tv Outnumbered FOX News September 22, 2023 9:00am-10:00am PDT
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prosecutors after a sweeping indictment, pretty shocking the allegations of corruption in charges against new jersey senator bob menendez. he is one of the most powerful offices you can have in washington and this is the second corruption charge in eight years. his wife nadine is also facing federal charges. this is "outnumbered," i'm kayleigh mcenany. joining us so-gerri willis, host of tomi lahren, tomi lahren. independent woman's forum kaylee mcgee white and former n.f.l. player and co-founder of mission.com, chris valletta. prosecutors say the couple took
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cash gold and payments toward mortgage, compensation for a no-show job, luxury vehicle, it was like a soap opera, but this is reality n. june of last year, federal agents searched their new jersey home and found $500,000 in cash. that's a lot. some stuffed in envelopes and some hidden in clothing. they allegedly found $100,000 worth of gold bars and mercedes benz convertible form menendez' wife. indicted on two unrelated criminal allegation. 2015 corruption case against him ended in 2017 and dameien williams says the three-term senator used his power and influence on a large scale. >> the indictment alleges that between 2018 and 2022, senator
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menendez, the senior u.s. senator from new jersey and the chairman of the senate foreign relations committee and his wife nadine menendez engaged in a corrupt relationship with hana, uribe and daibes. the senator and his wife accepted hundreds of thousands in bribes in exchange for senator menendez to use power and influence to protects, and enrich the businessmen and the government of egypt. it is alleged menendez used leadership role on to benefit egypt in various ways. senator menendez provided sensitive, nonpublic u.s. government information to egyptian officials and took steps to aid the government of
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egypt. indictment alleges senator menendez used his power to disrupt a criminal investigation undertaken by the new jersey general attorney's office related to an associate and relative of uribe. the indictment alleged sr. menendez used power and influence to disrupt federal prosecutor of daibes in district of new jersey. >> kayleigh: the senator strongly denies wrongdoing and says i have been falsely accused before because i refuse to back down to the powers that be and people of new jersey were able to see through the smoke and mirrors and recognize i was innocent . facts are not as presented. prosecutors do that and look what a trial demonstrates. before accepting the prosecutor's version, to my supporters and friends at large, recall the other time the prosecutors got it wrong and you
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reserve judgement. pretty stunning allegations. let's pull up the picture of that mercedes menendez's wife got. page 22 of the indictment, uribe, a business partner, contacted the dealership on behalf of the wife and they meet in a parking lot and she receives $15,000 in cash. the next day, nadine menendez purchased the car making a $15,000 down payment. the business partner said, are you happy to nadine, to which she replies, i will never forget this. this is stunning. i worked in washington, if you had something mailed to you and it was over $25, you could not even take it home. stunning allegation $15,000 for down payment on a car.
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>> that $25 would not have gotten the senator's attention, right? this is shocking, sounds like part of the soprano's tv show. if allegations are proven, i think you have to ask yourself what was the secret information that went to the egyptians, how did it influence policy and egypt policy, what happened as a result of the fact head of the senate foreign relations committee was on the payroll, he could be bought. i don't know if people understand, that is a really important position in washington. it is the contact with governments all over the world. so that is somebody who can make a lot of decisions on behalf of the american people and he was bought and paid for if the feds are right. >> kayleigh: it is incredible. intelligence, that is shocking, page nine of the indictment,
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listen to this paragraph, menendez and nadine menendez met with hana, may 6 2018. later that day, menendez sought from the state department nonpublic information regarding the number and nationality, could pose concerns made public without telling his professional staff that he was doing so, menendez texted that sensitive embassy information to his girlfriend and we'll skip down to where it says nadine menendez forwarded the message who forwarded it to hana, who forwarded it to egyptian official. stunning. >> it does not look good, we have to reserve judgement, innocent until proven guilty. to me, this is about integrity.
