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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  March 9, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PST

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you got this. and we got you. >> there was inexcusable lack of
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accountability. 11 marines murdered that day have not been answered for. >> anyone who doesn't agree will be sidelined. >> origins of the coronavirus. >> i don't think very many people knew what gain of function was. >> author of goosebumps claiming his publisher edited his book without his knowledge. ♪ respiratory ♪ respi >> ainsley: that is a beautiful shot of augusta, georgia, where the masters will be played in about a month, easter weekend, i believe. the azaleas will be in wonderful
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full bloom and everybody issing the pimento cheese sandwiches steve loves. >> steve: you get a good deal on a cheese sandwich. >> brian: this is the fifth major, they call it. >> ainsley: i've been watching the documentary, "full swing," it is so good and i heard they were renewed for another season. >> brian: it would have been good without the drama of liv. >> ainsley: you see who made the decision for liv. tonight benjamin hall will be speaking out, a year ago he was caught in a deadly blast in ukraine and lost his cameraman, he lost his leg and the foot on the other leg, he lost function of one eye. he will tell you the story of
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what was going through his mind during that blast and what gave him ability to hang on and fight. he's had 30 surgeries. >> steve: he was on our show and talked about, he has a new book coming out, join sean at 9:00. republicans on capitol hill are having series of hearings in things that have happened overlast couple years and most powerful was yesterday. yesterday the house had a meeting about the chaaon the withdrawal from afghanistan. joe biden was president when this occurred. we show you images that day. one of the most powerful speakers was sergeant tyler vargas andrews, he lost his arm and has scars from the explosion at the gate. >> ainsley: he lost his leg, too. >> steve: he did lose his leg.
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he feels terrible because he had a chance to kill the person who blew up and murdered 11 americans, but he was not given the okay by his supervisors. listen to what he had to say yesterday, it was gut-wrenching. >> the flash and massive wave of pressure, i'm thrown 12 feet to the ground and knew what happened. i opened my eyes to maen radios dead or unconscious lying around me. a crowd of hundreds vanished in front of me and my body was catastrophically injured. i tried to get up, but could not. i started to lose consciousness. i heard chaz screaming my name
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as he ran to me. his voice calling to me kept me awake. the withdrawal was a ca catastrophic and there was a lack of accountability. >> brian: it took retired military men and women using money out of their own 401(k) and pension to go over there and finance the exit of americans and their afghans and allies, as well as watching that horrible withdrawal and the president of the united states say look how many people we got out. look how many you left behind and look who you left behind to do it, people like tim kennedy, he served in afghanistan and helped evacuate 10,000 people on the ground in afghanistan that day. how important was testimony like this yesterday? >> it was heart-breaking. it is unfortunate, we have 13
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servicemembers that can't tell their story. nicole gee, i was with her during the evacuation, she volunteered to come search the people we were bringing to the base in an effort to save her life and that afternoon she gets blown up in anie d. the service members, acts of heroism everywhere you look. the 82nd marines on the ground doing things indescribable and seeing things we would never wish upon our worst enemy. it is unforgivable, lack of tools and resources we gave them and chaotic and catastrophic can't even describe what it looked like on the ground. >> ainsley: 13 americans died in that blast, a lot of afghans died. people were screaming, moms were carrying dead babies around in their arms, we heard a lot of that yesterday in the testimony. what went through your mind when you heard sergeant vargas
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andrews being in the tower with his team leader, ready to shoot that suicide bomber and couldn't get the a-okay. the battalion commander came in and he said, i don't know. who can give us the okay, this is the man we need to shoot and they never got the a-okay and that guy, 13 americans and many more died. what goes through your mind, what was happening in the tower and how can we improve the rules of engagement rules? >> unfortunately the authority and authorization that should have been available for them to do their job were not. the department of state was running this military operation and they should never run a military operation. it never goes well to have a politician trying to dictate what war fighters do on the ground, this is the byproduct. young men and women will lie and
