tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News November 17, 2024 3:00am-4:00am PST
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not win. he will stay on message and have democrats trashing donald trump building up harris. we turn back to them, bernie sanders if james cargill. republicans who i will mention, some of whom, and that is networking told us why trump one. can we get new names out there? people who actually know what's going on? a bit of energy and motivation and people who do have a grasp of the events taking place. i'm just saying this. i think the american people will be better served and cnn and msnbc don't change worse, they won't exist five or ten years from now not that it upsets me but you have to wonder what they are thinking so i'll see you tomorrow night monday night 8:00 ♪
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will: good morning, and welcome to "fox & friends" on this sunday morning. will cain, rachel campos duffy, joey jones, good morning. rachel: good morning. will: how's everybody feeling? joey: i feel great. i lost a little sleep over the bulldogs game, but it was a good one. will rachel and i probably have some separate debate about how we spent our night. rachel and i were at madison square garden -- rachel: that's why we're so tired -- will: and we got to see the upc, 3099 last night, there we are along with sean and bear hand
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lin, and it was quite a night. and this is what it looked like right when the main cardigan. card began. [cheers and applause] >> usa! usa! usa! will: donald trump made his entrance right at the beginning of the main card accompanied by rfk, vivek ramaswamy, tulsi gabbard, dan bongino, donald trump jr., eric trump -- rachel: kid rock. will: kid rock and, of course -- joey: elon musk. will: sitting right beside donald trump. i know you don't know then,
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rachel, because you left early -- rachel: i did. and still managed to get here late. will: but you can see there in the video, a big moment was, clearly an authentic moment when he saw joe rogan and went and gave him a big hug and they had a short conversation there there. rachel: yeah. another authentic moment is when the guy who won the heavyweight ufc championship -- by the way, i was telling my daughter when i was walking towards to meet to you at the restaurant before we went, yeah, or i'm going to the ufc game, she was, like, mom, stop -- [laughter] it's not a game. jon jones won the ufc championship, and look what he did with his belt after. watch. [cheers and applause] ♪
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[inaudible conversations] rachel: the music, when i watched this clip, i'm still the king, which is a mexican, you know, very famous sort of mexican -- joey: oh, cool. rachel: so it's kind of cool. i went, i've never been to a ufc fight before, i was a little nervous about what this was going to be the like, and i had so many thoughts, i couldn't stop talking. first, i can't believe how many people go to this thing. this thing was packed to the gills, test testosterone on fire. and then you see donald trump come out, and i leaned over to will, why don't -- even if they don't like ufc, whiept why don't other politicians come to this? it seems like this is votes for the taking. there's so many events politicians go to -- will: joey, you know this, i've been to several of these events, it is incredible.
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the crowd chanting, as you hear. there's some audiences that fit, you know, i don't think that a democratic politician could walk in and receive that kind of welcome. you know what else is like that, joey? probably college football. joey: yeah. we saw it really all through the election season, you went to the georgia alabama game, they come out and they shout his name. it's one thing, college football, southeast is real popular, but the thing about ufc that i think makes donald trump so appealing is this is jon jones, he's been the the hero, the villain, he's been vindicated -- can. rachel: what's the controversy? joey: well, he got himself in trouble. i can't remember what it is the first time. they said, hey, we're pulling your belt. comes back, wins it again can. the the next two bouts he tests positive for performance-enhancing drugs, then he comes back, they had to to give the belt back to the
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him. i can't remember why -- rachel: i see the parallel. [laughter] joey: yeah. at the end of the day, every time he steps into the octagon -- will: he's incredible. joey: -- he's incredible. the and the determination and the talent's there and the will to come back and come back, there's a lot of crossover there. rachel: you see these politicians on both sides is spending so much money to get that celebrity endorsement which didn't work for them, and curating themselves and twisting themselves into pretzels to be this and that. i get it, donald trump going there the, it feels authentic. he's a lover of these kinds of sports whether it's wwe or this. still, it seems like easy, like it's for the taking, this audience. and nobody on the left has a figured out that this exists. will: and no other sports league has, honestly, leaned into that level of red, white and blue. and this as donald trump has
