tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News November 17, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PST
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♪ ♪ will: it's the 7 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" weekend starting with this, president-elect trump getting roaring applause at last night's ufc fight while elon musk revealing who host supporting for treasury secretary. joey: a recount is on in pennsylvania with democrats admitting to breaking state law to count ballots mt. mccormick-casey senate race. rachel: and governor j.b. pretty kerr embracing transgender pole, but he's doubling down on it even after the election despite voters or rejecting policies and being swayed by ads like this. >> kamala's for they-them, president trump is for you. rachel: that was of a very effective ad. second hour of "fox & friends" weekend starts right now. ♪ if.
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♪ ♪ rachel: good morning, everybody. it's 7:00 here in new york city. you're looking at -- well, you were looking at a skyline of st. louis, missouri. we didn't do a game on that because that was pretty obvious. joey: i really wanted the game that time. [laughter] rachel: even i would have won on that one. will: well, you're looking at, as rachel said, st. louis. now you're looking at some tired individuals who stayed up last night watching sporting vents. joey stayed up late watching his bulldogs take down the volunteers, rachel and i went to the garden and watched ufc -- rachel: rachel's first ever ufc fight. will: correct. she did leave early though. rachel: i had to. ily an hour away. i had to get back. he stayed to the very end. if you -- let's just show what
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it felt like in there. i've never been to one. this thing was on fire. it was jam packed. donald trump walks out, look at that. will: and this is what it sounded like. ♪ [cheers and applause] >> usa! usa! usa! rachel: donald trump followed by rfk jr. you see there, kid rock, elon musk, tulsi, gab a ard, speaker johnson and, to of course, you just saw that footage of him hugging joe rogan which was, proved to be a pretty important endorsement there at the end before he clinched his remarkable, historic victory on jutte what is it two weeks ago?
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will: forever. rachel: it feels like forever. if it was fascinating. i enjoyed the the experience. two guys in a cage fighting. i didn't know we still did that stuff. it happens. [laughter] and a lot of people come out to watch it. joey: rachel's off-camera comment, it was it's very primal. [laughter] rachel: i'm so looking at this like an archaeologist, like i'm studying the culture. i've never been part of this, and we talked the earlier why aren't more politicians able to do what donald trump did and look so comfortable in that setting. will: it was interesting last night, after almost every fight, joey, the winner would give some acknowledgement to trump who was sitting ringside. almost every fight. i think if the winner was from where civil, that often might not have happened, but if it was an american in the fight, there was some acknowledgment for our future and former president and none bigger than what many considers today welcome back own the greatest of all times, jon jones.
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he was title heavyweight bout last night. interestingly, jon jones represents a constituency that is symbolic in this. he's a black man. as you pointed out, joey, he's been through his troubles, ups and downs, and he absolutely tipped his hat to donald trump. rachel: watch. ♪ [cheers and applause] joey: wow, that's awesome. that's a champ that, like i said earlier, has come back from a lot of adversity, a lot of it self-imposed. i think he'd admit that. but he's won some battles out of the octagon and just about every one of them in the octagon. he's the best of at what he does, and he's bowing to president trump. it's amazing to sit here and see. when you look at the crowd, the
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clip before this, i believe that was jelly roll. he's another redemption story. he has taken the music industry by symptom. he has won just with about every award a male singer can do, he was in jail and addicted and all these things negative in his life. he found redemption, he found his version of salvation, and now he's on top of the world. that's the one thing president trump, i think, now connects with a lot of people on. not necessarily a second chance, because that indicates you did something wrong, but just this idea that you can find if redemption or a rebound or comeback -- rachel: yeah, i think, joey -- joey: that's exactly what this election was. rachel: if you were -- first of all, americans alls love the underdog. joey: yeah. rachel: but if grow felt like the system was rigged against you, whether it's in your own life, the company that you work for, the economy that's not working for you and people in power controlling things and
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affecting your life, donald trump speaks to you. this is a man who took on the system and now is in power. this is, uh-uh think, almost like a triumphant moment among the people who actually put him into with office, the blue collar workers, the young males. this was a moment, and i think it's a very -- it was very american. will: well, that's, that arena full of voters just part of the 76,427,168 americans who voted for donald trump. it's a record, the most ever by a republican. rachel: absolutely. meanwhile, trump taps oil boss and fracking advocate chris wright as his energy secretary. he is a member of the newly-formed council of national energy, and his lawyer, or william scharf, will be assistant to the president and white house of staff secretary as a the key treasury secretary role remains up for grabs.
