tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News January 11, 2025 5:00am-6:00am PST
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breztri also helped improve my symptoms and was even proven to reduce flare-ups, including those that could send me to the hospital. now i worry less about bad days and enjoy more good days. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. it is not for asthma. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. don't take breztri more than prescribed. breztri may increase your risk of thrush, pneumonia, and osteoporosis. call your doctor if worsened breathing, chest pain, mouth or tongue swelling, problems urinating, vision changes, or eye pain occur. can't afford your medication? astrazeneca may be able to help. ask your doctor about breztri for copd. rachel: it's the 8:00 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" weekend starting with this, california
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leaders accused of mismanaging the california wild fires and their fire chief is making this major admission, watch. >> fire fighters can do their jobs. >> did they fail you? >> yes. charlie: pluses is the lawfare finally finished? president elect trump will not face a penalty after being sentenced in his new york case. will: biden preparing for prime time fair well address and reflecting on the election. >> i think i would have beaten trump, could have beaten trump, and i think that kamala could have beaten trump and would have beaten trump. will: how does he do that? charlie: who's going to tell him? will: third hour of "fox & friends" weekend starts right now. charlie: fox news alert, right now a total of six wild fires are burning across los angeles. the fire storm leaving at least 11 dead and destroying thousands of homes and buildings plus several schools.
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will: the crisis unfolds, every day heros are stepping up and running a donation center providing food and clothing to folks that lost just about everything. rachel: robert ray is live on the ground in pacific palisades track the latest flairup, good morning, robert. reporter: good morning. from a burned out incinerated neighborhood here and pacific palisades and vehicles scorched and people's belongings simply remarkable scenes here as all of this area, la county, going through historic fires. as a matter of fact the palisades fire, which is burning up in these hills and flaired up yet again last night. over 21,000 acres are scorched and thousands of men and women on the ground trying to contain that fire unfortunately. it is the largest, largest wild fire in la county history. a fire storm because of the santa ana winds that came
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through and see these visuals and remarkable from the air and evacuations in surrounding communities to try and protect people on top of thousands of evacuations that occurred over the course of the past several days and started last tuesday. there's six fires currently burning in areas like palisades and mall beautiful claims came down the mountainside and destroying the pacific coast highway and taking out could being straws up and down the pch in the very famous and beautiful malibu area. so many people have lost everything at this point and we'll talk about the other fires in a second. it's important to focus on the human element of this and what people are going through. let's listen to one account. >> we were hoping the house would be there the next day, but it wasn't. it's shocking.
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shock. you don't have time yet to think about the next steps. reporter: you see this map of all the fires, six of them burning as we speak in los angeles county. palisades being the largest scorching thousands of homes, incinerating them over 10,000 structures destroyed and over 50,000 structures are threatened and the eaton fire to the north, which is only 3% contained right now, over 14,000 acres burned there. six people have lost their lives in the eaton fire. down here in the palisades fire, five people total of 11 deaths and many more injured un-fornatalie. now, there are thousands of -- unfortunately. now, there's thousands of personnel, f fire fighters on te ground from multiple states across the western states and even canada and mexico. national guard is on the ground, and there are blockades, roadblocks, all over this area so that people do not come in
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and un-fornatalie get themselves in -- unfortunately get themselves in dangerous situations amid these burned out neighborhoods. there's been looters, over 20 people arrested and part of why the national guard has the blockades in places like santa monica leading into the pacific coast highway and malibu and they have huge barb wire fences set up and check points so that people with bad intentions don't get in and they're trying to keep people safe amid a lot of questions being pointed at elected officials and budgets being cut and how this is all transpiring and new santa ana winds coming in later tonight and of course the next few days and that could flair up more of these fires ands that is why it's a race against time right now for the hen and women on the ground -- men and women on the ground fighting the fires and confusion people are getting on
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cellular devices about evacuations and some have been wrong and put panic into the area in la county. the sun comes up in a couple hohours and we'll again, visuale all this destruction up and down the area,s and incredibly dangerous atmospheric smoke and particles and smoldering that's happening in areas where active fire is not happening. back to you. charlie: robert, you were talking about santa ana winds kicking up later tonight and talking about getting aircraft up in the skies to drop water and fire retardant where they need to? reporter: absolutely, y as soon as the condition comes up in a couple of hours and we'll hear the flurry of helicopters and airplanes and will move in and winds are light right now thankfully and that'll help fire fighters fight this from an aryl