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gone over the mark of 76 million votes in his win for the presidency. 76 million -- rachel: no republican has ever consider -- that's a record for a replunger absolute record. here's newt gingrich talking about that. it's historic. >> because it's very clear if you look at what the campaign was about, what lessons he's taken in the four years he's had to the think about his fist term and -- first term and now you look at who he's nominating to his cabinet, trump has committed to profoundly reshaping the entire federal government in a way that'll heed to more economic growth, to a dramatically smaller deficit and potentially to a balanced budget. so he is a truly historic figure in a way that is kind of hard to imagine. joey: i think that's the other side of it. ufc, combative sports, mma, it's a blue collar culture. the reason why people love it so
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much, i can go to my local gym and train in that. maybe, obviously, not be that good or be a competitive fighter, but you can go train in that. that's why joe rogan ended up becoming the announcer for it. he already did it and enjoyed it, blew up. and so people are so appealed the that because it's blue collar, something you can do at home, and president trump just appeals to those people. 76 million, i guess. will: with as newt gingrich said, i had laura ingraham on the will cain show, she said there the will be two politicians remembered from rough time period. it'll be ronald reagan and donald trump, and i think there's real legitimacy to the historic nature of what we're witnessing. turning our focus to congress as pennsylvania democrat bob casey has yet to concede his senate race. rachel: and now blue officials are openly defying state law by counting ballots that are
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missing required signatures. joey: madeleine rivera is in washington with the details. >> reporter: hi, guys, good morning. before the election the pennsylvania supreme court ruled mail ballots without the proper signatures or dates could not be included in the official results. but as pennsylvania's senate race a heads to a $1 million recount, several election boandg against this ruling. in bucks county a democratic commissioner made this argument when voting to count contested ballots. >> i think we all know that precedent by a court doesn't matter anymore in this up country, and people violate laws anytime they want. so for me, if i violate this law, t it's because i want a court to the pay attention to it. and there is nothing more important than counting votes. >> reporter: republican dave mccormick's campaign99 and the republican national committee are asking the state supreme
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court to affirm if its decision. bob casey's campaign, on the other hand, argues counties should be making their own decisions and that the high court should not intervene. casey has not conceded even though the associated press called the race on november if 7th saying the outstanding ballots would not be enough for him to overtake mccormick. mccormick leads casey at this point by about 20,000 votes, that's a threshold which under state law automatically triggers a recount. mccormick's team says the lead is insurmountable which the ap made clear in calling the race. a recount will be a waste of time and taxpayer money, but it is senator casey's prerogative. senator-elect mccormick is sure senator casey will eventually reach the right conclusion. but during the gop primary race against mehmet oz, casey sued for the ballot count. will: thank you, maaed runs.
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this is a huge story, especially in bucks county where the the pennsylvania supreme court has saided you don't count ballots without the signature, and bucks county's commissioners have said, no, we're going to defy the pennsylvania supreme court. it's truly ignoring the law in order to affect the election. and it's the not going unnoticed. take a look at this from "the washington post" editorial board. democrats thumb their nose at the rule of law in pennsylvania, is the headlines. st corrosive to democracy and invites similar behavior in future elections. rachel: so remember we had -- casey has not concede toed. and the democrats did not allow republican candidate who won, mccormick, to attend the orientation week that they have for members of congress. he ended up going in as the guest of another member. but this is clearly a plan on
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their part. joey: it gets a little bit complicated. you've got to call a spade a spade. mccormick sued to have the same thing done in 2022 the when he was up against dr. oz, is so you can't have one argument two years ago and now when you're on the other side of it have a different argument, and i think this is what's giving this thing life. he's up 26,000 votes, there's less than 80,000 outstanding provision aal ballots, and it seems like they're arguing over hundreds. so the idea that he's going to lose over this is pretty small. with but the fear is, hey, if they can make work, if democrats can go and use the, i guess, legal system to count ballots that are under state constitution not allowed, then what are they going to do in future elections? will: but they're denying the legal system. they're denying the judicial system. they're denying the supreme court of pennsylvania. joey: the county commissioner said i'm going to defy this law because i want to just not pay
