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tv   Happening Now  FOX News  March 7, 2016 8:00am-9:01am PST

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saved sadie go look at that a nice graphical nicely done . let's bring her own home. >> idaho tomorrow, mississippi tomorrow. >> hawaii. bill: let's go there. we don't ever get a gig your help. martha: we will be here to go see you tomorrow. jenna: major events ahead in the race for the white house as the democratic presidential candidates prepare for a town hall on the fox news channel. thisis before voters head to the polls in two key primaries. i'm jenna lee . jon: and i'm jon scott for a big night as brett hosts italy clinton and bernie sanders for a town hall on the heels of their fiery debate last night. >> i voted to save the auto industry. he voted against the money that ended up saving the auto industry.
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i think that is a pretty big difference. >> if you are talking about the wall street bailout, where some of your friends destroyed this economy, excuse me i'm talking about. >> if you're going to talk tell the whole story. >> let me tell my story, you tell your spirit and your story is voting for every disastrous trade agreement and voting for corporate america. did i vote against the wall street bailout with billionaires on wall street destroyed this economy? they went to congress and they said oh please, we'll be good boys go bail us out there. jon: joining us now, bret baier the anchor of special report. give us a preview. should we be expecting those kind of fireworks tonight, brett mark.
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>> you never know. they're not going to be on the same stage together. this is the stage behind us here, getting ready for the town hall in detroit the gem theater. we will have a half an hour roughly with each candidate. i will ask him questions and then we will have 300 or so michiganders who mostly are undecided. there are some bernie fans, some hillary fans. there are some independents here they are deciding they said between trump and sanders for some said they were deciding between marco rubio and hillary clinton. remember michigan as an open primary like other states so you can register that day and devote your coke we have a number of questions that are veryinteresting and i'll try to bring up topics we haven't heard in the democratic race today to hear from . jon: the auto industry and its help is a big topic in michigan. will be a big topic tonight? >> you know, there's some follow-up probably to do after last night's debate to go that exchange you played was the most fiery we've seen in the debates so far. i think there's more to mind there and obviously it's an
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issue that is on the minds of michiganders here. i think the economy, i think a number of topics that have not come up before in debates of the past, the town hall format allows you to kind of get beaver, get into the weeds in some topics and gives some breathing room. we hope to have a lot of substance in 30 minutes. jon: obviously it's tough to bring these two candidates together. i know for a while you had one of them then finally got both of them. bernie sanders really needs to eat into hillary clinton's lead very quickly if he has a chance of winning this nomination. he seemed much more aggressive in the debate the other night. >> i agree. and you look at the latest polls in michigan, hillary clinton does have what appears to be a big lead to this is a place sanders has been investing time andcapital as far as campaigning . he had a good weekend obviously
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and has picked up some states that i think some people were expecting him to. this is not over despite the fact that some on the democratic side say it is and remember hanging out over this is whatever happens with the fbi investigation of email classification dealing with hillary clinton so all of that is a part of this dynamic on the democratic side. jon: she even repudiated some of her husbands prime achievements during the clinton administration. the crime bill and welfare reform hillary clinton seemed to be backing away from those. >> that is the bernie sanders effect and that is, we are dealing with going back to some of these records and the fact that we have spent a couple of debates in the 1990s is pretty debate interesting.
