
President Trump strikes a sweeping deal with Pfizer and unveils a new TrumpRX website, promising lower drug prices but reviving controversy over the company’s COVID vaccine record. Republicans and Democrats clash in a Senate hearing over crime policy. YouTube becomes the third tech giant to pay up, agreeing to a $24.5 million settlement with President Trump over his 2021 suspension. Pique: Get 20% off your order plus a FREE frother & glass beaker with this exclusive link: https://piquelife.com/MEGYN Lean: Visit https://TakeLean.com & use code MK for 20% off
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Good morning everyone. I'm Megyn Kelly. It's Wednesday, October 1, 2025. This is your AM update.
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For many years, Americans have made the highest prices anywhere in the world for prescription drugs. It's being changed as of today.
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President Trump announces a new deal with a surprising partner, Pfizer in an attempt to lower prescription drug prices, though not everyone is ready to make nice with the controversial Covid vax manufacturer.
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You say don't fund the police, but do fund programs that create safe spaces for two spirit people.
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Republicans and Democrats clash in a lively hearing on fighting crime and YouTube agrees to a pricey settlement with President Trump over his 2021 suspension. All that and more coming up in just a moment on your AM Update. Let's be honest. Afternoons can be rough. Energy fades, cravings kick in and focus goes out the window. Another coffee? That's the quick fix, but it can lead to jitters or a crash later. Peak's sun Goddess Matcha is another option. Whether it's how the day starts or how it gets back on track, this Matcha is not just a drink. It can be a better daily habit. It gives stuff steady energy and helps you focus without the ups and downs. This is not any Matcha. It's organic, ceremonial grade and grown in Japan's pure volcanic soil far, far away from pollution. It is shaded longer for more nutrients and blended by tea masters. That's how serious they are about quality. The taste is smooth, creamy and rich, not bitter like lower quality Matcha. It packs powerful antioxidants to keep you sharp and steady. Right now you can get up to 20% off for life plus a free rechargeable frother and glass beaker. It's backed by a 90 day money back guarantee. Go to peaklife.com Megan that's P I Q U E life.com Megan to try it for yourself again, that's P I Q U E Life.com Megan President Trump on Tuesday announcing two new developments in the drive to lower prescription drug prices for Americans, a new direct to consumer website for discounted medicines and a multi pronged deal with Pfizer slashing prices on most of its products. More on the sudden coziness with the much criticized Pfizer in just a moment. But first, the details of the announcement. The new website Trump Rx, set to launch in early 2026, it will allow consumers to pay cash for prescription drugs from the government website. Pfizer agreeing to sell some of its products on site at the discounted rates, including an arthritis drug at a 40% cut, a migraine medication for 50% less, and an osteoporosis drug reduced by 85%. In terms of the broader Pfizer deal, most of its products will be offered to Medicaid at most favored nation prices, meaning Americans pay no more than the lowest price paid by other developed countries. And the company will invest $70 billion in U.S. manufacturing and research. Pfizer is the first drug company to agree to all of the demands set out by the Trump administration in a July letter aimed at lowering prices. At the time, many analysts said it was unlikely to happen. Mr. Trump from the Oval for many.
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Years Americans have paid the highest prices anywhere in the world for prescription drugs. A major reason is that the American consumers have been subsidizing research and development costs for the entire planet. They put all of on us and yet they were the beneficiaries too. So it's being changed. As of today, the United states had just 4% of the world's population and consumers only 13% of all prescription drugs. Yet pharmaceutical companies make 75% of their profits from the United States.
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Now Pfizer describes the deal as a voluntary agreement to help American consumers, but it raises an obvious question. Why would a drug giant suddenly slash prices in its most profitable market? Well, Pfizer has secured a three year grace period from President Trump's tariffs on pharmaceuticals. Starting today, the US is imposing a 100% tariff on branded and patented pharma products unless the drug company is currently building a manufacturing plant within the United States. President Trump saying deals with other drug companies are in the works, specifically mentioning Eli Lilly. While one of the largest drug companies in the world, Pfizer's willingness to be the first to step forward is of note given the negative reputation the company has among many conservatives, including some top ranking White House officials, surrounding its lack of transparency on the potential harmful side effects of its COVID vaccine. For years, Pfizer has been hammered for how it marketed its Covid shot, downplaying serious side effects like myocarditis, especially among young males, and failing to be upfront with the public as the risks later emerged. White House Senior Counselor for Trade and Manufacturing Peter Navarro on the Patrick Bet David podcast in 2023 saying the dishonesty surrounding Covid from Pfizer hampered the early pandemic response.