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and what elon musk did is he weighed s in. he liked one candidate more, but then he put out a post on his platform, x, and he said would -- it would be interesting to hear more people weigh in on this for donald trump to consider feedback. my view for this, for what it's worth, is that the sense is a business as usual choice whereas howard lutnick will actually enact change. business as usual is driving america bankrupt, so we need change one way or another, but then he said, hey, what to do you guys think? joey: this is incredibly interesting. if you've watched him, been on x and. watched his involvement with the trump campaign, this is what transparent a city is. i think six, a ate months ago you'd look at that and be like, oh, man, he's trying to influence the decision president trump makes. i don't think that's it at all. i think this is the angle he brings to the administration. the rule he's plague as an
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adviser to president trump, the idea that you can bring the people directly into the conversation, and that's not a bad thing. and i think dose has built this, you know, wall, ironically, around itself and this idea that decisions get made in back rooms and you bring it out and you're a united front. you hear that a lot, everybody's on the same page. how many times have we seen keywords in the 7 a.m. hour and they're consistent through the 7 p.m. hour on msnbc talking about something. this is the opposite. this is someone who was literally sitting beside trump last night going on his platte of a -- platform of a billion people ask and saying, hey, what do y'all think about this? will: chris wright, the this debate is over treasury, scott bessent versus howard lutnick, and, rachel, you talked to scott bess sent yesterday. rachel: i kid. it's not supporting me, fors about -- it's about the cabinet trump's going to to create. donald trump has been so correct
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on his policies. the past few months i have had the chance to travel with president trump. we were at barbershop in the if bronx, and and then i recently sat in on a meeting with he and elon musk on this new, the efficiency commission. like, who else could to that, you know? and both sides love him. the people love him, the richest man in the world, it's very exciting that we are going to bring the silicon valley solutions into government. rachel: so when i interviewed him, so this is what i kind of gathered. a lot of heavy hitters do like scott bessent, who you just saw. i think it was stephen moore, art laffer, people like that, and they say he's got really deep knowledge if something were to go wrong in the economy, this is the somebody who with understands it deeply. but other people saying that
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lutnick is you know, pro-cryptocurrency, he's more on the cutting edge and more reflective of the sort of, i guess, cutting edge nature of this cabinet that seems to be forming. so two points of view. i don't really know. i don't have enough about this. elon seems to like lutnick more, elon asking viewers or platform users what hay think. will: well, the governor of illinois, j.b. pritzker, he's vowing despite what looks like a big player in the election pushback onup transgender ideology, he's triple down on it. he put this out on x. this transgender awareness week, i want you to know that i see you and have your back as governor. illinois has enshrined protections for gender-affirming care to meet this moment, and because of that, you'll always have a home. not realizing this was transgender awareness week. didn't know that was a week. joey: it's interesting to me that the we didn't mow. that's it's interesting to me the way that popular culture has
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embraced, you know, i guess you would call it the lgbtq messaging and just celebration over the last several years -- will: i thought that was up june. i thought there was an entire month. joey: my point is maybe they've backed off a little bit. maybe they've backed off a little bit, popular culture in general, because of the effectiveness of this ad for president trump. >> kamala's for they-them. president trump is for you. joey: that's the sent amount of the people. rachel: you know, aoc actually removed her pronouns from her -- will: she did. rachel: -- instagram account, profile. so, listen, what i think you're seeing is i don't think the people really loved it. that ad was effective because people didn't really love it, especially when the trans ideology was being imposed and indoctrinated into children -- joey: that is sickening. if. rachel: that is. you're right about that. but i think what you're seeing is more the corporations who get
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on the bandwagon with whatever is the latest thing, ukraine, trans rights, whatever it is. i think they're realizing go woke, go broke, they're backing off. but, boy, this guy, pritzker -- by the way, his family has, like, his sister is a big trans activist, and they've invested a lot of money into these surgeries, so he has some real interest anytime. will: you guys are talking about the role it played in the election, here's a quote from a 2025-year-old voter from d.c -- 20 the that-year-old -- 25-year-old. i shocked myself, i voted for trump. i was so impressed by j.d. vance and how normal he appeared. i think i became radialized on the men in women's sports issue. the ad that says trump represents you, that was so come opeling. he represented normalcy somehow to me. i want to go back to this j.b. pritzker thing though because everyone was talking about the lessons they should be taking from this election, and you're
