tv Cavuto Live FOX News November 30, 2024 8:00am-9:00am PST
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>> rain, snow, bitter cold. travelers are facing all sorts of wicked winter conditions as they head home this holiday weekend. and fox weather storm specialist is in fredonia where the snow is piling up. >> good morning, jackie. let's check the yard stick. we left mayville, took an hour and 20 minutes, a white knuckle drive through the snow. here we're up to almost 22 inches. i haven't looked in an hour. we've picked up another inch. it's backed off a bit. the new york state throughway and the exit and entrance for the hamburg exit here-- i'm sorry, for the dun dunkirk-fredonia exit. the trucks had to come off the
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interstate and try another way. the trucks sometimes get stuck and sometimes you have to be patient and wait for the interstate to open. snowfalls totals three to four feet and by monday, it goes until monday evening and the band right now coming off lake erie into the south town south of buffalo. buffalo airport not a flake of snow, a tight gradient. tomorrow at orchard park, 49ers in town to take on the bills, it looks like they're not playing in a snow globe, but certainly a lot of snow before kickoff at 8:20 eastern. so, the first big lake effect of the season temperatures in the mid 20's, wind chills in the mid teens and a lot of folks here in the hotels, jackie, are stuck. they're trying to get west to columbus. i talked to a gentleman trying to make a chicago concert tonight, a concert in chicago, no way. people trying to get west on 95
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shut down through pennsylvania. the only way to get around it to go south and around the snow bands and come back up towards pittsburgh and then go that way. so, issues getting home from thanksgiving tonight and tomorrow if you're anywhere-- anywhere on i-90 between the area between buffalo and cleveland, you're going to run into issues, including i-90 right now being shut down. jackie: absolutely, the more snow there is, the harder to navigate. mike, please stay warm, and thank you. let's get to more of your forecast around the country. meteorologist adam klotz is in the weather center. >> hey, jackie, much like mike is dealing with out there, it's driven by cold air. even if you're in the spot where you are not seeing the snow bands, there's chilly temperatures. this is the current wind chill, what it feels like when you step outside, and cold air 20 degrees in lexington, 2 in
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chicago, negative 6 up in minneapolis, and that's leading edge where the cold air is. there's a little bit of a clipper system and we've seen kansas city going into st. louis and of course, that lake effect snow that continues to come down and otherwise it's clear, and winter weather alerts are in place across the great lakes because of that lake effect snow and even if you're not dealing with that, you're dealing with cold temperatures. tomorrow night, overnight tonight, this is what you'll wake up with, real temperatures not wind chill, 28 years in atlanta and obscenely cold here the next couple of days, and unfortunately, it isn't one of the situations where it's one day and the warm air bounces back in. monday morning, 27 degrees in portions of the mississippi delta and looking at memphis. it's colder on tuesday morning, 23 degrees in memphis and 24 degrees in atlanta and even the gulf coast is getting frost advisories and freeze warnings,
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settling down to the south. i want to leave you with this i know a lot of people are travelling today and tomorrow, and jackie, even though it's really, really cold, we're looking at mostly green, there's not a lot of big weather outside of the great lakes, but certainly people will want to bundle up here the next couple of days. jackie: certainly took some people by surprise. adam klotz, thank you so much for that. it's not only the weather, tsa preparing to screen three million just tomorrow. staffing shortages and wicked weather could cause trouble for travelers. and barry biffle, on how airlines are responding. we appreciate your time. so far it hasn't seemed to be any kind of a disaster, even though there have been some delays, but how do you manage this? >> thanks for having us. it's been a tough couple of years with air traffic control challenges and so forth.
