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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  September 2, 2016 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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stage ♪ and we're not gonna take it >> "fox & friends" starts right now. don't go anywhere. >> bye, everybody. whew. today is friday. it's september 2nd. you made it through the week, but we do have this news to tell you about. it's a fox news alert. a life threatening storm pounds the florida panhandle. hurricane hermine hit the florida panhandle before weakening to a tropical storm before leaving a path of destruction. transformers exploding catching fire leaving tens of thousands in the dark this morning. hermine is the first storm to directly hit florida, believe it or not, in 11 years. >> storm surge, flooding a major concern. >> florida, georgia, north carolina all under states of emergency as the powerful storm
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churns to the east. >> we've got fox team coverage this morning. we'll have jonathan who's in panama city this morning for us. >> reporter: good morning. things are relatively calm because i'm on the western side of this very lopsided storm but most of the damage is on the eastern side. that's exactly where the city of tallahassee found itself last night. take a look at this video from florida's capitol still overnight. a heavy winds, heavy rains knocking out power to more than 70,000 customers according to the city government website. among those customers the campus of florida state university. take a look at this photo. the fsu campus in the dark overnight during this hurricane. we also are seeing dramatic images of sparks flying from power lines. people sending in videos from all over the state and not just near the center of the storm but
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all over. the storm knocking out power to many customers. the power companies sending out utility crews to repair the damage in between feeder bands. many power companies optimistic that they can restore communities to pull power within 24 hours of the storm passing. we also have some video from overnight in cedar key. this is a community that is far east of where the eye of the storm was passing when it was out in the gulf of mexico. now we'll get over to janice steen. >> reporter: good morning. we're going to be watching hermine well into the weekend as the storm continues to move north and eastward. it's a tropical storm now. we're still seeing the same effects as it was when it made landfall as a category 1 hurricane. very strong winds. tropical storm winds not only
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for north florida but into georgia and south carolina. a the the very least tropical storm winds along the big bend. things will start to relax a little bit more from florida in the next coupling hours. we still have the threat for tornadoes. north florida, parts of georgia as well as south carolina as the tropical storms we typically see a lot of friction at the surface and the churning of the winds. so the potential for tornadoes. the advisories extend for millions of people all up and down the east coast. tropical storm warnings for the mid-atlantic. tropical storm patches that extend towards coastal new jersey. why? because this storm is going to exit the coast and sit and spin for days across the mid-atlantic and the northeast. we call it the cone of uncertainty for a reason. we don't quite know what's going to happen monday, tuesday, wednesday. we think this could be a very strong nor'easter that just continues to sit and spin and
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bring rain and wind and battering waves and storm surge all along the coast. this is going to be a huge headache for travel this weekend. back to you. >> oh, great. my sister's trying to get up here today from south carolina. >> not the labor day we expected. >> not at all. meanwhile, four minutes after the top of the hour. tucker just got off the air. we were talkings about this last night. donald trump had his big speech on wednesday and since that time so many misinterpretations, i believe, about what he said and what he didn't say softening or not softening, and because of the perception, perhaps, you've got two people on his static council who have resigned saying they were misled by where donald trump was heading. my sense is they weren't listening to the speech. >> right. because the left is saying donald trump wants to deport everyone but that's not at all what he said in the speech. he basically said i want to build a wall and i want the bad
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guys to get out of the country. >> maybe people watch the speech rather than read it. i had the advantage of reading the text of the speech and watching some of it. i don't think there's one thing in the speech inconsistent with american values, our history, that is offensive to any sane person. it was not a problem in any way. >> when you talk about the 11 million, the 11 million here illegally. he tiered it. he said, look, i'll tell you what, here's what he said yesterday on a radio show. >> we do it in a very humane way and we're going to see it with the people that are in the country. obviously i want to get the gang members out, the drug peddlers out, i want to get the drug dealers out. we have a lot of people in this country that you can't have. those people will get out and then we're going to make a decision at a later date once everything is stabilized. i think you're going to see
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there's quite a bit of soft softening. >> here's what you don't want to do, create a scenario for people to come in. you don't want that to happen again. >> some interesting a sides. politico reporting that donald trump is not putting in that mexico is going to pay for the wall. the mexican president broke his word and tweeted out, i told donald trump i'm not paying for that wall. so trump said, well, now i've got to put into the speech that you're paying for the wall even though you don't know it yet. >> i don't think he means mexico is going to cut a check to the united states and pay for it outride. i think there are ways that we can get them to pay for it by adding, what were you talking about it yesterday, you were talking about adding taxes to -- >> they have a bat tax in mexico which we pay. >> things like that. >> the cost of illegal
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immigration is so high to us, so many billions of dollars. >> $113 billion a year. >> exactly. that just slowing it down would pay for a wall. >> that's true. >> right. >> so i think the press is totally ignoring the point. the core message of trump's speeches, our immigration policies should serve america. it should serve ordinary people. the press is mad that the middle class is standing up saying, wait, this isn't working for us. >> it's laughable that tim jane said that donald trump had choked in not telling the mexican president. >> really. is the tim kaine that didn't confront the mexican president, refused to come on our show yesterday because i guess he projected the questions would be too tough. he said donald trump choked when he first met the president of mexico -- trump is not the president yet. >> what does he want trump to
