tv FOX Friends First FOX News January 9, 2025 1:00am-2:00am PST
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captions on a phone, like captioning on your tv so you can see what the caller is saying live as they say it, making it easy to understand and respond immediately. there is no insurance or medicare required. clear caption service is provided at no cost to you through a federally funded program. we deliver, install and train you on how to use your phone all at no cost to you. >> give your loved ones the independence and connection they deserve. >> call now to see if you qualify to get a clear captions phone at no cost to you, call 1-800-979-0270. >> that's one (800) 979-0270. >> force factor score. >> hardcore is for men ready to take on the day and night score. hardcore boosts libido, increases stamina and improves performance. that's why score hardcore is the number one men's libido supplement in america. alert appeared to at least five
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active wildfires burning across los angeles including one fire that erupted in hollywood hills overnight. the fire tearing through the city killing five people. speak of the pacific's palisades fire the most instructive wildfire in l.a. history burning over 17,000 acres. eaton fire outside of pasadena 10,000 acres burned and both at 0% containment. >> todd: take a look at these heartbreaking before and after photos judges some of the distraction. this is the charter high school a popular location for hollywood production to see if they are on the left and gone on the right. >> carley: just one of the businesses ripped apart by the flames in the last 24 hours. 1,000 structures have been burned in the pacific palisades fire alone. you are watching a special 4:00 a.m. edition of "fox & friends" i am carley shimkus. >> todd: i'm todd piro and many scrambling to escape the fire and others to pick up the
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pieces. >> it is gone, help a trunk gone, everything in the neighborhood, not existing right now. >> we have been here since 8:00 a.m. and no one is safe from this. >> carley: let's go to robert ray live on the ground standing outside one of the burned structures in los angeles county. roberts, good morning. >> good morning to you pacific palisades where i am at right now over 17,000 acres burned, unfortunately. you see this home behind me is an inferno right now. there are many things like this up and down the neighborhood right off of the pacific highway and the pacific ocean. malibu adjust to the north, guys. take a look at the video from last night in the hollywood hills coach at the sunset fire. we landed here yesterday and we went directly from lax to this fire as it ignited.
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we got pretty close up there with the firefighters as they were extinguishing or train to, at least go to extinguish the fire appeared to player is still going on. unfortunately right now, there are five fire is not contained. as a matter of fact, pacific palisades fire right now is 0% containment if you can believe that. when the light does come up, i think those assessments will go into a better scope. they may have some containment, but as i speak right now and his home and all of the people's belongings behind me, it is 0% contained. firefighters continued to move up and down they have only roads take the hoses out and trying to douse them so embers when they do fly up at least when they come down, may come down on wet structures and not dry structures at this point. you can hear the pops in the back. the winds have died down and
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thankfully that is a good thing. unfortunately, the past couple of days winds up to 100 miles per hour at points and we still see wind gust 30-40 miles an hour today and even tomorrow. there is a tremendous amount of activity all around the los angeles area. in fact, about 12,000 personnel on the ground if you include all of the different first responders trying to get these fires out. so many people, unfortunately, displaced with homes in ruins and of course, fatalities and a lot of injuries. santa monica just to the south of us, parts of santa monica are close down. they have evacuations as of last night. same thing with sunset boulevard with the sunset fire evacuations. all of this area right now where we are standing obviously no electricity and no power happening because of these fires. it is very fluid, it is very deadly, and it will likely go
