tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News March 1, 2025 3:00am-4:00am PST
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hibernation. she did not bring her binder. >> is she on the show? >> she's not on the show. >> it looks like you're having her as a guest. >> it's just a promotional trick. >> no. >> yeah, but. >> but where did she come out of hibernation? >> in harvard square. doing what? she spoke about her experiences with joe biden, and she said it was a real cooker pressure. >> a cooker pressure. >> it was a cooker pressure. >> that's what she said. >> jesse. >> what she said. promotional tease. it's sort of like the epstein files coming out. >> we also have the epstein files tonight at 8:00. >> yeah. >> don't miss those. >> i hear they're not so exciting. >> very mysterious. >> what happened? are they? never are. everything's redacted. >> yeah. >> at least that's what my doctor told me. you know, watch tonight. what? >> wait, you have jorge santos on the show? >> yes i do. yeah. what? i'm excited. >> what's he doing? >> oh, just being his old, charming self. all ♪ ♪
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[cheers and applause] charlie: good saturday morning, and welcome to "fox & friends" weekend. good morning, rachel, and good morning, doctor. >> good morning. rachel: so nice of you to join us. paul: they kicked zelenskyy out of d.c., they had to kick me out. [laughter] rachel: no lunch. did the staffers eat your lunch? peter: they said there was going to be lunch at 9 a.m. rachel: i will be buying lunch. breakfast, to the lunch. by the way, toba played madonna to get us in a good mood k and you two don't like madonna.
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charlie: i never said that, i didn't sing. you wanted we to be your back-up singer -- rachel: do you like ma a donna? charlie: trust me, i would ruin your show. rachel: do you like her in. charlie: there was a time i really liked her. rachel: okay. peter: i feel like anything i see about madonna, she's having another birthday many in her 60s, and she's laying in a bed inappropriately. rachel: yeah. [laughter] we were listening to borderline which is old school ma a donna. peter: i can honestly say, i never heard that song before. charlie: really? if. [background sounds] peter: -- from the 80s. rachel: i told him youn't doesn't like ma a donna, and he said you were losers. [laughter] charlie: is this just a slow-rolling hid-life crisis for her -- mid-life crisis? rachel: oh, yeah. she's had butt implants --
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charlie: usually you move on on. ing this is just, like -- rachel: permanent. rell -- well, there is a lot of news. [laughter] peter: the u.s.-ukraine minerals deal in limbo. the official signing getting scrap ised after president president trump, vice president vance and president zelenskyy got into a heated exchange over the russia a-ukraine war. charlie: trump asked zelenskyy to leave the white house after the cabinet meeting and told him to come back when he is ready for peace. rachel: i love it. here's the especially the conversation that has many republicans -- the tense conversation that has many republicans wondering if u.s.-ukraine with relations can ever be repaired. watch. >> we sign ceasefire. ceasefire. all of them told me that he will never if go. we signed him, guest contract, yes. but after that he broke the ceasefire. he killed our people, and if he didn't exchange prisoners. we signed the exchange, of prisoners, but he didn't do it.
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what kind of diplomacy, j.d., you asking about? what do you mean? >> i'm talking about the kind of diplomacy that's going to end the destruction of your country. >> [inaudible] >> mr. president, with respect, i think it's disrespectful to try the litigate this in front of the american media in the oval office. right now you guys are forcing conscripts to the front lines because with you have manpower problems. you should be thanking the president for -- >> you don't have the cards right now. with us, you start having cards -- >> i'm not playing cards. i'm very serious, mr. president -- >> you're gambling with the lives of millions of people. you're gambling with world world war iii. >> [inaudible] >> you're gamble with world war iii, and what you're doing is very disrespectful to the country, this country. >> i'm with respect -- >> far more than a lot of people should have -- >> have you said thank you once this entire meeting? no, in this entire meeting --
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you went the pennsylvania and campaigned for the opposition in october, offer some words of appreciation for the if united states of america and the president when's trying the save your country. -- and the who's try to save your problem. >> the problem is i've empowered you to be tough guy, and you'd be a tough guy without the united states. your people are very brave, but you're either going the make a deal, or we're out. and if we're out, you'll fight it out. i don't think it's going to be pretty, but you'll fight it out. you don't have the cards. but once we sign that deal, you're in a much betterings position. but you're not if acting at all a thankful, and that's not a nice thing, i'll be honest. that's not a nice thing. all right. i think we've seen enough, what do you think, huh? [inaudible conversations] this is going to be great television, i will say that. [laughter] peter: he's right about that. charlie: forever the television producer.
