tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News January 26, 2025 4:00am-5:00am PST
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♪ ♪ rachel: well, it's the 7 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" weekend starting with trump's wild las vegas welcome as he continues his no tax on tips promise. >> usa! usa! usa! [cheers and applause] jason: plus, conspiracy theory no longer. the cia now leaning towards covid coming from a lab. charlie: and a new study revealing early smartphone use could be linked to aggression, detachment from reality and even hallucinations. the second hour of "fox & friends" weekend starts right now. ♪ ♪ ain't that america for you and me -- ♪ ain't that america, something to see, baby ♪
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charlie: nice. that is america right there. tampa, florida. the sun is just coming up. it's is great to be with you all on sunday morning, jason, rachel. rachel: i love john mellencamp. we were just talking about all all the annoying habits that people have, and jason mentioned he doesn't like people who clip their nails at work. i just had to floss -- [laughter] in front of him. i had some barbecue still in my teeth. so does that annoy you, jason? jason: it's better that it's out rather than in. rachel: thank you. then you don't have to look at it -- jason: my wife flosses -- rachel: my are so close together. charlie: i'm glad you shared that. jason: she's got amazing, perfect teeth. rachel: that's the problem -- charlie: she's perfect, period. rachel: sorry about that, guys. had to be done. jason: didn't think we were going to go there, but, yeah -- rachel: i mean, you know, it's just what happens.
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last week, as you guys know, with the inauguration i brought my whole family out there. and if i thought i'd share a few pictures. i brought all the kids to the ball. i wish i could show you a picture of valentina. i didn't have one on me. but my older daughter walked in with her because we were all in separate cars, and she said that the as soon as she, valentina walked in, she petted about 50 women's sparkly dresses and said, so pretty. she los sparkles, and she loves fancy dresses, so valentina had a ball. that that on the left there is, that's jackie and my nephew, eric johnson, who, you know, everybody knows here, i brag him about all the time, big hockey player. he won the stanley cup. those are my parents who with also came with us to the ball. and then i ran into kellyanne -- [laughter] charlie: nice. and i ran into about 20 of your children at one of the balls, and they were so beautifully
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behaved. and they were so nice, they congratulated me about getting to work with you. and as i went through, i said to myself, i said i'm going to try the get all your names right eventually. and evita said, yes, well, will knew all of our names -- so very high expectations. [laughter] i said, yes, ma'am. i think you might be rachel daughter. [laughter] rachel: you think? yeah. they said they had a great time. that was at the turning point party. i didn't have the energy to make it that night of it was just a lot going on, but those kids had a ball. and i guess you were out there partying too. charlie: it was really, really cold. like, miserably cold. and you had to walk with, like, all the way around a -- you had to walk, like, a mile to get there. rachel: yeah. well, another party, alls -- charlie: always a party in vegas. rachel: always a party in vegas and, jason, donald trump was will there. and he was greeted with chants of usa. watch. [cheers and applause]
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>> usa! usa! usa! usa! usa! [cheers and applause] charlie: and, of course, this is what drives the left crazy about donald trump, because not only does he inspire situations like that, but he's actually talking about real issues. and one of -- and he was at this, in vegas, the main reason he went down there to visit was to remind everybody that, and thank them for their votes because, of course, one of his main if platforms that that they loved in vegas was his promise, no tax on tips. >> i'll be working with congress to get a bill on my desk that cuts taxes for workers, families, small businesses and, very importantly, keeps my promise for a thing called -- and i know you didn't hear anything about this, and i'm
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sure it had no influence on the state, the fact that we won this crazy, massive majority -- no tax on tips. [cheers and applause] no tax on tips! [cheers and applause] so if you're a restaurant worker, a server, a valet, a bellhop, a bartender, one of my caddies -- i go through caddies like candy. [laughter] if i play badly, i always blame my caddie. [laughter] if or any other worker who relies on tip income, your tips will be 100% yours. jason: a couple things going on here. first of all, donald trump understands the working man and woman. the reason that was so, so popular. kamala harris tried to come on later and pretend it was her idea. that wasn't true. he understands that. and the other thing you saw, again, when the president walks through the lobby, anywhere he goes, you start hearing these chants of usa, usa.
