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tv   Fox News Live  FOX News  November 30, 2024 1:00pm-2:00pm PST

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congress delegated the details to the federal bureaucracy, the bureaucracy that delegated to a private nonprofit that administers the program, the supreme court can say that doesn't fly which is another step toward making congress do its job of writing the laws. paul: what do you think that they will do? >> since they took this case they are likely to say that and reviving the nondelegation doctrine. paul: a technical term for congress should do its job as the constitution says it should. if you have your own hit or miss send it to us, that is it for this week's show, thanks to my panel and all of you for watching. we hope to see you again here next week. arthel: high profile arrests
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sparking new fears about crime across the country and that includes migrant crime. fox news confirming two members of the violent venezuelan ganglia arrested in new york city and part of the group that allegedly, colorado apartment complex. i am anita vogel, good to be with you. jonathan:today, we are learning new details about the suspect charged in the deadly shooting of a police officer in a chicago suburb. the officer was responding to a call about a man with a gun at a bank. we have fox team coverage. madison scottarpino on that an ted williams, a former homicide detective. first, more on those tren de
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aragua gang arrests. paul: both members crossed illegally into the country last year. now they are back in federal custody for deportation after being arrested in this drug bust along with 13 other suspected venezuelan gang members were peddling and credit card fraud and selling heroin and fake weed which says these weapons and ammo were also found during an early morning raid, they were wanted in aurora for another incident, they broke into an apartment 10 minutes before a federal shooting at the apartment complex. shortly after this the property management company made headlines proclaiming the
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complex had been taken over, claims that were denied by the local police. none of the men in the video had been linked to any criminal organization. city councilwoman raise the alarm at the apartment complex. >> i'm very proud of myself that this feature of my imagination because so much noise, brought so much attention to this transnational gang that invaded part of my city, put them on the run and now i look forward to working with tom holman and the trump administration to rid the country of this venezuelan gang. >> it's not clear how they got to new york city all the way from colorado but tom homan told fox the trump administration will go after these gang members for
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deportation. anita:to the midwest, police releasing the name of the suspected gunman in the deadly shooting of a chicago area police detective. >> reporter: getting new information about the man accused of killing allen readins. of 37-year-old chicago man with extensive criminal background. his name is joel thomas charged with first-degree murder for readin's death and faces attempt at murder, possession of a stolen firearm and other charges according to police and he has a long history of arrest including multiple arrests for aggravated battery to a police officer, thomistic battery and resisting a police officer.
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police say other officers were responding to a call about a man walking out of a bank with a gun yesterday morning. when the officers asked him to show his hands, probably saying that is when thomas shot readins. police are shocked. the police chief says readins was a dedicated officer who loved his family and community. he was with the police department since 2019. >> he leaves behind to mourn his loss his 19-year-old son, his mother, and siblings as well as a host of friends and officers. he closed substantial cases and helped us to resolve countless incidents. he was a natural. please keep us in your prayers. paul: this is the first time such a police officer has been killed on the job since 1938.
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anita: thank you for that live report. jonathan: let's bring in ted williams who is a fox news contributor. once again, we are talking about a law enforcement officer killed in the line of duty. your response to what happened? >> it is good to meet you but under these sad circumstances, you had this detective allen readin and one thing we learned about him is what all law enforcement doing this country, they run toward the danger. detective readin was warned a
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man with a gun. detective readin could have gone in a different direction but what did he do? he went toward the danger and as a result of going toward the danger, the individual with that gunshot and killed him. this detective made the ultimate sacrifice, represents what's good in america when it comes to law enforcement who served and protect their communities every day. paul: jonathan: the gunman has been named by officials as jarrell thomas, has a long criminal history but he is out and able to bring this sort of tragedy to another law enforcement family. >> that is a sad commentary
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about what has gone on in america. we have too many individuals who have no redeeming qualities, criminal element with extensive records. i am hoping something will change in america. not only am i a former detective but also a lawyer and i can tell you have seen in the criminal justice system these individuals come and go through the system. a very sad situation. this man should be going home to his 19-year-old son, his mother and siblings. the sad commentary, he has gone to a morgue. jonathan: let me turn to the tren de aragua problem.