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that said bernie sanders has changed the dynamic here. he has added some momentum on his side among young people in particular and that's concerning for hillary clinton. the other thing concerning for democrats is the enthusiasm gap as far as every state that you look at, republicans getting to the polls in bigger numbers than democrats. jon: let's talk about the polls. brand-new numbers ahead of the michigan primary tomorrow. wall streetjournal nbc news poll shows donald trump with a commanding lead on the republican side. he'sbeating his closest competitor ted cruz by nearly 20 percent . marco rubio and john kasich are both in the teens . on the democratic side, the wall street journal nbc news poll gives the edge to hillary clinton in michigan she is 17 points ahead of bernie sanders and obviously michigan is a key prize for all of these. i wonder specifically about john kasich. he says he's heading into the
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northern states, it's his home territory: he feels like he can do well there but the polling doesn't indicate that at least in michigan. >> that's right. there was one pole, and arg poll that had an outlier that seemed to have him had but most have from double digits. john kasich looks to perform well here, get some delegates and it is his home-court advantage in the midwest. the big races obviously john on the republican side are florida and ohio a week from now. it's a winner take all contest and will give us a blueprint of where this gop race is headed and whether donald trump can get to the magic number of 1237 or the never trump block him from getting that and force it into a convention contested in cleveland. jon: in michigan trump seems to be doing very well, perhaps bolstered by middle-class folks
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to see their future slipping away. they say c trump perhaps as the guy who is going to bring back the luster to states like michigan and the economy. >> listen, michigan has 38 delegates. it's a significant state on the republican side. i think you are right. trump has widened the break base of the republican party. there are more people in there who arecoming out to vote for him . the question is whether this starting to unify never trump movement with their millions of dollars behind them will force one other candidate to go up against him it seems like ted cruz is better positioned to be that alternative candidate today after some recent successes but we will see how it all breaks down. jon: it's going to be fascinating to watch tonight. thank you. we will see you then.
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with the special report attown hall, democratic presidential candidates will be speaking with brett right here on fox news channel, 6 pm eastern tonight and keep it here for prime time coverage of all the primary tomorrow night beginning at 8pm , bret baier and megyn kelly will anchor . jenna: we are talking a little bit about michigan and the poll numbers. michigan is the biggest prize of the four states holding presidential nominating contest tomorrow with 59 delegates at stake for republicans. the real clear politics average of recent polling as donald trump leading by 19 points there. ted cruz is secondand john kasich a close third, less than half point behind ted cruz. the ohio governor is spending time in his neighboring state and says michigan is key to his campaign. we will speak with governor kasich live in a few minutes . jon: north korea threatens the united states and south korea with quote, indiscriminate nuclear strikes. the threats come as the two countries begin annual military drills which north korea believes are rehearsals for an invasion.
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last year the communist nation threatened to make washington quote, a sea of fire during the drills. pam joins us live from the london bureau with the latest. reporter: north korea making pretty hefty threats against the united states. this time they have a little bit of something to respond to with being described as the biggest military drill involving the united states and south korea ever. on the way because of nuclear tests. the rocket launch by north korea and un sanctions against north korea. the exercises will include tens of thousands of us troops and some 300,000 south korean soldiers and likely we saw in last year's drills but more so a lot of military hardware including heavy artillery, e2 bombers and a nuclear powered summary. what probably has pushed the button with the pyongyang regime, exercises aimed not just at taking out the nuclear and missile facilities of south korea but also taking up a
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leadership including kim jong un himself. and that has prompted a response a bit like we heard last week, maybe stronger. as north korea can and will target with nuclear weapons us bases in south korea, southeast asia and the us mainland . a quote from a government official. we can bombard the us anytime we want. now over the past weeks and months i've been talking to my analysts in south korea and they tell me north korea still is a long way from doing what's needed to really be a nuclear threat to the united states. there's no sign yet they've mastered how to miniaturize the warhead, get that weapon back to earth and target the missile accurately. still, they do continue to do tests. they get better and better and even now we saw they can at least put some kind of a crude nuclear bomb either on a short-range missile or inside a plane and aim it toward a us
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target in the region. besides john, what's probably most important right now for kim jong un is to make these threats and secure his existence and his regime's existence for a bit longer. jon: greg, thank you. jenna: a little more politics on the way. with presidential candidates calling out the media for being a threat to donald trump. we will tell you who and discuss that claim with our media panel. what would you like to hear from gop presidential candidate john kasich when he joins us moments from now? go to foxnews.com/happeningnow to join the conversation.