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down as historic and southern california, guys. >> carley: certainly will. robert, when it comes to the winds driving at catastrophic levels, is the worst over? >> the worst of it is, indeed, over as far as the winds. having said that, we are not as far out as wind gusts the next 24-48 hours. when you look at this fire behind me sort of ripping apart the neighborhood or any sort of wind gusts can blow the embers and strike up the flames just sitting around a campfire and you blow on it and the fires go up, that is exactly the same concept here. remember this area has not seen a lot of rain in the past weeks. that just adds fuel to this fire, unfortunately. >> carley: robert ray in pacific palisades day three of this fire. robert, stay safe and thank you so much. let's go to brooke singman on the political fallout from the
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virus, brooke, good morning. >> president trump is calling out president biden and governor newsom to the response to historic wildfires. the 15th at the fires in los angeles may be the worst in the history of the country. many circles, they are doubting whether insurance companies will even have enough money to pay for this catastrophe. he said, let this serve and be emblematic of the gross incompetence and mismanagement of the item/newsom two oh. but despite newsom to resign, he said he is not going anywhere. >> i can't even respond to it. people are literally fleeing and people have lost their lives, kids have lost their schools, families completely torn asunder in churches burned down. this guy wants to politicize it. i have a lot of thoughts and i know what i want to say, but i won't. i stood next to the president of
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the united states of america today and i was proud to be with joe biden here till he had the backs of every single person and did not try to divide this. >> carley: trump says he will take care of californians. >> if we take care of the california we take care of the whole state. it is a tragedy and the governor has not done a good job. with that said, i got along with them when he was governor and we work together well. it looks like we are going to have to be the one to rebuild it. what happened there, i don't think it is like anything i have ever seen quite like it. insurance companies will have a big problem because you are talking about big, big dollars. >> meanwhile president biden meeting with state and local officials has canceled his trip to italy to focus on the federal response. tomorrow in california to see the impact firsthand, guys. >> carley: brooke singman live coach i think you. the palisades fire is the biggest blaze burning over 17,000 acres and still at 0%
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containment. but firefighters reportedly running out of water from hydrants as they thought you might fought the flames yesterday. >> todd: he joins us, doctor, you are living this horror right now. but building off of brooke's report, where'd he laid the blame? who is responsible for the tragedy? >> it is pretty obvious who is at blame for this and it is governor gavin newsom and they are karen bass and on the county level los angeles county board of supervisors, five women whose job it is to guide public safety and infrastructure for the los angeles county. these people have one main job and that main job is public safety. it is not i met change. but is not dei, it is not a high-speed rail took us $200 billion and take 50 years to build. what is one thing and it is public safety. that is the one thing they have
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not man focused on. karen bass went off to ghana on a political junket and gavin newsom called a special session california state legislature to spend $25 million to trump-proof california before he takes office and two or three days ago press conference ranting about the high-speed rail. they have done everything possible aside from focus on this. you look at karen bass and she spent billions of dollars building places to put homeless people and illegal immigrants putting them up in expensive hotels and a few hundred dollars a night while cutting the budget of the fire department by close to $20 million at a time when we need it most. the fire department is understaffed and short on air resources and short individuals on trucks and short on water of all things. this is something we predicted and something we knew would happen. i took my family up to a mountain and the palisades overlooking the whole community and actually showed them. i said these words six months ago, this will all burn.