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corruption undermines democracy, founding fathers intended for our country. this is unbelievable evidence. you have cash, you have gold, text messages, you have got cars. who knows where this is going to unfold. i think we can get to a point where this corruption is rooted out and there is a message sent. bribery and helping foreign entities is treason of the highest form and should be punished by life in prison. we'll see where this goes. >> in the indictment, this was on the senator website while this behavior was happening, our office cannot compel an agency to act, it matters with private business or judicial issues. it appears allegations are true, the website was a load of crock. >> what can be said, he didn't set up 20 shell companies to
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hide the fact he was accepting bribes. he likes it old-school way, gold bars stuck in a sock drawer, bizarre. it reminds me of something gavin newsom said this week, excusing allegations against the biden family. influence pedalling is hardly unique, apparently that is true if you are a democrat in washington. menendez barely escaped an indictment a few years ago and he turned back around and kept on doing it, i guarantee you he thought the system would protect him and maybe that would be true if his last name would have been biden. >> kayleigh: great point, he did this having escaped another allegation of corruption. hunter was not working in government, but the allegation it is influence pedalling and hunter biden gets a diamond, money for a sports car. hunter biden at burisma.
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hunter biden with cefc china. what about washington and the drinking water and people think they can do this stuff. >> tomi: this has become a pattern, you hear government officials being corrupt, we have shock and awe, not really, not so much. nadine menendez is like the hunter biden in this situation, the go-between, the one that is getting the perks, maybe cutting in 10% for the big guy, the brand, selling the brand. it is interesting how this works and it is methodical and strategic the way they plan this out. i love the fact it is gold bars, money shoved in clothes, you have to believe you are above the law to accept gold bars and to shove money in clothes in closets. you have to believe you are going to get away with it. the precedent has been set you might get away with it, why not
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go ahead and try. >> kayleigh: stunning, round two against corruption with senator menendez. we will follow it. record number of migrants cross the border and president biden lays out his plan to take on the crisis. he is apparently embracing it. type 2 diabetes? discover the ozempic® tri-zone. ♪ ♪ i got the power of 3. i lowered my a1c, cv risk, and lost some weight. in studies, the majority of people reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. i'm under 7.
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>> kayleigh: a live look at the crisis at the southern border. customs and border protection sources are reporting a record 10,000 migrant crossings every single day. you got to wonder how many gotaways are on top of that. critics are blasting president biden for incentivizing them instead of cracking down. 3.8 million migrants have crossed into our country. stunning 1.8 million entered since the start of this fiscal year alone, which began last october. president biden spoke about the migrant crisis yesterday before the hispanic caucus and sounds like his plan is not to end mass migration, he wants to embrace it. >> president biden: first we put in place policies that process people in fair and fast way. second, significantly expanding
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so businesses can get workers they need, families don't have to wait a decade to be together and increasing number of refugees admitted from latin america. people fleeing violence and persecution who want a better life. next week my team will consult with congress on this plan. third, support states and cities that have seen a surge in immigrants. we've developed federal experts and deployed them to train city workers. we've launched outreach helping million eligible migrants apply for work permits and accelerating a work permit. >> kayleigh: denial is his plan. embrace illegal immigration, deniallism and he blamed president trump twice calling him my predecessor. put up the facts, straight from biden's cbp.
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yellow line on the bottom is president trump encounters in 2020 at the southern border, lines above that are president biden's watch, so that is a lie. >> tomi: this is a lie, not a mistake and oopsey. for him and the rest of his party it is accomplish mment. this is a long-awaiting plan, strategy they have been working on for 10 years, maybe more. talk about the trump administration, i went down to the border and we had caravans coming through. donald trump had zero tolerance and threatened mexico with tariffs, which was effective. military did his part. the world's people are coming through mexico, how are they getting here, who is funding them? why? because they are incentivized to do so. they want to push them into the u.s., they know the door is open, you have to
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incentivize mexico to do their part and have remain in mexico. trump did it, there is reason apprehensions were at a 20-year low thchl. this is not a border policy. the question asked to karine jean-pierre, how many is too many? where do we make the cutoff? 10 million, 20 million, 50 million? do we open the door and we are the world's caretaker? that is good question for democrats running inure 22. >> kayleigh: she made fun of the question and cut off peter doocy. watch this moment from karine jean-pierre. >> what do you call it at the white house when 10,000 people illegally cross the border in a single day? >> what do you call it, peter, when gop puts forth -- wait, no, no, no, you can't. i'm answering -- >> you are answering with -- please, you said you were