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do? >> we called them so many times. tim kaine refused to come on the show. i personally called him. he did the whole round robin. >> he was the only person not to take your call. >> guess who did take my call. >> right there. >> eric trump. we're going to ask him about his dad's immigration plan. we're going to ask him about matt lauer who's going to moderate the first of four. we'll ask him what he thinks about that. he did it again. i'm talking about 49er deep backup colin kaepernick. he started yesterday, but before the game started he again with his helmet off took a knee, did not stand up with his hand over his heart when the national anthem played? >> what do you think of that? it's not a surprise. he was joined by his defensive back and a seattle seahawk also sat down. this is who sang the national anthem. ♪ ♪
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♪ >> wow. >> you're the sports expert. where's his employer? where's the owner of the team? if one of my employees did that i would at the very least issue a statement saying, this is awful. why aren't they doing that? >> you can't -- you can't -- you could suspend him but you have a union to deal with. why not just make the statement that this is wrong, contrary to our values as a team. >> you can't do that anymore, tucker. remember back in the day when the coach could grab you by a jersey and jerk your tail up and make you stand up? can't do that anymore. >> never had to be an issue before. the nba says you have to stand on the national anthem, the nfl
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doesn't. now you have eric reid, the 49ers safety decides he's not going to stand up and then jeremy lane sat down during the national anthem. african-american players who feel as though america doesn't represent what they want it to. >> if kaepernick took maybe 2/3 of his $114 million contract to the poor i would feel that would be a more sincere gesture. it costs him nothing, he gets a ton of publicity on it. >> did you see his socks? >> the socks had pigs on them, they were cops. pig faces with a cop hat on. >> it's so decadent. here's another rich guy surrounded by armed body guards. >> why does he get to wear those socks. the dallas cowboys couldn't wear the police decals on their helmets. >> that is a great dichotomy there. the cowboys wanted to salute the five officers slain by the gunman. they could not wear that. >> outrageous. this is disgraceful. my two grandfathers fought in
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world war ii. if they were alive, they're probably rolling over in their graves. >> the next time some powerful person wants to make a statement without taking any action, we should demand skin in the game. >> kaepernick is fighting for a roster spot but is guaranteed $12 million. >> very similar signing bonus, heather, that you signed. >> i know. >> this really hits home. >> life is good. good morning to all of you. 11 minutes after the hour and a couple headlines to bring you right now. first, a tipoff to the cops stopping what could have been a horrific series of terror attacks. police in illinois say that 18-year-old khan cook was planning on blowing up two venues killing thousands of innocent people packed inside. authorities say he was talking to a terror organization and was capable of carrying out a mass casualty attack but he is now
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behind bars. more details on that as we get it. we will soon know the minute-by-minute details of hillary clinton's daily meetings as secretary of state. they're moving up the time line to release her schedule next month, before the elections. they were originally slated to go public after the elections. so far only half of clinton's schedules have been released. incredible video of massive disaster on the launch pad in cape canaveral, florida. watch this. that is a spacex rocket moments of test firing a rocket for facebook. it erupted into a fireball. that blast could be seen and heard for miles and miles. some said it felt like an earthquake. a $200 million satellite that
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facebook planned to send internet service from space, this is the second major setback for spacex. last year a falcon 9 rocket exploded just after takeoff. >> unbelievable. a space program that doesn't get to space anymore. >> we have to rely on the private sector to do it. >> unbelievable. >> let's go back to the private sector and tell you what's coming up next. donald trump said it should be mandatory for immigrants to learn english. our next guest is a legal immigrant who says trump is right. plus, he's been missing for more than a decade. you'll never believe where this american was just found and who he is tutoring, teaching english to. ♪ ♪
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you can move calls between phones, so conversations can go where you go. take your time. i'm not going anywhere. (announcer vo) and when you're not available, one talk helps find the right person who is. hi, john. (announcer vo) so wherever work takes you, you can put your customers first. introducing one talk-- another way verizon connects your business better. learn how at onetalk.com. not everyone who seeks to join our country will be able to successfully assimilate. sometimes it's just not going to work out. it's our right as a sovereign nation to choose immigrants that we think are the likeliest to thrive and flourish and love us. >> donald trump stressing the importance of making immigrants
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assimilate, but should things like common language, customs, ideology, should we assimilate -- or make people assimilate when it comes to those issues as well. our next guest is a legal immigrant. he says yes. his name is nick adams. he wrote the book "green card warrior." he's the founder and executive director of the foundation for liberty and american greatness. thank you so much, nick, for joining us. >> good morning, ainsley. >> love the accent, nick. you're from australia. you live here in america. why do you think it's important for immigrants to assimilate? >> ainsley, the day that anyone is born in the united states of america is the day that they won the lottery of life. the day that i immigrated to the united states was the best day of my life, and this is the greatest country in the history of the world. this is the exceptional nation of the world. this is the indispensable country of the world, and if people are going to come to
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america, they have got to become americans. they have got to contribute. they have got to participate. they have got to fully embrace the united states of america, the existing values, traditions, and customs that drew them here in the very first place. and i think it's the height of ingratitude for people to come to the united states and not become americans, to refuse to speak english, to refuse to obey the rule of law, to refuse to obey the law. we need to make sure that people that are coming to the united states are going to be as american as possible. >> when you heard donald trump give the immigration talk the other night, do you think he relayed that? >> i do. i do. i think, ainsley, that out of many are a center piece of american exceptionalism.
