tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News February 16, 2025 6:00am-7:00am PST
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trump and musk score a big victory, how the white house is winning the war on waste as we learn more about the behind the scenes insane spending. >> st start your engines, we'e revving up for daytona, only on fox, joey jones is live ahead of the great american race. the final hour of "fox & friends weekend" starts right now. ♪ [laughter] charlie: it is daytona sunday. welcome to "fox & friends weekend." it's 9:00 in new york. great to be with you, lisa,. rachel: great to be with you. we had a fun show. charlie: do you feel like you'll live forever now? lisa: absolutely not. a lot of things he said he never
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does, i would do. he had phenomenal posture. rachel: great posture, the skin, the clarity in the eyes. a lot of people criticize the $2 million he spends a year on trying to reverse the clock. i learned something from him. we can all go to bed earlier, cut down on junk food and the number one thing you can do along with getting 8 and-a-half hours of sleep a night which is free if you can make it happen is to eat two hours before bedtime. we're learning a few things. these are free. we can reverse the clock. lisa: i think we got something from the conversation. we don't, just kidding. he made that up. new around here. so anyway, yeah, we asked him what time do you go to bed, i thought he was going to say something crazy, 83:30 p.m., that might be hard for some people but that's not abnormal. he said he stops eating either 12:00 p.m. or 12:30. charlie: he stops at noon.
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that would be run. lisa: that would be rough. he doesn't have pizza, steak or wine. rachel: you asked are you hungry. he says i get hungry. charlie: i don't want to liive liveforever so i'm going to enj- rachel: keep doing what you're doing. lisa: you can do all these things and get hit by a bus which is depressing to say. we don't control it. i guess there are some things you can do to be healthy and try to decrease the odds. charlie: somebody else who is very healthy is joey jones. the guy works out. he never misses a workout. the most buff guy there is. he is in daytona, florida, getting ready for the daytona 500, what's going on? >> reporter: if i miss working out, you just buy your shirts smaller. that's all you have to do. you don't have to work out, just buy your shirts, buy a medium. we're at the daytona 500.
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these nascar drivers are in good shape. they're about to do a marathon, 5500 miles in a race car. it's crazy to think they show up with so much energy for the first race, the daytona 500. they're here for almost a week. they already raced a couple races, raced the shootout and the duals and they're about to do the 500. there are a lot of "fox & friends" fans at the nascar race, they're all asking about rachel and charlie. they say they miss pete. i don't know what that means about me. they're so happy that we're here and they're ready to watch a race. rachel: it looks so fun out there. the president its is going to e there later today. do you know anything about what the president's going to do when he's there, anything special besides just watching it? >> reporter: listen, rachel, as charlie has proven,.
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i can tell by the secret service presence, he will want to be by the drivers. i'm excited to see what he does. he wants to be here shaking hands. the fans are ready for i they're meeting their second favorite joey. they may get to see president trump. the mood par mood is electric. charlie: i bet you see more than one maga hat, more than the one that trump is wearing. >> reporter: probably some dark maga hats. you got guys want to be style i. they're ready. they're ready for president trump. as they say, the sun is shining on daytona like it's shining on
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america. rachel: we'll check back with you in a little bit. thanks for what you're showing us there. looks like you're having a good time and the sun's out. lisa: sun's out, guns out. >> reporter: that's right. [laughter] rachel: thanks, joey. [laughter] lisa: you know what i wanted to ask? maybe you know the answer to this. you're doing 200 200 laps, howo you know how many laps you've done. charlie: somebody's counting them. rachel: i wanted to ask about the bubba wallace controversy. charlie: he was talking about how fit the drivers are. those cars -- i've never driven one of the cars at the daytona 500 but they're really hard to drive, they taken take enorms strength. lisa: i'm a terrible driver. i got the worst driver prize in high school.