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i wanted to know who i am and where i came from. i did my ancestrydna and i couldn't wait to get my pie chart. the most shocking result was that i'm 26% native american. i had no idea. just to know this is what i'm made of, this is where my ancestors came from. and i absolutely want to know more about my native american heritage. it's opened up a whole new world for me. discover the story only your dna can tell. order your kit now at ancestrydna.com jon: although donald trump skip this week's political action conference his presence there loomed large go to a the first three questions of cnn reporter dan abashed mark marco rubio was about donald trump.
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the florida sender immediately push back on that subject matter. even before he was a front-runner donald would offend someone personally, make fun of a disabled reporter or attack a woman journalist and would dominate news coverage. course he's going to get all this coverage. i'm not complaining. all i'm saying is the reason we talk about him and all this is happening is the night of the debate, over half the questions i asked were somehow related to my opinion of donald trump. jon: joining us now tammy bruce, radio talkshow host@tammybruce.com and a fox news contributor. also alan combs host of the nationally syndicated program by fox news radio. does the media have a donald trump obsession? >> i think he's the leader, he's an interesting guy. they want to cover him because it's fun but any leader whether it's marco rubio or anybody else should take advantage of every question. real leadership is being able
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to hear a question and use it to your advantage.all i hear is whining and if marco rubio wants to have questions about somebody other than donald trump than he needs to become interesting himself. the real story about people like mister kasich and mister rubio is why they are still in the race. we know there's no path for them to the nomination those are the questions that should be asked of those men because that's what's interesting. they're not necessarily legitimate, i don't see a path at this point but they are there to have an impact. really you can see the nature of i think their attitudes when theycomplain and whine and don'tsee every question as an opportunity . >> there in the race at their home states. >> they want to be king of ohio . >> well marco rubio's the king of puerto rico and idaho. >> little kingship's . jon: i'd like to think that
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mitt romney is right. i think romney baby waiting in the wings hoping a nation turns its lonely eyes to him. butlook, trump is a media creation. how many years on the apprentice? he gets good ratings, that's what it's all about. marco rubio has to take responsibility. he didn't do well in a particular debate, doesn't have great the policy positions. he's got to take responsibility for not resonating with the public . >> as the passive mrs. reagan was reminded, he was not well-liked by the media but what you remember from him was making it also, taking it over in a positive dignified way. there is a way to do it and i don't see that happening with any of the candidates at this point with the exception perhaps of mister cruz and he is always talking about something positive and moving forward. a good question for marco rubio would be what his opinion about mitt romney and that never came up to be one what about that? should rubio, people like that just ignore the media coverage of trump. you've got to deal with it. it's out there? it's part of the distal. >> it's a legitimate question. the media and trump are on and in fact the media as i said,
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it's a media creation. it's something that has to be addressed. rubio wasn't whining about it but essentially what he was doing, you've got to deal with that then move on and talk about issues. rubio by descending to trumps level and talking about extremities did not help himself like sinking that low. jon: let's talk about the media and their up sessions on the democratic side. media writing off candidates on both parties who are not frontrunners. is that fair? the thinking seems to be that bernie sanders has no chance now and that he should hang it up against hillary clinton. >> there's a much more substantive framework because of superdelegates on the democratic side so it's reasonable to know that sanders is not going to be the nominee. on the republican side i suppose it's a little less sure
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about what can happen because every day there seems to be someone else putting down but also that debate is important because it shows you where the democratic party has gone and also the longer it continues the more hillary has to move with the left to counter bernie sanders popularity but he is popular.when you look at what's happened over this weekend, they been split on both sides of the party. he is relevant but not necessarily because he's going to be the nominee he makes hillary a better candidate in other words. jon: can hillary complain in the same way that many republicans are complaining about the coverage donald trump gets? can bernie complained that he will hillary clinton is the anointed favorite. >> bernie sanders has resonated and attracted numerous people to his rallies. he's done better than even he thought he would do and i don't think he's a lot to complain about. >> he also is interesting and that's the trump dynamic. these are interesting people. i watch bernie sanders and i
