tv FOX and Friends FOX News June 20, 2023 3:00am-4:00am PDT
3:00 am
trying to do lip service. >> carley: we were talking about this before in this "wall street journal" report about beijing possibly planning a new training facility in cuba which is 100 miles off the coast of florida. a lot of concerning things having to do with china this morning. russ vought, thank you so much for joining us in studio no less. "fox & friends" starts right now have. a good day, everybody. >> todd: bye-bye. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ ain't never no bad days ♪ because we're having those good nights. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> brian: wow, so there is a lot going on there. we saw miami about a few minutes
3:01 am
ago, which is interesting because the mayor of miami could be the next president of the united states. here is a song i never heard before but i wish i had. i really enjoyed it. have you heard this song before. >> will: i will be honest my very familiar to brian kilmeade i have never heard it but i kind of like it. >> brian: do you have the album with you, chris? [laughter] chris is going to look no bad days? >> ainsley: it is a great beat. brian kilmeade the other day had to read a tease drop it like it's hot the song. >> brian: i had no idea what. >> ainsley: drop it like it's hot. i said brian, it's a song drop it like it's hot. does the song go drop it like it's hot? >> brian: did i not say that i had no idea. the only tease i read twice. i kept reading it because i. >> ainsley: drop it like it's hot. drop that like it's hot.
3:02 am
>> brian: by doing that allow other anchors to do it in the future go back and read it live on camera. >> ainsley: we were all going to the tv when bret came on. interviewing donald trump. he hasn't talked to him in years. so i mean we knew that bret would push back on him. bret is a news guy and he wanted to make it fair and balanced. he wanted to tell all sides and president trump did talk about the indictment. he talked about putin, how putin would not have invaded if he were in office. he had a message for women and then he went -- he had won the election and it was stolen and bret pushed back and said no, you didn't provide the information we needed to prove that you lost the election, sir. and gave examples of the economy, compared the economy then to what it is now. and talked about his children a lot and how much they have been put through. >> brian: is any of that true, will? >> will: i will take his word on it for what his children have been through. but, to ainsley's point, did he talk about as well, the classified document case. and i think was the most substantive and revealing part of that interview that could
3:03 am
have ramification going forward from both donald trump's legal case and for the presidential election. let's take a listen to what he had to say about bret's questions on what types of documents were in those classified boxes and documents. >> like every other president, i take things out. and in my case i took it out pretty much in a hurry. but people packed it up and releft. and i had clothing in there. i had all sorlts of personal items in there. much, much stuff. >> >> bret: and then they said they went to doj to subpoena you to get. >> which they have never done before. >> bret: correct. why not just hand them over then. >> i had boxes i want to go through the boxes and get all my personal things out. i don't want to hand that over to nara yet. i was very busy. as you sort of seen. >> bret: yeah. according to the document you then tell this aide to move to other locations after telling your lawyers to say you fully complied with the subpoena when you hadn't. >> before i send boxes over i have to take all my things out. these boxes were interspersed
3:04 am
with all sorts of things. >> brian: iran war plan? >> not that i know of. everything was declassified. >> brian: the judge ruled yesterday, the magistrate judge that not to talk about any of this top secret stuff. and he -- that's what the jack smith q i just don't want the president out there talking about what's in these top secret classified documents that could land the former president in jail. he could have punted on that question. >> will: let's be clear he did not talk about the contents of the classified documents. >> brian: i'm saying, if i'm the president, magistrate judge just ruled yesterday not to talk about this document case, so i'm not going to say anything. it would have been forced to move on and then talk about the policies and the economy. >> ainsley: he could have just said that. >> brian: he could have said it and bret could say bret is not a lawyer. >> ainsley: applauding him for answering the question? >> brian: it is somewhat dangerous. think to yourself every time you talk about a case after an indictment you could be saying things that could be used against you in the most careful
3:05 am
situation, period. normally people might have a lawyer to their immediate left mr. president, don't answer that question. but one thing he did say interesting about the tape. everyone knows the audiotape where he is evidently saying around i could have declassified this. now that i'm president i can't. then he said you were reading a document that was a classified document. i was reading a newspaper article. so how do we know he was reading a document. so it's audiotape. it's not videotape. he said i'm reading a paper. i have clippings, reading a story about mark milley and started talking about the iran situation. and then he went off on mark milley being somebody that he doesn't really like even though he hired him as chairman of the joint chiefs of staff. bret p. >> ainsley: bret talked about. that he went through specifics you said this about this person and this about this person. you are the one who hired them, sir. he said there are just a few on that list. he said there are many more that i did hire that i thought did the best job. >> will: it's less about what the judge told president trump about what he can and cannot
3:06 am
talk about. he did in my estimates. >> ainsley: did or did not. >> did not. >> will: what it is about and jonathan turley pointed out last night. in that moment when bret asked him about the audiotape, he, as you point out, whatever he says in an interview can be used in court. he then laid out his defense. it's not a classified document i'm referring. to say now that has to be his defense in court. he has made that defense. it is admissible in court. now that is the defense. and, to me, the take away from that is this. this is why we set such a high bar for pressing charges on someone who is running for president, a former sitting president because he is in a difficult position where legally, it's not wise for him to talk about things in an interview. but politically, it's harmful not to be able to talk. do you see what i'm saying? he is running for president. he has to be able to address these issues which are important to the american people.