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peter: it makes me think his entitlement comes from a place of president biden, secretary of tate blinken and explaining to them how democracy works, and they must have just said thank you some for the pep talk -- rachel: here it is. hand out the money. charlie: what a colossal misread both of the mood of the country but also just that room. you walk in that room, what did he think he were going to talk about, what did he think was going to happen as a result of this? obviously, putin's a bad man. everybody agrees putin shouldn't have invaded. but then you walk in and you're just going to to start crying about it and attacking your benefactors over that, that's no way the proceed. rachel: yeah, it's so wrong. i wonder who gave him the advic. it could be he's just used to operating this way and steamrolling over his benefactors, as you call it, or maybe he had a some calls before like you get tough, you know,
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from victoria nuland or susan rice, you go in there and you tell him, and he goes in there and tells them, and it just doesn't work out. and then you talk about, you know, the whole setup. i listened closely, j.d. vance called him mr. president, he called j.d., j.d -- [laughter] instead of mr. vice president. he comes in, you know, dressed in a costume instead of a suit. i think there's a lot of things that are happening here x this guy's very used to a certain way of operating, but there's a new sheriff in town. peter: and when zelenskyy's calling the vice president j.d., he was also shaming him for not visiting ukraine. the guy who was visiting ukraine more than anybody, lindsey graham, marched right out to the fox position on the lawn and said zelenskyy's gotta go. so i don't think that these visits, these pr visits the ukraine, are getting a good return for the zelenskyy team right now. ing i don't think the ukraine visit is the reason vance has a
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different opinion -- rachel: i don't know, peter, the propaganda tours of ukraine have actually given him a lot of money. [laughter] they've worked for long time. peter: for a long time. rachel: and lindsey graham, he kind of goes with the wind. it's not exactly like he's an honest broker here. charlie: well, whoever was advising him failed -- rachel: no question. charlie: -- at getting what he wanted. is after all of that, president zelenskyy refusing to apologize to president trump. let's go to madeleine rivera in washington with the fallout. >> reporter: hi, guys, good morning. of yeah, this mineral deal was seen by president trump as compensation to the aid the u.s. has given ukraine. no security agreement, it was expectedded to come in a bigger negotiation. president trump saying on truth social, i have determined that president zelenskyy is not ready for peaceif america is involved because he feels our involvement gives him a big advantage in
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negotiations. i don't want advantage, i want peace. he disrespected the united states of america in its cherished oval office a, he can come back when he is ready for peace. after being told to leave the white house grounds, zelenskyy spoke with our bret baier where he said he believes his relationship with the president, president trump, can be repaired. >> i'm not hearing from you, mr. president, a thought that a you owe the president an apology. >> no, i respect president, and i respect american people. and if, i don't know if -- i think that we have to be very open and very honest. and i'm not sure that we did something bad. >> reporter: this morning "the new york post" is reporting zelenskyy's chief of staff had insisted on having that oval office meeting. the push reportedly came as a president trump's special envoy to ukraine and russia, general keith can kellogg, was putting the final touches on that minerals deal. a u.s. official tells "the new york post" kellogg and zelenskyy
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had agreed to a deal with one item still to be finalized. zelenskyy's chief of staff pushed for the ukrainian president to join trump at the white house to sign the agreement. kellogg advised against it knowing that the relationship between the presidents needed to be strengthened before meeting this person, and now the world obviously knows how that meeting played out. there are questions now over ukraine's future as well with zelenskyy admitting they don't have enough weapons to push russia out. charlie, rachel can and peter. charlie: thank you. rachel: thank you, maddie. >> reporter: you got it. rachel: we talked a little bit about the lindsey graham sound, so let's just play that. i guess this is after zelenskyy was kicked out of the white house, no lunch, and then lindsey graham comes out and throws him under the bus more. [laughter] so watch this. >> i i talked to zelenskyy this morning, don't take the bait. president trump was in a very good mood last night. somebody asked me, am i embarrassed about a trump in i