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attack and the ground. that is why it's so important that they get that -- those containment lines so that the fire does not spread through the valleys, cross the hills and mountains and into new communities and specifically like brentwood to the north of us here in palisades. they want to keep all those folks protect there had, and they do not want a repeat of neighborhoods that are just gone here in palisades and malibu and other areas. six fires continue to burn here this morning in la county and again, can't stress enough how important it is for them to continue to fight this fire in the meantime. these winds are not going to come back and 70-100 miles an hour gusts to experience on tuesday and wednesday and nonetheless strong enough to get those embers going and spreading again. very important they continue to fight this and they are on the ground and in the air. back to you. will: robert ray in pacific
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palisades. will: meanwhile, the blame game is on and mayor bass and between karen bass and los angeles fire chief, who had this to say about the city of los angeles. >> did the city of los angeles fail you and your department and our city? >> it's mill job to stand up as a chief and exactly say justifiably what the fire department needs to be to operate to meet the demands of the community. >> did they fail you? >> that's our job and that's why i'm here. get us what we need so our firee fighters can do their jobs. >> did they fail you? >> yes. rachel: they're turning on each other. that's what happen when is these problems happen. no one wants to carry the blames and no one pes to step up and take responsibility for the fact there was not water in the reservoirs and dams were blown
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up and flash back of la fire department chief christine larson, watch. >> you want to see somebody that responds to your house, your emergency whether it's a medical call or fire call that looks like you. it gives that person a little bit more ease knowing that somebody might understand their situation better. is she strong enough to do this or you couldn't carry my huhs out of a fire -- husband out of the fire and my response is i'm in the wrong place if i have to carry him out of a fire. rachel: why did they even put this up, that's the worst. if there's a fire, i don't care who is r -- i want a strong man to pull me and my kids out of that fire. i can't believe this went up on facebook with her saying i can't carry your husband out. he's in the wrong place. what? will: from 2019 and talking about blame from different individuals and the main thing is the policies these individuals have put in place including dei. that is an outrageous, an
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outrageous statement, much less a public video, in support of dei. by the way, that was celebrating you want fire fighters to look like you. no, you want fire fighters that can darling stone reigns leading you out of a fire and putting up a video going your husband shouldn't have gotten himself in that position. charlie: yeah, you can get away with being fundamentally ridiculous when there's not a fire going on and when it matters and people's lives are not all that they have got homes and they're at resident and can suddenly being fundamentally ridiculous becomes way more, a much bigger problem and people are figuring that out right now and i think obviously there's enough blame to go around, and i suspect, not only do i hope but suspect that there are going to be people that pay grievous prices. rachel: it's not just that gavin newsom and karen bass, who we talk about ridiculous, she's in ghana as all this is happening,
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it's not just they're inept or distracted or weak leaders, it's what you said, will, it's fundamentally the policy. it's not just dei, it's the environmental policies that have led to this. i think that those are also going to be called into question and they've not managed their forests, and the reason they haven't managed their forests in the proper way are environmentist, environmentism, we've got to save the smelt. we don't want to do controlled burns, there's a lot of stuff going on. i hope those are the issues that are being addressed. will: those policies include cutting $17 million from the fire department's budget and found money for other priorities in los angeles county like this, $190 thoma 190,000 to homeless v program, $90,000 to gay men's chorus of l los angeles angulus,
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throws to gay, bisexual and transgender heritage month program. $100,000 to fund a midnight stroll transgender cafe providing housing for homeless transgender individuals. and $4.5 million for the infrastructure of electrical vehicle chargers. charlie: all those costs, it's not just being completely moron ick or id logically stupid about some of the policies, there's a lot of money at stake with -- by following these. they're companies that are making huge fortunes off city budgets based on these policies that are supposed to be dei all about diversity and everything but they're actually all about shoveling huge public contracts to your friends. rachel: to your friends but also to your ideological pet projects; right? what fundamentally is the purpose of the city government?