3:07 am
but is he caught in a box because at the same time, well then that puts me in a bad position in court. the thing i'm -- we'll talk about this more throughout the morning. this is why you sit and say what is the seriousness of the potential crime? and you look at precedent and you say it wasn't serious enough for joe biden. it wasn't serious enough for mike pence, it was barely serious enough to get more than probation for sandy berger and david petraeus. why do you box in somebody running for president. >> ainsley: bret baier said you were found with x amount of boxes that's nothing what biden was found with he was found with boxes in the garage, penn center and also in chinatown. >> brian: still hasn't given up. >> ainsley: he said i was president. i had the presidential records act in my favor. and he said that i was at liberty to have these classified information, this classified information. whether or not he that's going to be admissible in court because some say he had to go through a bureau says to make these declassified. others say, as president, he could just say that they are
3:08 am
declassified. >> brian: one of the biggest issues right now in the world is ourselves forcing his way into a meeting in china. so hours, he got 45 minutes with president xi. so, with the tensions in china. front and center, that's what bret asked. how would you handle the situation we're in right now? and the balloon? >> they wouldn't have ever had a spy balloon if i was president. there wouldn't be a spy balloon over our country. that spy balloon was going right over our nuclear sites taking pictures. and we killed it after it was leaving. it was going back home to china, wherever it was going. but we shot it down over the ocean. after it had done all of the work. they don't keep it on the balloon and then you pick it up. that stuff is sent back to china instantaneously as it's taken. so, a statement like that is so stupid. they have taken pictures of every one of our nuclear facilities in the midwest where we have a lot. where they know, better than anybody, that we have a lot. >> bret: you are saying that wouldn't happen under you. >> they would have never ever
3:09 am
done it, no. president xi and i had a very strong relationship, just like i did with kim jong un of north korea. >> brian: the administration says oh, as soon as the balloon came out and people are trying to figure out why this happened. it really happened first in 2019. they say they have been sending balloons during the trump administration. but there is no proof of that. and we don't even know where they pulled that out. that's the something that biden administration's always does it. happened before: cuban spy with the russians setting up a cuban spy station in cuba. well that really started in 2019. as soon as they hit controversy they say it started in the previous administration. you just know trump would never ever have allowed to traverse the country. >> ainsley: not for that long. >> brian: hurt somebody in montana shot it down when the people of montana said shoot it down. there is nobody here. >> ainsley: how long was it in the air a week? >> brian: what was in it? >> ainsley: one side of the country all the way through our country. over all of our military installations and then ended up on the east coast down in south
3:10 am
carolina before it was shot down. i guarantee if trump were in office that thing would have been down before it ever even traversed or flew over our country. >> brian: don't you want to know what was inside the balloon? shouldn't we know by now? they have already fished it out. >> will: issues more important in security of the nation and the sitting president of the united states and his relationship with china and/or ukraine, these are more important issues the one give hyper ventilating attention to what was in some boxes in mar-a-lago. >> ainsley: coming up. a fox news alert. time is coming out. find the missing sur miivel. taking tourists to. he made the dive twice. what could have gone wrong on expensive and very dangerous trip. >> brian: and stay out. climate protesters physically from hotel the activist madness
3:11 am
next. choose acid prevention. choose nexium. whenever you're hungry, there's a deal on the subway app. buy one footlong, get one 50% off in the subway app today. now that's a deal worth celebrating. man, what are you doing?! get it before it's gone on the subway app. ♪ oh booking.com, ♪ i'm going to somewhere, anywhere. ♪ ♪ a beach house, a treehouse, ♪ ♪ honestly i don't care ♪ find the perfect vacation rental for you booking.com, booking. yeah. this isn't just freight.