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why? it is obvious to anyone, it is dry and ready to go up and we have no resources to prevent it. unfortunately, what i prevented came true and it should have never happen and head down things to prevent an attack it as soon as it began, this would have never gotten to this point. >> carley: you mentioned, dr., the fire department is understaffed. we got to know you during the covid-19 pandemic and during that time, firefighters were let go because they did not get vaccinated. boy, does the city need those firefighters now. >> this is one of the biggest tragedies of covid. they got rid of so many firefighters young, healthy people who were never at risk that covid and worked outdoors for the most part anyway. never exposed in a meaningful way and told, "unless you get the and you don't necessarily need, you are out." because what happened? they fired and they went to
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other fire departments then i think los angeles leaving l.a. with a major shortage that lasts to this day and even on top of that with the budget cuts, even if they wanted those people, they don't have the money for them anymore. this is absolute disaster, completely preventable and negligence on their part. >> todd: speaking of money, dropping fire coverage for hundreds of california homes in this pacific palisades area. doctor, what happens to your friends, your family, your neighbors who want to rebuild that now don't have that insurance coverage? maybe aren't hollywood celebrities with basically self-insurance where they can write another check and build their home in a few months? >> this is the part of the story no one is talking about and they assume because of the words malibu and pacific palisades, old wealthy people. and the treasurer at the beach club, lacoste beach club in malibu i know many of the 300 people who all lost their homes over there members at the club who lived in that surrounding
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community. everyone of them lost their homes and guess what, they are firefighters, teachers, retired elderly people, blue-collar low income who lived in the community for decades before malibu got expensive. we are not talking about wealthy people and people who do not have the resources. with the lack of insurance and impossibility of getting insurance after what we saw, guess what will happen? reconstruction will be next to impossible and add to that administrative headaches from coastal commission and malibu and l.a. cities that will have to watch over this and the lack of construction resources and how they put jack up the cost. this will take decades to rebuild, not weeks and not years, decades, mark my words. they will be people who lost everything and will never be able to return. they will have to move far away and lose that community, families and everything they spent so much time building. >> carley: that is right and if you don't have insurance,
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your life is altered forever. thank you so much for joining us this morning. we are so glad you are safe and thank you for your insights. you're very welcome. breaking news coverage of the wildfires all morning as officials warned the worst may be yet to come. >> todd: leo terrell lives in the los angeles area. he says california leaders are failing because they are more focused on dei instead of disasters. he is going to join us next. ♪ ♪
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for adults with copd that is not well controlled, and with a specific marker of inflammation. >> todd: fox news alert, five people dead as firefighters race across los angeles county torching up thousands of acres. >> carley: desperately trying to contain the flames as fields flames of fire. a red flag alert until tomorrow afternoon as officials worse they worst is yet to come. janice dean is tracking the dangerous windstorm and what is the latest? >> the winds will die down a little bit and we are concerned 24 mile-per-hour tests and cause problems and none of the fires are contained, but we will not see wins like we saw yesterday. 100 mile-per-hour winds near the eaton fire. they will settle down and by friday afternoon, really calm.
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we need to get through the next 24 hours. look at the wind gusts for burbank area. the top wind gusts yesterday 84 miles per hour winds and 60-mile per our gusts. we are talking historic lands in these regions. wind gust 30 miles an hour, 20 miles per hour so calm or whether, but again we are not out of the woods and not getting rain in the region which obviously needs at. this time yesterday, we were talking 2,000 acres but now 15,000 acres so that shows you the scope how bad this was just in a matter of hours. look at this region before yesterday. just completely devastated. the smoke is going to be an issue as well, which we have not talked about a lot. the smoke will cause major issues, especially for people with respiratory issues. here are the fires and this time yesterday i'm talking about three and now we have five,
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5,000 acres for the palisades. the eaton fire, by the way, over 10,000 acres. just completely spread within a matter of hours. here is altadena, california,, january 6th, and now completely devastated and it looks like a bomb went off and it is really unbelievable. wind gusts and going through time 20-30 miles an hour. we could see winds topping 50 miles an hour in these areas. but again, not 100 mile-per-hour winds. firefighters could not do anything except try to rescue people. they could not get in there to contain winds 90 miles an hour. but now they will be able to get aircraft up there and get into the perimeter. i do think there will be some improvement. >> todd: you hear people saying there is a pacific ocean and why can't they use water from there? only if use hose from the mountains and if the wind speeds.
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>> they had to make that decision and could not do it. >> todd: thank you. joining as fox news contributor at leo terrell, look wildfires erupting in southern california should come as no surprise to anyone. so why was l.a. so i'm prepared to deal with fires of this magnitude? >> i will tell you right now, todd, it is not a priority and it should have been a priority with president trump with governor newsom's attention in 2018. we talk about heavy water from the north in california. he didn't listen. president trump talked about in october with joe rogan. california to focus on fire prevention. instead of, we talk about the i! we talk about karen bass in africa. the priority is not on fire prevention but on climate change, on ep mandates. you know who is paying for this?