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it's to not have this happen; right. it's to make sure there's water in the fire hydrants or make sure we have a nice lgbtq gay transgender stroll, what is this, midnight stroll at transgender campaign? what do you want your government to do? will: they're paying the highest taxes in the country: local, state, federal. they're paying the most to get this outcome. rachel: at the end of this, people will go do i want a midnight stroll transgender cafe or water in my fire high grans? i hope people are asking that question. charlie: i think president biden will clear it all up for us this week. and the oval office on wednesday and kamala harris is competent to run again. will: that is not a nice compliment. i think she's competent to run again. that wasn't a huge pat on the back. think she could run again? she's competent. what does that mean?
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means -- charlie: well, she would have won. well, she ran. exactly. will: she could have won and he could have won. rachel: watch. >> do you regret your decision to run for reelection and think it made it easier for your opposition to be successful? >> i don't think so f. i think i could have and would have beaten trump and i think kamala could have beaten trump and would have beaten trump. it wasn't about -- i thought it was important to unify the party. when the party was worried about whether or not i was going to be able to move, even though i thought i could win again, i thought it was better to unify the party and it was the greatest honor of my life to be president of the united states and i didn't want to be one who caused a party that wasn't unified to lose an election. that's why i stepped aside, but
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i was confident she could win. >> you said vice president harris had a good shot to beat trump. do you think she should run again in four year s? >> i think if she's competent to run again in four years, that's the decision to make. rachel: so stupid. he's become more and more incoherent as time goes on, but part of the reason why people like trump versus that it's not just because he's mumbling and i had to read that twice. it was in our notes and had to read it twice to seehe was saying. he's lying. he knows exactly what happened and you're about to leave awes, just -- office and just be hon say you, obama and george clooney and party and nancy pelosi, they pushed me out. i should have been there. i would have won, if that's what he ped to say. i don't think he would have won. but he's carrying this lie. people are sick of the lies. be honest, you're out of office and have low rating ands nobody likes you.
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what do you have to lose by telling the truth. tell everybody what happened. it's dumb and i'm sick of it. will: i don't think he's senile in that moment. he boxed himself in and said i think i would have beaten trump but i can't insult kamala so he does a quick like -- jerks the steering wheel left and said i think she would have beaten him too. even though she just lost to him. charlie: he got trapped in the mental paper bag. i think they need to include in the presidential daily briefing every morning the election is over and it already happened, you lost. donald trump won and i honestly think he forgets and maybe nobody wants to tell him on the stand. he's got a temper. rachel: if donald trump was there and he'd be like yeah, they push me out and there's so much lying. i think people are tired of it. i hope we're coming -- donald trump we had van drew on earlier and we were talking about the
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drones and donald trump saying -- day one, i'll tell you about the drones. i'm looking forward to more transparency from our leaders and our government. enough with the lies. we all saw what happened and you got pushed out. jill biden was made about it, you're still upset about it but you guys are still lying. dumb. dumb, dumb, dumb. turn now to headlines. south koreaen officials revealing the flight recorders from last month's deadly air disaster in south korea stopped working for four minutes before the passenger plane exploded. that data is crucial to the investigation into what went wrong. the devices are now being sent to a u.s. lab for further inspection much the fiery crash that killed 179 people in that country's worst airline disaster ever. an investigation continues into what sparked a five alarm fire that gutted a bronx apartment building friday morning.
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the fire left seven hurt and displaced hundreds more and learning that the complex had a heat complaint days before the fire broke out and city record shows dozens of complaints at city building over the last few years and the city named the landlord the worst ten years ago. spacex launched largest rocket. the test flight set to take place on monday from star base in south texas on friday. this will be the first of many test flights being planned this year. those are your headlines. charlie: you know, obviously elon musk is a bit continue verse y'all these days, but one thing you can't say about him that he's incompetent. rachel: no. will: no. charlie: one reason he left the democrat party.