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attention. i think they think -- i don't know what they think. rachel: jonathan you are the thely is going to be on later -- turley is going to break it down later in the show. will: so we're at the end of, obviously, shockingly, it's not over, but we're at the end of the kamala campaign. i'm i'm saying it's not over because they're still spending money. [laughter] and their billion dollars spent so far, and it's believed they're $20 million in debt, as you know. in the month of october alone, the harris campaign reportedly spent $2.if 6 million if on private flights -- 2.6 million on private flights. joey: yeah. this is what's funny about. she spent over a billion dollars, this is campaign funds alone. this is just the campaign. this doesn't count all the super pac ifs or all of the support, probably at least a billion dollars, president trump didn't spend 4000 million. he didn't spend 40% of that on his campaign. rachel: here's the ap saying kamala harris a raised a billion
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dollar dollars, plus in defeat she's sill sending persistent appeals to donors. internally, the apparent cash crunch being blamed for the campaign's decision to stop paying many senior staff. as of saturday even those initially told they would be paid through the end of the year. facing internal frustration, the campaign notedfied those that their health insurance would be covered through tend of the year. according to one person with direct knowledge of the situation who spoke on the condition of anonymity to share internal discussions. so there are vendors who are saying i haven't been paid yet, people on the campaign staff who were told even after the campaign you're going to be pairkd you know, through christmas, through the end of december, and now they're saying, no, we don't have enough money. and this brings us back to how they spent the money. and so much of it was spent on these very lavish celebrity endorse. s, and it didn't pay off for the campaign, and pit seems to be, my p it's almost like money
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laundering. it's a way to pay off celebrities to endorse you who maybe would not otherwise endorse you. that's what it locks like to me. am i wrong? will: not. i take it as part of a bigger story. i'm on a spam list that i cannot get off of. i cannot careen my -- clean my e-mail, so i'm getting kamala harris campaign trying to get money, but they were spending money in every way. planes, celebrities, how much were they -- we compared how much they were spending in salary versus the trump campaign in salary, staffer thes on a daily basis, and to me, this is the kind of competency they would have run in running anything. you would have just imported that into the federal government, that level of responsibility. rachel: and that kind of debt. we are $34 trillion in debt. joey: look at the last four years, that is hair brand. they believe they can throw money at issues and fix. if you look at iran, they believe they can throw money at
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something, release money to something, and that makes it better rather hand -- you're training pavlov's cogs. they go and act bad, you throw money at them. why would they stop throwing money? i spent a lot of time in the nonprofit world, and the most valuable asset you can get is earned media. if you do something good, if you do something people like and want to hear about. then you can go on for 3-5 minutes and talk about without paying a dime. you don't need a commercial. that was trump's campaign. not because he's the star he is, but because of the message. what people wanted the hear all the way down the line. rachel: i do think people will examine in future elections both of these campaigns in terms of what they spent on on, what worked, the power or pod costs -- of podcasts and, again, sort of the diminishing power of that celebrity endorsement.
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and in hard times people feel i don't care what beyonce -- beyonce has no idea what my life is like. i don't care if jlo likes kamala. will: and perhaps it's not just the diminishished celebrity, but i don't like the amount of money in politics, i don't think anybody does. but we also need to recognize it doesn't necessarily guarantee a win. we can't say, oh, money is how we get our outcomes in politics. clearly not. i give you kamala harris. turning now to your headlines, a fire ripping through a hollywood strip mall saturday destroying multiple businesses. 124 firefighters responding to the to the blaze which took them more than two hours to extinguish. thankfully, nobody was hurt. the cause of the fire is still under investigation. anti-israel protesters marching through downtown chicago yesterday demanding for president biden to the take action on the israel-hamas war. [background sounds]
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>> free, free palestine! not another nickel, not another dime -- ♪ no more money for israel's crime. will: this is the 57th march in chicago since the war began just over a year ago. and on to college football. as joey said, he's excited this morning because the georgia bulldogs bounced back from last week's loss with a big 31-17 win against 7th-ranked tennessee last night. over to the big 12, travis hunter making his way case for the heisman trophy as colorado toppled utah. >> just a few years to go and colorado taking all that out now. here's the reverse, trickery. hunter or steps it up, hunter dives, touchdown, colorado! [cheers and applause] will: yeah, the buffaloes are now, joey, i think this is the first year in a long time it will not be a quarter aback to win the heisman. colorado's 8-32.
