tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News July 15, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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cancers, including lymphoma and skin cancer; death, heart attack, stroke, and tears in the stomach or intestines occurred. people 50 and older with at least one heart disease risk factor have higher risks. don't take if allergic to rinvoq as serious reactions can occur. tell your doctor if you are or may become pregnant. done settling? ask your rheumatologist for rinvoq. and take back what's yours. learn how abbvie could help you save. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> baby there ain't no mountain high enough ♪ ♪ ain't no valley low enough ♪ ♪ beautiful shot of golden, colorado. >> lookses like -- coors brewing company. >> a sun rise we appreciate that. >> went from a sunset guy to now
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a sun rise guy. >> always but always been a coors banquet beer guy. >> love it. >> i like it. i was always a hard coors light guy. i love it. when you get -- >> you know, don't get mad at me but i'm not a beer fan but a tequila, champagne gal. >> tequila and champagne? >> i don't know if i've ever done that, actually i have done that. yes. but no i usually like them separately but there's a drink french 75 champagne and genb lemon juice it's a good thing. not for saturday morning, though. not the saturday morning kind of drink. >> like a 10-01 drink. >> newly unredacted e-mails suggest that he was not sold on the natural covid origin theory despite what he was telling the public. >> former state department
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investigators fauci part of a coverup. >> griff jenkins life we get big smiled on our face when we see griff. >> i drink coors when the sun comes up. house select committee on covid has questions for you. chief among them did covid come from a lab leak because it appears in this latest revelation, fauci acknowledges in private that gain of function research was underway in that lab in wuhan, china that's according to this unredacted e-mail from february of 2020 and credit here goes to martha producers on the story who dug into this. now take a look at two images of the same e-mail one totally redact previous from a request. other from the committee revealing what fauci wrote to his fellow scientists saying that would, quote, be most unusual to e volve naturally in the bats and there was a suspicion this mutation was intentionally inserted. now one source says this
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information was not classified but instead hidden because it made fauci look bad since he knew of gain of function and doctor sapphire fauci who oversaw the biodefense program at nih should have been aware that wuhan lab has been determined by state department to have, quote, unadequate safety controls. now doctor david asher part of the state department investigation into covid origins says this was a coverup. watch. >> now they're basically saying they have that thesis before the publication of their paper -- and it was rejected by fauci and by name of medicine itself which is also complicit. the coverup is so much more extensive and -- i can only imagine what's going to come out in coming weeks as more of fauci internal communications are uncovered. >> i think he's right more may be coming guy. the committee chaired by doctor brad says this is far from over.
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nicole -- >> listening to some of this is inpure rating border line disgusting in the sense that anyone who -- in 2020 even raise the question of the potential origin of this virus. were deemed sharlton i was criticized across media outletting saying i was a conspiracy theorist and in my book panic attack which i wrote about covid i have an entire chapter saying it doesn't make sense happening in nature and now you see doctor fauci agreed with me yet heavily criticized i would like an apology. >> you should. and will you discussed were pining for accountability yet you wonder where it goes so what do you do drag fauci and testifies he denies and clashes are ranked paul again and over by the media despite the eaved that is piling up about him. when you look at the beginning and origins of covid he has
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legitimate business interest what was going on at virology. he didn't want about that exposed for whatever reason. because of that research, because of the funding, because of people he was connected to because of his relationship with china. we don't know. but he quickly realized this is a problem. and whatever the real story is, needs to be pivoted to this is a natural origins theory and, and getting accountability for that will, feels nearly impossible right. will: a drastic impact on all of our lives. i said in the past hour that i'm willing to be creative and seeking accountability. what i mean by that pete is look we get a little bit callused to politicians that lie us to because it happens so often. we've been inundated with lies for the past three years those lies have been real dramatic impacts on our lives. but if, in fact, he did have -- any kind of fiduciary interest in wuhan if i were a prosecutor
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i would be looking at any possible charge for anyone involved in the depths breadth of that fraud -- >> doj -- >> it won't get that far. i would settle for a public statement accepting culpability and an apology that's one thing yet to do. he's yet to say i'm wrong. i was wrong, and i'm so sorry for the consequences. because it doesn't just stop at the viral origins. qhab the fact that he continued to recommend that children as young as two wear face masks. the cdc now telling us that well there were consequences to those actions and children 3 to 18 developed with disabilities up 17% from 2019. don't tell me this isn't because they wear face mask and kept out of school. earlier in the show i spoke to speech pathologist about this very thing.
