Skip to main content

tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  May 27, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT

6:00 am
♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪
6:01 am
♪ ♪ ♪ rachel: good morning, everybody, on a beautiful e we moral day weekend -- memorial day weekend. that was the navy band performing live, "god bless america," and god bless our troops, especially on this memorial day. so glad to be the here this morning with my if friend will and with joey by who's in for pete this morning. and very appropriate to have you this weekend. joey: well, you know, pete would be appropriate as well -- rachel: of course. joey: but if you can't have pete, have joey. rachel: that's what we always say. joey: i make a career out of filling in for pete hegseth. will: i would like to think that there would be a "fox & friends" competition the i
6:02 am
could sign up for and win, it would be pull-ups, but joey just squeezed out, none of us really cared about the count because he continued interview, talking throughout, and those were some beautiful pull-ups, joey. joey: you know, i'm not to going to run a marathon anytime soon, i skip leg day, so i get my pull-ups in. will: there you go. rachel: ray so, will, are you saying that you think you could beat pete? you seem to say i can only not win against joey. you think you could beat pete? will: i do think -- rachel: we'll have to do that. i thought you did well too, struggling a little more than -- joey: will's got some technique. will didn't come prepared. i had the intel. will: i was concerned about my attire. the pants were a little loose, the shirt came untuck thed. joey: kipping, where you're using your legs, that doesn't count. in the marine corps, that's
6:03 am
trash, we throw that away. one, two, three, when you -- we start going three, three, til you do it right. [laughter] all right. i guess we're going to have to get serious at some point. we begin this hour with a fox news alert. republican negotiators providing an update on the debt ceiling talks saying a deal could still be hours or days away. will: president biden gets criticism for leaving washington to spend part of memorial day at camp david. rachel: and chad pergram is live in washington with more. good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the sides raced to get a deal last night but failed to nail it down. they hope to wrap it up today and get legislative text. there's an urgency after the secretary of the treasury, janet yellen, said the the government is out of cash on june 5th. >> with regard to the debt the limit, things are looking good, very optimistic. i hope we'll have some clear evidence tonight before the clock strikes 12 that we have a
6:04 am
deal, but it's very close, and i'm optimistic. >> reporter: if today they get legislative the text today, the house can begin to the run its 7 2- hour clock. -- 7 2- hour clock, that could trigger a vote tuesday or wednesday. that would give the senate several days to process the bill. things always take longer in the senate. >> members have demanded and have the right the review the legislation for 72 hours. so that means you have to have something that stands up. you can't play tricks. there's no hiding the ball. you've got on the, you know -- >> is the speaker going to talk with the president today? no idea. >> what are they going to talk about, right? >> french toast? [laughter] >> reporter: permitting reform for energy is out for now, and democrats drew a hard line of workman kates for people to the qualify for some benefits. >> -- and holding the economy
6:05 am
hostage in order to the make these cuts. the things that that they're actually proposing don't deal with spend ising at all. what they're asking for is something known as work requirements for food and other kinds of social programs. >> reporter: yellen says the government will have what she called, quote, an extremely low level of resources in early june. treasury makes $130 billion if in payments for veterans, medicare and social security programs on june 1st and june 2nd. back to you. will: thank you, chad. chad, i think we still have chad, right? >> reporter: i'm here. i'm going to be here all day, all night, until they get this done. [laughter] will: i thought we lost you. no, there you are. the sentiment this morning seem es to be somewhat moving towards optimism, and i don't know if that's a matter of hours or days, but it does seem on the we are moving toward some resolution, is that fair? >> reporter: absolutely, if they're going to get this done by the 5th of june because, again, it's going to take a while to pros this through the senate. i want to come back to something
6:06 am
kevin mccarthy has talked about for days now, he has said 7 72 the hours. he didn't say necessarily 3 days, but 72 hours meaning if they got the text out last night, maybe they could have voted on tuesday. if they except the text out today to, maybe they could vote late tuesday, and he could still adhere to to his word. there was no relationship between kevin mccarthy and former house speaker nancy pelosi. there is one between mccarthy and hakeem jeffries. mccarthy has gone to great lengths to court jerries and get to know him -- jeffrey, and the level of trust is going to be the paramount. rachel: i love that you say that, because people forget how much of politics especially at that congressional level is relational. and that's an important point the note. i would say when joe biden was in japan, he was sort of saying if this deal doesn't happen, it's going on the republicans' fault, and hen suddenly some polling came out that said the
6:07 am