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okay. california wild fires are hitting just as the insurance crisis boils over. and the new rule that could keep home own ers from getting policy back on their plans. will: brian kilmeade with a look at what's coming up tonight on one nation. >> hi, everybody. watch one nation this weekend hawaii a show we have for you. among my great roster of guests, dr. jordan peterson, what's happening in canada. is donald trump responsible for the optimism we all feel in america. brian johnson doesn't want to die, join the club, but he's doing research to live forever and help us. he's funny and his fiance make as lot more money than him. we'll make sense of all that only if you watch one nation with me.
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charlie: back with a fox news alert, more than 37,000 acres burned throughout southern california killing eleven and destroying 10,000 california homes. california homeowners whose insurance was dropped before the devastating fires could get a lifeline as state insurance commission issues a one year moratorium on cancellation policies in certain fire zones. but much of the damage is
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already done. destruction only magnifying what critics are calling ongoing california wild fire insurance catastrophe. here with more, fox business anchor cheryl cassoni. we'll get to more but first, we always -- nobody likes their insurance company. but in n this case, the insurance companies were waving a red flag saying we have a problem here and it was the state that was not doing what they should have done that caused the problem. >> well, it's the regulators that will have a lot of answers -- that will have to come up with abs for those people. i want to go back to that wall street journal piece that pointed to the disaster that's been happening since 2017 in california. back in 2017/2018, we started seeing insurance companies: state farm, all
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state, they started dropping homeowners in the wild fire-risk zones because of the -- because of the insurance regulation commission in california, they were not allowed to charge more to the homeowners. they couldn't put in catastrophe modeling into the policies so they started dropping people. the insurers said you've got a ticking time bomb here. charlie: exactly. >> and the regulators, well, no, no, no. they started begging the insurance companies to stay in the state. things were looking up for 2025 until the disaster this week and the wild fires. but the journal points out, and i've done a lot of research on this this week, state farm dropped nearly 70% of policyholders in one piece, in one part of pacific palisades. now a lot of homeowners going to the fair plan. the fair plan is the insurance of last resort if you live in california. high premiums, not great
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coverage, their cap is $3 million. the average home in pacific palisades is $3.5 million. then the economic issue as well. but they didn't renew 68%, almost 70% of policies in pacific palisades, that's state farm specifically because they said we can't do these insurance policies anymore. doesn't make sense. charlie: then if homeowners do fall back on the state program and look at funding of the state program, the state program doesn't have the funds to begin to cover any of these. >> as of september, there was $700 million. right now, they have over -- for the entire state, fair has $458 billion in exposure. they have $6 billion of exposure just in the palisades neighborhood. so they've only got $700 million.
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charlie: it's amaizing. >> who's going to come in and save california? who will come in and save these people? i'll tell you, it'll be fema, who's got enough problems dealing with western north carolina. it'll be charitable aid, and congress will have to do something. there's 119th congress, here they are. plus the personal savings of the homeowners. but real quick, two points i want to make here, look at history of how congress has handled these disasters. took three months for them to approve aid for superstorm sandy victims and a year and a half to approve aid for maui, for lahaina. charlie: it's incredible. >> the bill is in the billions, and it's going to take time. these people don't have -- have nothing left. charlie: cheryl, thank you for joining us. watch cheryl host fox news live with bill melugin 10:00 a.m. to noon today. fox corporation made a $1 million donation to the red cross california wild fires
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relief effort that provides safe shelter, hot meals, emotional support and other re-sours. support the american red cross by donated today. visit go.fox/read cross or scan the qr code on your screen. coming up, from a friendly exchange from obama to a mar-a-lago exchange with john fetterman. friends everywhere he goes. . borrow up to a hundred thousand dollars to consolidate bad debt and save money for your next goal. take a swing at your kitchen reno... meant that literally. or design your actual dream wedding. consolidate bad debt and fund all your ambitions with a sofi personal loan. go to sofi.com to view your rate. sofi. get your money right.