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the citizens in california because just like myself, i'm in my evacuation close and sleeping clothes. you don't know what's going to happen. what happened to pacific palisades and altadena should not have happened. one final point, why did the mayor cut $17,000 out of the fire department budget? it is not a priority, todd. >> todd: that mirror karen bass when pressed by reporters didn't have a lot to say. >> do you regret cutting some fire department by millions of dollars, mayor? have you nothing to say today? have you absolutely nothing to say to the citizens today? no apology for them? do you think you should have been visiting ghana when this was unfolding back home? >> todd: you had a long flight from africa to craft a response. yet, that is what she gives the
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reporter. where is the accountability, l leo? here is the leadership? >> it does not exist in california, todd because it is a blue state. a deep, deep, deep blue state. plus we have a left wing media that doesn't ask the hard questions. i applied that reporter, but the media here apologizes for the socialist democrats in the state. look, i can, these fires that are going on could have been prevented. when gavin newsom said he is not going to respond, this is a lame duck governor who wants to be president who has never addressed the issue of fire prevention. he knew this was going to happen. the idea you have pacific palisades and all that acreage burning and zero containment. where are the resources? zero containment. why? lack of resources, lack of
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water, lack of reservoirs. one last point because i live in the state. prop 1, of the citizens passed a ballot to create more dams. ten years later, zero, zero dams! why? >> todd: let's get into why. educate us a little bit how governor newsom, as you mentioned or asked for 15 points to prioritize a little fish known as the delta smelt over the safety of the people. and basically crippled the water supply all to save this tiny little fish that, quite frankly, basically nobody cares about, leo. >> and all of this water that we could have, guess where it goes, todd? you were talking about it, the pacific ocean! in the pacific ocean! the citizens of california and the citizens of los angeles made one undisputed fact. this could have been minimized if not afforded to a great extent. you look at the fact we speak
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today, two days of historic winds zero containment. this is the fold of the democratic leadership gavin newsom and karen bass. let me repeat that karen bass the mayor of the city of l.a. and gavin newsom. >> todd: leo, before we let you go, you are in west l.a. how worried that the fire is 0% contained? this will come out of mala blue pacific palisades and make its way to more populated area like santa monica, like brentwood. >> we are both lawyers. right now it is hope and prayer because we don't know. janice was talking about the winds. these flames and embers can go anywhere. case in point, look at palisades. everyone has to be on alert. there is no guarantee of this fire. sub right now, i don't know, but i have to be prepared to leave
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this house or make sure that i am prepared to leave his house. >> todd: leo, we are praying for you and thank you for joining us and please be safe and stay alert because this could change like that, leo, prayers. many residents cramping this morning to escape the deadly fires quickly spreading across southern california. >> carley: that is right, our next guest arrives in lax with the burning raging wildfires. he will tell us what he saw in the sky coming up next.
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had seven active fires peered at the three big ones, two in brentwood and one in hollywood. but with the winds down and the helicopters up and also more firefighters from around the state, nevada, arizona, that is making a big difference those three factors. the big picture is they are not out of the wedge at that the winds 25 and 75, things will improve today. now, we are in the hardest hit area of those three fires, the palisades. right now, i'm in the middle of the walking district. the barbershop, nail district, salon shop, ups, juice store, major boutique right here, and of course, you can see they are all destroyed. at big issue here one in many ways, the lack of water. tuesday firefighters lost all pressure and the hydrants ran dry.