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concern 8-22. they're in control of their own destiny. ought to come down to them and byu. maybe both. meanwhile, top-ranked oregon rallying in the fourth quarter to avoid the upset bid and take down wisconsin 16-13. plenty more football today on folk, full slate of nfl action beginning at 1 p.m. eastern time. joey: yeah, bulldogs looked good. i was happy for them. will: up and down for you guys. joey:s. rachel: not a great photo finish, biden in the broadband while china's president xi takes the spotlight. how biden bids a global farewell in trump's shadow, next.
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♪ >> we haven't always agreed, but our conversations have always been candid and always been frank. we have never kidded one another. we've been level with one another. i think that's vital. these conversations prevent miscalculations, ask if they ensure the competition between our two countries will not veer into conflict. competition, not conflict. >> mr. president, are you concerned about a u.s.-china relations under the incoming trump administration?
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[inaudible conversations] rachel: president biden dodging when pressed about u.s. ties to china under trump as he awkwardr of the apec conference annual photo with world leaders with chinese president xi placed front and center. our next guest says trump's vet of the relationship is probably one of the most underappreciated accomplishments of his first term. fox news contributor michael pillsbury joins us now. michael, good morning. >> good morning, rachel. rachel: i saw that picture not only with biden in the background, but that entire event was overshadowed by the fact that china had a $3.5 billion port that they're, you know, inaugurating or opening up in peru. and so another symbol of the power, the commercial power and interest of china that we have neglected. so talk to us about what that moment looks like, why it's bad
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that our president is in the back whether we like biden or not and how that could change because president trump is now assuming -- ascending into power. >> i think the change when president trump takes power will be just enormous. he already turned the the washington point of view on china around in his first term. but i think you know, rachel, he was failed by a lot of his appointees who didn't agree with him on on china. they were quite pro-china and didn't want to make trouble. what has happened now, three big things that are newsworthy. the first is he's assembling a team of people who think the same way he does on china. not only marco rubio, mike waltz, but also he's talked to the "wall street journal", we reported it yesterday, he wants bob lighthizer to come back and be his trade czar, oversee commerce and treasury and other counties in terms of trade. that means the first thing they'll want to do is restore the trade agreement where china
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promised $200 billion to greatly increase american jobs. the second thing you see in a picture like this, it shows the timidity, it shows how much the biden team is afraid of china, and they just couldn't get a deal done. so china is still -- you won't believe n rachel, but china and its ira-type web sites gives companies a tax break for selling fentanyl precursors that go into america and kill tens of thousands of americans. if so this is high on the agenda, mr. trump told me. the third thing is really more important than anything else, he's concerned about nuclear war. so rye thing to bring a cease fire -- trying to bring a ceasefire in ukraine, people don't associate china and the power of china over russia. the chinese say no more, we're not helping you anymore, you've got to have a ceasefire in the ukraine, putin has to listen to that. it's the secret way trump has already described to me a long meeting that he wants to bring