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it seems there are at least a few hundred of these violent gang members that might not be extensive in terms of pure numbers but as we've seen in aurora, colorado, they are causing mayhem and terror for a lot of people, their influence is outsized. what do we do about it? >> what we have to do about it is what a lot enforcement is good at doing, they have to rush these individuals, take them into custody throughout this country. if you notice the university of georgia where we had a young woman, laken riley killed via tren de aragua gang member, we
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have what has gone on in colorado. what we have to do is take the chains off of law enforcement officers and let them go full force, take them and lock them up. jonathan: they will get this job done quickly. >> the sad commentary individuals have certain rights in this country and as a result of that, law enforcement officer restrained or constrained to. local mayors and individuals give these people off the street and left law enforcement do their job. jonathan: thank you so much. >> my pleasure in these sad
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circumstances. anita: border patrol agents in san diego seizing 25 pounds of fentanyl hidden in a suspicious vehicle weeks after cvp seized 800,000 fentanyl pills on the arizona/mexico border. christina coleman has live on this story. >> reporter: no rest for border patrol. look what a cvp director in san diego posted to x a few hours ago, border agents intercepted 81 pounds of cocaine hidden in a spare tire and border agents seized 25 pounds of fentanyl in a sedan 70 miles north of the us-mexico border in south orange county, enough deadly doses to kill 5 million people in the last fiscal year alone.
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they seized approximately 17,400 pounds of cocaine, 98,000 pounds of meth and 6500 pounds of fentanyl. >> for the last four years that is when fentanyl kills a quarter million americans and sex trafficking is up 600%. >> reporter: donald trump vowing to address this problem writing on truth social i will be working on a large scale united states advertising campaign explaining how bad fentanyl is almond millions of lives needlessly destroyed. everyone will know how bad this drug is and trump also threatening to impose tariffs on china, mexico and canada if they don't crack down on smuggling as fentanyl continues to pour into communities across the nation. in the pacific northwest,
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federal officials recently busted and east trafficking organization operating steps from the university of washington in seattle. the group is accused of pouring millions of fentanyl pills causing violence. >> the shootings that were prevalently reported in the city, also financial ties through africa, europe, and mexico. >> reporter: 50 firearms including several hundred thousand dollars of cash and jewelry along with thousands of rounds of ammunition were seized tied to this drug trafficking organization. very concerning. anita: the pictures of the drugs and contraband pouring into this country is unbelievable. thank you for that report.
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jonathan: there's dangerous tension across the middle east this afternoon. israel and hezbollah accuse each other of violating their cease-fire deal and a startling development in syria where antigovernment rebels have taken over the country's second largest city, the latest on that next. for more than a decade farxiga has been trusted again and again, and again. ♪far-xi-ga♪ ♪far-xi-ga♪ ask your doctor about farxiga.
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jonathan: a cease-fire between israel and hezbollah appears to be holding but just barely, both sides pointing fingers over alleged truths violations, and in the civil war,/1 the nation's second largest city. stephanie bennett had the latest. >> reporter: it has been a last 24 hours, last few days to say the least. we are hearing iran's foreign minister is set to visit syria tomorrow. he will go on to turkey and this is day 4 between israel and hezbollah and both sides keep flying these violation
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accusations at each other but at last check the cease-fire is holding. earlier the idf released this video of what said was a strike in lebanon. israeli aircraft struck hezbollah targets several times since the truce began with israel saying it reserves the right under the cease-fire to strike against any perceived violations. over to gaza where fighting continues between israel and hamas. according to a senior palestinian health official an israeli airstrike killed five people, three of which were the world central kitchen, they deliver, the october 7th, us attack, the world central kitchen says they have no knowledge any individual had alleged ties but pausing operations in gaza. now we head over to syria where
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rebels control a majority of aleppo following a surprise offensive. overnight russia launched airstrikes in response across part of the city for the first time since 2016. as part of russia's ongoing support for the syrian president and his regime. armed forces are preparing for a counter attack and analysts say the reason the rebels have advanced so quickly is because of syria's closest allies, weakened by the israeli attacks ongoing in the region. jonathan: fascinating to think these rebels were crushed in 2016 and a real embarrassment for bashar al-assad who we should remember is allied with iran and russia. anita: thanks for coming in today.