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dwp has three 1 million water, 1 million-gallon water tanks. the first one ran out 3:00 p.m. in the second 8:00 p.m. and the third a 11:00 p.m. according to the utility, the firefighters had no water. the firefighters, they tried to refill them but the firefighters using it faster than they could. >> they did fill the available water storage tanks, including three 1 million-gallon takes in the palisades area. but it is really that simple, it is going to be impacted at the higher elevations. it is hard to get the pressure up when we are using so much water. >> now, the mayor, mayor bass said, "well, that is not true." but the utility said actually it was. the utility also said do not drink the water until you boil it. that is ironic considering there is no power here. there is no natural gas here to
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run your generator. and there is no communications, no self- cell surface and he wil deliver some startling so people have that into the hard-hit communities. that will make a difference because people want to know how your loved ones are and they can't reach them unless they leave and try to get their device is powered up somewhere else. the other major fire is near pasadena, 11,000 acres, fifo table it's easy there. l.a. is 13% contained still out of the three fires all under investigation we are talking 130,000 people in total have been evacuated in these three fires. also, 2,500 firefighters are now here in southern california. that is going to make a difference but they do admit they were understaffed but what happen when the three major fires broke out basically simultaneously, similar what happen in 2018 when you had the
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wood sleep fire and a thousand structures there. i will wrap it up. this is supposed to be wet season and in fact we have only gotten less than a quarter inch of rain and we should have gotten five. some of the factors why these fires are so devastating, back to you. >> carley: william, you talked about the lack of water issue one of the major stories as it relates to the response but you seen that message. donald trump is blaming gavin newsom and don't blame me, this happened because of high water demand. what are you hearing regarding the reason behind the lack of water and lack of water pressure in the hydrants? >> well, okay, so don't get me -- i'm not defending anyone, right, that you do have unprecedented situations. three 1 million-gallon tanks that has been apparently sufficient for many, many years.
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now, did people foresee this kind of situation where the draw down because of this fire is going to require another tank? that would technically be more of dwp decision penn state. as for the water transfer from the san juan came delta down to southern california and lack of storage space? we haven't built a new dam in 30 years despite its being funded? there is a lot of issues there and whether or not that water additional capacity that now going after the ocean was given dwp. doing water stories in the west until we can write a book on it. there was one called cadillac that is her and it was really good. as terms in terms of water distribution in a state like this, a tremendous amount of state and federal infrastructure. it doesn't mean dwp will get it. agriculture uses a lot of water. there is a fight over the city's nag. it is a big deal.
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maybe dwp should prepare better for this, i don't know. i'm sure that will come out in the investigations going forward. i guess a little simplistic to blame one person for the lack of water pressure in these fire hydrants. >> todd: it will deftly come out in the investigation. william, to your point you can make a movie about it too and that was chinatown and that '70s and a lot of the same issue is not rectified. william la jeunesse live in an area which is the pacific palisades business district which basically before monday looked like central casting of main street and what you think mainstreet should look like an outlook look behind me, completely gone. >> carley: the nail salon, grocery store, laundromat and all that behind me, so, so horrendous and so sad. william la jeunesse, we will check back with you soon. there is a perspective that few people have witnessed. our next guest luanne to lax
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after united airlines flight rebounded and historic fires. >> todd: the passenger joins us now, mark, what is going through your mind when you look at the plane window and see a absolute escape blow? >> you don't believe what you are seeing. how does anything prepare you for that view? it looks like we were flying over "lord of the rings." i couldn't believe what i was seeing. >> carley: you said your flood was rerouted -- your flight was rerouted to. were you aware that the flight -- the first time you learned about them looking down and saw what we are seeing right now and what you recorded. >> we were supposed to fly into they are part but they rerouted because of high winds. the burbank air point and shorter runways. you heard a fire broken out and being a california resident for a few years, the fire and the
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high winds, you think this will not be good. but it can't comprehend the impact until you see it. when i open my window and casually looked out, my jaw hit the floor. this is a bad one. this is really bad. yeah, i am still just can't believe what is happening. this is a really bad when. >> todd: bring us inside the plane for a moment. where there any passengers on board looked out and said, "oh, my gosh,, my home is in jeopardy or my family, my neighbor's home in jeopardy?" i was one of the first people to open the window and looked because i'd like to look out as the plane starts to descend. as other people started open they are window, you could hear gasps and murmurings. the flight attendant, on the speaker and said, look at your right window and you will see the fire that is happening in california right now. you know, everyone just started talking and said they could not believe how bad it was this
