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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  April 28, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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will: it's the 7 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" weekend starting with this, a fox weather alert. one person was killed and millions under storm watches as tornado it's outbreak across the midwest damages most in oklahoma. pete: plus, joe's got a popularity problem heading into november. the new likability poll that a ranks him below nixon and carter. carrie: and a new -- carley: and a new study shows some americans are dreaming of their next vacation while on vacation. [laughter] the second hour of "fox & friends" weekend starts right now. finish if -- ♪ i was just thinking about that weekend out at cumberland bay ♪ pete: i got that one. i thought i did. this is the skyline challenge. you at home, take a look at your skyline and you name it. i'm going to go -- i'm pretty sure that's chicago. carley: it is chicago. pete: i'm pretty sure. will: i don't know. pete: look at that double-tiered
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building there -- carley: and then the waterfront. all right. pete: it looks a lot like boston. carley: last time there was a skyline, i thought it was chicago and it's phoenix, arizona. [laughter] pete: the mountains of chicago were in the background. [laughter] carley: it was, like, i got this one, guys. [laughter] pete: good waking up, chicago. hope you're doing all right. carley: thank god we didn't do a body of water because, man, oh, man, that was yesterday's idea. that would be a challenge. will: i got some e-mails about our failure on that geography yesterday. pete: which geography? will: it was the rhode island -- pete: oh, yeah. will: i said something about the long island sound. carley: right. pete: that's all right. you can't get that right. i feel like you've given up on the skyline game. will: i have kind of given up. i was so excited about it. i'm extra stupid today as well -- [laughter] pete: don't give up on it e,
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will. will: the brain is not firing -- pete: because i'm all in on the game, and i need somebody else to be in on it too -- will: i know. it's not fun to compete -- carley: does rachel like it? pete: she does but, like you, doesn't really know the skylines. carley: it's true. i have no idea. my dad always says i could get lost in a closet. don't really know where i am. directions aren't my thing. will: i like maps and history. did you know that joe biden's disapproval rating is reaching historic proportions? carley: wow. will: it now sits at 38.7%, down, as you can see, almost 20% from three years ago. and it really puts him in some -- well, it doesn't put him in any company because it puts him at the top historically on lowest approval ratings -- pete: the top of the bottom? will: puts him at the bottom, the worst. you take over, pete. pete: i thought you were doing great. [laughter] the 13th quarter of a presidency, i didn't know that
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was a thing, the first quarter of the fourth year, see all those presidents? we started with the popularity of ronald abegan, and we're still -- reagan, and we're still going. and we're still going. oh, there he is. there's joe at the end at 38.7. i mean, when you look at -- carley: wow. pete: -- this means at this point people have gotten to know what your policies are in your presidency. they either like them or they don't. carley: yeah, gallup when they wrote -- sorry. pete: go ahead. carley: when gallup released these poll numbers, they say biden continues to get extraordinarily low approval rate obviously among republicans, 2%. he's got an 83% approval rating among democrats which is actually lower than what trump had with republicans, usually in the 90s. but the big issue with biden that the campaign's going to need to worry about is his approval with end dependents is at3 3%. -- independents. --3 if %. will: you said lore than nix son and carter, but if you look at
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those two historically -- pete: if i was surprised by that that. will: -- they're up there. pete: can we get that graphic back up? it's interesting for people at a home to look. part of it, let's just be straight up about it, eisenhower, reagan, nixon, all republicans, also a older presidencies when i think there was maybe openness to a little more con end census. we've gotten, anybody would admit we've gotten hyperpartisan, it's harder to hold on to 73% of the country as a eisenhower did. but with clinton, 96. bush, 2004 after the contentious election of 2000, still sitting at 50%? i didn't see jimmy carter, but historically seen as really, really bad. trump more popular than obama. but h.w. bush goes back a long ways. is that right before the gulf war? if. will: no -- pete: must have been after. gulf war was '91. will: right. pete: so for biden to be at that spot, 38% -- carley: and to be making jokes about former president trump at the white house correspondents'