majority of people would blame joe biden, and now suddenly it looks like we might get a deal. how much of that polling do you think is playing into the new optimism that will was just talking about? >> reporter: you know, the president's polling has never been good, so i don't know that that necessarily moved the meter. what did move the meter is the fact that they're running out of cash, and they're running against this deadline. that's really what's driving things here. and it will be, as i always say, about the math. they're going to lose the left on this bill, probably the right on this bill. there's a fat middle that they can go for to try to get that vote matrix right. that's where the votes for this bill are going to lie. and again, that's why jeffreys, that's why mccarthy kind of working together, there has to be an awful lot of trust there. and if one side starts to see a lot of votes disappear, the other side is going to say we're not going to vote for this. you might remember those life
6:08 am
cereal commercials with mikey, nobody would eat the cereal until mikey ate it. rachel: dui it to mikey, he'll eat anything. joey: kevin mccarthy narrowly became speaker of the house, and there's been this sentiment the entire time that he's one failed policy away from losing that because of the strength of the freedom caucus and the detractors within his party. if he puts through, if he gets something through that doesn't include them in any way, doesn't include their votes, does the that weaken his case as speaker, or if he gets it through with them, does it solidify it? >> reporter: it's always been believed he's going to to the the lose 20 the-40 republicans on this, it's a question of how low can he go. tim burr comment is a republican from tennessee the, he's somebody who did not vote for the first debt ceiling bill, and he says he probably won't vote for this one eater, he just doesn't want to the raise the debt ceiling, but he says i still stand behind kevin mccarthy. there's a number of republicans
6:09 am
who are with mccarthy in that sense, but again, at what point does that dam start to breaksome if they don't think they got certain structural reforms, long-term spending plans here that will change the trajectory, that's going to be a knock against kevin msk -- mccarthy, but so far we have not seen that. will: chad pergram, thank you so much for that update this morning. rachel: thank you, chapped. will: back here in new york city, a whistleblower at the roe hotel is revealing shocking new details at what takes place at these hotels that are housing immigrants. he works security at one, and he has images and shared a story that includes, of course, like littering and just general visual chaos, as you can see there. ransacked apartment rooms, but more importantly, children left alone, children left unattended thed, children as young as the age of 10 getting crunk. rachel interviewed carlos
6:10 am
arianna earlier. here's what he had to say. >> we find fake passports, fake social security cards, all kinds of fake documents in this hotel every day. every day we find about ten kids alone in their hotel rooms either drinking or doing drugs. weapons will be in the room, but we're not allowed to go in there. if they are kicked out of the hoteling they get sent to a processing center at port authority where they get given a second hotel. so say a husband decides to beat his wife up, he will get kicked out, and they will just process him into a single men's hole. so it's the -- if you break the law, it's not a, well, we're going to report you to the proper authorities, it's let's give you a second or a third hotel room, and you still stay in the city. rachel: yeah, it's fascinating, you know? when he was telling this story about, you know, just how they just don't have to face the same consequences as americans, we
6:11 am
talked about the children being left alone, it wasn't long ago in the same neighborhood that there was an a -- abc producer who suddenly died while he was out dinner with his wife, and through that emergency came to be known that they had left their children alone in a hotel room nearby, and the now-new widow was arrested and charged with child endangerment, maybe rightfully so. but in this case, we have -- every day, he said, he would see multiple children left alone, some of them intoxicated, some of them, as he mentioned, the documents, he said, are false. so we don't even kno if these are children that are being trafficked. these people claim on the their parents who are not even taking care of them, if they're actually their parents. this is a huge problem and an indication that the chaos at the border is not staying at the border, it's right here mt. country. joey: tragedy, tragedy at
6:12 am
border. rachel: yeah. joey: it's not saying every single person crossing the border is going to the treat a hotel room this way and harm somebody else, but it is happening. there's video evidence of it happening, and why can't we have an administration that acknowledges that, sports -- supports our border? why can't we have a congress that passes a piece of legislation that would man kate the border be sured -- secured? -- mandate the border be secured? rachel: his sense from working there was the lack of gratitude. these are people that come here illegally, that don't appear on the working, they're getting stuff for free, hotel rooms, all this stuff, and look at the way they treat it. that should be an indication. i say this as the daughter of an immigrant who came to this country legally, who was so grateful, had to take a medical test, had had to take a citizenship test, and as a result we turned out, i think, the most patriotic woman i know. i'm not sure if the way we're doing this is going to have that the result. in fact, i know it won't.