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quick. it just seemed to explode very quickly. >> carley: market, describe a little bit more. it look like "lord of the rings" and when you describe it like that, describe a little bit more about what you saw and what you felt as you were seeing it. >> i mean, just the scale of it. we have seen ariel deas have fires before. a lot of times, they seem spread out and hot spots everywhere but this one just look like an opening of a volcano when you looked down. it was massive and it can, it it is surreal and nothing prepares you to see something that big. i don't know what i was expecting to see, but it certainly was not what i got on film. >> carley: when you see this and you were able to see from your advantage point just how big this fire was, i am sure one of the things going through people's heads is the firefighters on the ground. it is their job to put this fire out, this massive fire that has
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burned 17,000 acres in the palisades fire alone. >> todd: mark, before i let you go you are in santa clarita away from the palisades and santa clarita has known its fair share of fires over the years. are you worried with the buyer conditions you may see something sparked up then you might have to be evacuated? >> but is always a possibility so we are prepared to. but there is a people that have it a lot worse than i do right now. we have called friends and let them know. i have some friends that were evacuated and lost their houses. if you need a place to come by, we are safe at the moment or two but if you need to get somewhere, we are here for you periods that's all you can do. >> carley: mark think is much for bringing to put a 10-year storage. we appreciated. a los angeles business owner who was honorary laf the fire chief in 2022. and i understand you have some thoughts on los angeles fire
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department chief christine crowley and implementation of racial equity plan. what should we know about that? >> good morning, carley. first of all, allele made it out from the 50,000-foot view and perspective and i could feel his anger. so thank you for that, leo. but i am going to zoom in a little bit more just about to street level and let you know what happened because of the mismanagement of this fire chief, christine crowley. number one, she lied, gavin newsom lied and the supervisor lindsay lied when said predeployment for the fire. i talked to the firefighters they are till there was no predeployment so they lied flat out. there was not enough staffing because we don't have enough staffing at the los angeles fire department. and there was not enough water because of problems at the dwp, which relate to the same problems at the fire department which is this whole dei
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initiative and how they treat the older class of employees, which, you know, when it comes to the covid mandate they were firing dw p employees like los angeles firefighters. i was at the port of writes hearings for seven different firefighters. and i watched as they were fired. one of them asked to strip his uniform off after he was terminated in the port of rights hearing. christine crowley, chief christine crowley was 10 feet away in her office and could have come into the boardroom and stop the whole thing. but she didn't. she is a coward and has mismanaged this department with her dei initiatives to the point where, i think, the laf fee is eric a bubble span and will never be brought back. it has been her priority since day one, since day one after her department spent $670,000 to do
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a nationwide recruitment campaign to bring more ltp you tea into the fire department. she it out loud and on carry telnet kelly clarkson the first openly gay chief. i don't care. i know a very good friend who is 90 years old who lost her house on radcliffe street behind that burn l nelson. mary left with the clothes on her back and been out since 1966 and left with the clothes on her back in her wallet and her passport. so i am as angry as leo is but i'm angry for a couple of different reasons. right now, i am going to demand christine crowley resign as the fire chief. she is incompetent, unqualified to. by way, alexandria, new york, is named her for it disaster emergencies and she is a
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disgrace and doesn't even know -- she can't even throw when she was a firefighter she could not throw a letter properly. she was promoted through the ranks merely because she is lgbtq tea and you are not allowed to say the l word, i guess and appointed by mayor garcetti to be the fire chief simply for that reason. i'm very angry right now. i have a fire burning the enemy right now. you see i'm in a car and i haven't had power in my house and haven't for 24 hours right now. i'm watching the palisades fire behind my house. m-16 miles away from palisades and 3 miles from my house and coming over rich. they should not have happened and it didn't have to happen. there was no predeployment. she doesn't have the staff and she was calling firefighters back and she did not have equipment to put them in. because the staff is leaving and
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there is not enough engineer so even if they had that firefighters they did not have the apparatus to put the firefighters on to fight this fire. this all lies squarely on the shoulders of chief kristin crowley who should design today. we talk about me or pass they resign. what a disgrace she has turned out to be. >> carley: cutting the fire department budget by $17 million. you gave us a lot of insight into the situation on the ground and things that should be analyzed in the days and weeks ahead. paul, we have to leave it there but we have to leave it at that. >> carley, thank you very much. >> carley: smoke is causing dangerous air quality to impact people not even near the flames. >> todd: a physician working in california with his warning next. ♪ ♪ ds to respond. the war is here.