3:12 am
these aren't just shipments. they're promises. big promises. small promises. cuddly shaped promises. each with a time and a place they've been promised to be. and the people of old dominion never turn away a promise. or over promise. or make an empty promise. we keep them. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you. somedays, i cover up because of my moderate
3:13 am
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 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.
3:14 am
we moved out of the city so our little sophie could appreciate nature. but then he got us t-mobile home internet. i was just trying to improve our signal, so some of the trees had to go. i might've taken it a step too far. (chainsaw revs) (tree crashes) (chainsaw continues) (daughter screams) let's pretend for a second that you didn't let down your entire family. what would that reality look like? well i guess i would've gotten us xfinity... and we'd have a better view. do you need mulch? what, we have a ton of mulch.
3:15 am
as a business owner, your bottom line is always top of mind. ton. so start saving by switching to the mobile service designed for small business: comcast business mobile. flexible data plans mean you can get unlimited data or pay by the gig. all on the most reliable 5g network, with no line activation fees or term contracts... saving you up to 75% a year. and it's only available to comcast business internet customers. so boost your bottom line by switching today. comcast business. powering possibilities™. >> brian: we are back with a fox news alert. the clock is ticking to rescue five people on board a submersible just like this one that went to a dive to tour the titanic wreckage site. >> ainsley: the vessel has less than 30 hours which would be
3:16 am
thursday morning before it runs out of air. >> mast mask search and rescue operation underway for that submersible missing in the north atlantic. owned by ocean gate expeditions was transporting a crew of five people some 12,000 feet under water to tour the famous shipwreck costing $250,000 per person. the crew launched around 4:00 a.m. on sunday. lost communication roughly two hours later. officials now fear it sank too far down for a manned rescue. u.k. billionaire ham militiamisg believed to be board vessels. day wood and teenage son also on board accord diagnose that statement. they are exhausting every search effort possible. >> this particular submersible is advertised to have 96 hours of survival time. and so that gives us some time to continue searching and
3:17 am
continue to using all means to pro-and locate the crew members. >> ocean gate releasing its own statement reading, quote: we are exploring and mobilizing all options to bring the could you crew back safely. one believes it's trapped in the titanic wreckage. >> even close to the wreckage being able to stay so people could see as much as they can. the potential of it becoming entangled is a very high concern. probably that it's somewhere attached to a fishing net, some debris. >> as of thousand, experts say the vessel has less than 70 hours before it runs out of air. meaning it could run out by thursday morning. back to you. of. >> brian: thanks, todd. let's bring in don lynch, i'm sorry, i was looking at titanic special. let's bring in don lynch, titanic who made the journey
3:18 am
twice and advised james cammeron on the movie. don, welcome, your thoughts now about what could have happened. >> well, it's kind of hard to say. it surprises me that they lost communication so early in the dive. that seems like it would have caught on something pretty quickly if that were the case. it makes me wonder more if there was some sort of power loss of some kind. but why they weren't able to release ballast and float to the surface. i don't know. that was my hope that would have happened and they would have found them by now. >> ainsley: the coast guard in boston c-130 aircraft aerial search visual and using radar. canada also the coast guard and armed forces it assets c-130 and air search aircraft. going off the coast of cape cod. water depth is about 13,000 feet down that far. what do you think they can do rescue these individuals if they are still alive inside the sub? >> well, if they are down there,
3:19 am
i'm not sure what they can do. as i understand it, this is the only submersible that can go to that depth. and so i'm not too certain what can be done. you know, if that's the case, what can they get down there that would help them to get -- if they're caught on something to get loose? >> will: don, i'm interested in what you said that they lost communication so early in the trip. seems to be just kind of process of dededuction something that would lead you towards a couple of different conclusions, they lost power. i'm curious, if you lost power, would you still be able to come up? is there an ability of the submersible to rise without power? >> i'm not familiar with this particular submersible but i would hope that there would be. i would hope there would be some way of releasing ballast that they would be able to float to the surface. it seems to me that there should that be sort of capability. >> will: as i think about the potentialities there on the surface floating without power they can't be found. >> they are trapped on the