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stopping the flow at the border. 10,000 -- >> i tried to answer the question, you stopped me. >> kayleigh: in my days, if i would have done that to jim acosta, the reporter would have sat in -- no one did that for peter doocy. >> kaylee: the white house refuses to answer the questions and you have biden publicly admitting this is his plan. he is not even trying to spin this anymore, he is accepting this is the plan. we are doing this for a reason. all they are trying to do is manage the crisis and they are not each doing a very good job at that. you have new york city officials in a know paic over thousands of migrants flooding the streets everyday and we have reports that ice is developing id cards to give migrants. this week you had biden administration announce it will
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give venezuelans work visas to avoid deportation. where are democrats? stop asking for more money, go after biden for damaging policies he's putting in place that is destroying your city and killing people. >> kayleigh: it is killing people. chris, this video is hard to watch, if you have a child maybe take them out of the room for the moment. bill melugin posted a body being pulled from the rio grande in eagle pass this morning. and a three-year-old boy died the day prior and 10-year-old last week. biden is enabling this, that is harsh to say. these are the results. >> chris: there is human cost of life and death. i'm in texas, this is real for us. texas spends $850 million a year on illegal immigration, it has gone so fast the tipping point in texas and i finally feel the country is waking up just a
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little. look at what is happening in new york. governor kathy hochul and mayor adams, bring them, come to new york, it is great. no, stop, come somewhere else, we can't take you anywhere. meanwhile, we have 1.4 million visas in the backlog, people who came the right way and pay to go to universities, master degrees, phds who have job offers to stay here. it keeps us globally competitive. my wife lilly, it took her 10 years to get citizenship in the united states. we have to close leaks at the border. if you want to get in the life boat, shut the leaks off first, that is the most basic principle and we're not doing it today. >> gerri: we can't afford this. look at cost of these people coming in, $145 billion. it is probably four to five times that amount because of
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number of people coming through. nobody is able to keep up ratcheting the numbers because of the situation we have. we have 33 trillion in debt. we don't have enough tax dollars, this is unaffordable for the american people and they know it, that is why they are reacting the way they are. >> kayleigh: mayor adams knows it, too. new reaction from barstool founder dave portnoy about this "washington post" reporter, it is getting a lot of attention.
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>> kayleigh: barstool founder dave portnoy is firing back at liberal media after he called out a "washington post" reporter about a so-called hit piece she was writing about him. food reporter emily hyle was attempting to drum up negative comments from sponsors and the conversation went viral. >> it is on saturday and you are reaching out to advertisers and sending an e-mail that says to the effect dave's misogynistic racist, do you want to defend yourself advertising at this event, right?
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>> i haven't said anything like that. >> i can read, if you want, if you want, i can read what you sent, i have it. okay. we are planning to write about the festival and how some of the sponsors have drawn criticism by seeming to associate themselves with dave portnoy, who has a history of misogynistic comments and other problematic behavior. i want you to respond to that. >> oh, the one i sent to -- the most pointed of them. >> you said you didn't do it, i have evidence of you doing it. >> i didn't say i didn't do it, i said it was most pointed. >> before i provided proof, you said you didn't do that, now you said you did it the one time, you did do it. >> kayleigh: emily hyle was not counting on dave portnoy bringing the receipts and he did and he joined jesse watters last
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night. >> journalism is activism, no need to tell both sides of the story ever. i've been the subject of so many hit pieces and i've started cordially, let me tell your side of the story, my facts are off. if anybody with an open mind who has not made a judgement and listen to both sides, this guy is not who we are portraying him to be. that is only time that phone call that i had to record, that is only time i've ever talked to who has written a hit piece about me. it is crazy, that is the state of journalism. the "new york times" and "washington post" is garbage. they are activists, not journalists, no interest in the truth, none. >> kayleigh: gerri willis, this reminds me of conversations i had working in press for the former president and republican party with journalists. the tactics are the same, they write a story and she denied she
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had written the story. they come to you last minute seeking the comment and put in five words and it is a hit piece. >> gerri: you are familiar with this, this is when liberals are journalists and they think it is their job to go after the issues that is important to them. it is gender rights or women's rights, that is the lead of every story, this woman is a food writer, presumably she would be interested in food, pizza in this case. unfortunately, not at all. it is one example of journalist standards going down the tube. you don't find even portrayal of a lot of people or most people and certainly not politicians and it goes further into social issues. you don't see dana perino on the cover of a woman's magazine, right? it is pernicious in way it plays out. >> kayleigh: a lot of politics
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being servedum with that pizza. i love what dave portnoy did, he is on offense, tell her you are taping and you guys make up your mind. >> tomi: this happened so many times, when activists in journalist have tried to pull this cancel culture thing. that is what she was trying to do, pull cancel culture mechanism by going after the advertisers, that is what they do, they want people to be afraid to associate with you, cutting into your bottom line and maligning and demonizing you. that was her intent and goal, the food writer. he said you could have written about how i'm helping small business, she had no desire to do that. she feels dave portnoy is misogynistic and wanted to make that point and she did what she did and he called her out on it.
