tv Cavuto Live FOX News July 22, 2023 8:00am-9:00am PDT
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[stomach growling] it's nothing... sounds like something. ♪when you have nausea, heartburn, indigestion♪ ♪upset stomach, diarrhea♪ pepto bismol coats and soothes for fast relief when you need it most. >> at the top of the hour here. top legal concerns maybe for both candidates. of course you know now what donald j. trump could be facing and the january 6th role he might have play, that altercation, whatever you want to call it at the united states capitol, some have had stronger terms. and joe biden, whistleblowers'
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testimony have people think he may be facing. >> good morning, neil. besides chris christie, you don't hear much criticism when it comes to the candidates when it comes to the indictments. most are turning to joe biden and the justice department and fbi. and here is south carolina's capitol. >> if you're a republican in this room who is committed to wanting to defeat joe biden because you think he's not the right president, why in god's name would we nominate somebody who is going to be on federal criminal trial five and a half months before election day? it is insanity. >> whistleblowers appeared before the house panel claiming hunter biden received over $17 million from foreign sources and should have received felony charges for avoiding taxes on some of the payments. joseph ziegler previously unknown to the public, known
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only as whistleblower x said more serious charges were warranted because this was quote, willfulness which distinguishing it from a civil case. >> i've presented evidence, there's a process that we're given in becoming a whistleblower. i think that's the most important thing and look it at everything that we've presented to congress, to the house ways and means committee. none of it has been refuted. none of what we've presented has been refuted so far that i've seen. >> late this week, iowa senator chuck grassley released an unclassified fbi document alleging joe biden and son hunt hunter getting top prosecutor fired and where hunter was a board member, and republicans say they now want to return the
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favor. >> i don't think there's any secret where i would vote on impeachment. >> you could move to an impeachment inquiry and gives congress more teeth to actually get more investigators more subpoena power. >> hunter biden makes his first court appearance wednesday over the misdemeanor tax charges and that felony gun charge and a judge says donald trump will face a may trial date and good thing that trump owns his own jet, neil. neil: lucas, on that, by may 24th, it's conceivable that donald trump will have already amassed a number of delegates needed to be the republican nominee, getting way ahead of my skis. >> a great point. neil: how would that affect the trial if it would be on that date. the trump folks would try to push it back further. what have you heard? >> the constitution makes it simple, you have to be over 35, you know, natural born u.s. citizen, have lived here about 14 years and you're right,
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neil, may, 2024, that's about five months before election day and i did the math on my hands here, and it's certainly unprecedented in american history, there's no question about that. probably just leave it there. neil: so you're clear to run for office if those are the qualifications. >> just barely. neil: lucas. >> just kidding. neil: always good seeing you, my friend. want to go to new hampshire governor sununu on this. governor, it's great to see you. i want to talk about your decision not to run for reelection, you've been a successful multi-term governor in new hampshire. your take on some of the polls coming out of your state for the presidential primary. donald trump lost a little ground and still leads by an amount, what do you think? >> when you have an incumbent president sitting under 40%, that's a huge opportunity for everybody else. probably means we're going to have to coalesce one or two candidates around that other category, but that's 60-plus percent of the voters that are
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not with trump in new hampshire and i think that number will grow more and more as a lot of his poll numbers even at 37%, a lot of sympathy for him because of the political attacks. i agree with that, a lot of folks agree there's a lot of politicalization out of the department and indictments. just the reality this can't be our candidate, not going to win in 2024, the previous statements made are exactly right. all of these candidates have to start hitting this guy. you can't run against somebody be 20 points down and not talking about him. neil: except for chris christie and asa hutchinson, they're ginger about it. the last time i chatted with nikki haley, she was pretty critical. most are not, and you don't like that. >> our hope, get on the debate stage, you're willing to give the punch and show the such or you're kowtowing.