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If he had simply owned up to the fact that that thing came from the lab, we could have pressured the Chinese to give us the genome sequence which would have allowed us to design an effective vaccine rather than the crap we wound up getting. And again, Trump got lied to about that, not just by Fauci, but by Pfizer, the drug company.
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In what way?
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They didn't disclose the side effects of that and they weren't clear with him. They made him think that it was a true vaccine when it's not. It's MRNA technology.
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President Trump on Monday praising Pfizer CEO Albert Bourla, saying he did a quote, fantastic job with COVID and a lot of things outkick writer Ian Miller posting to X quote Albert Bourla once posted that Pfizer's vaccine was 100% effective in stopping Covid transmission, which was demonstrably false and helped pave the way for vaccine passports and mandates. I do not think he did a fantastic job. Founder of Americans for Health Freedom Dr. Mary Talley Bowden posting to X quote what an effing slap in the face to all of the people injured and killed by Pfizer. Really heartless and disrespectful. Hundreds of smaller accounts posting similar reactions. Dr. Martin Kulldorf, a leading expert in vaccine safety and co author of the Great Barrington Declaration, along with Now NIH director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya, is now chair of the Advisory Committee on Immunization Practices. He says the lack of transparency by Pfizer continues to this day. Dr. Koldorff posting Monday on X In a randomized trial of their COVID vaccine, Pfizer found birth defects in eight babies to 156 vaccinated pregnant mothers and in two babies, two to 159 unvaccinated mothers. When asked at the advisory committee meeting, Pfizer did not explain. HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Yesterday not offering direct praise of Pfizer, but championing President Trump's work to lower drug costs, something Democrats have been arguing in favor of for years. However, here is how the secretary described Pfizer and other vaccine companies in a 2020 episode of Mike Tyson's Hot Boxing Podcast.
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The thing that people have to understand is that the four companies that make all 72 of those vaccines, which is Pfizer, Black Zone, Merck and Sanofi, all of those companies are convicted felons. And not only that, they're serial felons. Their business model is committing felonies. These companies in the last 10 years collectively have paid $35 billion in penalties, damages, fines for falsifying science, for defrauding regulators, lying to doctors, and for killing hundreds of thousands of people. It requires kind of a cognitive dissonance to believe that these companies that are lying and cheating on every other pharmaceutical product, every other medical device that they create are somehow found Jesus vaccines and aren't lying to us.
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Coming up, Republican and Democratic differences on crime fighting strategies come to a head in a Senate Judiciary Committee and YouTube becomes yet another big tech company to agree to a settlement with President Trump over its decision in 2021 to suspend his account. You know all those fad diets? Half of Americans do it and if you do it enough, you could be at risk of diabetes, liver damage, heart attack and stroke. Weight cycling is when you lose 10 or more pounds, but then you put the pounds back on plus a couple more that puts tremendous strain on your organs and can lead to serious health issues. Bottom line, most people need help to stop weight cycling. And this is why I want to tell you about non prescription Lean. Created by doctors, Lean is an oral supplement, not a GLP1 injectable. It uses studied ingredients which Lean says target weight loss in three powerful ways. Maintaining healthy blood sugar, helping control appetite and cravings burning fat by converting it to energy and burning fat helps keep the weight off. If you want to lose meaningful weight at a healthy pace and keep it off, consider adding Lean to your diet and exercise lifestyle. Get 20% off when you enter mkakelean.com that's code mkakelean.com GOP and Dem senators sparring yesterday at a Judiciary Committee hearing titled quote, blue City Chaos and Tragedy how the Trump administration is addressing the Human Cost of Soft on Crime policies. The hearing comes as President Trump surges federal agents across the most crime plagued US Cities and has spent weeks politely suggesting Democrat Governors like J.B. pritzker of Illinois request National Guard assistance in their states. The GOP pointing to the success of President Trump's D.C. crime crackdown as a model to rapidly clean up city streets. In a matter of weeks, the D.C. murder rate reduced by 53%. Robberies dropping 57%. Carjacking falling by 75%. That's according to the Senate Judiciary Committee. Democrats often arguing that red states actually suffer from the most violent crime. Senator Chuck Grassley of Iowa, a Republican, putting those statistics into context, Democrats missed.