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the last thing we need, the last thing we can allow is cultural segregation, but becoming an american does not mean you have the right to take a patch of land and recreate your old country in the new separated from the rest of the community. we need to have a policy of integration, not separation, inclusion, not exclusion. >> what did you think about colin kaepernick sitting down for the national anthem? >> i thought it was a disgrace, ainsley. i think that to be an american is the greatest privilege in the world, and i think that anybody that is going to disrespect the flag, disrespect the gallant men and women at home and abroad, that protect us, that give us our freedom, that gave colin kaepernick the right to do what he did, i think that that is just absolutely outrageous and my organization, the foundation
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for liberty in american greatness flag, we are calling on the nfl to discipline colin kaepernick. we're calling on him to resign. >> nick, i have to go. so sorry. thank you so much. we all agree with you. coming up, more "fox & friends." new clients? let's go meet them soon. in person, we could read the room. on the phone, you're just a voice. yeah, i'm good. for fast rewards, let'book on choice. this trip could really help us grow. ♪ should i stay or should i go? ♪ when it's time to go for business, book on choicehotels.com and get a free night when you stay with us two times. book direct at choicehotels.com gilman: go get it, marcus. go get it. ...coach gilman used his cash rewards credit card from bank of america to earn 1% cash back everywhere, every time. at places like the batting cages.
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a quick look at your headlines this morning. if you have a samsung phone, watch out. the battery could explode. that company is recalling the highly anticipated galaxy 7. the smartphone could catch fire while charging. not good. the recall is costing samsung about $7 billion. dallas police chief david brown is announcing his retirement. chief brown made national headlines for his leadership after five of his officers were murdered in an ambush sniper
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attack. >> we don't feel much support most days. let's not make today most days. >> chief brown said he would step down on october 22nd. that's his 56th birthday. he served more than three decades as a police officer. ainsley? >> all right. thank you. well, you're not going to believe this next story. one school district in indiana is doing away with valedictorian because officials say it creates, quote, unhealthy competition. >> we're joined by that district superintendent dr. andrew melon. doctor, first off, what led to this? >> well, basically it's really been interesting what's happened because this has been driven by our three high schoolprincipals. it's really based upon several years of looking at the balance. there have been some inequities
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in the system that they've discovered and they felt like there wasn't a fairness to the system. we have a lot of kids achieving at very high levels and the -- sometimes we really believe in kids making sure they can find their best fit for life after high school. we have 98% of our kids receiving -- going to a post secondary opportunity. we wanted to make sure that there is a best fit for them and that they can work towards a level of course work that's best for them. we have advanced placement and dual credit opportunities that are extensive. we're a leader in our area. if a kid is achieving a high level, we want to make sure they can make choices in their best interests. >> dr. melon, sorry to interrupt you. you know what the critics say. they're saying, we're getting too soft. this is the wussification of america. everyone deserves a trophy. what is wrong with a little competition?
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>> we have a very competitive environment. we have 68 students with a 4.0 grade point average or higher, some with a 5.0 grade point average. there are still class ranks. still competition internally. what happens is having the title of val or sal creates a situation where kids are making decisions to take courses or not take courses to earn the title. >> you're afraid they're not going to take advanced algebra, take basket weaving so you can build that in. you're the ones who study education on a daily basis. i appreciate that you go to these meetings, these conferences and were able to talk to elite educators. from the layman's perspective, people win, people lose. there's a number one and a number two and in life a lot of times the number two's complaining that things aren't fair. get used to t. are you basically telling people that life's fair
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and that unless we can level the playing field, we're going to level the competition? >> i think that's the danger of what's happening with the message that's out there. at no point in time we have promoted that kind of attitude. we have a very competitive environment for all of our students and we are achieving at high levels in our school corporations. >> doctor, there should be one number one. there's nothing wrong with having one number one and having other runner up. what's wrong with being runner up if you do everything you can to be successful? there's winners and losers. >> i totally agree. i come from an athletic background. i'm all about competition, but the competition has to have an even or equitable playing field. we have so many advanced placement, dual courses and be they're not equitably spread. that's where it becomes difficult. >> dr. melon, what do you say to that parent? if this were my child and she were at the top of that list, fighting for that spot, she were applying to ivy leave schools
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and she could get into that if she were valedictorian, you took that away from her, i would be upset. >> that's a misconception. it's not the title that gets them into their college or university. >> it can't hurt. definitely helps. >> they still become number one in their class or number two in their class. this is all happening because of circumstances that we've been dealing with over the past several years. this is dealing with parents of those students competing for these titles. this isn't some theoretical situation. we have been dealing with this in a real level with real people in our high school principals, they all got together and said this is an unfair system. we need to work on it. >> thank you so much for coming on and giving us your perspective, your part of the story. >> thank you. >> i come from a family of educators. my hat's off to you. i know you work hard. >> thank you. >> what do you think of that? there is no number one. a lot of people are number one because they're all very smart
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because they cannot equal the playing field. which by the way in life, people complain fenway park is not fair when you go to play the red sox. so what? that's the way it is. coming up, the first time the two presidential candidates have hit the stage. is matt lauer the best person to ask the toughest questions. the controversy behind naming him as moderator next. plus, half a million people under hurricane warning. people being battered by hurricane hermine. we have a report up next. she spent summer binge-watching. soon, she'll be binge-studying. get back to great. this week 50% off all backpacks. office depot officemax. gear up for school. gear up for great.