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there is a surge of patriotism running through, rampant if throughout this country that i haven't felt this in a long are, long time. and that patriotism buoys you up on so many different levels. he personifies it because he loves the country, he loves the people of our country. he, he's proud of our military, he's proud of the flag. and for a lot of people, that's new. hay haven't seen that in their political leaders for far too long. donald trump, it makes me so proud that he's our president, because he does those types of things, and it makes the country as a whole stronger and feel better -- rachel: i love that you bring it up. st not just the left-right thing, it was also within the republican party. the country club rcans were always a embarrassed of the working class that were part of the coalition, they were embarrassed of the pro-lifers who were part of the coalition, of the religious right that was part of the coalition. and donald trump has embraced them all and said, i'm with you. and you're so right about his
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pate a rottism. say what you want about donald trump, nobody if doubts he loves this country. nobody actually personifies sort of the possibility of america more than donald trump. charlie: it's a real influx of hope that we haven't seen in a long time. and smart democrats are, realize that they have a real problem, and i think one of those smart democrats is aoc who who realizes -- jason: wait a second, wait a second -- rachel: i'm with charlie on this. don't underestimate that woman. charlie: i think, we make fun of a lot of stupid things she says, and she because say stupid -- she does say stupid things, but she's a lot more in tune with where people are than you would think. she was talking to jon stewart, comedian, about this and about how she is so concerned that in trump's second term he has basically broken through and become more what she calls
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normalized. >> what makes this go-around with trump so much more dangerous than the first time around is exactly what you're saying. it's that he is much more normalized this time around. than he was the first time. the first time people were really on edge, they were on guard, they were very vigilant about any break that he would have with these norms. this time the norms are becoming him. like, the norms are embracing him. rachel: jason, here's what i think charlie is seeing and talking about, and maybe you see this too. is in 2016, right, there was actually a penalty even among hollywood elites if you normalized donald trump. remember when donald trump went on jimmy fallon, and jimmy fallon to had just had hillary clinton and gave her a softball, you know, fluffy if interview s and then he did the same with
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donald trump, and he was excoriated for it. in fact, later on he had to go and do an apology in "vanity fair" saying i'm sorry i did that. no one was allowed to treat him like a human, like a normal person running for office as he was because they said you would normalize him. they were afraid because he's such -- he is culture. they were afraid, they were afraid of his cultural influence. jason: okay, but -- rachel: and now they can't stop it. it's happened. jason: but it's not because they changed, it's because donald trump dominated and kicked their ass. rachel: of course. jason: aoc, in my opinion, is an idiot! [laughter] and i don't believe anything she says. today had jobs coming to new york with amazon, she made sure that didn't happen. i mean, i think that donald trump has been the same donald trump -- a. rachel: of course he is. >> he's highly predictable -- rachel: but the difference is the left can't stop, the heft and the media elites -- jason: but it's not because they chose to make a difference, they were forced to make a
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difference. that's what i see in donald trump. i don't buy this whole idea that they have suddenly got this revelation. they see that he's got 80, 90% of america on this -- rachel: no, no, no, i don't think that -- jason: -- and now they switch around. and that's the normal. rachel: it's not that they've seen the light, it's that they can't control the narrative anymore -- jason: that's right, yes. totally agree. rachel: partially the strength of donald trump, fight, fight, fight, that was so powerful. but i think she -- say what you will about her, and you're right. for a woman, she's economically ignorant, especially with a degree in economics. jason: where'd she go to school? rachel: she went to boston u. or university of boston. but she understands the culture, and that's why she's worried with. another person who understands what's happening culturally that the left and the elites can't stop is bill ma bill maher and stephen a. smith. watch this. >> here's how bad the democrats [bleep] up. trump is cool now.