3:20 am
wreckage without power and can't be reached. the worst scenario, of course, i would assume that it lost pressure somehow and the entire submersible is lost? >> if it were -- you know, having been there, i would say that the worst scenario would be to run out of oxygen over time. if they did have a breech of some kind and implode it's over immediately and there is no suffering. i have to say when you go down there the knowledge that that might happen is really comforting. and so, you know, to me, the worst scenario is that they would run out of oxygen before they could be rescued. >> brian: the russian goes down with two submersible in case something like this happened, right? >> exactly. they always sent two. so that if one got caught up on something the other could get loose. i don't know that that ever happened. i can't recall ever hearing about that. >> ainsley: when they say a expawrt vessel. the canadian polar prince lost
3:21 am
power with it. does that mean the support vessel was right above the titanic while the sub was going under? what would they have been able to do though. divers can't survive that far down. >> no. they can't. it takes two hours to reach the wreck. whatever happened happened on the way down or as soon as they got there. and i'm just, you know, i'm kind of baffled by how something could have happened so quickly. >> ainsley: apparently it spins all the way down to the bow of the ship and then you can observe. real quickly, why do this? they are paying $250,000 to do this. they have the money to do it. some of them are big-time explorers and they like to push the limits. were you scared when you were down there? >> i think if you are scared, you don't go. [laughter] i was scared before i went, but the minute i got inside the submersible and i looked around and thought oh, okay, this is where i'm going to be the rest of the day and i realized i was
3:22 am
more worried because i was unfamiliar with it. once i was inside i was fine. >> brian: all right. you had a chance to explore the titanic and we will find out what is going to happen. don lynch, thank you very much. >> ainsley: everyone remember don in your prayers. praying for these families and victims and get them to safety. wouldn't that be quite a story? >> will: absolutely. fox weather alert. tropical storm bret barreling towards the caribbean with 40 mile-per-hour winds. the powerful system is expected to become a hurricane tomorrow. meanwhile, in the south, 29,000 americans are under excessive heat warning. the advisory spans over texas, louisiana, and mississippi. >> the heat wave is fueling severe storms that leave at least six people dead across the state. >> brian: i want to check in with senior meteorologist janice dean who has the fox weather forecast. janice? >> janice: of course we are watching tropical storm bret. the heat across texas has been almost two weeks of 100 degrees plus with humidity and that's why i'm very concerned for folks living out there. but, let's take a look at bret
3:23 am
because this was a big news story yesterday. the furthest out in the atlantic for this storm to form this time of year. it's early. and we are expecting this to become a hurricane as it moves closer to the lesser antilles. two early to say whether or not there will be direct impacts or indirect impacts to the u.s. but certainly interesting because it is so early in the season and this will be our first hurricane of the season as it moves closer to the crib i can't be. we will be keeping you posted fox weather.com for all the latest details. strong storms, including the risk of hail, damaging winds, heavy rainfall that could cause flash flooding and isolated tornadoes. the big story is the heat across texas and louisiana where we have another day of excessive heat warnings. this is what it is going to feel like, 116 in austin. 115 in dallas. 112 in houston. and it's just not breaking. this is going to be the second week of this extreme heat and we are going to probably see loss of life from it.
3:24 am
so, big concern for our folks across the south including texas and louisiana. and then cooler temperatures across the northwest and here in the northeast. we will keep you up to date, of course, throughout the day today. fox weather.com for all of your latest details and we will let you know if bret becomes a hurricane i think within the next 12 to 24 hours. over to you. >> will: thanks, janice. let's go to carley shimkus for headlines. >> six teenagers are recovering after a gunman opened fire at juneteenth celebration in milwaukee yesterday. police say thousands were at the party when an argument between a group of girls escalated and the 17-year-old male started shooting. all six victims are between the ages of just 14 and 19 years old. milwaukee police are still looking for additional suspects. security guards physically removing climate activists from a michigan hotel as they rallied against energy secretary jennifer granholm. the group began protesting as the secretary was speaking about the biden administration's green energy agenda.