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have never been more proud of the president. i was very proud of j.d. vance. standing up for our country. we want to be helpful. what i saw the oval office a was disrespectful, and i don't know if we can ever do business with zelenskyy again. i don't -- i think most americans saw a guy that they would not want to go in business with. >> reporter: do you think president zelenskyy needs to resign to resume these peace talks in. >> he either needs to resign and send is somebody over that we can do business with, or he needs to change. peter: quite the bite. charlie: and, of course, the problem there and if you are going to change zelenskyy, they haven't had elections. so there's a problem with that. and either -- so i don't think that we're going to wait around for that to happen. so somebody's going to have to have a change of attitude and figure out do they really want to make this thing work. of. peter: and everybody -- i know all these other european leaders
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were tweeting we support you, volodymyr zelenskyy, we've got your back, i don't know what they're going to do. they're not going to start paying hundreds of billions of dollars for weapons which would just prolong this war. somebody when knew if instantly -- rachel: what was happening -- [laughter] peter: -- was the ukrainian ambassador. she had her head in her or hands. you never see this. i go to these oval office things all the a time. even if they get a little dry and people might need to collect themselves, you never, ever see. that's she knew -- ever see that. he knew. rachel: yeah. i think everyone few. she just didn't have a poker face about it -- [laughter] we were watching this. we're, like, the whole thing's falling apart. here's what i think, you guys, i think that a zelenskyy kind of embodies the whole ungrateful european attitude in general. the sense of entitlement, the sense that america's always
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going to be there to hand out money and protect them and fix things. and now they're sort of waking up, like, this guy really means it. this thing was -- and also the fact we're seeing it all play out in, you know, we've never seen these kind of negotiations play out on tv like this. pete: no. and i went to poland twice with biden after the war broke out and for the year anniversary, and there is this sense, yes, europe is united with ukraine. but this war is over without the united states. there's a russian flag flying over e eleven sky's house -- zelenskyy's house right now, without the united states, i should say. without their help. so all of these tweets are meaningless unless these european if guys are going to say, okay, the u.s. is out, so here's all these advanced weapons. luxembourg doesn't have the weapons to give them. rachel: i think we've got to to get back to the central point, the most important point donald trump made in this whole thing. he said you are gambling with world war iii. charlie: yep.
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rachel: there's a lot of drama and we can break down everybody's feelings, but in the end i think what's remarkable is that we have a president when's willing to do anything -- who's willing to do anything to bring about world peace. if he doesn't get the nobel peace prize after this, that thing means nothing. peter: and he was giving zelenskyy an offramp. if you don't take it, the war continues. charlie: meanwhile, the trump administration rolled on with doge. federal workers told once again to justify their work as elon musk joined joe rogan for a wide-ranging interview saying doge is a threat to bureaucracy, not democracy. the office of personnel management e-mail came four hours after the end of the business day and asked employees to reply with approximately five bullets describing what you accomplished last week and cc your manager. going forward the message said, please complete the above task each week by mondays at1:59 p.m. --1:59 'em9.
