tv Fox and Friends Sunday FOX News September 27, 2015 3:00am-7:01am PDT
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sunday morning, it is september 27th, i'm elizabeth prann in for. a stampede at a crowded music festival. hundreds of people rushing the stage, turning the scene into chaos. moments later the details were released. and with poll numbers plummeting the hillary clinton campaign puts out a secret weapon, her husband. to blame the media for the e-mail scandal. watch this. >> what happened? the presidential campaign, and nature of the coverage shifted from issue based to political. >> wait. i thought hillary was taking responsibility for the scandal. but no!
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it's your fault. details ahead. and pope francis visit to the united states comes to an end today in philadelphia with a million expected at mass. but if this moment that everyone's talking about. you saw it live yesterday on our show. the pope stopping his motorcade to bless a disabled boy. this morning, he and his family will join us with their incredible story. it wasn't in the plan until they waved him over. "fox & friends" begins right now. ♪ did you get a new iphone this weekend by the way? could be a record breaker for the number of iphones fold. the iphone 6s and out. we're going to show you some of the new features. >> if you had it your way would we talk about technology the
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entire show? >> well, as tucker and i were saying we talk about technology a lot. and you want to go out to lunch with people that talk about other things. but i don't know that i want to spend four hours talking about it? >> three? >> you thought you had everything, your life was complete. if you don't have the new iphone -- >> i don't have it. >> tucker was walking down the hallway with tears in his eyes. >> i was. there's something missing. what is it? oh, it's a new gadget. >> there's a big hole in your life. we're going to fill it. but first the pope's historic visit to the united states comes to an end this evening. his six-day, three city tour, being capped off with a massive mass in philadelphia. >> that's right. last night pope francis turning his attention to the importance of marriage and family and a star-studded event. >> garrett tenney is live in washington with a look at what happened. >> good morning. last night we saw a different side of pope francis when he went completely off script from his prepared remarks. the pontiff spoke on the importance and beauty of the family, and the challenges they face before making a joke about
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mother-in-laws. it was a star-studded event, indeed, in front of 18,000 people from around the globe, with performances by aretha franklin, the fray, and andrea bocelli. in his remarks, pope francis praised family, saying god likes nothing more than a loving family and told the crowd to never end the day without making peace. he then closed out his remarks by calling for society to do more to protect them. >> translator: let us look after the family, let us protect the family, because it's in the family that our future is at play. >> pope francis finished off the night with one last joke, saying i'll see you all at mass tomorrow, before asking, what time is that again? that will, in fact, be at 4:00 p.m. today. back to you all. >> 4:00 p.m. today. >> we appreciate it. >> thanks, garrett. >> he was a big star, yesterday,
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of course. and he was very, very funny. and you had jim gaffigan coming out saying the pope was funnier than the comedians. >> yeah, he was funny. >> some were complaining because one of the actors on site was mark wahlberg. who is the producer, the rapper, there he is right there. son of boston daily mass goer, one of nine children, and a faithful catholic apparently. but he's also a controversial figure according to some watching this. >> i was kind of surprised at the critics. because one of the things that mark has said is that he doesn't have a perfect past. he said run-ins with the law in the '80s. he has been a part of some raunchy movies. but at the same time he said i'm a good father, i'm a good husband, and i'm a good person. so doesn't that define people who are all of us? we're not perfect people. i mean, we're really stretching here, i think, to be critical. >> i tend to kind of agree. i'm uncomfortable any time someone describes themself as a good person but i think mark wahlberg is may less offputting
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than most celebrities. he seems pretty real. he goes to mass every day. >> he's had a rough childhood. he didn't even know how many children that his mother had sired. children would just sort of show up at holidays because we didn't know. his parents got divorced when he was 10 years old. you know, potentially nine brothers and sisters but he doesn't know. he's had a real rough childhood. but he talked about catholicism openly and he's one of the most vocal actors in hollywood talking about his faith which, as you know, is not a popular topic in hollywood. >> yeah, it's not. >> so the pope said a lot yesterday. he talked about immigration policy. he talked about families. but on the way to center city, philadelphia, right after he landed, while on the tarmac, we got a picture of this, he stopped his vehicle because he saw a disabled boy in a wheelchair. he got out and then pleablessed child. >> this was all happening live. we were wondering if this was part, you know, part of his plan. he was about to drive into center city. and driving around the tarmac when he glasses over and he sees a couple of nuns that were
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there. and they were pointing down at the boy. he gets out, the 10-year-old boy, and goes over and kisses him. he's unable to speak. but it was a remarkable moment. and no one in the motorcade knew that he was about to do it. >> he asked the driver to stop, this young boy has cerebral palsy. he was there with his family, his twin brother, and his sister. and, in fact, they will be joining us live. but the father was so emotional he almost -- he had to look away. he was overcome with emotion. the mother started tearing up. they said it had been a long morning in some of the pieces i read, it hadn't been an easy trek getting there, they had been waiting for some time. and the boy can't communicate but they said he had a facial expression of relief when the pope embraced him. so it was really emotional, regardless of how you feel about religion. >> fantastic. i love this. i'm hardly a theologian but this seems much closer to the christian message than the policy stuff about global warming or immigration or whatever. stopping, kissing a boy in a wheelchair. i mean, you know, who doesn't
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see that and think, that's the point. and that photo- >> let's put up the still image. here's the moment when the pope stopped the car. so if you're driving the car, going to center city, no, i'm sorry, the pope is just telling me to stop the car. he's waving his hand out the car saying please stop, please stop. the whole motorcade comes to a halt. he gets out and goes over there. we're going to have the family here who was with the boy, obviously, on the tarmac, mike keating and the entire family here at 7:50 this morning. we're going to hear from them. >> so you may remember, it was about a week ago, hillary clinton was doing an interview about the e-mail scandal that's really kind of eclipsed her campaign. and she said you know what? i take responsibility for what i did wrong. now maybe you at home took her at face value. silly you, because her husband came out yesterday in an interview and basically revised those remarks to say it's not her fault at all, it's, of course, the fault of right-wing conspiracy and the media. here he is. >> the other party doesn't want
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to run against her, and if they do they'd like her as mangled up as possible. it always happens. we've seen history repeat itself. and i actually am amazed that she's borne up under it as well as she has. but, i have never seen so much expended on so little. she went out and did her interviews, said she was sorry that using her personal e-mail caused all this confusion, and she'd like to give the election back to the american people. you know, at the beginning of the year she was the most admired person in public life. and she earned it. why? because she was being covered by people who reported on what she was doing. what happened? the presidential campaign happened. and the nature of the coverage shifted from issue based to political. and it happens. you can't complain. this is not -- this is a contact sport. they're not giving the job away. >> oh, it's the campaign's fault. we're talking about the e-mails. >> the gop leadership coerce her
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to having not only her own server but her own e-mail address? >> the obama justice department, which is investigating her, is actually controlled by the right wing media, i don't know if you knew that. you guys have kids. if one of your children got caught doing something wrong and used this excuse, it's someone else's fault, my sister made me do it, the right wing media made me do it. would you spank the child? i would. >> it goes over really well when kids try to pass the buck. >> friends@foxnews.com. sit the media's fault? is it the campaign's fault for this e-mail scandal? >> the obama justice department controlled by right wingers? >> the answer to that is yes, of course. all right now to your headlines. a concert in arizona nearly turning deadly as thousands of people rushed the stage. dozens of ambulances, on the scene at tempe's summer end music festival. at least 12 people had to be treated for injuries. the crowd had stomp pedded toward the stage when the band revolution started playing. it was a band who actually
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halted the concert and called for help. the show later resumed in the evening. a new jersey community is grieving the loss of a beloved high school football star. 17-year-old evan murray suffering a fatal injury after being hit during a football game. the warren hills quarterback suddenly collapsed on the sideline, eventually being carted off by paramedics as he gave a thumbs up to the crowd. the cause of death is not yet determined, as coaches, students, and parents try to grapple with the loss. a gofundme page has been set up for murray's family raising nearly $30,000 in just one day. and a big night in baseball. nine years of heartbreak and frustration is finally over for the mets. the team is clinching its division title, securing a playoff spot, piling on the field after the win last night, beating the reds 10-2. meanwhile they're calling this the play of the year.
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>> that bounces pretty good. at the wall. reached up, and he got it. >> oh, wow. mike trout, four-time all-star making the impossible look easy. this unreal catch, rob the mariners of a three-run homer in the fourth inning. the angels went on to win 3-2. those are your headlines. all right. well, wacky weather night last night. look to the sky tonight because we have an incredible rare event. it's going to be hopefully clear. we always get excited for the super moon. it's going to combine with a lunar eclipse, giving it a beautiful red tint. i love a super moon. >> this ep phenomenon has only happened five times since 1900. last time was 1982. the show begins around 10:00 p.m. eastern. >> standing by to explain why the heavens are super mooning us. rick? >> well, a lot of people will be clear. isn't it nice that it's happening kind of like earlier in the evening, instead of like
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3:00 in the morning? >> i know. >> it was like people coming to work at our studios we were looking -- >> yeah, exactly. i got to feel like 3:00 in the morning a few years ago to see one of these. basically we're talking initially about a super moon or a perigee moon. right now the earth is at its closest point of the year to the moon. so about 14% closer than normal. and we're getting an eclipse on top of that. so we're going to have about an hour and five minutes on either side of the fully eclipsed moon, starting at 9:07 p.m. eastern time, so just adjust for where you are. and then we'll have that total eclipse from 10:11 to 11:23. about an hour, 23 minutes of a complete eclipse of the moon. are you going to be able to see it or not? along the mid-atlantic and into the southeast, that's the real trouble spot. a lot of the northeast is going to be fine. parts of the ohio valley not great. and much of the west is going to be spectacular. areas of the west, guys, you're
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going to be seeing that moon as it's rising also. eclipsing moon that's rising right on the horizon which is going to be really spectacular shot. >> wow. >> get ready for your twitter feeds to be come pastic with pictures of the moon. >> that beats a double rainbow any day. >> yeah. >> for sure. >> thanks, rick. >> a house divided. the search for a new speaker of the house continues after john boehner announces his resignation. we will try to replace him again. that is the question. we'll ask him when he joins us in just a minute. >> plus one man nearly burns down a gas station after he tries to light a bug on fire? nope, this isn't a joke. wait until you hear this story. just like eddie, the first step to reaching your retirement goals is to visualize them. then, let the principal help you get there.
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this congress needs to reset. you know, the american people, i think, are really disappointed. they gave our party majorities in both houses, and we have not delivered some of the things that we need to deliver. and so, it's an appropriate time for the house republicans to take a look at themselves and decide what they want to stand for for the rest of this term. presidential candidates on both sides have weighed in on speaker john boehner's design to resign. but the question still remains, who's going to take his place? florida congressman ted yoho challenged boehner for the speaker position earlier this year and is being touted by some as a conservative option to replace him. >> that's right. and he joins us now. congressman, thank you so much for joining us. the news last week, did the american people win or lose when we heard that speaker boehner is retiring? >> oh, the american people won. this was a challenge to the status quo in washington. this was never about mr. boehner. this was about the establishment, and the status quo and putting government back in to the hands of the people.
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this was -- i mean this is just a win for americans. you heard chris christie there in the opening of this segment, that's the sentiment in america today, that congress is not getting their job done. it's dysfunctional. and it's a lack of leadership and a vision for america to articulate and then to work to solve the problems of america, not talk about them for 30 years. >> right. so it seems clear that speaker boehner's designated successor is kevin mccarthy of california. would you be satisfied if he became the speaker? >> well, i wouldn't say that it's clear at this point. there's a lot of people that are going to get into this race. dan webster, of course, he got in, and he got in at the last minute last year on january 6th. it was 10:30 when he decided to run. and he got more votes than any of the other two, including myself and louis gohmert. i wouldn't say this is a giveaway for kevin mccarthy. there's a lot of other people vying to run. and our job in congress is to
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vet those people, so that we get people that are principled in the way that they want to legislate and not be on a power structure the way it has been in the past. and that we start solving the problems like our debt. you know, we have a debt ceiling debate when we go back. we've had two years since the last government shutdown and we've not had one discussion until about a week ago how we're going to deal with a potential $1.2 trillion increase in debt. and it's just unconscionable that people want to wait until the last minute, and they create crisis and we go into crisis management mode and that doesn't serve america or the american people. >> and you know what, congressman, the criticism is that there won't be any more compromise. what little there was is gone now with boehner's retirement. senator harry reid tweeting yesterday, by ousting a good man like speaker boehner, someone who understood the art of compromise, the party of eisenhower and reagan is no more. do you disagree? >> yeah, i disagree with that. if you look at the compromise, and if you look over the last 40 years, have they not had
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compromise? has that compromise not led us to $18.2 trillion in debt? a broken immigration system that they're afraid to tackle because ial. and i can go on and on. where is our energy policy? they've compromised and we don't have energy security in this country. even though they've worked on it for 30 years. in fact, friday i heard somebody in leadership say we've been working on a specific problem for 30 years. and if you can't solve a problem in 30 years, i think you're off base, and you know, maybe compromise, you can compromise but don't compromise your principles. >> right. >> and so i think this is a new dawn in american politics, and the american people win. >> congressman ted yoho of florida. joining us live this morning. thanks a lot, congressman. >> yes, sir. coming up here on the show, he came to the defense of a blind student being assaulted by bullies and then he was punished for it. now that teen is speaking out. you're going to hear from him straight ahead. >> and a mayor in maine wants to post the names of everyone who is on welfare online. he says the public has a right
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good sunday morning. it is 6:24. time for a quick look at your headlines breaking overnight. a 4.7 magnitude earthquake rocks northwest nevada just miles from the oregon border. this is the 13th quake to hit the region in the past ten month. so far no reports of any damages or injuries. and france finally getting involved in the war against isis launching their first airstrike against them in syria. until now the country has remained on the outskirts of the
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syrian border fighting for fear of strengthening president bashar al assad's power. well last year the state of maine spent $36 million on inentitlements. the city of lewiston has about 500 families collecting welfare, at least. and now the town's mayor says his community has a right to know who is on welfare, calling for the names of recipients to be publicly published. robert macdonald is a two-term mayor of that city. he said last week quote our liberal progressive legislators and their social service allies have made welfare recipients a victimized, protected class. the mayor says citizens have a right to know which of their neighbors they are supporting. robert macdonald joins us now. mr. mayor, great to see you this morning. >> good morning. how are you? >> so you argue that people in maine have a right to know which of their neighbors they're supporting. that this should be public. what's the rationale behind this? >> well, the rationale behind it is that if you have a state
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pension, it's public information. they have a website. and it publishes everybody's salaries. and i don't really know whose business that is except for the person that's doing it. but if we can do it for the state retirees, we should be doing it for these welfare people. i'm not -- this is something borne out of frustration. for 3 1/2 years i've been putting all kinds of welfare laws, i've been submitting them, and they're going, you know, the legislature is just tanking them. and what really hurts is that the legislators in lewiston are basically stabbing me in the back. every time i put them in, none of them support them. and yet, i'm overwhelmingly elected by the people up there, and this is what i'm -- this is what they've elected me for and this is what i'm going to do as long as i'm there. is to try to get some welfare reform up there. it's not that we really need a lot of it. but we do need some of it.