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you covered this last night. >> yeah, i did. not like wtvt shayla reid. she is in hudson outside of tampa. how is it? >> reporter: we are in hudson beach where we've just been able to make it to one of the areas underwater a few short hours ago. in fact, we are just a few feet away from the wall here right on the other side of the wall all of that water causing some major challenges for folks who live in this area. this is just one location in the tampa bay area hit by all of the wind and all of the rain and the flooding that happened over the last several hours. i had a chance to speak with folks evacuating from areas like this. they told me the water came in, came through the walls in some cases and their focus, just getting their belongings to higher ground. some businesses preparing for the -- had to cut that work short and cleaning up the mess behind. eight inches of water inside
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their business in one location. right outside the door the water was even higher. fortunately it's begun to recede. the work is not over yet. you're looking at video as transformers exploded, heavy rain. tough conditions for a lot of people to deal with, and first responders are out here in the overnight hours rescuing those trapped in their homes. guys, back to you. >> thanks, k shayla. appreciate it. when the storm first hit tampa it looked like it was going to be awful. >> can we note the line of people here to see you this morning is turning around the block. >> it's a little slow compared to most days. >> they're here to see you and twisted sister. >> twisted sister. sammy davis junior, i met him at laguardia, he kept walking. dee snyder, his younger brother graduated with my older brother. i'm in ninth grade.
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he came in high heels, long, flowing hair. i was just frozen. >> how old were you? >> i was in ninth grade. >> shocked. >> it was the first celebrity i met. ed henry is joining us now. >> the second celebrity. >> let's move up the timetable. we're going to soon know the minute-by-minute details of hillary clinton's days as secretary of state. >> the press is fed up with that. ed henry is live from washington. >> going off the rails. >> breaking the fourth wall. >> this is like sammy davis jr. running away from kilmeade. >> we're checking the facts, buddy. hillary clinton's e-mail problems and questions collide in the latest document dump from the judicial group judicial watch.
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abedine helped him get diplomatic passport and josh sharon said, quote, judicial watch is now attacking state department officials and the 42nd president of the united states for rescuing two american journalists from north korea. this is a new low even for this right wing organization that has been going after the clintons since the 1990s. questions like this though about the foundation and the e-mail problems are the kind of questions clinton would face at a news conference. something she hasn't had in a while even though tim kaine, her running mate, claims it happens all the time. >> when are we going to see hillary open up the floor and take questions from reporters at any event? >> you see hillary take questions from reporters every day. she does -- she talks to the press everywhere she goes. she did a press conference -- >> really? >> -- when she was at the recent -- she did a press conference when she was at the recent meeting of the african-americans and hispanic
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newspaper publishers. >> that was the first time. she doesn't do it that often. >> well, look, i don't -- i don't see what the massive difference is between a press conference and talking to the press everywhere you go. >> cbs saying really? because the vice presidential nominee's claim about a news conference every day or talking to the media every day is simply not true, guys. >> absolutely not true. not even close to true. >> she offers the media chocolate. >> right. >> that's more. the press gets more in that chocolate than kilmeade got from sammy davis junior. >> i assume he had to get somewhere. >> yeah. >> leave the man alone. >> ed henry, thanks a million, ed. >> boy, that tim kaine thing was embarrassing. when he signed up for this job, do you think he would have to say things like that. >> two lines of attack. he's going against trump for not
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giving his taxes because he wants transparency. miss i forgot to give you 14,000 e-mails. now he'll attack trump on courage. >> we asked him to come on fox, went on every other network. didn't come on fox. we would love to extend you an invitation. >> when hillary is in a forum when an actual journalist gets to ask a question that's not unscripted. will the first question be why aren't you giving press conferences. matt lauer will get that chance. the question is, is he tough enough to ask the questions that she has been dodging for the past year? >> what do you think? do you have a problem with him moderating it? >> i think the whole press is so in the tank for hillary and so in the tank for destroying donald trump, he's the best. >> we'll ask eric trump. the forum is next wednesday.