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dinner and he's got the lowest approval. also from a broader historical perspective according to gallup, biden's most recently quarterly average is ranked 277th out of 314 presidents, that puts him at the bottom 12%. pete: and now -- just showed him walking to the the helicopter by himself. not doing that anymore. oh, look at that, see that tagline? fort liberty? that used to be fort bragg. so what he's busy doing is renaming bases to be more woke at the pentagon. shuffling around the stage. i mean, you add it all -- shaking hands with imaginary people. you add it all together, it's not a surprise. it actually helps lend faith to the american people that we're that low. carley: all right, a fox weather alert, at least one person is confirmed dead in oklahoma following the massive tornadoes over the weekend. county officials say the person was killed in holdenville. pete: residents in nebraska are picking up the pieces after tornadoes flattened entire
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neighborhoods. will: fox weather correspondent nicole value -- valdez has the latest. >> reporter: good morning. we are in elkhorn, nebraska, another painful day as so many people mourn just a devastating, horrific loss as you take a look at what's left of some of the homes here. in this neighborhood alone, dozens of homes that have been leveled. you'll notice here barely a structure standing. but a little message, thank you, everybody, giving really so much thanks and positivity to those volunteers, an army of them who we saw out here yesterday e spending their saturday helping these victims pick up the pieces and start to try and move forward from these catastrophic storms. but it wasn't really this storm on friday night if here in nebraska that left so many people with a hole in their hearts. just yesterday several, multiple tornadoes impacting oklahoma damaging one town, sulfur,
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specifically are. 3-6 inches of rain on top of that added on a flood threat. but as you mentioned, at least one person dead there, multiple people injured, several buildings, power lines and more damaged. still 40,000 or so customers in the dark. meanwhile, in iowa a on friday we're talking about several other tornadoes that still have left their mark there. an ef2 according to the national weather service there damaging more than a dozen homes. but again, no loss of life will there which in some cases may be hard to believe, something that we've actually spoken to officials here in nebraska about. despite all the damage you're seeing here, everyone is alive and accounted for. of course, many people displaced, now trying to figure out where they go from here. but a miracle among the horror, guys. carley: yeah. thankfully, the storm was well forecasted because of people like you, nicole, so people are able -- were able to get more warning and stay safe. nicole valdes, thank you so much. pete: appreciate your work.
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man, it puts life in perspective, that's minute's life that they poured into -- carley: somebody's home, money. pete: everything you're dealing with at home looking pretty easy. will: continues today. pete: yeah. all right. speaking of something that continues, some colleges are shutting down tent encampments amid if reports of rampant anti-semitic behavior as anti-israel protests continue. will: more than 100 people are detained at northeastern university in boston yesterday as police cleared a tent the encampmentment. police also donning riot gear to remove 23 people from indiana university-bloomington. carley: and on friday 69 people were taken into custody for trespassing at arizona state university. this coming as the president of u-penn is calling on protesters to disband. meanwhile in new york, the protests at columbia university is entering its 12th day today. pete: and as anti-israel protests spread across the country, those little red dots, the university of illinois says
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students who participate will face consequences. i think that last statement, guys, is indicate can i have of why -- indicative of why this is continuing. they're e going to face consequences. we're going to negotiate which only leads to these things getting larger and a momentum of their own. and now up at columbia right now there's a bunch of kids in matching tents paid for by somebody else taking over the campus. they can't go to school. the jewish students are on zoom -- carley: yep. pete: it's pad ifness. will: i actually -- madness. i actually think these college administrators are in a difficult position, and i'm going to explain to you why. once you have a protest -- and, to obviously, or these can bleed over beyond free speech, but students exercising their voice, you're in a situation where no win. like, you know, you don't -- and the thing is, the reason i'm saying this is -- pete: i think you're right, i get it. will: -- you go after these university presidents, right, and you can even say let's fire
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these university presidents. there's a lot of talk about the columbia president. buts this is not some overnight problem. this is a problem that has been bred over decades, and so, like, to sit here today and go, oh, my gosh, you know, you've got to can kick these kids off campus, no, that would change nothing. that would change nothing. this is the product of, as we have talked about on multiple occasions and you've written books, this is the product of critical theory that's been taught over half a century. pete: right. will: these kids see world through the lens of oppressor and and oppressed, and they've assigned oppressor to israel and oppressed to palestinians. and beyond that, they also live in a world where critical thinking isn't part of the process. they're activists. the colleges taught them to be activists. so they're doing what you told them to do -- [laughter] pete: you're right. will: this is what you asked for, and you are getting it. carley: yeah. and i was talking to one jewish student the at columbia, and he says that a lot of the professors are standing with the protesters right now. so the teachers are standing