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the airlines including frontier have been invested a lot in our processes, but it's a record number of people and make sure to show up early and make some patience tomorrow. >> how do you deal with the balance of what is the f.a.a.'s fault or particular problems that are more associated with their domain versus what you're dealing with as the airline? everybody loves to finger point when there's a problem and oftentimes they get mad at you, the service provider. >> yeah, it's disappointing, we get blamed a lot. the facts show when there's no weather, we run 99 or 100% completion. it's pretty clear when we have challenges from a third party or weather, that's obviously causing challenges. most of the airlines today have invested so much that we're very resilient if we're not impacted by the atc or weather. >> things have really changed in the airline industry and how people travel, you know, there's a lot of frustration
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with respect to flights being completely fully booked, charging a la carte for certain things that they didn't once before. as a matter of fact, the senate was holding a hearing about these junk fees and with your airline as one of five accused of gouged, and i feel like a lot of the airlines are trying to stay afloat and that's how they do it? >> i'm pretty disappointed we're being attacked and to be called gougers is amazing considering our total price is actually down over the last five years. i mean, we've got inflation in practically every other area of the economy so the total prices have been very reasonable for consumers. so it's actually disappointing we're being attacked. i think the good news is, i think in all areas of the economy i think you're going to see different regulatory environment as we move forward so i think there's a lot of
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excitement, i think, for consumers as well as businesses in that regard. >> i think you're right. let's talk about the consumer a little pit bit. the holiday travel. do you see demand as we're headed to the new year? >> absolutely. we're seeing huge demand and you're watching the weather and i'm here in colorado up in the mountains and we've got record snow this year and cause them to want to go snow skiing or cause them to want to go to florida or the caribbean and the demand is hot. jackie: absolutely. i would opt for the warmer temperatures than the ski slopes behind you. we're dealing with a consumer that's seeing a change in guard at the white house and we were talking earlier about retail shopping and potentially consumers carrying a little more debt than in the past and a savings rate that's lower. we're seeing the zeitgeist that people want to spend, they're
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optimistic about tax cuts and things that will help them in 2025. are you seeing that with ticket sales? >> yeah. >> we've seen robust sales for the last few weeks. i think there was anxiety about the election and since then great sales and continue to see great sales into the holidays and next year. we see that excitement, i think, for people's jobs and in the economy, it's really shown up in sales. jackie: final question, i flew for the first time in a pretty long time, but during the pandemic we got use today seeing those videoof, you know, angry passengers fighting over masks and many other things. the whole atmosphere in the air seemed a lot calmer to me. your thoughts? >> yeah, it's finally settled down. there was a lot of anxiety and people mad at each other and so forth. and issues, people getting drunk to deal with it which caused more problems. no, we have not seen the challenges, for close to a year
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now, it's really settled down and i would say it's the most normal it's been in several years. jackie: all right. that's great news. we hope you had a good thanksgiving with your family and get a run in on the slopes for me, barry. >> thanks for having us. jackie: we'll talk to you soon. from buyers heading out to shoppers shelling out. the new warning from retailers about trump's tariff plans and what it means for your wallet. are we looking at a sanctuary showdown as trump's border czar throw it is down, the battle about to get underway. save on lg's first ever zero-clearance refrigerator that has near flush installation for the ultimate built-in look. don't miss our best deals of the season during black friday, in-store and online. your parents have given you some amazing gifts, celebrate the ones you inherited with ancestrydna. explore the detailed family roots, cultures and traits that shaped who you are today
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locked in the jail cell. you obviously locked him up because he's a public safety threat. we want to do that, it's safe for the officer and the alien themselves. when you release them back into the community that means i've got to put officers in your community. jackie: to the sanctuary showdown as the incoming border czar is warning that big city democrats better not get in his way of deportation efforts, but the question, what did the voters ask for in the election? the open border was a huge issue. ju julia joins me now. it's great to see you. i think that voters really spoke in this election when it came to the economy and the border and how they work hand in hand. ultimately when you see resistance from some of the democrat mayors across the country you start to realize that's not the mandate that the people asked for. >> yeah, it's great to see you, jackie. look, when you look at some of these, you know, democratic
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cities, los angeles, denver, boston, for example, we have to remember that vice-president kamala harris won those cities pretty handily, so it's no surprise to me when we see the mayors of these heavily democratic cities pushing back against the trump administration on this issue of immigration. i would also add that i think going forward into the new administration, not just in these democratically run cities, but a number of the swing states like wisconsin, like michigan, like pennsylvania, we will see resistance. democratic resistance to the trump administration on a number of fronts. that being said though, i have chatted with a number of democrats, including one democrat from new york who was launching his bid to chair the dnc, a state senator from the state who said we have to acknowledge that americans do have an issue with the situation at the southern border and that a strong border is important. so, you know, i think it's not-- it's unsurprising that these mayors are acting like this, but at the same time, there is
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this overall concern across the country at the border. jackie: i guess my question is what is different now versus situations that we've viewed in the past. it was president obama who deported many people. hillary clinton said if people commit crimes they should be deported. when democrats are resisting under these circumstances, what is different than we've seen before and what is wrong with people coming into the country legally, vetted so we know who they are? >> i think there's a big divide in the democratic party how to handle immigration and how to talk about immigration. you have a lot more moderate democrats, for example, talking about the need to acknowledge the situation at the southern border to be more strong on the issue of the southern border and to secure the border, but you do have other parts of the party that would push back against that, saying that the rhetoric is unfair, that we are a nation of immigrants, et cetera.