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i don't understand that, you're not going to get a trump voter, they're with trump. if the base is with trump, he's still in the race. you've got to find your own path. i thinkies is right. you've got to go through him, they tried to avoid and leadership takes it head on. leadership says i'm going to drive forward on this party and be positive future and be a candidate that brings more people together and that's what the republican party is waiting it see and he or she who does that will galvanize a lot of folks around them, probably not until november or december and still to play out, but the path to this nomination. neil: you talk about they don't want to ruffle trump voters, i get that, but by not doing this, they're probably turning off those voters, too. so, what do they risk going after trump? >> nothing. nothing. again, i don't know the political strategy here. they risk upsetting a voter that they're not going to get
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in the first place, right? those voters will come back in the general election, that's fine after you get the nomination, but those base voters are with trump, we know that, they're in lockstep. they have to win the other 60%, if they can do that, that's the ticket there. and again, we've all had the discussion, but the hard conversations are going to happen in november and december when we tell this candidate, you're polling at 3%, get the heck out. and call that candidate tell them you're shut them off and feel galvanize. they're all my friends and i want them all to do well, but they have to have the discipline. getting into the race is easy, the discipline of getting out, that's the key. neil: you never got into this presidential race. a lot of people said you should have and a lot of people are disappointed as well with your decision not to run for reelection as governor of new hampshire. politico said governors like chris sununu once overperformed
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in purple states, and he's leaving and aren't many more left. he's referring or they are referring to these republicans that appeal in not say republicans areas and that's dwindling and it's an echo chamber. do you worry about that? >> new hampshire is purple, we're not a democrat state, our congress is led by republicans, we're one election away from becoming like massachusetts. sorry, massachusetts, i mean, really. [laughter]. >> look, we have the fastest population growth, the fastest business growth, the most pro business state in northeast, all of these great things for us. i've been here four terms, going on eight years now and i still have 18 months to go to be sure. i kind wanted folks to know where i was. and it's not a public career, it's called public service and i think that folks have to stay disciplined. i could win a fifth term, that's nice to know, but you've
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got to hopefully leave things better than you found it and give somebody else an opportunity to run and run on the republican successes that we've shown can really be gathered in new hampshire. neil: but that's rarely echoed by some of the other candidates and something might change, governor, to your point, but your name comes up as possibly a no label type candidate to run as an independent. would you ever consider that? >> no, not that i'm looking at. i'm still very-- again, look at the poll. the fact that donald trump is now under 40% in new hampshire. other candidates are getting in and spending their money and debates are coming up and huge opportunity-- >> no, no not just that poll, close to half of americans are open to a moderate third party candidate. and you are in that group of people that presumably could fit that bill. are you interested? >> well, look, no, look, nothing i'm looking at. i can tell you, there's a reason. when you look at trump-biden, yesterday's news on both sides,
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no one is excited about either of them. both have legal troubles and with the drama, the baggage, everything the average american doesn't want right now and i can see why a third party, if structured right if they can get ballot access with the right candidates could be actually quite exciting, this isn't going to be like ross perot in '92 with the dominos line up. my focus is a strong republican candidate because that's how you get the best republican values back there and hopefully someone that understands systems that believes in limited government. doesn't believe a big government solution to everything. we've got to get out of that mindset and that's not what republicans are about and get back to local control and as i say in new hampshire, live free and die thing. it's about the individual, it ain't about government solutions. neil: that sounds like a definite maybe. [lau [laughter]. neil: i'll leave it at that, governor, great seeing you. >> look, no, nothing we're looking at. but, look, i would expect nothing less, you've got to leave them hanging, a little
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more for your show. neil: that's right, all drama. governor, great seeing you. thank you very much. >> thank you, buddy. neil: governor sununu of the beautiful state of new hampshire. not such beautiful treatment for robert f. kennedy on capitol hill. what that exposed after this. >> it was describing an nih funded study by cleveland clinic scientist. >> reclaiming my time. >> published in usc-- >> chairman, the time is mine. please ask the witness to stop talking. >> you asked me a question. >> mr. chairman i'd like 10 seconds back. >> you're slandering me incorrectly. >> the time belongs-- to the gentle lady from florida the way that i see it, if you're buying it, flying it, or wining n' dining it, then you gotta be cashbacking it. [chuckles] come on now. earn big with chase freedom unlimited.