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lisa: you should be able to run anything. rachel: listen, the whole doge experience that we've been having over the last three weeks has been incredible. people just sort of every day learning about new terrible spending that's going on, things they never knew the government was giving money to and u.s. tax dollars were going to be spent, check this out
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>> when you talk about $14 million and a taxpayer is sitting there, thinking about how much they paid in taxes last year e it was probably less than 14 million, so that means every dime that they pay to the federal government went to improving public procurement in serbia. rachel: $47 million for improving learning outcomes in asia when china and all the asian countries, singapore, they're kicking our butts in education anyway. why isn't that going to american kids? i don't think it's enough that we cut the spending. we have to figure out are we going to prosecute people who have been ripping us off? lisa: what democrat is going to
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go down defending the 10 million for male circumcision, i don't know. we'll see that fight. it's also good for the administration to get this out and to let americans know how they're money is going to be spent. we know what democrats are going to do with this. as soon as something goes wrong. >> including ending indoctrination from k-12,
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keeping men out of women's sports. all of these things are very child friendly. the other thing i love about it is that the visuals are so child friendly. whether it's jd vance walking around with his children spilling out of his arms or elon musk in the white house with baby x, at one point on his shoulders like running his hands through his hair, wearing the gold chain, it's like there are children everywhere and it's so spectacular. valen tina -- lisa: that was the sweetest thing i've ever seen. rachel: there she is. he was so kind to her, by the way. i'll tell you, with little x, he was there, he was picking his nose. i thought he wiped it on the desk. i'm not sure. but it's really funny, you know what wasn't on that list, maha, make america healthy again is about our children.
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president trump put a democrat from the kennedy royal family from hhs to uncover all this. this is completely choreographed. trump is a broadway producer. he is sitting there and he realizes this is the moment and he brings in the children and he makes a joke how the secret service doesn't like people crowding around the president of the united states in a situation like this. the picture at the end was amazing. this is where he was signing the bill to keep boys and men out of girls and women's sports. lisa: democrats just handed him his issue. i saw it pop up in the senate races as well in the election. it was a big issue on the campaign trail. i don't have kids yet. i'm not naive to know it gives you purpose. we had a rudderless society over the past four years and democrats tried to remove the anchors that give people anchors in life, remove religion and
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family and we've seen an increase in depression rates particularly among young americans so perhaps over the next four years for young people and younger generations, they can find purpose again with taking the lead and reinstating family values and desire to have kids and family. rachel: jd vance's very first public appearance was at the march for life where he talked about family policy and then again, going back to valentina, the way donald trump treated valentina was so beautiful. he's one of the most pro life president. he's fighting against discrimination in utero that we have towards people that we deem as not as perfect. i look at valentina, she's perfect. she is worthy of life and there she is and yet 90% of children diagnosed with down's syndrome are executed in the womb, frankly, it's yo eugenics. she would love to have classmates that also have down's. she loves every.
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guess what? she's the only child with down's in her school and the only child with down's that's been at her school in 10 years. what does that tell you about what we've done to this class of people. lisa: when i met her, she had an ai eye shoe dough brush inr -- shadow brush in her hand. she reached out her hand it was so cute. i have an aunt with special needs. i share that, that people with different abilities have so much to offer our country. charlie: she's why sean's confirmation hearings went so smoothly. she's works the crowd. now to a fox weather alert. more than 400 million people waking up without power this morning as deadly floods crush tennessee, kentucky and parts of virginia. lisa: fox weather correspondent brandy campbell is surrounded by it in clarksville, tennessee and joins us now. brandy, what's the latest?