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chinese pressure on russia to stop the ukraine. they've also -- lee got the chinese to openly say, this is during the campaign, chinese openly said we don't want nuclear escalation, we don't want to expand the war, sovereignty's important. these are things that have already made russia kind of angry at china. rachel: yeah. >> so you see what trump can do. he's promising a ukraine peace plan during the time he's president-elect. that's the next two months. so the team is there, the chinese are already giving positive signs, and it's going to be the end of this biden timidity that lets the fentanyl come in and also biden just did not start trade talkses at all. remember how important that was under trump? rachel: yeah. >> there's no trade talks with china because the chinese refused to come. it's really quite an opportunity for trump to get leverage and get things done with china. rachel: really quick, one last question. you say that the deep state, the national security establishment, those bureaucrats want to stop
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donald trump in this next term because wall street gets rich and somehow they're doing the work of wall street who gets rich from not dealing with china and it military ambitions. i don't have a lot of time, but if you could just address that quickly because i think people don't understand that connection. >> yeah. i think president trump knows this. there'll be deep state resistance to his china policy. so his appointments are really, important. right now marco rubio needs a china expert. each county the of the government's got of to have an assistant tech secretary for china. if those people are keep state, it'd be very hard for trump to succeed. he's got to have a lot of people who agree with him in the various posts. i think that's going to happen, at least i hope it's going to happen, rachel, don't you? rachel: yes. michael pillsbury, or you're always on top of this topic. thanks for joining us. >> thanks, rachel. rachel: chuck schumer begging republicans to be bipartisan
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♪ >> i offer a word of caution in good faith, take care not to misread the will of the people. if we want in the next four years senate to be as productive as the last four, the only way that will happen is through bipartisan cooperation. will: senator chuck schumer begging republicans for bipartisanship, a far different can tone than what he struck the before his party lost the election when he pushed potentially getting rid of the filibuster if democrats a had won. our next guest says this is democrat hypocrisy in full force. fox news contributor byron york joins us now. good morning to you, byron. let's start, let's start before we get to this plea from senator schumer. let's play the what if game.
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if democrats had won and had power, what would have been done by chuck schumer? >> well, he would have killed the filibuster, if he could have. go back to august. it's the democratic national convention. kamala harris has only been the nominee for 32-3 weeks. remember, this was in the joy period. she was going up in the polls, everybody was happy, and senator schumer -- even though the senate had a pretty poor electoral outlook -- thought he was going to win. so he thought democrats were going to be in the majority. and his first priority was going to be to kill the filibuster. you remember in to 2022 the when the senate was tied 50-50 and the only way democrats could win was with vice president kamala harris' tie-breaking vote, they still tried to kill the filibuster, fell two votes short, manchin and sinema. so this time in this convention, schumer goes, talks to 'em the accurates and said, look, schumer -- excuse me, manchin and sinema are gone, this time
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we're going the can kill the the filibuster, republicans will have zero role in passing legislation, we can do it all a democrats. will: right. so, byron, would you just help me quickly understand and for everyone watching as well the role of the filibuster and what killing it would have done to allow democrats to cut out republicans. >> yeah. this is the legislative filibuster which requires that for important legislation you gotta get 60 votes. and neither party has 600 votes which means really big, important things can only be passed when there actually is some bipartisan agreement. so it's an torrent important tool to protect minority rights in the senate. will: right. >> and it has long been the subject of hypocrisy. the former -- the late senator fred thompson used to say it's real simple. when we're in the majority, the filibuster is bad. and when we're in the minority, the filibuster is good. will: but.