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peter: the best part i saw so far was from the transportation secretary. here's my five things. [laughter] i'm getting fired. rachel: he's not getting fired. he's not getting doge'd. listen, elon musk always a went on with joe rogan to talk about this, you know, to talk about this bureaucracy, this stubborn, stuck in the mud bureaucracy and saying you can decide, america, if you want a bureaucracy running your country or if you actually want a democracy run by the people. listen. >> -- should be celebrating that we've found a way to cut out fraud and waste. >> yeah. >> if you pay taxes and you don't like that you have to pay so much in taxes and then you find out that there's significant fraud and waste that's been exposed, you should be celebrating. >> probably so is, like, they'd say trump is a threat to our democracy, which is ironic since he was elected with the majority of, or you know, the popular
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vote. they started saying i was a threat to democracy. but if you just replace threat to democracy with threat to bureaucracy is, it makes total sense. and only the bureaucracy eats revolutions for breakfast. this is the first time that they're not. that the revolution might if actually succeed, that we could retore power to the people instead of power to the bureaucracy. charlie: like you said a minute agoing or rachel, all this is unfolding right before our eyes with, and there's something are -- a little, you know, maybe a little chaotic, maybe a little uncomfortable for system people, but it's a very healthy thing. rachel: i couldn't agree more. and, yeah, also in that interview he said this is the greatest revolution since the american revolution, since 1776. he talked about in this team that donald trump has enact ad. he said bureaucracies eat revolutions, this time they just might not make it. peter: i just can't believe that elon musk went to austin, texas,
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and missed the whole zelenskyy thing. [laughter] like, the one day that he's not there. charlie: can you imagine? if. rachel: well, you also got on a flight to come here, and and you missed it. peter: i did! and i'm getting text messages -- rachel: do you regret not having been in that historic moment? if you can be honest with us. charlie: of course, you would have been stuck in the press office and wouldn't have -- peter: there really are no, the pool is a new, evolving thing. a. rachel: yes. peter: who goes in, who doesn't go in. no, i'd rather be here to talk about it. we can talk about it for eight hours. if i was there, i'd be talking about that it for, like, 15 seconds. charlie: we'll be talking about this for a year. [laughter] rachel: i think so too. this is going down in the history books. some headlines now. the santa fe sheriff's office investigating the deaths of gene hackman and his wife.
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the couple's deaths are deemed suspicious enough for a thorough investigation. the actor's pacemaker was last active on february 17th which is nine days before his body was discovered inside of his new mexico home along with his wife and his dog. investigators taking three medications from the if scene -- from the scene as well as a planner, medical records, two cell phone as well. they're also a reiterating there are as of yet no signs of foul play. the pope, the vatican says pope francis had a peaceful and restful night's sleep after he had difficulty breathing, prompting medical staff to put him on a ventilator. he was alert and oriented the entire time and responded welt to the treatment. his prognosis is still guarded, that's what the vat began calls it -- vatican calls it, and the pope was admitted to the hospital more than two weeks ago for double pneumonia. iowa governor kim reynolds signed a bill into law that
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removes transtrender next -- transgender protection from the state's civil rights code. this comes one day after a big protest broke out inside of iowa's capitol over the legislation. >> >> i'm signing into law a bill that safeguards the rights of women and girls. it's common sense to acknowledge the obvious biological differences between men and women. in fact, it's necessary to secure genuine, equal protection for women and girls. rachel: hard to believe we need a law for that, but this law goes into effect on july 1st and, guys, those are your headlines. charlie: so biology is real. rachel: it's real. yes. it's immutable, you can't change it, you can't opt in, you can't wish for it to be someone else that you're not -- charlie: we can't all be madonna. [laughter] rachel: you can try. [laughter] a lot of people are trying.