6:13 am
this is not the way it should be done. joey: rachel -- rachel: and it's an insult to people who do it right. joey: people born into this country aren't grateful and don't appreciate it. how can we ask anyone else to be? will: meanwhile, take a look at this poll, a fox news poll about people, how much they think artificial intelligence will change your life here in the united states. 86% say it it will change your life a lot or some. only 12% say that it won't change your life much at all. we talked about it here on this program, all the different ways in which a.i. is going to end up changing our life. it's interesting because the department of education is highlighting another way that they seem to be concerned about the rise of a.i., and that's in its ability to, well, leapt us know what's happening in our classrooms. the doe issued a report on a.i. that says the following: when we enable a voice assistant in the kitchen, it might help us with simple household tasks like setting a cooking timer, and yet the same system might hear
6:14 am
things we intend to be private. this kind of dilemma will occur in classrooms and teachers. that monitoring might have consequences for the teacher. achieving trustworthy a.i. that makes teachers' jobs better will be nearly impossible if teachers experience increased surveillance. joey: i'm sorry, what? [laughter] the difference between accountability when when you're in charge with our kids and what i can say in the my own kitchen? if you don't understand the difference there, maybe you don't understand privacy at all, accountability at all. teachers should welcome this just like cops should welcome cameras -- rachel: exactly. police officers have to wear cameras so we can see what's happening. everything we see happening in our schools right now, the little insight we got from those zoom calls -- and i was one of those people, because i had one kid in public school at the time, and i was shocked at the pro-china information he was being forced to regurgitate the on his zoom call that i nearly fainted. it was -- i had been talking about indoctrination at school,
6:15 am
it turned out it was ten times worse when i saw it on zoom. that's what people saw, and now parents are a lot more aware, and they do want a window into their classroom because they don't trust it. joey: the real irony here, when you seven -- send your dogs to a kennel, you can send them to one with a camera, when you send your toddler to daycare, you can choose one with a camera so you can see how they're treated, but when you send your kid to the public if school, god forbid you be able to listen in. will: there's no if fear of a.i. for anyone but the teachers. rachel: yeah. remember, joe biden said recently in the rose garden address, he said these are all of our kids. and i think that's just another reflection of that where they think these are their kids k and heir not. they're ours. we're lending them to you to teach them math and science and not gender theory and and crt. so since you betrayed that trust, we need to check up on
6:16 am
you. what did reagan said? trust but very fay? yeah. -- verify? that applies here too. we're going to turn to your headline, a u.s. coast guard suspending the search for a missing louisiana teen who went overboard on an excursion with friends just days after graduating high school in baton rouge. the 18-year-old reportedly jumped overboard, oh, my goodness, on a dare from one of his friends. crews coming up empty after scouring the waters for days. so sad. and this is a live look at lax airport in lang -- los angeles are. as you can see, the roads are packed leading to the terminal as folks try to get away this memorial weekend. airports across the u.s. are bracing for another chaotic day as millions take to the skies. this video off the denver showing the security line backed up into the baggage claim area. yesterday travelers faced nearly 6,000 flight delays and almost
6:17 am
200 cancellations. and already today the there are over 580 delays and 66 cancellations. aaa says this could be the busiest holiday weekend for airports since 2005. i wonder what's driving that? fascinating. all right, the usfl taking a swipe at the nfl's new kickoff rule placing fair catches at the 2525-yard line -- 25-yard line. we do see the risk of injury from a runback. the league tweet, quote: uspl is proud to keep special in special teams with traditional connect ahs that maintain the player -- kickoffs that maintain player safety. the philadelphia stars face the pittsburgh maulers tonight at 9 on fs1. and those are your headlines. will: all right. straight ahead, growing calls to boycott bank of america after they voluntarily gave data to
6:18 am