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>> reporter: good morning, guys, between the tennessee and kentucky border we have numerous roads closed down between flash flooding or because of rivers that are rising because here in clarksville you're taking a look at the red river. you can see it has completely shut down this road going into the dunbar cave state park. to gauge how deep it is, it's several feet. on the right we can see there's traffic cones and a stop sign and a street sign. those cones are almost completely covered. when we got here they were about halfway covered. so just indicating the river still on the rise. it's currently at major flood stage and continuing to rise several more feet going into this afternoon. now, keep in mind, while people are dealing with the river rising here, they dealt with street flooding yesterday from street flooding, temperatures, they have dropped overnight. this morning, we had snow to actually come down in the area so if you walk with me, take a look at the grass. you can see a light layer of the
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snow. i spoke to some residents very surprised to wake up and see that. so it's a big mix of so many different weather elements here as water continues to threaten this area. guys. charlie: thank you, brandy. turning now to your headlines. senior trump administration officials including secretary of state marco rubio, national security advisor mike walz and special envoy steve whit cough will be going to saudi arabia to start peace talks on how to end the war in ukraine. according to multiple reports, ukraine officials were not invited to these talks. vivek ramaswamy officially beginning the process for an expected run as ohio governor, his campaign filed the necessary pay per work with the state's secretary yesterday using the name vivek ramaswamy for ohio. potential bid follows a failed gop presidential run in 2024 and
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comes about a month after his exit from president trump's department of government efficiency. and to the ice, another canadian crowd loudly booed the u.s. national anthem yesterday as team usa took on canada in montreal. [booing] charlie: canada's prime minister better known as governor justin trudeau was in the crowd when the bo os rang out and multiple fights broke out in just seconds into the game. >> straight away, matthew and brandon hagle right off the hawk. charlie: the united states would go on to deliver a humiliating devastating beat-down, beating canada 3-1, advancing to thursday's four
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nation face off championship in boston where they could see the canadians on ice once again. and i mean, this may be the best -- this is my favorite story of the day. it's amazing. it's so humiliating. i don't know how canadians get out of bed in the morning. [laughter] lisa: do we think justin trudeau's career has been revived from this because he was on the ropes. charlie: i don't know. rachel: i'd say it's shocking to k see how the referees stand around and watch the guys clobber each other. it's a great sport. charlie: it's a gr great lesson for pare parent. racing.rachel: i love how saide show that america winning -- this is the number one sport in canada, hockey is. charlie: that's the only thing they have, that and being nice. it's our fifth game at best.
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our fifth game. not only that, they surrendered all their niceness by being rude little jerks. could you imagine booing another country's national anthem? could you imagine doing that? rachel: it's such a move you make when you feel inferior. lisa: i love hockey. i grew up going to games with my dads. i took him to show -- i'm blanking on the name. he broke a record. rachel: eric johnson? lisa: oh, shoot. charlie: you go for the fights. you like nascar for wrecks. lisa: it was a big thing recently. i forgot the name. vice president vance putting people on notice. how the white house is putting america first, next
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charlie: vice president jd vance calling out civil liberty vie lviolations while addressing european unions in munich on friday. >> what i worry bow bout is the threat from within, the retreat from europe from some of the fundamental values, values shared with the united states of america. when we see european courts canceling elections and senior
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officials threatening to cancel others, we ought to ask whether we're holding ourselves to an appropriately high standard. we must do more than talk about democratic values. we must live them. rachel: this as president trump doubles down on his reciprocal tariffs saying they'll include allies in europe to make sure america is treated fairly. charlie: joining us now is journalist ag glenn greenwald. that was a truly remarkable speech we saw from jd vance this week. >> it was remarkable because this has been a long-standing critique of u.s., european foreign policy, everything we do is justified in the way of advancing and protecting democracy. the war in ukraine, we're defending in democracy, that's what we do. the lie for decades is we partner with some dictators regimes. and the europeans have often interfered in elections when