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yeah. >> so maine has one of the most generous welfare benefits in the country. there's evidence people move to maine to get them, and your city in particular has a pretty high rate of unemployment. a lot of refugees move from somalia by lewiston, by church groups, as you know better by anyone. has welfare helped lewiston, in the end, or has it has unintended consequences? >> well, we've had unintended consequences. but let me just make a point here, okay. somalis are not -- the somali refugees are not the problem. the somali refugees are basically are working. they're such a minute part of our welfare system, basically, and i think that ones that don't have jobs probably don't have jobs because they can't speak english, because the government won't give us money to immerse them in english. it's not them. it's the domestic people that are coming into our state. what's happened here is we have
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a school system. one of the things about our school system, it's second to none, is a special ed education department, which entrusts them all. >> that makes total sense. you are on the front lines of this question, no doubt. you're up for re-election. great to see you this morning. thanks a lot, mr. mayor. >> okay, thank you. well, fight for faith in the military, where some are calling this god bless our military sign outside a marine corps base an abomination and demanding it be removed. we'll bring that debate to you next. plus a small fear turns nearly into a big disaster. wait until you hear why this man sent set a gas pump on fire and what happened to him. we always were told we were german. we were in a german dance group. i wore lederhosen. so i just started poking around on ancestry. then, i decided to have my dna tested through
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the jungle. take him home. >> who wouldn't take that animal home. >> i would. potty training is a pleasure with -- you know what i mean? >> it's unbelievable. >> how is this for offensive? buckle your seat belts now. there's a marine corps base in the state of hawaii with this sign. let me put it on the screen. if you can't read it, it says god bless the military. this is so shocking -- oh, by the way and their families and the civilians who work with them. this is so shocking to some sensitive ateths in hawaii they're demanding it be taken down immediately. >> they're saying they want this thing taken down and the fact that god bless the military, their families and the civilians who work with them, it should be taken off of the military base's main area and moved to the chapel. >> this is -- this is perplexing to me, because i don't understand how a sign, which is so innocuous, is so offensive to people. i don't -- it's beyond me. >> some advice for the ateths, if you're an atheist and you
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don't believe in god, driving by the sign, just sort of sigh, i don't believe those people believe that. you don't need to get in their faces and demand they remove it. it's not an attack on you. when did an atheists get so -- i don't think they're all this way. i know atheists who aren't interested in imposing their views on others. >> that sign isn't imposing -- >> live and let live. >> this was the letter that was written. i mean, i think if you believe this was a brazen violation, this sign is a brazen violation of the no establishment clause of the constitution, and it sends a clear message that your installation gives preference to those who hold religious beliefs over those who do not. >> yeah. >> brazen -- >> small type underneath it says we'll give you a bonus if you believe in god. crazy. this is not a test of people's faith. let us know what you think. friends@foxnews.com. now to a look at our headlines. a california teen who stood up to a kid beating up a blind student now telling his side of the story. >> [ bleep ]
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>> hey. >> are you okay? >> all right. >> that is cody pine decking a bully who was caught on camera punching a fellow classmate. cody says he knew he had to do something. >> i really didn't want to hit him. but whenever you punch a blind kid, that's what made me so like mad. i've always watched videos of bullies like beating up kids and getting away with it and like, to me, like, i've always been the kid that was like, oh, if that ever happens to me it's never going to go down like that. >> the bully was arrested and while cody hasn't been suspended the school is still looking into the incident. and a dramatic rescue caught on camera in utah after a car goes careening into a canal. >> is that what your majority of your pain is? >> in my legs. >> wow. >> this man was pinned underneath his car trying to keep his head above water.
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police used a neighbor's ladder to get to the roof where they carefully pulled him out and found that both his legs were broken and transported him to a local hospital and he is now recovering. and there's more than one way to kill a spider. you don't just have to scream for yourself. a michigan man found that out the hard way. the critter crawling on his car, the man tries to light it on fire. maybe he thought it was a tick. while pumping gas. no surprise here, flames started shooting up from the fuel tank, engulfing the pump. the man went running for his life. >> a cigarette. >> he didn't have anything on him. so all of a sudden i looked up and i see flames. >> after igniting the fire and probably killing the spider, the man was able to grab a fire extinguisher and put out the flames. i don't know if he still -- >> remarkable. . >> i just don't understand --
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>> maybe he really thought it was a tick. but -- >> i hope that spider survived. >> well, we're not really sure. we think the spider maybe -- >> we have team coverage trying to get to the bottom of that. >> i hope the guy -- >> exactly >> guys it's dark and it's cold out here. i mean not cold. but cold. enough. and that's what's about to happen. take a look at the maps. i guess a lot of people are happy about that. mixed feelings, i would say, maybe, at best. and we do have some rain out there this middle part of the atlantic has been battered for around five or six days now and that is going to continue today. we have this pesky system right there to the north of it high pressure which has been keeping a lot of the northeast, and even for the pope, so spectacular. but it's also brought a lot of wind and really rough waves all across the eastern seaboard. if you're trying to sneak in some last kind of bits of warm weather across the beaches, not really helping. now we also have tropical moisture that's been down around the yucatan peninsula of mexico.
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that is going to pull up towards the center of the gulf, and i don't think we're going to be topping about tropical development but we're going to be talking about tropical moisture moving across the area and pretty heavy rain across the central gulf and across florida again for the next couple of days. temperaturewise, there you go. still feels like summer today. one more day of it, 81 in fargo. guys, 8 ce. >> we'll just hang onto it as long as we can. although i'm not -- there's no snow, i'm not complaining. >> i'm ready for it. >> thanks, rick. >> looking to see a movie on this sunday? well, two star-studded flicks just hit theaters "the intern" and sicario. but are they worth paying for? >> our expert kevin mccarthy -- >> for everybody. we're talking about the steve jobs movie. i cannot wait until you see it. it will blow your mind. >> comes out in like two weeks. >> october 9th. >> "the intern." movie by nancy myers who districted a films like complicated what women want, the
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holiday, and basically anne hathaway's character runs an online clothing company and robert de niro becomes a senior intern for her at the company and they try too change each other's lives. one of the weakest myers films i've seen but what makes it great is they worked well together. they're fun to watch. their chemistry brings you in, it commands a presence that you do want to watch. i gave the film three out of five. i think it's a good solid date movie for a matinee but not worth a full ticket price. there's a great moment in the film where they're on a plane, the montage scene. i always wondered what are actors actually talking about when a montage scene happens. you see them laughing, talking, but you never hear them. what are they saying that's making them genuinely laugh. here's what they had to say. >> we tell stories to each other. >> i was asking her what she was going to have for the dinner break. >> and i was just like i'm going to have soup! but you can't hear that. so, yeah, it's mainly just trying to tell each other embarrassing stories to get us to genuinely laugh.
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>> that opened up on friday. three out of five which is a good matinee. it's decent. worth seeing if you want to go for a good, solid date movie. not anywhere near the quality of what women want. >> what about sicario? >> this say brutal, relentless, intense film. an fbi agent teams up with a government task force to help battle the war against drugs in the border area of u.s. and mexico. it is a film that will actually take a lot out of you emotionally. gorgeous cinematography you've ever seen in a film. emily blunt proved herself as an action star but this is her dramatic chops. the star of the film is benicio del toro. one of the best actors working today. incredible actor. >> is it my imagine or have female characters become way more violent? what is that about? >> i don't know if more violent but i feel they're trying to make more female characters have like really great roles in hollywood. we've been seeing more of that. >> charlize theron. >> we need more great female
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action stars and dramatic stars. i love that. i love seeing that. >> we need more of you. you'll be back to talk about steve jobs in a few weeks. >> 4 1/2 out of 5, highly recommend seeing that. and there's a lot of movies coming out in the next couple weeks called the walk, steve jobs one of my favorite movies of the year. honor to be here. >> good luck in your run for speaker. >> i love you guys. >> i got so many tweets about that congratulating me on becoming -- >> thanks, guys. >> thanks. >> remember the kid who was arrested for bringing a clock to school? it's amusing he says in retrospect. >> was it a little cool to be arrested? >> it does give you a little street cred. >> it was kind of control. >> it was kind of cool but his father says they still may sue. does the family have a case? that debate next. plus millions of people lining up to buy the new iphone. is it worth the upgrade? cyber guy is here with some closer look at some of the new features. we'll be playing with it. >> do you have it? >> oh, yeah. hey babe, last one home cooks?
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okay. we all remember the teenager arrested for bringing a homemade clock to school. teacher said it looked like a bomb. his dad reportedly wants to sue for anguish. but ahmed seems to be enjoying the new fame. listen here. >> how long did it take you to make that bomb? >> um -- >> huh? i mean, it looks like a pretty complicated explosive device. >> 20 minutes. >> be honest. was it a little cool to be arrested? does give you a little street cred. >> um, it was kind of cool. the way i felt cool though because i knew i was innocent. >> street cred. did those comments ruin the family's take? here for a fair and balanced debate. keisha hebbin and trial attorney
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heather hanson. thank you so much for joining me. keisha i want to start with you. does this type of media appearance have an effect on the family's case? >> i say it does. and i say it has a negative effect. because this kid does not look like someone who is suffering some type of mental anguish as a result of being arrested. even the day after his arrest when he was interviewed on television the first thing i said was he looks totally fine. he doesn't look like he was hurt. he's embarrassed. he's shamed. he's laughing and talking about this situation. so it's going to be very difficult for his family to prove some type of damage. >> okay, devil's advocate before i get to you, heather. larry, did he lead him in when he said, was it kind of cool? >> i mean considering he's a 14-year-old, that could be argued. but the fact of the matter if you're really suffering mental anguish, that's not going to happen. you may not think it's funny. and he's not showing the typical symptoms of someone who is suffering mental anguish. >> heather what do you think? >> first of all he's not suing
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for mental anguish, he's suing to get the clock back because they kept the clock. he's been suspended from school for three days. and the fact that someone gets over something or is actually able to celebrate it afterwards does not mean that they weren't hurt in the moment. he's suing for what happened to him in that moment when he was handcuffed in front of his peers, taken away and held away from his parents and his school mates while he was questioned. i think that most parents would be upset by that and most parents would want to pursue some sort of recourse. >> family does have a case? >> they absolutely have a case. his constitutional rights were violated. he wasn't given due process. he was suspended for three days under the school code and under the constitution. you have to have some sort of hearing before that you just get your school taken away. on top of that, if there's an equal protection argument that he was treated differently than those who aren't muslim, that's going to be a strong case. and if he wasn't given his miranda warnings, because when you're in school, school officials are similar to police, if they're questioning on behalf of police, and therefore they have to give the child the warnings. so he has a lot of things that he could potentially argue in
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the case. >> but the teacher said that she was -- she didn't necessarily know that this was a clock. >> right. well elizabeth in this day and age we have to be so careful in our schools. we've had children come to school and shoot up students and teachers. so not to say that they didn't act a little overzealously. but i can see where the caution came from. and the problem that this child had was he did not explain, he just kept saying it's a clock. okay, obviously in this climate we need to know what did you use to make it? if he would have been more specific i think it wouldn't have gone this far. and one of the things that heather said is he has a whole bunch of claims. but the thing the parents are suing for is some type of personal injury, mental anguish and things of that nature. if he couldn't prove that the damage was done by the evidence that he's alleging he's not going to have a case. >> we could certainly talk about it all morning. thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you for having us. coming up, john boehner's resignation is sending shockwaves throughout the gop and really across the whole u.s. some are celebrating it, a
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victory for conservatives. we'll talk to senator ted cruz about that when he joins us next hour. plus, are you thinking about getting a new iphone? clayton already has it. the cyber guy tells us if it's worth the upgrade. stick around. terry bradshaw? what a surprise! you know what else is a surprise? shingles. and how it can hit you out of nowhere. i know. i had it. that's why i'm here. c'mon let's sit down and talk about it. and did you know that one in three people will get shingles? i didn't know that. i did. he's on tv saying it. but have you done anything? (all) no. that's why i'm reminding people like you to ask your doctor or pharmacist about your risk of getting shingles. because if you had chickenpox then the shingles virus is already inside you. (all) oooh. who's had chickenpox?
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scoot over. me too! when i got shingles i had this ugly band of blisters and look that nasty rash can pop up anywhere and the pain can be even worse than it looks. so talk to your doctor or pharmacist. we all in? (all) yes! good, 'cause if not we're gonna watch highlights of my career 12 hours straight. i know, talk about pain. seriously now, talk to your doctor or pharmacist today about a vaccine that can help prevent shingles.
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features with kurt the cyber guy. clayton, kurt, should we get these? >> we agree on these. this is the first time that there's a refresh of the s series in their entire series that it's really worth it. >> it's a totally new phone. when you've got the 3d touch layer on the surface of the screen. the 4k videos. let's talk about that first. we're talking 4k on a cell phone. >> this is a 6 class right now. this takes the best video out of any phone in the history of time ever. it's 4k ultrahigh resolution video that comes out of this with spectacular video stabilization software driving it. on this ipad, while it's not 4k, the detail of this is extraordinary. it's the first documentary shot on an iphone 6s plus.
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>> it was totally shot on with 4k video. >> it's just -- the detail. if you were here in person, you can see the string hanging off a power line. it's as if you could reach out and touch it. the detail of 4k video is extraordinary. >> some of the differences in the smaller phones. the 6 s and the 6s plus. when you're taking video, it has optic video owe the smaller one doesn't have that. >> it's a distinction that i didn't learn about until a couple of days ago. there was a difference between the larger iphone or the plus versus the regular size one, which is just the 6s. >> it takes little light photos, as you know. >> we were playing with this. every time you take a photo now, it takes a second and a half of video essentially ahead of and after each one of the photos. >> these are called live photos. >> live photos of technology.