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A key data point when they assert that the most violent cities are in red states. Almost all of those cities are run by Democrat mayors. Axio reports that of the 20 cities with more than 100,000 residents and the highest murder rate, 19 have a Democrat mayor. President Trump is willing to work with these mayors, but they keep turning down the offer for help, despite the fact that President Trump's efforts are working in places like D.C. and Memphis.
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Democrat Senator from New Jersey Cory Booker, in his typical dramatic fashion, accusing Republicans of deepening political divides for pointing out that Democrat cities often experience much higher crime rates.
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Dear God. We continue in this nation to deepen partisan divide and to undermine the truth that we share common cause, common purpose, and even common sense. And now I'm sitting in a hearing that somehow wants to pit red against blue, as if they're not Republicans and Democrats that live in every county, in every state, and all of us want the same thing, which is lower crime in our communities. This committee right now is having a hearing that is not about finding common ground and working to find solutions, but driving a false divide based upon a false pretext that somehow places that vote for one party over another are more dangerous. And that's just not true.
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Democratic Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois attempting to score points against the Trump administration's pardon of January 6th rioters with DC Police Union head Greg Pemberton. Here's how that went. So what was your reaction when President Donald Trump gave a full and unconditional pardon to 1500 individuals who had been prosecuted for violence against police officers?
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Well, it's frustrating to see that, but what I point to is since that day, since January 7, 2021 through today, we've had 1537 officers injured or someone has assaulted a police officer, and 95% of those cases have been no papered by the U.S. attorney's office. So, yes, it's frustrating to have officers who are assaulted, but the vast majority of those people that assaulted officers that day were arrested and charged, and many of them convicted, and should they be.
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Full and unconditionally pardoned.
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My frustration, Senator, is that no one seems to care about police officers who were assaulted after that day or before that day. It seems like people only care about police officers were assaulted on that day in the calendar. Police officers are assaulted all the time. No one seems to care about it. And that's our frustration.
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Senator Josh Hawley, Republican from Missouri, challenging former Biden Deputy Director of Gun Violence prevention, Gregory Jackson Jr. About a report he authored for the Community Justice Action Fund on defunding the police.
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This is so typical of what the Democrats do now after your policies have transparently failed and led to the deaths of, of millions of Americans. Now, you say you've never heard of defunding the police. Your own report recommends it on page after page after page. Instead of funding the police, here's what we ought to invest in. We need to invest in programs that acknowledge the need for safe space initiatives led by lesbian, gay, bisexual, two spirit, trans and gender non conforming people. What's two Spirit?
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Well, look, I don't know exactly.
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You guys are pulling some interesting quotes. This is from your report. What is two Spirit? You say they don't fund the police but do fund programs that create safe spaces for two Spirit people. What is? What?
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What is?
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I just want to know. I don't know what that is. I have no idea what that is.
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Well, I honestly, I'm not completely aware of the language.
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You wrote the report.
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YouTube agreeing on Monday to settle President Trump's 2021 lawsuit over his account's suspension for a cool 24.5 mil. Trump alleging in his lawsuit that YouTube, which is a private company, violated the First Amendment, which doesn't apply to private companies, when it prevented him from posting new videos on the platform in the aftermath of the capitol riot on January 6, 2021. The streaming platform now the third big tech company to settle with the president since the beginning of his second administration. In total, Mr. Trump racking up nearly 60 million bucks from Meta X and now YouTube. The lawsuits each filed after President Trump left the White House in 2021. The Wall Street Journal reporting 22 million of this settlement will go to the trust for the National Mall to build the new White House ballroom, which is expected to cost 200 million. YouTube originally justifying the ban, saying Mr. Trump's account violated policies against inciting violence in the aftermath of the January 6th rioting. YouTube reinstating the channel in March of 2023. The platform releasing a statement at the time, quote, we carefully evaluated the continued risk of real world violence while balancing the chance for voters to hear equally from major national candidates in the run up to an election. The settlement coming after a federal judge in April ruled that YouTube's parent company Google, had illegally monopolized online advertising technology. Mr. Trump's DOJ is now seeking to force Google to sell off part of its online advertising business. President Trump celebrating news of the settlement sharing a meme on social media depicting a sheepish looking tech executive handing over a Large check for 24.5 million on the White House lawn. And that'll do it for your AM Update. I'm Megyn Kelly. Join me back here for the Megyn Kelly show live on Syria SiriusXM Triumph Channel 111 at noon east on YouTube.com Megan Kelly and on all podcast platforms.
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Hey, everyone, it's Nikki and Bri, and we're here to let you know that we have a podcast, the Nikki and Bri Show.
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Yes.