the tbi. kentucky congressman thomas massie on the house investigation next. joey: plus, sailors versus marines, it's almost time for the annual fleet week tug-of-war. don't miss it. there they are, there they're going. uh-oh, is that one versus -- looks like there's just one there. i think there's probably some behind. ♪ ♪ reedom unlimited and buy a better plane seat... switch to a king suite- or book a silent retreat. silent retreat? oh! hold up! earn big with chase freedom unlimited with no annual fee. how do you cashback? from prom dresses to workouts and new adventures
6:19 am
you hope the more you give the less they'll miss. but even if your teen was vaccinated against meningitis in the past they may be missing vaccination for meningitis b. although uncommon, up to 1 in 5 survivors of meningitis will have long term consequences. now as you're thinking about all the vaccines your teen might need make sure you ask your doctor if your teen is missing meningitis b vaccination.
6:20 am
6:21 am
6:22 am
will: our next guest is among the house republicans investigating bank of america for report hi giving the fbi a list of targeted customers related to january 6th. one whistleblower telling lawmakers those who purchased a firearm with a bank of america product were elevated to the top of the list regardless of when or where the purchase was made. here with his insight, kentucky congressman thomas massie. congressman, great to have you this morning with us. so bank of america turning over lists of customers, first of all, i think some of them they considered geofenced within some type of january 6th designated area, but also others had just bought guns and turns it over to the fbi? >> right. if you bought so much as a hot dog with a credit card or a debit card from bank of america on january 5th, 6th or 7th in
6:23 am
washington, d.c. of 2021, hay put you on a list and gave it to the fbi, but they enhanced that list by day that mining their -- data mining the private records of their customers to see anybody who's bought a firearm, and that wasn't limited by date. and that's very disturbing to us because that information comes from an fbi whistleblower. he's a supervisory intelligence analyst. it was corroborated by his boss who's a special agent in charge of the boston the field office at the fbi. so we've got two whistleblowers telling us that this is going on, and there's no legal process. and let me be clear here, will, this isn't the fbi going to bank of america and saying we have 12 suspects and we've got a warrant, we want you to the look at their data. bank of america, or according to this fbi whistleblower, was generating lists of suspects on hair own and giving them concern on their own and giving them to the fbi without a process. will: really quickly, that's the word that i latched on to the,
6:24 am
this concept of voluntary. am i to assume that bank of america came up with this idea on their own, or fbi said, hey, you know what, bank of america? this would be great, for you to voluntarily give us this information. >> i'm really worried if it's the latter case where there was a wink and a nod, and the fbi said we can't constitutionally ask for this, but if you gave it to us, that would be constitutional. if you violated the privacy -- if you do it, it's okay according to the constitution. now the wink and the nod makes it unconstitutional. but this is a disturbing trend we're uncovering in thenyization of government committee that jim jordan and i serve on. hand in glove, they're working together with private companies. so we sent a letter to the bank of america ceo telling him to preserve all documents. we're investigating this. will: yeah. it's the concerning either way, obviously. it's a constitutional concern if the fbi is doing the wink and the nod, but it's the also concerning private corporations
6:25 am
take thing on the role of law enforcement, and every customer ought to know this is what you sign up for when you sign up for an account with bank of america. i want to ask you about ron desantis. you were there for the campaign rollout this past week on twitter. it got mixed reviews, a lot of people watching, other people that couldn't watch. you know, tell the us your thoughts on ron desantis the' rollout this past week. >> well, it looks like the $8 for the blue check mark only get you half a million participants in your inaugural announcement. [laughter] i think ron desantis the' popularity surprised elon musk and his engineers, and it took down the site for about 15 or 20 the minutes. but we got back up. i was able to ask ron a question paragraphly concern particularly about weaponization of the fbi. ron desantis the knows policy from a toz. i served with him in the house, and that's a refreshing thing about that town hall. will: yeah. a to be vetted out, a lot to be sussed still between trump and
