mo dumb of operation he goes to jail in peru and living the high life and has sex, drugs, alcohol and he's even fathered a child behind bars. now he's coming to the u.s. to answer up on charges not for the murder of natalie but for extortion -- more than a scam. he extorted natalie's mother. i spent time with her in aruba and she defined literally falling on the ground at the foot of a cross by the road. filthy, begging, trying to find her daughter. screaming to heaven where is natalie when it hit her that natalie had been murdered and
5:37 am
was dead. she was never coming back. and then he had the gall to try and extort her asking for a quarter million dollars in exchange for what really happened to natalie and to lead the mother to her remains. that p-o-c i'm looking at right there tried to bleed money out of a murder victim's mother and he's going to rot in hell but going through the u.s. system first. pete: she's going to get her chance to look him in the eyes as he faces that system. incredible. what a vivid update from you. i want your take on another story as well and the jury reached a verdict in the murder trial of cult mom laurie vallo dabell. >> that was a long time coming and sectioning with the profit,
5:38 am
her -- sexting with her fifth husband, the profit, didn't help her. her children were buried in pet cemetery on his property, the two of them were dancing on a beach after their wedding and sexting each other. that did not go down very well with the jury. now she did not face the death penalty in that case but guess what, she's getting extradited pronto to arizona where she's going to face another murder charge for the murder of her fourth husband, charles vallo. mipete: man, two really tough stories. the gears of justice often move slowly but in these cases hopefully justice is served in the end. thank you for being all over it from the beginning, manicy. appreciate it. >> thank you for inviting me and happy mother's day to everybody's mom and wife. pete: indeed and covering that all morning tomorrow.
5:39 am
if you've forten, there's one day left to reck. nancy, thank you. coming up, 26,000 migrants await on the mexican side of the border. they say migrants butcosming here illegally. talk to two border town mayors on the mess they're having to clean up. not just a human mess but it's a mess. plus, hiding spot washout? blankets not enough to cover up this major drug bust.
5:40 am
5:41 am
5:42 am
♪ your yard is your sanctuary. where you should feel free. i know... i was talking about the dogs. [barking] they need their lawn back fast and you need scotts turf builder rapid grass. it's a revolutionary mix of seed and fertilizer that grows grass 2 times faster than just seed alone. giving you a stronger lawn. release the hounds! [barking] smell that freedom, eh? i smell it! i'm still talking to the dogs. pick up a bag at lowe's today. feed your lawn. feed it.
5:43 am
rachel: texas mayor victor tremendous vino and don -- trevino and don mcglaughlin. victor, how is this affecting your community? >> thank you for having me. i issued a emergency declaration on april 30th for anticipation for any surge and allowed the city to sell coordination needed and receiving a steady stream of immigrants. however at this point it's been manageable and i've been in constant communication with border patrol and mayors.
5:44 am
i've seen people from city hall going to the next destination from bus stations too. the -- they've slowed down the stream and we're seeing border patrol take ago bit longer to process people and they're now meeting court dates before they get patrolled. i'm also in constant contact with hospitals and we're limited in infrastructure and medical capacity for large number offed a migs. this is a reality that we don't also -- we also don't have a pediatric intensive care unit locally so that's of concern. rachel: yeah, of course. you already have rural sort of limited capacity for healthcare and it's being overrun. mayor, i couldn't help thinking that he said if we have a large number of injuries or emergencies and your town having
5:45 am
a school shooting noodle rod tragically not too long ago with the circumstances of towns being overreturn and title 42 gone, how will that impact your community in terms of emergencies? >> excuse me. it will be tough. just two weeks ago, we had 40 migrants on the train east of uvalde and every ambulance in our community and surrounding area was at that train as they transported people to hospitals. phenomenal with would have had -- if we would have had an emergency in our community, we'd have no ambulances. it's an on going deal. rachel: sticking with the mayor from uvalde and i visited your town and spoke with you and there was a child detention center inside of your community. you had no access to it and couldn't see what was going on
5:46 am
inside. can you tell us anything happening as the children come through your town? any new updates especially in light of the new development with title 42? >> sure, we're still unaccompanied minor center here in uvalde and most of the time they're brought in over the evening and processed and over the next few days sent somewhere. one of our concerns and not coming from uvalde and 85,000 migrant children coming across the border and they're unaccounted for that the government has no idea where they are. but they brought them in and processed them. rachel: not allowing them to see the ones they have in custody and no idea about them as well. this is very troubling. mayors, we thank you for giving us some insight into how your communities are dealing with this situation, which our border patrol says is the worst that