3:25 am
[chanting] granholm you are killing me. >> carley: protesters are mad because they say granholm hypocritically, climate action while still pushing fossil fuels. taking victory celebration a little too far. hurting himself after winning a chance to spin the show's iconic wheel. >> henry was celebrating and he dislocated his shoulder. >> awe. so, he is not going to be able to spin the wheel, but alice is going to spin the wheel for him. here we go. thank you. how about 95? don't hurt yourself. >> carley: heck yeah, henry's wife spun him a 95 spinning him to a showcase show down where he
3:26 am
won a hawaiian vacation, guys. isn't this a funny story. he will be fine. look at him. >> brian: did they put it back in place like jiff jenkins, griff dislocated his shoulder on the fox square and had to go to the hospital. >> carley: means that the price is right has a whole nursing staff. >> a lethal weapon. you just go a wall and bang it. >> will: that's all i know about dislocated shoulders. >> brian: they don't do it live. they could have stopped tape and put his shoulder in place, you know? do you know, chris? >> chris: i don't. >> ainsley: then they would have to like wait an hour for him to like -- several hours to go to the hospital, come back. >> brian: bottom line, is this is the one thing you learn from this, bring a date to price is right. >> chris: absolutely. >> ainsley: let the woman spin the wheel, 95. >> will: game shows injury problems. still ahead, a man arrested after allegedly throwing a phone
3:27 am
at pop star b.b. rex zoo while she was on stage. why he says he did it, next. >> plus, doing fundraisers in california while biden and desantis descend to the democratic strong hold. it wondering if he is going to enter the race. the california voter panel says the blue state could soon turn purple? i don't think so. >> ainsley: question mark, question mark. >> brian: exclamation point, period. ♪ if you're dreaming about california ♪
3:28 am
3:29 am
♪ hit it ♪ ♪ it takes two to make a thing go right ♪ ♪ it takes two to make it outta sight ♪ ♪ one, two, get loose now ♪ ♪ it takes two to make a... ♪ stay two nights and get a $ 50 best western gift card. book now at bestwestern.com. what's considered normal for your cat... is interesting... ♪ it's curious... and it's sweet. ♪ but if your cat isn't their quirky self lately, they may have pain from a common condition called osteoarthritis. now, there's solensia. solensia is a once-monthly injection. it works like your cat's naturally made antibodies to reduce pain signals. in a study, 77% of cat owners experienced an improvement in their cat's pain after 3 doses. veterinary professionals administering solensia who are pregnant, trying to conceive,
3:30 am
3:31 am
3:32 am
you got this. we got you. ♪ ♪ the vehicles are all-electric. the feeling is all mercedes. the choice is all yours. ♪ >> unfortunately some of our maga republican friends in congress are trying to undo all the progress we have already made in the first two and a half years. this ain't your father's republican party. ha. they are back at it again. >> will: that's president biden in california tapping tech and climate donors for campaign cash
3:33 am
while ripping into the g.o.p. florida governor ron desantis also fundraising the golden state where he has been egging on governor gavin newsom to make his political plans clear. and jump into the race. here to react our panel of california voter san francisco resident tom wong and l.a. resident danna rosenthal. glad to have you both on the program this morning. danna, i would love to start with you. you know, we do the story often on the fox news channel, on this program. about the state of california. whether or not that comes to crime, homelessness, many of the issues plaguing that state. you, i think, are a self-described moderate democrat. what's your assessment of your state and its leadership? >> >> that's a very interesting question. yes. i am a moderate democrat. i used to be a full on democrat. but under newsom's leadership i have definitely shifted.
3:34 am
i definitely have to say he definitely has done a very subpar job leading this beautiful state. homelessness, as you know, is disastrous. in fact, he now has come out and said oh, yeah, homelessness itself is a disaster. well, for the past four years he has been the governor but he is now blaming the republicans. i don't know what he was thinking because he was the governor all during this time. so i don't know why he is blaming the republicans when he was in charge. and then, you know, he locked down the state during covid. we were the state with the longest restrictions. >> will: right. >> we're. and we had, you know, the same outcomes as every other state that, you know, we had infections. we didn't fair any better and he ruined education for kids in
3:35 am
california and he is in the pockets of the teachers unions. so, i think he is a disaster as a governor. and, you know, he is, you know, i think, you know, as desantis says, pussy footing around and i would hate to see him in the white house. >> will: let me bring tom in, danna for that point. he seems to be running some sort of shadow campaign for president. before we turn to politics, tom, what we are talking about here is a experiment in governance when it comes to california. many sharon the assessment that danna just articulated when it comes to california. then there is the obvious question why do people like gavin newsom and the same ideology and same policies keep getting reelected in california? >> well, people keep on reelecting gavin newsom -- when i surveyed some of the democrats and moderates and even some
3:36 am
asians formally voted for democrats is that they know that gavin newsom is a bad person but they don't know who the other candidates are they might get somebody that's worse, they might get somebody that's better. they want more certainty. they want to know where the candidate stands, where our leader stands and how to move forward with education and with crime, with traditional family values. so that is -- people have not made it career. candidates have not made it clear. our leaders have not made it clear about where they stand on these issues. that makes it very confusing for the voters and people who are conservative. we want a leader that can lead and have a very clear direction. that's what we want as conservatives. >> california spiferlg the drain 300 and some thousand people moving out of the state people would check the box admission other than gavin newsom. you think they would check other it. says something that he keeps getting reelected and probably gives him hope that he can be