6:26 am
desantis, or haley, scott and so many others. an interesting forum, and he's certainly shown himself willing to the answer a lot of those -- >> one quick thing. will: yeah, sure. >> you can see who's listening in the own the hall there on twitter, and i noticed the wife of a congressman who had enors doered trump was on that announcement -- endorsed trump was on that announcement, so i think ron desantis has broad appeal. will: well, i don't know that listening necessarily suggests appeal, but i think that, i think that anyone interested in running for higher office ought to be the someone that everyone is listening to the or anyone who is encoursing america -- encoursing america. we should be interested in this first conversation you and i had about the fbi. congressman massie, thank you. >> hank thises, will. will: coming up tonight the, check out a special edition of "one nation" with brian kilmeade. but paris on this show, jocko willink joins us live with a special memorial day message.
6:27 am
and now, i'm checking my fico® score. i got a new credit card, and i'm even finding ways to save. finally getting smart about money feels really good. see all you can do with the free experian app. download it now. my most important kitchen tool? my brain. so i choose neuriva plus. unlike some others, neuriva plus is a multitasker supporting 6 key indicators of brain health. to help keep me sharp. neuriva: think bigger.
6:28 am
6:29 am
when people come, they say they've tried lots of diets, nothing's worked or they've lost the same 10, 20, 50 pounds over and over again. they need a real solution. i've always fought with 5-10 pounds all the time. eating all these different things and nothing's ever working. i've done the diets, all the diets. before golo, i was barely eating but the weight wasn't going anywhere. the secret to losing weight and keeping it off is managing insulin and glucose. golo takes a systematic approach to eating that focuses on optimizing insulin levels.
6:30 am
we tackle the cause of weight gain, not just the symptom. when you have good metabolic health, weight loss is easy. i always thought it would be so difficult to lose weight, but with golo, it wasn't. the weight just fell off. i have people come up to me all the time and ask me, "does it really work?" and all i have to say is, "here i am. it works." my advice for everyone is to go with golo. it will release your fat and it will release you.
6:31 am
joey: welcome back. a recent study is hay lighting the crucial role fathers play in shaping harrisons' attitudes. rachel: the peer-are reviewed study from springer link says, quote, our findings suggest a father's own has clipty ideology is a likely contributor to around their son's exregistration of masculinity. will: joining us now, former navy seal is team commander, jocko willink, who's with us now. this is interesting -- glad to have you, by the way. thank you for being here. happy memorial day. >> thanks. will: you know, i spend a lot of time with two sons talking to them all the time about what it means to be a man. so i hope that in this study suggests they're learning lessons from that, not going to rebel against me like so many of the other lessons we try to teach our children. >> yeah, i think it's a little surprising they ran a study to figure this out. [laughter]
6:32 am
it doesn't take a genius to realize that fathers and mothers influence their sons and their daughters. i don't -- children are highly malleable, and they're going on the easily influenced, and they're going to be the influenced not just by their parents, but also by what they see on screen of their phones. so you've got to the pay ages to what they're watching -- attention to what they're watching because they're going on the watching other people besides their parents, and they're going to possibly emulate those other people. so we have to be cautious about that. rachel: jocko, masculinity such an interesting topic, tell he why masculinity matters and why we need to make sure we're passing that on to our boys. >> well, the stereotypical masculine trait, thing like assertiveness and being competitive and being decisive and being sew thetic with your motions -- stoic with your emotions, all those things are positive. they're positive not just in boys, but in girls and men and
6:33 am