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charlie: all right. let's check in with adam klotz live at daytona international speedway for the start of the 84th annual daytona bike week. adam. adam: hey, good morning, guys. yeah, the 84thth annual daytona bike week. last year close to 500,000 people made it out here. this morning we're expecting tens of thousands to ultimately show up right over my how older is the daytona international speedway where they're going to have a supercross event tonight. it really kicks off the whole event, and surrounding the stadium are all the a bike manufacturers. folks come out here all day long, and they get to to ride demo bikes which is something i'm ultimately going to get to do as well. this is going to be a fantastic day. we love florida, ask we love daytona beach. -- and is we love daytona beach w. i'm excited to be out here, and throughout the rest of the morning you're going to see me on bike, and is we're going to see a lot of bikes and
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a lot of fun. charlie: glad to see you're already in your biker jacket. rachel: i know, i noticed. adam: i think i make it look cool. rachel: you do. [laughter] charlie: eric to. former trump national security adviser, kt mcfarland, joins us next on what to expect from the russia-ukraine negotiations. are so much more than clients. they're conquerors and champions, and what matters most to them matters most to us. it's no wonder we have a 4.9 out of five client satisfaction rating. ameriprise financial.
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charlie: a tense oval office exchange plague out in front of the american people between president trump, vice president j.d. vance and ukrainian president zelenskyy. >> you don't have the cards right now. with us, you start having cards concern. >> i'm not play aring cards. i'm very serious, mr. president. i'm very serious. i'm the president -- >> you're gambling with the lives of millions of people. >> mr. president, with respect, i think it's disrespectful for you to come into the oval office, try to litigate this in front of the american media. >> you have nice ocean, don't feel now, but you'll feel it in the future -- >> you don't know that. don't tell us what we're going to feel. rachel: wow. our next guest says zelenskyy failed to see there is a new sheriff in town who puts america
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first. peter: former trump deputy national security adviser, kt mcfarland, joins us now. kt, when zelenskyy is telling trump that right now we have this great ocean, to we dent feel any pain but we will soon, that sounds like a threat to me. what about you? >> oh, absolutely. look, what zelenskyy seems to think is that we want that minerals deal so much, that we're going to give him, in effect, nato membership. then he went and doubled down when he had the interview with bret baier, and he kept saying we can't trust spite putin without security sworn fees -- guarantees. i guess with boots on the ground. what he kept talking about, it was like he was going around in a circle, we can't trust putin to keep any if agreement, therefore, we need security guarantees. but the security guarantees you're offering aren't good enough. we want to have a military security guarantee, and the president is not going to give
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it. they are not nato members, and we are not going to give them nato protection. in fact, the president of the united states cannot give them that kind of protection, because that's a treaty agreement. we don't have a treaty agreement with ukraine, and we're not going to have one. i don't think this goes anywhere except worse unless president zelenskyy either completely changes, which i don't think he will, or he steps down and we get a new leader in ukraine who is willing to have a peace agreement. rachel: kt, this kind of goes back to the beginning of of the war, this idea of making ukraine part of nato. he was enticed by the prior administration that he might be able to be part of that, and he wanted that and said, and they said, yeah, you should be, you should be part of nato. and that sort of really ticked off putin. and so what donald trump, i guess, essentially is saying is, no, you're not going to do that, and that's a way to bring about peace. why would volodymyr zelenskyy, when he sees, when he sees how
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many people are died in this war on his side and the other side and the nature of the war, like, these drones and these little -- these young men dying like they're targets in a video game, why wouldn't he want to end this in a way way with us on husband side this way? -- with us on his side? >> maybe he still thinks we're going to come in with boots on the ground. i went around to a lot of european -- eastern european countries over the her, and i met with ukrainian officials, and they kept saying, well, president biden has told us he'll give us whatever it takes for as long as it takes. and i said, look, if president trump is elected, that is not going to to be the policy. we are america first. we are not if going to be there in another forever war that is destined to be a defeat. so change your attitude, and they didn't change their attitude. they really expect now if that the united states is going to to support them in a military fashion. that's not going to happen. charlie: you know, kt, since you
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have a real old tick view of the world and -- politic the view of the world and understand the realities on the ground unlike zelenskyy did walking into the oval office yesterday, what do you think is going the happen in what does a month from now look like in relations between ukraine and the united states? >> ukraine is losing this war. they're losing it slowly, grindingly, but they are losing it. it's a war of attrition, if in a war of attrition, the reality is that the country with more people, more weapons, more staying power wins that a war. and so either president e eleven sky grabs at peace while he can have it, or, i don't know, maybe the president of the united states decides we don't want to be in another forever war. one thing is pretty much guaranteed, if there is a peace if table, zelenskyy is not going to be invited to to it, not with that attitude. charlie: wow. rachel: well, we're $175 billion into that war. kt mcfarland, so great to hear
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from you and get that insight of what they were thinking before donald trump got in and the fact that they haven't changed that attitude. peter: so, kt, we can say something that zelenskyy didn't, thank you. [laughter] rachel: yes, we can. [laughter] thank you. >> much appreciated, thank you. peter: thank you. rachel: now hand over the money, kt. [laughter] peter: check's in the mail. rachel: bye. peter: all right. coming up, the death, the tragic death of gene hackman and his wife deemed suspicious enough to launch an investigation as police rule out carbon monoxide poise is softening. rachel: -- poisoning. rachel: what the actor's pacemaker said about his time of death.