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he's not just the most powerful guy in the world, he's actually kind of -- at 78. >> celebrities all over the place from hollywood, from l.a. to new york would talk to him, and they all loved him until he ran for office. and so then when they talked about him the way they talked about him, you didn't feel that way about him before. what changed? so a lot of people asked themselves that question, and they weren't satisfied with the answers the dems gave them. jason: they had this barrier though of the media. the traditional media was continually knocking him down. the the lawfare was taking its toll. one of the big things that happened was elon musk with x. so suddenly, you had the ability of the american public to actually see unfiltered, raw. and donald trump went out and did things that the democrats didn't do. he went out and talked on social media, he did the podcasts, he did those types of things, and people said, wow -- he was on joe rogan for three hours. i agree with him on that stuff. that's what made the fundamental difference, his ability to breakthrough. the democrats' fundamental
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problem isn't that donald trump is cool, although they are right about that, they lack ideas. they have no, nothing creative. they have nothing to offer the american people other than higher taxes, more government and more regulations. that's the democratic party -- rachel: i think what you're seeing is fear. charlie: oh, completely. rachel: i agree with everything you're saying. i think the point is aoc, unlike schumer, for example, who's probably out of the cultural -- charlie: has no idea -- rachel: has no idea what's going on culturally -- charlie: he smells something on fire, he doesn't know it's his own tail. not only did trump go where democrats -- he also went where republicans had never went before. jason: amen. charlie: he said, you know what? i know republicans don't ever ask for votes from black americans, i'm going to go and actually work for these things. rachel: and he went there policy wise. he said no more stupid wars. republicans never talked like that before donald trump and,
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boy, people are responding to it. left, middle, young people want that. so it's not just, it's not just the image. there is substance behind this shift and this change. charlie: he went with total respect and and didn't pretend to be something he wasn't. rachel: amen to that. jason: yeah. the authenticity was off the charts. american americans smell through that. but, yeah, that was a huge change. and you know what? they're being more candid about the cia too. so the cia spokesperson said this the fox news digital: cia assesses with low confidence that a recent relayed origin of covid-19 pandemic is more likelo assess that both research-related and natural origin scenarios of the covid-19 pandemic remain plausi we have low confidence in this judgment and will continue to evaluate any available credible,
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new intelligence reporting or information that could change cia's assessment. here's what changed, donald trump got elected -- [laughter] the biden cia a had all this information. john ratcliffe gets confirmed and, what, within 72 hours, he exposes what they believed and thought all the time, they just never shared it with the american public. rachel: that statement still is pretty weak. if that's the best the cia has, pull their funding. i'm not in the cia, and i knew this right away. [laughter] i mean, the wuhan lab tarted to disappear -- started to disappear -- or china started to disappear scientists from the wuhan lab who were raising alarms about this. doctors who were starting to see patients, they were disappearing them. red flag, hello. and also the wuhan lab was doing covid and coronavirus studies. hike, duh. [laughter] -- like, duh. and this was all deliberately, you know, hidden by fauci. and this is what concerns me, you guys. it's the not just the lack of
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transparency,, the lack of accountability. the fact that paw if chi got a pardon, and he will -- fauci got a pardon, and he will never if bear responsibility at least from a federal level. i talked to you, and you said he could still face state charges. but the man did a huge disservice, responsible for hundreds, millions of deaths, and he will not be held responsible. that's a problem. charlie: and this is your weekly reminder that government comes up with the most absurd things, and nothing's more absurd than the central the intelligence agency, they're on top of it now because they're so intelligent. rachel: we'll see when all these things come out of what donald trump is going to reveal on jfk and everything else. i think we're all going to get a new look at the cia. jason: and rfk, when he gets into health and human services, that's where the treasure-trove of documents is. that oversight can be revealed. and fauci and other, i think,
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are still subject to civil suits. rachel: do you think they disappear -- you know how they did on -- jason: they've got to go into the bowels and go -- rachel: paper shredding. charlie: i would argue that exposing those, the reality of all of that is even more important than all the transparency about jfk assassination, martin luther king assassination. this is stuff that happened, you know, four years ago, five years ago. and everybody, including many in the media, were in on it. jace yeah yeah. and we all jabbed ourselves -- jason:. not everybody, but a lot of people -- rachel: i didn't. jason: i want to know what they knew. rachel: i do too. everybody who felt if obligated to do that to keep a job deserves to know what exactly is going on. all right, turning to your headlines, a migrant suspected in a fatal hit and run in illinois is behind bars after police captured him 800 miles away enroute to mexico. the man crashed into a car with
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five people inside last sunday. a 20-year-old was killed and two others remain hospitalized. the u.s. marshals' service confirming the illegal immigrant had been previously deported from the country, and and he now faces multiple charges including reckless homicide. president trump is defending the firing of pulse until -- multiple federal inspector generals after letting go of at least 15 of them late friday night. the president telling reporters on air force one last night -- on saturday, that's right, yesterday -- the that the action is actually quite common saying, quote, i did it because it's a very common thing to do, but some people thought some to were unfair or were not doing the job. it's a very standard thing to do very much like the the u.s. attorney. during the campaign cycle, vice president j.d. vance jokingly promised that he would put a stop to the potential collaboration between skyline chili and graters' ice cream.