women as well. can you go overboard, can you take too much risk? yes, you can. can you be overly competitive? of course you can. can you be too detach thed from your emotions? sure you can. but when these attributes are balanced, they're good, like i said, heir good for boys, they're good for girls, they're good for men, they're good for women. i don't think there's anything toxic about these things millions you take them to an extreme -- joey: unless you're threatened by the truth. speaking of the truth and people that exemplify these traits, it's memorial day in a couple of days. you and i understand it from a perspective a lot of folks don't. what is your message for this memorial day? >> first of all, i just want to say that memorial day is sacred. it needs to be a sacred day. it's a day to remember the incredible sacrifices made by our fallen service members, hundreds of thousands of men and women who made the ultimate sacrifice is for our freedom. and those numbers, those crazy
6:34 am
numbers, they're not just numbers. joey: that's right. >> they're people. they're people like my friends mark lee, mikey, ryan job. these are people that had hopes, hay had dreams, they had futures, and they sacrificed all of that for us of. so that's what we need to remember on memorial day. and, listen, this doesn't mean we should be somber. none of my fallen teammates would want any of us to the sulk around all day and be sad. they would want us to be with our friends and families. joey: that's right. >> they would want us to enjoy the day off, have a barbecue, but they would also want us to remember that all the things that we enjoy, the freedom and the fortune that we have, that these are gifts, and these are gifts from the brave souls who gave their lives for us. joey: in all your success, you always keep their legacy alive. you always say their names, and i appreciate you for that.
6:35 am
that's the way to do it. will: thank you, jocko. rachel: thanks, jock on o. he's a very masculine guy. let's just put it out there. [laughter] joey: he is. will: by the way, you can now preorder joey's new book, "unbroken bonds of battle," he's got a new book out at fox news books.com. that's exciting. joey: it's the very exciting. that book is full of stories of people like jocko was just talking about. a lot of wounded warriors and other men who went through such trials and tribulations before they got to service and how service changed their life and allowed hem to make sense of it all and come out better people. and my relationship with each one of them as i've known all of them for a very long time. please, check it out. rachel: out june 7th, "unbroken bonds of battle." make sure you order and buy it. thanks, jee by. coming up, frank siller shares how tunnel to towers is
6:36 am
honoring fallen heroes this memorial day by paying off mortgages for 30 heroes. will: but first, here's the navy's northeast we moral band performing live. ♪ ♪ ♪
6:37 am
6:38 am
6:39 am
6:40 am
♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ rachel: all right, that was the navy band's northeast ceremonial band playing "stars and stripes forever," and this memorial day we're honoring our fallen heroes with tunnels to tower thes as they pay off 30 mortgages for gold star families and father-in-law first responder
6:41 am
families -- fallen first respond orer families. swrea jee lance corporal ronald freeman lost his life at 25 the many in april, 2011, while serving in afghanistan. he sacrificed himself in order to the save his infantry team from an ied. will: ceo frank siller joins us now. frank, always great to see you. glad to have you on memorial day weekend. >> so honored to be here among so many heroes or that are willing to sacrifice their lives and all a ooh too often co, and that's what we're here to honor, these great heroes. will: you're paying off mortgages. tell us about the program this weekend. >> well, we paid off 30 mortgages for memorial day weekend because these great heroes gave their lives for our country. we made a promise, the tunnels to tower thes foundation made a promise that if you give your life, you leave a young family behind, we're going to deliver them a mortgage-free home. i mow so many people behind us and around america, certainly fox viewers, have been donating
6:42 am
$11 a month, and this is where their money goes. we like to make sure that on this weekend that they see the results of their donations. rachel: yeah. i mean, so many people donate because they trust you, but i also love how you've made it so accessible. everybody's got $11 a month that they can give. what does it mean to you to be doing it on this weekend here with us in particular? >> well, i meet so many of these families, i spend time with them, i meet their children that are left behind, so it's the very emotional, to be quite frank with you. and, you know, when you do that, you tell them, look, you know, or your husband died, your loved one died, and we're going to take care of your family because of their sacrifice or her sacrifice, it means a lot to them. you can't bring them back, but you can most certainly make that burden in their lives a little easier. joey: you know, frank, you lost your brother on september 11th, 2001, and that is a memorial day for those men and women from that day, but you have connected so well the sacrifice of first
