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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  August 17, 2024 4:00am-5:00am PDT

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♪ ♪
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will: it's the 7 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" weekend starting with this, all eyes on pennsylvania this weekend. vice president harris is kicking off a bus tour while former president trump is expected to slam her economic plans at a rally in the state today. pete: plus, as both candidates get ready for their first debate next month, trump is recruiting a familiar face to help him prepare. >> she put over 1500 people in jail for marijuana violations and laughed about it e when she was asked if she ever smoked marijuana. she kept people in prison ontheir sentences, and people who suffered under your reign as prosecutor, you owe them an apology. rachel: and from mom to roommate, the sleepover is sparking debate as one mom bunks up with her daughter on her first night at college are. the second hour of "fox & friends" weekend starts right now. ♪
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♪ will: nashville? pete: it looks a lot like it, but it's missing a key ingredient because we've got a batman building that's very distinct. so either that's not in the shot or that's a different portion -- rachel: but you're saying it's in tennessee? pete: that's what will is saying. i'm going to say cincinnati. rachel: i'm going to say, i don't know, alabama? will: just take the whole state? pete: birmingham? will: des moines, iowa. pete: des moines, iowa. a little more -- des moines' bringing a little more than i thought. will: -- can't do it in the future. i'll take arizona. i get all the cities. pete: yeah, ohio -- anything with -- rachel: i don't like this game, and you know it, so i'm just going to play by my own rules.
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pete: it's amazing how states can be -- all eyes are on iowa at the beginning, now it's all pennsylvania. we should just show skylines of pennsylvania -- rachel: actually, we should know it's pennsylvania but let's just figure out each city in pennsylvania. from now until election. pete: only philadelphia and pittsburgh -- quick, name four more -- will: scranton. rachel: allentown. florida florida if i don't know if that's how you pronounce it. harrisburg, right in the middle. bucks county. if i know a county. [laughter] rachel: see, we actually learn something -- pete: this is where you come for hot political analysis. will: -- kentucky. pete: that's not a real name. rachel: you guys need to learn more geography, i think kamala harris needs to learn more about economics. here she is unveiling what donald trump is calling the maduro plan. she's calling it the opportunity
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economy. listen. >> as president, i will be laser focused on creating opportunities for the middle class that advance their economic security, stability and dignity. together, we will build what i call an opportunity economy. [cheers and applause] an opportunity economy. an economy where everyone can compete and have a real chance to succeed is. everyone, regardless of who they are or with where they start, has an opportunity to build wealth for themselves and their children. and where we remove the barriers to opportunity. pete: is so lots of political words there that anyone could say, but the question is, what does that really mean.
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equal opportunity is wonderful, but maybe it looks a lot more like equal outcome. rachel: yeah. pete: so here's a quick layout of some of what kamala harris laid out yesterday and is being panned for because it's over the top government control kind of stuff. $25,000 down payment, so just free giveaway if you're buying your first home. there's a lot of restoration of the child tax can credit -- will: and an expansion. pete: and an expansion. limiting annual out of pocket expenses for prescription drugs and then a federal ban on grocery price gouging. that's a big one there where there's not a lot of definition around what it means. some bureaucrat in washington, d.c. going to dictate, you know, what bacon prices in harrisburg, pennsylvania ors is going to be and how -- pennsylvania, is going to be and how does that end up working and how has it worked out in the past? by the way, do you know how much private, private, i don't know,
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industry, experience harris and walz have? rachel: right. pete: zero. rachel: can you imagine -- pete: business experience, zero. rachel: -- being in charge of the dairy industry, they're going to figure out the prices for mil, for cheese, for butter. of by the way, it isn't just groceries, it's going to go across industries. of course, this is going to bring black markets, shortages, hoarding, bread lines. it's obvious what's going to happen. donald trump took to truth social, and he said if you think things are expensive now, they will get a hundred times worse if kamala gets four years as president. under her plan kamala will implement soviet-style price controls, she will abolish private health care and make california's ridiculous tax policies the law of the land meaning every american will be taxed up to 80 to % of their income. if you want more cash and less tax, vote trump. and i think we're just seeing the entire election defined
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right here, in my opinion. will: you know, pete, i like that you used the example of what would bacon prices be in harrisburg, pennsylvania, because -- and i don't mean to be rudimentary about this, there's a reason that things like price controls, and you could extrapolate this to climate change as well, don't work. and it's because there's no single person, nor no single entity or bureaucracy that has the requisite knowledge of any particular -- and i mean this literally -- they don't know what would be the right price of bacon in harrisburg. and, by the way, that's different than what it is in pittsburgh and what it is in austin, texas, and that's different than what it would be in sacramento, california, because of supply chains, supply and demand. markets are complicated. they're very -- only real mechanism to determine appropriate pricing is the consumer in a free market who says not one individual, but thousands, millions of choices to say, yes, no, buy, sell. at a constant the rate.