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we will lose wars. they disbanded the -- this could have saved american lives and the people that were evacuating. it is fault of the government and department of state for things like this happening and us to continue to lose wars. >> steve: indeed, earlier on "fox and friends first," we had gold-star mothers talk about what they saw yesterday. tim, listen to this. >> i actually got really emotional while i was hearing the testimony and ended up becoming even more upset when i realized that the whole thing could have been prevented. >> a very alarming thing to hear individuals and organizations were the ones who have stepped up in the past 19 months to see that we are still retrievingern americans and still retrieving individual afghan friendlies from danger right now. it is a great alarm to me that
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our government has put any pushback against us trying to help those still left behind. it also is a great deal of joy for me to hear finally our children are getting justice on capitol hill. >> steve: tim, what we heard from the first woman in that sound bite montage, she said it didn't have to happen like this and it didn't. >> no, it absolutely didn't. neo-operation, we've done lots of them. the military goes, well, when you put politics and policymakers on the ground for war fighters, this is what happens. you want to give the authority and power to the lowest level so they can make -- ground truth is the most important truth, men and women on the ground have ground truth. if you don't allow them to make
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decisions, we will see americans dying and dying, it was absolutely preventable. save our allies are trying to evacuate people out of afghanistan, we have people in safe houses, this is far from over. let alone guilt and remorse of having to lose americans that day because of failed policy and because we took the authority and authorization away from groundforce commanders. this is not how we fight and win wars, this is how we continue to lose them. >> brian: absolutely, tim, you helped get benjamin hall out in ukraine, you never stop, too bad we have to use great organizations like yours and can't use official organizations that we pay tax dollars for. is it okay with you that chairman of the joint chief of staff and secretary of defense austin say, i was following orders to get people out and that is what i did, alleviating themselves from responsibility. how does that sit with you?
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>> i couldn't sit in that seat for a day. it is the hardest job in the world, both secretary of defense and joint chief of staff, when americans die because of failed policy and we had americans die because 've failed policy. we had 20 years at war and that country is worse off than when we got there. these are policy problems, not war fighter problems. it is easy to place blame on the military, but if you take a step back and objectively look at what happened over the course of 20 years, it led up to failed event -- >> brian: nobody is blaming the military, they said they were doing what the president told them to do, but instead of putting stars on the ground and say if you do this, people will die and we will lose this are wa war, he did it and said wasn't my call, is that okay with you? >> i have personally been in
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situations where if i left because i had a tough decision, they'd replace me with somebody less capable to have to make choices. i will not walk away from having to make tough decisions, i will advise their advisors in some positions i've been. i was an advisor, i will not let somebody else come in and make worse decisions. i will continue to fight the battles i can win, those are really tough decisions. do i quit and let somebody else come in, maybe a yes-man that will do whatever the president wants, we have a chain of command for a reason, the chain of command goes all the way to the president and the president was relegating decisions to department of state, that is where failed policies were implemented on the ground. >> steve: joe biden did admit the buck stops with him. >> ainsley: both moms said the