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>> we took a few here of tucker. if you press down, you can see a second and a half of photos before and a few seconds after. if you miss the photo and you can create use these as wallpapers too. >> you can. for example, i wasn't focusing really well. so when i -- i can get the most crisp part of that photo. that's what i get. 3d touch is another hallmark feature of this phone. how 3d works with this new screen built. >> aren't they asking you the same question. what does it mean? do you put your finger in there? no. >> the big thing here is for the first time the iphone knows the difference between touching and pressing. when you press, it can feel and understand that distinction. if you push hard, it knows that distinction. if you just tap, it knows that distinction. >> practical applications, we saw a host of apps, where if you press on the app icon, a little menu will pop up and it can go
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into the app and use it or go right to one of the functions. >> have you done maps. this is apple maps. if i press harder, see, it offers directions home or mark my location. it just is more sensible. now, i am on my way home. directions like that. without putting in or navigating hard. it's a smarter way to use the iphone. it takes a little of getting used to. but it feels smart. >> after an hour you figure it out. it starts at $199 and $2 the smaller and the larger phone. >> in essence, the pricing has not gone up. >> geeking out. >> good to hang out. >> thanks for coming on the show. a community mourning after a football player dies during a hit during the game. it's what the player told the coach seconds after the hit that has everyone stunned. >> the internet going wild over this. a major mars discovery about to
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verizon built america's best, most reliable network for one reason. because it matters. good sunday morning. it's september 27th. i'm elizabeth pran in for anna kooiman. the final stop for the pontiff wraps up his visit with a million people expected at a mass in philadelphia. this moving movement has everyone talking. the pope has everyone talking. the pope stops his motorcade to bless a boy in a wheelchair. that boy and his family join us this hour. the race to replace john boehner as speaker of the house. what's next for republican leadership after this sudden resignation of boehner. could it benefit the republican party? or will chaos ensue?
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senator ted cruz joins us in a moment to react. have you ever been on a first date like this? >> no, no. i admire a man who can cry. >> really? >> don't touch my coat. >> that's nothing. wait until you hear what one man did after being refused a second date. here's a hint. he asked for a refund of the first date. "fox and friends" hour two -- smart guy. >> awkward. "fox and friends" starts right now. all right. pope francis is capping off his incredible visit to the united states with a massive outdoor mass today if philadelphia. >> more than a million people expected to attend. speaking of church leaders -- fox news correspondent brian guinness is in philadelphia with the details. good morning, brian.
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>> reporter: good morning to you all. last night was a star studded event. it was the pope sitting at the foot of philadelphia's famous art museum at aretha franklin sang amazing grace and opera legend andrea bocelli sang the lord's prayer and thousands filling the benjamin parkway. six families from six different countries giving moving testimonials of their own struggles an joys. pope francis scrapping his prepared remarks and giving an unscripted 20-minute speech on family saying the most beautiful thing god created was the family. urging those to overcome difficulties with love >> it's a factory of hope. it's a fakry of resurrection. >>. >> translator: let us look after the family.
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let us pro tentect the family. because it's in the family that our future is at play. >> reporter: it was perhaps the most passionate, energetic and pastoral we've seen the pontiff in america. his monologue seemingly encapsulating why he's been dubbed the people's pope. officials were expecting up to 500,000 people. heavy security may have scared people away. trains were at half capacity and some streets and sidewalks were empty. as for the rest of the schedule, he will be begin at 9:15 and speak to seminarians and clergymen at 9:15. 300 bishops and seminarians. then he'll head to the correctional facilities, he'll speak to prisoners male and female. the pope, pope francis has gone to jails ever since he became the upon tich. he likes doing that. after doing that, he will come here for the main event, the
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mass at 4:00 p.m. after that, it's wheels up, 8:00 p.m. back to rome. to cap an incredible trip to america, guys. >> witnessing history. thank you, brian. we appreciate it. the star studded event in philadelphia ant right at the art museum, where they were playing the rocky music as the pope ascended the stairs. people were saying the pope's jokes were funnier than some of the comedians. mark wahlberg had a little bit of controversy. the. >> the critics are saying he's raising eyebrows, he's someone who supports gay marriage, the catholic church opposes it. he played a porn star in boogie nights and a star in ted. if you saw that movie, it was centered around a pot smoking teddy bear. he did actually serve time as a teen. he assaulted a convenience store owner back in 1988.
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critics say, they're raising eyebrows if he was the best person to emcee this event. >> the pope also, of course, appeared with president obama, the contest who -- mark wahlberg or president obama. i don't think it's a close contest. i'm offended by most hollywood actors. i think they're annoying. mark wahlberg strikes me as more real than most. he's a daily mass goer to. >> down to earth and of course, when he was in the american sniper, is that the name of the film? lone survivor. that's the name of the film. he said when he first started that film, he was being criticized by them. he's like, look, they're make fun of me i'm a hollywood actor. he's right. i can't stand on a level playing field with these guys and they put me in my place and i absolutely deserved it. i was really surprised about his frankness during that time serving with those guys when he was studying for that role. >> nothing to hide.
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he said at the beginning of the speech, i was watching it live. he said my faith has made me a good husband, a good father and a good person. i think -- i know you have to say you're a good person. i believe him i think he's open about his past. >> people who are offended by mark wahlberg ought to spend time around other hollywood actors. it's a matter of perspective. he's one of the more impressive ones. >> friends at fox news.com. we'll be following the pope later in the show as he gets ready for philadelphia. >> of course. now, let's look at the headlines breaking overnight. a concept in arizona nearly turning deadly as thousands of people rush the stage. dozens of ambulances on the scene at tempe's summer ends music festival. 12 people had to be treated for injuries. the crowd stampeded for the stage when the band revolution started playing. it was a band that called for help. the show later resumed in the evening. a new jersey community is grieving the loss of beloved
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high school football star, 17-year-old evan murray suffering a fatal injury after being hit during a football game. the warren hill star quarterback coming back to the sideline saying he felt woozy and collapsing. he was carried away as he gave the crowd a thumbs up. a cause of death is not yet determined as coaches, students and parents try to grapple with the sudden loss. a go fund me page has been set up for his family. already raising $30,000 in just one day. the fight to -- the number of isis recruits failing. 30,000 new fighters have joined the terror group in the last year. pouring over the border into syria. 250 americans have successfully joined isis or tried to. that's compared to just 100 a year. elizabeth, are you ready for nasa news? >> am i? >> are you ready for mars news? a mars mystery may have just been solved. nasa planning to announce a
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major scientific breakthrough concerning the red planet. this will happen tomorrow. the space agency is not offering any hints about it. so far scientists are abuzz all over the internet about what it could be. life on mars. not expected to be the big news. however, they think evidence of a flowing ocean of water could be a possibility. which could if there's a flowing ocean of water on mars perhaps have life in it. >> and mean potentially more beachfront condos. not now. >> donald trump is planning his trip to mars. >> we have more from the weather center. >> if you bring a sign, you're going to get on tv. dhek one out. alice and gene, welcome to new york. on your bucket list. "fox and friends sunday" is the top of your list. >> that is the top of our list. >> how awesome is this. we're happy we made the list and you have everything checked off. >> thank you for having us on. >> we appreciate it. >> let's talk weather -- it's
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chilly isn't it? 57 in new york. chilliest morning in a while. overall, not that bad anywhere. warmer air certainly in place. fall started this week. if you're wondering what the next few months will look like, above average precipitation across the southern half. temperaturewise, warm across the north. that bodes well for us where we're not ready for it to be chilly just yet. thanks for the sign, guys. >> rick, have you ever had a bad date? >> never. >> all been perfect. >> never to the level that we're about to show you out of london. where a man and a woman went on a date. it didn't end so well. she thought, i'm done with that guy. didn't really connect. she's pretty polite. >> we're going to read the exchange and put it up on the screen for you. i believe clayton, you'll be the -- >> i'll play the -- >> i'll play the woman. >> do you want to? >> i'm the director here. this is what happened after the first date. this has gone viral now. >> ready, action.
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>> boy, it was nice meeting you tonight. fancy meeting up again? >> lovely to meet you too. you are a very nice and passionate person, but i am not really sure we aren't right for each other. i am quite a reserved person but wouldn't want you to change. hope you have better luck with future dates. >> i want to show off my cooking schools. fancy coming to mine. wednesday eve next week. >> thanks for the offer. but i have plans those days and next week will be crazy at work so late nights. multiple ex pla cla mags points. >> so when can you make it? i'll cook you something delicious and treat you well for dessert? >> thanks. but i don't share your view. sorry exclamation. i'm sure you'll find someone else to cook for. >> boy, oh, that's me. sorry. you're unfair and i'm now sorry
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that i paid for your drink tonight. can i ask you to pay me back for it? it would be just fair. >> of course, i will pay you back if that is what you want. i would have bought you one back but it got too noisy in the bar. let me know your bank details and how much the drink cost. >> it cost 4.50 euros. here are my bank account information to wire me money. >> wow. this confirms you are definitely not the right one. >> cut. >> you know why this is frustrating? the daily mail which reprinted this, didn't include his details or his name. >> i would like to know this person. i would do public shaming. >> i want to send it to our friends in nigeria. >> that's unbelievable. i dpes they're not getting together for a second date. >> would you have? >> never. >> you would have let it go after the first text.
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>> i probably wouldn't go on the first date it sounds like. >> you want to come over to my house late night, i want my money back. what a pig. >> let's hear your worst first dates or second dates. >> can you top this? i hope not. ff weekend on facebook. we'll read them and reenact them. the race to replace john boehner. what's next for republican leadership after his sudden resignation as house speaker? will chaos ensue. senator ted cruz joins us with his predictions, next. have you seen this picture of a woman riding a sea turtle. it landed her in bars. tall all the details coming up. if you can't put a feeling into words, why try? philips sonicare leaves your mouth with a level of clean like you've never felt before, making it the most loved electric toothbrush brand by americans and their dentists. innovation and you.
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republican presidential candidate senator ted cruz of texas comes out on top in the value voter summit straw poll yesterday. cementing his position as a favorite among social conservatives. 35% of the vote. i talked with cruz from his office in iowa about speaker john boehner's resignation yesterday and what's ahead for the republicans in congress. here's part of what he said. >> senator, great to see you this morning. i assume you were not saddened to see john boehner go. the question is, was he pushed or did he do it under his own steam? what do you think the right interpretation of what just happened? >> well, look, i mean, that's a question for him to answer. what i will say, i wish john boehner the best in his next
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chapter. i hope that we see a new speaker of the house who is a strong conservative and what i think is most important for house leadership and for that matter, for senate leadership. is that they will actually honor the commitments we made to the men and women who elected us. the reason people are so frustrated out of their minds with washington is as conservatives we keep winning elections and the people who we elect don't do what they said they would do. i hope this serves as a wake-up call to house leadership. that the promises we made on election day, we need to follow through when we're in office. >> john boehner announced his resignation, you were among them. do you think you celebrated too vigorously in public the fact that he's leaving? >> listen, what my focus is on, it's not on any one individual. to be honest, i don't really know john boehner. he doesn't speak to conservatives, a whole lot of them in the senate.
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i don't know him personally. has nothing to do with the man personally. what it has to do with it the leadership in both chambers. if either john boehner or mitch mcconnell would stand up and lead, would defend the conservative principles we were elected to defend, i would be the first one to celebrate them, to praise them. it's not about -- this is where so much of the mainstream media tries to make it a personality fight. tries to make it a food fight. we saw that in the debate. the last debate, i thought it would turn into jerry springer, have one of us pick up a chair and throw it at another. i'm not going to play that game. >> will the government shut down over planned parenthood? is it worth it for republicans? >> i don't think we have a shutdown. i think it would be a mistake if president obama forces a shutdown. what president obama has said is quite remarkable. he has threatened to shut the government down over planned
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parenthood. i believe congress should fund the entire federal government, every bit of it. but we should use our constitutional power of the purse to decline to give $500 million of taxpayer money to planned parenthood. a private organization. it's not part of the government. it's currently under multiple criminal investigations for committing an ongoing pattern of felonies and we should also use the power of the purse to prohibit any federal funds from being used to implement this catastrophic iranian nuclear deal. >> that last presidential debate, there were a lot of candidates who talked about planned parenthood. but i don't see them standing up and leading on that when the fight is actually happen. i would welcome all ten of those men and women in california, come to washington, stand up and lead the fight when the fight is actually being waged and when we're deciding whether republicans are going to honor the commitments we made to the men and women who elected us or
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simply engage in showboats. coming up part two of my interview with him. we talk about religious freedom and who ought to replace speaker boehner in the house. criticizing the black lives movement and activists want a college newspaper kicked off campus and stripped of its funding. the student who wrote it, an iraq war veteran feels he was thrown under the bus to put it mildly. he joins us next. not exactly a modern day bonnie and clyde. this couple accused of robbing banks got caught.
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its time for your news by the numts. more than 57,000 square feet. the size of a sinkhole that opened on a popular australian beach. it swallowed one car but no campers. they had to evacuate. 500,000, one man squeezed out of florida orange farmers. he took 4 million pounds of fruit without sharing the profits. finally, 10 million bucks to chicago inmate tried to sue a prison for enabling his escape in 2012. this is for real. his name was jose banks. he said guards should have been able to stop him before he rappelled seven stories down on tied-up bed sheets. thanks, tucker. an iraq veteran and student finding himself in a first amendment fight after writing an op-ed in his school's newspaper
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asking "at some point black lives matter is going to be confronted with an uncomfortable question. is this all worth it? at what point will they rethink how they're approaching the problem? >> something at this vctivists trying to shut down the paper. i may have mispronounced. stas calfage. >> let's get that on the table. >> say it three times fast. >> i'm not going to. i want to ask you a little bit about, were you worried when you released this piece you would get some serious backlash? >> yes. i mean when i write these arr t articles, i'm knot 100% certain in my views. i wrote it in a way to get feedback. i thought i would get constructive criticism back. but it's been an attempt to get me not to publish again. >> it sounded like a thought 23u8 question.
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is this movement effective? we've seen the videos. some the rhetoric during some of the marches have been pretty terrible. calling for the killing of police officers. so when you look at this movement at large, it is a fair question to ask. what was the response on campus? >> on campus, it was basically that i had delegitimized the movement and attacking the movement somehow. but i wasn't. i was basically asking, do you think that maybe a stronger message of peace would be better? >> we know that the editorial staff later apologized for your piece, writing in part we sincerely apologize for the distress that the piece caused the student body i. the opinions expressed do not reflect those of the artist and we want to affirm that as community members we stand in solidarity with the black lives matter movement. what did you think when that happened? >> i felt i was all alone. the paper basically said we're going to send you down the river. but since then, they real vi had my back. they really have been fighting
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in my corner. >> for the first amendment. >> for the first amendment and the right for me to publish my ideas. >> what happened to college, universities, this is a place where free speech, where this free flow of ideas is supposed to be embraced. now there's a plan to try to get the paper shut down. what do you think of that? >> that's not good. it's happening in college campuses across the country. but it's happening across the country in general where we're not listening to each other or talking to each other. we're afraid of each other and trying to build silos where we're too afraid to basically try to engage each other. >> wow. >> there's a town hall meeting. what do you expect will happen at the meeting? that will happen tonight. >> tonight at 7:00. what i hope is that a lot of students show up in support of the paper and express their belief that all ideas on campus should be included. and not just the ones that are pre-approved by a select group of students. >> really your movement, you said it's the most legitimate way to go about this.
