. . rachel: good good morn america. it is 6:00 am here in new york city. that was your national anthem. i m so happy to welcome joey, brian to the couch today. brian: that was live. i wasn t aware it goes from one nation do this. rachel: you are american history. that is why we do that. brian: i don t think that is the reason. what did you think about, the way to open the show. brian: i did not know you did it. i did not know you get real viewer pictures so people mail in different photos. joey: first time i filled in on the show, it wasn t viewer pictures but dogs. then it was cats. somebody complained about cats. rachel: we did all babies, all dogs, and because of pete we did cats. the ratings changed. started the cats. love the photo of the couple picking blueberries in the summer. nothing more american than that. that is what we do ends. brian: that is what we do. nothing more american than picking blueberries. i don t foe what kind of traditions you have in your ho
Come back here to try to make a difference. I want to congratulate you on the difference you have made. Now one of the questions i would ask you is why youre willing to leave a place with so much responsibility and background and capability to be willing to be the secretary of health and Human Services. Thank you, senator. When i think about the mission of the department of health and Human Services, which is to improve the health, safety, and wellbeing of the American People, its what ive literally spent my life trying to do. And so to have the opportunity to participate if confirmed, to be to serve as the secretary of health and Human Services and to try to guide that organization in a direction that would further fulfill that mission, i cant think of anything more exciting for fulfilling. I think you have the background for doing that too,
with the wide range of experience you had between the different practices and hospitals and then coming here and going through a number of Differ
getting a raise? that is exactly right. joe, here s the thing, the categories that you and i use the most, you and i drive, we use our electricity, we fill our cars with gas, we buy food. they are the categories that consumers really feeling the pinch. i suspect, as long as you decide, maybe not to drive, not to run the ac, not to it eat, then you re probably doing okay. you re one of those consumers maybe feeling all right but for a lot of us, joey, this is real. again, we re working. we have jobs. that s great but we re simply not keeping up with as consumers and that is really troublesome. brian: lastly, you re a personal finance expert. what can people do to try to make it through this without losing money or not making ends meet? great question. always boost that rainy day fund if you can. lock in the new job now. lock in your new contract now. if the job market starts to crater, it is showing a little bit of weakness, you want to
from a russian shell last tuesday. she and artem, in some senses, are lucky. they ve been evacuated to the city of zaporizhzhia. 0ther victims, adults and children died where they fell in the streets. these are just some of the hundreds of casualties of what s been happening in mariupol and the surrounding region. all of these are victims of russian attacks. it s notjust the physical injuries, though. many of these children have deep psychological trauma that they will perhaps never get over. these doctors and the children s surviving relatives asked us to tell their stories. the head of the children s hospital, can t hide his contempt for what russia has done. translation: i hate russia. the girl who lost her leg was so traumatized she wouldn t eat
other victims, adults and children, died where they fell in the streets. these are just some of the hundreds of casualties of what s been happening in mariupol and the surrounding region. all of these are victims of russian attacks. it s notjust the physical injuries, though. many of these children have deep psychological trauma that they will perhaps never get over. these doctors and the children s surviving relatives asked us to tell their stories. the head of the children s hospital, can t hide his contempt for what russia has done. translation: i hate russia. the girl who lost her leg was so traumatized she wouldn t eat or drink for days. she couldn t mentally handle it. we had to feed her intravenously. another boy, a six year old with shrapnel in his skull, described without tears or emotion, watching his mother burn to death