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i don't know much about that. but apparently, he wasn't able to get it done. the ice cream combines french pot ice cream and skyline's signature chili spice if mix with oyster crackers sprinkled throughout. that that sounds absolutely disgusting. we do need an executive order to end that. did you guys know about this? charlie: no, did not. jason: no. sorry. rachel: please don't make us eat that, producers? charlie: wild you say that? [laughter] you just guaranteed that you'll be eat it. [laughter] rachel: well, the organization teaming up with the border czar, tom homan, to find more than 300,000 mussing illegal migrant children. how they're doing it, that's up next. living in the red. with a very high risk of another attack. with his risk factors his recommended ldl-c level should be below 55. are you at risk? learn how to get a free ldl-c test at attackheartdisease.com. when we started feeding bogie the farmer's dog,
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days ago, hundreds of criminal migrants have been arrested every day by federal immigration agents. white house officials sharing these images of deportation flights now taking off daily with the use of military planes, but the white house is looking to is scale up operations. meantime, at a rally in las vegas yesterday, president trump said he is considering moving irs agents to the border. watch. >> on day one i immediately halted the hiring of any new irs agents. you know, they hired -- [cheers and applause] , they hired or tried to hire 88,000 new workers to go after you, and we're in the process of developing a plan to to either terminate all of them or maybe we'll move them to the border. >> reporter: and here are the latest numbers from i.c.e. as of saturday more than 1400 illegal migrants had been arrested and more than 1200 detainer requests have been
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lodged with local authorities. among those arrested are these three tren de aragua members, one in texas, two in tennessee all who entered illegally last year. and if now the feds are reportedly having to scout is more spaces to house migrants as current detention sites are expected to film quickly. rachel, back to you. rachel: thank you, chanley. meanwhile, gioia cares is teaming up with tom homan and investigative reporter czar a carter to launch -- sara carter to launch an initiative aimed at locating missing illegal children for human trafficking awareness month. here is -- to discuss is fox news contributor sara carter. back in the summer myself and will and pete interviewed donald trump. i asked him directly, will you find these children who are missing, and he said, yes, of course. i was so heartened to learn he was already starting on this right away, as soon as day one
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he got tom homan on it. bob, i'll start with you, what is gioia doing to help tom homan in the search for these children, which is so tragic? >> what a difference an election makes, right? people who care about, you know, this past administration if has been active in bringing in people not just from the northern and southern border, but a parole system where we're flying people in from nicaragua, haiti, venezuela and cuba. but, you know, we were involved in the movie sound of freedom where we became aware of this tremendousville of trafficking. and so with that awareness, we formed the coalition of different people, organizations that, to raise awareness. we're going into schools with people like monique bear, crimestoppers, different can groups to bring with awareness to this problem. because before that we weren't aware that this, again, this last administration was actively bringing this in.