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take a listen. >> what we're seeing in our clinic is speech and language delay, developmental delay and social pragmatic delays general motor planning disorder it is astounding. and not a surprise at all -- the mandates that were in place, people staying at home for long period of time and not getting out and socializing has negatively impacted so much of our child's developments. talk to your pediatrician get the rereferral don't wait. be really need the assistance, help them to catch up from where they were. >> sad part this is probably not kids otherwise have a good home situation or means and ability to provide for them and kids already behind and they have already environmental societal, family issues and challenges. now you stick them in a mask pull them out of class and staring at a phone and wonder why the long-term effects of disability and developmental
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problems exist, and cdc is coming out with this. i mean, fine. cdc -- they've lost all credibility too. on almost any issue as they dabble into gender affirming care all of the other stuff they do these day. >> biden administration has not given up despite the decisions of the supreme court. they have now put in a plan to forgive more than 39 billion in student loan debt. by adjusting essentially -- for borrowers who have been making payments for a great periods of time. sometimes this can add up to -- >> court struck it down is what they were doing is illegal. and now they're announcing that almost $40 billion will be forgiven anyway? >> because they're tricky. they found a loophole changing some things essentially a paperwork thing, and here's what's interesting. you know, you have vice president harris saying that they are dedicated to removing student loan debt because they want to make sure that people are able to start a family,
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become entrepreneurs and essentially not have this debt. but this new thing one of the parts of it is they're going to forgive the student loan debt in people who have been paying student loans for 20 to 25 careers. years, now i hate to burst her bubble but those are not people coming out of school but these are people well established in their profession and took out a large amount of student loans for professional graduate schools like daughters and lawyer and now they're not making a lot of money and maybe got a wasted undergraduate degree that they can do very little with these days. >> david williams president of the protection alliance he said this to "daily mail" this is absurd and slap in the face to the taxpayers. biden administration is hill bent on spending hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars bailing out wealthy student loan borrowers even after being rebuked by country's i huest --
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highest court. >> a personal finance expert on earlier i asked him how this whats an how we get out of it. watch. >> i don't know the legal aspects to it. i know the business aspect to it the financial aspects. but the legal aspects to me at least as a layperson doesn't seem like our founding fathers had in mind that someone could wake up in the morning and decide to strike $39 billion of taxpayer money. the president wants to do is go a little bit further -- and amend the income -- plans that you talked about. so that more people qualify instead of focusing on reforming our system which is really what we need. we're focusing on forgiveness. so forgiving instead of reforming -- good politics. bad economics. we should be really going to the root of the problem. which is the high cost of education. some schools mine for example do a pretty good job at this stuff. others unfortunately, not sou good. >> he's absolutely right i've wongdered aloud about this and
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rolling illegal immigration we have rolling waves of amnesty. let's say you give amnesty to the current generation what do you do for the next? >> 3.0 dreamers? rolling waves of forgiveness because it doesn't fix underline problem. >> that it is egregiously expensive outpaying rate of inflation and the government in large part concern it has a horrible return on investment. how do you fix that by waiving away debt? >> you're not. that's also not teaching very good economics to those choosing to go to school. because they are now taking out loans -- that they may not be able to pay back and then maybe of the mindset it is forgiven anyway. you have yo to really look at cost benefit and risk when it comes to taking out loans is it worth it will you be able to pay off your debt? >> or the people who don't go to school don't take on loans work hard pay taxes now paying off other people's student loans in the process -- here's another story for you speaking of root causes, there's
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a lot reasons why crime happens and maybe politicians and some of these deep blue cities address those and bring crime rate down instead the oakland police department now has put out a psa about how you as a resident can just further solidify harden your home. so we can't do anything about criminals outside. but you can make your castle -- more imperm and survive and here's what the oakland pd put out for homeowners in an american city. ensure all doors and windows are secure and fine reconsider reenforcing doors with a security bar or door brace. install security systems, use outdoor lighting with sensor and trim hedges so people can't hide don't open your door to strangers create a emergency plan and join a neighborhood watch program this as oakland like other cities have seen demands for defund the police,