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pete: absolutely. will: so no genius can sit in washington, d.c. and go, no, here's the right price for your groceries. pete: correct. will: and, by the way, same thing with the climate. there's no genius in moscow, beijing or washington, d.c. that goes, you know what? a tweak here and turn the dial up here, we can set the global thermostat at a exactly the right temperature to preserve humanity for, i don't know, x number of years. there's just no group of people that genius. pete: you're right. and if so that's why their policies are a combination of idiocy and hubris. rachel: yeah. pete: anybody who's arrogant enough to think they can do it is also an idiot because they're ignoring all the a fact toss or that would -- factors that would go into that. my dad drives by this gas station to go to that a gas station because it's two cents cheaper over there -- rachel: sean does the same thing. [laughter] pete: it's baked in right now. and no one else can do that. rachel: it's true.
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we should look at her history, she is the daughter of a marxist economics professor at a stanford. by the way, pete buttigieg is also the son of a marxist. these are the people who will be the new leaders should kamala harris be elected. so it's important, they're telling you right now, months before the election, what they will do. and we ought to pay attention. if meanwhile, there's going to be a debate, and donald trump is preparing for that debate using tim city gabbard -- tulsi gabbard a, who debated kamala harris. here's a flashback of some of those highlights that tulsi encountered during her debate time. >> there are too many examples to the cite, but she put over 1500 people in jail for marijuana violations, then laughed about it when she was asked if she ever smoked marijuana. [cheers and applause] she blocked evidence, she blocked evidence that would have freed an innocent man from death row until the courts forced her to do so. >> i am proud of making a decision to not just give fancy speeches or be in a legislative
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body and give speechessen on floor, but actually doing the work of being in the position to use the bauer that i had to reform a system that is badly in need of reform. >> the bottom line is, senator harris, when you were in a position to make a difference and an impact in these people's lives, you kid not. and worse yet, in the case of those who are on beth row, innocent people -- death row, you actually blocked evidence from being revealed that would have freed them until you were forced to do so. there is no excuse for that. [applause] and the people who suffered under your reign as prosecutor, you owe them an apology. will: so tulsi -- rachel: she's good. [laughter] will: and so tulsi's playing kamala now in debate prep. he's beginning the debate prep. tulsi is playing kamala. kamala, by the way, has also gone into debate prep. i believe she's at howard university, her alma mater, doing debate prep. the line that i like tulsi said there was you were in a position
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of power and when you kid, this is what you did. because the reboot of kamala harris is to presume she hasn't been in power -- pete: the last three and a half years. rachel: or is it still in power, will? pete: it's amazing a too, think about the warp speed of our politics. that's 2019. kamala harris was a failed presidential candidate who couldn't get more than 1%, now she's the nominee and 80 days away from an election, and tulsi gabbard was a democrat presidential candidate, and in this cycle she was on the short are list to be the vp for the republicans. [laughter] it's how quickly these things shift. but this debate is going to be key. and i don't think we can -- it's going to be difficult to overstate how significant getting this opportunity for a contrast will be considering we're going to get a coronation for the next week at at the dnc. she hasn't done any interviews. she's had to talk a little bit about her economic policy. watch how much they pull back now. she dipped her toe in -- will: it did not go well.
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pete: watch them go right back into the bubble all the way until september soth, and then i just -- soth -- 10th, and then i just hope we get actual exchangings because it could be meaningful. by the way, lara trump who's the rnc co-chair, talked about the debate prep, what it looked like on somebody's husband's show. "the bottom line." >> tulsi eviscerated kamala harris in 2019, there's no doubt. she's part of our team, and she is one of the people who's helping donald trump prepare for the september 10th debate so get the popcorn popping, guys, because it's gonna be good. pete: sure is. rachel: you know, it's funny, i love that you brought up just all the changes, pete, like, you know, tulsi is now helping donald trump, was actually being considered -- because in effect, if you look at this and especially the way kamala has come, you know, was installed, the way they're bubble wrapping her and protecting her because she's not really in charge.