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you were working to find a dialog. i asked you before we went on camera, what has the response been? have you felt you've within threatened in any way since you released this piece? >> i haven't been physically threatened. i have been screamed at. being in basic training, that's not anything new. it's been an angry blowback for it. there's a lot of pressure. >> thank you for joining us and thank you also for your service. >> thank you so much. >> good luck at the town hall meeting. we appreciate it. coming up here on the show, an emotional moment on the tarmac going viral. did you see this yesterday? pope francis stops his motorcade on a dime. comes to a screeching halt when he spots a boy with cerebral palsy. that boy blessed by the pope joins us with his entire family straight ahead. >> you've seen the pope riding around in his black fiat. we have our very own pope-mobile on the plaza. we'll take you for a ride and find out where the pope-mobile is going. hi my name is tom.
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if you have any of these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away. tell your doctor about any history of mental health problems, which could get worse or of seizures. don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if have these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away as some can be life-threatening. tell your doctor if you have heart or blood vessel problems, or develop new or worse symptoms. get medical help right away if you have symptoms of a heart attack or stroke. decrease alcohol use while taking chantix. use caution when driving or operating machinery. most common side effect is nausea. i never thought i would be a non-smoker and i'm so proud. ask your doctor if chantix is right for you. welcome back. a shot of the morning. pope francis riding around in a black fiat throughout his american tour.
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the pontiff's poped up ride is a fiat 500l. we brought one right to the plaza. here it is. joining us along with todd van derrin from ramsey fiat. he's going to explain why the pope favors it. >> good morning what's so special about this car? >> very visible. very economical. >> is the engine up here? >> up front. >> how fast is this thing? >> it was going pretty fast this morning to get here. >> the pope drives one in rome, right? >> he drives around rome in the scv 1. it's the one that he rides around in the vatican. i guess in europe, you need smaller spaces. don't need the big bass parking lots we've got here. >> the vehicle that the -- the vehicles that he was in during his trip here, they were brought over, correct? they weren't provided here in the u.s.?
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>> i called fiat and they didn't really have a lot of information for me. but for security reasons. >> sure. >> i believe it was brought here. >> when the pope endorses your vehicle, it's not a small thing. if the pope was caught eating a snickers, snickers would be excited. >> it's a car that we've seen in the last three days, a tremendous amount of people coming in and saying what's this car all about. let's check it out. >> it's a normal car apparently. according to sources, this car hasn't been retrofitted with the bulletproof glass. the pope told newspapers in the past that he likes to drive around without any bulletproof windshields or side, any of the doors. likes to be out there in the open. >> sure. >> that doesn't surprise you, right? >> he's driving around with the windows open. >> does this fit into your next advertising campaign. fiat fit for a pope, fit for you. >> why not? >> why not is what i say. >> sure. >> get in touch with your ad guys. >> thank you. >> thank you so much for joining
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us, todd. interesting. it's part of his message, simplicity and very economical. we appreciate you bringing it by and giving us a closer look. now to the headlines. a passenger missing after their plane crashed into an indiana backyard injuring another person on board. it clipped trees, striking a power line and roof before crash landing upside down. one person on board fled the crash site. they're not sure why. it's been four years since a manhattan developer shelved the idea to build an islamic culture center near ground zero. now shreve al gamal wants to build a 70-story luxury condo complex on that manhattan, lower manhattan spot. it will have all the amenities, a five-star hotel has, including a pool, private lounge, it's already projected to cost 3,000 bucks a square foot to live there. proof you should not mess with sea creatures. a woman caught on camera riding
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on the back of a giant sea turtle is behind bars. police in melbourne, florida have been looking for the picture taken in july. they recognized her after a disturbance call. she's charged with animal cruelty. a serious offense in the sunshine state. if guilty, moore faces five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. take a look at these two show-offs. they allegedly robbed and ohio bank and posted pictures of it. flaunting on facebook. the man on parole posed with the money. at one point biting it calling it a mcstack. it led police directly to their doorstep. >> brazen. >> can i make an obvious point? people with face tattoos are not long-term thinkers generally. >> people who post their crimes on social media are also -- >> i don't know if he knows it,
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facebook is a public website? >> are you sure? >> good to see you, rick. >> got my face tattoos covered up with makeup. welcome here. they're complaining about it being chilly out here. it's that time of year. take a look at the maps. you are in for a treat tonight. if we can see it right here around parts of the northeast. we have a big event going on. a lunar eclipse, but not only that, a lunar ee along with a supermoon. we're having a full moon tonight and an eclipse. it's going to last just over an hour. complete eclipse starting at 10:11 tonight until 11:23. a lot of cloud cover across the east. especially in the southeast. the mid-atlantic. the far northeast looking great and much of the west and central part of country looking great. plan your viewing time. really spectacular event.
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>> feeling like fall. we have rain across parts of the mid-atlantic. it will ease off tomorrow and across parts of the central gulf, get ready for deep tropical moisture coming in. same goes for florida. take a look at this spectacular day. you are the winner across the northern plains. let me know how you're spending that beautiful day. >> great day to go to duluth. >> certainly is. hillary clinton getting hollywood help to make her more likeable. the oscar winning director giving her advice for the campaign trail. >> we know you don't need that. this photo is making an online splash, no pun intended. is this little girl underwater or not? a photographer shares his take coming up next.
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welcome back. it's 7:41 on the east coast. we've got sports news for you. it's been a wild day of college football yesterday. ended almost in embarrassment for number 3 tcu if not for the remarkable touchdown with seconds on the clock. watch. >> boykin throwing. too tall. green caught it. >> holy smokes. that was quarterback trevone boykin. led his team to a victory over texas tech. lsu scoring a victory overseer cues. the orange. thanks in part to leonard four net. lsu won. >> wasn't close between utah and oregon. utah quarterback travis wilson getting four touchdowns. >> this is all we could talk about yesterday on the show.
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commercial breaks. this tricky photo making a big splash. taking the internet by storm. millions of people online can't figure out whether this little girl is underwater or jumping into a pool. >> i spent a lot of time looking at it. we have a photographer with us today. matt, sweetwood. >> you have to have astigmatism to think she's underwater, right? >> really? >> actually, i do have astigmatism. >> i do too. you've offended all of us with is tig ma tich. >> the photo has been played with after the picture was taken to create the effect. >> how can you tell? >> if you look at the photo, there's a couple of things that keys. not that i'm an expert on hair. but if you look at her hair, her hair doesn't look very wet. if you look at her ponytail, it's frizzy. i'm not quite sure how hair can be frizzy underwater because it
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all kind of sticks together. >> you removed some of the editing from this, didn't you? >> i did. >> it took me about 30 seconds. i added contrast back in and changed the brightness. you can see in the photo that it's clear she's out of the water. >> we don't need to save her is what you're saying. >> you broke a lot of hearts this morning. >> you did break a lot of hearts. >> how can we get a similar effect with masking? explain masking. >> you take a photo after you've composed the picture, you have it on your computer, like in adobe i photoshop. you can adjust the contrast, the brightness. i think he did cloningment he took some of the bubbles from another part of the picture and put it in front of her face and created the effect that there's something in front of her. he didn't do a good job at her feet with digital photography, you can completely change the photograph after the fact. those in the news business, how many pictures we see are put on
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the screen have been altered? >> i bet essentially every one. it's a natural thing. it's part of the work flow process. put it on your computer and improve the image. depending what you do to the image, photographers view it as fair game or not. if you change things, move things around like we could take this and continue with the hair joke and put hair on me. take a picture of me to do that. that wouldn't be considered fair. if we adjusted the brightness or the contrast or changed the color a little bit, that's a fair thing to do in the photograph. >> let's see your -- i understand that you've done a similar image. you're going to show us and walk us through it to take a look at it. >> absolutely. >> okay. here's the picture. you altered this photograph. >> that's the original photograph. as it sits. then we did a little bit of editing on it. the same kind of thing. took out the contrast and changed the brightness a little and desaturated. you get the effect of her being
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underwaterment. >> that internet -- that was an optical illusion. that was different. >> different people's eyes physiological saw the picture in a different color. this is a trick that's relatively easy to do if you know how to do photo manipulation. >> what color is that dress? >> did we ever get to the bottom of it? >> it's blue. >> i think it was white and gold. >> oh, it's blue. >> great to see you. >> nice to be here. >> tricks behind the -- >> kissing up to -- >> i'm going to leave now. >> thanks, matt. good to see you. >> up next, a fight for faith in the military. what some are calling this god bless military outside a base. they want it removed by force. we'll give you the state of play in that story. the pope stops his motorcade to bless a disabled boy. you saw it live on the show yesterday.
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pope franciskeating, son of the director of the marching band that created the pope upon his arrival in philadelphia. michael and his parents chuck and kristen and his twin brother christopher and his sister katie join us now. i am so grateful for you guys coming today. thank you so much. >> thanks for having us. >> we watched it live. we -- all three of us were almost speechless. the whole studio.
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i want you both to tell me what was going through your mind at the moment because this was in no means anything you expected to happen. >> well, i guess what we saw was when the pope came down the stairs from the plane, waved over to us, the band. it was great. and that was -- i thought that was our moment. and then that's when he got into the fiat like you have outside and drove around and waved to the band and then as he was passing us, the president of our school, sister regina said something to him and got his attention and looked over and saw michael and then he hads the driver stop the car. >> we remember, he stopped very abruptly, stop stop stop, and got out of the car. we all said, you know, this is what we've seen in pope francis. he is so unpredictable and reaches out when he feels it in his heart. what was going through your mind as a mother? i saw you overcome with emotion but i can't even fathom?
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>> i was just -- i couldn't -- i didn't know what to think. here was this great leader. we told katie and christopher, just seeing him at the airport was going to be something they would share with their grandchildren one day. a once-in-a-lifetime experience. here he was walking towards us. i think my mind went blank for a little bit. he came over and right away grabbed michael's head and kissed him on the forehead and i just -- i was speechless. i kept thinking to myself, how can you thank someone who is sharing his love and a blessing that's so great. and so i just started saying thank you, thank you, thank you, and he reached out and grabbed my hands and my husband's hands and at that moment, i just -- i couldn't believe how fortunate and blessed we truly are. >> now, and i know that michael can't speak with us this morning and he couldn't speak at the time, but it has been a very long morning for you guys. >> yes. >> you had gotten up early.
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the pressure was on. you had been preparing for this. you were performing. you wanted it to go well. what happened at that moment? did you see anything in michael's facial expression and what did you feel? >> we did. you know, michael is typically a prty happy boy. he doesn't always smile unless he feels it. he doesn't cry unless he's in pain. so he's just kind of general affect all the time. after pope francis removed his hand the second time, all of a sudden, i looked at my daughter and michael had a huge smile on his face and katie and i were stunned and excited and people say did he feel the difference? i don't know that, but i know michael feels a lot of joy around him and love and that's exactly what he was feeling at that moment i'm sure. >> absolutely. katie i want to bring you in, and christopher as well, this is -- as a family unit, what was it like for you guys to see the pope embrace your brother? >> it was really amazing. can't even put into words.
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so special. >> we saw you, katie, overcome with emotion. >> yeah. >> did you ever expect that to happen? >> no. i just thought he was going to drive away, but i was happy he turned around. >> christopher, what about you? was it neat to see your brother get embraced by the pope? >> yeah. >> he blessed your family which is a beautiful thing. what does it mean everyone across the nation has seen this moment and that it's gone completely viral? what does that mean? >> it's an unbelievable feeling. just the presence of a pope and what he stands for and what he's all about, and just the image of him going to kiss michael and blessing him, it's a symbol of our faith. also i think the world is embracing this man and what he stands for? . >> what does it mean people are just -- it's getting circulated all across the nation and we hear it the top of every hour we're running thiseadline and
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getting feedback from the viewers and they are touched by it. >> i don't think we've had a chance to process it yet. it's been a little crazy. between family and friends reaching out to us, the unbelievable moment, the tears of joy it brought to everyone's faces and the emotion about it is unbelievable. we attribute that to the fact and the fact that michael being such an unbelievable child. >> we thank you so much for joining us. we thank you for sharing your family and your time. and your very inspirational faith. >> thank you very much for having us. appreciate it. >> tucker, clayton, back to you guys. >> coming up, hillary clinton's e-mail scandal continues to get worse. who does her husband blame? republicans of course. >> the other party doesn't want to run against her and if they do they would like her as mangled up as possible. >> wow. well th will that excuse work or does hillary clinton need a hollywood image make-over? the latest on that story. >> you think you've been on a bad date before. we may have found the worst
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most common side effects include skin peeling... ...ingrown toenail, redness, itching, and swelling. tell your doctor if you have any side effect that bothers you or does not go away. stop toe tucking... and get the drop on toenail fungus. ask your doctor today about kerydin. good sunday morning. september 27th. i'm elizabeth in for anna kooiman. pope francis' last day if the u.s. but he's not slowing down at all. in about an hour, he'll meet with 300 bishops before speaking with prisoners and celebrating mass with millions in philadelphia. we're live in just a moment. >> and as her poll numbers head toward the basement at high speed hillary clinton and her husband bill have pulled out their secret weapon. >> what happened? the presidential campaign happened. nature of the coverage shifted
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to political. >> what's her secret weapon? blaming other people for their mistakes. maybe a hollywood image make-over is what hillary needs. we'll give you details coming up. have you ever been on a first date like this? >> you must think i'm -- >> no, i admire a man who can cry. >> really? >> a guy gets rejected in a text message after a bad date then he demands his money back for the drink that he bought. is that the worst date ever? your es males are pouring in. -- your e-mails are pouring in. we'll share them. "fox and friends" begins right now. >> good morning. great to see you. >> have you ever had a date like that? >> no, never. >> digital era. >> awkward silence. >> no. >> we're going to show you what happened on this date and have a little role playing on the set. we're going to act out that
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fateful exchange. >> who knew elizabeth was such an amazing actress. >> i had to turn down that career to, you know, substitute here. >> we're glad you did. >> we're glad you're here this morning. >> first up, pope francis on the final leg of his jam packed trip to the united states. the crowds the largest he has seen so far. this afternoon an estimated million people in outdoor philadelphia. >> this comes hours after the pontiff highlighted the importance of marriage and family in a star-studded event. >> fox news correspondent brian is live in philadelphia with all the details. good morning. >> good morning. last night was really a star-studded event, an inspiring energetic night. the festival of families here. today another big day, his sixth and final day. back to last night, mark wahlberg hosted the event, big performances by aretha franklin and andrea bocelli in front of tens of thousands of families in attendance and six families from
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six different countries giving moving testimonials of their strugsles and joy. the show stopper was pope francis moving unscripted dynamic 20-minute speech on families. he said that families are the factories of hope, the most beautiful thing god created and he urged families to overcome their difficulties with love. in fact, listen to him joke about some of those family difficulties. >> sometimes they can fly and children bring headaches. i want to speak about mother-in-laws. >> it was perhaps the most passionate, energetic and pastoral we've seen the pontiff in america. his monologue encapsulating why he's been dubbed the people's pope.
