Skip to main content

tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  November 28, 2024 9:00am-10:00am PST

9:00 am
♪ ♪
9:01 am
>> emily: hello, everyone. happy thanksgiving. welcome to the special edition of "outnumbered." i'm emily compagno and joining me today, cheryl casone, fox business anchor and host of "american dream home," kennedy, a host of the "kennedy saves the world podcast," gerri willis, fox business correspondent, and david asman, fox business anchor. a migration day is months away, and president-elect trump is looking to make good on his campaign promises of putting america first and bringing the country together. >> i will governed by a simple motto. promises made, promises kept. we are going to keep our promise. [applause] nothing will stop me from keeping my word to you, the people. we will make america safe, strong, prosperous, powerful, and three again, and i'm asking every citizen all across our land to join me in this noble and righteous endeavor. that's what it is. it's time to put the divisions
9:02 am
of the past four years behind us. it is time to unite, and we are going to try. we have to try. success is going to bring us together, and we are going to start by all putting america first. we have to put our country first for at least a period of time. we have to fix it. because together we can take america great again for all americans. so i want to just tell you what a great honor this is. i want to thank you. i will not let you down. america's future will be bigger, better, bolder, richer, safer, and stronger than it has ever been before. >> emily: trump is already going to get to work on day one. he's looking to crackdown on illegal immigration, kick-start american energy, and reestablish our global standing. and a new poll shows that a majority of americans support trump's vision for our country.
9:03 am
p research found that 53% of americans approve of president trump's plans and policies ahead of his second term. kennedy, that is why he was voted into office overwhelmingly by a majority of americans who believe in his plans and his policies. >> kennedy: what was really interesting to me is that the democrats never acknowledged that he had already been president, and the people had vastly different personal economic landscapes during his first term. i mean, think about that, because so often when you're running against someone they've never been president. they are totally untested in that role. but he had been. he knew what the job may entail. that is such an incredibly rare thing. we've had a lot of one-term presidents, but you didn't see jimmy carter go back at it in 1984, and for good reason. because, you know, he had his vision, it kind of failed, the country wasn't in a better place, and no one had an appetite for that the next time around. but the country has been on the
9:04 am
wrong track. three quarters of the country have said that repeatedly. democrats couldn't see that. so yeah, given the chance. give him a chance to give americans what they voted for. maybe they're not going to be republicans forever, but we can all be americans right now. >> emily: that's right. david, to kennedy's point, so many interviews, exit entering the candidacy, should people of all racial makeups and religious backgrounds, geographical dwellings, that said "my life was better under president trump." it was an incumbency that works. >> david: we are all going to be picking up kennedy's point here because it's such a good one. he was in the belly of the beast. not only was he in the belly of the bees in the first term, but then he had another term where he had to sit back and watch lawfare and all of the attacks on him, that american's i wasn't true, which is why a lot of americans didn't vote for him the first time ended the second time. what he wants to do -- and i'm old enough to remember
9:05 am
ronald reagan coming in in 1980 -- he wanted to really shake up government. government was a problem, not the solution. that was reagan's great line. trump knows that as well, personally now. very personally, because of what happened that first time. the bottom line is he's hired a cabinet of folks who are in the shaking of business. these are people who have reworked companies, who have tried to shake up the bureaucracies that they're going to now try to change. and you've got elon and vivek trying to figure out what can be cut and what can't, what is necessary and not what's not.separating the wheate chaff. >> emily: a small business in the agricultural and alcohol
9:06 am
sector, nothing is more regulated than those. and the slimiing is so real. the amount of money we have to hemorrhage, but hopefully moving forward under this administration it will be the dismantling of these regulations and the fostering of entrepreneurial and capitalist spirit. >> cheryl: one of the agency so full of unnecessary regulation is the epa. if they can get in and change the culture -- not dismantle, but at least cut down the power of the epa, that's going to help small businesses and help the real estate sector and help builders. there's so many onerous, ridiculous regulations on the books. the other is the ev mandate. people are buying electric vehicles. you are the one outnumbered today. we've got all the business people and emily. that's kind of fun. that's the thing, if you go down and look at all the bureaucracy in particular with those ev mandates, people are buying those cars. get rid of it. those subsidies, the government
9:07 am
is paying out those subsidies. it is such a waste of money. this couch today on thanksgiving is all about not wasting money. we are about saving money and about growing our economy. >> gerri: that's what i say, don't waste my taxpayer dollars. just to echo what kennedy was saying, we are all americans now. it's thanksgiving. it's time to come together. how surprising is this poll we just looked at? hello? not at all. trump won big time. so what he's talking about what he talked about on the campaign trail, and the only thing surprising about those numbers is his polling on economics and how he'll run the economy is even higher than it was when he campaigned. so his polling is doing even better, so that is the interesting thing when you see progressives protesting what he wants. i don't understand it. you know you're going up against tthe american people. >> emily: can i ask you, how soon do you think this the results?