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administration needs to change. >> brian: he got a pass on it. >> steve: tim, thank you for your service, what you are doing and the website is save our allies.org. >> ainsley: please help, 80% of afghans who stood by us at risk to themselves and their families remain left behind, according to someone who works with you getting people out. >> give benjamin hall a big hug for me, i love that guy, he's a hero. >> ainsley: you helped save him, you're the hero, too, thank you. >> steve: 8:13. >> ashley: ashley. >> ashley: mitch mcconnell is in the hospital after a fall at a washington, d.c. hotel last night. his office said leader mcconnell tripped at a local hotel during a private dinner and was admitted to the hospital and is receiving treatment. the ken you can itty lawmaker has had polio at age two, 20 years ago, triple bypass heart surgery, we're waiting to learn
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how he's doing right now. moscow launching missile attacks across ukraine. military officials say russia fired 81 missiles overnight. responders pick through the rubble. ukraine energy agency says russian shelling from energy source, the largest nuclear plant in all of europe. prince harry and meghan markle are being recognized as prince and princess and will be called prince archie, and princess lilibet. in an interview with oprah, meghan suggested archie was denied the title because he was missed race. to tip or not to race, that is raised by someone who says --
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your thoughts on the trend of being asked to tip for everything. one viewer says we do not tip unless we receive a service, waiter, waitress, etcetera, based on how good the service was. another viewer said this incredible note, i know brian tips, he tipped me on run from dayton, ohio to south bend, indiana, plus a book and picture, you remember who is kind with tips. look at you, brian, so nice. >> brian: wow, i remember him, he deserved a tip. >> ashley: brian always making people smile. if you worked in a restaurant, you always tip bigger. >> brian: he was driving me around. >> ainsley: thank you, ashley. >> steve: my friend sent me a note, how about a service charge and place for a tip on top of it? >> brian: yeah, that was
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yesterday. >> steve: automatic 20% and extra? >> ashley: maybe depends how service is. >> steve: a lot of people don't read to see it was tacked on, okay, 20%. 40%. >> ashley: sometimes the waitress will say we have included tip, which is nice. >> brian: i would say, what, only kidding. more good news, end of cancel culture, powerful people are beginning to stand up. hollywood is beginning to stand up and speak out, case in point goldie hawn. we are taking this out of comedy, comedians need to do what they need to perform. she said, i think it is important to stand vigilant on people's behavior and understand when they are out of line. i am concerned about these areas, you don't have a job,
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suddenly you can't date a woman within the business or you get fired, they are canceling books, classic books, no one can read, there is mistrust everywhere, there is cancel culture and culture wars, no one is looking at that. >> steve: look at that, this morning we talked to the guy thatun ares brave books about how rl stein, behind goosebumps series, apparently scholastic changed words in his books in the series and had no idea, they did it to reflect what they felt is appropriate for 2023. he is like, wait, what? >> ainsley: they never contacted him for permission. >> steve: they did not. >> brian: he can't sing zip-a-dee-doo-dah, do not expect to hear it, reminiscent of something that happened in the '40s. >> ainsley: and minnie mouse is
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in a pantsuit, no dress. they don't say hello boys and girls, they say welcome friends. >> brian: okay. >> steve: we're "fox and friends," we're always welcome. >> ainsley: true, coming up, embattled da george gascon has new challenger who promiseings to seek justice for victims, his law and order message coming up next. >> brian: governor ron desantis runs up a solution to allow djokovic to play in the miami open, it involves a boat, that is straight ahead. a third kid. what if she likes playing golf? it's expensive. we're outlawing golf. wait. can i still play? since we work with emower, we don't have to worry about planning for a third kid. you can still play golf... sometimes. take control of your financial future
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>> steve: far left la county da george gascon facing backlash on his soft on crime agenda and it could cost him his job. our next guest says it is time for a change and is running against mr. george gascon. district attorney and da candidate john mckinney joins from l.a. why do you want to replace george gascon? >> i'm running because there is a void of leadership in the da's office leading to chaos on the streets and within our office. that chaos is manifesting itself as higher crime rate, homicide rate is 50% over where it was in 2019 and among the largest numbers we've seen in the last 15 years. thefts are out of control. people are suffering. businesses are shuttering.