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with the students in the tents. will: one more thing. like, okay, you teach them to be activists, you teach them this critical ideology, and you also simply don't educate them on the issue in the present tense. they're highly ignorant of what's going on. the chant you hear beyond free palestine is genocide. i think you and i have talked -- i did the weekday show as well -- pete: we talked a little bit about it. will: yeah. the numbers on this war, on civilian to combatant the deaths, again, in urban warfare where hamas hides among the people is reaching historic proportions which means israel has done a he is to have call job of reducing civilian death. civilian death is bad, but it's also a fact of war. pete: always a has been, always will be. pete: and this is historical proportions. make the educational case for me that this is genocide. pete: all they're doing is propagating the propaganda of hamas, peddling those numbers given to them. and i mean this without hyperbole, future military schools and others will study
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closely what the israelis did in gaza in an an attempt to avoid civilian casualties. not perfect, but an imp possible situation of underground tunnels, massive civilian population there as well, poverty, other situations. they have gone out of their way to try to prevent civilian deaths, yet they have tragically occurred. that is the kind of ignorance you're talking about. you would think though -- everything you said, will, when it comes to the physical threats toward students at the university, that's a line you could draw -- will: sure. pete: you can't draw that. carley: and think about how this war started, it's on record, members of hamas saying they wanted to attack israel in such a way that israel would have to respond, kill palestinian, because a war would start, and it would get the middle east on the palestinian side. and i don't know, maybe hamas is even frightened how many western, americans are also now standing with with them as a well. pete: middle east or the middle eastern studies departments that have been implanted in these --
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that's been so effective. carley: and by the way, that's by design as a welch there was this "wall street journal" article written in november of last year after the october 7th to have attack, but the person who wrote it is, studies terrorism at george washington university, and he says that the fbi has tapes going back to 30 years where members of hamas, a wiretap conversation where they were saying how do we get western minds, american students, to side with us. and then he said let's target the universities, let's get the professors. and you see the outcome of that right now. pete: bigtime. well, representative virginia foxx, she's a republican from north carolina also the chairman of the education committee in the house of representatives, spoke to "the fox report" about this. here's her take. >> the inmates are in charge of the asylum. jon, this is totally unacceptable, what's happening on these campuses. these presidents, these boards of trustees need to get control
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of the campuses. this is ridiculous. jewish students feel up unsafe -- unsafe and i don't blame them. when we were there at a columbia, it was chaos. and from everything that we've seen from fox news, we know that this is the way it is on other campuses. pete: will, i just want to put an exclamation point on what you said. except for the threatening of jewish students, that's absolutely unacceptable and has to be picked and changed, e kind of -- let 'em have it. throw all the tents up at column a ya. just occupy the university in perpetuity. it's who you are. will: it's who they are. it's what you taught. pete: this is why you can't have nice things, so just ruin it. carley: or you could be like florida state, and they just turned on the sprinklers. [laughter] nobody can be there when it's wet -- pete: that's not a bad idea. let's get to the maintenance department at columbia, it'd give 'em a shower too.
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carley: maybe well needed. we've got some more news to get to, secretary of state antony blinken will be in saudi arabia tomorrow to discuss ceasefire efforts in gaza. the trip coming as israel, hamas, egypt and qatar have yet to reach a deal. u.s. officials are pushing for a 6-week ceasefire and the release of around 40 hostages. secretary blinken also a expected to discuss an inebb creased delivery of humanitarian aid e into gaza. prince harry receiving backlash for wearing four medals while presenting the soldier of the year award. those include a medal for his service in afghanistan along with three others presented to him by queen elizabeth. critics say prince harry was taking attention away from the american servicewomen who were being honored. the award went to army sergeant first class elizabeth marx for her 23 years serving as a combat medic. pete: i'd have is are to know more. are those medals being worn with the incorrect uniform? are they too -- i don't know.