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and in so many ways, this debate is really like she is the system. she is that, you know, the figure head in this cabal of, you know, autopilot administrative state, whatever you want to say, that's running our country right now. and donald trump is running against the system. if you want to blow up the system and go back to the, you know, system where the people actually empower one person to be in charge and be the executive, you're going to vote for donald trump. if you want what we're seeing right now which is i don't know who's in charge, somebody is running things. it's not kamala. she's on the campaign trail. it's not joe biden. i just think we're not talking enough about what's happening right now. we want to talk about november, but what's happening? what's -- who's running our country? pete: i don't know. good question with. rachel: have you thought about it, pete? [laughter] pete: i don't think too much about it. if you do, you go down these dangerous, dark rabbit holes -- rachel: well, that's the point,
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right? you're going to vote for more of this. pete: well, exactly. that's got to be the contrast. trump's four versus their three and a half. rachel: yeah. will: meanwhile, the fbi is responding to claims that the organization released thomas, crooks' body for cremation just days after he opened fire at former president trump's rally in butler, pennsylvania, last month. rachel: one republican congressman is slamming the organization's handling of the ongoing investigation. pete: chanley painter joins us with the details. >> reporter: hey, good morning. the allegations are outlined in a 6-page investigatory report by republican congressman clay higgins from louisiana as a part of his role on the bipartisan task force investigating the july 13th rally shooting. higgins, a former police captain, visited the crime scene in butler on august 5th, but when he asked to view the body of the shooter, 20-year-old thomas crooks, he learned it was already gone. in fact, the fbi released the body to crooks' family for cremation just ten days after
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the assassination attempt writing, quote: butler county coroner technically had no legal authority, but i spoke with the coroner, and he would never have released crooks' body to the family for cremation or burial without specific permission from the fbi. higgins says the fbi did give that permission, and now because the authorities no longer have the body, higgins says he can't confirm if any findings writing this. we will actually never know. we'll get the reports and pictures, but i will not ever be able to say with certainty that those are accurate. according to my own examination if of the body. higgins also panned the fbi for releasing the crime scene after just three days. higgins further alleges the fbi cleaned up biological evidence from the scene which he says is unheard of. the fbi, though, is firing back with this statement saying, quote. we have followed normal procedures mt. handling of the crime scene and evidence. the fbi continues its painstaking work on the investigation to develop as
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complete a picture as a possible of what led to the shooting, and we remain committed to maximum transparency. well, guys, the fbi goes on to say that any allegations of interference with congressional efforts is inaccurate and unfounded. back to you. pete: thank you -- will: thank you, chanley. pete: appreciate it. rachel: you guys trust the fbi in this investigation? pete: i don't know. i trust a lot of fbi agents. i would hope whoever did the initial autopsy on the body would be like, oh, this clown, you know, let's get it right on what -- his cause of death, log it and then i don't know. that's -- but do i trust the fbi writ large? of course not. rachel: the family of the trump fan who was there and was shot and killed, the father who died protecting his children, that family has now hired an attorney. they want to do their own investigation. they want to get to the bottom of what really happened, so that's also -- pete: it's a reflection of our sad state of affairs, you can't trust the institutions.