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we've gone from 85,000 children missing to 340,000. but they're not missing, they've been sold. they're purchased, basically, and then handed off to sponsors. 40 children at one address? that's not a home, it's a business. hey. rachel: no. you're absolutely right. and i love that you're to going into the schools, bob, because so many of these kids are ending up in the school system, and you're able to give the signs and let them know that there's help for them and resources. >> right. rachel: obviously, this is going to take law enforcement, right, sara a? >> oh, it's going to take huge cooperation with federal, local, state law enforcement officials as well as, i think, our partners in the western hemisphere. there's no way to stop this kind of crisis alone. i mean, everybody has to be working together. bob's right with goya cares we're able to get out there and educate students in the schools, we're able to find, you know, within the communities those kids that may be trafficked, that may be afraid. they can go to someone, feel
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safe and report what's happening. and then, but it's the after care -- rachel: that's what i want to know. what happens after you find 4e78? -- them? what is happening to these children? the biden administration, tom homan, you guys find hem and what happens? >> the very first thing is mental health. a lot of what we're dealing with, finding their parents, their actual guardians because a lot of these children who have come into the country have disappeared into the homes where they're being sold, as bob has stated. so we need to locate their guardians. one thing i can say, rachel, i spoke with the el salvadoran president. we know that children have been trying to contact relatives. hhs has a hotline. some of these children have called that hotline. these children are going to find their way back to safety because tom homan is going to be leading that effort with president trump. and the people who are trafficking these children in the united states need to be held to the full extent of the law. they absolutely have to be
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punished. there is no way that we can allow this to continue to happen. we're a nation that is based on principles and morals, and we can't sit around and we can't accuse anyone if else of doing anything if we're not willing to take care of the problem that has happened in this country because of a wide open border under president biden. rachel: well, bob, as you know, we were complicitous. congress, the democrats refused to do a dna test on these children, and then they handed them off to can -- they're telling me i have to wrap. one last sentence from you with, bob. >> this is the biggest industry in the world. of it's the money and the power that we see, and this administration who cares about our kids, they're going to solve this. we've already -- not one week into this administering, and we're already saving thousands of people. rachel: it's unbelievable. and it's, it's remarkable what you've done, sara and bob. you know, there are very few ceos who want to take on an ugly issue like this. god bless you for putting your efforts and your money behind
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something -- >> very few presidents. >> very true. rachel: very few presidents. amen to that. thank you, bob. all right. of we'll be right back. e? 15 or more headache days a month, each lasting 4 hours or more. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine. in a survey, 91% of users wish they'd started sooner. so why wait? talk to your doctor. botox® effects may spread hours to weeks after injection, causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away as trouble swallowing, speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness can be signs of a life-threatening condition. those with these conditions before injection are at highest risk. side effects may include allergic reactions like rash, breathing problems, dizziness, neck and injection site pain, and headache. don't receive botox® if there's a skin infection. tell your doctor your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions like als, myasthenia gravis, or lambert-eaton syndrome and medicines like botulinum toxins, which may increase the risk of serious side effects. chronic migraine may still keep you from being there.
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rick: welcome back to "fox & friends." take a look at these high temperatures today. it is going to feel so good compared to this last week that have been so unbearably cold. across the south you're going to get to to 66 in new orleans. snow across the ground across much of southern louisiana yesterday. that's going to be fully gone. snow across parts of the southeast will also be leaving. temperatures towards the 40s up towards philadelphia, new york. big improvement. a little bit of rain coming into this area. we had the snow, and now we've got heavy rain wednesday and thursday of this week that's
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going to cause flooding concerns for us. we'll be talking about this this week. southern california, the first significant rain in about nine months across parts of southern california and the first real significant rain of rainy season which we desperately need during this time of the year. it started coming in overnight. this is going to continue throughout the day today and throughout at least the first half of the day tomorrow. rainfall totals somewhere in the 1-2 inches widespread. a but isolated spots picking up more than that and mountain snow. all a beneficial rain that's going to help with the fires ongoing and help prevent future fires as well. charlie, over to to you. charlie: thank you, rick. or ricky -- [laughter] rick: you don't get that the permission. that's just rachel. charlie: okay. give it time. [laughter] a new fox news poll shows roughly a third of americans plan to change their drinking habits after a surgeon general recommendation to put cancer warning labels on alcoholic beverages. alcohol is the third leading cause of preventable cancer in