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suggesting, hey, maybe aoc's backing off, right? if that's not what's happening in illinois. joey: no. will: he is trillioning down on the policies that really seem to have a backlash. and not just transgender issue. this week he also a was, like, hey, illegal immigrants, you have a home in illinois. watch this on msnbc. >> i'm going to do everything that i can to protect our undocumented immigrants, the residents of our state. and i also a, obviously, need to make sure that whatever they're doing in our state, the federal government, that it is the actually within federal law or state law for them to do it. joey: yeah -- rachel: you know, will, i have to say this guy is not -- in my view, he does not represent -- if you want to understand what's going to happen to the democrat party, the touchpoint is aoc. aoc actually is a populist. there's -- i don't agree with her on a ton of things, but, you
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know, we talked about this yesterday. a lot of people in her district vote for her and voted for trump. she's been out of touch on issues like ukraine and so forth, but she is on social media, she's on those platforms, joey, she's always trying to get a feel for where people are at. i think she's a little more flexible than these kind of older guys who go i think i'm for trans if rights, and they don't mow how to shift. i think she's the one to watch on where the party goes. joey: yeah. i don't mean this in the negative at all because at 38, i look back at where i was at 25 the or 28, and i think, man, i had to keep growing up, learning, experiencing things. she got into congress at a very young age comparatively, so you would expect her to evolve with age because that's what everybody does. there's a saying that if you're under 30 and conservative, you're heartless. if you're over 30 and you're liberal, you're probably broke. will: that's not exactly the way i heard it -- it's 25, the way i
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heard it and heartless under 25, brainless over 25. [laughter] joey: that works too. i gave you my watered-down version of that one. rachel: i think aoc's responding to polls and a little bit to her constituents. jee yeah yeah. i'm trying to paint it in the best light possible. we want unity here. we're a unity couch. we can bring in tulsi and aoc. all right, turning now to your headlines. israel says one of its reservists was killed while fighting in northern gaza yesterday with as its military continues heavy operations in the area of northern gaza. meanwhile, officials in israel also they say intercepted a rocket, quote, launched from the east over southern israel earlier this morning but no injuries have been reported. the. the library of congress has been macked by a, quote, unknown adversary concern hacked. the hackers hacked e-mails between january and september.
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it is not clear who the hackers are, but law enforcement9 and the capitol are investigating the incident. and amazing footage shows a remarkable nighttime rescue of a tighten surfer off the coast of -- kite surfer off the coast of california. helicopters hoisting the surfer and rescue swimmers back up to safety and, thankfully, nobody was hurt. and finally, police officers in washington had a unique way of bringing home the bay -- bacon after chasing town an escaped pig. >> oh, he's so sweet. >> well to the east side. >> the pig is being noncompliant. there are. will: noncompliant pig. joey: okay, so this is funny. the notorious with p.i.g., as the department called him, was caught before being brought to a nearby animal sanctuary.
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i think he heard they were about to put breakfast on, he had to make his escape. i can't blame him. will: texas took care of the pigs yesterday, arkansas. joey: barely. will: i like pigs. not barnyard -- joey: let me ask you -- will: like a pot-bellied -- joey: could you have a expig if eat bacon? will: yes with. rachel: you really love donkeys -- will: i loven do keys -- donkeys, and pigs are super intelligent. rachel: are pigs more intelligent? will: i don't know. i like smart animals. i don't like dumb ones. rachel: are any of your dogs smarter than donkeys? will: i have a doberman. really smart breed. i don't know. throw in dog, pig, donkey, producers, there's got to be some irk q ranking -- [laughter] joey: donkeys fend off
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predators. they're like sheep dogs. rachel: i know more about con keys than i ever wanted to know. [laughter] will: i've been trying to get pete to get a donkey in tennessee the. now he's going to be in washington, d.c -- [laughter] rachel: plenty of asses there. will: pennsylvania democrats openly admit counting illegal ballots in the mccormick-casey race. jonathan turley next. but shingrix protects! only shingrix is proven over 90% effective. shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older. shingrix doesn't protect everyone and isn't for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. tell your healthcare provider if you're pregnant or breastfeeding. increased risk of guillain-barré syndrome was observed after getting shingrix. fainting can happen so take precautions. most common side effects are pain, redness, and swelling where injected, muscle pain, tiredness, headache, shivering, fever, and upset stomach. ask your doctor about shingrix today. ♪ believe it or not baby... at university of phoenix...