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they won't be on stage to the. they're going to answer questions about national security, military affairs and veterans issues. >> i have no problem with it. i think he'll do a good job. there's a built-in imbalance, but i think he's going to feel the pressure, do a good job. >> i agree. >> i think he'll ask good questions. >> donald trump said there's no problem. matt lauer likes him. >> a liberal compared to what? he's like the most modern guy in the press core. >> with the sudden pause i realize i should jump in and toss to heather. >> hi, brian. ainsley. how y'all doing? good to see you this morning. got a couple of headlines i want to bring you right now. 40 minutes after the hour. take a look at this incredible video. a heroic news photographer risking his own life to save a pregnant woman from a fiery car crash. watch. >> are you by yourself? >> yes. >> oh, goodness. you can see that. a news photographer. happened in louisiana carrying
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the woman who is seven months pregnant away from the car after she crashed into a tree. the news reporter then switching roles, grabbing the camera, catching that dramatic rescue on camera. the woman and her baby are going to be just fine thank goodness for that. how terrifying. a missing american student reportedly kidnapped but now found alive and listen to this, in north korea working as kim jong-un's personal tutor. he's, of course, the head of that nation there. well, david sneddon is his name. he was kidnapped to teach the north korean dictator english. he is living in pyongyang, married, has two kids. he never reached out to his mom and dad and we have no idea why. strange. and a jaw dropping video of a father and son's close encounter with a great white
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shark. watch this. >> he's coming up to the boat. he's coming up. holy -- >> don't swear. >> no. oh, my god! >> no kidding. well, that is jim givens and his son jack. they were fishing off the coast of massachusetts when they noticed a shark circling their boat. they estimated it to be about 20 feet long. i would be so terrified. >> did i hear the dad right. don't swear? your own video, don't swear? >> one for the dad. >> love that. >> great advice. >> thanks. >> thanks, heather. 18 minutes before the top of the hour. coming up straight ahead, do you have a problem with your flight? well, the company that said it's your fault -- there's a company that says it's your fault for being a bad passenger. they may be right. forget about tracking the criminals in chicago. start tracking the bullets. is that a good idea or is it ridiculous? a fair and balanced debate coming up next.
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i'm booked solid for weeks. it takes ingenuity to make it in the big city. welcome back. the city of chicago has just about the strictest gun laws in north america, and yet the st e violence in that city is at a 20-year high. one lawmaker there is saying guns should be used to track down killers. actually, not just guns but the bullets they fire. a new proposal being pushed for serial numbers to be placed on ammo in the hope that each bullet can be tracked back to the store where it was originally purchased. gun shop owners say these regulations will create a mountain of paperwork and not save a single life. here to debate it, willey pratt and the deputy director of the center for american progress action fund, larry, what's wrong
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with this idea? >> well, it's virtually the same idea that they had in maryland. it failed after 15 years and millions of dollars. they finally had to pass the law and take it off the books. you're talking about so much data and data that's going to change when the fun is fired a few times. it's a record of nothing that's going to lead to anything. so it's typical socialist ideas and been tried before and it's going to fail again. >> igor, thankfully we already have this in place. it's called ballistics. every round fired through a rifle's barrel, handgun or rifle, leaves a unique mark that can be traced back to the gun from which it was fired. this occurs naturally. why would we need to layer on yet another tracking system when we have one? >> well, because you want to see where the bad guys are getting their bullets. if there's a store that sells a lot of these bullets that winds up at crime scenes, you want to
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know is there something going on at that store? we're told a lot you've got to focus on the bad guys. you've got to focus on the people who commit crimes and this is exactly true. what this does, it says if a lot of these bullets come from a certain store, maybe we need to investigate that store. >> so the trial lawyers can sue and get rich doing it. wait, you say we need to -- >> trial lawyers? no, no, i'm talking about saving lives. i'm not talking about trial lawyers. >> of course. the whole point is to allow trial lawyers to sue gun manufacturers and gun stores. >> why do you have a problem with a business that sells to criminals going into that business and investigating? what's wrong with that? >> as you know -- >> that's common sense to me. >> gun stores are not allowed to sell to criminals. >> but many do. that's the problem. many do. you have a lot of these -- you have -- at least some of these stores telling to people who they knowingly shunting selling to. you have investigations about this where you've had dealers selling to people who they know should not have weapons.
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>> there you go. they've been prosecuted for it. >> oh, really? >>. >> i wonder why this is a bad idea if it's going to be paid for by the people who buy the ammunition, the cost will be low. the average person look at this is going to save, i don't know, 90 people murdered in chicago. if this saves one life, why exactly is it a bad idea? >> it's not going to save any lives. it's going to cost a lot of money. it's going to make it easier to muscle gun owners. the idea really is more of the same has been tried over the years. various efforts to control firearms and control the industry. criminals don't obey the law. it's a real bummer. they're going to use bullets if
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there were any logic it wouldn't be put into practice. they will use unregistered ammunition like guns. >> igor, do you honestly think this is the core problem. this is why 90 people got put into practice. core problem? this isn't why people are being murdered? >> no, but you need to keep the guns out of the hands of the criminals. if law enforcement can do this, i should be it and so should you. >> i'm sorry, we're out of time, appreciate it though. coming up, donald trump being attacked by the press for being honest about illegal immigration. don't go away, because we have eric trump here to react to that coming up next. rco...! polo! marco...! polo! marco...! polo! marco...! sì? polo! marco...! polo! scusa? ma io sono marco polo, ma... marco...! playing "marco polo" with marco polo? surprising. ragazzini, io sono marco polo. sì, sono qui... what's not surprising? how much money amanda and keith saved
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famous dave's has been the sponsor of our summer concert series all summer long. its founder dave anderson was crowned smoked champion by destination america. >> he joins us right now to make our labor day more special like he does each and every year. how did you do it? >> we smoked the competition. two of the biggest barbecue chains in america. and we won. >> what'd you get? >> well, we each had to come up with $5,000, plus there was $5,000 from kings ford and the winner would donate it to their charity. and so we were donating to operation barbecue relief, which we were down in hammond, louisiana. we were giving out 20 to 30,000 meals a day to folks that probably for the first time had their first hot meal. >> wow. >> was it barbecue that you gave out? >> we were literally smoking up 20,000 pounds of pork butts every day. people all of the vendors that
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support us throughout the year in our rib fest were literally bringing us semitrailers of pork butts, we had chickens. we had some of the top pit masters from all over the country. >> awesome. >> coming down to hammond, louisiana. >> well, guess what? it's labor day weekend. a lot of people at home are barbecuing. so give us some tips. >> well, one of the things we're doing here with our ribs a lot of times people take them out of the smoker. >> can i do this? >> go ahead, slather them up. we want to put the sauce on the ribs, get some on the other side. what we're doing is we're caramelizing all the sauce on there, we're layering the flavors on there so they can be the best tasting. >> you put it on at the beginning, during and right before you serve? >> well, right before we serve because there's sugar in this sauce. but that caramelization, a lot of people don't do this. they take them out of the smoker and serve it.