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the u.s., and the cdc says there are nearly 200,000 alcohol-related deaths a year. fox news medical contributor, dr. nicole saphier, joins us now. so, really? do you really think there are going to be a bunch of people who quit drinking because of a surgeon general's warning on a beer can? >> well, good morning, charlie. no, i certainly don't think that the warning label on alcohol from the surgeon general's recommendation actually going to thwart people if drinking alcohol. i will say that americans at this point, we are drinking too much. we saw a lot of that throughout covid. but the reality is, charlie, alcohol has been ingrained in our civilization for centuries upon centuries. if you even look to the blue zones across the world where people live the longest and healthiest, it's not because they've cut out alcohol entirely from from their diet. in fact, alcohol is quite with common in their diets. but what we are seeing here, what's been going on here is that people are drinking more, they're drinking a hot more hard liquor, they're having a lot of those sugary additives, and
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owl -- all of that is leading to a rise in inflammation, metabolic disorders and, ultimately, resulting in cancers. do i think we as individuals could probably benefit from drinking a little bit less? absolutely. do i think that the surgeon general's warnings are really going to be what gets people to stop? i do not think so. charlie: well, i appreciate that. that that makes me feel a whole lot better. i was nervous about this. but far more concerning to me any ifway with is this -- anyway is this new study showing that smartphone use leads to to hallucinations, detachment from reality and aggression in teens. and what's so amazing to me about this as young as 13 years old, where does the aggression come from? >> well, charlie, so this is -- what you're referring to right now is a citied study looking at over 10,000 adolescents ages 13-17 in the united states and across india. and what they have seen is that these kids are reporting hallucinations, specifically if
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they spend a lot of time on video games and social media. why is this happening in this actually is not surprising. think about these games that that they play. they're high levels of violence. they're all of a sudden having difficulty perceiving what is real, what is not. we're seeing an uptick in violence in adolescents. we see it in school, cyberbullying and others. one of the things i found very concerning, charlie, is a fact that about a third of the kids, females more than males or were reporting suicidal thoughts. at this point i think the evidence is overwhelming, our increased digital use, it can the all have detriments specifically hen it comes to -- when it comes to children. me as a mom of three and a physician, i try to keep kids off the devices as much as possible. my kids do not get their electronics during the week. we try to go on, any sort of vacation we get rid of the electronics. these are heavily addictive. we've seen with brain imaging
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mri that it does alter their brain chem can calls -- chemicals, so it is the not surprising the mental health effects, but it really is thwarting their socialization skills and just their becoming adults. it is, it is altering their brain. charlie: it really is amazing. it's kind of the world's largest human experiment in human history. now, i was told by a little birdie that today is your birthday. is that possible -- >> it is my birthday. that. [laughter] yes, it's. charlie: well, happy 30th birthday. [laughter] >> thank you so much, charlie. my son's turning 25 this year as well, but it's definitely my 30th. [laughter] if. charlie: well, you look like you're 30. it's because of the healthy eating and the moderate drinking and staying off your stupid -- >> everything in moderation, charlie. live your happiest and healthiest life. charlie: dr. saphier, thank you. >> thank you. charlie: trump announcing when he'll have a decision on the fate of tiktok as he searches
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promising a solution to the law banning the app in the united states. he told reporters, quote, numerous people are talking to the me, very substantial people, about buying it. and elle make the decision probably over the the next 30 days. if we can save tiktok, i think it would be a good thing. i'd only do it if the united states benefits. well, we're fortunate to have kurt the cyber guy joining us to help break this down. this is a hugely popular app, and i think the president does want the save it. >> and there's billions and billions of dollars at stake, and the president, i think, wants to be the hero here. rightfully so, because there's an opportunity. and he's right. he's set up in this way to where he could have the u.s. win, but he could also dictate -- he's controlling that rudder. he's going to be the one that decides who gets to buy twitter -- i mean, yeah, tiktok. or if it won't go at all. so, i mean, it's really in his hands at this point. and if what we do know is that there were reports earlier before the president said this on air force one last night.