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i hope more journalists will understand this is the risk they run if they want to be activists instead of journalists. >> i like that term. she said she had no predetermined conclusion, that is laughable. >> one thing dave told jesse watters last night, he said i know what is going to be written about me based on the publication it is coming from. he knew what she was going to say about him, not because of e-mails to her advertisers, but because she was a "washington post" reporter, only 7% of the american public say they trust the media. this is how it works. she came to him, she didn't come to him, he went to her and pressed her, why haven't you asked me for my side. she said, i was going to make to make sure i had all the information and was going to ask you for comment.
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in other words, she was going to come with predetermined conclusion, back him into a corner and force him to accept this narrative she was going to spin on him. >> kayleigh: she got owned and i will be fascinated to see if this story makes the light of day. >> chris: definitely got owned, tables turned a bit. clicks, likes, shares, views, that is where we are and dave portnoy built business on this viral nature and auth entity he brings to that. great to see the tables turned. no one is talking about what he did do for small business and continue to do through pizza fest. his passion for pizza and he's raised close to $50 million for small businesses through covid and continues to raise through the barstool fund. we'll see how this turns out. he wins in this equation by far
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>> kayleigh: wild new video shows the moment a nasty brawl broke out among fans at last night's giants and 49ers game, latest example of violent chaos in the stands this n.f.l. season. [video playing] >> new york 20-yard line. >> kayleigh: you can see at least five fans trading blows in the lower section of levi stadium outside san francisco. scenes like this have become far too common. last month fight between 49er and raiders fans near that same stadium left two people with stab wounds. a fan charged with assault after this fight during the commanders week one game in washington and last sunday, a huge brawl broke out at the houston-texans home
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opener. life-long patriots fan dale mooney died after an encounter during last sunday's game in foxbor ough. tragedy. chris, i know you were on the field of these n.f.l. games, did you ever look up in the stands and see this kind of stuff? >> chris: we never saw this kind of stuff, back in the day, when two people get in a fight at a game, a lot of pride and passion and alcohol and beer, two people get in a fight, people break it up. common sense people say, it is game, relax and go your separate ways. now when a fight breaks out, people rush and grab their phone. everyone standing there with
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their phone because this is the bystander apethy that occurs. i get to capture the content. sports should be unity and competition and what makes america great, that is what it is. this is shining negative spotlight on all of it and i wish we would put the phones away and stoep in a bit. >> something is happening in society when you have airplane brawls, and people throwing stuff at singers at concerts, throwing items at them, sports bras, senseless crime from the youth. why are we violent? >> i am glad i am not a sports fan. sorry, chris. this is emblem attic of breakdown in social fabric we've been seeing over several years. poll after poll has found
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americans don't trust each other. we don't even like each other that much. you have things like this, sports games, which are supposed to be uniting and friendly competition and you have people breaking out into brawls because they don't like each other. this is particularly true across generational lines. a few years ago, people found boomers were more likely to say their neighbors could be trusted. gen-z, twenty % of gen-z say they can trust their neighbors and friends. >> kayleigh: neuropsychologist told axios the pandemic changed us, for first time in anyone's life, it was like every man for himself, it broke life as we knew it. is this covid? or something different? >> people have gone feral, people forgot how to be around each other. you are locked up in your home and if you go out, wear a mask,
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you have the mask police in force and airplanes, probably why things have gotten hostile in the air. covid was a precursor. look at 2020, the lovely riot season we had, summer of lo love, there were no consequences to act this way. people learn there are not a lot of consequences, so act on your emotion and get away with it. >> kayleigh: it was called the summer of love as people were being killed, no consequences. >> gerri: i think people feel powerless and act out and stand on the sideline while people punch each other to death and film it, hoping somebody will send them cash for the video. americans have stepped back, they are watching, not acting. >> kayleigh: wow, we need good samaritans today more than ever. coming up emily compagno is in orlando for crime con, she'll
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>> chairman of foreign relations committee charged with bribery, it is the second time bob menendez has been charged with corruption, we have full coverage this afternoon. president biden addresses the crisis on the border with proposals critics say will attract more illegal migration. the sheriff joins us. another irs official comes forward to contradict the