9:08 am
how soon will will feel relief waiting in the wings? >> gerri: don't forget, ceos come to work every day and sit down at their big boy chair and make decisions that affect how many americans are employed and how much money the company is going to be spending, and they're making it on the basis of the policies that are coming in, that they know are coming in because they've seen trump before. >> david: but it's going to be a pitched battle. the bureaucrats are not going to let go easily. a lot of them will be shown the door. they're not going to let go easily. >> gerri: but bureaucrats will rule tax policy. >> david: of thinking about the pentagon, hhs. >> kennedy: don't forget about the supreme court ruling about chevron deference, as well. >> david: they have the law behind them, no doubt. now they do. >> kennedy: they did for a long time, and the epa can make those regulations by fiat with no recourse and no accountability, and that has all changed. we are in uncharted territory. >> cheryl: we had over a thousand regulations under biden and harris that have cost us billions of dollars to our economy.
9:09 am
>> david: probably trillions. >> emily: if the fuel impact -- if president trump restores the fuel, wouldn't that change everything? shipping and everything, i retire economy. would you say that is the single most effective and immediate change he could make? >> cheryl: one word, keystone. >> david: and i'm looking for big changes at the pentagon. that is such an ossified bureaucracy. it's got to change. >> gerri: i'm all about the taxes. >> emily: so much to come including this. democrats are looking for a new leader after vice president kamala harris' big loss. guess who is topping one survey? stay with us. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ —no peeking. —okay. okay. ♪ open. ♪ ♪
9:10 am
over 600,000 usps employees working in sync to ensure everything sent on its holiday ride ends with a moment of joy. ♪ the united states postal service.
9:11 am
cost sharing model. we make monthly contributions, choose any medical provider and pay them directly, then submit the bill and get reimbursed. experience savings with faith, freedom, and flexibility. here's something you don't see very often... elves not working and why not? i gave them the day off. thanks to weathertech. with so many gifts for everyone they won't have to work as hard. there's laser measured floorliners and cargo liner. plus the child car seat protector. and cupfone to secure any phone while driving. or get a gift card instantly at wt.com ♪ i call winner!
9:12 am
9:13 am
9:14 am
♪ ♪ >> cheryl: a recent survey is giving us an early look at the possible front runners for the 2028 democratic presidential nomination, and despite her major loss, vice president kamala harris is the top choice for addends by a landslide. she is leading gavin newsom by 33 points. other candidates who do some support by those surveyed include pennsylvania governor josh shapiro and harris' former running mate, minnesota governor tim walz. pete buttigieg is also on the list here. david, i think they might need some new names, some new leadership, as many ideas on the democratic side of the ticket right now. >> david: low down on that list you saw governor shapiro, and i think if you want to move -- a lot of them think we have to move to the center to win the next time. the same thing that happened in 2022 kamala harris have been
9:15 am
this time the more people saw her, the less they liked her, and they learned -- or contradictions that came out, or 180 flips on things like fracking and law enforcement and so forth, and the biggest flip of all, of course, was we are going to unite everybody, and nazi, nazi, nazi. the slips made people dislike her and not trust her. the trust was the key issue on how she's going to govern. i don't see how in four years it'll be anything different than this time or four years ago from now. >> cheryl: we have a long time until 2028, emily. at the same time, democrats need to do a deep dive and understand what went wrong, or there's going to keep losing. but if you like losing, maybe harris is your 2028 candidate. and i'm being serious. they've got to rework the entire party. >> emily: maybe we should stop giving them such good advice. the reason those names are the top, it's because they've been recycled him just now. kamala harris was an empty vessel that failed at what they
9:16 am
tried to put her in to do, as did her running mate, walz. josh shapiro, now that's a good name. note that governor newsom shared a donor pool with kamala. a sort of grew up in the california donor pool together and in california politics. they choreograph their running so they wouldn't step on each other's toes. clearly one has remained successful and what has not. not only does the democrat party need to reevaluate it's very shallow bench, but also with the parties values stand for. because they keep trotting out either tiktok influencers and thinking people will listen to them with these extreme radical views, cultivated on campuses, where they keep trotting out the octogenarians that are massively out of touch with what the party needs. so hopefully we have a running candidate that is worthy of oppopponency. but they are fractured with nowhere to go if they keep
9:17 am
checking these ideologue boxes. >> cheryl: at the end of the day, now the staffers that work for harris are coming out to do interviews and they are saying that the trump campaign used new forms of media, we have to learn from that. you are the ones that were supposed to be -- they are the first ones that went to tiktok. >> kennedy: that's actually a really great question and astute observation, because they just assumed what they had kind of pioneered was enough, and it wasn't. they assumed that the advent of influencers and their ground game would be theirs. what happened was republicans and other parties went, we will get on tiktok, too. ed trump amassed more followers. it was another way for him to directly communicate with people who are curious about his ideas and his policies. the other was republicans had been drugs for several election cycles, most notably 2022, in large part because democrats had an incredible ground game.