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but there's consistency among democrats on attacking any, any limitation on protection for minority rights, minority meaning the minority party. meaning they have looked the pack the the supreme court, they have looked to overcome every constitutional provision including the filibuster that stops them from unchecked power. >> you know, fred thorpe thompson's remark was many good humor, and at the time he said it, most senators still supported the filibuster because they know that they may be in the majority today, but tomorrow they could be in the minority. the control of the senate has changed three times in the last ten years. the interesting thing about what democrat accurates were going to do is they -- democrats were going to do, they decided we're finally just going to kill it. there's a legislative maneuver to change the rules that we can use, and we can pass the voting rights bills and the abortion bills and other things the want -- we want to the pass that the do not have bipartisan support. so this was really stepping over
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a line. and i'll tell you, one of the biggest defenders of the filibuster has been mitch mcconnell, the republican leader, and whether republicans were in the majority or the minority, he has said you cannot kill the filibuster because we all know we're going to be in the minority again someday. will: and to me, i think the larger story for everyone watching is the filibuster's only one part of the story where democrats have attempted to the set aside every form of check and balance. now that they lost, they're begging to the keep the filibuster for some form of bipartisanship. byron york, thank you soft. >> thank you, will. will: trump names a longtime fracking executive as energy secretary. what it means for biden's last minute effort to place emissions, taxes on oil and gas companies. that's next. finish (♪)
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joey: the trump transition continues to advance with the president-elect naming liberty energy ceo chris wright to lead the department of energy. this is biden's epa announces a last ditch effort charging the first ever methane tax for emissions by oil and gas companies over the next three years. here to weigh in is power the future founder daniel turner: daniel, thanks for joining us this morning. >> thank you. joey: first off, let's talk about this new fee bind's
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rolling out in the -- biden's rolling out in the midnight hour of his administration. we're talking $9000 per metric ton in 2024 and jumps up to $1500 in two years, by 20 the 6. -- 2026. i believe this was part of the unflaix reduction -- inflation reduction act, believe it or no- [laughter] and it's just now getting enacted. biden's doing it with a couple months left in office, and it's going to be pretty burdensome for our oil and gas production. tell us about it. >> absolutely. this is a tax not on methane as much as it's a tax just on natural gas. if you have natural gas in your home, you're going to pay more starting next year unless this is repealedded. and it was part of the inflation reduction act, so there is a mandate on congress with having control of both chambers, there is a mandate on the republican congress to get this repealed very quickly. but you have to ask the biden
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administration, the inflation reduction act is two years old. you waited until you lost the white house and you lost the senate to then conveniently roll out the implementation of this tax? sos this is just the final kick in the teeth of an angry biden administration who sees hair green agenda slowly disappearing from the if american landscape. joey: yeah. so, you know, president trump names chris wright who's an oil and gas executive to be the administrator of the epa. to me, that's almost like let's go in the opposite direction. we're going to do everything different than the green new if deal policies that this administration's had. >> yeah. joey: do you think when you stack that with lee zeldin at epa -- i'm sorry, director of energy, secretary of energy for wright, but when you put lee zeldin as everything p if a administrator on top of that and you've started this trifecta of folks who are going to, i guess, make gas cheaper? is that the end goal? is it possible in. >> yeah where. you can see the smile on my
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face. these are really exciting time for this industry, and there's a lot to look forward to. this is a crazy statistic, but it's true. chris wright, who's wonderful, by the way, i've had the chance to speak with him on a number of panels and at conferences, fantastic. chris wright will be the first energy secretary in history when has wail worked in the energy industry. that's how our government works. we have hired historically doctoral candidates and harvard, you know, law graduates, and those are all lovely people. but we've never hired someone who actually has worked in the industry. and so to have a sew wrote who knows -- a ceo who knows all of the red tape, all of the obstacles, all of the cooperation that industry needs from government to thrive, to have an actual ceo in this position shows a huge shift in how president trump is going to run government. and that's got to be really exciting for the american people. joey: yeah. i'm sure the folks down in houston are excited to see
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liquid natural gas get main seem the, and all the folks up in the plain states are probably happy maybe they won't have so many windmills popping up. thanks for joining us, and we'll see how it turns out. >> thanks, joey. joey: thanks, daniel. going to os the it over to rachel now. rachel: yeah. those windmills are so ugly, and they kill birds. they kill'king eagles, they're horrible. >> boeing is laying off more than 400 members of its aerospace labor union, the first time in a series of major cuts from the company as they plan if on getting rid of roughly 17,000 jobs in the coming month. boeing's ceo says it is the layoffs are due to overstaffing. the the air travel giant has been under scrutiny after a series of issues with their planes including when a door panel blew off during an alaska airlines flight in january. l.a. county's newly-elected district attorney, nathan hochman, is asking supporters of
