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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  February 1, 2025 5:00am-6:00am PST

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(man) i can do diabetes differently with mounjaro. (vo) ask your doctor about once-weekly mounjaro. will: the 8:00 hour of "fox and friends" weekend starting with this, a second major airplane crash in a matter of days, we bring the latest from philadelphia. after a medical transport jet crashes and explodes setting homes on fire and leaving debris over the streets.
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the first american hostage is released as part of the israel/hamas cease-fire deal after being held captive for nearly 500 days, the latest developments live from tel aviv. rachel: donald trump bringing a lot of american hostages home and putting the spotlight also on school choice as we see a significant drop in test scores. the third hour of "fox and friends" weekend starts right now. >> a medical transport jet with the child patient, her mom and four others aboard, crashing and exploding near a mall yesterday in philadelphia. the blast setting homes on fire and hurting multiple people on the ground. as you can see, it left a wide debris field. rachel: i see the sun is finally up and you are getting a better view of what's going on. what can you tell us?
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>> reporter: i start with the answer to a question you asked about where exactly the jet hit the ground. with the sun being up, local outlets have helicopters flying over the impact site and we can see a crater that was formed on the sidewalk area right near the roosevelt mall in a very populated area where this medical transport jet went down just before 6:thirty last night. eventually six people on board. they have all been killed and we are hearing about six injuries treated at temple university hospital and you can expect that number to increase throughout the day, that is what we expect to learn as the day progresses but look at this video. you see people about to enter a home and they turn around and
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see the massive fireball as the jet struck the ground at a very fast speed resulting in a massive explosion, jet fuel soaking three to four blocks of row homes and cars in the area, sparking a massive fire no doubt resulting in casualties. take a look at this statement from shriners children's hospital, you mentioned the tragic story of the people on board that medical transport jet, shriners confirms that one of our pediatric patients and the child's mother were aboard the jet rescue air ambulance that crashed in philadelphia, the patient had received care from shriners children's philadelphia was being transported back to her home country of mexico. because of patient privacy concerns we can't say any more about the patient and her family at this time, the jet was going to stop in missouri to refuel and then take this little girl and her mother back
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to tijuana. she had just completed that life-saving treatment in philadelphia. can only imagine they must've been so happy to return home having received that treatment and then this tragedy occurs, so so sad, six people treated at temple university hospital, three of them released, three of them considered in fair condition, don't have any ages at this point, take a look at the flayer when, it was only in the air for three miles the entire flight lasted less then a minute. very populated area and we hope the casualty number is lower than it looks like it could be. here's governor josh schapiro last night. >> a unified response to an awful aviation disaster. as awful as that aviation
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disaster was we saw the best of philly. we saw neighbor helping neighbor. we saw pennsylvanians looking out for one another. >> reporter: all hands on deck today with federal authorities, the ntsb also here investigating, local officials were expecting them to give us an update regarding casualties and the steps they are taking locally. as soon as we get that information we will send it to you guys. will: one more question. the company was philadelphia learjet. am i reading correctly this is the second crash in 15 months for this jet? >> reporter: there is a report about that. i need to do some digging to confirm that but i did see the report you are talking about so we will figure that out and confirm that or not in the next hour for you.
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joey:this tragedy comes two days after the deadly collision between an american airlines plane at a black hawk helicopter in washington dc. barges are ramping up salvage operations as we learn more about one of the air traffic controllers working at reagan national airport that night. rachel: good morning, madeline rivera. >> reporter: more assets are arriving today, crews will be assessing what's needed to get the aircraft out of the water. those large chunks of debris will be examined by the ntsb along with a black box from regional jet and the army black heart. the recorders have been taken to a lab. as crews continue to work at the site there have been questions about staffing at the air traffic control tower at reagan national airport during the time of the crash. the new york times citing an internal problem and area faa safety report and source
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briefed on staffing reports that air traffic control supervisor allowed one air traffic controller to leave the job early that night leaving one person to do the job two people. the ntsb says interviews with air-traffic controllers are being done. they are also reports the army black hawk was flying above its permitted altitude of 200 feet. the faa is restricting helicopter traffic near dca until the ntsb completes its preliminary investigation. >> what i can say is in this incident, it should not have happened. we have an aviation what's called a swiss cheese approach where if something fails, backups should catch it. multiple layers of redundancy. >> reporter: so far 40 one of 67 bodies have been recovered, first responders sold the remains of servicemembers as they were taken from the scene, two crew members of the black hawk have been identified. andrew eves and staff sergeant
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ryan o'hara. rachel three hostages back in israel after being released by hamas earlier this morning after spending 484 days in captivity. charlie:that include such trey yingst joining us live in tel aviv and has the latest. >> reporter: good morning. another hostage release took place today with three additional people coming home. american citizen keith siegel was released from the port in gaza city. we do know keith along with his wife were taken from the community of the gaza border on october 7th. she was released during the first cease-fire. >> he looks very weak but he looks week. lost a lot of weight but he will be okay. he will be okay.