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♪ will: while the pennsylvania senate race has been officially called for republican dave mccormick, incumbent senator bob casey still refusing to concede, pushing for all ballots including what appears to be illegal ballots to be counted. that same message is being echoed by some democratic officials including this one admitting she doesn't care if that illegal ballot has been disqualified, she wants it counted. >> i think we all know that precedent by a court doesn't matter anymore in this country, and people violate laws anytime they want. so for me, if i violate this law, it's because i want a court to pay attention to it. will: so here to discuss, george washington university law professor and fox news contributor, jonathan turley. that is a really wild and, i
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guess we should appreciate the level of honesty in that statement -- [laughter] like, the pennsylvania supreme court has said you a may not count those ballots. she said, i don't care about the law, i'm counting the ballots. finish. >> no, it is a revealing moment, and it is the an honest moment where you have this official saying i just don't care, i don't care that the highest court in my state said that these do not count. now, that court in that opinion said these ballots without the necessary signature or date are invalid under a very clear and express state law. 9 and the court said we are not going to be changing election law days before an election. we're just not going to do it. so this official says i don't care. and so you really have someone who is tossing away any pretense of principle, and she's not alone in this. in order to get casey over that line, likely -- he's likely to
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need these ballots. he has to have a yield on provisional ballot which will almost be unprecedented. he's got to get up there in fetterman type of territory. but these are not those districts that are going to yield that type of thing. will: right. >> i think what you have are officials saying we're going to have to count some of these ballots if we're boeing to flip this election. will: we're going to come back to this on obscene election interfencer case -- interference in bucks county. they're saying it's a waste. senator-elect mccormick's lead is insurmountable, a recount would be a waste of time, taxpayer money, but it's senator case su's prerogative. senator mccormick knows what it's like to lose an election and is sure senator casey will eventually lose the right conclusion. you'll get there eventually. but what you're saying to us, professor, is the margin -- even though it's within the range which you can count for a
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recount -- is not there. the vote's not there unless you go get these illegal votes, these illegal ballots. >> that's right. we're talking about ballots that were set aside. and there was an automatic recount when you're below .5% in pennsylvania. but you still need to have a higher yield, because you've got to pick up about 20,000 or so votes. and some of those ballots, obviously, are going to go for your opponent. so you need a much higher yield, and that is extremely unlikely. that's why the ap called the race some timing ago. and the fact is, this is going to take time, it's going to take a lot of money or but it's not likely to change the outcome unless you can i somehow count ballots that shouldn't be counted. and this really does show -- i wrote with a book on the age of rage just recently, and shows the meaning of that age of rage, that it gives you a license to do things and say things you would not ordinarily do or say.
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and here you've got someone who's saying, you know what? the law doesn't matter anymore, and so i have a license to do this. well, obviously, she count. and if they count those ballots, the democratically-controlled state supreme court will reverse it. but we will spend a lot of time and a lot of money as they try to flip this election. will: that's fascinating, the age of rage. your rage forgives you your own hi pockily s the lack of -- even you're looking to to undermine democracy. you were just telling me, who's the lawyer helping bob casey? [laughter] >> well, they really brought in the usual s&p 500s. of course, they brought in marc elias who was critical in the infamous steele dossier. this is a no to have yous lawye, you know, has been court sanctioned. the government sanked the clinton campaign -- sanctioned the clinton campaign for hiding
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the funding of the dossier, that this may sound familiar if you followed the trump trial in manhattan. they got a maul fine. but a reporter said the clinton campaign denied ever funding it. so this is someone who has an incredibly checkered a past, and casey embraced him. the question is, at what point is the race not worth it? you have a distinguished career in the senate, and i think that he's got to have a moment of introspection at this point and say i'm going to have to do what so many have called upon me to do -- i'll with. will: right. >> -- accept that i lost and call it a day. will: professor jonathan turley, thanks so much for sharing your with experience with us this morning. thank you so much. >> thank, will. will: the experience that that matters, our next guests outline the positive changes a secretary hegseth will bring to the pentagon and military recruitment.