5:47 am
they've ever seen in the history of this country. thank you so much. >> it is. it is. thank you, and happy mother's day. >> thank you so much. >> thank you very much. rachel: pete. pete: body cam footage shows suspects hiding in unusual places during a drug bust outside of cleveland last week. one man crammed into a clothes drier. others hid in closets and some tried hiding under blankets, watch. >> you think we're that dumb. get up. stand up. pete: police arrested seven suspects on various charges including fentanyl. that's a crew right there. the state of nevada pushing to
5:48 am
make las vegas a new hollywood and bipartisan group of state lawmakers want to give movie studdies $10 m $1,090,000,000 -- $190 million annual clement if it passes they'll back a $1 billion expansion in sin city. across america, bad boys being named after yellowstone characters and social security reports show the name dutton and kasey ranked number one and two obstructing cerumen the list of top five growing boys list in the past years. dutton is the last name of the family that owns the ranch in the series and kasey is one of the sons and those are your headlines. doesn't surprise me. all right, coming up, as rachel mentioned, tomorrow is mother's day and what better way to
5:49 am
celebrate mom than getting her some gear to transform her backyard garden. chip wade next with the top tools. ♪
5:50 am
5:51 am
5:52 am
5:53 am
will: form it mother's day. pete: it is. if you need a gift, one idea is make the outside of your home look as beautiful as her. rachel: joining us with gear to transform your garden, diy expert chip wade. chip, wood morning. >> good morning. nothing says i love you mom like a crisp and clean yard. two tools i use the most is a hand held blower and string trimmer. two awesome item from ego today and number one in reviews for battery powered platforms and they also have the industry's most powerful hand held blower. this blows $200 miles an hour and will last for 90 minutes on a single batly charge. the batteries work across all the ego tools and awesome trimmer not to worry about winding the head. they have power load technology. you can stick that string in there and it'll do all the work for you. more at lowe's and lowe's.com and if you want something
5:54 am
rugged, reliable and durable in the garden look no further than eli hose reels and aluminum carts, flat free foam tires and stainless steel polyurethane hoses and crush free with a 10 year warranty. i have an eli hose for longer than ten years and works great. what other brand gives you a full warranty after ten years and solid warranty at eleyhose.com. all the different quarter, full circumstance and will fully adjustment 360 heads and stop flow technology. this is brand new. when your head gets damaged in the garden, look at this, it's pretty durable. there you go. look at that. it gets damaged and cuts the water for you, which is really nice. you're not going to have geyser effect. any longer. saves water at k rain or at lowe's. next up america's tractor, the vin track made here in the u.s.
5:55 am
in ohio. this thing is amazing. 30+ attachments from grapple hooks to snow blowing, to cutter decks. what's great about this is it has articulated steering as well. look at how this thing works and it can go up to a 30 degree incline and safely which is amazing. this will be the last tractor you ever have to buy. more at vintrack.com. it's mother's day and have to make her feel awesome in the garden, black matt pergola and outdoor living and me and my dad assembled in about 45 minutes and cool decorative screen panels to customize on the back or screen walls on the side. really, really awesome and check it out at barrett outdoor living, moms like mine and my life, they'll love it. all this up on wadeworkscreative.com. happy mother's day. rachel: 40 minutes for chip to do two hours for other dads.
5:56 am
will: for sure. chip, thank you so much. coming up, could your future flight be flown by an ai pilot? like everything else i guess. stay with us. ♪ how to grow more vibrant flowers: step one: feed them with miracle-gro shake 'n feed. that's it. miracle-gro. all you need to know to grow. how to grow delicious herbs: step one: use miracle-gro potting mix. that's it. miracle-gro. all you need to know to grow. you can't always avoid migraine triggers like your next period. qulipta® can help prevent migraines. you can't always prevent what's going on outside... ...that's why qulipta® helps what's going on inside.
5:57 am
qulipta® gets right to work. in a 3-month study, qulipta® significantly reduced monthly migraine days... ...and the majority of people reduced them by 50 to 100%. qulipta® blocks cgrp-- a protein believed to be a cause of migraines. qulipta® is a preventive treatment for episodic migraine. most common side effects are nausea, constipation, and tiredness. learn how abbvie could help you save on qulipta®.
5:58 am
5:59 am
[narrator] why is aaron happy? well, just days ago, his old wheels gave out. but he knew carvana had his back. that's because carvana had tens of thousands of cars under $20,000. so aaron's folks could help him out with a sweet ride. [aaron] no way. [narrator] yes way. with the most cars under $20,000 and our car vending machines, we'll drive you happy at carvana.
6:00 am
♪ ♪ ♪ [national anthem] ♪ [national anthem] ♪

131 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on