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they dislike the outcome as has the united states and at the same time the united states and especially europe are leading the way in censoring the internet so this idea that we can posture as defenders of democracy but we have to be honest with ourselves that that's not really what our institutions are intended to do is amazing to hear from a senior american official. rachel: one of the ways the government does do the things you're talking bows it through usaid. the cutoffs, the government doesn't want to tell us what they're doing so they prop up ngos and they do the dirty work of regime change and corruption and interfering in internal politics in countries. so i want to get your thoughts on what you see happening. i mean, i've sort of learned about this through you, through mike pence and others. it's all getting shown to light so what are your thoughts over the last three weeks. >> this is something that has been a bipartisan policy in decades, this idea that the united states should go around the world, manipulating internal
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politics of other countries and we don't use the cia to do it because everyone knows and we want to deceive the american public, oh, we're humanitarian or promoting democracy thigh the national endowment of the democracy and what the agencies do is create anti-american hot hostility. we in america don't know that this is what our government is doing, everyone else knows, usaid has been kicked out of a lot of countries, four years before we were told the russians invaded our sacred democracy, hillary clinton was using the national endowment of democracy to fund anti-government protest groups in russia to destabilize the country, we used's it to facility take it a coup in 2014 in dw ukraine to remove the president we didn't like. it's refreshing to see transparency and c candor brougt to what the agencies do and the
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harm they cause to the united states. charlie: on a lot of these issues it became a uni part in n washington where they were committing the same sins and it was ripe for one of the parties to produce a wild cat-er from the outside and it wouldn't up being donald trump who of course had to demolish the republican party and take it over but that's where we are now. >> it's an important point. one of the things that interested me most about the trump candidacy from the start and i was never associated with the american right before, we needed so much, someone to challenge not just one or the other party but the uni party bipartisan consist consensus in washington. we see a lot of republican establishment senators an democratic establishment senators really angry about what pete hegseth said about the ukraine. rachel: is it money? what's behind the uni party, all
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the adventures abroad that we're talking about. >> when you create an institutional base of power and this what is we created after world war ii with harry true noon counter act the soviet union. it's only grown and grown with vietnam and the reagan years and then after 9/11 and now it's so gigantic that no one can control it. it's completely -- it's its own government and i think it's because there's an inertia that says once we have power we don't want to give it up. charlie: thank you for your fierce independence and fearless reporting. >> thank you for having me. rachel: we're getting ready for race day with burgers for tailgating. charlie: joey jones is in daytona. we'll talk to him, next. ♪ 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.
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lisa: start your engines, the daytona 500 is today on fox. and we're celebrating with a race day tailgate. charlie: joining us now, mike puma, founder of the gotham burger social club. looks like you've got quite a spread here. >> this is just a handful of things we offer at the restaurant on # sixth street on the lower east side. we just celebrated the one year anniversary. when people tailgate and they do things, you need things that you can hold in your hand and hold a beer in the other. you don't want a plate, don't want a knife and fork. one of the best things we do is the smash burger. rachel: what is the see drought secret tothe smash burger. >> good equipment, great beef, the right heat in the bad. we take thin sliced onions an put it on top of the beef. lisa: what is a smash burr better? burger.rachel: you smash it. >> you put butter in the pan,
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put beef down there, onions. >.lisa: is this warm? >> this is warm. i've been eating your burger for years. i know i love them. this is fantastic. charlie: so you smash the onions down into it. >> when we flip it, the onions get carmelized, get into the beef. charlie: you don't want to put cheese on a raw burger, like if you're in politics and you're chuck schumer -- >> you don't want to do that you want to flip it over, get the cheese nice and meanted. -- melted.we have a finished one have a house made pickle. lisa: how do you like to cook yours? >> these are smash burgers, they're cooked all the way. lisa: oh, okay. >> by the time it's ready to flip, it's almost done. always american cheese. it melts the best. keep it simple. that's the beauty of a great burger. sometimes people try to hard. we like to keep things very simple here. the other thing we like to do, we like to add a little bit of
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heat to our burgers, a couple pickled h jaleponos and finish t with a little ketchup. a little kiss of mustard and our famous club sauce. that's our secret sauce. charlie: and then you smash it all down and you've got a great burger. mike, thank you so much for joining us. rachel: gothams burgers, i'm going. >> social club. come by. >> the pickles are amazing. >> let's head back to florida where joey jones is live ahead of the daytona 500, he's joined by chairman of richard childress racing, richard childress, driver of the iconic bass pro shop, austin dillon, and johnnie morris. joey. >> reporter: listen, i know you guys were just doing a cooking segment but they were eating