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kennedy, jr. testifying on capitol hill. i don't think he's still the better of how that went down, hillary vaughan has more. >> neil, democrats i talked to admitted to me they did not want to hear what rfk, jr. had to say and they wanted to silence him and want today ban him from coming to capitol hill. but tell me that's not censorship. >> that's not censorship. that would be not allowing him to speak, that does not mean in the halls. >> we were trying to make sure he didn't cause more harm. >> he can say whatever he wants whenever he wants, but he doesn't get a right to testify before a committee of congress. >> i'm not going to respond to a loaded question like that. you've already decided in your own answer. >> it's not just government censorship that kennedy was
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calling out the children's health defense is suing a collection of organizations and tech giants to work together to squash what they call fake news. and kennedy claims it was a blackout of those in the pandemic policies. and the group includes mainstream media groups, ap, reuters, "the washington post" and tech giants, google, youtube, meta and twitter. kennedy telling fox he thinks media groups came after him because they were threatened. >> the real competitors are the thousands of new news organizations that have sprouted up like mushrooms on the internet, that are eroding public trust. we need to now choke them off in a way we'll do that is by deplatforming any of these organizations that doesn't follow our story. >> and we did reach out to the trusted news initiative for comment on the lawsuit and response to kennedy's accusations. we've not heard back yet, neil. neil: all right, hillary
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vaughan at capitol hill with that. and eliza, anecdotally, a lot of the kennedy folks have been telling me that money has been coming in fast and furious in small donations. it sounds akin to money coming into donald trump's campaign because of this feeling of a legal pile-on against the former president, that rfk could be benefitting the same way. what do you make of that? >> yes, he's raised millions of dollars, the question is, is he raising the money from the voters he needs to actually make an impact? he's running in the democratic primary here and that's a problem when all of the democrats on capitol hill don't even want to hear from him. so, at this moment, joe biden, the president is expect today win the democratic nomination again, but that doesn't mean that kennedy isn't making a lot of noise. in new hampshire, i saw, i met, actually many trump voters who voted for trump in '16 and '20
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and thought rfk was an interesting choice and some from bernie sanders's campaign who thought he was upstart in '16 and '20. he's captured something in voters that basically feels the government is lying. they're questioning what they are hearing and seeing in the news, but that's not democratic primary voters or that's not most of the democratic primary electorate. neil: could it be at least a chunk of the new hampshire primary. in the new hampshire primary and democratic primary that's not the kickoff, south carolina is. but that he could resonate in that state like that? >> so, then i that event i went to certainly he had power with the voters and hundreds showed up and also independents can vote in primaries and that's
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something that's a big deal for kennedy, but the question, is he resonating or actually beating biden? there's a lot of questions like you mentioned about where new hampshire falls in the schedule, the state disagrees with the national democratic party in that order, so there's actually a chance that new hampshire holds their primary against what the national democratic party has ordered and biden doesn't even appear on the ticket. so in that case, kennedy could win, but then the national democrats say those delegates might not count. there's a lot of questions that need to be answered how powerful he is in new hampshire. neil: you know what's interesting, too, eliza. you think about it, apples and oranges, his father benefitted from, you know, an opponent who surprised lyndon johnson in new hampshire, didn't win it, but wounded the president enough at the time that lbj would not seek reelection, and along robert kennedy came along to enter the race. i'm just wondering if bigger
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players come to the fore here if it looks like, you know, an rfk, jr. is resonating, and that there are alternatives out there and that this could trigger bigger bold-face party names to come forward and give it a run themselves? >> a question that biden has some significant weakness. there are democratic voters, they say they're not excited about another run by biden, but that's different than voters excited about kennedy and what we hear when we talk to voters, when we talk to strategists is just because democratic voters aren't excited doesn't mean that they won't come home in the end. neil: fair enough. >> and there's a lot to see, but i think those are two different things, kennedy showing his power and biden's weakness doesn't mean the same voters. neil: got it. we'll watch it closely. eliza collins, wall street journal political reporter, a darned good one at that.
