sunday. it s an open air north turn down there in florida live at 6:00. and can you tell that the weather is perfect. why are we up actually in new york city where it s 60 degrees. only 70 something down there why can tell we just don t have the rcars. i postulated that all three weekend anchors would be in racing suits. a unitard today. just to get into the theme of their weekend coverage. i bet you $100 that is not going to happen. guess what? i wore mine. it s a one-piece. brian: you should cover it? is it fire retardant? ainsley: we are not going to try that out. let s not test it. steve: thank you very much for joining us on a friday. kind of a long week. nonetheless, will and racism are having breakfast with friends along of the big race this weekend. how did you get some people in there so early? must be the coffee? rachel: it s the coffee but florida just loves fox news. steve: yes, they do. rachel: true fans of our network. we are excited bass we we
ohio it is not eligible for federal disaster assistance in the after math of a toxic train crash in east palestine. good morning, i m bill hemmer. dana has the day off. back by popular demand sandra smith. this is america s newsroom. fema shooting down the governor s request. the agency said the toxic bill in east palestine does not qualify as a traditional natural disaster. bill: the administration is sending funds to help with medical costs. the head of the epa was there for the first time. on the scene yesterday ohio senator j.d. vance. it is like chemicals coming out of the ground. let me show this to people. watch this. you can see the chemical pop out of the creek. this is disgusting. the fact that we have not cleaned up the train crash, the fact these chemicals are still seeping in the ground is an insult to the people who live in east palestine. sandra: health officials insist the water is safe to drink. but people who live there are concerned. i haven t s
into the use of artificial intelligence. they are worried about the risks of developing machines designed to be smarter than humans and how fast things are moving right now. correspondent matt finn is live tonight in los angeles with a top story right out of a science fiction movie. good evening, matt. good evening, bret. this list of more than 1100 people calling for a temporary halt in artificial intelligence includes names that are considered some of the biggest ai advocates and greatest minds of our time. among them elon musk ceo of spacex and twitter. steve wozniak the co-founder of apple and andrew yang former 2020 presidential candidate. tech leaders are asking all ai laps immediate ai pause developing than the latest chatgpt platform. the pause should be public and verifiable so independent experts can develop a shared standard of safety protocols. the tech leaders say artificial intelligence can pose profound risks to society writing in part, quote: contemporary ai
the hour. growing pressure on president biden to finally speak out about the chinese spy flight and three other objects shot down from the skies over north america. lawmakers on both sides of the aisle are pushing for the president to be more transparent about the decision to shoot down the objects and the growing threat from china. welcome to a new hour of america s newsroom, i m dana perino. bill: good morning. how are we doing? dana: fast hour. bill: i m bill hemmer. president biden so far keeping silent about the airborne objects shot down over the weekend. that was last weekend as lawmakers demand answers. the white house now considering plans for biden to give a speech on the topic before heading to poland on monday. secretary of state antony blinken will have a possible opportunity to meet with china s top diplomat later this week in germany. his first chance to de-escalate the tension face-to-face. mike pompeo saying it is time for the biden administration to
run and if he does not, i will be running with him. you see the momentum holding kamala harris off the ticket. i made it clear that my intention was to play and my intention was to play for the new york jets. we start this hour with fox news alert, brand new video showing the moment, the very moment a russian fighter jet buzzes then collides with the u.s. drone this week. that s right, you can see the plane dumping the fuel on the drone which is an estimated tag about $30 million before it clipped the propeller of the drone and sent the drone into the black sea. lucas is live in washington as we learn the russians are searching for the debris 5,000-feet below the sea. lucas. good morning. you can see this video is showing what u.s. forces are calling flanker. at a high rate of speed, happening 75 miles they re bumping fuel which vaporizes instantly when it hits the air. the drone is being destroyed. it is going ton for 35 to 45 minutes before the collision happened.