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with the meklemores a few seconds ago. richard childress, you've got a couple cars out there, you've got austin and kyle. how is it looking today. >> it's looking great. kyle, it's 20 years, we want to see him but we want to see austin get his second win here. does it get this better than daytona 500, bass pro shops and president trump being here. what a day. >> reporter: i don't think you can get more american than that. but let's turn to johnnie morris, one of the greatest americans i know. bass pro shops is a staple at nascar, you've got a couple cars on the track but the numb. number 3has to be special today. >> especially today. i was thinking coming to the track, 27 years ago, this race, the great american race, dale senior won and we had the bass pro on the back of the car. that was a great day. the great american race is a celebration of america and thanks to guys like you, joey,
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it's a celebration of freedom and our great country. land of opportunity. >> reporter: it's not just a business. you talk about a man who practices what he preaches, i asked if he was having a great time in daytona, he said i was at fish camp but we're coming here today. he practices what he preaches. you won in 2018, correct? >> yes, sir. >> reporter: what's it like today. >> i'm ready to get out there. this is my favorite race day morning, nothing like the national anthem, the fly over, the adrenaline. the butterflies come and go. it's always there, it's the daytona 500, want to etch my name on it one more time. >> reporter: the trophy is part of the fanfare. we have a band la playing behind us, they're starting to let the fans in. what's going on, guys. are you having fun? [cheers and applause] >> reporter: i don't know if they're here for me. i think they're here for these guys. but they are absolutely -- are
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you guys excited for president trump? [cheers and applause] >> reporter: it's going to be a great race day. i can almost barely hear you guys. ism going to throw it back to you guys. charlie: thank you, joey, richard, austin and johnny. lisa: okay, i'm back. charlie: doge dominates wasteful spending and pricey degrees, how it's helping push the prose of key vocational jobs. that's next. when we started feeding bogie the farmer's dog, he lost so much weight. pre-portioned packs makes it really easy to keep him lean and healthy. in the morning, he flies up the stairs and hops up on my bed. in the past, he would not have been able to do any of those things. we handcraft every stearns & foster® using the finest materials, like indulgent memory foam, and ultra-conforming inner springs, for a beautiful mattress, and indescribable comfort.
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danicharlie: doge may be making headlines for eliminating jobs but it's also helping redirect young bea people to consider industries that don't require college degrees. >> this a real enthusiasm for getting in front of the pr problem here and creating a more persuasive case for the 8 million jobs that are currently open that don't require a four year degree that our country is in desperate need to fill. the maritime industrial base, the guys who build our submarines, they're looking to hire 100,000 tradespeople. they called me a couple months ago and said do you know where they are? and i said yeah, man, i know
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where they are. they're in the eighth grade. we have to get ahead of it now. charlie: sunday morning futures anchor maria bartiromo joins us now. great to see you this morning, maria. it really is amazing, mike rowe is onto something there, we have all of these bureaucrats in washington doing things that don't need to be done and yet at the same time we have all of these jobs that require skilled -- real skills that we desperately need. maria: yeah, and i think this movement toward real skills, jobs that are practical in terms of what the economy needs right now, that movement was going on a little earlier than doge really started making its impact but it's certainly illuminating the same issue that you raise. i mean, the fact is right now we need hundreds of thousands of electricians, why do we need electricians? there's a shortage of electricians right now. i was told this by the president of microsoft because all of the a.i. power we need is indicating
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a real need for electricity and different sources of energy. so brad smith when he joined me a couple weeks ago told me that right now we are in desperate need of electricians and when you have that kind of demand out there, the wages will go up. so you're seeing a little creep of wages higher in some of these jobs that are very practical to the economy and frankly do not require four year degrees and of course we were questioning this way before doge about the cost of going to college and the cost of all of that debt when you come out and it's certainly underlining it right now as we're cleaning house, trying to remove wasteful spending. charlie: of course, nobody's been talking about it more than you have been going back years. so what have you got coming up on sunday morning futures? maria: we're talking with steve whitkoff who is on his way soon