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in the meantime, north korea, it's lobbing more missiles into the south china sea ar elsewhere. we don't know what it's about, and we're seeing more-- in the yellow sea i should say, but again, it keeps happening and general jack keane, what he thinks we should do about it after this. and while you're hittin' the trail, i'm hitting your cooler. and your cut-rate car insurance might not pay for all this. so get allstate. oh, booking.com ♪ somewhere, anywhere... ♪ ♪ i just want to lie motionless in a chair! ♪ booking.com, booking.yeah ♪ ♪
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>> all right. north korea moving to the top of our-- the foreign area hot list right now, launching more missiles in the yellow sea today. this is a growing nuclear threat. we've got one of our submarines docked right near south korean military installation itself. that's got the north koreans talking about a tit-for-tat that happens as a u.s. soldier is in their confines.
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general jack keane with the laters on all of this. general, so much to get into on just north korea alone. what do we know about the latest missiles launched? >> yeah, well, they're cruise missiles. they launched them off the west coast between korea and japan and you put your finger on it, neil. i mean, the reason this provocation is going on and what happened on wednesday with also short-range ballistic missiles and then last week with inter-continental ballistic missiles which could reach the united states, it's all about the nuclear ballistic submarine that's parked in the southeastern part of south korea. so, we have not deployed a nuclear ballistic missile submarine in 40 years to south korea and why are we doing this? well, because the north koreans have a nuclear arsenal of estimated, neil, from 40 to 60 weapons, and they also, obviously, have been developing
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ballistic missiles to fire those and deliver those weapons and then they-- with their language, they threaten the use of them. so, what the united states is doing, and i think it makes prudent sense, is demonstrate to the north koreans and remind them that we are a nuclear power far superior to them and this ballistic nuclear submarine is that reminder. we're not saying how long we're going to be there, and likely as long as it's there, the north koreans are going to be spun up by this and continue to threaten and also to fire off missiles. the second thing, and this is important, also, because north korea has been so belligerent and because they've fired so many missiles, particularly in the last year, it's been remarkable how many they fired. japan and south korea have both toyed with the idea, well, should we develop our own nuclear capability so we can protect ourselves and not just rely on the united states
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nuclear umbrella to do that? well, that certainly got the attention of our foreign policy national security folks and that also was one of the reasons why that nuclear submarine is there, to make sure that south korea and even japan recognizes that north korea-- that the united states protection from-- against north korea with our nuclear capability is real, sustained and not going away. neil: general, while i have you here. what do you make of this u.s. soldier ran into north korea. we haven't heard from him since ap the north korean, what do you think they do with him, leverage him, use him, what? >> how unfortunate is this, neil. when tensions are so high, this soldier likely under some distress makes a decision to do this. you know, given the fact that he's spent a couple of months in a south korean jail for a
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criminal offense and the united states army was sending him home and likely facing some kind of disciplinary action and the possibility of a less than honorable discharge from the military is what we normally do when somebody, you know, commits a felony, and i would suspect that that is causing him a huge stress in terms of facing the reality of that and his family and his friends. i don't know, i'm just speculating. he may be running from that more than actually running to south korea. he's trying to avoid, you know, facing the emotions of all of that. listen, this is an american citizen, an american soldier and we've got to get him back regardless of what his motivations were. let's just assume he was under a lot of stress and made a bad decision, that's not a factor here. this is an american citizen, let's go get him and the problem is, we don't have relationships, neil. we work through sweden to do
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this, but the good news is, we have had a lot of success through the years in getting american citizen detainees, regardless of what their motivation out of north korea and assuming he wants to come out, the first thing to do is to make contact with him and to find out how he's doing and what he wants to do. neil: that's very well said, general. you're the first one i've talked to on this who is just stepping back and saying, he's an american first, let's get him back and we can deal with all of this other stuff later. general, always good catching up with you. thank you. >> great talking to you, neil. neil: general jack keane on all of that. meanwhile, lionel messi and oscar de la hoya. i want you to think about that because we connect them after this. homeowners, need to lower your monthly expenses and get cash? here's a great way to do it. the newday 100 va cash out loan. at newday, our veterans on average pay off $44,000 of high rate debt,
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hi, i'm michael, i've lost 62 pounds on golo and i have kept it off. most of the weight that i gained was strictly in my belly which is a sign of insulin resistance. but since golo, that weight has completely gone away, as you can tell. thanks to golo and release, i've got my life and my health back. >> messi! could it have been any other way? >> all right, talk about a big debut, the sports agent extraordinare, the obvious question is were they all wearing pink jerseys in honor of barbie? what do you think? >> it's had a dynamic effect on miami and a dynamic effect on major league soccer. first of all, his contract is about $60 million a year, but he also got equity in the team,
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which is quite unusual and then, they expect their revenue to double next year. now, the highest ticket price last year for this inter-miami team was $29. this year it's $544, with a lot of the tickets going over-- for $1,000. neil: wow. >> his jersey is on the way to becoming the fastest seven-day sale in the history of jerseys and the actual valuation of the team is expected to go from about $600 million to a million five and this will help them with their new apple deal that-- >> this is only playing on apple, right? obviously, you can reroute it and credit apple, but that's a coup for apple, too, right? >> yes. so, what this will do is the league looked a while ago for the david beckham effect.