9:18 am
what did they do? they figured out a way to replicate that, to go meet people where they are. that means knock on their doors, and in states where they have a lot of a lot of mail-in voting, reach out to the republicans there and get them activated. that's what they did. they didn't take anything for granted. unfortunately the democrats relied on an old playbook, and they didn't with the needle forward. they assumed too much. they assumed the ways and means they have getting elected in the past would remain but also their coalition would stay intact, and all those things fell apart because they were asleep at the wheel, which is shocking given the events from june on in his presidential cycle. >> cheryl: you know what, gerri? they ignored and insulted the working class of this country. the democrats are supposed to be the party of the working class, and they completely lost them. their message was completely gone. i guess they're all eating quinoa in new york city and los angeles while everyone else was going to cracker barrel, which was, by the way, brought
9:19 am
on to television by ex-nbc anchor brian williams. if the economy and immigration -- if they can't figure out those platforms, they are going to lose in 2028 and keep losing. >> gerri: that's absolutely true. to go back to the point you started with, about calling out people who they feel no affinity for, and from that world. i'm from appellation. iappalachia the place he got devastated and his recent hurricane. these people have been through a lot. they did to the devastations of nafta. they lost job after job because of nafta. the opioid crisis crushed people in those regions. to come back and say it's because you're not very bright, in fact, you stupid, you are garbage, was the most heinous example of campaigning i have ever seen in my life. >> cheryl: knife got gavin newsom, kennedy, saying we are going to trump-proves our state. you're from california. final word from you on that?
9:20 am
>> kennedy: how is he trump-proving it, by expanding homelessness and taxes? people can't get out of there fast enough. if they can afford to leave, they are leaving. they are doing what elon musk did, and going to places like austin, texas, where you still have creativity but no state income tax. so he's failed on so many levels. the only thing he's good at is looking like a perfect casting for a presidential candidate. unfortunately his resume -- coat. >> cheryl: spending millions on a home, which he just did. coming up, a new survey says some americans are so stressed about politics they are skipping thanksgiving dinner. we will have more on that next. ♪ ♪
9:21 am
hey, i just got a text from my sister. you remember rick, her neighbor? sure, he's the 76-year-old guy who still runs marathons, right? sadly, not anymore. wow. so sudden. um, we're not about to have the "we need life insurance" conversation again, are we? no, we're having the "we're getting coverage so we don't have to worry about it" conversation. so you're calling about the $9.95 a month plan -from colonial penn? -i am. we put it off long enough. we are getting that $9.95 plan, today. (jonathan) is it time for you to call about the $9.95 plan? i'm jonathan from colonial penn life insurance company. sometimes we just need a reminder
9:22 am
not to take today for granted. if you're age 50 to 85, you can get guaranteed acceptance whole life insurance starting at just $9.95 a month. there are no health questions so you can't be turned down for any health reason. the $9.95 plan is colonial penn's number one most popular whole life plan. options start at just $9.95 a month. that's less than 35 cents a day. your rate can never go up. it's locked in for life. call today for free information. and you'll also get this free beneficiary planner, so call now. (soft music) ♪ hello, colonial penn?