6:43 am
responders and what they do for their community with the sacrifice of men and women who serve our country in uniform in defense of this country. your story alone has created, has closed the gap and the divide, and you continue to do the it with this organization. >> you know, it's so ironic that you said that because nine of these mortgages of these thirty mortgages are for first responders. and the reason why we did the nine of them is because they served their country first, and they came back to america, you know, and then became first responders. joey: yeah, overlap. >> most of them were police officers and most of them were shot just because they were police officers, they were ambushed, etc. so, you know, it's a commitment that we made, the tunnel to towers foundation, and we ask everyone to go to t2t according, $11 a month, and we can keep on fulfilling the promise. willwomen i'm lad you brought up that, that $11 a month that so many give, this is what is on the other end of that giving. when you co, frank, what is it you hear the most? when you hear from the family
6:44 am
members that you've support, what grow hear from that family? >> they can't believe it that people care. it's not just the mortgage-free home, but we try to bring them into our family. joey knows that. we have a very large tunnel to towers family, volunteers across america, we're proud of the work that we're doing. but they're so appreciative that they're not forgotten and their loved one's not forgotten. rachel: i know you're a man of faith and your patriotism and also your faith is driving you, and it's an inspiration to so many of us. so thank you so much. will: stick the around, frank. hey, listen, you mentioned them, they're right behind us here. it's fleet week here many new york, got a lot of sailors here this memorial day weekend. good morning, saylor. thank you for your service. >> thank you for your support, sir. will: you guys come to new york on it fleet week, this is memorial day weekend, what because it mean to you? >> it's the about honoring fallen soldiers, knowing that people appreciate what they've
6:45 am
done and what we are about to do. will: i'm curious, for so many of us we go through our lives at least at some point, memorial day's a day we have time with our friends and family, a barbecue, and then you make transition into serving, i'm curious, did you feel maybe the same way in which you, this change in which you view ised memorial day? >> i felt it was a greater calling to celebrate memorial day, being in the service after i joined. will: yeah. it went from being, i'm sure, just a holiday and a party to if not one of your friends, but those that came before you. >> yeah, absolutely. just being a part of the navy, it's a team -- [audio difficulty] camaraderie. will: all right. okay. were you thinking about what you were going to say? [laughter] were you getting nervous? lucky for you, they told me i'm ott out of time. [laughter] you start going down a row, and
6:46 am
you can see somebody getting ready. rachel: you might as well have asked him. that was not cool. [inaudible conversations] will: you to go? rachel: no, no, no, get him, get him. will: he was happy. rachel: oh, he was relieved. he was relieved. all right. well, you can support fox news media's team fox fleet as a time for a cause this new york city on june 4th for the tunnel to towers stair climb. will: and to coe e nate visit t # t.org. rachel: all right. joey: thank you, brother. >> god bless you all. god bless fox for your great support. you never forget about our heroes who gave their life for our country. rachel: coming up, the mclemores are back on fox square feeding our service members all morning long for fleet week. we learn how sailors are fed on the ship every single day. ♪
6:47 am
[applause] ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ voltaren. the joy of movement. ♪ we got the house! you did! pods handles the driving. pack at your pace. store your things until you're ready. then we deliver to your new home - across town or across the country. pods, your personal moving and storage team.
6:48 am
you're so much more than just a landowner. ( ♪ ) you're a gardener. ( ♪ ) a groundskeeper. ( ♪ ) a landscaper. ( ♪ ) because you didn't settle for ordinary. same goes for your equipment. versatile. powerful. durable kubota equipment. more goes into it. so you get more out of it.
6:49 am
6:50 am
joey: all morning long the mack he mothers have been out here on fox square serving some of our service members in new york city for fleet week.