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ne got the best known player in the world and now they have someone who is even closer to his prime so that it's electrifying the miami franchise, but it's also having a ripple effect on franchises around the league because everywhere messi plays, they'll sell out and the tickets will be scalped. so this is going to bring television revenue into the league. it's going to bring other european players will come and it heightens the status and prestige of major league soccer. neil: that's all they're talking about in florida. did they always have-- to get back to the substantive question, the pinkout fits, was that always the case or just start? >> no, this is sort of new. neil: all right. >> and we're sitting on the weekend of barbie-heim. neil: absolutely.
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>> but, remember, it's miami, if you go to the city, there are pastels everywhere, so-- >> you're right about that. you're right about that. lee, thank you very much. lee steinberg following all of those developments here, but a lot of green for lionel messi and the florida area. all the florida papers if you were to peruse them, he's page one and nationally getting the attention as well. speaking of athletes in the news, president and former oscar de la hoya, looking at big athletes, like michael jordan documentary, and fictitious stars, apollo creed and george forman showing his career. and oscar de la hoya, six different titles in different weight divisions and i don't think that anybody has done that and he's getting the
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documentary treatment. it's a bit of an eye-opener, it's not the pretty boy image you generally get of oscar de la hoya. what he makes of the documentary treatment because it's a trend. take a look. >> all of these years i found out that i was conditioned, you know, as an athlete, as a kid that grew up in east l.a., winning the gold medal, being labeled as the golden boy. neil: that's in '92. >> it was a lot of pressure, a lot of pressure. neil: your father kept pushing. you were the exit ramp off poverty. >> i was the chosen one since i can remember, family asking for anything from me. especially when i started winning money, i actually had to seclude myself from all of my family so i wouldn't have to give my money away. neil: yeah, yeah. we were talking about that during the break, right? that what happens to a lot of the greats. we were chatting with the forge
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forman movie out and lost a lot of money and put the trust in wrong people and mike tyson losing close to a billion in earnings. it wasn't easy? >> i think a lot of people take advantage of our kindness. we are fighters and we're supposed to be tough, but deep down inside we're good people, we're nice people. neil: yeah. >> and we feel like we owe the world everything, you know, for some strange reason and i was able to -- like i said, i secluded myself from everything and everyone at one point. i wasn't talking to family for years. neil: is that right? >> for that reason. just to avoid me giving my money away, yeah, so i was able to-- >> you were into the life of being-- you were like a rock star, i remember all the beautiful women and everything else. >> oh, yeah. neil: and you were sucked into that. how did you get out of that? >> sure, you know, life
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experiences. at 50 years old i decided to make this documentary because it's just, it's never too late. it's never too late to find yourself. it's never too late to really dig deep down inside and see who you really are. neil: but they had to tell you when they were preparing this, i know mark wahlberg was on there. >> yes, mark wahlberg is actually the producer. neil: and someone told you, all right, champ, i'm going to show your warts and all. if they do a documentary on me, it has to be wonderful stuff. [laughter]. neil: and you said okay, i don't want to give it away. there's some stuff in here that people might think differently of you in the end. >> you know, what i feel, i thought that at 50 years old i can finally set myself free by telling my truth because as like i was saying as a kid, i was conditioned to be the golden boy and the golden boy, it's glitz and glamour, he can do nothing wrong and he's making all of this money and
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these women and this and that, but yet, inside, it's not the life style i want to live yet, inside i'm confused on why i'm doing this, hoe i'm doing it for. i had, neil, i had a-- an abusive, you know, household with my mother and my father, emotionally pushing me so hard and really having no connection. i mean, i literally just told my father that i love him two years ago. neil: wow. >> and i couldn't tell my mother because she passed away when i was 18. so you can imagine all the pain and all the suffering and, but yet again, the fighting was my escape. being inside the ring. neil: how were you so good at it. you've always been a very good guy. what i remember you, oscar, following your career closely and with such jealousy, you're a handsome guy and more women would be drawn to your fights than you ever saw in boxing. >> oh, yeah.