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to saudi arabia to start talking about peace between ukraine and russia but he has been back and forth to israel. he's gone to qatar and he actually is being called the biggest reason that we are seeing hostages get released so we've got a great conversation coming up live with steve whitkoff to give us a sense of whether or not we'll see phase two of the agreement between hamas and israel. we don't have a lot of indications that the terms are complete for phase two. we'll also talk with tom homan, aalexandria ocasio-cortez is trying to obstruct things by giving classes and a web new web newhampshire to i'll lee -- webinar. we'll talk about how that's going. palmer lucky is the founder of oculus. he sold oculus and founded a company called andrel industries, one of the leading drone makers in the world. i've been asking for years now why does the u.s. military continue to buy drones from
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china. dji drones are in the u.s. military, the question is, if you're using a drone made in china, can that drone see whatever that drone sees, can communist china see it as well so palmer lucky is going to tell us about andrel industries and what he's seeing in terms of our soldiers paired up with weaponized technology. it's so so fascinating. we'll talk with lisa mclain, talk about where the plans stand, executing the plans of president trump is paramount. we'll talk about where we are right now. we've got breaking news and a big show coming up. i'll see you in about 10 minutes. charlie: thank you so much. we'll be watching. sheryl crow is saying bye-bye tesla, disney making big changes to disney plus. rachel and lisa break it all down in pop culture round-up,
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country. we're going to start with this. singer sheryl crow is saying good-bye to her tesla, she pledges her money, get this, lisa, she's giving her money to npr. she posted on instagram, my parents said you are who you hang out with, there comes a time you have to decide who you're willing to align with, so long tesla, money donated to npr who is under threat. she's donating to state run media. that's her sharrett? charity?lisa: charlie earlier t least we can follow the source of her indoctrination. i would have happily taken the tesla off her hands. we give half a billion dollars to the corporation for public broadcasting where npr gets their money. there was a speech, like why are we doing this? we don't need to be funding npr.
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i'll take the car. rachel: disney is going to change content warnings before old movies. did you know they had warnings before pea peter pan and dumbo. they're going to take the warning levels off the beautiful films. lisa: d.c. has come under attack for being woke in recent years. disney plus lost 700,000 subscriberses in q1. rachel: i was one of them. lisa: they were going after florida's parental rights bill. they dabblet in politics, reqgowoke, go broke. rachel: peter pan doesn't need a warning label. lisa: i wonder what the warning label was, probably something stupid. rachel: cobra kai and karate kid star ralph macchio said
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staying out of hollywood was the key to his 30 year marriage. >> stay out of hollywood. i always kept one foot in, one foot o out. a lot of this comes from my wife who grounds and elevates me and my kids as well. rachel: his daughter looks just like him. lisa: wax on, wax off. rachel: it's good advice, right? lisa: i feel like hollywood would be hard for marriage, you're kissing co-stars, all these different things, that would maybe be conducive to leading to cheating. i don't know. i'm not in hollywood. good for him. it's the love and commitment that leads to -- you've been married. what's your secret. rachel: i don't live in hollywood. maybe that's it. good for him. and by the way, cobra kai, we all love it. we all love c karate kids. some women are going to home depot to find their man. watch this.
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>> if you're a single lady and you have nothing going on, maybe one day you're bored and you're going to go to home depot, the number one goal, look confused and pretty. ♪ >> excuse me. >> i found out girls are coming to home depot to meet a man. i'll be here all day. [laughter] lisa: i think this is brilliant. rachel: it is. find the hottest guy and like oh, i'm looking for x, y and z. lisa: organic is always better so brilliant idea. go get your man. find your tool, even if you don't need one. rachel: you're finding someone who is useful, who is handy, who can hang paintings and make a window box or whatever people do at home depot. i like this idea. lisa: i have been to a home depot. rachel: would you do this? lisa: i would, actually. rachel: you would get dressed
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up, p put on makeup and go to he depot. lisa: maybe. or go to a grocery store. i have a friend who met her husband in a produce department. rachel: that's another trend, go to the produce department. lisa: it was like a meet cute. all right. we've got to go. you d go to home depot. rachel: you go to home depot, you go to home depot. more "fox & friends" moments away. ♪ the itch and rash of moderate to severe eczema disrupts my skin, night and day.
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♪ ♪ charlie: so don't miss the daytona 500 starting at 1:30 today on fox. rachel: it's been a great show, you guys. lisa: i had so much fun. charlie: i bet lisa's headed to home depot. lisa: no, i'm going to the take by shoes off. rachel: even head the church. lisa: so much fun with you guys. ♪ maria:
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