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for his schedule today the pope will meet with 300 bishops and seminarians at st. charles borromeo and then at 11:00 a.m. he will head to the curran-fromhold correctional facility where he will meet with inmates ages 18 to 21 at the prison gym and that comes to head at 4:00 p.m. the main event today. the mass where pope francis will take all of america really to church today. a million people expected at the heart of philadelphia, benjamin franklin parkway. a sight to see before he takes off back to rome at 8:00 p.m. guys? >> thanks, brian. even the pope getting digs in on mother-in-laws. >> it's a universal sentiment. paying attention to politics you may remember the other day hillary clinton during an interview was asked about the e-mail scand will has consumed her presidential campaign and driven her approval ratings down to the basement and remember what she said, she said i take responsibility for what i did. well turns out not so much. >> maybe that was premature.
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>> maybe so. >> she didn't consult with bill clinton who now bring it out on the campaign trail to talk, laid the blame for the e-mail scandal where it needed to be. listen to bill. >> the other party doesn't want to run against her and if they do, they would like her as mangled up as possible. it always happens. we're seeing history repeat itself. she went out and did her interview, said she was sorry that using her personal e-mail caused all this confusion and she would like to give the election back to the american people. at the beginning of the year she was the most admired person in public life. and she earned it. why? because she was being covered by people who reported on what she was doing. what happened? the presidential campaign happens. and nature of the coverage shifted from is she based to political. >> the campaign's fault. >> one thing he said, she was being covered by people who reported on what she was doing.
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>> exactly. >> we are reporting what she's doing. she had a private e-mail server, which could have been a huge security risk among the fact that we don't know exactly if classified materials were sent back and forth on an unsecured server. we're slowly learning more about the e-mails and reporting on exactly what she's doing. >> we learned about it from congress by the way through the benghazi investigation. >> the day this interview took place on thursday, the next day, the white house announced that, in fact, there was a new batch of e-mails that hillary clinton never acknowledged and never turned over that have surfaced. this scandal grows. to believe what bill clinton said you have to believe the obama justice department is run by right wingers and the clinton people, that "the new york times" is a right wing newspaper. they are living in an alternate universe. >> brilliant to release it on friday with the pope news. meanwhile, ed klein and "the new york post" has written a
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bombshell piece this morning about hillary's hollywood make-over. obviously she's seen declining poll numbers. every time she publicly speaks, does interviews, this has been a problem. this new report is they've enlisted the help of steven spielberg to help remake her or make her a little more likable. >> and the piece says it was very much encouraged by her husband bill and she would work in front of a camera and how to make herself more relatable to the crowds and my thing is, she's been a public figure since the '90ss even way before that and she's now working to revamp her image and optics. >> that's such good point. we know all we're going to know about hillary clinton. i like ed klein, i want to say i'm skeptical of the details of this piece but i will say it is fascinating and irrefutable the more people that hear from hillary clinton the less they like her. when she stayed silent during secretary of state her numbers went up. when she talks more her numbers go down. >> all right.
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now to your headlines. breaking overnight a concert in arizona descends into chaos as thousands rush the stage. dozens of ambulances on the scene at tempe's summer end music festival, at least 12 people had to be treated for their injuries. the crowd stampeded towards the stage when the band revolution started playing. the band actually halted the concert to call for help and the show did resume later in the evening. a new jersey community left stunned by the loss of a beloved high school football start. 17-year-old evan murray died after being hit during a game. the warren hills quarterback coming back to the sidelines saying he felt woozy before collapsing and gave the crowd a thumb's up as paramedics carted him away an autopsy will determine how he dieds at community tries to cope with the loss. a go fund me page has been set up raising nearly $30,000 in one day. atheists taking aim at a marine corps base in hawaii, a sign reads "god bless the military their families and civilians who work with them."
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it's been up since the september 11th terror attacks. the military religious freedom foundation wants the sign moved to the base's chapel after 23 marines came to the group to complain. base officials are now looking into the situation. do i have to read this story. elizabeth. the mets, big night of baseball, nine years of heartbreak is over for the mets. they finally clench the division title securing a playoff spot. lot wondered if they would have a meltdown like the experience of 2007 when the phillies came out of nowherep and xwaj and meet them. not last night. >> how are the phillies doing? >> they -- their season ended in april. they came back to beat the reds 10-2. meanwhile they are calling this the play of the year. do you see this? watch this. >> 2-2. out towards centerfield. that ball, to the wall, reached up and he got it. >> holy smokes.
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four-time all star mike trout making the impossible look easy the unreal catch robbed the mariners of a three-run home run in the fourth. the angels win 3-2. you wouldn't be able to do that at wrigley. >> right. >> climb up the brick wall. caught in the ivy. >> yeah. that's a reason why it's been -- >> unbelievable. >> another all star with us today. >> do we have him. >> there he is. >> keep looking. hey, clayton, you just read the mets story and someb said they ! she didn't know, you found out that the mets made it right now when she was watching you. >> i'm glad i could bring that joyous news to a mets' fan. >> she was very excited. trust me. let's talk a little weather out here. it's chilly for the folks visiting from florida here this morning. chilly start across much of the area. we'll show the maps to you. see what we got going on. 58 in new york city. the chilly, 77 in tampa, had you stayed in florida this morning you would be warmer than right now. it is chilly up here. as you come up to this part of
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the area for fall right now. but it's been so warm, not many fall colors happening yet. let me know if you have fall colors happening where you are. a lot of rain across the mid-atlantic and beach erosion from the pesky situation that's been out heres the better part of the last five to six days. done by tomorrow. good news. we will turn our sights down to the tropics. little bit of activity down around the yucatan going to bring moisture. i don't think any tropical system but moisture towards the central gulf and parts of florida throughout the day today and tomorrow. back to you inside. >> thanks, rick. it's being labeled the worst date ever. >> for good reason. >> i'm surprised we don't have the fox news alert into this. >> we should. can we get serious music. this was a terrible, terrible date that unfolded in london. >> i've been practing so we're going to be doing a little role play here, acting out the text, put it up on screen. >> right. these are texts between a couple. >> set the stage for us. >> this is taking place the england. notice there are british
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colloquialisms in here. fancy i think is -- >> okay. >> and we're going to act out the exchange and tell us what you think. start off i'm the boy. it was nice meeting you tonight. fancy meeting up again? >> lovely to meet you. you are a very nice and passionate person, but i am sure we really aren't right for each other. i'm quite a reserved person but wouldn't want you to change. hope you have better luck with future dates. another exclamation point inserted here. >> here's the boy, ignoring the hint she sent. she never wants to see him again. quote, i want to show off my cooking skills, smiley face. fansing coming over to mine for dinner tuesday or wednesday night next week. >> thanks for the offer but i have plans those days and next week will be crazy at work so late nights. exclamation point. >> the boy, who i think must have asperger's or something, i will cook you something and treat you well for dessert. >> thanks, but i don't share
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your view, sorry, another exclamation point. i'm sure you will find someone else to cook for another exclamation point. >> the boy, finally getting it, writes, you're unfair and i'm now sorry i paid for your drink tonight. can i ask you to pay me back for it? it would just be fair. >> of course i will pay you back, that's her being polite, if you want. i would have bought you one back but it got toos noisy in the bar. let me know your bank details and how much the drink cost. >> he's just snippy now, it cost 4.5 euros he says and sends his bank account details. >> wow. this confirms you are definitely not the right one. no exclamation point. >> no smiley face. >> no smiley face. >> have you ever done this, clayton? >> i've never done that. >> i just have -- we want to hear from you. i mean i haven't really been on -- >> you handle that -- how would you handle that? >> i've only dated my husband so i'm not experienced in the dating world. i probably would never have went
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out with him in the first place. >> mary writes this morning, my first date was at the county fair, my date so cheap he had me jump the gates by the cow barns instead of paying. for some reason i ended up marrying the guy. >> hilarious. the guy showed up with his hair a mess, smelling like a bottle of whiskey. worst date ever. >> okay. >> keep them coming. we would love to read them. >> on that note, coming up, the search for the speaker of the house heating up after john boehner resigns. how will this move impact the presidential race. fox news sunday host chris wallace is the expert he's going to join us next. >> watch out. one wide receiver scores a touchdown, he's delivering a big hit off the field. the big play you'll want to see again. ♪
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welcome back. john boehner announced his resignation for speaker of the house the other day and many are excited if not thrilled. >> the conservative audience this weekend values voter summit giving a standing ovation at the word of the news. what does this mean for the gop going forward? >> joining us now to weigh in is the host of "fox news sunday" chris wallace. he has like a month left until officially out of there. what's going to happen in the meantime? >> it's interesting, because in a short-term sense you're exactly right, the tea party, the hardline conservatives in the house, in effect, forced boehner out, but in terms of what's going to happen in the house, the government action that's going to be taken, it's not going to go so much their
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way. seems almost certain now that there's not going to be a fight over the budget, that they're going to pass a short-term budget that includes funding for planned parenthood and talk that boehner no longer under the thumb of the hardline part of the gop caucus may do business with democrats on raising the debt limit or extending the highway bill. it will be interesting to see what happens. and look, the basic balance of power in washington isn't going to change, whether it's john boehner or ronald reagan, who's the speaker of the house, the fact is that democrats have enough votes in the sflaenate t sustain a filibuster and president obama still can -- has his veto pen in the white house. it's not like because boehner is out, that conservatives in the house and the senate are now going to get their way in terms of government action in washington. >> no. and they might get kevin mccarthy i have to think is the frontrunner by any measure. do you think if he becomes the
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speaker, mccarthy, he will turn out to be more conservative than boehner was? >> well, on the margins, i think. but he's -- and certainly there's a sense, i think, among the so-called freedom caucus that the more hardline conservatives in the house, he's a little less established and a little more favorable to them, but again, you know, there's a decision that's got to be made on some of these things. you can fight the good fight, vote to shut down the government as part of defunding planned parenthood, but is that -- where's that going to get you? i will tell you, i talked to a top republican staffer who said, look, with the split inside the party and with the fact that republicans seem to have sort of taken ownership of the idea of shutting down the government, he said, i'm not sure that the president or democrats in the senate have to do anything, whether it's the debt limit or when the budget comes up again in december, they can sit back and say you want to shut down the government, go ahead and do it. as he put it, we used to have a
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weak hand, now we have to hand. >> who's going to be on the show? >> we're going to be talking first of all to jeb bush. we went down to miami, spoke to him this week. very interesting conversation. the former frontrunner has shoveled back into the middle of the pack. i think has had a bit of a regaining of momentum. we'll talk to him. we will have a debate among two top house leaders about the future of the gop. tom cole who is a boehner supporter and nick mulvaney one of the hardliners. >> all right. chris wallace from washington, thanks for joining us. >> thank you, chris. we'll be watching. >> coming up here on the show, one man nearly burnt down a gas station trying to light a bug on fire. no choke. wait until you hear how this one ends. >> the sons and daughters made the ultimate sacrifice to protect our freedom. we honor three gold star moms with a special gift. ♪
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my name is chris hughes and i am a certified arborist for pg&e. i oversee the patrolling of trees near power lines and roots near pipes and underground infrastructure. at pg&e wherever we work, we work hard to protect the environment. getting the job done safely so we can keep the lights on for everybody. because i live here i have a deeper connection to the community. and i want to see the community grow and thrive. every year we work with cities and schools to plant trees in our communities. the environment is there for my kids and future generations. together, we're building a better california.
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. their sons and daughters gave the ultimate sacrifice to protect our everyday freedoms and today we honor them. gold star mother's day which recognizes moms who have lost a child while serving our country. this morning three of those wonderful mothers are here and we have a special surprise for them, a day of pamporing. we will go through all of these wonderful moms and start here with yolanda lopez. her son army corporal manny lopez was killed in iraq in april of 2005. i just want you to share your son's story with us. that's really why we're here today, to give you this service when it's such a special day.
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>> manny, when 9/11 happened, he was in high school, and that's when he said i'm joining the military as soon as i can. i want it to protect you, mom, i want to protect my family. >> and all of us. >> and everybody else. and he graduated, got married, and signed up and went to iraq. he got killed in his first deployment. >> we lost him in 2005. >> yeah. >> but we wouldn't be able to be here today if it weren't for him. >> thank you. >> we thank you for being a brave mother and continuing his memory. >> thank you. >> beautiful make-over by great clips. >> thank you. >> another beautiful mother. chris kessler. tell me about your son. >> my son was first lieutenant joe steiner and he was killed south of kandahar in 2010. we always knew joe was going to be in the army, as a young first lieutenant passionate about his men and mission. the incident that took his life, the ied, he was the only one
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that was physically injured or hurt and that's just how joe would have wanted that. >> how long was joe in the service? >> he was brand new in the service. in for a little over almost two years. >> okay. >> commissioned in 2008, finished armor school in 2009 and was killed in june of 2010. >> is there something you do every day to carry on his memory? >> yes, there is. i talk to him every day and our family set up the memorial fund and we are heavily supporting strong point ranch which is our initiative in new mexico. we're working on building a 14,000 square foot ranch for our nation's military members, gold star families and veterans where they can come for rehabilitative experiences and a respite cost-free, one week, and my oldest son billy has been working on the plan for this ranch and finalizing all the electrical and mechanical plans
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with an independent civil engineer and they should be finalized this week and we can set out for bid. >> thank you for being a brave mother. >> thank you. >> thank you to joe for his ultimate sacrifice. >> thank you. >> and i hope you enjoy the day. >> thank you very much for this. we appreciate it. one final mother to get to. pat perry. thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you. >> i know you're getting your nails down. >> that's okay. >> don't want to shake your hand too hard. tell me about your son who was a navy s.e.a.l. >> yes. brian bill. >> brian bill. >> brian bill he was a navy s.e.a.l., he had been on the team for about ten years. he was, obviously, an amazing young man, as i think most of these other mothers will tell you their children also. from a family. i'm one of seven, so he had a huge number of cousins and they all grew up together and spent a lot of time together. he was on a helicopter that was shot down in afghanistan on august 6th of 2011, with 30 other men, with 30 men, and it
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was a tremendous loss to the community. >> what do you want folks at home to know about your son and all of these men this morning? >> these are men who have given of themselves freely. this is a volunteer military. it doesn't touch everybody and i think out of mind, out of sight, out of mind. people tend to forget what it means. we have a scholarship for brian at his alma mater nor witch university. we started one at his high school. and my daughter started a non-profit in memory of brian. we send the children of navy special warfare on outdoor adventures with men like their dads so they will know what their dads were like. >> thank you for coming this morning and continuing the mem re. freedom isn't free and we wouldn't be here if it weren't for your brave sons. >> thank you very much. >> coming up, we'll check in on our gold star moms next hour and
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any gold star moms in the area are welcome to get a free make-over here at the plaza, 48th and sixth avenue from now until 10:00 a.m. and female veterans are also welcome. tucker, clayton, back to you. >> pretty nice. thanks. a doctor turns into a macgyver when a toddler has trouble breathing aboard an airplane making a device that helped save the child's life. meet the doctor and hear the remarkable story that's coming up next. >> plus, looking to score a touchdown with your tailgate. the four can't-miss tips for football fans everywhere. we're grilling on the plaza. i was getting a little worried here. a week where we don't have meat on the show. we got that back. ♪ think your heartburn pill works fast? take the zantac it challenge! zantac works in as little as 30 minutes. nexium can take 24 hours.