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neil: it was unusual. >> it was. neil: you'd see caesar palace and half of them from women. >> like a concert. neil: same with my shows. not really. [laughter]. neil: how did you deal with that, and no boxer had seen that, muhammad ali comes to mind, but more controversial associated with that. tell us. >> yeah, a lot of people around me, yeah, just managers and agents. neil: but you had to get to the point, i trust nobody. >> sure, there was a point where i trusted nobody. neil: you also for a time in your career, fish net outfits and had a lot of people wondered is he okay? it didn't hurt you, it drew more attention to-- >> it was incredible. neil: what was that all about? >> so when i retired i lost myself. i got into a lot of alcohol and drugs and i just literally lost myself and the fact that i had
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a relationship with my mother that was so disconnected, you know, she never told me she loved me, i would always go to these clubs here and pick up women and it wasn't for-- it wasn't necessarily because, you know, you want to be with them and you just want to talk and have a voice, some ears to listen to you. and i remember just crying and spilling all-- everything to that stranger that i don't even know because i wanted somebody to listen to me. neil: but the most outrageous stuff you did didn't get reaction, fans were drawn to you even after you gave up boxing. >> i think it's because a lot of fans and people know exactly who i really am. you know? they know-- >> settle this once and for all. do you wear women's clothing now? >> no, no, no that was-- >> was there is enough distance
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where you can't clock me now? >> too much distance. what closes doors and-- >> i thought that was a marketing gimmick. >> it wasn't, no, those were real pictures. that was me. the ironic part is, the crazy part is i do not remember it, i do not remember it. neil: was it alcohol, drugs. >> it was everything, that's where i was. neil: and you look great, taking care of yourself. >> life is beautiful. i'm just glad and fortunate enough that i'm still here. neil: remarkable life. a remarkable man. that documentary coming out next week, the 24th and the 25th. taking a look at another side of this pretty boy boxer. that was not quite as perfect as it seemed. so i urge you to watch that. i urge you to take cue from something going on in corporate america. a lot of bosses are hiring etiquette directors, and do
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shop if you want to know exactly where to search. if you want to browse as a new parent to be and talk about what it means to be a reg industry, try a stroller, try a car seat and come to babies "r" us, a single trusted destination and we've got it all here. >> speaking of trying. i'm going to try out this stroller track over here and this is one of the things that parents can do when they're coming to shop for the new item as i ask the next question. >> timing-wise you couldn't have picked a better time. it's when bye-bye baby is liquidating because of everything going on with bed bath & beyond and consumer tightening. which is going to impact the consumer more? >> when it comes to baby products and by the way, pet products, they're recession proof. great job on the track. >> thank you. you've got right now on one hand an amazing business opportunity, you're right we've got a competitor that just went out of business and is liquidating, but you've got a sustainable, long-term market opportunity in the baby world to provide a destination and
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that's what we're trying to do here, just like you're doing on the stroller track right now. you can come in here and try it all. you can't do this online. >> yehuda, thank you so much. when you look at the brands, a journey for babies "r" us and toys "r" us. the first brand they've seen success over the past year and toys "r" us after relaunching, they're in every single macy's across the u.s., 452. so, even though this is babies "r" us first location the plan is to expand with the partnership and not yet announced who that will be. we'll get that by the end of the year and for now, this is the first flagship one stop shop for all of your baby needs. >> i don't know if i'm ready for the full stroller, but i'll take a couple more runs. send it back to you. neil: thank you for that, madison. when it comes to babies, you expect them to cry and act up now and then because, you know, they're babies. but when you hire adults at the workplace and they come in acting like that and worse, and not dressing appropriately, and