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he's going to see his family now. >> reporter: another man was freed from southern gaza along with yarden, his wife and children have been seen since. the scenes were less chaotic. israel had threatened hamas with pausing the release of palestinian prisoners if the hostages were paraded through a crowd again. we know these hostages were exchanged for hundred 83 palestinian prisoners, some fled into the west bank, others into the gaza strip. the entire country of israel morning as they wait for more information about the remaining hostages that are still in hamas captivity. we expect another exchange next saturday. will: i understand two more americans are alive and still in captivity. what do we know about them and how soon can we have them come home?
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>> reporter: we know very little about them. there were seven americans being held with three alive. with keith released today two remain in gaza that are believed to be alive, the difficult part is hamas and islamic jihad are trickling out the information. even the israelis are not getting the names of hostages set to be released until the last moment. officials are hoping those americans will be on the list to be released next week and but it is unclear at this point given the fact that smaller organizations inside gaza like islamic jihad have been holding many of the hostages since october 7th. charlie:there has been a lot of pressure to get both hostages home and political pressure even here. now you have these people who committed horrible crimes. does that make things more complicated or has that pressure been invented with more hostages, give us some insight on that.
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>> make things more complicated because some of these palestinian prisoners were in prison for life sentences for committing attacks, organizing bombings against buses and cafés in the early 2000s and now they are back in the hands of hamas, they will rejoin the organization and be able to participate in future attacks not just in gaza but also the west bank. communities that are within 45 minutes of where we are standing right now. some of the scenes inside gaza are painting a grim picture for the israeli campaign against hamas. you see these images of hamas fighters and pickup trucks parading through the streets of gaza as they release these hostages, they not only have fighters but also weapons that they can continue to use if the israelis decide to go back into gaza and continue the war. rachel: thanks for that report.
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yesterday donald trump had an education roundtable where he took up an issue he promised to deal with on the campaign trail, looks like he's going to do it, this is just days after the nation's report card revealed a very bleak look for american students. fourth-grade, fourth-graders lost four points in their scores on math, 8 points in reading, 5 points in reading for fourth-grade, 5 points for reading and eighth grade. a lot of this attributed to not just our poor education system but what was done to children during covid where they received virtually no education during two years of lockdown. representative byron donald, what did he tell you? charlie:we had byron donald's talking about the importance of giving parents more authority over the schooling of their
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children. watch this. >> the best way forward is giving parents every opportunity to choose the academic environment for their child. we have seen quite frankly the failures when you have a 1-size-fits-all educational system. the time has come in america of following florida's lead to make sure parents have every opportunity to find the best place for their kid. what came out the other day demonstrating the children in america have fallen behind in math and reading in part because they were locked out of the classroom for two years which was frankly crazy democrat policy, we have to use that moment to really think outside the box. donald trump is committed to that. i am committed to that and so many murderers and activists around the country are committed to thinking outside the box because these children need every opportunity to succeed.