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so, i think going forward, the question is how does the democratic party, you know, learn to -- are they able to unify in order to communicate about the issue of the southern border or do they continue to resist donald trump? we have to remember a lot of this has to just come back to general partisanship in this country and there are a lot of democrats who are, you know, simply just going to resist the president-elect, and those most things he does, trying to work with him despite disagreements, but there's a disagreement how the party should move forward on that front. jackie: i see what you're saying within the democratic party yourself and how the republicans review it. republicans want legal immigration and seems to be a sense of size and scale and you know, basically where we will get the money to be able to do that. over the course of the past four years, 12 million people came into the country and can't afford it. whenever you talk to a democrat
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and scale that back, they say, well, that's not the right way to do it. julia, i want to get to this, the tariffs, it's part of the immigration story and donald trump is trying to get ways for the leaders north and south to come to the table and help him. the wall street journal is warning shoppers they should buy stuff now before the tariffs hit. trudeau came to mar-a-lago and a phone call with mexico. is trump showing that it's a negotiating tool and playing out how he hoped it would? >> i think it's a negotiating tool with that 25% tariff. it's notable that trudeau was sitting with president-elect trump, and mike walz and that
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trudeau, maybe a debate behind the scenes how to go forward, but in contrast how mexican president claudia schei nba um has handled this. and she says that's not how it played out. two very different approaches on either side of the border, but i've got to say, jackie, i was online shopping yesterday, i was at the mall yesterday and online it was slow going with internet speed because so many people were out shopping. at the mall it was so crowded. this is anecdotal, but people are getting out there. don't know if that's high tariffs, but it was something to see. >> we don't know to your point, julia, but you're right, spending was in the air the last few days. >> great to see you today.
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>> israeli forces claiming to strike a hezbollah target on the syria border with lebanon today as both sides accuse each other of the violating the cease-fire. stephanie bennett has the latest from london. >> hey there, yeah. it's day four of the cease-fire deal between hezbollah and israel. so far it appears to be holding despite the violation accusations thrown at each other. we're also going to take a look at the current situation over in gaza as well, as we are getting some breaking news over there. but first, a short while ago,
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idf released this video of what it said was a strike with rocket launchers in southern lebanon. israelis targets have cited cease-fire violations several times since the troops began this week. israel says it reserves the right under the cease-fire to strike against perceived violation and despite all of these sporadic episodes, they appear to be holding. to reiterate the terms of this deal, which includes representatives from u.s., france, the united nations, they're going to oversee compliance with those terms. israel has commit today withdraw ground troops from lebanon within 60 days and out of lebanon's border with israel and the litani river. more than a million lebanese and tens of thousands of israelis have been displaced by
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the fighting. let's head over to gaza. fighting continues and we're not anywhere closer to a cease-fire deal there. an israeli air strike on a car in the gaza strip killed five people, three of them were said to be employees of the u.s.-based charity world central kitchen who deliver food to war torn area. earlier this year seven of their employees were killed. the israeli military say it struck a wanted militant who had been involved in the attack that sparked this war and royal kitchen said they had no knowledge that the individual in the vehicle had alleged ties to the october 7th hamas attack and for now they will be pausing operations, we're hearing, in that statement in gaza at this time. of course, this is a developing situation right now. back to you. jackie: absolutely, stephanie bennett, thank you. president joe biden renewing a push for a cease-fire in gaza after the deal with hezbollah.
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law cast tomlinson is in massachusetts where president biden is spending the holiday, lucas. >> well, good morning, jackie. hamas has just released a new proof of life video showing an american citizen, 19-year-old edan alexander, a member of the israeli brigade,'s from new jersey. the video which we're not showing, is relatively new, he says he's been held captive 420 days. what's notable about it, alexander says he wants president-elect trump not president biden, but president-elect trump to help secure his release. of course, there are four american hostages that remain alive in cap tippett in gaza today and dozens of other israelis cities. while visiting a firehouse here in nantucket, president biden spoke about the cease-fire deal with hezbollah, and it's notable there is no cease-fire with hamas right now.