9:23 am
9:24 am
say christmas. christmas! for holiday traditions old and new, when you want gifts to express a lifetime of love. we've spent a lifetime crafting them. harry & david, 90 years and still sharing. ♪ ♪
9:25 am
>> kennedy: speaking of graces, who are you saying grace with? the election is over but some americans are still totally bent out of shape over the 2024 race, so much so they are letting politics get in the way in their holiday celebrations. according to a new survey, a whopping 64% said election-related stress is impacting their holiday plans and almost a quarter considerep. emily, what advice do you have for people who want to have a solitary bird by themselves tonight instead of breaking rolls and eating sweet potato casserole with their loved ones? >> emily: the time with your loved ones is priceless and there's not enough money on this earth to buy back one minute with your loved one. i hope they extend forgiveness and grace and don't sacrifice that precious time for political views.
9:26 am
i will say this, i have never once made that sacrifice, but there are many people who currently are not speaking to me because of who won the election and because of where i work. it is mind-boggling to me, because time is the most precious commodity we have, and i just don't understand that. >> kennedy: yes, and there will be political wins that shifting either party's favor, but there's no reason to give up on family. the. >> david: it's not just family. it's friends, too. there was a wonderful old comedian come he's gonna. his name was orson bean. he was a comedian and an actor. johnny asked him and he said you don't have to be political. there's a time -- we forget that. there was a wonderful time, most of our history, you didn't have to be political. he went on to refer to places like communist china where you are forced, if you didn't say the party line you were kicked out of your family. literally, kicked out of your family.
9:27 am
we've got to get back. it sounds regressive to say this, because we are always looking to the future, the greatest thing about america is you still don't have to be political. you have to stand up for the fact that you don't have to be. there's so many other things to be concerned about, to talk about during a thanksgiving meal. you don't have to be political. if it gets political, you can find a way of getting out of conversations. it happens when you talk about religion, too. but don't worry about being political. >> cheryl: you now, life is precious, time is short. if you have the opportunity to be with your family, figure out a way to get through today and tonight. i'm going to be spending this afternoon hosting a lot of my friends here in new york. i don't have any family in new york city. i wish i did, but i do not, and i'm thrilled to be with all of you today. i'm going to celebrate and be grateful. but i will tell you what, he's got a chance to be with her family, don't pass it up because of politics. that is such a heartbreaking mistake. >> kennedy: you absolutely
9:28 am
will regret it. you don't want to live without regret. it's much better to go into a situation and be mildly uncomfortable for a little bit and maybe redirect the conversation than it is to look back and have that gnawing at you. gerri, what do you think? >> gerri: it seems to me, if you're with your family, it's worth everyone being safe who they are in front of family. i don't want to totally ignore that. but i do want to share something. thanksgiving isn't just about family, it's about our country. every year "the wall street journal" runs two editorials on thanksgiving day. one was written by the pilgrims in 1620, which is phenomenal, talking about the experience of coming to the country, what it was like, what they did. the other is from the journal itself, and they run it every year for 50 years, despite the fact progressives have tried to stop it. i'm going to review one paragraph because it's going to blow your mind. and they lamented again this year, probably. we can remind ourselves that,
9:29 am
for all our social discord, we had remained the longest enduring society of free men governing themselves without benefit of kings or dictators. being so, we are the marvel in the mystery of the world, for that enduring liberty is no less a blessing than the abundance of the earth." isn't that beautiful? >> david: i've got to credit the guy who wrote that. he was a great editor at "the wall street journal." >> gerri: that is a fabulous sentiment as we come into thanksgiving. all americans can celebrate what this country represents and the freedoms that we have. >> kennedy: and we all have a voice. everyone's vote is equal, regardless of where you're from or what you believe. there are so many things like that to be thankful for. >> david: and so many things beyond politics to be interested in and to talk about. see what it's a great challenge to find a list of things you can talk about.
9:30 am
>> cheryl: i would suggest football but i will walk that back a little bit. i can get heated also at the table. >> kennedy: i love the videos on instagram of people throwing stuff and screaming when their team blows that, like i did when the 49ers lost. coming up, emily is that with a brand-new book titled "under his wings." it's out today. more on that next. ♪ ♪ with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis my skin was no longer mine. my active psoriatic arthritis joint symptoms held me back. don't let symptoms define you... emerge as you, with clearer skin. with tremfya®, most people saw 100% clear skin... ...that stayed clear, even at 5 years. tremfya® is proven to significantly reduce joint pain, stiffness, and swelling. serious allergic reactions and increased risk of infections may occur.