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rachel: yeah. that's where we're at. pete: all right, let's turn now to a few additional headlines starting with new york city mayor eric adams says he's done nothing wrong after he was reportedly hit with another round of subpoenas as part of a corruption probe into his 2021 campaign finances. >> whatever information we can give to show that we have complied with the rule, we're going to do that. this is all part of the process. we're going to follow that process and come out on the other side. pete: he loves shirts with logos. back in july investigators requested text messages and other communications. attorneys for mayor adams and his campaign say they're in the process of responding to subpoenas. and ford is recalling 85,000 police suvs after a officials say 18 vehicles caught fire under the hood. the recall applies to ford explorers with the police interceptor utility package from 2020-2022. officials say if your engine fails, oil or fuel might be released into the hood area and
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ignite. ford says they aren't aware of anyone getting hurt and are working on a solution which is expected to come out next year. and calling all horror movie fans, the iconic house from the 19822 film poltergeist is hitting the market. [background sounds] >> they're here. pete: i've never seen it. will: me neither. pete: the california home has been listed for the first time in more than 40 years going for over $1 is 1.11 million and, don't worry, the realtors promise that the house is ghost-free -- rachel: you never saw poltergeist? will: no. not a big horror movie guy. pete: likewise. rachel: yeah. no, but it just shows, like, we're not that far -- i'm not that much older than you guys,
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but i am older than you guys. my generation, everyone knew. will: forgetting generations when they come out, some movies, i think poulter poltergeist is there. like the exorcist, never saw it. rachel: really? can i tell you this story? the exorcist came on, and i watched it with my mom, and i was scared to death. and i looked over at my mom at the end of the film, and i was thinking, i've got to go to bed, i'm so freaked out, and i was, like, mom, this can't really happen, right? and she was, like, oh, yes -- [laughter] good catholic moms, like, you bet this stuff is real. so anyway, it freaked me out. [laughter] pete: i just don't have any interest really. will: i saw freddy krueger movies, one or two, nightmare on elm street. maybe i watched one friday the 13th. that one didn't get me because jason walked and everybody else ran -- [laughter] he walks, they run, how does he
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get to them? rachel: yeah, but they were all high. [laughter] the teens were always high. all right. does this campaign promise from vice president harris surround like she's -- sound like she's high or sound familiar? [laughter] listen up. >> i will work to pass the paris ever federal ban on price gauging on food. >> i am today ordering a freeze on all prices and wages. pete: price gauging. rachel: david asman on what harris can learn from history about a economics. ♪ ♪ if the ergo smart base from tempur-pedic
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♪? >> as president, i will be laser focused on creating opportunities for the middle class. together, we will build what i call an opportunity economy. i will work to pass the first ever federal ban on price gauging on food. will: that's vice president kamala harris promising to implement a federal ban on corporate price gouging to fight inflation, but history has shown us policies like this don't work
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not just overseas, not just in latin america, not just in the soviet union, but in the united states. let's throw it back to the 1970s. >> the time has come for decisive action, action that will break the vicious circle of spiraling prices and costs. i am today ordering a freeze on all prices and wages throughout the united states for a period of 90 days. will: on august 15th, 1971, nixon announced a 90-day hold on all prices and wages across the united states. now, interestingly, after this 90-day hold on everything -- wages, every type of productgood for 90 days, inflation fell from 6% undown the 3% over a 22-year period. -- 2-year period. but when the government eased off these recs, prices immediately shot back up. this was in 1973. so what did nixon try to do? of course, put the freeze back in, put another restriction on prices of goods and wages.
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stricter controls. but this time it's like a gas pedal that you hit too many times, it didn't work to control or tame inflation. at that point in american history. that's america. that's the 1970s. now, let's bring in fox business an color david asman to walk through -- anchor. david, great to see you this morning. it's pretty shocking, actually. when we listen to kamala, we do think of venezuela and the soviet union. it's shocking to to go back in our own history and say we've toyed with this kind of stuff, and we can really analyze did or did it not work with nixon. >> well, nobody thinks that it works. i mean, you have analysts on cnn, you have "the washington post," you have "the new york times,"s you have jason furman who was a former democrat -- he was in the white house informing democrats about how to work the economy. everybody knows it doesn't -- two things happen when you use price controls. first of all, you repress inflation. it's like a boiling pot of water
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and you put a lid on it and slam the lid on tight. eventually, it's going to explode. that's exactly what happened in the 1970s after nixon put this his price controls on. once he took -- first of all, the reason he took them off, the price controls, is because it also creates shortages. that's the second thing it does. because companies simply stop producing stuff that that they can't make money on. that's how the free market works. you produce things that you can make money from. if you lose money every time you produce something because of price controls, you stop making it, and that leads to shortages. we had shortages in the '70s on gas, these long, long gas lines. you had to wait four or five hours to get a tank of gas. we had -- on everything that we put price controls on, we ended up with shortages. and, oven, we've seen it in vens wall la, we saw it in the -- venezuela, we saw it in the soviet union.