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across all your sales channels. so you ship the right products, to the right customers. ♪ head to shipstation.com to start your free trial. ♪ peter: gene hackman and his wife testing negative for carbon monoxide poisoning as the couple's death is deemed suspicious if enough for a thorough investigation. officials revealing the actor's
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pacemaker last recorded an a vent on february 17th, nine days before both bodies were discovered in their santa fe if home. several medications and two cell phones found at the scene have been taken into evidence. here to discuss is crime scene analyst alina burrows. how surprised were you to find out that carbon monoxide poisoning has been ruled out here? >> yeah. certainly, unexpected, i would say. peter: and there's this february 17th message on the pacemaker. is this a normal thing that csi guys go in, they're able to figure out how somebody died or who might be involved with a pacemaker? >> well, it's one piece of evidence just like cellular phones where they'll be looking at a last text messages that were sent, phone calls that were made trying to establish a time of death for both. peter: and how, how often in a
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situation like this, untimely passing, do investigators go in and find a husband and a wife who are both dead if it wasn't, if it is not a murder scene? >> right. certainly the thing that's suspicious about this case is we have two people that are deceased around the same time frame. that really seems to be the only thing that police are finding suspicious. i haven't seen any reports of anything missing, anything ransacked, we have no visible trauma on the bodies, even the medications that were found are not ones that we would typically associate with an intentional overdose. peter: so no trauma on the bodies, they don't think there was carbon monoxide poisoning, no evidence of anything missing, no gas leak. what else is left? >> this is going to be a toxicology case. i guarantee they're going the find more and, unfortunately,
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toxicology can take months to perform. peter: okay. well, we will be standing by for the results, alina, thank you. >> thank you. peter: coming up, the white house comment on -- committing $1 billion to fight the bird flu and rising egg prices. secretary of agriculture brooke rollins gives us an update on how the administration will bring costs down. and adam klotz is down in daytona, florida, for the start of the city's annual bike week. adam? if. adam: a hey, good morning. it's the 84th annual. the sun is rising on bike week, and if i'm out here doing a little bit of shopping. which bike am i going to get on and ride? i'll let you know coming up a little bit later. ♪ -- for too long ♪
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♪ peter pete welcome back. thousands of bikers are in florida gearing up for the start of the 84th annual daytona bike week. charlie: adam klotz is on the ground there. hey, adam. adam: good morning, guys. yeah, last year close to half a million people were out here. we're expecting tens of thousands at the daytona international speedway. there's a mote -- motocross race later tonight. it's kind of like kid in a candy store, right? what people love to do at these vents, they bring their children -- events, you get to
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do demo rides. anybody can out here. you get out here early and you start to get excited. would i look cool on this bike? if is this one more my style this for me, i kind of love this gold color are. i love the brown. it's kind of retro, kind of vintage. that's kind of my thing. you decide which one looks cool to me. i'm also shopping. the kids will be out here shopping, the adults. which one am i going to demo ride in i'm thinking the same thing, this one's speaking to me personally, but there's some really good bikes out here, charlie. i don't know if you can weigh in or not, but there's going to be a ton of to fun, and coming up i'm going the figure out which one of these i'm going the ride. a lot of folks will be doing the same thing. peter: adam a, you have the perfect opportunity before everybody's awake with, you could just knock one bike down like in peewee's great adventure, and they're all going to go downing and nobody -- unless they're watching the show