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here is president biden on thanksgiving. >> thankful for the peaceful transition of the presidency and thankful for the fact that for the grace of god-- we'll get more progress in the middle east and i'm really thankful for getting the first cease-fire in lebanon. >> and it's notable that the cease-fire expires when biden leaves office. yesterday with window shopping, he walked out a bookstore with a copy of the 100 years war and 1917 to 2017, by columbia professor, now, bidens attended
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the annual christmas tree lighting in nantucket. there were no sign of the anti-israel protesters that followed him here, including the son of a nantucket resident. >> and the president has a trip to angola. jackie: it was an interesting reading choice for the president. lucas, thank you so much. what is the trump transition team saying about these developments. mark meredith has the latest on the ground there. >> good morning, once again to you. president-elect trump has avoided reporters questions since he won the election, but through surrogates, how the incoming administration plans to handle foreign policy matters. senator lindsey graham
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self-south carolina, a close trump ally returned from a trip to the middle east where he met with the crowned prince and he told that trump wants a cease-fire in gaza before trump takes office. graham is quoted as saying, i want people to know that trump is focused on the issue and he wants the fighting to stop and to end. and the u.s. ambassador to israel says he's eager to see peace, but that the cease-fire with hezbollah may not hold. >> i think we have all have skepticism and primarily when you heard prime minister netanyahu yesterday, talk about the cease-fire, it's clear he kept open options, if there's violations in not just in military action, but movement, and it appears there's movement toward military action, then
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all bets are off. >> we know that trump's incoming security advisor was here at mar-a-lago and he was there as the canadian prime minister was there to talk tariffs. we'll look to see whether trump will weigh in on his platform. jackie: mark meredith. thank you. coming up 'tis the season for stealing. the new warning for holiday shoppers as the shopping season is getting underway. first, emon elon musk and vivek ramaswamy are looking at this with doge coming up. ahh...uhhh. no, that, uhhh. so check allstate first for a quote that could save you hundreds. glp-1 weight loss meds are everywhere these days, and so are the questions: do i have to be on the meds forever? how can i keep the muscle and lose the fat? will the weight come back? that's why we built noom glp-1 companion with muscle defense.
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>> and the biden administration scrambling to address a $20 billion shortfall in irs funding before president-elect trump returns to the white house targeting that agency. hillary. >> hi, jackie, the irs is warning that if congress doesn't step up in free up $20 billion they were counting on, that ultimately billions of dollars are going to be added to the deficit. the treasury deputy secretary saying this could mean $140 billion added to the deficit. there would be 6,000 fewer audits done of wealthy people they say and 2000 fewer audits of large corporations and irs would have to go on a hiring
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freeze. but some in congress don't think that would necessarily be a bad thing. senator joni ernst saying if the government is looking for extra cash, they should look in the mirror. evading taxes, 5800 owe 50 million in back taxes. >> i'm ut letter astounded that the irs is concerned about a shortfall when we do know that if their own employees would pay their back taxes, they would have more than enough funding to do all of the proper audits. >> the senator's blueprint highlights over 20 ways that could be cuts to the government budget, totally $1 trillion. if the math adds up that would help elon musk get halfway to his goal of enacting $2 trillion worth of cuts.