6:51 am
will: now we have some special guests to tell us how they feed the sailors on a ship every day. rachel: joining us now, our navy culinary specialists, daniel and andrew, along with the mclemore boys, john and john two. [laughter] great to have you. so how many, how many -- let's start with you. how many people do you serve? >> 5,000. rachel: and you said you got trained by -- cu you weren't a chef before you enteredsome. >> so hay train us for two months and they send you to the ship. rachel: really quick, what's everyone's favorite meal? >> it depends on what you put on the line. rachel: what's your favorite thing to feed them? >> my favorite, i would say chicken, like, jamaican? rachel: go figure. joey: lance corporal joey jones was on the uss rushmore as a marine, and they needed help with the pancakes. i flipped pancake cans for a
6:52 am
week, and i learned a lot of respect sister what you guys do. >> y'all do 50,000 meals a day. we did, like, 25 today. that's 50,000 the, that blew my mind. rick: how many people does it take to put this operation on? rachel: go to andrew here. >> oh, you know. i would say it takes about eight css to get the whole meal set up. rick: that's it? >> they're efficient. joey: different shifts too, right this. >> that's insane. rachel: i know. i can't imagine. will: stuff like this -- joey: yeah, yeah, yeah. >> so we did brisket. i said how many would y'all do on the aircraft carrier, he said 2500 briskets. [laughter] it's a simple recipe. you take your brisket sandwich, you put it on the griddle, you griddle it off with some provolone cheese, and you take that and you go to your toasted bun. all of this this you can get on
6:53 am
fox.com. the scent to this is, and these guys were eating it up, you've got another the that comeback sauce. rachel is very familiar -- rachel: i'm wearing it on my dress. >> so you get that that on there, and notice how the cheese is melted in there, and then you top it off with some lettuce -- joey: make it healthy. >> and you top it off with a little bit of tomato, and you've got to get a little bit of salt on there, person on there, and then here's the secret, take your combat weapon -- [laughter] and you cut can it in half. and who wants to eat? rachel: oh, boy. joey: rachel's all about it. rachel: i might as well, i have enough comeback sauce on me already. >> will? will: yes, sir. joey: the military's had recruitment problems, you add to this to the menu, you're going to get some sailors signed up. [laughter] >> i know rick want wants one of these.
6:54 am
joey: thank you to knave culinary if specialists daniel and andrew and to the mclemore boys. we're going to have some food and have some fun. sailors versus marines, fleet week tug-of-war right here. >> let's go. joey: can i eat now? [applause] ♪ how to grow delicious herbs: step one: use miracle-gro potting mix. that's it. miracle-gro. all you need to know to grow.
6:55 am
6:56 am
6:57 am
somedays, i cover up because of my moderate to severe plaque psoriasis. now i feel free to bare my skin, thanks to skyrizi. ♪(uplifting music)♪ ♪nothing is everything♪ i'm celebrating my clearer skin... my way. with skyrizi, 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months. in another study, most people had 90% clearer skin, even at 5 years. and skyrizi is just 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections
6:58 am
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. thanks to clearer skin with skyrizi - this is my moment. there's nothing on my skin and that means everything! ♪nothing is everything♪ now's the time. ask your doctor about skyrizi, the #1 dermatologist-prescribed biologic in psoriasis. learn how abbvie could help you save. fleet week in new york city. this week on fox where we have sailors and marines. rachel: it's time for the marines to go up against the navy. i'm going to have to root for the marines. corrects the competition we have had in the past we are taking this very seriously behind us. we have nothing compared to what they do back with this marine
6:59 am
colonel. this is eight fleet week tradition marines versus alice were taken very seriously. >> we take it very seriously. it is friendly competition. it's a competition between us that makes us both better. i have to admit i'm deafly rooting for one side of this. [laughter] quick you are rooting for that's had to make a church fair it is on the line. so let's get after it. our scope. >> one minute let's go. [cheering] [applause] for seven go let's go. [cheering] go. go marines ago. go. paul. paul.
7:00 am
paul. paul. [cheering] [cheering] rachel: that was incredible. thank you. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪. neil: woman came up with the salt idea that we thought it would not show the rush they besought so much of a rush but man it was a few minutes ago. more than 42 million folks hitting the roads. grounds and skies for memorial y ek

96 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on