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smiled and of course he's a lunatic but it's like i'm smiling at the crazy guy. >> like trumps not a lunatic. >> look, these are interesting people to watch. we are a television age. we understand that. the other candidates, reagan, a fascinating man to watch. they got to pump up the game. this is not 1910. this is television. jon: but sanders and his brooklyn accent. >> i was born in brooklyn. jon: i wouldn't think of him as a media darling. >> he's not a media darling the way trump is a media darling. he wasn't a reality television start. he's nowhere near trump in terms of media attention and you want to compare the oxygen that trump has versus sanders, i don't think it's any comparison. >> let me sent tell you what sanders represents. he's so popular a young young people. there's this idea that only young people can appeal to young people. jon stewart proved that lot wrong and bernie sanders is proving that wrong. people love him because you can reach out to any group of people regardless of your age
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if you are interesting, if you understand their issuesand . >> you feel the burn?>> other than that horrible socialist lunacy he's pretty good. jon: thank you both. jenna. jenna: flooding turning deadly in california as forecasts call for more heavy rain. we will take you out to the west coast and ohio governor says not only will he do well tomorrow in michigan but he could win the state and many of its coveted 59 delegates. we speak with the governor next about michigan and how important it is to his campaign.
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jenna: all eyes turned to michigan. the biggest prize of the four states tomorrow as we reported earlier, polls showing that donald trump is in the lead but many are watching john kasich who was reportedly making moves in the state and says his part of his northern strategy to remain competitive. polls only tell so much and we wanted to take the opportunity to talk about the issues. this election will impact every american family as you know and as i am on the eve of maternity leave, stanley is very much in the forefront of my life so i've invited all the candidates to have a substantial conversation about personal issues impacting all this and governor john kasich agreed to this interview and joins us now from his busy campaign
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we seen in states across the country there can be issues when it comes to drinking water and clean drinking water. that's a real problem for families and families turn on the positive thinking our water is clean they don't expect poisoning in our family circle what do we do about that? >> it's a challenge not just in michigan but all across the country. there's only two issues. one is the older homes that have the lead in them and secondly even lead paint on the walls of some of our homes. what we have to think about is what can we do basically at the state and local level to have a priority here on bringing some help to folks that could involve some funding issues . it could involve capital dollars that will go to those places where we know there are real problems. the other thing we have to do of course as we get ready to
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deal with the problem is to make sure we get it as early as we can, warn people, give them another path to being healthy and that requires an executive who tells that the cabinet and the bureaucracy don't cover anything up that's the problem. don't think it's going to go away. there will be no shame in admitting we have a problem. that's exactly the attitude. jenna: do you think the president should have been more involved in the situation in michigan or is this more of an issue that has to be dealt with at the state level? >> i think as a president i am aware of this problem of the lead pipes, the older infrastructure, the problem of this lead paint in people's homes and i think the best way to deal with it frankly is probably at the state and local level because we can do bonding. we will have to have the dollars that can be raised and take on a reasonable over a pe
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deal with this problem of the aging infrastructure. it's not something you can look the other way. it's going to cost money but you have to know what you are doing when you spend the money. jenna: when we come back i'd like to talk to you about a new poll that we have to go on his outfit says even the lead in michigan and we have more evidence perhaps that is not just an outlier as has been described. we will talk a little bit about that, national security and your wife will join us as well. >> great, thank you. jenna: we will be back in a moment the. jon: will also talk about a little pro football although for us broncos bands it's a sad and peyton manning, possibly the greatest quarterback ever to play the game calls it a career look back at the five-time mvp with our sportscaster we have over 15,000 activities
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find out if you qualify and get your free information kit. . jenna: we are continuing our conversation with presidential candidate governor john take it there, we are joined by his wife ina few moments. before we get to more of a conversation about family, i want to talk to you about national security. because the list that is threatening our nation is so long . nuclear north korea, and aggressive china. transport threats from within. it's enough to make any mother or father worried about our safety. international security plan you say we must choose to lead once again. i'm wondering in what ways