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right now, the biker guys, they're not gonna know. adam: you're absolutely right. now's the time to embarrass myself. i appreciate that, peter, that's what i'm going to do. charlie: you can just -- just blame him. party party yeah, just blame me. adam: a obviously. these guys are so cool, everyone's so nice out here, they're going to let me off the hook even if i lay something down. it's all a good. charlie: keep egg break -- breaking in your leather jacket there. two window watchers rescued after their scaffold began swinging and mashing into the side of a man -- smashing into a side of a manhattan skyscraper. people watching from the street could not believe their eyes. oh, gosh. >> wow, it's spinning like crazy. fire department is on the scene. multiple trucks are coming. you still hear glass falling
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down. charlie: firefighters eventually pulling those workers inside the building. good grief. the fbi has served the village of dalton, illinois, a subpoena over land development involving controversial mayor tiffany henyard's boyfriend. the bureau seeking documents related to property including inspection records. this comes just weeks after henyard and her boyfriend got involved in this massive brawl that broke out at a town meeting. dalton officials receiving the subpoena on tuesday, the same they primary voters elected to replace henyard. critics call her america's worst mayor because of alleged financial mismanagement, and those are your headlines. rachel. rachel: well, you know, she's a lot of fun to watch. [laughter] charlie: what would we do withouter? rachel: all right, charlie, thank you so much. well, the department of agriculture now warning that
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americans could see the price of eggs spike if more than 40. but the trump administration is working on a solution, committing more than $1 billion to combat the bird flu and the egg shortage. here to break it all down for us is our new secretary of agriculture, brooke rollins. brooke, it's so great to have you on. thank you for joining us. >> good morning, rachel. rachel: so i'm looking at this. the cost of eggs is expected to go up 40% this year. i know that you met, you had that, like, a round table with, like, two dozen farmers. what did you guys gather, and what are you guys going to do at the department of agriculture to address the air a january flu and the prices -- avian flu expect prices of eggs? >> you know, rachel, i think, first, it should be said that watching what happened in the white house yesterday and with the president, you know, america is back. the trent of leadership. rachel: yeah. >> but that's really across the board, how are we going to solve
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all of these massive problems and challenges that were brought to us by the biden administration. and certainly in my lane, not with ukraine and not foreign policy, but with domestic policy and certainly with prices that our consumers are facing, that single mom in detroit, you know, she may know what's going on and she may be glad that we have peace through strength across the world, but she is much more concerned with how expensive eggs have gotten, right, and how she's going to feed her family. i know you're a bunch of kids, i'm a mom of a lot of kids, not as many as you, but this is a big e deal. the cost of grocery, the cost of everything went up 25, 30% under president biden, but eggs specifically. there were a lot of reasons for that. one of the drivers is the avian bird with flu which has required almost 160 million birds have been depopulated which is a real fancy term for basically killed
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so that we could try to stop the flu. most of that happened under the biden administration. so what do we can the to fix it? so we've repurposed funds from usda to push back on that. part of that a money is going to be used for biosecurity measures which is locking the barns down. the avian flu is spread through wild birds, so how do we make sure all these barns can protect against the wild bird flu. the second thing is how to we quickly repoppe if late. under biden and obama, a lot of rules and regulations were put on these chicken farmers, and if it just takes a lot longer than it should to get hens back into the henhouse and laying eggs again. third, back we do, again, on that deregulation piece regarding repopulation but also just regarding egg farming and chicken a farmers in general. that's a massive piece of this, and we're rolling back a lot of those rules. forty, are there -- fourth, are there short-term import eggs, we've announced a deal with turkey, other countries around the world the get eggs