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>> this is been growing and festering for a long time but it exploded and exploded in complete view for many parents during covid and suddenly kids were stuck at home on a computer. whether you like it or not all of this has to be solved in the process of politics and i really do, congressman donalds touched on this, this is a terrific political issue for republicans and it is not because it helps republicans win political campaigns, it is that you can actually get things done because so many of the worst performing schools are in areas that have been run by democrats forever, one party cities, one party states and this is the kind of thing that
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turns voters away, and in search of real solutions, new solutions, something different and the best solution is giving parents more ability to send their kids where they want to send. >> there's talk about illuminating the department of education, serious talk about that, block granting that money back to the states, covid revealed the corruption of the teachers unions, that they were willing to sacrifice, there's always a debate, almost like taboo to say the teachers unions were bad because then people said you were implicating teachers and everybody likes their individual kids teacher for the most part so this taboo about talking about the unions because talking about the unions, talking about your kids's teacher, nobody wants to get crosshairs with their kids's teacher, there is a lot of stuff that can happen. charlie:what does she do when she has a teacher that
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underperforms next to a teacher that overperforms, very little she can do about that teacher that underperforms, very little she can reward to the teacher that overperforms so it is not, the union and the teachers aren't the same, the union doesn't protect good teachers because good teachers don't need to be protected most of the time and that's the frustrating part. school administrators are the ones that have insight into how negatively these unions can affect how schools ran and school choice is a local very local issue. pay taxes to county and city to fund your schools, not just your state so there's a federal government role here but there's a role here, i hope the republicans key into that and like other issues, if you are at the state level, local level, you are on a school board or city council, this is an issue that affects everyone and people care about. rachel: it is a politically salient issue because it is
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multiracial and as you rightly pointed out, it hits the working-class more. barack obama took away scholarship programs for children in dc while at the same time he and michelle were, dc school, poor black minority students were getting kicked out of that school. the democrat party is beholden to teachers union, this would break, block granting this, giving vouchers to parents. this is how you break that cartel. charlie:the ones who suffer the most are the ones democrats claim to care about. rachel: during covid we saw that. let's turn to your headlines with a fox news order, trump's special mission envoy, richard grenell securing the release of
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six american hostages after he was in venezuela, those hostages, being accused of plotting a coup. rick grenell posting this photo with americans writing they just spoke to donald trump and couldn't stop thanking him. to venezuela, must accept deported criminal migrants including gang members, can't wait to speak to him on how that conversation went. democrats are set to elect to their new party leader today after losing control of the white house and congress in the 2024 election. the dnc chair election after house minority leader had keim jeffries making controversial remark about fighting the trump agenda. >> we are going to fight it legislatively. we are going to fight it in the courts. and fight it in the streets.
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rachel: there it is. the white house issuing a response saying, quote, this unhinged violent rhetoric is dangerous. leader jeffries should immediately apologize. jeffries and his team deny he was calling for physical fighting. we never saw them in the streets violently. donald trump's new federal department of government efficiency or doge announcing one billion dollars in saving after canceling dei related roles. 100 for contract have been eliminated. most were funded the department of treasury health and human services and office of personnel. it is a lot of money. charlie:they are still very lost.
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rachel: they didn't take a good message from election. charlie:republicans were there once and donald trump came from it. back to our top stories, six people debt after a medical plane carrying out child patient crashes. more on that tragedy next. my moderate to severe plaque psoriasis held me back. now with skyrizi, i'm all in with clearer skin. ♪ things are getting clearer ♪ ♪ ♪ yeah... i feel free ♪
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charlie:shocking video shows a medical plane carrying six people including a child patient plummeting from the sky last night and crashing in a massive fireball in a philadelphia mall. the explosion's parade jet fuel across are essential areas, setting homes on fire and hurting multiple people on the ground. an eyewitness to this horrific crash joins us. good morning, ryan, thank you for joining us. if you don't mind, take us through what we saw. >> initially what caught my eye was the massive flash that lit the sky as far as i could see orange. i turned around to see, a massive mushroom cloud.
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charlie:tell us how close you were to where the plane crashed. >> i was in the parking lot, getting food from my perspective. it crashed right beyond the houses or behind me. couldn't have been less than 500 feet or so away. charlie:did you witness any debris going around you are past your over you? >> not over me but there was definitely a bunch of smoke is what i noticed. thankfully nothing came shooting out at me.
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charlie:whether the plane was on fire, you didn't have eyes on it until it exploded. did anybody around you see and have you gotten a feel for someone who witnessed the plane coming down if they think it was on fire before it hit the ground? >> people definitely knew it was a plane initially. people around me, screaming it was a plane. it was a plane. a sense if was on fire or not. after seeing the aftermath, the initial fireball, in my eyes was probably already a blaze. charlie:our hearts break for the people on board. can't thank you enough for sharing your firsthand experience and hope we get answers soon.
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remember selena gomez, had a meltdown over the arrest of illegal immigrants. angel moms have a message next. they say seeing is believing,
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children who were brutally murdered and beaten to death and left on the floor by these illegal immigrants. >> i feel like it's a ruse to deceive people and garner sympathy for lawlessness. >> my daughter was a child, many other children whose lives were taken due to people who cross still legally. >> they didn't cry for our daughters. rachel: you didn't cry for our daughters. vice president of national border patrol council, i have to tell you, i have interviewed many of these moms and other relatives associated with these children's deaths and that is the exact reaction i had when i saw the video, where was selena gomez when these women were brutally murdered. >> not to sound insulting but i had to look her up.