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would you specifically lead that would be different from what we've seen over the last eight years and elicit a different result? >> let me just tell you with prudent, if you use a trumped up excuse to invade our friends and allies you're attacking up your go don't be confused about that. we will arm you ukrainians. they need to be able to fight for their freedom and i would give give them the weapons they need. with the chinese, you don't own the south china sea and stop attacking us because if you keep doing it to have the capability not only to defend ourselves but to take out your systems and we will. in terms of isis: in the air and on the ground, a coalition of our friends in the air and community along with western forces in the air, on the ground, destroy them, settle it down then come home and we should not be involved in our civil wars but where our direct interests are at stake we must go. jenna, i had up to 700 foreign policy expert . i had 55 percent of them pick
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me as the person best able to manage international relations with jeb bush coming in second and everybody else in single digits. i have the experience and the know-how and most of them know the things that i did when i served on the armed services committee. i was also in the pentagon with secretary rumsfeld after 9/11 where i let teams of people in to help him solve the problems they had there so i have significant experience. jenna: let me ask you quickly, i want to ask you about these poll numbers because we have a poll, an arg poll that shows you in the lead in michigan. we are getting other indications from a few other sites including monmouth just came out that shows you really vying for that second place spot. we are seeing these polls and these moves in michigan, you got asked this question yesterday about you being a spoiler in the race and that's really about your strategy for a brokered convention. with that new polling i love your reaction to some of those numbers and what else you feel
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about folks that are saying this and the only reason you're in is to spoil it for everybody else. >> maybe they're spoiling it for me. maybe they ought to get out. i'm the one with the experience, the accomplishments and record and secondly, we are going to do well in michigan. we feel the momentum appear. were going to head to ohio. i'm going to win ohio and we're going to campaign all across the country. you have to be somebody that can solve problems not just talks about solving problems. i feel with my record and now with the growing crowd and maybe even a little bit more media attention we feel very good about where we are. jenna: we know you lead ohio but also the head of your household sitting next to you. that is of course your wife karen. you are on the campaign bus so that's why we are in this shot, i want to explain to our viewers. i know you guys are busy on the road campaigning in these final
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hours before michigan. karen, it's great to have you on the program. we appreciate the time. >> thanks for having me. jenna: it's great to talk to you, a potential first family on the eve of nancy reagan's passing because it reminds us how important first families are and particularly first ladies. karen, i'm curious if you can share with our viewers any challenges your family has face that you feel positioned both you and john for the potential role in the white house that you are seeking? >> well, i think like every family knows, raising children in this day and age is a challenge in and of itself and we are blessed to have healthy 16-year-old daughters and i think you know the challenges that come with that so we are just looking forward to moving forward in this campaign and coming back to ohio to campaign next week. jenna: you have a political life before you had children and after. as a father what changed you after you had children that may be impacted some of the choices you made as a politician? ask well, you love your kids and you get to see the world through their eyes a lot of
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times and we are just having a greattime as a family. we just lead a normal life. we don't live in a governor's mansion, we live in our own home . there's a fence around the governor's residence and now that the girls are 16 and our beautiful young ladies i'm starting to think we ought to put a fence around everything. but my wife is already first lady of ohio and this is not something she was all that excited about. when i won the first time we woke up the next day and she said, do i have to be first lady? i said yes, i think you do. she's engaged in some of the most important issues in our state and she's realized that politics can be a vehicle for actually doing a lot of good things. jenna: tell us a little about that karen. i'm sure that's something several years ago you didn't think you are going to wake up first lady of ohio and you are. tell us what you've experienced
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and what that's been like . >> i really believe that children are our future. there are most precious natural resource and the things that i get involved in are things that can help young people whether that is fitness and health and wellness, whether it's afterschool programs that are so important to the kids and are in the inner cities. it could be being involved in the war against human trafficking and also against drugs. those are the kinds of programs i have the opportunity to be involved in and it's been a real treat. jenna: final question, this is the real reason i'm having you on. i have one child at home, i'm adding number two. you had the benefit of getting two for the price of one. i'm wondering what advice you have for me now that i will have to kids inthe household. any advice asi near the birth of dose you . >> get a night nurse . [laughter] >> i want to give you a little bit of advice. always run the video camera because as the kids get older