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will: meanwhile, a major winter storm dumping snow and ice in the mid south and deep south. check out the live look of snow covered atlanta. parts of the metro got 3.5 inches and 776 domestic flights cancelled with 929 delays. charlie: check in with adam klotz for our forecast. reporter: good morning, guys. a lot of snow in the southeast and more than we've seen in new york city and fox square and squeezed out a couple of snow flakes here and there and as of now, things calmed down and begin with those fire conditions that folks are dealing with across portions of the west, especially there in the south western portions there getting in the los angeles area and winds orlikowski night ultimately are going to be picking back up and it's calm out there now and you'll be talking about winds heading through today and the only thing, portion 40, 50 miles an hour and that's going to cause a
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bit of problem and we're again looking at fire weather outlooks jumping back up to critical. that's enough to spread some of the embers and maybe make the fires continuing to be hard to contain. otherwise back on the east coast, this is that big winter weather system and largely a lot of places in the southeast that saw that snow and ice, it's now pushed off towards the atlantic and snowfalling in the backside of this system. west virginia seeing snow and snow in interior portions of new england and those are your weather headlines. for now, tossing it back inside to all of you. will: thank you, adam. with nine days to go till inauguration day. john fetterman confirms he'll meet with trump at mar-a-lago. rachel: cameras caught a friendly exchange between president elect trump and obama. is this all just another sign that democrats are flipping the tune on trump? charlie: here to disuses is white house counselor and host
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of here's the deal with kellyanne on fox nation, kellyanne conway. great to see you this morning. what's the deal? what were trump and obama talking about at jimmy carter's funeral? >> i was glad to see that exchange, unsurprising and the former and future and current president's club in this country is teeny tiny. it's a handful and other 335 million of us. they probably -- maybe talked a bit of policy, maybe personal, it was a great exchange for everyone to see. this time in washington, people scream bipartisanship all the time, and then they vote, particularly the democrats, voting for inflation reduction act. all voting against trump's tax cut and jobs act, that benefited all of their states and congressional districts and the supreme court with the biggest first amendment case in a very long time and certainly republicans and democrats putting at the feet of trump as he's ready to go and be inaugurated banning tiktok a day before he takes office and he's
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basically saying, listen, people gave us a mandate and i'm active on tiktok and let it continue and let me take a shot at that but for obama and trump to show the world that people of differing parties and people dead set against each other in the last campaign and kamala harris sitting there talking to no one, looking all miserable frankly talking to either president trump who beat her, it looked like, or president obama that she relied on heavily to get her across the finish line. there was a missing chair and president trump was sitting next to barack obama because chicago shelfs in hawaii. will: it's a small club and ranking the different former presidents there you'd suspect had the hardest relationship with trump, you'd expect obama would be number one dating back over a decade. to me, at the very least, what we take from this is oh my god, donald trump is a threat to democracy.