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♪ >> this is someone who, you know, is known to be a white supremacist, known to be an extremist. there's no evidence that this mans has ever run anything. the fact that he is a veteran is insufficient. >> i will just say hegseth would say, he would deny strenuously he's a wheat supremacist -- >> do so did trump. >> i just want to put that in the record. rachel: shameful. more baseless claims from the far left going after our friend, pete hegseth, with everything they've got as president trump picks him for i his incoming defense sec state. our next guest a argues pete has the experience that matters and he's exactly9 what the pentagon and america needs for recruitment and to the keep us safe. former army intel captain jeremy hunt joins us along with former special forces officer gater exn
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if er. first of all, welcome to both of you. jeremy, when you started seeing these attacks, what kid you think? i sat by this guy for a long time. not happening. >> exactly. [laughter] i think what we are witnessing, we're witnessing the dying gasps of the dei disaster that has affected our military, and we're seeing people who have made millions off this hoax who are realizing their grift is up. i think so many of us would have seen that and responded and, you know, fire back, want to pop off, you know? but if you look at the way pete responds if, he's been so gracious. his response, he's thinking about the soldier, sailor, airman and marine, and marines when finally feel like they can be comfortable back in their military again. you know, for the parents that are considering sending their child into the military, that have been nervous to do that under the biden-harris administration, well, or now with president trump and pete hegseth in charge, they feel
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comfortable sending their child into the military again. it's for the youngster gent who's thinking about reenlisting but, you know, who happens to be white and was it would if you're a white guy, you might not have the same chances at promotion if because of the color of your skin. that person feels like, you know what? i have a shot again. i look at all these attacks, and i'm really, honestly, encouraged by pete's response and by saying, look, this, you know, dei, of course they're going to be attacking me because they don't want to see the soldiers, sailors, airmen and marine have another shot, but their day has finally come. we're very excited to get to january. rachel: there's a spanish saying that says when the dogs bark, it means you're galloping. i think peeve's over the target, and the right -- pete's over the target, and the right people are getting tick off. garrett, there's a lot of defense contractors, and that whole lobbying grifter scene is
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also upset because he's disrupting the apple cart there. so talk to me ab that, because one of the criticisms they have against him is, well, he doesn't know anything. he's not connected the all these defense contractors, and a lot of people are going, well, that's kind of what i like about him. >> that's exactly right. that's exactly what i like about him. he's not coming from a board of one of the major defense contractors. rachel: yes. >> that's what we've seen time and time again, that we bring in an individual who served as a general officer and then moved to a defense board, and then we bring him back into the pentagon to continue business as usual. well, the lower levels of the military and the majority of veterans' organizations, grassroots veterans' organizations are saying enough with that. we want minute who has no connection to the large -- somebody who has no connection and break this stuff the up. there's universal agreement that our acquisitions process is broken. so someone outside of thats process needs to come in, a take a look at it and say need to reto do this thing and start picking up weapons and equipment
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that are going to to help the service member and not help our bottom line and stock shares. rachel: yeah. just on a personal note i have a daughter, we talk the about it yesterday, who's been thinking about west point. >> awesome. rachel: right. and i asked pete, what do you think? she's a girl, i'm worried, and i'm worried about this administration. and he said, wait and see. let's see what happens in the election. if donald trump wins, that might be a good time for her to think about that. and, boy, donald trump won bigtime, and i guess west point might be in her future. we'll see. >> love to hear it. amazing. rachel: yeah -- >> woe whoa, whoa, whoa -- [inaudible] [laughter] ray all right, you two, or thanks for joining us. >> thank you. rachel: you got it. tomorrow, the laken riley murder trial continues after prosecutors reveal she fought with her killer for 18 minutes before she died. how the case put biden's border failures on full display. we're going to a talk about that. very sad story next.