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we start thinking we don't need to run it anymore. i'll tell you, our kids have so much fun looking at the videos of when they were kids and i wish we had done it a lot more as they got older so . jenna: it goes too fast. >> make sure you tell that husband of yours that he's got to run that video camera and if he doesn't know what he's doing then learned because it's a real treat. jenna: i will pass that along to leave. i'm sure he will appreciate that. it's great to have you both in the program. best of luck in the next several hours and we look forward to having one in the future. thank you so much. thank you. jon: i'm pretty sure he knows what he's doing. jenna: we got a lot of video already but it's good advice and a good reminder. jon: along the highlights of this guy but after nearly 2 decades and two super bowl victories, denver broncos quarterbackpeyton manning says goodbye to football. what this means for the game .
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jenna: we are awaiting a news conference that will signaling the end of an era in football as peyton manning gets to ready to step away from the game after 18 seasons and two super bowl victories. the mvp expected to make that announcement at 1 pm eastern time. joining us, fox news contributor who will be watching the press conference along with us. before we get to that you have any information for our viewers about what brought peyton manning to this final decision? >> i think probably the realization that this is the right time. you want to super bowl, he was able to let the denver defense lead him to a super bowl after heled so many teens in the past. he's been to the super bowl now four times, one twice , only quarterback to do that with two separate teams. his performance wasn't good during the year. he missed several weeks,
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probably thought he lost his job. he threw four interceptions in a game against kansas city. he had just 11 touchdowns and 18 interceptions. the quarterback rating was way down. he had the next surgery so what he was able to do with his time in denver was taken to two super bowl, when one, the defense being the mainstay in the last one but it's a career that's been well done. he has all of these records. there's nothing left to prove. he leaves at the top of his profession and really can't perform the way he has for so many years so it's a good time and the right time.jenna: what do you think his absence will mean for the league overall westmark. >> he along with tom brady have been the faces of the national football league the past two decades so there's going to be a big hole there. peyton manning has been just stall work. people tuned in to watch him. they got grown comfortable with him, seen him for so many years. he's on commercials throughout
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the game, papa john, that nationwide jingle that's in everybody's ears right now so there's going to be a big hole and it's not going to be filled. there are other great players. tom brady will continue, perhaps the greatest back ever is brady. russell wilson, aaron rodgers, there are lots of great players but peyton manning set the standard for quarterback play and work ethic in the national football league and all of these records, his name will never be forgotten.jon: i was at the super bowl in miami when john elway on his last one. people were urging him to come back and try for three in a row. he decided to hang it up. peyton is doing the same thing. might be there be a manning role at the broncos or some other organization? could he get into sports casting, coaching? >> there will be a long line and long list of opportunities that people will have john and on and on like john elway who
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could still play at that time, elway left cause he thought it was a cinderella ending and it was a good time. peyton manning will be 40 years old and he really can't play anymore. he will have opportunities with jimmy has and who kn, he owns t cleveland browns.he would like for him to come on board and tennessee titans ownership, but adams unfortunately passed away so there may be an opportunity there. there will be other teams that will be in denver because they will have john elway and you will have espn, nbc, cbs and fox talking to me peyton about his services. he would probably be a terrific analyst. he knows the game inside and out if that's what he decides to do but there will be no shortage of people wanting to employ him. jon: when he goes to the hall of fame, which uniform? >> that's going to be probably a difficult call for him and i'm sure he's probably not ready to make that. he felt grateful that denver gave him the opportunity to continue his career, on a super bowl there after the neck surgeries, after they colts
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released him but i think he's probably a cold for life and people remember all those great 13 years he played. he missed the 14th year because of next surgery.went to the playoffs 15 of the 17 years he played, the majority of them obviously with the colts so that will be a tough call for him. if i was guessing i would guess it would have to be the colts. jenna: maybe some creative tailoring before. jon: i just thought of this. don't you need a horseshoe on a bronco? perhaps you could do both. jenna: there's always a way to bring both sides together so we will see exactly what peyton manning says and we will have that life and have your live reaction as well because it is a moment in time to market for the league and also for peyton manning. jim, thank you very much. we will see you in just a bit. >> it's been a great career by peyton. jon: we remember the life and legacy of nancy reagan. here to say goodbye to afirst lady who loved her country and her husband .