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an police have not been properly supported and criminals have been allowed to get out early. instead homeowners are told to trim their hedges and cayty bar the door. >> last one you mention is one that struck me join or initiate a neighborhood watch program in your community well in 2020 you have oakland mayor say we need to spend less money on our police force and more money on social programs and former california top cop then vice president candidate harris, said i support mayor of oakland so they were also calling to defund the police. which is why you just need to have neighborhood watch that is apparently the answer to this. >> look at this. consider reenforcing doors with security bar or door brace. welcome to oakland. >> sleep well at night. police aren't coming and don't call them. but you can block your door, trim your hedges and -- don't answer for strangers. >> don't answer for strangers -- if you call the police how
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quickly will they get there don't worry you can call your neighborhood watch. this is what they have in store for you. >> i was just thinking -- we certainly lock every door and turn alarm on if we go to bed every nights but it is cliche we used to lock the door but it is true we didn't. it wasn't always like -- you know, lock up the castle. >> growing up yipght i didn't have alarm system and -- >> i won't reveal the defense system and strategy is. we have a strategy. but you're right. you live in constant skepticism and it shouldn't have to be that way. turning to headlines starting with this police searching a man who vanished after calling 9-1-1 to report a toddler wanking down a busy alabama highway thursday. carley russell called family member who lost contact with her and phone and car later found on the interstate just south of the
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birmingham. no children were reported missing in the area. but a witness reports spotting man near her vehicle before police arrived on the scene. 25,000 dollar reward is out for russell's safe return. and congress passed 886 with woke pentagon policies that would be welcome. gop amends curve travel reimbursement policy transgender care and dei program and a fail gop amendment to block biden administration from sending cluster bombs to ukraine. first shipment arrived on thursday. progressive members of congress like cori bush and joey joining 100 republicans in opposition to the move. interesting alliances there as we move further and further into a war we can't control in
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ukraine. researchers now revealing that people over the age of 70 are 11% less likely to develop dementia. if they keep a daily diary. write letters and use a computer. the study completed by a university of australia use data from 10,000 seniors monitored over past decade it also found activities like playing cleses doing cross words and completing puzzles can reduce risk of the disease by 9%. and those are your headlines. >> do you journal? >> no. >> i don't journal. >> i have journaled at certain -- >> i thought you might. >> i wrote thoughts down but deployment it's been years and years -- >> do you -- i wrote books yopght keep a diary or journal. >> do i look like a journaller to you. >> you are -- the desk and everything in its place and superneat and everything.
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ocd -- >> feelings. but you feel something. >> that's not true. you can do objective account. that's a medical way of looking at the day. captain's log, you know. captain's log hosted with doctor sapphire was in today for rachel. it went wells. check. >> still ahead, a fox news alert -- a new york artifact pleading not guilty to murder charges with the gilgo beach killings on long island we'll talk to suffolk district attorney ray tyranny, next.
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>> back with fox news alert after more than a decade long island police have made an arrest in the infamous gilgo beach murders. new york artifact recollection huberman pleading not guilty to three counts of second-degree murder. suffolk county district attorney ray tierney announce charge and he joins us now. ray it is great to see you this morning. so tell me, i mean this is a fast indicating case we've talked to you throughout the morning. the evidence which his attorney describes as -- circumstantial evidence, the phone associations, the truck, the eyewitness accounts, do
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eventually lead to dna you would describe as how rock solid that you got the right guy. >> well i think if you look at all of the evidence and how it comes together, i think it's very solid, and you know it starts with the activity but that's underneath victims. >> what fascinates me is the arrival, the path to get to the dna evidence, from what i understand the mitochondrial match from discarded pizza to a hair left on a body is 99.96% accurate but to get to the place where you're testing rex huberman's pizza where did it to pool the suspects? >> at the beginning we have the hairs but we didn't have anything to compare them to so that's where the work started. it starts with the phones, and we could tell from analysis that
