steve: we start with fox news alert vladimir putin picture they are threatening to use nuclear weapons declaring he s not bluffing which meansu are bluffing. steve: the threat as hunter biden heading to address the leaders gathered in new york. ainsley: that is right. jacqui heinrich from downtown new york city, good morning to you, jackie. good morning, ainsley, steve, brian. the head at the summit was food shortages from the war in ukraine but that statement that speaks putin a threatening use of nuclear weapons and partial mobilization of the country s reserve troops. the first of its kind since world war ii. putin basically claimed nuclear threats of its own and framed a statement as a defensive move accusing the rest of nuclear blackmail and saying the last encourage ukraine to show the russian controlled nuclear plant in southeast ukraine. he accused the west also trying to divide and destroy his country. speak with those who tried to blackmail us with nuc
before you became a writer, you studied art history. mm. and then you worked as a cabinet makerfor a bit. i worked at wildenstein, the art dealership first, six months, the famous. moving paintings around. i was a stock boy for wildenstein but, i mean, the minute i got there, it was a fabulous job. i get to hold all the art, know all what they owned. they owned billions and billions of dollars of art. and i got to have that interaction with the stuff. then i worked as a. three months, apprenticed as a woodworker in newjersey with a master cabinet maker. then i went and led teenage girls through europe on these fancy trips, and then i ended up at the london school of economics. i did a master s in economics for two years. but from art history to cabinet making to london school of economics to do a master s in economics, it s not an obvious. there s no, no. ..path. i was growing. you were looking. i knew when i graduated that i. at every stop, i was writing. i knew i wanted to write, but
i worked at wildenstein, the art dealership first, six months, the famous. moving paintings around. i was a stock boy for wildenstein but, i mean, the minute i got there, it was a fabulous job. i get to hold all the art, know all what they owned. they owned billions and billions of dollars of art. and i got to have that interaction with the stuff. then i worked as a. three months, apprenticed as a woodworker in newjersey with a master cabinet maker. then i went and led teenage girls through europe on these fancy trips, and then i ended up at the london school of economics. i did a master s in economics for two years. but from art history to cabinet making to london school of economics to do a master s in economics, it s not an obvious. there s no, no. ..path. i was growing. you were looking. i knew when i graduated that i. at every stop, i was writing. i knew i wanted to write, but i didn t know how it was going to happen. you had a plan to go to wall street and make a ton of money and
chicken at the grocery store was what $4, $5? $5? the rotisserie chicken at the grocery store where peter doocy used to be the stock boy is $14. it is $14! it is a big chicken. $14! speed when i was shocked to see 7-eleven has rotisserie chickens, what an investment. they will focus on fruit and candy bars. steve: skewer through a chicken and spin and make hot dogs. ainsley: they have everything there, muffins, scones. steve: a cavalcade of deliciousness. ainsley: you just to go when they were to pay gas but many don t sell gas anymore. steve: you can buy wood, beer and cigarettes. brian: that was refreshing. by the way. ainsley: right next to the ice outside. brian: that is how people will heat their homes, by the way. steve: everybody in florida has it, just saying. brian: after saying