3:37 am
president of the united states. move to national politics. i would love to ask you both. danna, i will come back to you. talk about how your lesson in california has informed your choice on who you would support for president. would you support similar policies through the biden administration for his re-election for president. or have you lermd of learned on this experiment i might look a different way when it comes to president? >> i'm currently undecided. i will say this: i definitely do want trump. absolutely not. >> will: why is that? >> did i vote for biden the last election. but, you know, i'm not saying that i'm voting for him this time around. i as a woman it's very important to me to have access to abortion. so, the fact that, as we know, a lot of the states, the red
3:38 am
states, you know, are restricting access to abortion. so, i need to know that the candidate, whoever it is, is pro-choice. >> will: but if it's a state issue i'm just curious are you worried about real quick danna, are you worried about a federal ban on abortion? because if it's a state issue, the way that it is now and you live in california, why does that inform who you choose for president? >> well, it's a moral issue. you know, i don't want the president of the united states to, you know, think that they have the right to say what a woman does with their body even if it is a state issue i don't like a president saying oh, yeah, a woman has -- the president of the united states can say oh, yeah, we can say what a woman does to their body. >> will: i understand that, danna. >> i am currently under decided but i definitely do not want trump. >> will: i understand your passion on that subject. it is interesting to me that as it stands right now, that
3:39 am
wouldn't necessarily directly affect your life if it's a state issue. where these issues like homelessness and crime are directly affecting your life in california. so important passionately to you that it overrides those issues that do and have directly affected your life in california. really quickly, i'm sorry i have got get tom in here real quick. >> homelessness and the economy and, you know, for me, personally, education has been a very big issue for me. i have been advocating for education and kids since the pandemic. >> will: right. so, you know, those are very big issues for me. >> will: i understand let me get tom in because we are running out of time. >> i want a president who puts kids first especially for education and obviously homelessness and the economy are also very big issues for me. but morally, i want a president who, you know, believes that a woman has the right to choose. >> will: tom, where do you stand on national politics and the
3:40 am
lessons out of california? >> national politics, whatever california is doing, you don't want the rest of the nation doing. california has some of the most progressive policies, failed policies we are living in hell here. we are one of the most beautiful states. but we are run so poorly that we have homeless issues. we have overtaxation of the people. businesses are leaving by the thousands, families are leaves by the thousands. i want a president like donald trump. i supported him. i voted for him twice. i will vote for him again. he is going to make america great. and he has policies. some people might not like him personally, but it does not mean that he cannot do the job. is he able to make peace with korea. he can make peace with china and russia and bring our economy back and bring us back on the world bring us back. because right now we are in a very bad place with the rest of the world. we are losing our grip as super
3:41 am
power, as a being often time we need somebody who can lead. >> will: i appreciate you both getting up early there in california and having a discussion on the state of california and it is how it informs your choice for president of the united states. danna, tom, thank you so much. >> thank you. >> thank you so much. >> will: carley, over to you. >> from car to new york. got headlines to get. to say starting with this a citywide manhunt underway in new york for a man accused of attacking three men with a knife on sunday. officers is say the suspect approached the woman from behind slashing heir legs before fleeing the scene. authorities released surveillance footage of the subject and asking for the public's help in identifying him. can you see him right there. all three victims received stitches for their wounds and have been released from the hospital. a new jersey man arrested for assault after throwing a phone at singer b b rexha during her concert on sunday. zel phone video captures the
3:42 am
moment the device hit the singer in the head. she can be seen stumbling and security escorts her off stage. he did it because he thought it would be funny. according to a criminal complaint, rexha later posted pictures of her bruised face but later assured fans she is going to be okay. back downstairs to you, will. >> will: city council wants to ban facial recognition technology used to stop an epidemic of shoplifters claiming it's racist. our next guest owns three supermarkets and why he says this tech is needed to keep employees and customers safe. ♪
3:43 am
how do we decide what hotel to book? (yelping) fear not, i got you. choice hotels has a hotel for every type of stay. like a comfort with the kiddos. spacious! that's what they all say. stay twice and get a $50 gift card when you book direct at choicehotels.com. ♪ ♪ ♪ voltaren. the joy of movement. ♪ i'm saving with liberty mutual, mom. they customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need.
3:44 am
3:45 am
music (i swear) jaycee tried gain flings for the first time the other day...and forgot where she was. you can always spot a first timer. gain flings with oxi boost and febreze. after my car accident, wondnder whahatmy c cas. so i called the barnes firm. i'm rich barnes. youour cidedentase e woh than insurance offered?