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we feel this added layering of flavors really takes and turns -- >> what about dressing at the table, dave? >> that's a good point. because people really eat with their eyes. and one of the things that we found is that if you can make your table more interesting, for example, instead of just having a bowl of potato salad that's just like a big bunch of salad there, dress it up. make it interesting. and then it just makes the whole table a lot of fun. >> what is it? >> that's potato salad with rib rub. >> how long can you leave that in the sun? what's the truth? >> i'm sorry? >> the potato salad, how long can you leave it in the sun? >> keep it cold. and bring it out right at serving. >> well, this looks beautiful. you did a great job. >> we have some smoked salmon. some cucumber cups. >> that's awesome. thank you so much. >> a lot of ways of dressing up
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the table, i'm the best at barbecue on labor day where all your family and friends have good time. >> thanks for feeding our crew each and every day and this crowd. we appreciate your sponsorship. coming up next on our show -- >> eric trump. >> talking immigration and so much more and what his dad doing this labor day as he surges in the polls. don't go away. i'm just a guy who wants to buy that truck. and i'm just a guy who wants to sell him that truck. so i used truecar. it told me what other people in the area paid for the truck i want. and because we're a truecar certified dealership, i already know the truck he wants. so we're on the same page before he even gets here. -it's fair. -and it's fast. look good? looks great. this is how car buying was always meant to be. this is truecar. ♪
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for an erection lasting more than four hours. if you have any sudden decrease or loss in hearing or vision, or any symptoms of an allergic reaction, stop taking cialis and get medical help right away. ask your doctor about cialis and a $200 savings card. good morning to you and your family. it's friday, it's september 2, 2016. i'm ainsley earhardt. we start with a fox news alert. a hurricane hits florida for first time in over ten years. now more than 100,000 people are in the dark this morning. the storm surge flooding areas all along the east coast and labor day weekend for millions set to be a complete washout. what you need to know straight ahead. then donald trump lays out a ten-point plan on immigration, bawl the left wants to focus on is deportation.
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what getting -- what is get wrong with getting rid of criminals? his son eric trump is here to explain. all right. 49ers quarterback colin kaepernick takes a stand by staking a knee. protesting the existence of the national anthem again. now it turns out in early august he was openly bashing the police, comparing them according to his socks to pigs. mornings are better with "friends." ♪ we're not gonna take it no, we ain't gonna take it ♪ ♪ we're not gonna take it anymore ♪ >> the crowds begin filing in. they were having a ball.
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and twisted sister will be here in our final consisht of labor day. they had a full blown concert at 5:00 a.m. >> fifth avenue was packed at 5:00 a.m. i don't think that's a lot of hillary voters in the audience. >> i just walked through it. i'm pretty sure. >> a lot of tattoos and famous dave's barbecue. a life threatening storm is pounding florida and georgia, leaving a path of destruction. >> it's called hurricane hermine. it made landfall before weakening to the tropical storm. >> jonathan sery has more. >> reporter: i'm on the westside and most of the damage is concentrated on the east side. but look at this video from overnight in tallahassee. the capital city of florida
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finding itself in the direct path of the storm. 70,000 customers going without power according to the city government website. customers include the entire campus of florida state university. i want to show you some video from overnight from cedar key. this is a barrier island off the northern gulf coast of florida. again, an area that's very far to the east of where the eye was passing and yet, they suffered a record storm surge. all around we have been seeing dramatic video of tides rolling in and north of tampa, firefighters and sheriff's deputies used high water vehicles to rescue people stranded by a combination of storm surge and rain that caused flooding in low-lying coastal areas. back to you guys. >> all right, thanks so much. we'll keep checking in with you because the people of florida obviously going through a lot.