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we need a change. i think my 25 years of experience in the office and my life experience, suits me to take over this office and lead us to the future. >> steve: it has to be frustrating for you, being in the office for 25 years, to watch the boss essentially say, okay, that doesn't count as crime, we are not going after these people when you look at it and crime has dropped in every single category in l.a. county year over year. that is probably because people aren't reporting it, they know there is not a consequence when you do something wrong, in many cases. >> crime statistics are unreliable, all but murder statistics, of course, we can can't dead bodies. i started in the office in 1988, when crime was worse than today, we brought that crime rate down over the next couple decades to
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the point l.a. was voted largest safe city, five years ago. since gascon has taken over, we live in different reality and crime is exploding, crimes that affect people's quality of life, even small things turn out to be big things in the aggregate. >> steve: let me ask you this, within the last year, there was a recall effort in l.a. county and in the end, he did not get the boot, so somebody must be on his side. >> yeah, that person may not be human because we got over 700,000 signatures from registered voters who said they wanted to see an election and opportunity to look at other candidates. what happens after signatures were turned in and the point the registrar said we didn't get the
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550,000, i don't know. i know there will be election in 2024 and voters have a right to change direction. >> steve: it is game on, thank you for telling us your story. >> thank you, appreciate you. >> steve: on this thursday, growing pressure on president biden to crack down on mexican drug cartel following brutal killing of twoern ms. texas congressman dan crenshaw shares his message for the administration and others next. , even if you got ppp and it only takes eight minutes to qualify. i went on their website, uploaded everything, and i was blown away by what they could do. getrefunds.com has helped businesses get over a billion dollars and we can help your business too. qualify your business for a big refund in eight minutes. go to getrefunds.com to get started. powered by innovation refunds.
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>> ainsley: growing pressure on president biden to crack down on mexican cartels after four americans are kidnapped, with two being murdered just across the southern border. >> steve: texas governor dan crenshaw is sharing his thought and message for mexico president, watch this. >> brian: congressman dan crenshaw joins us now, guy in texas with military background
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would want to take action here, do you believe the mexican government believes we need to take action here? >> according to the mexican obrador, he doesn't. he can't understand why we think it is a bad thing that we think fentanyl is poisoning. he doesn't seem to understand what i said propaganda for electoral purposes. it is infuriating, and should be to mexknans, too. they are sick of this, sick of corrupt politicians taking money from cartel, they want safety and prosperity and americans want that for mexico, if you could choose one country to make 10 times better, you would choose mexico, it is an
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important ally. this president needs to work with us, we just want to help him. >> steve: the white house said, it was laughable, she said fentanyl is at historically low levels right now, which we know seizures are way through the roof and commented kjp did, on suggestion you had to sez ig nat cartels as terrorist out fits, watch this. >> designating cartels as fto's would not grant us additional authorities, united states has pow powerful -- and individuals that enable them. we have not been afraid to use them. >> steve: your suggestion won't work, she says. >> i want to clarify something, i have never said to designate them terrorists, there is good reason, if you designate them terrorists, you create more
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asylum seekers south of the border and make the crisis far boris johnson. this is one thing i agree with her on, she is wrong the fentanyl crisis is all-time low, since when? like last week? by how much? this is ridiculous, we're losing tens of understand thises of people and confiscating hundreds of thousands of pounds 10 times over on monthly basis. authorize military force. that means couple things. it doesn't mean tanks rolling in the next day, it means we can use intelligence gathering and work through the mexican military in order to target them. we can put our assets to bear on this problem. we want to do it with the government of mexico and this is what i would tell the president of mexico, we need to increase penalties against them. the authority that comes with
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terrorist origination, goes after finances, sanctions mexican officials without designating them terrorists. are they terrorists? of course, if you label them that way, you will make our situation worse. it makes good headline, really bad idea when it comes to immigration crisis. >> ainsley: yesterday active service members and veterans were in washington for house foreign affairs hearing, one of many hearings we expect to see. it was emotional talking about the withdrawal of afghanistan and former marine sergeant tyler vargas andrews, i don't know if you saw it, he was getting emotional and crying. he said they were up in the tower and his team leader was ready, he's a sniper, ready to take out the suicide bomber and
