begging you to touch and go will: good morning and welcome to fox & friends. good morning and welcome to fox & friends live from the daytona international speedway in daytona beach, florida, for the daytona 500 today, 2:30 eastern time on fox. we re right here, yards away from the track. rachel: we re in the danger zone. [laughter] will: well, if yesterday was any indicator, the cars going around the track today will be the second faster thing you will see or hear, the second loudest thing you will hear. if the thunderbirds buzz us like they did yesterday [laughter] we ll all be ducking. rachel: it is lower than you think. pete: and i think we have eventually later on in the program, we re going to the play the clip of how we all reacted when the thunderbirds came over, because it was, like my wife was over there going, have you never heard that? it was out of nowhere, we dove. rachel: you and congressman waltz said the same thing which was when the bad guy
mine. they said you did 16 minutes? i got 8. i think you had most of the track to yourself. there was 14 cars out there. i passed one. the ride car, so you can ride with a professional driver, and you in the passenger seat, and those guys are going way faster, 175 on the high line. in truth i only went 145 [laughter] pete: well done. will: you are the champion, my friend pete: oh, wow, that s very gracious. pete: i will ache that. this is the only nascar trophy i will ever hold will: i don t know if i could feel the difference between 154 and 145, but you re out there corey, if i was going slow, it didn t feel like it. i felt like what you guys do, man, i know i m rambling, i feel like you could jerk the wheel this much and end up in the wall. it is terrifying and exhilarating. yeah, that s how i d describe it to. then put 39 other crazy guys around you going 70 miles an
derailment because everyone is concerned will, you had an amazing interview with a toxicologist which i found extremely informative and interesting. but the ceo of the train company, more folk southern norfolk southern, actually went to east palestine. here is what happened. i m here to support the community, and if you ll excuse me, that s where i m headed right now, listen to community members. will: that s alan shaw, norfolk southern ceo. he said the following as well, i returned to east palestine today to meet with local leaders, first responders and a group of norfolk southern employees who live in the area. and every conversation today i shared how deeply sorry i am this happened to their home. we are going to do the right things to help east palestine recover and thrive again. pete: if i mean, not a lot he can say at this point. i d just like the epa and fema, it feels like it should have happened a lot sooner. there is a lot of, it takes time
to gather information, i get that. but everything feels so delayed and almost rachel: reare acting, reacting to pete: yeah. if not for the media coverage or political pressure, these ceos, fema, other political wouldn t be showing up. and that s not the way it s supposed to look like. that s not actual leadership. rachel: and i think what concerns me, accidents happen. i mean, they happen. i was actually in a train crash when sean was in congress and we were on our way to a, an event up in maryland. so these things happen, and as pete buttigieg pointed out, more than we actually thought. and so one is, what is the government doing to make trains safer. but more importantly, when this happens, why were the residents not told immediately to the evacuate? why were they told to come back before the tests were done? because they re still testing right now, and yet they told the residents to come back which brings me to the interview that you had earlier with that toxicologist that was