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the world still seems to be on fire especially in the middle east, so much going on but as things relate to this cease-fire, both sides of accuse each other of violating it. thursday israel attacked has the rocket launcher in lebanon but israel says the us gave them the right to take military action against direct threats from lebanon. what are your thoughts on that? >> thank you, there is a side letter to the cease-fire agreement the united states gave israel, israel has the right and lebanon has the right to defend itself but israel has a right to defend itself proactively. if they see that there's a threat and they will be attacked, israel has the right to take action. which is the only way you get israel to agree to this because this has been going on for a year with hezbollah firing
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thousands of rockets into israel. israel has been warning them. finally israel took out most of the leadership and destroyed 80% of their missiles and rockets which is extraordinary. israel has given hezbollah a meaningful significant defeat but going to your reporting about syria, how did the rebels take over the city and you referred to it because hezbollah has been crushed, they helped bashar al-assad greatly in the civil war when there was a civil war between sunni muslims and majority in syria and the government of syria. as your announcer mentions, is closely aligned with iran and russia but russia now because they are preoccupied with ukraine doesn't have as many
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fighter jets to help bashar al-assad. i would say bashar al-assad is weak right now and it is amazing what's going on. a jonathan: attorney the events with rebels taking over aleppo and adding to the tensions of the big picture of the region between lebanon and hezbollah, i want to listen to what mike pompeo had to say about it, let's listen. >> i'm not surprised the cease-fire hasn't held for a couple days, the conflict has been going on a long time. and the goal is the destruction of israel and and israeli citizens live in the northern part.
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>> they go back to their neighborhoods, some finding their homes, some not finding homes. for the ones finding homes are they going to have to pack out and get out again? what do you think? >> made the. a lot of people need to have a little context. there was a cease-fire. it was hezbollah that broke it on october 8th. it is important for everybody to know that israel was fine with not having conflicts with lebanon or hezbollah. hezbollah attacked israel and for the last year they would fire rockets into israel, kill israelis, israel would respond and fire rockets back into lebanon but how long do you keep doing that? hezbollah kept on firing rockets. israel would try to fire more rockets back to doctor
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hezbollah but they weren't deterred, and take out their leadership and destroy most of their weaponry which they have done but the only way you are going to get peace in this region is if you change the regime in iran. it all comes from iran, the houthis and yemen, hamas, gaza, all of them are being trained, supplied and financed and guided by iran. we want to get into a situation, unlike the biden administration with do with the middle east in terms of conflict management which never settled the issues, the trump administration is going to deal with this in terms of conflict resolution and the reason. anita: that is what i wanted to
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ask you, and trump becoming the president once again, quick answer. >> iran is scared of trump and trump will be able to put in all kinds of new sanctions and pressure and hopefully go for regime change. anita: we appreciate your perspective, thanks for coming in today. jonathan: donald trump had dinner with justin trudeau and another meeting earlier today, what those meetings could mean for trump's potential tariffs on canada and what those tariffs may mean for you next.
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jonathan: donald trump and justin trudeau optimistic after meeting at mar-a-lago, trump says dinner conversation covered the flow of illegal drugs and migrants are cross our northern border. he has threatened steep tariffs on canada unless the border traffic stops. mark meredith live in west palm beach with details of how the meeting went. >> reporter: there has been a lot of controversy since trump threatened canada and mexico with the possibility of tariffs unless more was done to stop the flow of fentanyl from reaching the us, threats against canada and mexico got their attention including justin trudeau who showed up in florida last night. there was a photo posted from dave mccormick of pennsylvania,
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he was at the dinner, he was seated next to donald trump and trump's incoming national security advisor, and that had to find out about it in real time. trump boasted he had a productive meeting with the prime minister where we discussed more important topics requiring both countries to work together to address the fentanyl and drug crisis that decimated so much, trudeau says he enjoyed the conversation with trump. no word yet if mexico's president will make a trip anytime soon. trump said it was a productive call, the mexican president says she believes a trade war can be avoided. lawmakers split over the tariff strategy, republicans praising the effort to replace border security but democrats have
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introduced legislation to reign in trump's tariff power and some say trump is creating chaos with the threat of tariffs. >> we see an administration that the more keen on tearing things down across the border. >> reporter: democrats are vowing to rein in that power but they don't have much power themselves come january because they will be in the minority. it is not expected to go anywhere but gives an indication of the sensitivity of this nature with trump threatening tariffs on more nations depending on their stance. jonathan: mark meredith, thank you so much. anita: president biden heading back to washington. is administration is working with the fbi to investigate a series of threats against some