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reveal chilling details, painting the suspect as a killer hunting for females before targeting riley and the struggle that lasted 18 long minutes. joey: yeah. fox news contributor and retired nypd inspector paul mauro will be covering the trial live from georgia all week, and he joins us now. thank you for joining us, paul. we've gotten a day or two of trial. it's been very public. what have we learned so far? >> well, the evidence is quite compelling, and a lot of that evidence was challenged by the defense because they knew it was going to be so dispositive. you've got dna evidence that is from skin scrapings that were collected from underneath laken's fingernails that go the ibarra's -- s na, you have a thumbprint from ibarra because one of the plastic gloves that he allegedly wore had a hole in the thumb. you've got a video that appears to show him discarding clothing in a dumpster. you have you have the phone
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forensics. you really have a narrative that demonstrates his day that day including an earlier incident where he was allegedly a peeping tom. again, he's innocent until proven guilty, we recognize that. but the prosecution at this point has really created a very compelling narrative of how he might have done what he did and what happened to the laken riley that morning. rachel: yeah. that's a lot of circumstantial evidence. i think it's clear to most of us what he did. the family obviously wanting justices, wanting this man behind bars forever if not executed. but what else do they want? i'm sure that this issue of the border has really -- it's really at the center of this or right? >> yeah, it really is, you know? the have entry of jose ibarra into the country is a little bit murky. i.c.e. listed him as a gotaway, but there was early reporting that he had a sponsor is. i a contacted the alleged
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sponsor, they deny it. so it looks like he may have presented at the border as somebody who was coming in under the well known cnhv program at this point which allows for expedited processing if you have a sponsor. he then seems to have left the system, left the processing and come into america. he gets arrested in new york, he gets arrested as well down in georgia. he's actually out with a warrant on him when he's ultimately arrested for this crime. so it becomes an unfortunate but iconic event because it really put on the radar screen for america in an unconditional way that we had a real problem at border and that we were importing not just garden variety criminals here, but members of criminal gangs who were really committed to doing a whatever they wanted, whenever they wanted. in this case, the gang being tren de aragua from venezuela. will you're going to be live in athens, georgia, all week long. i watched a little bit last week, paul.
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it's pretty overwhelming evidence against jose ibarra. a fairly technical, to the level of being weak, defense of jose ibarra. as we go into this week, and we'll be watching you on fox, what are you watching for in trial this week? >> so as we know, there's a bench trial going on. he chose not to have a jury. generally, you do that because you have a very tech call dependent fence. you know you're not going to get a lot of sympathy in the juriskick. that's what's calculated here -- jurisdiction here. the defense team seems to be playing on the idea that there is the probability that his brother, diego, was actually the p if everything rt -- perp. diego was wearing the hat that they feel was or worn during the event. so the defense seems to have seized upon that fact to try to create a counternarrative that it was, in fact, the brother k. and heir saying9 that the dna is not dispositive, don't trust it,
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it's only a exalter talking to you -- computer. and, in fact, there could it could have been the brother. the problem for jose is that the judge does not seem inclined towards him in any way with this evidence. he's ruled against the defense in every defense motion to suppress the evidence. so i'm going to be lookingor, frankly, a pretty quick adjudication. this thing may even come down monday. will: oh, wow. we'll be watching, paul. thank you so much. rachel: you guys, she was going to be a nurse. she was going to a make the the world a better place. so sad. will: we turn now to your headlines. the jennings creek wildfire is now prompting local officials to evacuate residents in over saw 150 homes in warwick, new york. the blaze has burned through 5,000 acres between new york and new jersey. it is the 88% contained on the new york side. the cause of the fire, though, has still not been determined. you can smell the smoke when you wake up in the morning. as we wait the hear more on elon
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missing and vivek ramaswamy's new department -- i loan musk's and vivek ramaswamy's new d. of efficiency, doge, a former trump official reveals what agencies he think could be on the chopping block. >> we have a lot of cost in the u.s. government in a lot of different regulatory agencies. agencies that potentially overlap. the cfpb and the sec, they both are regulators for retail investors. do we need two of them? these are questions that should be asked because at the end of the day, both those agencies are very expensive. will: that's the consumer financial protection bureau. it has a $8000 million annual budget while the securities and exchange commission has an annual budget of about $2.4 billion. that's correct. fair amount of overlap. a new survey finds gen-z and millennials willing to go into debt for their pets. the harris poll survey found nearly a quarter of pet parents face debt specifically related