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seconds ago and nobody could hear me but myself. something borrowed 10 going on 11 times. this wedding dress has been in the kingston family for more than 120 years. it has been worn by ten brides. >> wow. in a few weeks abby gal kingston will become the 11th. a bridal designer spent 00 hours restoring the victoria-era gown. i would love to know more about this. the coolest story of the day. >> have all the marriages -- like what happened to all the different marriages, what happened to the family? >> maybe that's my like -- >> sometimes the details are ones you don't want to know. all we know this is going to be the 11th time this dress has been worn by a bride and that's pretty darn awesome. >> it's a whole new level of something borrowed. moving on to your headlines the emotional moment everyone is talking about, pope francis bringing his motorcade to a sudden halt at the philadelphia airport to get out and kiss a 10-year-old boy with cerebral
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palsy. that boy and his family joined us this morning to share their incredible experience. >> i was speechless and i kept thinking to myself, how can you thank someone who's sharing his love and a blessing that's so great and so i just started saying thank you, thank you, thank you. and he reached out and grabbed my hand and then my husband's hand. >> michael's father says the image of pope francis kissing his son will forever stand as a symbol of their faith. unbelievable. fired for trying to protect passengers? q. an allegiant air pilot says he lost his job for making an emergency landing in florida in june after reports of smoke in a cabin. the pilot's union says the airline is upset because the move made the company look bad. they called the firing retaliation for ongoing labor negotiations. the airline won't comment on personnel matters but says mechanics found no problem with the plane. a dramatic rescue caught on camera in utah after a car goes
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careening into a canal. >> is that what your -- majority of your pain is? >> my legs. >> first responders arrived to find this man, pinned underneath his car trying to keep his head above water. police used a neighbor's ladder to get to the roof where they pulled him carefully out. he has two broken legs, but is recovering. football players are used to running over other players on the field but a cheerleader? >> towards the end zone, touchdown! shelton gibson. >> ouch. west virginia wide receiver shelton gibson bulldozed a cheerleader sprinting through the end zone. he had scored a touchdown in the second quarter. west virginia beat maryland 45-6. those are your ouch headlines. >> clayton, tucker, over to you. >> football season is under way
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and we know what that means. tailgating is here. >> oh, yeah. before you stock the coolers and fire up the grill we have the top tips you're going to need to make the tailgate a massive success. who better than chef harold moore joins us now. great to see you. >> nice to see you guys. >> you will boil it down. don't just go into the tailgating things without thinking it through. >> you got to be prepared. you want to prepare the night before so you don't spend a whole day a slave to your party. >> you want to enjoy the party. >> want to enjoy the party. >> be prepared. what do you need to do the night before? >> you want to -- if you're going to make -- like i'm doing skewers, you skewer everything, have it ready to go, so as soon as you come, light your fire and start cooking. no -- >> you don't want to be out there skewering things. >> you don't. >> let's talk about some of the skewers. this is a complex and let delicious looking skewer. bacon around it. what is that? >> that is a bacon wrapped tomato. find them at moore food and drinks. >> how are they? >> delicious. i would eat a pine cone if wrapped in bacon but a tomato
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seems like a perfect center for one of these. >> they're good. >> i love it's simple. for simpletons like myself you want to say keep it simple when out there, you don't need some elaborate plan? >> you don't want do anything that's knife and fork. one-handed kind of foods to eat standing you. >> you're holding a beer in the other hand. >> you are. what is this? >> those are chicken skins. >> chicken skins. >> chicken skins. you can buy boneless chicken thighs. >> sell me on this. >> delicious. so good. the best part of the chicken, all grilled. >> i love that. >> yeah. >> you cook them, put the skins on or precook them. >> put the skins on and cook them. >> all right. >> toolbox, i see one here, what do you need a toolbox for? >> when doing your tailgate stuff you want to travel light, but you also want to be prepared. >> yeah? >> in here a knife, brush, for coating things, you want to keep a band-aid maybe or aspirin.
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>> for sure. >> but it's all nice and travels safe. that's a metal box and drop something, the knives don't come poking out. >> a stanley ther muss. >> an oyster shuck. >> that is. stanley thermos if you don't want to go the japanese route make sauces like i make a hot sauce vinaigrette you keep warm in here and pour it out on -- >> that's unbelievable. your friends must love you. >> sometimes. sometimes. i'm usually lazy. i go to their parties. >> we will get more specific about that in the commercial break. thanks for joining us. >> thanks. >> thanks. the fight to replace john boehner as house speaker is on. who will take over? senator ted cruz shares his thoughts in part two of our interview fex. >> it's app you're holding a cheese greater talking about john boehner right now. so,as my personal financial psychic,
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and how to deal with my uc. to me, that was normal. until i talked to my doctor. she told me that humira helps people like me get uc under control and keep it under control when certain medications haven't worked well enough. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. raise your expectations. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, control is possible. welcome back. right now, breaking news, pope francis getting ready to depart
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his residence at st. charles borromeo seminary in philadelphia. a beautiful seminary out on philadelphia's main line. he's going to create the seminarians there on his way out and speak with the -- he will speak with the oldest priest and youngest seminarian there. after that, he will meet with 300 bishops, pope francis' last day in the united states before heading back to the vatican. joining us now, to explain what exactly is going on, father robert, the founder of the institute. great to see you. >> good to be here. >> what is the message of the pope's trip to philadelphia and different from his trips to new york and washington? >> slightly different. this is an international setting and the visits prior from washington, new york, were really focused on the united states. but the message was onef family. i mean that homily or spontaneous homily, we were sitting there with the embargoed text and all of a sudden he used two lines of the text and went off into this beautifully well
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organized statement on the family, tracing it from creation to sin to devil, the incarnation, the resurrection, wrapping it all up and saying that family is the emblem of god's love of the world. >> what was your reaction last night when you listened to some of the families that gave very candid, very personal accounts of their personal life and the challenges and the fears that they face and how did he handle that. >> well, they were very real, weren't they. i think the way he handled it, afterwards to say, i think that probably -- i'm just speculating here, prompted him to discard the prepared text and he spoke in a way, an oblique way, to all of the issues they raised because he said the family is a place where you throw plates, it's a place where we have pain and suffering, but that the love is what sustains and that love is the only thing that can generate hope because nothing else can. >> so good to hear him talk
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about that. looking at your screen, father, at st. charles borromeo. the main campus there. 130 seminarians that live there. he got rest and slept there. >> unless they went knocking on his door. >> he will greet the oldest and youngest. what do you expect him to do here? >> i have been to this campus. a number of years ago i gave talks there. these guys, i just have to say, having been a seminarian, to have the pope in the house, i mean this is the boss. he's in the house. he wants to encourage them. this is going to be the signature of his pontificate. over the years of his pontificate more and more men like this respond to the call and give their lives to the church in service, according to his model of service, you will know his pontiff cate -- >> will that happen? something a lot has been about. the numbers declining. do you think this will turn the tide? >> the numbers declining has been overplayed, because, for
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instance, the north american college in rome, the american seminary in rome, is filled to the rafters and they've had to expand it. number of the other seminaries are growing. so there is a good, positive response as a result of john paul ii's pontificate and then in its own way benedict. these are highly theological philosophical pontificates where people learned. what's going to be interesting to see here, if this more passionate, personal, pastoral will cause young men to respond in their vocations and call young women to the -- >> church. >> becoming nuns. >> as the week concludes now, we're getting a good grasp of his visit here, and we just saw such an outpour of support all across the board from people who may not necessarily be members of the catholic church. >> absolutely. >> how does this compare, you
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know, when we -- and i remember when benedict came and it was exciting but i don't remember it being like this. >> well, i think any time a pope comes it's going to be this enthusiasm. i'm sure they had bobblehead benedicts too. i think it's the news media that is over the top. i've been commenting on things like this for 25 years and never seen the news media gushing as much as they do now. a lot of interesting political reasons that may be going on, i don't know if you want to discuss this on a sunday morning, but that may be -- >> what are they? >> i think that a lot of people are misreading and superficially reading this pontificate as being one that will transform the core teachings of the church on morality. certainly he tilts left on economic stuff, though just a dime's worth of difference between him and john paul ii, in terms of their economic understanding. it's the style, it's the personality, it's the vibrancy
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with which he speaks that's different, not the core teaching. if you come at this thinking that this is going to be a whole transfortive pontificate that the church will ordain women or allow for gay priests and things like that, then i think you're going to be kind of egging him on. if you see it as more in continuity with the past and he's given every indication that the dogma is not going anywhere -- >> especially with the families. >> especially there, what he's trying to do is turn the page on the story about the church with regard to the priest sex scandals and the general hectoring image, the scolding image that church has in a lot of people's minds and showing another dimension, not something different, not something contradictory, but also compassionate that meets the woman caught in the act of adultery, protects her, but in the end says sin no more.
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>> father joining us as we're looking live at st. charles borromeo, the big campus seminary in philadelphia, waiting for the pope to come out and shake hands and then father, what will the afternoon look like leading up to that massive mass at 4:00 p.m.? philadelphia? >> you know, you got me there. i have been so busy reading the peaches i haven't seen -- speeches i haven't seen the itinerary for the day. he's going to meet these two, the youngest and oldest, and then he's probably going to encourage them. the mass, of course, will be in the afternoon and then he takes off. but i'm not sure what's happening in between. he's probably going to -- >> visiting a correctional facility. >> that's right. of course the correctional facility which he's very accustomed to doing. >> right. >> done it in beau nas air res, do it here in one visit i remember he said i'm a sinner among sinners. >> what do american bishops think of him? >> off the cuff, outside the confessional but off the cuff.
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>> for sure. >> i think some are wondering what the agenda is. where are we going with all of this, because so much of it is very personal. i mean the whole getting out of the car and -- that's real. he is very personal. he sees a person in front of him that becomes the whole world for those moments that's there. the bishops, american bishops, are looking at the whole program attic thing to a great extent. >> we will take a quick break here as we await the pope's arrival to walk down the hallway and we will be right back. remember the ground zero mosque a major update on that story straight ahead. what we learned about new construction on the site. >> and a hero in the skies, a doctor turns into macgyver to help a child breathe in mid flight. what he did and how stay tuned. i'm angela, and i quit smoking with chantix. for ten long years i was ready to quit. but i couldn't do it on my own.
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misswill turn anan asphalt parking lot into a new neighborhood for san franciscans. a vote for "yes" on "d" is definitely a vote for more parks and open space. a vote on proposition "d" is a vote for jobs. campos: no one is being displaced. it's 40% affordable units near the waterfront for regular people. this is just a win-win for our city. i'm behind it 100%. voting yes on "d" is so helpful to so many families in our city.
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welcome back. a hero in the skies this morning. this doctor got word of a struggling 2-year-old whose parents packed his asthma medication during a seven-hour flight. he saved the toddler's life. here now director of robotic surgery at the cancer institute, doctor guru. nice to see you. welcome to the show. >> thank you so much, clayton. >> you were on the flight. what sort of announcement did you hear? did the in-flight crew know there was a doctor on board? >> so, no, they just announced that they're looking for a physician to take care of a patient and i responded to that announcement. that's when i saw the child. >> when you got to the child, what was happening? >> so the child was in the mother's lap, a little short of
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breath and crying and a little agitated because he had a cold and then with the kind of temperature in the plane and also the asthma history, he was getting slightly worse. for the parents he had two episodes of shortness of breath before i got there. >> crying, shortness of breath, four hours into the flight when you saw the boy. you got up to him checked his oxygen level and it was extremely low. you knew this kid needed his asthma medication but his parents packed it away, didn't think they would need it. how did you jump into macgyver mode at that moment? >> what happened, the crew and us and me collaborated kind of they got all the equipment, we kind of team tagged this and i looked around and i realized that we didn't have a way to kind of pass the medication and oxygen together, so i created this out of a water bottle, cup and hooked that to the oxygen tank and used an adult inhaler.
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>> wow. and did the boy start to respond? >> yes. as you said, when i started, you know, the saturation was low, but by the end of the treatment he got two treatments, he was way better and i'm glad and thankful and we're all lucky we were able it to do this together. >> are your colleagues calling you macgyver now? >> with a kind of story like that, it stems back from you have to do with so much little sometimes, a lot of non-profit work, i do back in the country kashmir and then also a lot of work here at the cancer center, i run the innovation program. >> we appreciate you joining us this morning. thanks so much. i would like you to join me on my future flights from now on. thanks, doc. >> thank you. >> a fox news alert. pope francis about to depart for his final day in the united states. our live coverage continues at the top of the hour. live in philadelphia right now. the fight to replace john
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this is a fox news alert breaking now. pope francis' final day in the united states is under way. he is right now entering st. charles borromeo in philadelphia. >> about to address about 300 bishops and cardinals speaking to the clergyman. the pontiff will meet with the oldest priest in the archdiocese of philadelphia and the youngest seminarian at st. charles. >> the pope will head to a prison where he will meet with inmates before celebrating a mass. joining us is reverend live on the couch. >> i'm happy to be here. >> tell us what we're watching. >> he's at st. charles borromeo the seminary for the archdiocese of philadelphia, but it's a
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regional seminary, there are seminarians from all over the world sitting there, he will be addressing the bishops of the united states as well as the seminarians. we will hear like he was speaking to st. patrick's cathedral telling us to work hard and be grateful for things, similar statement, certainly this is about the family he will speak about the relationship between the priesthood and religion, religious life and the family life. that's what i think we can expect to hear now. >> what is it like for the men, young and old, also? this has got to be surreal. >> the pope is peter the success of the apostle peter and why is peter? because of the question jesus asked him, you are christ, the son of the living god. they're looking to him for direction as to how is it they should carry out their ministry as disciples in the world today. he will head to a correctional facility later. what do you think he will talk to the prisoners about?