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oh, i don't know, using the microwave to heat up fish, they need a talking to. they need an etiquette director. it's all the rage right now in companies. meet an expert on etiquette, not just me, here to give you some warnings after this. ♪ do side jobs installing windows, charging something like a hundred bucks a window when other guys were charging four to five-hundred bucks. he just didn't wanna do that. he was proud of the price he was charging. ♪ my dad instilled in me, always put the people before the money. be proud of offering a good product at a fair price. i think he'd be extremely proud of me, yeah. ♪
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walking around barefoot. burping loudly. that-- well, that's questionable whether that's that bad. and anyway, microwaving fish, a major faux pas there. and we need someone like a neil cavuto to give etiquette lessons. they thought twice about that and they said we actually need someone like jacqueline whitmore, she's an etiquette expert, etiquette success at work and she knows of what she speaks and she's not snooty, so a great combination. great to have you on. >> great to see you again. neil: you're right. it's kind of out of control. not among everybody, certainly not among my staff. all right, it's just my staff. what is happening where we're doing this? >> well, this has been going on for years. so, i don't blame it on covid anymore, i blame it on dress down fridays.
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you remember long ago when people allowed employees to wear jeans and t-shirts to work, it went downhill from there. when people dress sloppy, their work is sloppy. >> and it's just how they interact with each other. now, i'm not saying that this is unique to new or young workers, but it does seem to be disproportionally the younger workers. how do you deal with that? >> there's many ways of dealing with it. number one is to hire an etiquette consultant to come in and teach the staff, but it starts at the top, the person in charge, the ceo should be the example and if that person isn't the example, then everything goes awry. so, i believe that etiquette is situational and what is lacking now in the workplace is situational awareness. it's how we interact with other people and relationships are the key to success in this intercultural, multicultural
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world. neil: and a lot of us don't think about some of the things we say sound, or the way we act, you know, is being picked up in the workplace. what's a big faux pas you try to smash when you're called for advice? >> well, i concentrate on the a, b, c, d's. appearance, behavior, communication, and digital footprint and i have to say, my most popular class is e-mail etiquette. so many employees are hitting reply all when not everyone needs to see that particular message. i mean, people are showing up late for work. people are wearing flip-flops and they're wearing dirty shoes. they're not paying attention to how they are speaking in an e-mail. grammar and word choice matters. do a spell check because this is part of your personal brand which in turn becomes part of the company's personal brand. if you don't have any training
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in place, soft skill training, then these mistakes are going to continue to happen which will ultimately fact your bottom line. neil: well-said, jacqueline. well said. and she knows of what she speaks and acts that way. that's what i advise, just be decent to one another, wear a tie everywhere, man or woman, i think it's a good idea. that will do it. you got another mask? are you the ceo of cashbacking? no, you're not. earn big with chase freedom unlimited. how do you cashback? 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.
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that's service the way we want it. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ experience the feel of a dentist's clean at home. with oral-b. round cleans better by surrounding each tooth. so clean, you'll feel like you just left the dentist. ♪ what you waiting for? ♪ oral-b. brush like a pro. ♪ come and get it. ♪ >> irs whistleblower, joseph ziegler speaking out, telling fox news the proper procedures were not followed when investigating the president's son, hunter biden. this as g.o.p. calls for impeachment grow louder following the release of a fbi document highlighting bribery allegations against president biden and hunter. welcome to fox news live, i'm griff jenkins. hi alicia. >> hi, i'm alicia acuna. ri
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