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interesting. carley: well, americans are already planning their next vacation while they're currently on vacation. [laughter] a new poll revealing 11 in 5 say they -- 1 in 5 say they want to take another trip the day they get back. 27% feel that itch within a week. so we want to know, how quickly do you start thinking about your next trip? e-mail your replies to friends@foxnews.com. pete: okay. so it's not during their vacation. we're not thinking about the next vacation during their -- carley: no, yeah, i think people are, right? that's to how i read it. pete: you said when they came home -- will: well -- well, they included that. it was also while they were on vacation. does it count people going, we should just live here. [laughter] carley: and then they get a timeshare. pete: have you ever extended by a day? will: yeah, i have. pete: i have too. every once in a while -- will: it's a situation often where the rest of my family gets to stay, but then i can figure
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it out to get the extra day. you don't rebook the whole family. pete: well, not nine flights, i'm not going to do that. that's ridiculous. have you ever walked on a plane with nine people? you look like the clown family. [laughter] okay, you're over here, you're not over here, if you don't have assigned seating, you're making trades -- it's a disaster. carley: everybody knows they're one disaster. pete: all right. e-mail us, friends@foxnews.com can, how do you manage your vacation? do you extend them? get a little crazy, stay an extra few days? all right, a retail curfew, that's the latest plan to curb crime in san francisco. the impact on local businesses coming up next.
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business. it's not a nine-to-five proposition. it's all day and into the night.
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it's all the things that keep this world turning. the go-tos that keep us going. the places we cheer. and check in. they all choose the advanced network solutions and round the clock partnership from comcast business. see why comcast business powers more small businesses than anyone else. get started for $49.99 a month plus ask how to get up to an $800 prepaid card. don't wait- call today. ♪ will: san francisco's mayor has a new plan to crack down on crime in the city, just close business earlier with. under the new curfew proposal for the tenderloin area of the city the, businesses that sell liquor can, smoke products and pre-packaged food would be forced to close between midnight and 5 a.m. owner of new princess market in san francisco, willie joins us now. willie, let's talk about this
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proposal. first, would this solve the issue of crime in san francisco? >> i do not think so. will: what would it do? >> i do not think it will make any changes, closing two hours before, four hours. most of the activities that happen during the day will continue. there is a police presence that actually stop people from committing crimes, break into cars, break into stores. i think that's the best solution for the crime, to stop or slow down. will: and is the new princess market, are you in the tender loin area? what part of san francisco with you -- are you in, and what kind of crime have you experienced in recent years? >> well, i am in the center of the tenderloin are. i'm basically the center of it. the crime is break into cars, break into stores, break into
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apartments and buildings and basically smashing glasses and whatever they can get their hands on. will: and how often has it happened to you with, for example, at new princess market in is this something you experience on a nightly basis e? >> i would say very often, once a week or so. will: and just, again, what is it? is it walk-in, grab stuff, walk out? is it, is it armed robbery? is it vagrant city? -- vagrancy? what is it that is the issue? >> the issue inside the store becomes we have so many cameras, we do not have beside the shop lifting and that's the main issue that we have. outside of the store because they have no cameras, they're breaking into cars, they're breaking and smashing windows while they're walking by and graffiti on the walls. that's -- drug dealings and activity, shoplifters and people who display their products on the sidewalk to sell them.