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attorney general, we have our political panel on that and a concern about social media poisoning america's youth. i'm john roberts, join gillian turner and me at the top of the hour for "america reports." >> kayleigh: crime con is kicking off today in orlando, florida, for true crime fans, professionals, my co-host emily compagno is there mingling with the true crime community. emily is host of fox true crime podcast. emily, what are you seeing down there? >> emily: hi, guys. this is incredible. crime con is an absolutely fantastic summit as kayleigh
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described bringing together so many people in this genre. people say why is true crime popular? three reasons. we are fascinated. we tell ghost stories and read horror novels. it is attention to cold cases, it is support for law enforcement, the reason we know to advocate and allocate resources so crimes can be solved, families can get closure and people who immerse themselves in the true crime genre are better equipped and feel safer. they say, i know how to fight my way out, how to evade or avoid a situation to begin with. that is who is here with us on fox true crime podcast, we have law enforcement and cis, we have cold case coalition, we have the podcast gold shield and security and self-defense companies and manufacturers and we have so many families of cold case
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victims unsolved that are begging for attention and allocation. we are here for it all, today i'll be on the main stage at 5:20. do not miss it, kayleigh. >> kayleigh: we'll watch. you have a new special on fox nation that takes a closer look at rex heurman, the long island serial killer and we have a clip. >> i was scared enough i had a friend wait in the parking lot to make sure i got to my car okay. >> did you call or text your friend? >> from the table. i said i think this is the gilgo beach killer, meet me in the parking lot, i don't feel safe. i didn't want to go home with him, he was visually agitated, like you could tell he was angry, he put all this work in and then when we walked out, i waved to my friend, you could
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tell he got more agitated. >> kayleigh: emily. >> emily: the question remains, what would you do if you realized halfway through a meal that you were having dinner with a serial killer and that is what happened to nikki carbone, that is just one small part of the fox nation special, the architect of death, the long island serial killer streaming now. we have others that had close calls, people had close interaction with serial killer and what remains for those families who are of the murdered victims found there that haven't become part of those charges. so much we cover there on the fox nation special, the architect of death, gilgo beach murder, long island serial killer. the true crime genre, fox true
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crime podcast and fox nation special, i'm honored to be a part of it all. >> kayleigh: we will watch all of it, we miss you, see you monday. more "outnumbered" in just a moment. his #2s are perfect! he's a brand new dog, all in less than a year. when people switch their dog's food from kibble to the farmer's dog, they often say that it feels like magic. but there's no magic involved. (dog bark) it's simply fresh meat and vegetables, with all the nutrients dogs need— instead of dried pellets. just food made for the health of dogs. delivered in packs portioned for your dog. it's amazing what real food can do.
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♪ alka-seltzer plus powermax gels cold & flu relief with more concentrated power because the only thing dripping should be your style. plop plop fizz fizz winter warriors with alka-seltzer plus. ♪♪ >> last but not least, social media users are roasting "new york times" columnist david brooks after he complained on social media about the price of his dinner. brooks writing "this meal just cost me $78 at newark airport. this is why the americans think the economy is terrible," the restaurant hit back. looks like someone was knocking back serious drinks, bar tab almost 80%, he's complain about
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the cost of his meal. keep drinking, buddy. if it takes a meal to wake up a "new york times" columnist about the state of the economy, i'll take it. >> real economic crisis most americans are experiencing right now, someone pulled up a menu from the restaurant, his burger and fries cost about 15 bucks. if his tab was over $70, how many double shots of whiskey did that man drink before he got on the flight? how did he even make it on to the plane. impressive. >> drinked enough to cause him to send the tweet, probably regrets. >> i disagree with his assessment based on that meal but i think we can all agree the price of things is outrageous, and whether you are drinking or eating, shouldn't cost you $78 unless you get a lot of drinks. but a lot of americans pay $6 for a bottle of water and how could it be reality and part is inflation and part is the airport. as much as i wish i could rip this guy, i have to say when i go to the airport and get some crappy food that's generally
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cold and not very good and cost me $25 for a burger or something small, it does frustrate it. >> complain loudly and maybe something will happen. i was thinking the price of the ticket on the airplane has gone through the roof if you want to travel right now, and that's because we are yet again travelling. >> $78 bar tab, restaurant says -- tab, restaurant said 80% was bar tab, right. so, average cost of a whiskey at newark airport, ten bucks, so six drinks he might have had? nice dinner with a beer, a burger and fries? >> i'm wa tomi, i think he had a point. don't forget to dvr the show. it's friday, get an expensive beer at newark
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