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of donald trump's cabinet nominees and democratic lawmakers in connecticut. lucas tomlinson has more on this. >> hamas has released a new hostage video showing alexander from new jersey, a dual citizen, lone soldier in the israeli defense forces and moments ago the white house released a statement about this hostage video saying, quote, the hostage video seems to be a cruel reminder of how mass's terror against citizens of multiple countries including our own. the war in gaza would stop tomorrow and the suffering of gazans would end immediately and would have ended months ago if hamas could release the hostages. the statement went on to say there's a deal that remains on
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the table. yesterday in nantucket doing some window shopping some eyebrows were raised when biden walked out of this bookstore with a copy of the hundred years war on colonial conquest which some see as anti-israeli. professor meredith who is a former plo spokeswoman, still the designated terrorist group in the united states and reminder while there is a cease-fire with hezbollah that expires when president biden leaves office, no deal with hamas right now where four american citizens including ed alexander remain alive and in captivity 420 days at least since the october 7th hamas massacre. president biden will be heading back to the white house in a few hours to mark world aids day and another trip abroad going to africa to the country
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of angola. anita: we should all remember there are hostages in gaza including those four americans. thank you for that live report. jonathan: as democrats search for answers after vice president harris's crushing electoral defeat her campaign aides are breaking their silence defending their overall strategy from spending to messaging but critics say they are shifting the blame. great to see you, melissa and i want to play a clip of dylan who ran the harris campaign to a large extent, seems emblematic to be of the problems democrats are having in digesting this defeat. >> up against a narrative we weren't doing anything or were afraid to have interviews, we
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have another thing we had to fight back for that trump never had to worry about. jonathan: there's all this talk about did we are did we not do enough, should we or shouldn't we have talked to joe rogan. the simple answer is they should have talked more about the economy and more about the border, seems to me democrats to a large extent missed the mood of the country. >> especially that clip going on pod save america, the obama people talking to themselves how we screwed up this election which is a monadic of how we got here. the democratic party was co-opted by a bunch of reallys, forgot the people they report to represent. the two issues every paul told
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us we didn't have to guess where the economy, not wall street but inflation which was crushing american families and the border and kamala harris never had a good answer for either. she didn't do enough interviews, she didn't shop to al smith, they. through $1 billion and at its core they lost the american people and that's why donald trump did as well as he did. jonathan: the party that always considered itself a party of the people loses such a crushing defeat to a man who is allegedly a billionaire who somehow is able to speak far more directly and appeal far more directly to those people. it is extraordinary to me. >> the coalition, the backbone of the democratic party was the
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union movement, the working man and woman, supposed to be the voice of people who are most vulnerable, didn't have a seat at the table. in the last several years you see the party completely missed the mark and forget who it is supposed to be there to fight for. donald trump to his credit swooped in and shipped away at the latino base, black men, younger voters and he in essence co-opted the democratic coalition and democrats have to do a lot of introspection coming off of this election if they don't want to repeat the same thing in the midterms and four years from now and it won't be going on pod save america. jonathan: let's look at four years from now, it will be an open nomination process which it wasn't this time. the front runners on screen, kamala harris, gavin newsom,
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governor of california, josh schapiro, aoc, who do you think is going to emerge from that pack as the leader of the democratic party? >> its way too soon to be talking about that but two things about two people on screen. there is a reason kamala harris was so roundly rejected in the 2020 democratic primary. democrats did not choose her, the party elders chose her. four years from now i don't see her rising to the top. the other person, if democrats had not learned our lesson from the past election, we've got to move away from the fringe and back to the center, this country does not want an extremist. that aoc's name is popping up makes me fear we are not learning the lesson.
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jonathan: great talking to you, thanks. >> thanks for having me. anita: australia is the first country in the world to ban children under 16 from using social media. do we need to do the same for the sake of our children's mental health? that is next on fox news live. . (other money manager) how so? (fisher investments) we're a fiduciary, obligated to act in our client'' best interest. (fisher investments) so we don't sell any commission-based products. (other money manager) then how do you make money? (fisher investments) we have a simple management fee, structured so we do better when our clients do better. (other money manager) your clients really come first then, huh? fisher investments: yes. we make them a top priority, by getting to know their finances, family, health, lifestyle and more. (other money manager) wow, maybe we are different. (fisher investments) at fisher investments, we're clearly different.
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states across the us raise concerns about social media and youth mental health. doctor debbie, good to see you today. let me ask you, good idea or bad idea? >> we need to do something much more strongly to help kids with their mental health concerns even if it's not outright mental illness but more their demoralization, being isolated and insecure but at the same time i don't think this is the way to go about it. seems like a broad, sweeping measure have that could throw out the benefits of social media and target certain people more than things they are saying. anita: i wondered if we might see something like this in the us. there could be legal issues around it as well.