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>> jesus is the first one who encounters we saw that in the earlier segment where he speaks to the family. everything stops to address those under stress and prisoners are those in distress as well. he speaks about the need for reconciliation, the need for rehabilitation, that's something punitive, but rehabilitation, reconciliation, that's what we can expect to see. >> visiting prisoners is a biblical injunction. >> it's a requirement. >> do you see that when you met with prisoners, people in this country don't think there is any hope for them, they will stay there and there is no way they can find god. >> father flanagan that founded boys town usa said there's no such thing as a bad boy and there is no such thing as a bad person. god is seeking reconciliation of all people. when the pope is speaking he speaks with what all things are possible with love and with hatred not everything is
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possible, not everything can be overcome but with love all things can be overcome. that's the message we will see. saying that to prisoners, somebody who might have done evil, evil things, with all things love is possible. evil can be overcome. that's the power essentially for us as christians of the cross, right. the most evil things in the world was the day of the crucifixion of christ and yet that was overcome with the resurrection. that's the principle upon which he's trying to expound for you and me today. >> and this is, obviously, really the mapeak, although he s highlights in washington and new york, but he's concluding his trip talking about families. >> that's right. >> and that's something he is extremely passionate about and something he wants to put in his legacy. >> the reason he's here. we can hear him say for those that are priests or religious, jesus was not a confirmed bachelor and i think that he's
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going to remind the priest and religious though we may not be married we are not confirmed bachelors. he's going to speak to uswhat's life of the family. that's what i would imagine. >> what's the distinction between up married or a confirmed bachelor. >> somebody unmarried that doesn't mean you're not in family yal relationships. you call me father but that doesn't mean i haven't had a child. i have a spiritual relationship but i am called to be a father. what's a bachelor? someone concerned only about their own interest. the odd couple. >> great explanation. >> that's fascinating. >> tell us about the family gathering. he came to philadelphia because there was this global family conference. what is that? >> he's bringing together, there's a sit in on the family which will take place in rome how does the church interact with the family, the gathering all around the world to speak of the pressures on the family. there are a lot of pressures. the pressures in the united states. right.
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redefinitional questions of marriage. there's talk about is the religious alignment of families the same as the civil alignment with families. that's an american question. throughout the rest of the world there are questions about mothers in the philippines who have to leave to work in saudi arabia and in the united states as nurses, leaving their children at home, the pressures upon the single mothers in latin america, he's speaking about the economic pressures on family to survive. we know those pressures living here in new york. he's going to be addressing all those questions at this world meeting of families, certainly this evening and to the sem fair yans he will say, how is it that you should be interacting with families, how is it you should see your role in interacting with families. what is you're called to do with these families. >> philadelphia is not without problems and obviously the scandal that has unfolded in philadelphia over the recent years, and the associated press reporting that pope in between possibly the correctional
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facility visit and getting into the mass that he might meet with victims of sexual abuse, this has been reported and did not happen yet. do you anticipate that might? >> these were crimes that were committed, right. we tend to look at this as a sex scandal, really a criminal scandal. crimes were committed against children and i think what the pope is going to be trying to do and spoke about this at st. patrick's cathedral, reconciliation, there has to be reconciliation. part is holding people accountable for the crimes they've committed. >> he will be arriving at 4:00 p.m. on benjamin franklin parkway and have a short parade through center city before he goes to the mass. >> yes. i think when you think about that, this is what is remarkable. this pope is the if irs pope to remove two -- first pope to remove two bishops for dereliction of duty in terms of their interaction not because of something they've done in terms of related to abuse but what they did not do in relation to
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taking out priests who have been responsible for these sorts of things. >> defending the institution. >> he's basically taken action because of their inaction as bishops. i think that's going to be something which is significant and a culture shift. bishops are basically sovereign in their own dioceses but this pope has taken action against the bishops who he felt has not -- have not done their job as pasters the way he ought to. >> a jesuit pope. >> jesuit father. >> how does that affect his ministry? >> you know what distinction is, a couple, i think about pope francis. one is being a member of religious order is different than being a dieson priest. most take vows, jesuit fathers live in community. we see a simplicity of life. the holy father he doesn't own things. die yasin priests own things, they have like little apartments where religious order priests live in a bedroom and a common
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room a living room. very different way of life. and that's why we hear him speaking to die yassin priests about the simplicity of life. be careful of the car you drive, the technology, the comfort you surround yourself with. he said to us at st. patrick's cathedral comfort is your enemy. saying to the priests at st. patrick's cathedral, work more, get paid less and be grateful. think about that message at fox news. >> about as counter cultural as you get. that hasn't been emphasized in the news coverage. >> he's tough on the priests and this is a vocation, not a job. you're called to serve people. you're called to be a father to people. you are to be proximate, affectionate with people. says to them have the smell of the sheep. what does that mean? the sheep smell bad sometimes. you have to be close to where people are. he said yesterday, don't worry about where people should be. worry where they are. go where they are. >> english translation of the pope speaking now at the st. charles borromeo seminary in philadelphia.
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let's listen in. >> confirmation of god's blessing upon the masterpiece of creation. every day, all over the world, the church can rejoice in the lord's gift of so many families who, even amid difficult trials, maintain faithful to their promises and keep the faith. i would say that this is a very difficult period of transition and that requires that we move forward and recognize the
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family. gratitude should be more important than any, regardless of all of the obstacles. the family is the fund mental locust of the covenant of the church and god' creation. god blessed with the family. without the family, not see ven the church would exist. nor could she be what she is called to be. that is to say, a sign, an instrument, of communion with god. >> all right. we're watching the pope speaking right now in pennsylvania, on the main line of philadelphia at the seminary there, in front of a packed house. father, his message to you've been talking about his message to these priests, it's tough.
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i'm sure in private meetings as he was meeting with the oldest and youngest seminarians as he was walking through that message. >> saying you have to be proximate to the people. you have to be where they are. not where you want them to be. this is the real challenge for a lot of priests. we have a desire for where we think people should be. think about marriage, questions, for instance. people are called to be husband and wife. we know today he speaks about the supermarkets there's a supermarket mentality versus the grocery store mentality. people today have a lot of choices and as a result they get caught up in the choices. how do we meet them where they are, not necessarily where i want them to be as a priest in marriage but i have to bring them along and that means i have to be close to them, i have to understand what their struggles are, what their temptations are. we heard that yesterday too. when he speaks about how children plates are flying all over the house a guy that understands family life. >> right. he said love will heal. plates fly in the family, smash around and that's where there's pain but at the end of the day
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love in that family. >> if you think about how hard that is, if you're married you know how difficult that is. when you wake up next to somebody and you look at them and say this is not the person i married 20 years ago. when you think about the hardships like the cruel things we can sometimes say to each other and how painful that can be and how you can bear that pain year after year after year, maybe you say to yourself you know what, i want to wait until my child turns 18 and i'm out of here because that's hatred. hatred when you start to hate you can't overcome. but when you love, then all things even those injuries those hurtful things your wife husband might say to you, those things can be overcome. that's what he's trying to remind the priests to help people where they are, not where you want them to be. >> interesting. >> wow. >> father, you've given me anyway a totally different perspective. >> me as well. >> you're welcome. it's my pleasure. >> we'll check back in on the pope's visit in a short time. first. >> throughout the hour. coming up next we have breaking news from the campaign trail. brand new polls in on the 2016
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race. who is up and who is down. we're going to do that with our old friend frank. he's got the numbers. stay tuned. my name is anne. i'm one of the real live attorneys you can talk to through legalzoom. don't let unanswered legal questions hold you up, because we're here, we're here, and we've got your back. legalzoom. legal help is here. if you have moderate to severe ...isn't it time to let the... ...real you shine... ...through? introducing otezla, apremilast. otezla is not an injection, or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. some people who took otezla saw 75% clearer skin after 4 months. and otezla's prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't take otezla if you are allergic to any of its ingredients. otezla may increase... ...the risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression... ...or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop.
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♪ welcome back. brand new polls just in about the presidential candidates, who's up and down, and how do the voters feel about hillary? >> who better to break down these numbers than the man very familiar with numbers, pollster frank luntz, good to see you. >> good morning, tucker. >> you have numbers on the favorability of the 2016 republican candidates. do voters like them? not necessarily the people who are the most favored to win but the people who voters like the most. who's winning? >> and the reason why we do this, is that a pollster's job is not to tell you the way things are, it's to project into the future. if you don't have favorability, if people aren't considering voting for you there's no way for your numbers to go up. your fox news poll has great news for two candidates, ben carson and marco rubio.
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ben carson has the highest ratio of favorability of any of the presidential candidates as you can see right there plus 52% with marco rubio up 35%. what that means is that if they get a good debate performance, you're going to see an extra 5, 6, 8, 10% going to them. it means that they're in the game and the two that are going to be upset about your fox news poll are jeb bush and john kasich who barely have a positive favorability ratio. the problem for them is, the election is now four months away, getting closer, been through two debates. without that positive ratio they don't have the potential to increase their support. >> yeah. that's not a good number for either of those candidates. look specifically at ben carson, have we seen an increase in his favorability after the past two debates and voters have gotten to know him a little bit better? >> it's been a significant increase. when you go up 20 points that tells you that something very positive is happening.
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and not only is ben carson drawing support among republicans he's actually doing well among the electorate overall. i think it's because he's gentle, his demeanor is very positive. he's the one candidate that makes you feel good after you listen to him. >> right. >> may not be bold, may not be in your face, but he has a tone that people like. >> for sure. i wonder how predicted these numbers. i love my college roommate, 100% favorability with me but don't want to be president. is there a difference between afec nate for a candidate -- >> i've met your college roommate. he not only talks too much but he drinks too much. >> true. >> three things you need to have. high favorability, everybody's second choice, because that allows them to then move you up to the top spot, and you need a positive ratio. and ben carson and marco rubio have both. >> who also has both especially on the democratic side? >> actually it's joe biden. it is not hillary clinton.
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and to my surprise, i'll put this in perspective, hillary is 38% favorability, if she ends the election on that and she were ever elected president it would be the lowest favorability that anyone has ever been elected to president in american history and nobody has had more than half of the country feeling unfavorably to them. her numbers compared to joe biden she keeps dropping, biden keeps rising. if he decides to run he will make a race of it. >> here's a roster that kind of shocks pe. this is all contenders for the presidency left and right and in first place is joe biden. >> and that's the pope. at 49% he's actually three points ahead of carson. you got to look at the -- at those two biden and carson. they have the greatest potential to increase their support in the coming months. if i were joe biden's strategist i would be telling him get in the race and make sure that you participate in that first presidential debate. that's coming up on october 13th. >> is he going to?
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>> i can't tell. i was at the concert he was at last night in new york. he got a rousing response when he walked out on stage but nobody knows. >> wow. >> frank luntz. >> thanks a lot. >> your expertise is appreciated. hope to have you back. thank you so much. >> it was a great poll and this is a great election. >> we're enjoying it. >> thank you. >> coming up, he came to the defense of a blind student being assaulted by bullies and he was punished for it. the teen is speaking out and you will hear from him. >> waitress pays for a sheriff deputy's meal and then the deputy returns the favor in a big way. both of them join us live with our heartwarming story next. there they are. >> cool. ♪ waiting on the world to change ♪
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is definitely a vote for more parks and open space. a vote on proposition "d" is a vote for jobs. campos: no one is being displaced. it's 40% affordable units near the waterfront for regular people. this is just a win-win for our city. i'm behind it 100%. voting yes on "d" is so helpful to so many families in our city.