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immediately on the shelves, and hen the fifth which is perhaps the most important, how do we address the bird flu. it is highly pathogenic. it moves through the air, and it's really, really affecting our farmers, so is we've got a pretty big, massive plan we rolled out this week at the white house, and i look forward to implementing that. listen, there is no short-term fix. tomorrow, i wish i could snap my fingers and your eggs are back down to $2 a dozen, but we are on it, and we're working night and day to solve it. rachel: well, i have chickens in my backyard, sean started that. and yesterday i went out -- they just started laying, and yesterday i got five eggs. if you could make this answer really quick because i'm out of time, is part of the solution more small farms? when air a january flu hits and you have these giant industrial farms and these chickens which i don't think the eggs are as good anyway, is part of it just
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informing in smaller -- investing many smaller farms many. >> i think the silver lining, we've got chechens too in our backyard, how do we of for something like this. and people are sort of looking a around like, wow, maybe i could get a chicken in my backyard, and it's awesome. rachel: yeah. i think everyone who isn't a farmer right now wants to be. so you're in the right department, brooke. >> i am, what a blessing. thank you. rachel: thanks for joining used today. >> good morning, thank you. rachel: take care. all right. more "fox & friends" coming up. honestly, we've had a complicated relationship. ♪ i've tried sports bras, underwire bras, minimizer bras... ♪ and then out of nowhere, i found a lump. breast cancer. ♪ then, losing the breasts i never fully appreciated. ♪
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charlie: multiple arrests paid at barnard college after a violent mob took over campus buildings as anti-israel protests return to campuses in new york city. our next guest is a jewish student at columbia university who just wants a safe if ask and normal college experience. zack singerman joins us now. zack, so good to see you this morning. so you obviously are just looking for a normal college experience. what are you getting? >> yeah. i'm not getting that. i mean, i try to go to class, and can this was more of a problem last year, but with it starting again in this year, i mean, i try the go to class, and
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i have friends who were rejected from if campus when they had an 8:40 class, they're not able to get their education that they're paying columbia university all this money for. and people especially last year were going through the streets and through campus and being yelled at and being told that hamas' military brigade was going to come for them. and it's really -- these people who are doing these to protests, they feel, as soon as they feel like they're doing it for the right cause, they're only impacting everyone else on campus. i mean, i talked with all of my non-jewish friends too, and they'll say it's just annoying when these protests are starting and the gates have to close down and and there's long lines to get onto campuses and to get to class or to get to lunch. the it's, like, it's a massive inconvenience to everyone and if
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also it's terrifying for jewish students when you see these protests on campus. especially when they chant for intifada which is a call for the genocide of jewish people when they feel as if they're protesting a general side themselves. charlie: yeah. obviously, maybe they think they're doing the right thing but they're this, obvious, masked up which tells you something else as well. how would you rate the university in terms of how they're handling all of it in keeping a normal -- or trying to keep a normal college experience? >> well, i will say that this semester they've been more on top of it. barnard expelled two students recently who went into a class about israel and they are interrupted it chanting things about a zionism and hating israel. and those two students were expelled, and and that's what led to this protest eatly where there was a sit-in in millbank
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so that basically holding one of the barnard deans hostage so that she would reverse the expulsion. and and it's just, it's terrible because the administrationis finally starting to do something right, and then there's just another protest, and it just keeps going. charlie: truly insane. thank you, zack, for joining us. we wish you best of luck. >> thank you. charlie: we'll be right back. if (♪) mud mask? (♪) lowe's knows running a home or business can add up, fast. but with a free mylowe's rewards membership, your earnings add up fast too. earn points towards mylowe's money, get member only deals, and free shipping. join for free and get more with lowe's.
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