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will: and i want to play off two scenarios. under this is scenario, you have to close your store, i believe, is it at midnight if this takes place or something like that? >> yes, sir. will: what would that do not only to your business, but to the neighborhood yourself which makes it become a little bit of a ghost town except for the criminals? >> that's why i think it's really a bad idea to close and just to close when it's not safe for people to walk in that neighborhood. it will be darker, it will not be safe for the residents who walk in that neighborhood. we have a lot of clientele who actually finish their night shift at midnight so, therefore, when they come, they come to do their shopping after midnight if at the retail stores. having a store that's open 24 very 7 makes it convenient for people who live in the neighborhood to actually have access to their grocery. will: right. >> if we were to close, they have to walk blocks in a dark
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area, in a dark region just to get access to their groceries -- will: right. >> and that's why it's convenient, not only this the other aspect, having all these cars in the dark, it's just access to all these people who break into cars because it's dark, no witnesses, no cameras. every corner, every store has two or three people working. they are friends of the neighbors, they are the people that they go to when they finish their work. they socialize, they're doing their shopping. if we close all these, no witness if there is any crime that's happening in that region, in the neighborhood, in the tender loin. nobody will see it, no camera will see it. i, as a business owner, if i see anything happen, any activities towards my business or my neighbor's business, i will call the police. i am a witness to what is going on. >> right. >> if we stop them, no one sees nothing, and so all the people that actually like to break into cars and stores -- will: free rein. yeah, free rein in the city.
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the other scenario as you point out, just putting more police on the streets, more police presence to stop the crime. >> [inaudible] will: i've got to leave it there, willie, but we appreciate you getting up early with us in california and explaining the issue in san francisco. we wish you the best of luck. >> thanks a lot. will: the will cain show, which streams at 12 eastern time at foxnews.com, the fox youtube and facebook, that's what i've got coming up this week. rebeccah heinrichs did not like my interview last week about the war in you know. she's welcome to come on. lee green we'd, and there's one guy whose face didn't make it -- pete: so your team thinks i don't help -- will: my team sent it in, this team -- pete: putting pete on the graphic will not help people watch the will cain -- wow. wt. will: pete will be there too. millions under storm watches as a tornado outbreak causes
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widespread damage across oklahoma. ricking is tracking the latest. plus, a typical family now maying -- paying over $200,000 just to raise a child. taylor riggs on the rising cost next. ♪ lately, i've been, i've been losing sleep -- ♪ dreaming about the things that we could be ♪ start your day with nature made. the #1 pharmacist recommended vitamin and supplement brand. when my doctor gave me breztri for my copd, things changed for me. breztri gave me better breathing, symptom improvement, and reduced flare—ups. breztri won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems.
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we have another day of this. here's the storms, it's moving really slowly right now. but in the short term, we're just talking about a lot of rain across eastern parts of oklahoma and throughout texas. in fact, we have the big flooding situation going on across the eastern suburbs of the dallas area this morning. watch this very carefully if you've got to get on the roads. this is where that flood threat is for today. we're going to see some spots maybe another 3-55 inches of rain, especially arkansas, down towards louisiana -- 3-5. this goes on through tomorrow, at least the heavy rain part of this. but the severe storms today, another extended bull's eye across parts of arkansas a, down through eastern texas, parts of louisiana from shreveport, we could be looking at a few tornadoes. this'll happen once the sun comes up, heats the environment up. we'll get a little more instability there. definitely damaging wind, definitely a concern for hail. day four, pete, underway of this severe weather outbreak. pete: thank you, rick. rick: you bet. pete: it should be no surprise,
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the cost of raising a child in america is on the rise. childcare costs surged nearly 20% between 2019 and 2021. that's the latest data available. that adds up to almost a quarter with million over 18 years, and that's before college. here to discuss is cohost of "the big money show" on fox business with, taylor riggs. taylor, thanks for being here. >> and we're experiencing it, aren't we? pete: absolutely. everybody out there watching knows some component of this is compounding on their life as well. why is this happening? >> overall, just high prices, right? when we see big picture why inflation is such a pain if on everyone, it is a tax on the american people, and really inflation is such a tax on those who are least able to afford it. middle class, lower class, those with families, those trying to make ends meet. that's sort of the big, overarching picture. federal reserve has to keep interest rates high e to help cool that down. that means rates are high, costs are high, wage prices are high, all of this.