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the great storm from the north has come against israel. you've got the scriptures calling each one of us, not only to pray for the peace in jerusalem, but every city throughout israel that's under siege. this massive grocery store should be crowded. people are lacking food. exactly. the international fellowship of christians and jews is preparing meals for precious elderly citizens who can't get out. so many bombs yesterday. because of the war, much of her roof is gone, the ceiling is gone. she's frightened from hezbollah. hezbollah. how does she get food? the international fellowship of christians and jews will come in. you provide groceries, vegetables, hot meals. it's you. your emergency gift will help provide food to klara and thousands like her,
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trying to survive in the evacuated areas of israel. your urgently needed gift of $45 will help rush the delivery of an emergency food box and nutritious meals for a week. it's you that gives her hope and lets her feel the presence of god. it must be that god is here with me now. thank you. and i'll say a special prayer of thanks to god. when there's war and violence and brokenness, you and i as christians are chosen to minister to love. you help bring the peace of god that passes all understanding and to know i have something to eat today.
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burn down from security cameras. paris hilton also says she watched her home burned down on live television. >> todd: in the meantime, air qualities remain in place as terror through l.a. with millions at risk of harmful fumes. with dr. sattler lender up in southern california and national spokesperson for the american lung association. doctor, instinctually we know the smoke and it is bad for you but medically, what does it do to your lungs? >> that is a really good question. first of all i want to offer prayers to all the people affected by the fires. when you think about fires and you look outside and see the smoke in the air, that smoke is composed many different particles we inhale on a daily basis what they are naturally in california. but on top of that with this wildfire, all of those particles can stimulate inflammatory response first in your lungs. part of the particles will
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infuse in your lungs directly into your bloodstream increasing blood pressure causing other damage across your body increasing your risk -- stay when we seem to have lost his microphone. i think the point that doctor is trying to make is that yes your lungs are the most impacted, but the lungs as you know all such and think he to life spreads to the body goes into your cells. that is why you want to limit as possible the impact of particular. doctor, we have a back. i want to get your thoughts on this. the people of southern california the most at risk but how far away should people be worried about the health impacts of this smoke? >> you know when you look at the numbers right now, up to 17 million people in southern california. so you looked north of los angeles and extends south. i am in orange county and my daughter has asthma and you can see a little bit of air
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pollution in the air that affects her on a daily basis when she takes that deep breath. so it depends on the winds. there were 80-1 1100 mile-per-hr winds in southern california because of the fire surrounding los angeles. as a health care provider, i am getting phone calls in orange county about exacerbated asthma or copd and even help the individuals with significant amount of air pollution in the area. so it is very cognizant of. >> todd: we are talking mass filters if you can and we are talking stay indoors. it is vital right now. you will be able to go out outside that now was not the time. dr. thank you for your time. appreciate it. with waking up five active wild fires burning in los angeles. the three they can still 0% contained. >> carley: we have continuing coverage at the top of the hour.
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>> carley: if you are just joi joining us, we continue our coverage of the deadly wildfire in los angeles. thousands of firefighters are battling at least five active wildfires racing across the county. >> todd: pacific palisades fire most destructive wildfire in l.a. history burning over 17,000 acres. the entire island of manhattan is 14,600 acres, picture that. eaton fire torching 10,000 acres. these fires are zero percent contained. >> carley: this is palisades charter high school, a popular location for hollywood productions. >> todd: this hair salon ripped apart in the
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