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i want to read something the current surgeon general said about this. a synthesis, here we go, this was earlier this year, why i am calling for a warning label on social media platforms. he went on to say a synthesis of 20 studies demonstrated a significant relationship between social media use and body image concerns and eating disorders with social comparison as a contributing factor. when asked about the impact of social media on their body image nearly half, 40 precip% of adolescents age 13 to 17 said social media makes them feel worse, 40% said them feels neither better nor worse than 14% said it makes them feel better. when you look at those statistics and the depression among our youth, certainly like you said, something has to be done. what do you recommend?
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>> it in the preview of the parents more than the government. social media is pervasive. there can be harm associated with a but you could have creditors targeting kids. kids are spending so much time on social media and that's where a lot of concerns come up, kids spent three hours a day, have more concerns in terms of insecurity but that's the role of the parents to alert parents a little bit more, alert them about screen time or what their kids are looking at but if you have a government come in and decide a warning label will go on everything, seems like an overreach because kids, there are benefits, kids tend to bond with each other especially after covid, sometimes they are part of a minority or have a minority opinion, they can find others outside their circle to
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communicate with so you are eliminating those things. the warning label tells people more than they might suspect about social media. anita: a double-edged sword. what do you see in your own practice with problems from social media to adolescents. >> people become more concerned about body image but not sure if it is social media alone. with zoom and people working from home i see more people concerned about how they look and cosmetic surgeries are also going up but there's something about being confronted with an image whether it is true or not, something you don't like about yourself causing these thoughts to begin but social media, is that the actual
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message because how is it different than tv or movies in the past that might have made people feel they couldn't live up to what they wanted to do. jonathan: anita: it's more of your daily life when it is in your hand. can't put the genie back in the bottle but parents need to take a more active role. thank you for joining us, appreciate it. jonathan: a rare honor for a black american priest, he left brazil in 1955 because he was not allowed to practice his ministry. he's on the road to becoming the seventh african-american saint. lauren green has more. >> the catholic church recognizes 10,000 saints but none of them are african-americans born and raised in the united states. a growing list of saint candidates could change that.
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the latest on the path to canonization is the servant of god's award, a black priest born in boston who went to brazil because he wasn't allowed to practice ministry in america. father morton joins half a dozen african-american men and women known as the saintly six whose causes for sainthood are in the early stages. >> what is great about the people being considered is they were born in the united states, they would technically be the first black american saints. >> reporter: deacon harold brooke silvers wrote about a slave who became a priest, his father told him he would most likely be the first black american canonized. >> causes are moving along very well at a much faster rate than normal. >> reporter: black catholics are championing the causes honoring the challenges they
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overcame living through slavery and jim crow. >> being a black person in the united states during that time, the things they were able to accomplish, the work that god was able to do through them during that challenging time inspired me. >> highlighted in new episodes of martin scorsese's new dock you series. back to you. jonathan: we will be right back. but i've alw 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. and i can't wait to see what's next. hats off to the future. nothing runs like a deere™
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anita: record amount of snow slamming the northeast as lake effect storms sweep across town from ohio to new york with some parts of pennsylvania exceeding 40 inches of snowfall, 2.4 million people remain under a lake effect snow warning through at least monday. jonathan: it is called the game and it is owned by the michigan wolverines thanks to a game-winning field goal with less then a minute ago, michigan with a 13-10 upset win over ohio state. it is also their fourth straight win in the rivalry. players from the two schools forwarded midfield after michigan tried to plant its flag there. it went on for several minutes. and unfortunate end to a good
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rivalry game. anita: we have a brand-new 4-legged champion, taking home the coveted best in show title at the 2,024 national dog show. not only is he cute but he's making history as the first pogo to win the competition's highest honor. that is it for us today. great to be with you. jonathan: i love pugs. no more gross cough syrup. we all want you to feel better. i want extra tv time or i'll walk! how about this? introducing the only kids soft-chew for medicated cough relief. aaaaghhh! new mucinex children's mighty chews are mighty clever. have you ever thought of getting a walk-in tub for you or someone you love? now is a great time to take a look at getting a safe step walk-in tub. with safe step's standard heated seat and new fast fill faucet,
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♪ ♪ >> jesse: hello, everybody.

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