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the phones were being used in a constrained area in massapequa park and midtown manhattan in one of the murders there was a specific car used chevy avalanche so we learned they own a chevy avalanche and not only live in that massapequa park area but worked in the midtown, manhattan area so now, we have a suspect now we get abandonment samples from dna and compare that to hairs and off and running. >> tell me in i have this characterize correct so you use phone data to create a pool of potential suspects could have been in two geographic regions from there use factors such as the trk to narrow it dun further. who among this pool has a green truck or access it a green truck and from there you narrow it down with a physical description i believe of the potential suspect until you had that point a very small pool from which --
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matching dna? >> yeah. fortunately, you know, he had a very unique physical description very large person. over 6'4" he was heavily built so that as well as his residence, car, the phones and then, of course, that allowed us to -- or interested us enough in him to get the dna. will: two more questions he used burner phone. he used to cover his phone. why didn't that work? >> as glinned you are you will slip up and once, law enforcement can set -- could focus on you, they'll find associations. will: okay last question for you aye been fascinated by this case for a long time watching documentary reading about this case for a long time. there's 11 bodies i believe on that gilgo beach area nearly attributed three to four to rex
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huberman is the issue that he's responsible for more bodies that it was a dumping ground with multiple serial killers explain to me the other what is it -- seven bodies. >> so, you know, gilgo 4 which is what you're talking about 3 he's charlged with the 4th we're working on, they have, they're the circumstances of their death are related to four separate burner phones were used. the area in gilgo beach which they were buried they're clearly related so that's what our grand jury investigation centered on. once we're finished with thisser woo going to work with other ones as well. will: ray tierney you have amazing break throughs and appreciate your diligence and being with us this morning. will: coming up climate john kerry doesn't want to offend china president xi jinping. >> is he, in fact, a dictator? >> not useful to get into -- i'm not going to get into -- will: morgan ortagus on that and more on the hearing that had
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ask your doctor for farxiga for chronic kidney disease. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. ♪ farxiga ♪ nicole: we begin with your headlines a woman charged in the overdose death of robert de niro grandson issued a warning during drug deal saying, quote, i don't to kill you law enforcement sources telling new york post that 19-year-old de niro rodriguez texted suspect asking to buy counterfeit oxycodone and xanax and asked if the pills were cut with fentanyl. surveillance video catches a trio of thieves stealing a denver wal-mart customer's credit card you can see one of the suspects at a vending machine next to the self-checkout counter they dropped some cash and hand it back to the victim. that's where the theft takes place. you can see the suspect use some slight of hand to take the victim's card. the victim reportedly nearly
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2,000 dollars in fraud charlgs from wal-mart. and prince william and princess kate's kid stole the show as always during a surprise visit to a royal air force base. yesterday george charlotte and louie explore multiple jets ahead of the royal international air tattoo plane show this weekend. the kids toured c-17 glove master 3 marking the first time the family of five visited the event i can watch louie all day long and those are your headlines. >> let's check with meteorologist a.d. come adam klz for a look at the forecast. >> over the course of the weekend dealing with extreme heat as it is really stretching across the country. let's dive right into it and talk about temperatures feeling like, yeah it certainly a warm one already early this morning. sitting a 75 degrees in new york city that's the beginning widely you're looking at temperatures in the 70s ore warmer across
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the country that heat particular lay in eastern half of the country there's showers currently coming down from the midwest stretching down towards portion of the mississippi delta stretching off towards north texas. rain has been a big issue across new england now showers moving offshore and more storms could become severe today that is that big line of storms moving across midwest could cause a little bit of flooding as we're talking about a whole lot of rain. i'm going to leave you with one last graphic and those are your forecasted highs across the country. yes it is a warm one out here feeling like summer. those are your headlines for now tossing back inside to you pete. pete: never had a breakfast chick-fil-a bowl we got him one. you're welcome. all right white house climate envoy john kerry failing to echo his boss's comments. about communist china's president xi being a dictator. >> is he, in fact, a dictator?