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they didn't get the a-okay from the military or from the administration, so they didn't do it and they think that guy was responsible for killing 13 americans. listen to some of the testimony and we'll get your reaction. >> flash and a massive wave of pressure, i'm thrown 12 feet to the ground and knew what had happened. i opened my eyes to marines dead or unconscious lying around me. the drawal was a catastrophe, 92 my opinion. >> he lost an arm and a leg, his rights arm was shredded and his abdomen soaked in blood and ripped open. awful to hear that and many parents of the americans say it could have been prevented. what do you say? >> they are right. it is a heart-breaking
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testimony. largely forgotten his response, it is president biden. the 13 families haven't forgotten, that brave marine hasn't forgotten and i want them to know republicans in congress haven't forgotten either either, that is why we're doing these hearings and will hold president biden accountable. the decision-making was poorly thought out. list a few things, pulling out of kabul airport instead of bagram. president biden wanted one thing, zero troops, his entire policy, zero troops. his military told him this was a terrible idea, he didn't listen and put state department in charge instead of military. they didn't have clear rules of engagement, they wouldn't give him clear direction, it was horrible and unacceptable and
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president biden is to blame. >> brian: sharing the screen of the most horrific military images you could have that day and how many left behind and private organizations had to go save them, not the military, which is horrific. thank you. >> steve: on this thursday, ron desantis of florida putting the ball in joe biden's court asking if unvaccinated novak djokovic can play in the miami open if he arrives on a boat. >> ainsley: clay travis on the mandate madness next.
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djokovic could enter by boat, but your administration allows thousands of unvaccinated migrants to enter through the southern border. only thing keeping novak djokovic from participating is misguided unscientific out of date va x requirement. clay travis is here to react. i think he is only half kidding, you can go to the bahamas and come over and he should do it. >> clay: i would love this, brian, could you imagine if they streamed this in realtime, ron desantis wearing a captain's hat taking the helm of a boat, skipping across the beautiful waves, bringing the ship from the bahamas back to florida with novak djokovic behind him chilling in the salt spray there? incredible campaign ad, i'd like to be on this boat. what it does a great job of
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doing is illuminating and illustrating absurdity of biden policies, particularly relating to covid. i've been saying for over a year now, brian, we have got five million illegals who have walked across our southern border and come to america for years, we don't require them to get the covid shot or check them so far to see whether they actually have covid and they all get to come here and stay for years. novak djokovic has had covid, at least twice, has natural immunity. he played in the u.s. open in 2021, when covid was more omni-present in the united states. he just played in australia open and he's potentially the greatest tennis player of all time and in 99.9 percentile in
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terms of health status. it is anti-science for novak djokovic not to be allowed in this country and for anyone else. people say, why should i care about a tennis player? what about your grandparents that live in italy? they can't come to see their grandkids, almost no country still has this, it is indefensible, no way this should still be existing policy. >> brian: if you're vaccinated by the chinese vaccine or russian vaccine, less than useless, vladamir putin wouldn't get it and you are allowed to come here. you would think someone at white house would say we have to address this, this is embarrassment. radio silence. at 35, number one player in the world, you only have a couple years to see him at the top of his game. economically when djokovic
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plays, as opposed to when he misses, can you think of the economy and be selfish for a second? >> clay: everything joe biden touches is crap, including the budget blueprint he's putting out this afternoon. it is hard to tradministration when everybody understands in no way are we safer because novak djokovic can't order. good for ron desantis. >> brian: nothing safer than playing outdoor tennis, other than maybe golf. clay, thanks, good luck on the radio show today. >> clay: appreciate it, you, too. >> brian: check in with senior meteorologist janice dean for fox weather forecast. >> janice: take a look at the map, snow on the way for northern tier of the country. it feels like winter. southern part is heavy rain and possibility for flooding, so
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across the upper midwest, great lakes to the northeast on friday afternoon, we're going to get this, as well. will we get snow in and around new york city? it is possible, i think it is going to be too warm for a big snow event, could see flurry of abivity. forecast for friday through understand is, we're going to have nor'easter. several inches in the mid-south could present flash flooding, the west is dealing with more heavy rain and mountain snow, incredible story over last several weeks and months and here is the nor'easter sunday night, it will cause travel delays. telling you now, make sure you have know plas if you are traveling by air, there will be delays and cancellations. we could see snow, brian, dawn might have to get her shovel out. >> brian: she's been training all winter for this moment.