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when you take the price controls off, you have this explosion of inflation which we saw in the mid to late '70s. that had to wait until ronald reagan came along to fix the problem, and he did. will: right. >> she's trying to resurrect the most agreed upon disaster in economic policy, and it just shows also her ignorance of the way the economy works, the way businesses work. i mean, the most fundamental thing about business is if you can't make money doing something, you stop doing it. will: you know, david -- by the way, for anyone who's watching, i know many are old enough to remember, for those young enough not to describe, what david's describing is striking images, seeing cars lined up down the street in the '70s, that's mesh. i'd almost love to do another wall to show this is actually the inevitable result. these are dominoes falling. in other words, if you institute a government policy of spending more than you have over an extended period of time, then you have to print money from the
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federal reserve, then you have inflation. >> right. will: then you have to raise interest rates from the federal reserve to try to tame inflation. at some point, you arrive at the domino she just knocked over which is price controls, and you're projecting forward we know what comes after that. the next domino is shortages. this is the chain of events we're headed down in america. >> well, the dumbest suggestion that she made yesterday -- and, presumably, she's being advised by economists that are as dumb as she is in term of their understanding of economics -- is the idea that rising prices are the cause of inflation. heir not the cause of inflation -- they're not the cause, they're the result of inflation. inflation is created by too much money created by the government and too few goods because they're not -- there are too many restrictions on producing things whether that's a lot of regulations, high taxes, whatever it is. you have to either increase the supply of goods by tax, lowering
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tax rates and lowering regulations or by stopping printing so much money or, best of all, do both, which is what ronald reagan did. will: right. >> so he had growth and a slowing down of inflation. you don't need to have a recession in order to kill inflation. will: right. >> you just need more supply of goods. that's good for everybody. it's good for the economy, it lowers the debt -- will: well, this is incredibly important analysis. get more of this from david today, 3:00 eastern time, journal editorial report. you can always a get great economic analysis, and it's never if been more important than when you hear this type of proposal coming from a candidate for president. david, great to see you. thank you. >> thanks for the plug, appreciate it. will: all right. the godfather of fentanyl. a new fox mission special introduces us to the chemist behind america's deadliest drug, next. ♪ ear ago. but he's still living in the red. with a very high risk of another attack.
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♪ >> this is the true story of the deadliest clandestine chemist in american history and the birth of the street fentanyl epidemic. as told by the man who created it. >> this is a product that was made for killing people. >> so you feel like you were able to successfully pull that off for how long? >> years. many years. pete: he's called the godfather of fentanyl. a new fox nation special introduces us to the self-taught chemist behind our country's deadly drug epidemic. our next guest is featured in the special, former oklahoma bureau of narcotics agent and
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the author of the book lethal doses, john mattinger joins us now. what are people -- this is a fascinating topic. it's something that has, it's a huge part of our political conversation. it has devastated communities and lives, this drug, which is highly addictive. what are people going to learn in this special about this issue we're facing as a country right now? >> yes, good question. i really think that one of the big messages in this is going to be that here's guy who was the only chemist making fentanyl at the time, he was the only one, had the only laboratory in the country. he was the only person distributing it, he and his organization. it still took me three years to catch him, to find him and put him away. and after he was caught, fentanyl went away. there were no more fentanyl deaths in the united states for 12 years. so how do we deal with a
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situation like that today when we have overseas labs and hundreds of, hundreds of people making it and we haven't got access -- pete: welsh you studied this, how do we deal with this? is it china? is it border closures? candidates are talking about it, what would actually address it? >> yeah. personally, i don't really see a solution in sight anytime soon. the pharmaceutical manufacturers, there's 25,000 chemical companies making chemicals in china and 800,000 -- 80,000 companies in india. so you have -- huh how do you, how do you get a grip on that that's all outside the united states? we're going to have a very difficult time controlling it even if -- and i don't think they really want to -- china wanted to stop the it. pete: the guy -- yeah, the godfather, what was his, was he
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interested in making money? did he -- because at the point, is this overdosing or are we being, are americans being poisoned by this in is this an -- what was his intention and what is the intention now, i guess, is my question. >> well, he was in for the money. he was a self-taught chemist. he was kicked out of high school for truancy. brilliant mind. he was recognized early for his intelligence. he made not just fentanyl over his career, but just about a everything else. he made everything from boot bootleg booze to heroin. he made lsd for janis joplin and the grateful dead, he made methamphetamine for motorcycle gangs. he was a person who made whatever he wanted for money. pete: well, now we're losing a lot of people as that process has been replicated,