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i didn't know if she was an actress or a singular. i apologize for that but where were a lot of these actors. it is insulting because i see a lot of latino actors and singers who live in the united states, california, and florida, they were in the big outcry that said of donald trump wins they were going to move to canada or mexico which i haven't seen them pack their bags but some of these individuals are doing a lot of little videos to boost their ratings and get more likes but the reality is it is what it is, they are on a soapbox looking for ratings, they don't care about this country or the actual victims brutalized by illegal aliens. rachel: you have been on the job. i give kudos to the administration, to their communications department for not letting that go by, engaging in the culture, calling selena gomez out
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directly for this and using the moms in their own words to counter that message. i give credit to the trump administration for not just letting hollywood and these actresses who have private security and faced none of the issues that say a mexican-american girl who went to the corner store and ended up brutally raped and her body discarded under a bridge is unbelievable. i want to talk about this too. mass deportations have gone underway right now and people are warning illegals using tiktok about the raids so they can evade these raids and what can be done about that use of tiktok. >> it has been happening for quite some time. even the criminal cartels were
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using tiktok, instagram, any means of social media to recruit kids to help them bring more people to the border. supplies, whatever it may be. these groups will utilize anything at their disposal to further their criminal enterprises, something we've been seeing for quite some time. some of the intel guys should start monitoring those and counterattack and throw them off of where they will be. rachel: use tiktok to get them off of the sent. of the scent. for those who haven't seen these tiktok warnings here's what it looks like. >> i am in search of florida cute winter boots one hundred 29. i see orlando and tampa have great -- >> the response of ice cream trucks in orlando at several
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locations. i've heard some people say in winter park, bogy creek and the south parkway. rachel: they are using these names, winter boots is another game for ice, it's a code for it. ice cream trucks. can ice and other law enforcement do anything about this? >> they will continuously go out to interrupt the actual law enforcement out there, winter boots, whatever names they are using, when you saw border patrol. you are in a situation what you were advocating for, i want to
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give a last word before closing this interview on what you think donald trump has done so far. >> he put america first, it is sickening you have individuals that will attack law enforcement, they are anti-immigrant or racist, no one, we are pro-immigration but need to do it the right way. we are anti-child trafficking, anti-drugs, and just like donald trump has shown. rachel: pro angel mom. thank you. rfk junior fending off democratic attacks over vaccines, big food and more, doctor nicole sapphire will break it all down. in october, we begin to harvest next year's bedding.
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charlie:robert f kennedy junior in a round of seated senate hearings ahead of us crucial confirmation. >> i will comply with all the ethical guidelines.
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>> that's not the question. >> you are asking me -- >> no i am not. >> the problem of corruption is not just in federal agencies but in congress too. almost all members of this panel are accepting including yourself accepting millions of dollars from the pharmaceutical industry. >> oh, no, no, no. i thought that would -- charlie:here is dr. nicole saphier. before we get to these exchanges, big picture, how do you think rfk junior did? >> i watched the use hearings and i thought there were strong moments for rfk junior and moment it felt a little rocky. overall i thought he did well. a tough line of questioning and he was asked some tough questions. you had senators trying to have
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their viral moment, not being serious or thoughtful in their questions, came across argumentative and even ignorant in their questions but there were good questions that were hard questions some of which he did struggle to get through. looking at this i don't think he won over any senators who had apprehensions going into the hearings but i do think ultimately his performance was as strong as expected to be. charlie:rfk junior said the some the things that are going to be difficult to defend, he's very outspoken, he's been in the public spotlight for a long time but i did get the sense throughout that he probably knew more about public health, vaccines than most of the people asking him tough questions.
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>> you are right. he has decades of colorful history and there is bound to be something people don't agree with. i'm certain you could find some things i have said that were wrong or false that i don't agree with today. we all evolve. i will say that when it comes to vaccines and the history of vaccines he is well educated on it like a lot of things, you can cherry pick the data you look at and i don't think when it comes to some of the vaccines he's looking at big picture but one of the most profound moments in these hearings is when senator rand paul put eloquently something i've been talking about the fact the childhood vaccine schedule put out by the cdc doesn't have to be 1-size-fits-all. a parent can ask questions. the same at all vaccines are safe and effective for every person is unequivocally false. you can say vaccines are safe and effective and you can say vaccines are not effective for
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everyone. those are both true statements. what rfk junior is saying is he's not going to limit access to vaccines but wants to do regular studies to make sure these vaccines are safe and those who need the vaccines have access to them. charlie:one of the important things in terms of improving confidence in vaccines is being able to answer questions. we are grateful to you because you are willing to answer questions. that's the most important thing. great to see you. joey:some headlines for you. the first us parent to be found criminally responsible for a school shooting that her child committed, seeking a new involuntary manslaughter trial. jennifer crumbly says she was not informed about a deal reached between two school employees and prosecutors. crumbly and her husband were
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sentenced to ten years in prison for buying their 15-year-old son ethan the gun used in the mass shooting at oxford high school. turning to business news costco workers will soon get a pay hike. the company planning to give many workers $30 an hour after union members threatened to strike according to a memo. this will happen over the next three years, this will include a $0.50 increase for lower paid employees. here's a first person view of a daring helicopter rescue off of a snow-covered mountain in washington state. ice climber had fallen one hundred feet in the cascade mountains northeast of seattle. rescuers finding the kleiner and two others on a ledge at an elevation of 6600 feet. that ice climber flown to a nearby hospital. his condition is not yet known and to those are your headlines.