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jackie. jackie: it sure would. thank you. speaking of elon musk and vivek ramaswamy they're going to be heading to capitol hill next week and proposing massive cuts. is it possible? let's bring in strategic wealth partners, luke lloyd. i want to go to america's accountant on this. hillary was talking about doge wanting to cut $2 trillion in spending. that would be massive towards our deficit. >> absolutely. anything that the doge group can put together and hopefully people are going to listen, jackie, because we all know how much fraud and waste exists in the government. for example, how about this? the pentagon has failed seven straight audits. now, what does that tell you with the amount of money that goes into defense, and they can't pass an audit? so, let's hope that doge can
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really make some differences here because they don't necessarily have the teeth. it's a matter of the president listening to them and what he can do by executive order, and if he can't do it, can he go to congress and have -- and lobby for the changes that we desperately need here. jackie: yeah, and hilly did some excellent reporting laying out if you take away some of the executive orders that biden has put in place, for example, forgiving student loan debt, you can get to that target and it's not that hard to get there. she talked about the cbo and their debt outlook. said this, federal debt held by the public would rise to 110% of gdp the end of 2032 if all else remains the same reaching 185% of gdp by 2052. that's just not sustainable. something's got to give. >> well, look, the doge,
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department of government efficiencies, really the deflationary, disinflationary department. all inflation and all of that stunts government growth is government debt. the fact that we grew from 2020 to 27 trillion to almost 36 trillion now and $9 trillion in just four years, that's stunted a lot of the economic growth and that free market capitalistic innovation. if we get back on organic free market growth, lower actions, lower regulations, we're going to spark the economy to actually increase revenue, so under the trump administration, we had the most tax revenue in history because we sparked organic growth and that whole kind of thought process, the tariffs being inflationary and economic growth. that's off set by lowering carpet taxes from 21% to 15%. every 1% decrease in corporate taxes adds to gdp.
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the projections we'll lose 1% by the tariffs, you add 3% gdp organically. jackie: a lot of people have been talking, dan, how the president would have to pass those tax cuts and pass them quickly. obviously, he wants to open up the oil space and the energy space and do it quickly to get the prices down. so for those who are debating and saying it may take a while before he can have a real impact here, others would say, no, there are things he can do on day one that would actually open it up pretty quickly. >> no doubt about it, as luke was just saying to the point of executive orders on day one, which will eliminate a lot of the unnecessary spending. remember, we have a spending problem, not a revenue problem. so, to me, it's a combination of three things, it's tax cuts, it's deregulation, and it's about efficiency in government. you know, elon musk wants to
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use ai. look what he was able to do at twitter. he took over. he cut 80% of the work force and you know what? x is operating just fine. so, even in a private company like that, you had so much waste and unnecessary costs. can you imagine what could be done with the federal government by implementing very simple things and doing them quickly? the answer to your question is, why he, trump can do it quickly while he has both houses of congress. >> you're right and luke, that's why the stock market is excited for just the month, the dow is up 7 1/2%, the nasdaq up 6.2% and even in this last week with this threat of tariffs, the market is taking that on the chin and ultimately saying the right policies will put this economy on the right track to continue to grow and operations will flourish and so will everyday citizens because remember, two-thirds of the
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economy is consumer spending. it's you and me. >> that's exactly right. and that's why i'm of the philosophy that 2025 is going to be the year of the equal weight s&p 500 which means the other stocks outside of technology and the top seven stocks that carry the market because you have manufacturing, you have financials with deregulation that are going to benefit, materials, the good things happening to america so you have all the other sectors that need to catch up to tech that's basically carrying us for a couple of years. so we've been manufacturing heavily in financials, because perception means more than reality. whatever happens the next couple of years, the perception is that trump is going to be good for that. the one thing i would keep an eye on, the government efficiency department, and we have 21 million public sector employees, mainly state employees, two million direct federal employees. if we make things more efficient and lay off a lot of the workers, since two-thirds
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of the consumer, spending, me and you, if we lay off some of the government jobs, i would pay close attention to that because that could pull back consumer spending because we're making things more efficient. jackie: you might see a bump in the unemployment rate initially, but dan, in 30 seconds, with the trump administration cut the waste and place them in other jobs, because the economy will be growing and room to do it. >> that's it. the compli can grow and the these people working in the government, if we could put them in the private sector, that's a win-win for everybody. so that should be the outcome that we're driving towards, jackie. jackie: all right. dan, luke, good to see you both. >> thank you. jackie: all right. while you're giving more, porch pirates, they're actually taking more. the warning that we have coming up. lainey wilson: in this family, we ask for help when we need it so we can help more children who really need it.
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>> millions of americans shopping for gifts this holiday weekend, but law enforcement officials are warning them to watch out for suspected porch pirates. madison scarpino has the details. >> jackie, americans are expected to break holiday shopping records this year, but the national police association says many criminals are even more motivated to steal during the holidays. >> we're seeing burglars follow
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people home from the mall, from the store, and especially if you drive home from the mall or from the store with lots of packages in your vehicle. they will follow you home and attempt to rob you often right in your driveway. >> she says that shoppers need to stay vigilant since the national retear federation says americans will spend nearly one trillion on the holiday stopping season. over 183 million people are planning on shopping between thanksgiving and cyber monday, but a lot of those won't step food in a store. >> black tuesday, black wednesday, and everybody before so you're not caught up in it, really. >> online, everything is online. >> 100%? >> 100%. >> you're not stepping foot in a store? >> no, i hate going in the stores on black friday.