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>> i'm not going to get into it shall >> -- >> but he has enormous power of the leader of china. absolutely. >> you wish the president would use another word? >> i don't care we ought to get tangled in, you know, labels. pete: no labels but enormously powerful leader that controllings everything climate admitting that china and key nations have not submitted plans for net zero emissions here to react spokesperson and founder of the polaris national security morgan ortagus so good morning morgan these are climate envoy, maybe he doesn't want to tick off the chinese joe biden called him a dictator he doesn't want to. does this stuff matter? >> well it does matter, and what i'm sort of confused about pete is why john kerry the fourth administration official is going to beijing. he's are huge pr wins that were
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giving xi jinping on his home soil. so first remember we have some biden administration officials that apparently forgot how to google and they went to china on the anniversary of the square which, of course, the chippings communist party has done everything they can pete to make sure that chinese people don't remember that in their history. then sarkt blinken uninvited to beijing asking, you know, to go to get some con educations. he talked about fentanyl got patted on the head and a working group and saw yellen, secretary of the treasury bowing in kowtowing in front of the communist party leaders now you have john kerry going and not sure what they've done to merit a trip and hacked and knew a lot of advance things about secretary blinken trip's we have the spy base in chiewb. what have they endoto deserve
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multiples coming to bow before the emperor? >> they hacked into the e-mail account through the government e-mail system i believe to the commerce secretary and others getting sensitive information you mention the spy balloon yet from blinken to yellen now kerry we're going hat and hand. and we're talking to them too morgan about things like chiement change they've seen no indication of having any interest we want you to shut down and do something about emissions but you're opening coal power plant every two weeks. when you're talking about to your biggest enemy about things they don't care about, what do you get from that? >> not only have they started more coal plants that you point the but number one emitter of co2 around the world i thought my former boss mike pompeo explained it well in every administration you have a guiding principle of what you're willing to negotiate with other countries about this. this administration's guiding principle is climate change and
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unfortunately there's ongoing genocide right now in china that was declared by president trump and our administration the bide about administration certified that genocide declaration that we were able to put out there. and you never hear them talking about this right secretary blinken said he would lead with hype right, what does that mean in context of our conversation? they're willing to take climate change confession and won't talk about human rights whether xi jinping is a dictator and other things because they want to accept climate change confessions even though they have no intention of actually following them. pete: of course they don't or they'll give bread crumbs whether they care about a lead capture or espionage it is insane that we go there on that get nothing in return and look like fools in the process. morgan ortagus, thank you appreciate your time. >> thanks, pete. pete: you got it still ahead
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will and i will go to class getting lesson from none other than professor vice president kamala harris. >> a.i. is kind of a fancy thing first of all it is two letter it is means artificial intelligence. but ultimately what it is, it's about machine learning. >> it's a fancy thing two letters -- a trip to kamala's school of thought, coming up next.
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>> think about the impact on something like public health. when we invest in clean energy, and electric vehicles and reduce population, more of our children can breathe clean air and drink clean water. [applause] >> vice president kamala harris turning heads once again in her latest claiming u.s. must reduce population to fight climate change that's not only thing kamala harris has taught us in her tenure as vp. >> going off the wall learning to form a word salad to spelling out how to spell big words. so will, she'll never be president of the united states which means when she's done maybe -- she'll have to get a professorship somewhere that's what they all do. right so we're preparing hype
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for what she might do next. >> preparing to go to start to school. where she loves school buses, pete. >> she does. the yellow bus. >> check it out. >> so here's the thing, who doesn't love a yellow school bus? right can you raise your hand if you love a yellow school bus, right, just there's something about the -- and most of us many of us went to school on the yellow school bus, right? >> cue the music. ♪ ♪ ♪ the wheels on the bus go round and round -- round and round ♪ ♪ which yellow bus unclear. >> you know one of my verbal takes to suggest that you agree with something i'm saying to punk wait everything i say with the word, right? watch kamala harris and clip going forward make you agree with her by constantly saying right -- who loves school bus?
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right? that's like an dplish english class affirming you're with me here right that's when her students are saying at the harris school of thought. watch. >> it is a reflection of our moment in our time. we should always find times to express how we feel about a reflection of joy because, you know, it comes in the morning. [laughter] >> there you go. how would you drain culture? >> a series of habit and customs formed by group of people over time that really governs way of life. informally our way of life that was off the cuff i didn't know -- >> i didn't know his answer you can look that up merriam-webster. or comes in the morning. >> really does you love sun vises. so that makes sense. will: comes in the morning.
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let move to physics class here in school with the vice president tell us about physics madam, vice president. >> talking about the significance of the passage of time. right, the significance of the passage of time. so when you think about it, there's great significance to the passage of time and there's such great significance to the passage of time -- [laughter] will: best description ever i heard it was a book report written by someone who did not read the book trying to hit a minimum word count. pete: what about worm hole or traveling back? time. wrap your brain around that one. will: significant. pete: whether passing or not passing through it something significant will happen to you. today or later. a exploration of space and how amazing that is. watch. >> my mom was a scientist so i just love the idea of exploring the unknown. >> are you guys readying to go?
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>> yeah. >> those were child actors too by the way. they were. will: i didn't know those were actors. she knew if t. she was explaining the story she was like the space czar i don't know got a fancy title. will: most people don't watch hbo saying that because it is a premium channel and subscriptions are fewer for fox. but starring julia lewis it is kamala harris. >> not just joy in the morning but at night looking through the telescope. exploration of class i think we have more class that she can take us to. >> spelling. >> check this one out see if you can get it. >> a.i. is kind of a fancy thing first of all it is two letters it means artificial intelligence. but ultimately what it is, it's about machine learning. >> two letters. >> two letters, fancy, it's about machine learning.