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good sunday morning. 9:23. quick headlines. the u.s. announcing air strikes against isis in both syria and iraq. this comes just hours after they took the syrian strike. the country has remained on the outskirts of the syrian fighting for fear of strengthening president bashar al assad's power. >> president obama set to peek speak at the united nations today he will address world leaders during the closing session this afternoon and tomorrow sit down with russian president vladimir putin amid tension over ukraine and syria. they saw each other in november. tucker, clayton, over to you. sorry, clayton. >> pick one of us. >> i'm sorry. >> here's a good one. listen to this story. a texas waitress picks up the bill for a sheriff's deputy. the heartwarming story doesn't end there. tammy says waiting on the deputy and his family touched her heart so she paid for their meal. and then minutes later that texas cop returned the favor and left her a $100 bill as a tip. joining us now with the story is
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that waitress tammy and deputy dustin with the orange county sheriff's department. great to see you this morning. >> good morning. >> thank you. >> all the bad news we've been hearing about in the news over the many weeks great to hear a story like this. what inspired you to grab the check from -- walk up to the cashier and said, if he asks for the bill i got this. >> well, number one, everything that's been going on in the news, officers getting killed, people bad mouthing them, and then this officer deputy comes in with this two little girls and his mom and they're real people like we are, normal people, and i don't know, i just felt in my heart i wanted to do something nice for them because, you know, i feel for them. so that's why i did it. >> lovely. deputy, what did you think when you said, can i have the bill, i would like to pay for my meal? >> i was trying to figure out
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who actually paid for my bill. i didn't think it would be my waitress. and i -- tell you the truth whenever they told me she paid for my meal, i turned around and looked at her, and i said, i need to talk to you. >> i think we have a quote. you said, i have a bone to pick with you. is that right? >> yeah. that's right. >> tammy, you said, what did you say in return? you said don't take this as a bribe, right? >> yes, sir i did. because i mean, i didn't want him to think that or anything. might not have been the right thing to say, but, you know, i'm just a waitress. >> well not just a waitress, a wonderful human being. deputy, what did you think when you -- when she paid for your bill? what was going through your mind? >> initially i thought why is she paying for my meal? i knew her from -- i met her several times being there before, it's not the first time
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i've been there, you know, when i found out she had paid for my meal i thought well, i've been a waiter before, i know they don't make all the money in the world, so i wanted to be sure not only did she get back what she gave to me but for helping serve my family. >> and you left and then tammy, i think the cashier brought something over to you and slipped what into your apron? >> she came back into the kitchen and she said here you go, this is what the officer left you. i pulled it out of my apron and it was a $100 bill. >> wow. >> i was like oh, my gosh. i couldn't believe it. >> that was the tip. you left her a tip paying it back, paying it forward. i don't know if it's paying it forward, paying it back, but the thing that touched you the most was the phone call you received after, who called you? >> his mom. and that was just so sweet. like ten minutes after they had left, i got a phone call and the
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waitress said you really need to take this call. it was his mom. and she was so sweet, thanking me for what i had done and she told me she said, this is just so awesome and, you know, because this is her son. you know, i mean -- >> proud mom, deputy. that's all we can hope for, right, make our moms proud. >> you're right. >> deputy, and tammy, appreciate you both joining us this morning. thanks for sharing your story. hopefully other people will pay things forward as well. thanks, guys. >> thank you. >> you bet. coming up here on the show, fight to replace john boehner as house speaker is on. who will be the one to take over? no one may have more influence than our next guest. senator ted cruz will join us y don't want to miss that next. hillary clinton has struggled with her image on the campaign trail, now a director is giving her a make-over according to a report. details on that connection
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♪ verizon has backup generators for most of their towers, so they're ready if the power ever goes down. (bird screeching) i wonder why they save those backups... and not just put them in the regular rotation. i bet if they just had the chance, some of those backups would really shine. no matter what happens, a reliable network has your back. fox news alert, pope francis is right now addressing a group of 300 bishops and cardinals in philadelphia he is stressing the importance of forming and focusing on relationships. >> and from here the pope will head to a prison where he will meet with inmates, about 100 this afternoon, and this afternoon he will cap off his
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historic trip celebrating mass with a crowd of more than 1 million people. the pontiff flies back to rome tonight. tucker? ? thank you. meanwhile republican candidate ted cruz wins the values voter summit straw poll yesterday. third year in a row he's done that. proving he is a powerful force among social conservatives, won 35% of the vote, joins us from his new campaign office in the state of iowa to talk about speaker john boehner's exit and the fight for religious liberty in america. here's part of it. >> who would you like to see replace john boehner? would you be happy with kevin mccarthy of california? >> i've always said i'm going to leave house decisions to members of the house. i'm describing the characteristics i think house leadership should embody and in particular, the most important characteristic is a faithfulness, a fidelity, to the men and women we're working for. conservatives were pleased that
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john boehner announced his resignation, you were among them. do you think you celebrated too vigorously in public the fact that he's leaving? >> well, listen, what my focus is on, it's not on any one individual. i don't really know john boehner. he doesn't speak to a whole lot of conservatives in the senate. i don't know him personally. nothing to do with the man personally. what it has to do with is the leadership in both chambers. if either john boehner or mitch mcconnell would stand up and lead, would defend the conservative principles we were elected to defend, i would bes the first to celebrate them, to praise them. >> in your new campaign office in iowa, the first state, first contest of caucus there, and you're talking to voters, what are the real issues of concerns republican primary voters the ones you've talked to? >> well, people are frustrated. they're frustrated with the direction of this country, frustrated with a stagnant
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economy where millions of americans are hurting. they're frustrated with the federal government, assaulting our constitutional rights. and they look at the obama/clinton foreign policy leading from behind is a manifest disaster. and they're looking for a leader they can trust. all of us have seen campaign conservatives, talk a good game on the trail but haven't walked the walk. i believe what republican primary voters are looking for is a consistent conservative, someone the same yesterday today and tomorrow no i want . >> i want to go to the pope. do you think the pope was direct and specific enough in his calls for religious liberty when he was in washington? >> well, i'm very glad the pope came to washington. i thought it was truly a remarkable experience to sit on the floor of the house of representatives in a joint session of congress and listen to the pope speak to us. and i think his message
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encouraging all of us to appeal to our higher angels, to put aside petty differences and to come together on shared values, to solve the great challenges of the day, i think that was a very important message. i hope that leaders on both sides of the aisle listen to and heed that message. i have to say, tucker, i was more than a little amused watching the mainstream media try to pitch the pope's visit as somehow wonderful for democrats. i mean basically they're trying to turn pope francis into an official spokesperson for the democratic national party. that's more than a little amusing. pope francis is a powerful voice for life, he is a powerful voice for marriage, he is a powerful voice for religious liberty, all three are under profound assault in america right now. and it was striking, it was sad. >> when pope francis on the floor of the house of representatives called for us to defend human life at every stage of development, to see virtually
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every democrat sitting stonefaced with their arms crossed glaring at the pope rather than standing together on the most basic obligation all of us have to defend life. ted cruz of texas. polling at about 7% as of this morning. all right. thanks, tucker. headlines now. the director who brought you "jurassic park" and "schindler's list" enlisted to help hillary clinton's fading campaign. that's the explosive claim from a new book which says that steven spielberg was called in to give the former secretary of state lessons on how to be more likable. the book is called "unlikable" claims the idea to use spielberg's help came from bill clinton. a new jersey community left stunned by the loss of a beloved high school football star. 17-year-old evan murray died after being hit during a game. the warren hills quarterback coming back to the sidelines saying he felt a bit woozy before he collapsed. he gave a thumb's up to the crowd as paramedics carted him
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away. an autopsy will determine how he died. a california teenager who stood up to a kid beating up a blind student is telling his story. >> [ bleep ] out of here. >> hey. >> [ bleep ]. you bro. >> are you okay, usaen. >> >> all right. come here. >> that's cody pine decking a bully caught on camera punching a blind classmate. >> blind kid. >> he says he knew he had to do something. >> he's punching a blind kid. >> i didn't want to hit him, but like the -- whenever you punch a blind kid that's what made me mad. >> i've always watched videos of bullies beating up kids and getting away with it. to me i've always been the kid that was like if that ever happens with me it's never going to go down like that. >> good for him. the bully was arrested and while cody hasn't been suspended the school is looking into the incident. and those are your headlines. elizabeth? >> thank you. we're back with the three
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wonderful gold star moms who lost their sons in their fight for our country. yolanda lopez, chris kessler and pat perry to honor their sacrifices for gold star mother's day we gave them a day of pampering and here's how they're doing. how did you enjoy it? >> it was wonderful. >> lovely. >> you look beautiful. in addition glam squad here, great clips and taxi nails. routh also wanted to give you $200 gift cards to round out your day of pampering. pat, you and chris and yolanda. >> thank you. >> all three of you brave women lost your sons as they defended our country. we couldn't be more grateful for the three of you and grateful for you coming by today and your sacrifices. we appreciate it. >> thank you. >> thank you. >> thank you, girls. >> and, of course, thank you to great clips and glam squad. we appreciate it. [ applause ] >> coming up, john boehner's resignation is shaking up the republican party.
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could it affect your wallet. maria bartiromo host of "sudden morning" joining us with her take. this movement has everyone talking. the pope stopping his motorcade to bless a boy in his wheelchair. hear from the boy and his family coming up. ♪ ♪ a moment like this ♪ some people wait a lifetime for a moment like ♪
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ominous music must mean a shakeup on capitol hill. john boehner announcing he will resign as speaker of the house. could resignation impact the stock market and your wallet. joining us now, maria bartiromo. >> hi, guys, how are you? >> i don't know the answer but i bet you markets do like john boehner. >> the issues surrounding what happens next is really going to
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dictate markets. looks like we wons get a government shutdown on october 1st, we will see a continuing resolution passed. that's a positive. but the fact is, is that john boehner has been working on a number of things that were positive for wall street and now there's a big question. that really includes dodd/frank. one of the issues talked about now on wall street is whether or not his replacement will continue to push to lift the threshold for what's called systemically important financial institutions. bottom line here all the banks -- many of the banks that have $50 billion in assets or more, have been deemed systemically important. that means, lots of bureaucracy, higher cost, what boehner was trying do is get that threshold up to $500 billion from $50 billion which would mean the systemically important banks would only be the largest banks we know. we don't know where that stands right now and whether or not that effort is going to continue because that is a big negative for financials and negative for the markets. >> dodd/frank, will there be any
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sort of change with dodd/frank? >> that's the point. we don't know at this point. dodd/frank has been incredibly cumberso cumbersome, expensive, has meant dictating balance sheets. look at general electric, ge sold 50% of its profits okay, the business has been completely changed because of dodd/frank. ge does not want to be deemed systemically important, selling ge capital, 50% of its profits. these are the things happening as a result of dodd/frank. boehner was working to change some of that. we don't know where that stands. that's one of the biggest things. >> real estate market affected by dodd/frank. government response to a government crisis the government started in the first place if we talk about the continuing resolution like it's -- is that really going to bring comfort to the stock market? i mean -- >> no. there's definitely uncertainty. i agree elizabeth. one of the things that this opens up more uncertainty. so right here we're fresh off of the federal reserve not raising interest rates when everybody -- a lot of them wanted to raise interest rates, that opens up
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uncertainty, the john boehner question in terms of, you know, what happens with these issues in terms of sequestration, how do these things change, that's going to dictate how money is allocated. the short answer is, is that this creates a lot more uncertainty than you want and for a number of pockets of the business community like financial services, it's actually a big negative. >> they talk about it as a victory but it's teary. >> and uncertainty. >> former governor of utah, jon huntsman, is he getting into the race? >> no. we will talk about china and president xi, the former ambassador to china under president obama. we will find out from him if he thinks anything got done here in this meeting because so many are talking about cyber crime, the hacking we saw, and really what's been talked about is china taking responsibility. >> and kareem abdul jabbaar on your show. >> he is. >> we never miss it. stay tuned for sunday morning too you tours, right after this, 13 minutes away.
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my name is rene guerrero. i'm a senior field technician for pg&e here in san jose. pg&e is using new technology to improve our system, replacing pipelines throughout the city of san jose, to provide safe and reliable services. raising a family here in the city of san jose has been a wonderful experience. my oldest son now works for pg&e. when i do get a chance, an opportunity to work with him, it's always a pleasure. i love my job and i care about the work i do. i know how hard our crews work for our customers. i want them to know that they do have a safe and reliable system. together, we're building a better california.
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misswill turn anan asphalt parking lot into a new neighborhood for san franciscans. a vote for "yes" on "d" is definitely a vote for more parks and open space. a vote on proposition "d" is a vote for jobs. campos: no one is being displaced. it's 40% affordable units near the waterfront for regular people. this is just a win-win for our city. i'm behind it 100%. voting yes on "d" is so helpful to so many families in our city. overnight, this emotional moment has captured the nation. pope francis on the final leg of his u.s. trip, stopping his motorcade, to get out, so he can kiss the forehead of a 10-year-old boy with cerebral
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palsy. that boy is the son of the director marching band that greeted the pope upon his arrival. his parents and twin brother and sister join us now. i'm so grateful for you coming today. thank you so much. we watched it live. all three of us were almost speechless, the whole studio was speechless. i want you both to tell me what was going through your mind at the moment. this was in no means anything you expected to happen. >> well, i guess what we saw was the pope came down the stairs from the plane, weaved over to us, the band, it was great. i thought that was our moment. then that's when he got into the fiat, like you have outside and drove around. and then he waved to the band and as he was passing us, our president of our school, sister regina, said something to him and got his attention. he looked over and saw michael and he had the driver stop the
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car. >> we remember, he stopped very abruptly, said, stop, stop, stop, got out of the car and we all said this is what we have seen in pope francis. he is so unpredictable and he reaches out when he feels it in his heart. what was going through your mind as a mother, i saw you overcome with emotion. i can't even fathom. >> i was just -- i couldn't -- i didn't know what to think. here was this great leader, we told katie and christopher, i mean, just seeing him at the airport would be something, they would share with their grandchildren some day. this is a once in a lifetime experience. here he was walking towards us. i think my mind went blank for a little bit. and he came over and right away grabbed michael's head and kissed him on the forehead, and i just -- i was speechless. i thought -- kept thinking, how can you thank someone who is sharing his love and a blessing that is so great, and so i just started saying thank you, thank
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you, thank you, and he reached out and grabbed my hand and my husband's hand and at that moment i just -- i couldn't believe how fortunate and blessed we truly are. >> now, i know that michael can't speak with us this morning, and he -- it has been a very long morning for you guys. you had gotten up early, the pressure was on, you've been preparing for this, you were performing, you wanted it to go well, what happened at that moment? did you see anything in michael's facial expression and what did you feel? >> we did, yeah. michael is a pretty happy boy. doesn't always smile unless he feels it. doesn't cry unless he's in pain. and so he's just kind of general affect all the time. and after pope francis removed his hand the second time, all of a sudden, i looked at my daughter and michael had a huge smile on his face, and katie and i were stunned and excited and, you know, people say he feels a
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difference, i don't know that, i know michael feels a lot of joy around him, and love and that's exactly what he was feeling at that moment, i'm sure. >> absolutely. katie, i want to bring you in and christopher as well. this is -- as a family unit what was it like for you guys to see the pope embrace your brother? >> it was really amazing. can't even put into words, just, like, so special. >> we saw you, katie, overcome with emotion. did you ever expect that to happen? >> no. i just thought he was going to drive away, really happy he turned around. >> christopher, what about you? >> was it so neat to see him and see your brother get embraced by the pope? >> yes. >> he blessed your family, which is just a beautiful thing. you know what does it mean that everyone across the nation has seen this moment and that it has gone completely viral? what does that mean for you guys? >> it is unbelievable feeling. just the presence of a pope and what he stands for, what he's all about, and just the image of
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him going to kiss michael and blessing him, it is a symbol of our faith, and also i think the world is embracing this man and what he stands for. >> yeah, what does it mean to you that people are just -- it is getting circulated all across the nation, and we hear it at the top of all of -- every hour we run this headline. we're getting feedback from the viewers and they're truly touched by it. >> i don't think we had had a chance to process it yet. it has been crazy. just between family and friends, reaching out to us, and one unbelievable moment, the tears of joy brought to everyone's faces and the emotion that -- about it is just unbelievable. and we attribute that to the pope and michael being an unbelievable child. >> we thank you so much for joining us. thank you for sharing your family and your time and your very inspirational faith. >> thank you for having us. we appreciate it. >> we'll have more "f "fox & friends" up next.
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these feet grew up in a family of boys... married my high school sweetheart... and pursued a degree in education. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. so i talked to my doctor and she prescribed lyrica. nerve damage from diabetes causes diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is fda-approved to treat this pain. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new, or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling, or blurry vision. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. now i have less diabetic nerve pain. and i love helping first graders put their best foot forward. ask your doctor about lyrica.
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welcome back. interesting interview earlier in the show with the mayor of lewiston, maine. a lot of people on welfare. and the mayor's suggestion is why don't we publicize the name of the people who are receiving state aid, one of the most generous welfare packageses of the country, people move there to get welfare. you ought to know who you're supporting. >> right. and we heard from you, irene on facebook, people receiving welfare should not feel ashamed. if they do, get off welfare and find a job. >> so christine on facebook says, i do agree with him. when people see their neighbors on the dole of using it, maybe they'll report them and remove them from the welfare program. >> it is weird that authorities are -- we need a million new immigrants to fill jobs that americans won't do while americans take welfare. tomorrow, big show. brett bare will be here.
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tony blair, josh earnest and rick perry. >> who admits that -- >> i would never. >> thank you for joining us this weekend. with all of our good pope coverage. good morning. the speaker of the house stepping down as the presidential race heats up. good morning, everyone. i'm maria bartiromo. welcome to "sunday morning futures." john boehner getting mixed reaction this morning. where does the party stand and how does boehner's decision impact the race to the white house? plus, president obama seeing eye to eye with chinese president xi on cybersecurity a few months after a major government hack linked to the far east superpower. jon huntsman on that. and whether we can bring some of the jobs in china back home to america. plus, basketball hall of famer kareem abdul
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