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to pet if expenses but it's even higher with 34% of millennials and 29% of gen-zers. and those are your headlines. rachel: it's expensive to to go to the vet. it's very expensive. will: with a little surprising because really the truth is almost all of the cost of a pet on the back end of their life. young gen-zers, unless they're adopting old pets, they should have a 10-year run. rachel: a lot of people are having pets and not babies. maybe babies are more expensive -- joey: yeah. my e little frenchie cost me, like, 10 grand -- will: to buy? joey: no, no, no, to keep alive. christmas came early for that little guy. my initial reaction was, well, keep hem comfortable but i got today to -- told, no, we gotta keep him alive. will: let's turn to our chief meteorologist -- rick are rick man, there's a lot to unpack there. [laughter] who wouldn't go into debt for
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their -- rachel: rick is a pet daddy -- will: i am too, rick, but that's a modern phenomenon, the i'll spend whatever for my if pet. rick: pet insurance, that us a all -- that's all i've got to say. places like hartford connecticut, you are 10 inches below where you should be in rain since september 1st and around 4 degrees warmer than average. it's been warm and dry. in both of these cases, the driest and warmest on record. we have some rain coming in wednesday afternoon into thursday, just look at what happens. it's going to be kind of slow mover, not a massive downpour at any point. but this system is going to linger for a couple of days. and we're going to see chances of showers over and over again wednesday, thursday into friday and maybe even in towards saturday morning. by the way, all that blue, that's snow. we might be seeing some spots 6-12 the inches, especially in the mountain to bees of west virginia. some relief's coming. will: thanks, rick. joey: god, family and football.
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christian academy to a state championship. >> i want these guys to win a championship. now, whether they have it as far as ability or not, that remains to be seen. but what i can tell you is they have really put in the kind of work and commitment to be champions. joey: coach edenny -- denny joins us now. thanks for joining us. coach, we got this final episode's out. what should viewers expect the see when they tune in? >> well, you better have about three kleenex with you -- joey: oh, man. >> -- because this is really an emotional end sed. you know, i don't see heeds things until they're out -- see these things until they're out, i don't know what's coming. aaron will give me a little hint every now and then, and honestly are, i teared up. it was really emotional. joey: you know, aaron, sometimes when you see reality tv you think, oh, you know, there's
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something fake there, they're making that up. what's it like to produce a show like this, that's so genuine and authentic? >> this show is more than just a show. this is exactly what this place is. my approach is to be a fly on the wall, you know? if a lot of times reality tv shows are set up, they're put in a position and a place to kind of achieve what the producers want to to achieve, and all i have to do around coach denny and his team is turn the cameras on and let them be them because it's truly awe innocent in. what you see is what you get with god, family, football. suis joe you know, coach, the way football is set up now, name, image and likenesses, social media and all these things pulling at the athletes, obviously, your football program's faith-based in the sense it's not just about football, it's also about your faith and who you are as a person. does that make it more difficult, or do you feel like you have an advantage with these kids to keep them from being distracted? >> i love for christ is for
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every challenge of life. is so there are a lot more challenges right now for kids in high school that are athletes with nil and the rest of it. but we feel that the lord jesus christ has an concern is an answer for life and for what's going if on in our lives right now. so we're preparing them every day for whatever those challenges are. joey: listen, football is my favorite sport, is now this is one of my favorite shows. thank you to guys for bringing this to us and and letting us come in and see what you're doing there. the final episode is available now, and if you haven't seen it yet, you can binge the entire season of god, family, football right now exclusively on fox nation, and we've got a second season coming. thank you, denny and aaron, for joining us. >> thank you. joey: all right, guys. more "fox & friends" just moments away. stay with us.
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before taking breztri for my copd, i had bad days. days ruined by flare-ups (cough) that could permanently damage my lungs. and i noticed things changed. breztri gave me better breathing. starting within 5 minutes, my lung function improved. breztri also helped improve my symptoms and was even proven to reduce flare-ups, including those that could send me to the hospital. now i worry less about bad days and enjoy more good days. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. can't afford your medication? astrazeneca may be able to help.
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