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i think sort of the big picture solution is you don't need more government spending, you don't need another bailout of daycare centers. let's hope up, let's lower regulations, open up competition, let's let more people come in. let's lower the burden on payroll taxes we have to pay, how much we have to pay nannies and help sort of spur competition to drive a lot of that innovation, i think that would be one good proposed solution. pete: here's some more data on childcare costs. 75% say it's been more expensive than expected. 55% have gone into debt to pay those expenses, and that's an estimated childcare costs per year. i like what you had to say about a potential solution, opening things up. but on these high costs, they're not going to go down. >> nope. pete: we're stuck with this. it's just the rate of increase. >> bingo. so when we talk about sort of costs going up versus costs going down, we don't mean costs are going down, we just mean the rate of the cost increases are just slowing. so i use sort of the analogy of a car. so when you talk about instead
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of going 60 miles an hour forward, we're going 30 miles an hour, but we're not in reverse. so prices are still increasing, we're still accelerating, at a slower rate. and that overall is the problem. that's why a lot of studies have shown people are waiting later in life to form families, they're waiting later in life to get a home that is unafford if,. it has a lot of societal implications for the work force when you delay starting a family and delay that household formation. so this does have a lot of society implications as a well. pete: it sure does. we saw birthrate numbers just this week showing we're not even at replacement rate anymore. some of that has to do with optimism about the future, but a lot of it is economic. i can't afford my own life, let alone an additional. >> and japan, china, those are horrible examples of what happens when you have a lower birthrate and you can't spur sort of economic growth. so i think, again, a lot of different issues here. i would let a lot of competition come in to take over. i would lower the burdens, lower the regulations and, again, stop
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the wasteful spending that has spurred all of this inflation and all of these cost increases and all the bailouts and handout toes to the daycare centers as well and sort of let private business come in and provide a good solution. pete: great stuff. taylor riggs, and we can catch you and brian and jackie at 1:00 on the fox business network, "the big money show." if you're missing it, you're messing out. >> thanks. pete: kellyanne conway is coming up for reaction to biden's jokes at the white house correspondents' e deal. >> and, of course, "the new york times"sish sued a statement blasting me for, quote, actively and effectively avoiding independent journalists. hey -- [laughter] if that's what it takes to get "the new york times" to say i'm active and effective -- [laughter] at. but did you know propane also powers school buses that produce lower emissions that lead to higher test scores? or that propane can cut your energy costs at home? it powers big jobs and small ones too.
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carley: reality tv star harry who is also on "dancing with the stars" reveal ised he has been diagnosed with skin cancer at the age of 26 and warns his fans to wear sunscreen this summer. >> there isn't really an easy way to say this, but last week i went the a dermatologist, and they found some skin cancer on me. i'm going to be all good, everything's going to be okay. but i just wanted to make this post to let you know that summer's around the corner.
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please, wear sunscreen. carley: dr. nicole saphier is the author of "love, mom," and she joins us now. dr. saphier, good torning -- morning to you. 26 seems young to be diagnosed with skin cancer. >> to be honest, we're seeing a skin cancer paradox where we're seeing more of it which is interesting because more people have sun awareness and are wearing sun screens. i was diagnosed at the age of 35. my niece at the age of 11. carley: wow. >> so there are some risk factors that put you at an increased risk, one being fair complexion. so blond or red hair, blue or green eyes, family history of skin cancer, excessive sun exposure. the question is why are we having more skin cancers. is it because we're wearing sunscreen and then spending more time in the sun because we think it's okay? there's a lot of chemicals in sunscreen and also some of the moisturizers we put on. actually, some animal studies is have shown just some regular moisturizerrers have increased
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risk of skin cancer in those animal study thes, so there's a lot of things at play right now. but at the end of the day, there are some things you can do to protect yourself from skin cancer and also you need to be aware of your skin. so, obviously, avoiding the sun, wearing skin protection and wearing a good sunscreen like a mineral-based sunscreen without harsh chemicals, that can decrease your risk. but it's very important, if you looking at something on your skin, is it asymmetrical, raised in one part and flat on the other, look at the border, can you do a nice circle around it e or is it irregular in is the color uniform or different in areas? the diameter, is it bigger than a little, small pea, and is it evolving, changing over time? any of these should have a red flag for you and get you to see a dermatologist, and if you are someone with a fair complexion who has 50 moles or more, you absolutely should be getting routine checks. carley: catching it early can