3:47 am
i d d so my y quesononsw eouout hicacase.y y son, yoyou ght t beurprpris cacalledhehe bars s fi i d d soit was the best call eouout hii could've made. call the barnes firm and find out what your case all could be worth.uld've made. ♪ call one eight hundred, eight million ♪ >> brian: all right. new york city grocers fighting back with rampant shoplifting with the help of facial recognition technology. now the far left city council wants to ban it. a bill co-sponsored claims said this technology has higherrer rates for darker skinned people. our next gues guest is installig facial recognition in his supermarkets jason ferrera. you are putting this in and then you read this story about how they are saying take it out.
3:48 am
what is your reaction? >> i mean, look, it's a big investment we have to make to get this installed in our stores. not like i'm doing it because i want to have something cool. i would rather have the investment makes a better shopping experience for our customers. >> brian: how long have you been in business. >> over 45 years. >> brian: how bad is the shoplifting. >> i have never seen it this bad. >> brian: who are these people. >> it's everyone. it's spreading. not only people doing it professionally. we have people that are doing it just because they can get away with it. and gamut runs from children to have -- older people. >> brian: look at this. they did a look at who is actually doing the shoplifting. 327 individuals account for 6,660 arrests or 30% of all shoplifters. so in a way this has become a business. >> it has. but i think, also, it doesn't really justify how many people are doing it because we are not getting the police responding to
3:49 am
every call. so, i think that a lot of these steps are slipping under the radar. >> bret: right. because cops aren't back. shoplifting new york city tolerate a little bit. there is a threshold. >> they are tolerating a lot of it. not a little bit. getting this attitude from law enforcement where, you know, they are hands off. they pass the buck off to the legislators. the legislators say we have to call the police. going back and forth but not getting any traction. >> do you find people were facial recognition did they tell you when you bought this technology it might mistake darker people. >> not at all. >> brian: do you think that's total fallacy? >> yes. >> dolan doing that to madison square garden to stop people from suing him from coming in and some of the negative publicity around that? >> yeah. i think that's the excuse, but it has nothing to do with our purpose for using this technology. >> brian: you just think it's criminal first in new york city. >> basically that's how it feels, yes. feels like the working person is
3:50 am
second behind the criminal. >> brian: here is a video of some of your manager being confronted with shoplifting right there. so what's going on right here. >> so what happened was this person was taking something simple. taking some beer. my manager went up to him and said listen i need that back. the guy starts following him around the store after he took the beer back. the guy with the pink shirt is actually another customer who stepped in. thank god he was there. because my manager had no back up. >> you have security but when you have security you still got to be back by the cops and they are worried about putting their hands on somebody. the criminal turns around and sues. >> that's right. people feel emboldened evening though there is a security guard there they feel like they lash back. >> almost as if you have to unionize. stand up and speak out. and let everybody know that you guys are not going to tolerate. this. >> that's what we have been doing. we have formed that coalition together called cabs. trying to get albany to listen to us. the mayor's office to listen to us. legislators to listen to us. and it's been several months now
3:51 am
we have been crying out for help and we haven't seen any traction. >> brian: jason, we are listening. feel terrible for it and hope you will put it in and start using it and grabbing these people before they act again. jason ferreira, thank you so much. >> brian: sits down with r.f.k. jr. only problem youtube has yanked the interview by violating their, quote, vaccine policy. jimmy failla always has his interviews yanked for different reasons mostly because of the jackets he wears. ♪ ♪ as someone living with type 2 diabetes, i want to keep it real and talk about some risks. with type 2 diabetes you have up to 4 times greater risk of stroke, heart attack, or death. even at your a1c goal, you're still at risk ...which if ignored could bring you here... ...may put you in one of those... ...or even worse. too much? that's the point. get real about your risks and do something about it. talk to your health care provider
3:52 am
about ways to lower your risk of stroke, heart attack, or death. learn more at getrealaboutdiabetes.com this isn't just freight. these aren't just shipments. they're promises. big promises. small promises. cuddly shaped promises. each with a time and a place they've been promised to be. and the people of old dominion never turn away a promise. or over promise. or make an empty promise. we keep them. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you. it's positive. we're having a fetus! (male) having a fetus? we're having a fetus! would you look at that? hi, fetus. (female announcer) no matter where you are on your pregnancy journey... keep pushing. your fetus is doing great. you want to feel the fetus kick? um, it's a baby.
3:54 am
somebody would ask her something and she would just walk right past them. she didn't know they were talking to her. i just could not hear. i was hesitant to get the hearing aids because of my short hair. but nobody even sees them. our nearly invisible hearing aids are just one reason we've been the brand leader for over 75 years. when i finally could hear for the first time, i started crying.