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he came back, reporters were asking some clarification about where this deal is right now, and he said, no, larry ellison of oracle is not in the discussions. but we're hearing otherwise. i think the president's playing his good art of the deal game. i think he's trying to get them all coming at it to drive up the valuation of tiktok. and if here's the question, are the chinese going to allow the sale? and they'd be foolish not to. but they'd also be foolish not to leverage what people are discussing could be tariff relief. like, could you get -- if you're china and the u.s. wants this and, believe me, 170 million americans want tiktok here, what kind of deal's going to come out, what can china get out of this? that's what i've got my eye on. jason: yeah. but donald trump holds all the cards, because if it's not allowed in the united states, it's worth zero. >> if he doesn't say, okay, i'm going to let in this happen, then the law stands, and it are
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me -- remain banned in the u.s. jason: you're actually glad you do have president trump because he does know how to negotiate, but it's going to be a lot of money. >> well, you've got bytedance that thinks it's worth $200 billion, you got the president who at one point was saying, hey, it could be north of trillion dollars. what's it really worthsome we're about to find out. and and a lot of it also things on when you transact tiktok, it's got to reside in the u.s. does the algorithm that powers all of this thing which is the device inside of the tiktok that points certain videos to you and certain videos to me, does that come along with the deal? if. jason: yeah. >> i say it's got to -- jason: it has to. >> otherwise it's meaningless. jace yeas i've got to get your take on this because i was fascinated by this, there's a flying motorcycle out there? tell me about this. >> all right. at the beginning of the year there's a big tech show, and this is from richter. of it's the sky rider x1. this is actually going to be
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out, apparently, in 2026 for $60,000. it goes about 62 miles an hour. you get in this thing, you don't even have to know how to fly it. you get in there, you say where you want to go, and it'll fly for up to 40 minutes on a single charge. it will take you to your destination, and, you know, if -- let's say that you, something went wrong in the air, they say they have redundancies, it's got a parachute that if the thing broke -- [laughter] jason: you run out of battery? >> -- bring you down to earth again? here's where i got -- this thing is, you know, this should inspire innovation. why are the chinese kicking our butts again with something like this? we really need to be getting this kind of thing going in the u.s. jason: yeah. >> and whether we're going to see these things buzzing around or not next year, i don't know. jason: elon musk is ahead of everybody on autonomous vehicles. i think the idea that our kids and grandkids are going to look back and say, you used to drive? tell me about that.
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it's crazy. >> by the way, we're tracking a story the at cyber guy.com where we do the tech report, there is this incredible breach, a large insurance company, car insurance, some huge data loss. go and see if your data is part of this. jason: yikes. kurt the cyber guy, thanks so much for joining us. with all right, we're celebrating the start to catholic schools week with some of the teachers and students making the most of their classical education. ♪ -- calling all angels ♪ school. i'm also a library board trustee, a mother of two, and a grandmother of two. about five years ago, i was working full time, i had an awful lot of things to take care of. i needed all the help i could get. i saw the commercials for prevagen. i started taking it. and it helped! i was better able to take care of all those little details. people say to me, "barbara, you don't miss a beat." prevagen. at stores everywhere without a prescription.
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♪ jason: today marks the beginning of catholic schools week full of programs, mass and fund raising events across the country. charlie: and catholic school enrollment has only grown since 2020, now reaching nearly 1.7 million students nationwide last school year. rachel: that's right. i think covid helped to speed that up. father daniel is the president of my kids' school in new jersey, our lady of mount car carmel. and he is here with some of the students, i love all these kids. of let's talk about why catholic
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schools. >> why not catholic schools? [laughter] i think we've got a long track record of forming hearts and minds in goodness and and beauty. rachel: yeah. charlie: and what's the importance of the classical curriculum? >> yeah, i think it's very significant. i mean, the classical curriculum does well to form children not only in acquiring discreet habits and skills for the work force, but also to live life well. rachel: what does that mean, classical, for those who don't know? [laughter] >> all the big questions coming out this morning. yeah, what does classical mean, i think there's a focus on classical languages, there's a great track record, thousands of years of tradition of how to form minds and hearts, and we're really placing ourselves in that tradition as well. rachel: well, we love the schoo- charlie: and we've been listen dog them warm up. we can tell you, you all are in for a real treat here. of. rachel: all right. take it away, kids. thank you, father.
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more "fox & friends" coming up. thank you, father, so much for this and, again, this is our lady of mount caramel, my children's school. so proud of all of you. fantastic job. charlie: spectacular. jason: you got up early this morning, thank you. [laughter] we are people living with afib. ♪ and over half a million of us have left blood thinners behind. for life. ♪ we've cut our stroke risk... ...and said goodbye to our bleeding worry. with the watchman implant.
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but also want whiter teeth they have to make a choice one versus the other. sensodyne clinical white provides two shades whiter teeth as well as providing 24/7 sensitivity protection. patients are going to love to see sensodyne on the shelf. >> it's the 8 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" weekend starting with this. the senate has a busy week ahead. as several key trump administration pickings head to capitol hill for high stakes confirmation hearings. rachel: plus trump looking to shake up the economy as he pushes his no tax on tips message in las vegas. >> no tax on tips. no tax on tips. tips will be 100% yours. [applause] >> it'
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