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save your life. thankfully, this 26-year-old says he's going to be okay, probably because he got diagnosed early. so we all know about ozempic, it's not intended to be a weight loss drug, it's actually for diabetes, but it's been used to lose weight and now because of the popularity of it, there's boeing to be 13 new ozempic-like drugs coming to the market in the next few years. obviously, this is going to be huge money making for the pharmaceutical companies. but as a doctor, how do you feel about this? >> well, this could be an entire segment in itself. ozempic and we 2007 i have, they cost about $40 billion last year. that was the expenditure on those medications, and they're extremely expensive. so maybe, about over $1,000 a month for it. so if you can't afford it, you can't use it right now. getting some of these other medications on the market is going to cause price competition and maybe bring that down, so people who can't afford it may actually be able to benefit from some of these medications. my personal opinion, i worry that they're being overused and not being used in conjunction
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with a good health care plan, nutrition and exercise. i do think that we have to study a little bit more of the long-term consequences, but there is some benefit to it. decreasing cardiovascular risk and others. carley: that's such a good point. there's such a stigma around a using ozempic, you hear it with celebrities, oh, they just use ozempic. isn't it better than being overweight? >> absolutely. a lot of studies are actually showing tasker people who are losing the weight have a lower risk of cardiovascular disease and chronic morbidities that come being overweight. but the concern is people are just on the med medications, and they're going to be dependent on these medications for life because they're not changing their lifestyle, they're not eating healthy. and you're already seeing some of the side effects. poor nutrition, people are reporting skin changes, losing their hair and others. so you have to do it smart, under the care of a doctor not just some medi spa -- carley: yeah, that's a good point. because if you go off the medication but don't change your with diet and and exercise routine, you're just going to
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gain the weight back. >> and people gain even more weight. carley: okay. so mother's day is just around the corner, and it's a special mother's day for you because you have a new book out called "love, mom." it's available now, right? and it's doing so well. >> it's a new york times bestseller. i'm so grateful. it's such a beautiful collection of motherhood stories. my own included. you're in the book, carley. it makes you laugh and cry, there are so much wonderful stories that will inspire nip on mother's day. it makes the perfect gift. carley: it really does. ainsley's in it, martha maccallum, sandra smith -- >> some gold star moms, a lot of fox moms and also moms you don't know. fox viewers or have submitted stories, it is truly -- i am just so excited. carley: it's a special book, i was so happy when you asked me to be a part of it, such an honor. you did so much work behind the scenes, and you're such a good face to represent -- >> and the audio book too, it has a lot of our voices.
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it's not just me. carley: we recorded our chapters. that was a first for me, but ien enjoyed it. dr. saphier, thank you so much. we appreciate it. >> thanks for having me. carley: president biden tries to downplay his age with joke withs at the white house correspondents' dinner. coloradanway reacts -- kellyanne conway reacts with us coming ups next w. 5% of. and, as loyalty members, we get points toward mylowe's money for the things we want. oh, we want this. the all new mylowe's rewars loyalty program is her. download the app to joi, earn and save toda. (vo) in two seconds, eric will realize they're gonna need more space... (man) gotta sell the house. (vo) oh...open houses. or, skip the hassles and sell directly to opendoor. (man) wow. (vo) when life's doors open, we'll handle the house.
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carley: snl comedian colin jost serving up a softball roast for president biden despite hurling insults at president trump during last night's white house correspondents' dinner. >> can we just acknowledge how refreshing it is to see a president at an event that doesn't begin with a bailiff saying, all rise. [laughter] pete: fox news contributor kellyanne conway joins us now. pretty familiar stuff there. >> oh, definitely. i don't think it moves the needle for any voters or whatsoever. but we did see joe biden able to be at the podium for 10 or 15 minutes. we'll see if he can do it for 90 in a debate against a much more energetic, much sharper, much wiser and much better presidential record in donald
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trump without a teleprompter, joe biden. i thought colin jost coaxed biden a little bit. let's go through some of the -- we're looking for the strings of barack obama pulling your strings, thereby making fun of the fact that joe biden can't stand alone. but i do worry, by the way, that that becomes a positive with lots of americans who are fence sitters between biden and trump friends. if they say, well, if i think obama is really running the white house, running washington, running the world, i'll feel better about that. also he took a shot at biden for shedding the black vote. he took a shot at biden that the race is tied. so i thought there were a couple of jabs. nobody really lays a glove on the vice president, kamala harris, even though she's less popular than joe biden. i've gotten the sense this weekend in washington that democratic allies, and i are repeat myself, the media -- [laughter] they think this is joe biden's last white house correspondents' dinner. it's almost like, a little bit not nostalgic for some of them.