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it's all a farce. they didn't believe that. you can't interact with a dictator, would be dictator in the way that obama -- rachel: excuse me. obama did that with raul castro in cuba and went to a baseball game and his family. will: probably spoke harsher about donald trump than castro. rachel: exactly. >> i think that barack obama is politically savvy enough to know this country is heading towards trump. obviously there's a huge mandate and alignment with the america first agenda energy independence and lower taxes and fewer regulations and enmies securing our border and even generously resources and more deeply respecting local law enforcement and border patrol and feel safer and more secure and everything becomes more affordable and obama probably sees that his democratic party long after he left office has gone from wokeness and this election was about fairness of wokeness. people are sick of detailed
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bullets you showed about what's being spent in la over being prepared for fires like this and my heart goes out to all of them but i think obama prides himself on being like a post-political cultural type of figure and president trump dominates social media and won the popular vote, something that neither republican candidate against obama came close to doing and in terms of former president and would be president's club, look at two rows of goodness, it's donald trump that had been on the ballet with joe biden, forget that. but he beat kamala harris and hillary clinton and the two most prominent would be women and i like that and people snubbing any ex-president and know that the world is watching and enemies are watching and it's a very bed form to not just be polite. i said that because i was raised bay woman and not a wolf. i didn't learn that in politics,
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i learn that had in life. charlie: you were not raised by wolfs. rachel: not to be caddy, but who was the coldest. karen pence and you're at a funeral, you're in a small club like you said, be gracious and just -- i don't know. will: yeah. we got to leave it there. kellyanne, we appreciate you being with us. watch here's the deal with kellyanne on fox nation. thank you, kellyanne. the fires in los angeles displacing thousands and putting countless first responders on the front lines. rachel: one private chef is doing her part in feeding anyone that needs it, and she's next. made in america. that's something that still means a lot to us here at red land cotton. it all starts right here in this red dirt in northwest alabama. our family works extremely hard to bring you the best bed linens and bath towels in the world. we're proud to say that 100% of our products
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it's because of tiktok that i had to go out and get a website. i'm at a point now where i've outgrown my house. growing up, every time i'd get out of the shower, i would itch. my first experience with goat milk soap, it kinda was like a light bulb moment. tiktok is a fantastic platform for diy. if you'd have told me three years ago that i would own my own business and be expanding into a separate building, i would've told you you'd lost your mind. mom. mom, look what i got. (laughing) the best way to make family memories in the caribbean is at a place founded by a family from the caribbean.
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rachel: more than 37,000 acres burned throughout southern california killing 11 and destroying 10,000 homes. our next guest is a high end chef in the area, and she's stepping up to provide meals to those in need. >> come with me to private chef for the entire hurting city of los angeles. my efforts to feed the 3,500 fire fighters fighting on the front lines and displaced families in need of nourishing and over $100,000 raised but
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it's only day one. rachel: private chef brooke bavinski joining us live from llos angeles. the food looks delicious and how are you doing it and getting all the supplies and the supply chain thammuz have been disrupted because of the fires and explain how your operation is going. >> yes, thank you for having me. i would say the community of la is in mourning and there's so much tragedy going on, but we are all doing what we can and for me as a professional chef, i knew i needed to make meals for those in need, and the community hasstepped up to help in such incredible ways and local farms donating supplies and hundreds of volu volunteers asking how te of assistance, people offering kitchens. i've partnered with holy smokes kosher barbecue in la that's given me a ditch and food, and
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the support is tremendous. in just a couple of days, we've raised over $57,000 to provide -- $75,000 to provide meals for those in need and 3500 fire fighters in la fighting the front lines and 10,000 families displaced with absolutely nothing and in need of immediate nourishment and seeing the community come together is really what's fueling me to workday in and day out, 18 hour days to get hundreds of meals out every dick emberd day to those in need. need. i hawkeyes been the reaction? >> there's been a tremendous amount of support. everyone is heart broken and devastated in la, but people are asking what can i do, how can i help? i don't just want to sit around. can i deliver meals, can i open up my kitchen and that's been incredible from a local standpoint and people all around the world are asking me how they
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can help and donations and supplies and everything is flooding in. it's very heart warming to me. rachel: turnovers and what percentage of meals are going to first responders versus those displaced. those displaced, are you taking them to shelters or are they coming to you? how is this work something >> we want the meals to be delivered hot and fear. we are personally getting volunteers if not ourselves to deliver them to fire stations ourselves, going to the front lines, into topanga and palisades and pasadena and physically handing meals to fire fighters that are fighting to make sure they get food. then communicating with families directly who have absolutely nothing so going to organizations, nonprofits have been reaching out and shelters reaching out with specific families in need of immediate meals and assistance so personal