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ultimately. >> ultimately it involves machines. now what those machines do during passage of time that's what makes a.i. dangerous over the passage of time when you put in things into the machine and the humans change it, and then it is significant. in the passage of tile. how that passage of time and maybe they control. will: because joy comes in the morning. pete: and then maybe they control the yellow school buses. will: i think we got a plus on the book port. pete: of school of thought. joe biden went to penn center one named after him and she went out to california. lucky students sit on on her lectures. will: berkeley. don't let the sun outsmart you our next guest going viral for their methods to keep those rays in check.
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yesterday. 12-4 will loves their alternate uniforms. part of the bright spot for cleveland, nailer brothers both hit home runs in the same inning. >> hits this ball hard. deep out to right field, and it is gone. josh currently at bat he was first round pick by the marlins. that ball hit hard, and that one is gone. >> pretty cool two brother on the team two homers in the same inning. joe and for the same team since 2013 that's when bj and justin upton of the braves did it back to back at bat. and to golf rory mcilroy into the scottish open at the top of the leader board rickie fowler trailing close behind and check on nicholas colesarts hitting first ever hole in one. >> at two-under working his way
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to that cup line. ♪ ♪ just the right landing spot. >> i just love they played a bagpipes while ball is in flight. nice shot. scottish open continues today. and with that we toss it down to nicole who is just downstairs with a lot of interesting beauty products. nicole: i like the bagpipes it really brings the -- brings it home. [laughter] all right well i do have some fun things in front of me. using sunscreen as directed can lower your risk of skin cancer and as one being melanoma but 40 to 50% but how do you know which one to buy? a med spa in salt lake city has gone viral for videos showing how well different sunscreens really protect your skin joining me now jillian and roberts masters is thanks for joining uo sunscreen can be confusing.
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there's a lot of big headlines the last few years about harmful chemicals in it oxy benzone so we, of course, want to be caution about what is absorbed in our system so talk to us a little bit about sunscreens and also what's the difference between mineral and traditional sunscreens. >> yeah. so there's a big debate between a mineral and chemical sun serene. so the main difference is that a physical sunscreen is going to create a physical barrier on the skin. so that when uv rays hit the skin they just bounce right off. and then a chemical sunscreen absorbs uv rays into the skin, they cause a chemical reaction and convert uv rays into heat and then that is pushed out of the skin. so both will actually give you protection against aging and skin cancer. but we always recommend a physical sunscreen to everybody but especially people with
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sensitive skin or acne prone skin they're a lot less irritating than a chemical sunscreen. chemical sunscreens can be a little more water resistant so sweating, swimming at beach those can be really great option. you have to keep in mind that chemical sunscreens take 20 minutes to go into full effects. versus a physical sunscreen is giving you protection immediately when you apply them. >> so interesting. of course well we have brought some of your favorite products here. and one that, you know, has become wildly popular the supergoop can you tell us why you like them. >> for sure. so supergoop is an amazing product. we like this one especially for events. so one of the main ingredients in sunscreen is going to be zinc that's a strong white cast so if you're taking photos, this is an amazing one that we love because it is completely translucent not
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a white cast from it. >> so some of the other ones just briefly they go on they're mainly for your face, for your body, what's a good rule of thumb for people who put on sunscreen. can you put it on in the morning and then you're done for the day? >> no. [laughter] >> misconception we recommend reapplying 80 to 90 minutes so most sunscreen like the uv stick here they say it on the bottle so water resistant up to 80 minutes we've done testing with our tiktok videos showing what sunscreen does when you wear it for eight hours a day. and that it is not completely covering your skin anymore. so we love a powder sunscreen or a nonaerosol spray if you don't have time to do a full cream there's so many options out there and no excuses for not reapplying. i've done a picture where they look at the sun damage it is horrifying i don't recommend anyone do it also wear a hat
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make sure you cover up. sun protection is extremely important. thank you so much jillian and liveia roberts. >> thank you coming up 2024 presidential president nikki haley joins us coming up live top of the hour. ...you deserve a little me time. with 24 trusted brands by wyndham to choose from, your wyndham is waiting. get the lowest price at wyndhamhotels.com
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♪ ♪ when i met ya in the summer ♪ nicole: good saturday morning. it's 9 a.m. on the east coast. look how beautiful those horses, coming up it is national i love horses day, and we're going to be having riding lessons. riding lessons for the whole family. pete: very nice. those are two nice looking ho
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