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eric and lyle menendez not to rush the to judgment ahead of the brothers' resentencing hearing next month. their 1989 murder case has been back mt. spotlight due to the to the popularity of a recent netflix series on their crimes which hockman says he won't watch telling the daily beast, quote, i don't want to see them, what's the point? i'd rather read the book. the menendez brothers' resentencing hearing is set for december 11th. actress rachel ziegler was reportedly nearly cut from the new snow white movie after a series of controversial to comments ahead of the film's release next year. according to the daily mail, disney if exbiives were worried her comments would hurt the upcoming movie saying, quote, they would love to tell her to stop talking. the most recently, he called out trump voters on her instagram story after saying, quote with, may trump supporters and voters or and trump himself never know
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peace. and those are your headlines. let's turn now to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for our fox weather forecast. rick's going to to give us some peace of mind about the weather. rick: could you believe the the me 9/11 business brother thing was 35 years ago? rachel: no. rick: most people probably don't kno what concern know what this is. rachel: i'm old enough to know. rick: i know, you and me both. we're going to get a lot of rain for a lot of people that hamid it. a lot of rain and mountain snow, snow levels coming down to around 2,000 feet. down across central california we're going to get moisture as well. more rain today and tonight across areas across parts of the south, oklahoma and in towards texas. this right here is remnant moisture from what was tropical storm sara, but rain coming to the mid-atlantic and northeast. not only rain, but some snow. and that's part of this cold air that's beginning to dive in
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throughout parts of the inner mountain west. that's going to bring in the chance for snow as well across parts of the far northern plains. look what happens wednesday through friday, snow across parts of the central appalachians. we still have people impacted by hurricane helene, and they've got cold air and snow coming to some of those towns that were impacted from that storm. rachel: a ray thank you, rick. it's national homemade bread day, and chef eric has some tip to make the perfect loaf. ♪ hold on to that feeling. ♪ street --
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joey: welcome back. today is national homemade bread day. rachel: and here with all the best baking tips is chef eric levine, owner of vico and 317 main street. also has a new book coming out -- it is out. >> forking good. amazon, barnes and known. any -- bread. bread is one of those things that brings everyone back to the table. it's easy to make, and people get so intimidated by it. but if you start with some good flour, not bleached flour because with it has chemicals in
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it, it doesn't do good for the body. once you shift out of that -- rachel: this is what i want to talk to you about. we talk about make america healthy again, and people go, how do i start? there's toxins and all these add thetives, the easiest thing is -- >> the start with bread. rachel: because the bread in the stores is filled with junk. >> and it's really easy to make at home. you start with great flour. you can use honey or natural sugar, not processed sugar. yeast. we have two types of yeast that we use -- will: get out of your way. >> you're good. the fresh wreath is the best -- yeast is the best, but you've got to use warm water. if you get hot, it's not going to rise. all these breads have been properly fermented. will: what do you have here in the raw form? >> with this is a rye bread -- rachel: how come it didn't stick to your hands? >> it did a little bit. this is traditional white. the important part is you let
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the fermentation happen and people make the mistake of using hot water instead of room temperature water. again, it'll kill the yeast. the bread's got to ferment, and then you're able to pull it out and put it into different forms. you bake it in the oven, brush it with extra virgin olive oil, and you get a nice if crisp texture on the outside, and the freshness is really important. even non-bread with, non-bread, it's a very nice, light -- nan, indian bread that goes well. we have hummus, we have roasted garlic, we have a base sill, a balsam sicken -- balsam imon this side, but adding flavors or just using straight the up olive oil. using different presses of olive oil so you get an extra virgin olive oil, that is the first press. it's green it's got this
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beautiful flavor. will: which of these, because it's national homemade bread, which is the easiest to make expect hardest? >> foe catch ya is the easiest to make. rachel: we use a bread machine, it's still homemade, you can set it at night and it's ready if the morning. so easy. >> at 317 we work with a company called lakewood who does our process and the way we want it, but it's all fresh, great ingredients. and when you start with great ingredient, you finish with a great product. again,. non-processed sugar. honey instead of sugar -- rachel: i think that's great. joey: chef, i would break bread with you anytime. rachel: yes, that's a great -- that's what it's all about. joey: more "fox & friends" moments away. ♪ -- though the paint could peel, the glass could shatter -- ♪ let it rain ♪
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