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deliveries delivering to part of the buildings and people taking people in droves and housing two, three families in their -- in whatever -- however they can host them. so personal deliveries, but i'm there from -- in the kitchen early morning to late at night. half cooking meals and half delivering meals, and everyone is offering their help and assistance. rachel: brooke, it's heart warming to hear what you've done and effort you've put into too and initiative and that's the can-do spirit and generosity of people reaching out to you with donations and it's discombobulating to be displaced from your home, and a warm meal i'm sure is a relief and even a sign that we all care about what they're going through. so thanks so much, brooke, for joining and yous good for you. just so proud of you. >> thank you. it's only day three. we have a lot more to go, but we're off to a positive change
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and start. rachel: thanks, brooke. well, trump lawfare continuing right up till his inauguration, but the judge insists the president elect is getting the same treatment as anyone else. gregg jarrett saying i don't think so. he'll talk about that verdict,in next. now taxes is a turbotax expert who can do your taxes in a day... so you can get up to $4,000 instantly. now, this is taxes. intuit turbotax. mylowe's rewards is here. join for free today to unlock member perks from the palm of your hand. with every purchase, all members earn point toward mylowes's money. get free gifts to bring home, member deals to get more projects done and free standard shipping. start earning for free with mylowe's rewards today. ♪today my friend you did it, you did it♪ pursue a better you with centrum. ♪ it's a small win toward taking charge of your health. ♪
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jot considerable indeed extraordinary legal protections afforded by the office of the chief executive is a factor that overrides all others. they do not reduce the seriousness of the crime or justify its commission in any way. >> the weaponization of government. they call it lawfare. never happened to this and never happened before. and i just like to explain that i'm upset. will: president trump railing against juan merchan that handed down unconditional discharge meaning no jail time or any other punishment in yesterday's sentencing. trump says it's more proof this case was politically motivated from the start. here to react fox news legal
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analyst gregg jarrett. gregg, good morning to you. isn't it interesting that even yesterday making the argument both the prosecutors and the judge talked alaska the seriousness of the crime and so serious it deserves absolute punishment. >> that's the great irony in all of this and, you know, will, merchan acted like he was on trial yesterday trying to invade rationalize, and defend how he and bragg hi hawaii jacked the law -- hijacked the law to persecute a political opponent. sounds like the alibi of a man that was wrong and inspired bookkeeping errors and magically morphed into the phantom felonies that the da didn't even have authority under the law to prosecute and an honest, neutral judge would have tossed the case in the garbage where it belongs and bragg's legal theory was incoherent and ludicrous and
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merchan did the opposite and welcomed it like the holy grail and joined in as co-prosecutor to engineer the convictions. he knows what's coming and he knows this case will get overturned and in the process, merchan will get spanked and humiliated, i to the best of my recollection for his bias conduct. will: gregg, almost every legal expert, yourself included believes this will be overturned on appeal. it'll be yet just another win for donald trump in defeating all of this lawfare. but the question has always been for the beginning, at what level will it get appealed and overturned? is there a reasonable expectation that could happen in the new york state court system or not till we arrive at the supreme court of the united states? >> supreme court. you're not going to get any relief in the new york court system, which is stacked with liberal judges and justices who are just like merchan. they'll defend merchan. it's the federal courts and the
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supreme court that will offer relief because this is truly the most aidoo bombal -- abombal because of the law and -- abuse of the law and it was throwing the election in democrat's face and it was backfiring and americans watch statutes growth statutes testily -- grotesquelys were shredded, and voters rallied behind trump and they delivered the ultimate jury verdict that nullified what is essentially a crooked case. this wasn't a fair trail. it was a farce. will: that farce by the way, just to be clear, gregg, underlined by the fact there was no punishment; right? if the goal was -- the goal clearly was just to get that one tag line if they could,
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convicted felon donald trump. a tag line that didn't work and depriving him of the office of the presidency. >> that's right. under new york law and nobody is convicted of anything till the judge enters in sentencing the judgment, they've wanted to stain donald trump as a convicted felon, even though the media immediately after the jury verdict said he was a convicted felon, incorrectly but they were all in, trying to stop trump from being reelected to the white house and the silliness of this is that merchan admitted yesterday in court that from the very beginning this case did not under law deserve any punishment. that was the result. will: all right. gregg jarrett, always good to talk to you, gregg. thank you so much. >> thanks, will. will: all right, actress and activist patricia heaton on her
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