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look who's here. we have eric trump. good morning. >> good morning. great to be back. >> what do you make of what the mainstream media is doing -- talking about your dad's immigration plan and his speech and saying that he wants to deport so many people and they're really upset about it. what's truth? >> listen, my father wants to protect this country and preserve the wages of 320 million people who live in this country. it's very, very sad. the median income hasn't gone up in 15 years and yet we have thousands and thousands of people coming across the border. they pose a real security risk and my father wants to take care of the problem. quite frankly the people who are in this country who are causing massive problems he wants to get them out. i mean, he wants to get them out. >> eric, he seems to be -- first we have to get the drug dealers and the gang members, get them out. then we'll take account, look around, and decide what to do from this. but two things happened over the last 24 hours.
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jacob monty and alfonso aguiar, said i don't like the speech, i'm resigning. what's going on there? >> the speech -- it was very consistent and has been very, very consistent with his plan. it was really interesting. i think it took tremendous leadership for him to go down to mexico and meet where the president but when you saw the meeting the president of mexico said it was a two-way street. he said america has a real problem with tremendous drugs coming across the border. we have tremendous problem with the money coming back into our country and we have tremendous problem with guns and different weapons coming into the country which are hurting the cartel. i was really proud of my father. i think they left it in a good way. then the leftist media spins it, et cetera. but it was clear from both leaders that a border is necessary for the protection of their own country. >> would there be an effort to clarify what the two guys who were advising your dad on hispanic issue, is there an effort to get them in the mix or clarify their mission? >> it's very important to us.
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and if you look at the hispanic community they have been largely left behind in this country. the african-american community, they have been left behind in so many cases. it's a very sad thing. you look at inner cities, 60% unemployment. african-american youth, they have been left behind. the same applies to hispanics in many instances. very, very sad. my father wants to bring jobs back into this country. he wants to make this country safe. >> right. >> that benefits every american. but every legal american and there's a difference in his mind between legal americans and illegal americans. >> especially americans at the lower end of the income scale. what's so striking to me the democratic party used to be very concerned with things like wages. how much do you make, that's really meaningful to people and now they're off on global warming. but your dad's economic argument was a democratic argument. >> sure, no question about it. we have 100 million out of the workforce, wages haven't gone up
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in 15 years. since bill clinton signed nafta, right in 2001, since he signed nafta we have lost one-third of all manufacturing jobs in this country. our jobs are fleeing the country and yet people are coming into the country and taking the few jobs that we have left. we have to balance that out and we have to protect the country. we need to know who's here. you can't turn on the tv without seeing another isis attack, without seeing another, you know, horrible, horrible tragedy. we need to know who's in this country. we need to protect the american people. >> so we found out over the last two weeks the commingling of the clinton foundation and hillary clinton and her days at the state department. this is the fbi, this is judicial watch, this is citizens united subpoenaing legitimate record, not pundit spin. the latest is that the gsas revealing that bill clinton may have used tax dollars to subsidize the set-up of the private server for himself. >> nothing surprises me anymore. you see huma abedin, her connection between the foundation, the state department and the e-mails going back and forth and you know, big donors
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wanting to go to din we are the vice president. it's really horrible. pay to play on the largest level. and americans deserve a lot better. we as people deserve a lot better and these government officials are employees of ours, the american people. we should be doing a great job -- they should be doing a great job of working for us and they're not. >> you mentioned vice president. this is joe biden talking about the clinton foundation. >> hilarious. >> do you think americans should be concerned at all about the ethics of the clinton foundation? has the clinton foundation always been 100% ethical in your view? >> look, i think that the clinton foundation like all foundations has found itself in a position where things have changing and i think she's going to change -- just like the realities of how complicated it is -- >> is she hurting herself --
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should the foundation have taken foreign donations? >> i think they'll stop taking -- >> can you interpret that for us? >> that is our leadership. no, i can't interpret that. i'm not sure if anybody can interpret that. this is the leadership that we have in our country. somebody sets up the foundation, they pocket hundreds of millions of dollars. they say they come out of the white house quote/unquote dead broke and now worth $150 million. what product were they selling? if we make a -- if we sold a bottle of wine or a hotel room, what product were they making -- >> favors to the government. >> of course. it's so sad. people work so hard, and sometimes they can't achieve because of the policies that these politicians put in place and look what they do. >> i'm going to tell you joe biden should be offended. here's a secretary of state working for the president of the united states and instead she's coming the foundation a with the secretary of state job. it has nothing to do with joe biden. >> you didn't read politico yesterday.
