rachel: my husband is advocating for me to get a chicken coop because we eat a lot of eggs. eggs are what people eat when meat is too expensive, now eggs are too expense i. a lot of people doing what we just saw out there, renting a chicken and a coop. will: one of the things i m good at can. rachel: making eggs somehow to you like your eggs? will: i like variety. i m off of scrambled. i like a sunny side egg off of toast, i like poached. rachel: i like poached. will: i m like the guy from forest gump, bubba [laughter] pete: i like over medium, not too the runny, a lot of seasoning on it. a little cheese rachel: what kind of seasoning? pete: various kinds that i ve acquired from this show over the years. [laughter] i couldn t tell you what they are, but i use them. will: not too runny. pete: not too runny. will: i like it runny. i don t want dry eggings. soft scrambled. pete: soft scrambled, i absolutely agree with. i grew up on hard scrambled in minnesota. [laughter] m
a full report from idaho is just ahead. biden intends to visit the southern border for the first time since he left office. take a look at what biden said in the past about the border visit and the common sense department is wondering what changed. we begin in the nation s capital where they adjourn without electing a speaker for a second straight day. kevin cork is live in dc with the latest. three more failed votes today. a round of closed door talks to boot. and congressman-elect kevin mccarthy looks no closer to securing the speakership that s speaker of the house, if you haven t been watching. the battle continues tomorrow at 12:00 nooning. we i think this is interesting. i crawl before i walk, before i run. a bit of optimism, perhaps, for kevin mccarthy. see if that s warranted. in all, the californian has fallen short in six, count them, six, votes over two days as a group of 20 conservatives who have deemed him i d logically unreliable, i would say, have refused t
of you listening, as opposed to watching under the television. a couple of final thoughts as we wrap up this third summit in a row. he went to the bavarian alps and then came here to nato. certainly the last two conferences have all been about ukraine. what is the strategy? what is the potential endgame? and, you know what, here at nato, a real sense of an organisation revitalised because of necessity, because of what s happened, and trying to work out how to face up to an aggressive russia and a dangerous decade. let me show you a couple of little extracts from the prime minister s news conference, which hasjust finished, as i record this at 2pm spanish time, and the couple of questions that i got to put to borisjohnson. thank you. chris mason, bbc news. prime minister, what is the overall objective of the uk s help and strategy for ukraine? is it unequivocally getting the russians out, restoring ukraine s borders to how they were before the war and, if i may, you have been