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And we've got new episodes every Monday and Thursday. We're serving up real deal conversations that go beyond the cameras. Think motherhood confessions, sisterhood vibes, boss business energy and TV life.
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Tea.
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Need a laugh? We got you craving inspo. We got inspiration and affirmations on deck. Want a little cry or a big? Heck yes. That's our jam. Whether we're breaking down pop culture, sharing parenting wins or fails, unpacking personal growth, or just riffing on everyday chaos, nothing is off limits. Plus, we welcome incredible guests, play our favorite games, and do what only sisters can. Keep it 100 while raising a glass together. So pop a bottle, hit play and come hang with us. Listen to the Nicki and Bri show wherever you get your podcast.
Date: October 1, 2025
Host: Megyn Kelly (SiriusXM)
Episode Focus:
Today’s AM Update dives into three headline-grabbing stories: President Trump’s landmark pharmaceutical deal with Pfizer, a fiery Senate committee hearing highlighting GOP and Democratic clashes over crime, and a multi-million dollar settlement between YouTube and President Trump following his 2021 account suspension.
Segment starts: 00:39
President Trump announced a sweeping agreement with Pfizer aimed at sharply lowering prescription drug prices in the U.S., marking a dramatic shift in pharmaceutical policy.
“For many years, Americans have paid the highest prices anywhere in the world for prescription drugs... It's being changed as of today.” (03:51)
“If he had simply owned up to the fact that that thing came from the lab, we could have pressured the Chinese to give us the genome sequence... Trump got lied to about that, not just by Fauci, but by Pfizer, the drug company.” (05:45) “They didn’t disclose the side effects... made him think that it was a true vaccine when it’s not. It’s mRNA technology.” (06:11)
“The four companies that make all 72 of those vaccines... are convicted felons. Their business model is committing felonies... It requires kind of a cognitive dissonance to believe that these companies... aren't lying to us.” (08:13)
Segment starts: 09:09
A Senate Judiciary Committee hearing brought Republican and Democratic approaches to crime in American cities into sharp relief.
"Of the 20 cities with more than 100,000 residents and the highest murder rate, 19 have a Democrat mayor." (11:30)
Emphasized that Trump is willing to help, but Democratic leaders are rebuffing offers.
“Dear God. We continue in this nation to deepen partisan divide... Now I'm sitting in a hearing that somehow wants to pit red against blue... That’s just not true.” (12:16)
“It’s frustrating... but no one seems to care about police officers who were assaulted after that day or before that day. It seems like people only care about... that day in the calendar.” (13:53)
“Instead of funding the police, here's what we ought to invest in... safe space initiatives led by... two spirit... people. What's two Spirit?” (14:24)
Segment starts: 15:18
YouTube agreed to pay $24.5 million to settle Trump’s lawsuit over his account’s suspension in 2021. This follows similar settlements with Meta and X, bringing Trump's “big tech” haul up to nearly $60 million.
"We carefully evaluated the continued risk of real world violence while balancing the chance for voters to hear equally from major national candidates..." (paraphrased, 15:18)
| Timestamp | Speaker | Quote / Moment | |---------------|-------------|--------------------| | 03:51 | Trump | “For many years, Americans have paid the highest prices anywhere in the world for prescription drugs... It's being changed as of today.” | | 05:45 | Navarro | “Trump got lied to about that, not just by Fauci, but by Pfizer, the drug company.” | | 06:24 | Trump / Reactions | Trump praising Pfizer CEO, drawing a storm of online backlash | | 08:13 | RFK Jr. | “Their business model is committing felonies... It requires kind of a cognitive dissonance to believe that these companies... aren't lying to us.” | | 11:30 | Grassley | “Of the 20 cities... with the highest murder rate, 19 have a Democrat mayor.” | | 12:16 | Booker | “Dear God. We continue in this nation to deepen partisan divide...” | | 13:53 | Pemberton | “No one seems to care about police officers who were assaulted after that day or before that day.” | | 14:24 | Hawley/Jackson | “What's two Spirit?” ... “I honestly, I'm not completely aware of the language.” | | 15:18 | Kelly | YouTube’s $24.5 million settlement described; $22 million for National Mall ballroom |
This episode illustrated how Trump’s administration is pursuing direct deals to lower drug prices, even partnering with past adversaries like Pfizer. The Senate’s debate on crime laid bare deep partisan divides, with both sides defending their turf but rarely finding common ground. The YouTube settlement signaled Trump’s continuing battles—and victories—against big tech giants, reinforcing his combative post-presidency style.