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jon: outnumbered coming up in six minutes. sandra and harris, what do you have? >> moment and still going strong ahead of another gop voting day tomorrow but after trumps only big weekend, has ted cruz made a two-man race? and hillary clinton on fox news tonight for the first time in two years. and this headline for her to deal with. reports she personally wrote and sent more than 100 emails that are now considered classified. >> ices claims responsibility for a string of deadly attacks in iraq, threatening to undo the game us troops have made. what can be done to stop them?
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>> we will ask our hashtag one lucky guy about that and john bolton is outnumbered. happy monday. jenna: there more excited than me. >> see you. jenna: tributes pouring in at the nation mourns the death of nancy reagan. she passed away yesterday at the age of 94. the public is expected get a chance to pay their respects before she's laid to rest beside her husband at the reagan presidential library. william is live at the presidential library in california and joins us with what to expect. william? speak. reporter: the final chapter of nancy reagan's life is being written as we speak, played out here at the reagan library where she spent so much time reserving the presidents legacy. i'm going to pan over to show you some of the media here that is showing up to tell her story. too many her passing on sunday in bel airis the end of an era,
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politically and culturally. if you are 26 old or younger you were not a life during the presidents rain . the 43-year-old would be in third grade when nancy and the president left white house so you have a whole generation unfamiliar with this presidency which is one reason we she spent so much time at the library here dedicated to his life. >> nancy reagan poured herself into this place and put her energies into this place because it was a way for her to continue to connect with president reagan, to continue to serve his legacy and to be really as close as she humanly could with her husband. reporter: the last time nancy was seen in public was 2014 on the 10 year anniversary of the president's death. she spent time alone at his gravesite. flowers have begun to pileup outside the entrance to the library which is closed this week. plans for her funeral were written many years ago but now it is all left is the timing. >> they will be outside the reagan campus this week and the
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day prior we will be allowing visitors and the public to pay their respects. reporter: so there is a state dinner in washington dc thursday soak in all likelihood the public could have a viewing on one day, the funeral and burial the second day so it's going to be either thursday or friday or friday saturday. those details we will know in about three hours. jenna: we will be right back. >> pet moments are beautiful, unless you have allergies. then your eyes may see it differently. only flonase is approved to relieve both your itchy, watery eyes and congestion. no other nasal allergy spray can say that. complete allergy relief or incomplete. let your eyes decide. flonase changes everything. . .
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>> we're back in an hour. "outnumbered" starts now. ♪ andrea: this is "outnumbered." i'm andrea tantaros. with us today, harris faulkner, sandra smith, host of "kennedy" on our sister network, fox business's kennedy, today's #oneluckyguy, former ambassador to the united nations and fox news contributor john bolton, and ambassador, you're back, outnumbered and looking dazzling as usual. >> oh, god. sandra: really are. >> as the other four people on this set too.

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