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tragedyically, so many times over. john maddinger, thank you for your time. >> you're very welcome. pete: as we've said. all eyes on pennsylvania as trump heads to the swing state with kamala harris right behind him. pennsylvania congressman a dan meuser is here with what he expects to to hear from the former president later today. new must be. ♪ -you the man! cologuard is for people 45+ at average risk, not high risk. false positive and negative results may occur. ask your provider for cologuard. ♪ i did it my way ♪
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will: we're back with a fox weather alert. hurricane ernesto making landfall in bermuda as a category one storm. residents can expect rain, strong winds and flooding. hundreds currently without power. pete: and in north carolina, the storm's swell causing a house to collapse into the ocean. no word if anyone was hurt. life-threatening rip currents are expected along the east coast for the next few days. rachel: turn to chief meteorologist rick rick reichmuth. rick: have any of you been to bermuda? will: no. rachel: i have. rick: it's a really tiny island, there's so many storms that go there, but not that many make direct landfall, only11 as far as we know. 111 storms ever making -- 111
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storms ever making direct landfall. it's 3211 miles long and just about a mile and three-quarters wide. 211 miles long. -- 21 miles long. another one making landfall in bermuda. it's built quite well to be able to sustain storms, certainly a category one, but it will be a rougher day. the eastern seaboard beaches already closed because of the rip current, you see all of that energy especially by tomorrow making its way here, maybe a nod flood threat across parts of interior secs across sunday and monday. back to you. will: thank you, rick. donald trump and kamala harris both heading back to pennsylvania this weekend. harris hits pittsburgh tomorrow to launch her bus tour, but trump will be rallying voters today in wilkes bar, pennsylvania. rachel: the latest polls show harris and trump separated by
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single digits in the keystone state as both sides look to build support in that creating bat -- critical battle grownt. pete: pennsylvania congressman dan meuser joins us now. thanks for being being here. everybody's math includes pennsylvania. both sides. it is definitely ground zero for this campaign. what's going to be the key on the ground for these campaigns when it pertains to -- i know pittsburgh and philadelphia, they're different areas, different cities, different needs, but what's the key in pennsylvania? >> yeah, hey, great to be with you all a, thanks. well, firstoff, of course, there's going to be a lot of money spent. they're at $110 million, we're in the neighborhood of close to that. we're not going to outspend 'em, but we're going to outwork them. we now have over 350,000 more republicans registered versus democrats versus 2020, but there's something even more important. the rnc, you should lara trump and michael whatley working with myself and many others, we have
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a get out the vote ballot, mail-in ballot initiative as well as a protect the vote initiative. as a matter of fact, we're signing up thousands and thousands of people, and we need others to get onboard to be poll workers. so we've got concern -- we're not going to be caught sleeping this time around. perhaps we were in 2020. we're going to be maximizing the vote, we're going to be, we're going to be protecting the vote. but i'll tell you what, pete, you know as a well as i know president trump's policies are proven to work, and kamala harris' policies are out in left field. and that's, that a's what we're going to prove. we need informed voters. the more informed voters we have, the more we will win by the margin will increase. rachel: yeah, i agree. i think getting your information out, getting past the propaganda coming from the left and the media is going to be important. i know, congressman, when i've been out talking to people in wisconsin, the number one issue they wanted to talk to was this protect the vote. so beyond poll watchers, is
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there anything else that the republican party is doing to protect the vote? >> you know, we are. i'm talking with our secretary of state the who is with a democrat governor, but we're also working with our county commissioners. we have 67 counties. they understand what their authority is. they are in charge of the election bureaus. everybody needs to understand what their authorities are, what the best practices are for election rules, and they need to be the followed. and, again, what their authority is so they can't be, frankly, pushed around at the wrong time come election day and even prior. but, again, it's the enthusiasm. look, kamala harris is on the so-called honeymoon. it hasn't even begun yet, the real campaign. if we can expose half of who she really is to half of her current supporters, we're going to win by a landslide. and one thing we know, president trump is no phony. he wears his personality, his
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policy, he owns it, and we all know that he's about putting america first. where's kamala in this? i mean, america last at best? if. will: yeah. congressman meuser, thanks so much for being with us. we'll be watching today and throughout this cycle, pennsylvania. >> going to be a good one. thanks very much. rachel: have a great rally. will: meghan and harry are taking unloyal trips, and why is mom sleeping in your college dorm? rachel: it's not me. [laughter] emily campagno is here to help me break it all down in my pop if culture round i-up. pete: here we go. good to see you, good morning.oa ♪ parodontax active gum repair breath freshener clinically proven to help reverse the 4 signs of early gum disease a toothpaste from parodontax, the gum experts. we really don't want people to think of feeding food