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maybe trump's going to win and they're not going to have -- this is it, this is the final stand for biden and harris, and i think alone is fascinating. will: kellyanne, is there such thing as a fence sitter between joe biden and donald trump? when i look at this election, i don't -- i'm trying to think anecdotally if i know anyone who said, yeah, i voted for biden in '20, willing to vote for trump in 2024 or is it just an enthusiasm election. what joe biden will be fighting is getting the same turn that he got in 2020. >> that's been a challenge for him in the polls so far. if you look at everybody's polls including fox news', all the mainstream media polling, private polling says the same thing which is that joe bidens' core constituency in to 2020 is fraying. many of those voters are sitting in the middle right now and i mean just undecided, and others have migrated over to president trump. you see that particularly belong african-american, he is -- hispanic males, some women.
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particularly political independents. i think political independents are growing in our country. rfk jr. will get some of them state by state. there's not a single state he's shown that he can win so far, this is about a electoral votes, but many of them are supporting donald trump. hay see him as the outsider -- they see him as the outsider. if this is a binary race between the two of them, the concerns for trump are you've got to get more of the so-called double haters, people who say they have a strong dislike for both trump and biden. in 2016 donald trump carried the double haters. i don't like that term, it's someone wells', but it's used conventionally. donald trump beat hillary clinton by 20 points in michigan and almost 40 points in wisconsin. so you really have to sew that up. also joe biden's doing better among people who voted in to 20 to, and donald trump's doing much better amongst people who say they'll vote in 2024.
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the big defor those e folks are will you actually vote, and i think this election comes down to not just democrats and republicans who come home to their candidates, but how many will stay home. this is the first time in our history that the badge of honor to say that you may not vote, particularly if you're younger. i don't want to encourage them. i may not if vote. carley: well, you already mentioned the word, the debate. and on friday president biden did an interview with howard stern, and for the first time said that, yeah, he'd be willing to debate donald trump. listen to this. >> i don't know if you're going to debate your, your opponent -- >> i am somewhere. i don't know when. i'm happy to debate him. carley: what do you think, kellyanne? do you think this debate would actually take place? >> i would say, brick it. democracy -- bring it. democracy deserves this. president trump has said anytime, anywhere, anyhow, and he'll be ready to debate. think he's debating joe biden without joe biden there every day when he's talking about the state of world affairs and
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things in this cup. but debates are very important because it gives we, the people, in our democracy an equal cannes to watch the candidates shoulder to shoulder, point to counterpoint and was out who our favorite is -- suss out who our favorite is. i think that's particularly important this year when you're looking at the binary record. if i were president trump, if i were advising him on debate prep, or i'd saying near what we can all see. we all see of biden's lack of ability and and acuity. remind them, ask joe biden about the chaotic afghanistan pullout -- carley: that's a great point. -- >> advice to the generals, why he's emboldening nuclear-capable iran and donald trump is taking out soleimani and baghdadi -- carley: a lot to talk about. pete: we're going to run out of time. thank you for your time this morning. carley: we'll be right back. >> thank you.
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hey! asthma's got you going through it? grab nucala for fewer asthma attacks. nucala is a once-monthly add-on injection for severe eosinophilic asthma. not for sudden breathing problems. allergic reactions can occur. get help right away for swelling of face, mouth, tongue, or trouble breathing. infections that can cause shingles have occurred. don't stop steroids unless told by your doctor. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection. may cause headache, injection site reactions, back pain, and fatigue. ask an asthma specialist if nucala is right for you. carley: it is 8 a.m. urf

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