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it's just too much. >> with all the jn line -- online shopping, porch pirates, americans lost 13 billion to packages loss last year. and they hate lights, locks and security cameras. jackie: madison, they also eight barking dogs, just a tip. try buying the gifts for the 12 days of christmas. the staggering cost of that coming up. ♪ three french hence, two turtle doves ♪ with ancestrydna. explore the detailed family roots, cultures and traits that shaped who you are today for only $39.
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very special christmas for me ♪ >> with the holiday shopping season in full swing, ever wonder if you could swing buying all the presents in the 12 days of christmas at today's place. according to pnc's christmas price index, $50,000 for all of that. would it be worth it? let's ask our panel. comedian ali, and new york columnist, would it be worth it? there's gold in there. >> gold seems to be a nice value, but this isn't my christmas list, there seems to be a high density of birds and poultry on there, but i was surprised to hear that the average gen z-er my generation is planning on spending $1,000, this year, but 50k is above
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mine. jackie: i'm seeing eight maids milking, nine ladies dancing, 10 lords a-leaping. i'm thinking from a politically collect standpoint, it should be outlawed. >> if it's a boyfriend and break up with them, and family disown them. $50,000, you can get a car, you can get two cars, yeah, if someone is wasting their money on this stuff and some of it borderline illegal activity, so, not good. [laughter] >> all right. moving on from the gifts. let's talk about the turkey that we ate this weekend, a lot of people complaining they each so much over the holidays and a weight problem, and they've got to deal with it in january. we get back to the gym, the treadmill, the membership prices and the fees. won it be easier if people were more moderate with respect to eating and didn't indulge in the holiday season? >> i think that thanksgiving is the one day, it's just a cheat
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day and anything goes, but moderation going into it and moderation after it seems healthy to me, but this is my first thanksgiving in 10 years where i ate turkey, i broke my vegetarianism, and a milestone for me. >> and i heard something about tofu turkey. that definitely was a option. people butted so much pressure on the eating and drinking and social, and then they get in a hole and desperately want to try to get out. >> yeah, i think it's not that we're getting heavier, it's inflation, part of it, you know, but if we're going to eat like this, which we are for every holiday, i think it's an opportunity now to give people christmas gifts of ozempic. so, takes care of it. jackie: all right. let's talk about the general holiday shopping if you're not buying the 12 days of christmas gifts and you want to get someone special in your life
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something. many people have been shopping online for years now post pandemic, that was the thing, but we talked about how foot traffic has been up in the mall and people want to get out there and feel nostalgia. there's a different feeling in the air, also with a change in regime in washington. >> yeah, absolutely. i think it's so nice to actually touch a fabric and see what it's like in person, to try something on and not spend your time going back to ups or fed ex to return something that just didn't work. you know, i think there's some ownership to actually picking a garment, seeing if it works or seeing something in person and picking it for someone else, and giving it to them having that experience. it seems of much more personal and intimate. and from those people buying it from their bed in pajamas. jackie: i did not grow up that way, i remember shopping trips with my mother going to the mall to buy the family holiday
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gifts and wonderful times and we'd stop for hot chocolate and buy some things for ourselves, too. alli, what's the craziest gift someone got you, you were like, what is this? >> oh, something i think my aunt got me a globe that lit up when i was a kid. i don't know where you would put that or why someone would want that. there's a lot of crazy gifts out there now, online you can get anything, you can basically get the costumes that people use for halloween, everything's got hyperbolic with stuff you find online. and people like the in-person shopping. and used to be physical fights going on and now that people are shopping online, you can go to the stores and that's a minority. jackie: that's a great point and i remember seeing the video people literally mowing down others for the tv.
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great to see you. >> thank you. >> see appreciate everyone watching out there as well. we thank you. you can also catch me on the big money show weekdays 1 p.m. eastern on fox business. and griff jenkins and alicia acuna are coming up when fox continues next. ♪ simply having a wonderful christmas time ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ (vo) with verizon, trade in any phone, any condition, this black friday get iphone 16 pro with apple intelligence.
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