3:55 am
i could hear everything. call 1-800-miracle and schedule your free hearing evaluation today. my active psoriatic arthritis can make me feel like i'm losing my rhythm. with skyrizi to treat my skin and joints, i'm getting into my groove. ♪(uplifting music)♪ along with significantly clearer skin... skyrizi helps me move with less joint pain, stiffness, swelling, and fatigue. and is just 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses. skyrizi attaches to and reduces a source of excess inflammation that can lead to skin and joint symptoms. with skyrizi 90% clearer skin and less joint pain are possible. 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. thanks to skyrizi, there's nothing like clearer skin and better movement... and that means everything. ♪nothing is everything♪
3:56 am
now's the time to ask your doctor about skyrizi. learn how abbvie could help you save. >> ainsley: youtube under fire after moving an interview with r.f.k. jr. claiming it violates their vaccine information policy. the presidential candidate briefly touching on vaccines in this clip. listen. >> you had trump run for presidency. during his campaign, he on several occasions he mentioned that he believed that vaccines were causing autism. it became a tribal issue. >> ainsley: jimmy failla hosts fox across america on fox nation and joins us now. what do you think of this? they took down the video of him questioning the vaccines. >> yeah. let me qualify my analysis here for the viewers at home. i'm not a medical professional. the only doctors i know are dr. dre and dr. pepper. that's as far as my credentials
3:57 am
run. that being said, you don't need a medical degree to understand when it comes to the term misinformation, it often constitutes whatever the gate keepers want it to constitute. >> ainsley: exactly. >> during the covid years, we were told misinformation was anything that ran counter to the administration's agenda. so if you think about it, technically speaking, if we were editing this fairly joe biden videos would be taken down because he said vaccinated people couldn't get covid. he said it was a pandemic of the unvaccinated. by definition he is was spreading as much misinformation as anybody. they didn't say a word about that: they are violating vaccine policy. what is the vaccine policy you are not allowed to talk about it unless you repeat exactly what dr. fauci and joe biden said. >> thank you. again, the people who were often wrong. the frustration there is they are denying us a good faith exchange of ideas in that we should be allowed to discuss these things. we have every right to question authority especially when it is being forced on us.
3:58 am
the vaccine was forced under false pretenses. again, vaccinated people couldn't get covid. er go you had to get it civic duty. cops were fired. think about that, ainsley. i are mugged in new york city. 911 can you send a vaccinated cop you just want a cop. that's where they took that term and misappropriated it. and that's kind of the danger here. >> ainsley: it should be a platform where you can think freely and this is not something so outlandish, just questioning the shots we are putting in our children's arms. >> yes. >> ainsley: we are allowed to do that as parents. tweeted out r.f.k. jr. what do you think should platform censure are presidential candidates. deleted by youtube, luckily you can watch it on twitter and he thanked elon. elon has changed the platform now you can say if you want. if there is misinformation or questioning whether or not this should be maybe researched or both sides should be told, you get a little warning. >> how about that?
3:59 am
often now it backfires. if youtube's goal was we don't want anybody to see it. twice as many people are going to see it because there is this boomerang effect now. >> ainsley: going to talk about it on "fox & friends." >> got me and you. preempt meant on medicine are you and me. it doesn't matter. to cloob clear, i'm vaccinated at least that's what it says on my card i bought from craig's list. >> ainsley: thank you for coming on with us. you can watch that interview. is up on twitter now. the second hour of "fox & friends" starts right now. ♪ it is a challenge to conduct a search in that remote area. >> united states searching for that missing subtwo and a half miles underwater near the titanic wreckage. >> our fear is it imploded around 3200 meters. >> hurricane season is right around the corner. up first the list will start with bret. >> barreling toward the caribbean with 40 mile-per-hour winds. >> i would like to be less
4:00 am
combative. >> bret baier scoring exclusive interview with donald trump grilling the front runner on everything. >> bret: why did you have this very sensitive document. >> i have every right to have those boxes. >> hello. >> both president biden and governor ron desantis taking their presidential campaigns to california with multiple fund raising events lined up. >> some of our maga republican friends in congress are continuing to try undo all the progress we have already made. >> now joey vaughn. [cheers] >> his first game back. joseph daniel votto. >> did t that beer catch the ba? >> taking a break there set to address the future of artificial intelligence which the white house has said is a top priority for joe biden. >> he will meet with tech entrepreneurs as he ramps up fundraising efforts for his 2024
208 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on