9:31 am
before treatment, your doctor should check you for infections and tb. tell your doctor if you have an infection, flu-like symptoms or if you need a vaccine. emerge as you with clear skin. ask your doctor about tremfya®. ♪ speaker: who's coming in the driveway? speaker: dad. dad, we missed you. daddy, hi. speaker: goodness. my daughter is being treated for leukemia. [music playing] i hope that she lives a long, great, happy life and that she will never forget how mom and daddy love her. saint jude-- maybe this is what's keeping my baby girl alive. [music playing]
9:32 am
narrator: you can join the battle to save lives by supporting st. jude children's research hospital. for just $19 a month, you'll help us continue the life-saving research and treatment these kids need now and in the future. speaker: cancer makes me feel angry, like not in the feel on the outside, just the inside. i'm angry at it. speaker: when your kid is hurting and there's nothing you can do about it, that's the worst feeling in the world. [music playing] narrator: 1 in 5 children diagnosed with cancer in the us will not survive. speaker: those that donate to st. jude, i hope that you will continue to give. they have done so much for me and my family. [music playing] narrator: join with your credit or debit card for only $19 a month, and we'll send you this st. jude t-shirt,
9:33 am
or, for a limited time only, join for $39 a month to receive this exclusive st. jude jacket you can proudly wear to show your support. speaker: are you ready to go have some fun? speaker: yeah. speaker: when we came here, we didn't know what tomorrow would hold. st. jude showed us that tomorrow, there's hope for our little girl to survive. narrator: let's cure childhood cancer together. please donate now. [music playing]
9:34 am
sometimes jonah wrestles with falling asleep... ...so he takes zzzquil. the world's #1 sleep aid brand. and wakes up feeling like himself. get the rest to be your best with non-habit forming zzzquil. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> kennedy: even if it's snowing where you are, they're
9:35 am
still sunshine in your heart. emily compagno has published her first book, called "under his wings: how faith on the front lines has protected american troops." you can get your copy now at fox newsbooks.com or wherever books are sold. here's a look at the fox nation special based on emily's new book, "under his wings." >> emily: the stories of war are often told in black and white. the winds and the losses, who fought where and when. but those details don't reveal is the unseen force at work, the origin of tied-turning courage, the source of the invisible protection. the embrace in which the soldier found comfort. in the depths of fear and despair, who do soldiers turn? who protects them? this is personal to me.
9:36 am
my family's history of military service spans generations and stretches across the globe. that is why it meant so much to me to write my book, "under his wings: how faith on the front lines has protected american troops." in the special i'll show you a glimpse of the extraordinary stories within, from feeling god's presence in the thick of a firefight to having prayers answered during torturous captivity, to receiving god's calling to serve in the most surprising of ways. these war fighters experienced god's faithfulness is their shield and rampart. they found refuge under his wings. ♪ ♪ >> kennedy: what incredible subject matter. >> emily: thank you so much. i cried in these interviews, i cried writing this book. i was moved beyond words, frankly, at the extraordinary stories, and i am honored to serve as a messenger for these war fighters. the moments they had on the
9:37 am
front lines in the battlefield, their deeply intimate experiences with god and they faith. as i mentioned in that tease, having the conversations with vietnam into treatment in the thick of an ambush, suddenly he had vision, clarity from god. certain deathless to the left and being saved was to the righ. that restored his peers again and his faith in god, because he had seen too much loss of life and too many good men die and he had stopped talking to god. that was a miracle and a could argue, was his faith being restored after that? a green beret who grew up on an apache reservation, he would repeat this, this seemingly meaningless phrase whenever he would feel fear. in the thick of a firefight in iraq, realized what that phrase was, as time stopped and he was saying it in his head and it materialized in english. it was jesus.