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we'll see. see you later. coming up, almost been a year since the slap heard around the world. fox nation release special saying who is will smith, first who is bill hemmer? examined by dana perino over next two hours. >> bill: eight-hour documentary. clay is right, by the way, it is indefensible and the thing is winding down anyway from the white house. brian, great show, nice to see you today. target mexican cartels, how far is the biden team willing to go? we're about to find out and where did covid virus originate? robert redfield was there in the beginning and under oath yesterday and here live today with us. why the far left has hair on fire over president biden and die with zero. have you thought about that? meet the guy who wrote a book on it? dana and i will see you in 12
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minutes, top of the hour.
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>> ainsley: with oscars coming up and chris rock speaking out about infamously being slapped last year, fox nation releasing "who is will smith," watch.
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>> what chris rock said might have been disrespectful, that is what comedy does, it pokes the bear. it wasn't obscene, it wasn't necessarily her fault. he was laughing. will was laughing when this happened. >> ainsley: joining us is the host of "who is will smith," casee mcdonald. what did you learn about him? grew up in philly, military family. how did he go to hollywood? >> i think that is what it is, it goes back in town. how was that slap almost a year ago, that was insane. go to "fresh prince," born and raised in philly, his mom worked in the school district, they had a disciplinary family, very strict, school mattered. he was raised "right," he saw
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his father hit his mother and he was stunned. you maybe think, did he see jada in trouble and he stood up from her and this was from his childhood. you learn about his climb to greatness, he was the fresh prince of hollywood, the king of hollywood. he has to do cleaning up since that slap. you got to stay at the oscars, you were not hauled out on battery. chris rock stepped back. it is the notion of the elite and just -- hang on, we'll get through our show and then the fall out can happen. i think it will be interesting to see what happens this year at the oscars and it is interesting to see will smith's climb to where he was when he was great before this fall from grace. he's had major contributions, you see his work in "ali"and his
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story. interesting finding out about his upbringing. >> ainsley: we have a sound bite from your special, let's take a look. >> when you are a will smith and you come from place you don't have money and all of a sudden, you have all this money, it can be really difficult to sort of keep track of it coming in, it going out. >> the two things that will kill you with fame are cash and -- and they both took him. >> he would buy cars and motorcycles and expensive clothing. he ends up being 2.8 million in debt to the i.r.s. >> ainsley: i had no idea, tell us more about that. >> i think he got caught up in the lifestyle, you grow up in philly simply and you are thrust into the spotlight. you have money, cars, clothes,
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women, you see his love affair with jada start to blossom, the it couple in hollywood. you have sympathy for him, i did when i saw her sitting at the table talking about her entanglement with this man. this is our guy, will smith is the king of hollywood and maybe for the same woman, he brings his career tumbling down. approaching 60, we saw him king richard, venus serena's father, we'll see what is next for will smith. >> ainsley: thank you. watch "who is will smith," available on fox nation, more "fox and friends" moments away. my active psoriatic arthritis can slow me down. now, skyrizi helps me get going
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♪ >> look at all the people going to work in tampa. thank you for joining us today on thursday. see you back here tomorrow. >> thanks to everybody who came out to goodie goodie burger. awesome to see everybody out there. the food was fantastic. >> bye, we'll see you tomorrow. >> bill: cartels killing americans. it is driving calls for a u.s. military intervention in mexico. republicans aren't the only ones saying enough is enough. it's thursday. i'm bill hemmer from new york city today. hello, partner. >> dana: good to be with you. asme -- i'm kp. the cartels fueling bloodshed on both sides of the border and the kidnapping of four american tourists is a breaking

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