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let's turn to rick reichmuth who has our fox weather forecast. harmeet dhillon's >> reporter: temperatures are warming up compared to where we were through much of the month of january, 70 in dallas, 50s across the northeast by the time we get to monday so big improvements in rain across the northeast which was really needed. getting a lot of rain to california and this is a little too much. some spots in the 15 to 20 inches of rain range where you see this moisture from the panda express, oyster from hawaii to the west coast of the us. we will see 5 to 7 feet of snow, 20 inches of rain in some spots and also some of this rain to the south which is great news. the two big fires are 100% contained.
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we have some rain coming that will help get things a little greener and set the stage whether it is a threat for fires. joey:thanks for that. usually seen on the sidelines, battled a heart condition for years. gin hill with her story for american heart month next.
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rachel: american heart month, time to raise awareness about heart disease which impacts millions of americans every year. gin hill has been professionally impacted by this, she was diagnosed with a heart condition that forced her to wear a defibrillator vest even when on the field for two years. she is here with us to share her story after beating all those odds. tell us about the condition. tell us how it impacts you.
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>> if you think of the heart like a rubber band pumping blood, so big and floppy, couldn't come for blood to my body and the crazy thing is it was but i didn't know my family history. heart attacks on the mail outside of my family that i chalked up to being male, lifestyle, clogged arteries, i don't eat meat, i exercise every day. it couldn't be me so i excused and ignored the symptoms for too long even though i was feeling exhausted, constantly out of breath, not until my ankle started swelling so big i couldn't put shoes on except for flip-flops that i finally went to 1/3 doctor and said something is really wrong. that is a big sign but i should have caught it before then had i known the risk factors and family history. when i was diagnosed my heart was down to 16% function. i was told there was 1/3 chance i would have a 5-year life expectancy, a third chance i would need a heart transplant and a third chance medicine would work for me.
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they put me on the defibrillator vest and the medicine and thank god the medicine worked for me. rachel: is a permanent fix or something you have to deal with all the time? >> i will take medicine all the time. a couple pills in the morning at a couple pills at night from my uncle and father. it was a death sentence. neither one live to the 5-year life expectancy. rachel: and they didn't know they had it. what are those of science, somebody watching and what are the symptoms that might warn people about it? >> heart disease is the number one killer of women in the us. my symptoms were very benign, fatigue, who's not tired and today's world, shortness of breath, got to the deck i was waking up at night feeling i just ran a marathon trying to catch my breath and the swelling and indigestion but if you have those signs do not ignore them, take your health seriously, be your own best
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advocate and it affects females at a younger age than you would think just like men. rachel: you went to several doctors before and they didn't catch it. always get a second opinion. >> i excused my symptoms, didn't want to seem like i was complaining so i'm feeling a little tired. instead of saying i am exhausted, sleeping through alarms, i was too embarrassed to stand up for myself, didn't want to appear i couldn't do my job or was a complainer instead of embracing something real is happening to me and need to figure out what it is and fix it immediately. if i had caught it before my heart was down to 16% i might have had a 6-month recovery instead of 21/2 years. rachel: you are so tiny i'm trying to imagine with swollen ankles. i would have told you to go to the doctor.
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we are so happy that you didn't catch it and you are doing better and look healthy as ever. >> it is a testament to how far medication has come thanks to research like the american heart association that i can take a few pills versus what was a death sentence 20 years ago for my uncle and my father. carley: do you have to do anything special in terms of exercise? are you restricted in anyway? >> i can't redline exercise which i exercise 5 days a week. i don't push my heart to exhaustion. between the navigational beacon, that is all. carley: thanks for sharing the story. more "fox and friends" coming up.
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