9:38 am
"i am always with you." the stories are incredible and they represent the front lines, it's not always left on the battlefield. battling grief with the ultimate sacrifice or catastrophic injuries, how they occur and marsh and espouse. the pts and how it has the potential to break up faith and families but doesn't through the stories. i had the honor as an nfl cheerleader of visiting the troops in iraq and on a uso tour we were taking care of with colonel karcher when we were stranded one night. we called it a slumber party. in that memorable night we made so many friends. after we left, he ran over an ied and colonel karcher lost his legs. sergeant timothy david lost his legs and he was younger than i was. i reunited with him 15 years later in the stories in this book as he credits prayer with saving his life over and over
9:39 am
again as he died multiple times. each time being resuscitated against all odds. he is an incredible character. he said he promised eternal life. i was moved beyond words at p.o.w.s in captivity for five years, six years. he saw me walking in front of the s4 phantom where he was shot down, and it was his faith who brought him through those torturous years. an incredible story of christmas in captivity where a vietnamese guard he was torturing them, they heard him clinging down the hallway, the door opened and he carried a bottle of wine, a hunk of bread, and a bible so those men in captivity could have communion. you saw me walking, providing over a service in iraq. an iraqi walked in. the room froze. he walked down the aisle of the church and said, "i am a christian and this is the only
9:40 am
place i am free to worship with you americans here." morgan ortagus' incredible stories as a woman of jewish faith standing on the global stage, visibly pregnant, speaking out against muslim minority atrocities at the hands of the ccp. the stories will last generations as they represent my family's generations, letters from my world war ii lieutenant nurse great-great-aunt, and so much more in this deeply, deeply intimate and frankly life-changing and externally book. >> kennedy: it's wonderful to have a calling like that, but to have that manifest in such a complete book that honors so many people and so many conflicts. they are faith and divine presence that carried them through and arguably change the course of our country. >> emily: absolutely. the voices within are just extraordinary. as i said, it is the utmost honor of a lifetime to serve as that messenger for them.
9:41 am
my prayer is that you all in these pages of the book find your faith and find your faith resort or perhaps find the freedom to proclaim your faith, that you are not alone, that jesus and god are always with you. >> kennedy: beautifully said. don't forget to order your copy of emily's new book, "under his wings." it is on fox newsbooks.com. . well done. you should read it right now. it's a great holiday gift for everybody. stay with us. in case you missed it, that is up next. ♪ ♪ i've been worn by celebrities, athletes, and world leaders. but i've always felt most comfortable up here, with the folks that made me who i am. i'm right at home, out here on the land. and i'm in my lane on the shoulder of the interstate. because this is where i come from. i've been showing up here for nearly 200 years.
9:42 am
and i can't wait to see what's next. hats off to the future. nothing runs like a deere™ (man) what if my type 2 diabetes takes over? (woman) what if all i do isn't enough? or what if... (vo) once-weekly mounjaro could help? mounjaro helps your body regulate blood sugar and mounjaro can help decrease how much food you eat. 3 out of 4 people reached an a1c of less than 7%. plus people taking mounjaro lost up to 25 pounds. don't take mounjaro if you're allergic to it, or if you or someone in your family had medullary thyroid cancer or multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2. stop and call your doctor right away if you have an allergic reaction, a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or vision changes. serious side effects may include inflamed pancreas and gallbladder problems.
9:43 am
taking mounjaro with sulfonylurea or insulin may raise your low blood sugar risk. tell your doctor if you're nursing, pregnant, plan to be, or taking birth control pills. side effects include nausea, diarrhea, and vomiting, which can cause dehydration and may worsen kidney problems. (woman) i can do diabetes differently with mounjaro. (vo) ask your doctor about once-weekly mounjaro.
9:44 am
9:45 am
♪ ♪ >> emily: welcome back. it's time now for "in case you missed it." a new study finds that gen z adults would rather be models than doctors. the study shows that young adults are more likely to gravitate towards creative industries, especially those involving social media. jobs like model, blogger, and influence are ranked especially high, beating out more traditional and, i argue, noble career fields like medicine,
9:46 am
teaching, and engineering. gerri, what does this tell us about the state of the union? >> gerri: should i say it's kind of a shallow choice? should i get right out in front of it and say this is something you do when you really have no ballast in your life and you don't want to help the rest of the world connect that sounds so judging, doesn't it? it is a little judging. i guess you can do good work as a blogger, but as a model? it sounds like something you want to do when you're 18. >> cheryl: this list is ins insane. personal trainer, i can get behind that. those are important. the actor, influencer, artist? you've got to make money, guys. you got to pay the rent. not that i'm disparaging these professions, but life can be expensive. i guess that the practical side of me speaking right now. >> david: fox business speaking. >> emily: the point is that it's based on a body of knowledge and schooling, regular, hard work, and ethics.