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food isn't just fuel to live. it's fuel to grow. my family relied on public assistance to help provide meals for us. these meals fueled my involvement in theater and the arts as a child, which fostered my love for acting. the feeding america network of food banks helps millions of people put food on the table. when people are fed, futures are nourished. join the movement to end hunger and together we can open endless possibilities for people to thrive. visit feedingamerica.org/actnow food isn't just fuel to live. it's fuel to grow. my family relied on public assistance to help provide meals for us. these meals fueled my involvement in theater
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and the arts as a child, which fostered my love for acting. the feeding america network of food banks helps millions of people put food on the table. when people are fed, futures are nourished. join the movement to end hunger and together we can open endless possibilities for people to thrive. visit feedingamerica.org/actnow ♪ rachel: all right, well, it's time for another pop culture round-up, and this time outnumbered cohost emily campagno was kind enough the to join us to dish about the latest hollywood has to offer. we're starting off with, of course, prince harry and megyn hand. [laughter] durable when they said they were going to is stay out of the spotlight? yeah, right. they're traveling to colombia for what's being called a quasi-royal trip this weekend just after their chief of staff resigned after only three
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months. first of all, these tours are like fake royal tours. they're not royalty anymore. >> but someone's picking opportunity tab, because where they're staying is $3,000 a night. apparently, the president kindly said after i saw the netflix special, i knew meghan had to come visit and tell her story so, clearly, she's a generous -- rachel: colombia has so many problems. the vice president's watching netflix and saying this documentary is worth having her over? what? and apparently their goal is to bridge the gap between, you know, mental health and others and really promote, for example, cyber and digital safety. sort of the question remains which you alluded to, are they really the best ambassadors for that kind of thing? rachel: they're bullies. i don't know why they're talking about this. also, good point, they lost their latest pr person only after three months. that says all you need to know. she probably needs mental health services after that. [laughter] all right. welsh spain is investigating an
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unauthorized katy perry music video in a protected natural area. spain claiming that they filmed this on the sand dunes of -- [speaking spanish] and that, apparently, they didn't get permission, but i don't understand because you can't shoot a video like this without a license. >> right. so okay, so this is, actually, i think an important story because according to the katy perry team, we were told all the guys have the necessary permits, we were toll verbally, yes, it's okay to proceed. my lesson to everyone is don't just rely on the boots on the ground. you have to make sure that, indeed, you have the permits. do you remember tokyo terrorist? that was actually filmed without permits because they knew they could never get the appropriate permits they were, like, guys, we have 10 minutes to do this before the cops come. and you also remember in australia when then amber heard and johnny depp brought their dog, they were criminally prosecuted. know the local rules and be
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prepared to pay for them. rachel: good point. this is my favorite story. apparently now the latest rage are run clubs. so gen-z is getting a off apps concern thank you. thanks for listening to me. they're getting off the apps. these clever, genius marketers, these four guys, said we're going to start run clubs. they're popping up all over. young people are coming, they're doing something healthy and meeting other singles. this is my favorite story. >> look, i only run if i'm being chased, however, i love that it's healthy and not centered around alcohol. as someone who -- rachel: they do drink after. >> they drink after. but i host the fox true crime podcastings, i carry a taser and pepper spray, take it from me, still don't go home with those people. doesn't matter if you met the guy at the run club, still be safe, ladies. that's my advice. rachel: you're ready to be a mom. [laughter] the next story you're going to like. all right, this mom goes to her
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daughter's to move her in as i have done multiple times, moving the daughter into the dorm room. my daughter wouldn't wait -- couldn't wait to kick me out. this mom stayed the night and had a sleepover. what do you make of this? this is breaking the internet. >> and they're divided. half the internet is like, do what everyone else does, you say good bye and cry in the car. the other half is, like, no, this is great. this is the epitome of a mother-daughter bond. i think the closing line was important, the daughter said this helped me with my anxiety. maybe she has so much anxiety because her mom won't let her or go. rachel: i was also conflicted, i wish my daughter would have liked me to today. >> go on, like, parents' night. maybe mom's weekend -- >> they should do a moms' sleepover night so all the moms get to do it. [laughter] emily, thank you so much. we'll be right back.
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while i am a paid actor, and this is not a real company, there is no way to fake how upwork can help your business. upwork is half the cost of our old recruiter and they have top-tier talent and everything from pr to project management because this is how we work now.
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