9:47 am
you can't argue the same for influencers and models. i think social media and that world has rewarded instant fame rather than hard work and education. it doesn't have to be school education, just some education. >> david: on the other hand, this is america. in the 40s and 50s everybody wanted to be a movie star. '60s and '70s, everybody wanted to be a rock star. maybe in the past few 90s people were thinking about making money. wall street was big in the '90s. >> kennedy: greed was good. >> cheryl: we had to pay off our college. >> david: people are looking for the limelight. >> emily: and that instant gratification rather than delayed gratification. >> kennedy: everyone is a model in this generation. think how hot the doctors are going to be in 20 years. [laughter] i think there's a tremendous upside here. but if you talk to teenagers, the only people they follow and are influenced by our influencers to make like $25 million a year. so they see that, and even though it is, like, maybe half a
9:48 am
percent of tiktokers and youtubers are making that kind of money, they look at that and they are like, that's what i want to do. because they get free stuff, they're having fun, and it doesn't take a lot of brainpower. it sounds like the ideal, but it also is a sign that our country has grown very soft, and we need to harden up, and that's where parents come in to say, i'm not paying for college if you want to dance around. >> cheryl: i had that practical response to this topic because that's how i was raised. it was like, you're going to go to college. you're getting out and getting a job. let's go. >> gerri: my mother said to me, literally, after i graduated, "you're not staying here." you always have to have a backup plan. >> emily: the things like that are ephemeral. what's going to put food on the table? that's why always keep my license just in case. merriam-webster is adding over 200 new entries to its dictionary. some of the highlights include
9:49 am
"nepo baby, a person again success or opportunity through familial connections." "touch grass, performing and real-world activities as opposed to online expenses." and, of course, "maga, a political movement calling for strict limits on immigration and a return to policies and practices in place before globalization." what say you about that definition and about those words? >> kennedy: i think that's very restrained definition. i think they wanted to use something much harder and probably like, "it's misogynist and racist and its roots." >> david: that's between the lines. >> kennedy: but i always love those. whenever i see "nepo baby" i think of prince harry. he would be absolutely nothing without his familial connections, even though he's trying to blow up his own life. he's totally insufferable. and there are some nepo babies
9:50 am
who are really good at their jobs and really fight against the perception that they only got where they are because they had a hand up, and there are people like lance strohl, the formformula 1 racer who is completely off limits, data civilian or advise him a spot on every team that he buys. >> emily: can i have one? >> kennedy: you'd be a better driver. >> emily: what you call it -- the pop culturization of it. >> david: i have to go back to maga. they are talking about it like it is so aggressive, going back to before the 20th century globalization. we look at people like elon musk and vivek ramaswamy, elon musk is talking about going to mars, for goodness' sakes. it's not about going back, it's going into the future with a rocket. looking at webster is kind of like looking at google for a search. the first ten pages are this very woke stuff. you don't get to the truth until the 11th page.
9:51 am
>> cheryl: am i the only one who didn't know what "touch grass" was before today? i'm aging myself. >> emily: new york city workers could soon get sick leave to take care of their pets. the proposal would expand the earned safe and sick time act to include pets and service animals. the lawmaker behind it is citing the mental health benefits of owning a pet for the move. critics argue, gerri, as do i, yet personal time baked into your leave with which you can do what you want. why do we always have to identify exactly what it's for? because then that leaves out a whole host of things. it's not a catch-all. >> gerri: emily, i'm the owner of a poodle puppy! i think this is the greatest idea we ever heard. i think we should get this time. no, i don't really. i think you're right. >> david: you had my heart stopped! >> gerri: the poodle puppy is everything and he is essential to my mental health. it is true, i agree with that part.
9:52 am
>> cheryl: i have a cat named milo who is just the best. i don't have children, but i'm not going to go to my employer and say i need time off for my pet. i think that's a little too far. >> david: i think it's just saying something about new york. new york is so lost right now. they cease to be the place people would come to work the hardest, 23 hours a day, and that one hour is just to eat, the extra hour. you work the hardest here that you've ever worked before to become the best that you could possibly be in the whole world, whether it is in theater, business, music. whatever it is. that is what represents -- that is what used to be the image of new york and why people would come here, to work harder than you ever have before. not to avoid as much work as possible. >> emily: if you can make it here, you can make it anywhere. >> kennedy: they should put that in a song. it's absolutely right. what other do people need to take time off work? come on. like, do something
9:53 am
extraordinary. we were talking about this earlier in the show. life is precious, family is precious, pets are precious. but also, your work can truly change the course of humanity like some of the subjects in emily's book. so work hard and pour that energy and love into your pets when you get home. >> cheryl: i work hard because i got a cat to feed. >> gerri: and a mortgage. they never pay a single bill. >> emily: speaking of mortgage, our smart homes becoming too smart? these days you can find wi-fi and ai on your oven, refrigerator, even your light bulbs. while some swear by the convenience of these smart devices, others argue that things have gone too far. kennedy, valid criticisms and fears, frankly, over this sort of "taking over by the machine, ai taking all our data." >> kennedy: anything with a chip can be hacked, and all of a sudden your oven and refrigerator are spying on you in your underwear.
9:54 am
>> emily: the other day i fell asleep with my oven on 350, and the next morning -- i could have turned off, but i'm not willing to sacrifice that. i don't want more computers. i want a combustible engine and i want my oven without ai in it. >> david: i married a woman from central america. she is all about spontaneity. the thing i hate about ai, it assumes that we are so regular. the most fun i have in my life is where we do spontaneous things, and we do spontaneous things every minute of the day, being married to a latin. that's where i am. i don't like anything that kills spontaneity. >> emily: hopefully in your oven is just a turkey. more on this special edition of "outnumbered" next. ♪ ♪
9:55 am
upset stomach iberogast indigestion iberogast bloating iberogast thanks to a unique combination of herbs, iberogast helps relieve six digestive symptoms to help you feel better. six digestive symptoms. the power of nature. iberogast. i'm jonathan lawson, here to tell you about life insurance through the colonial penn program. if you're age 50 to 85 and looking to buy life insurance on a fixed budget, remember the three p's.
9:56 am
what are the three p's? the three p's of life insurance on a fixed budget are price, price, and price. a price you can afford, a price that can't increase, and a price that fits your budget. i'm 54. what's my price? you can get coverage for $9.95 a month. i'm 65 and take medications. what's my price? also $9.95 a month. i just turned 80. what's my price? $9.95 a month for you too. if you're age 50 to 85, call now about the #1 most popular whole life insurance plan available through the colonial penn program. options start at $9.95 a month. no medical exam, no health questions. your acceptance is guaranteed. and this plan has a guaranteed lifetime rate-lock, so your rate can never go up for any reason. so call now for free information, and you'll also get this free beneficiary planner.
9:57 am
and it's yours free just for calling, so call now for free information. i'm not a doctor. i'm not even in a doctor's office. i'm standing on the streets talking to real people about their heart. how's your heart? my heart's pretty good. you sure? i think so. how do you know? you're driving a car, you have the check engine light. but the heart doesn't have a hey, check heart sign. i want to show you something. put both fingers right on those pads. there you go. in 30 seconds, we're going to have a medical-grade ekg reading. - there it is! - that is you. look at that. with kardiamobile, you can take a medical-grade ekg in just 30 seconds from anywhere. kardiamobile is proven to detect atrial fibrillation, one of the leading causes of stroke. and it's the only personal ekg that's fda-cleared to detect normal heart rhythm, bradycardia and tachycardia.
9:58 am
how much do you think this device costs? probably a thousand. $99! wow. that's impressive. get kardiamobile today for just $79. and check out our black friday deals which are here now, at kardia.com or amazon. don't wait! these offers won't last. ♪ the future is not just going to happen. you have to make it. and if you want a successful business, all it takes is an idea, and now becomes the future where you grew a dream into a reality. the all new godaddy airo. put your business online in minutes with the power of ai.
9:59 am
>> happy thanksgiving, everyone. you might be already eating your turkey but is it really your favorite dish for the holiday? a recent study shows that over half of americans actually prefer the side dishes. the most popular choices include stuffing, mashed potatoes, sweet potatoes, green bean casserole, and mac and cheese. kennedy, i think, though, it is because everyone's turkey is dry and they are not using my dad's recipe for turkey which you have tried which is totally moist and amazing in under an hour. >> people at this point have already brianed and roasted so they are not going to switch to your dad's method this year but high heat cook of the turkey, cuts the cooking time in half and if you follow its instructions, a bunch of chicken stock in the pan, your turkey will be so moist. but i love the sides. i do love the sides. >> i do love the sides, too, but the perfect bite. >> i have been without an other and for eight months. they turned off our natural gas
10:00 am
thanks to all those politically correct people up in albany, so we have two burners, that's all we have, but having said that, my wife has become an excellent cook. >> come over to my place, we are going 10 minutes from here, green bean casserole, if you haven't had it, you must have it. >> okay, mashed potatoes. i like sweet potatoes. the pie, a lot crumbles on the top, everything but the turkey. it's all about the vegetables, all about the sides. don't wrap me when i'm talking about food. >> kidding, kidding. and punk and pie, of course, to top it all. well, thank you all for watching this special edition of "outnumbered." heavy things giving to you and yours. god bless you. have a wonderful family friends. ♪ ♪ >> president biden takin

54 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on