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they said the clinton foundation made strides fighting childhood obesity. >> do you know about their work on obesity? >> hillary will insult us for making a tie outside the united states because you can't manufacture in this country anymore because of what their policies have done to this country, but yet, just about every dollar that the foundation makes goes overseas when we have massive problems in our own country. we have massive poverty. we have a lot of problems in this country. right? but instead of fixing the inner cities and instead of fixing the educational system, instead of contributing within the borders all that money is going overseas. i find that very, very ironic. >> i wanted to ask you about the forum next week. your dad will participate in the debates as long as the moderator is fair. now it's just announced that matt lauer is going to moderate that. what does your dad have to say that? >> listen, we have on his shows
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many time and his involvement with the foundation -- >> clinton foundation -- >> i hope he'll be fair. you see some of the stations at nbc, msnbc in particular, i mean, may as well be a super pac against trump. it's really sad to see what happened to the media on that station. i hope that won't be the case with matt. i hope he'll be fair. the best debates are the ones where the moderators have sat back and been neutral and let the candidates respond. >> i think he'll do a great job. i think your dad said good things about him in the past. there was a story in the politico among the things happening a lot of positive things happening on the your campaign. on monday, you expressed that this -- if this is true, a little bit upset for the rnc for not doing more to get out in battleground states and you jettisoned out there with the rnc in the battleground states. >> i read this and i literally shook my head. the rnc are amazing people, they do an smazing job. i went over to the rnc to thank
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the 200 people for doing a great job over there. >> it's erroneous? >> totally. the rnc they do an amazing job. they're so committed to us winning and all republicans winning. they do a great job. >> you're not concerned about the battleground states ground game? >> well, listen we'll fight very hard and the new poll numbers are incredible. >> why is your dad doing a better job in the polls? >> i think he's had an amazing couple of weeks. i love the humble donald trump. he's the greatest father in the world. he'll be an incredible leader to this country. but i think people have seen that softer side. listen, i think you have louisiana, that's totally under water. where's hillary? she's fund-raising. where's obama? he's playing golf. where's trump and pence? they're in louisiana. and in mexico. he's on the next plane to go down there. where is she?
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she's fund-raising. i think people are starting to see the leadership qualities and my father will do a great job for this nation. he'll do an unbelievable job for this nation. >> how is your fund raising? >> my fund-raising for st. jude? >> no, for the trump for president campaign. >> we're doing so well. he gave the immigration speech, you know, we -- we raised $5.2 million in one day. think about that. $5.2 million in one day from donations that were less than $50. so it's incredible. the ground swell of support is just tremendous. it's going so well. >> labor day plans? >> having fun. >> no -- that's it? >> trying to get away from politics. >> i'm a civilian in the whole process. i'm trying to step back. >> it will be your last break for a while. >> it will be. >> thanks, eric. meanwhile, colin kaepernick keeping his promise to disrespect our nation's heroes. ♪ the land and of the free
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>> he took a knee, everybody else stood. at the very latest on the controversial quarterback, next. plus, a political dynasty at the ripe ages of 7 and 4. our child prodigy series continues. their two brothers, they're dubbed the minimayors. there's something out there. that can be serious, even fatal to infants. it's whooping cough, and people can spread it without knowing it. understand the danger your new grandchild faces. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about a whooping cough vaccination today.
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all right. colin kaepernick keeping his promise to not stand up during the singing of the national anthem. he took a knee this time. even though it was ringed with 250 military members. >> yeah. this time it was during the chargers salute to the military pregame. fans greeting the 49ers quarterback with boos. listen. [ crowd boos ] >> and anna kooiman has the latest on the protest. >> he promised he was going to do it and the fans promised to boo and they did. colin kaepernick disrespecting the red, white and blue despite being surrounded by dozens of military men and women. ♪ ♪ and of the free
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and the home of the brave ♪ >> i mean, we feel like getting on out feet right now. so patriotic, how do you not stand up for this? this time kaepernick was joined by teammate eric reed to protest perceived racial injustices by police officers. he says taking a knee was a compromise after sitting on the bench after last week's anthem. >> we were talking to him about how can we get the message back on track and not take away from the military and as we talked about it, we came up with taking the knee. and i think what i did was taken out of context and spun a different way. >> reporter: well, how is this for context, before the game photos surfaced of kaepernick practicing while wearing these socks. look at your screen here. they're depicting cartoon pigs
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wearing police hats. santa clara police department said our mission to keep everyone safe and provide an enjoyable environment at levi's stadium will not be affected by what any individual says or wears. his disrespect seems to be contagious with jeremy lane taking a seat last night during his national anthem. the nfl has clarified there is no rule prohibiting these protests. guys? >> i think it's also spreading because you have the seahawks n eric reed. so this could be -- this could be something that's going throughout the whole league. >> i don't know why the employers or the team owners don't say something about it. why can't they make a statement on behalf of the national anthem? >> he did say positive things about the military and said he loves america after the game. >> i wonder what's going to happen on 9/11. next sunday. >> thanks a lot, anna. >> of course. >> see you tomorrow. coming up next, a new batch of hillary clinton's e-mails from her time as secretary of
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state have been released. one e-mail in particular could prove a major problem for her campaign. plus the feds are asking god to prove he might exist. not what you might think. come on, god, your move. ♪ (humming) ♪ so you're up at dawn, ♪ k, , look alive. ♪ you've been saving for a big man-cave. ♪ (chuckling) good luck with that, dave. ♪ you made the most of your retirement plan, ♪ ♪ so you better learn to drive that rv, man.♪ ♪ so many things you're doing in your life. ♪ ♪ ♪ nationwide is on your side. [ crowd noisewhoa. [ gears stopping ] when your pain reliever stops working, your whole day stops. try this. but just one aleve
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time for the best part of the show -- "news by the numbers." $700,000. that's how much the victims of the aurora movie theater shooting have to pay the theater in legal fees after their lawsuit failed that's what a judge said. next 85 thousands that are. that's how much police say that this woman stole from the girl scouts. she store it from the girl scouts. she admitted to transferring money to herself. once she started she couldn't
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stop. like eating thin mints. 7,000. that's how many store back office jobs that walmart is slashing. the retail giant employs about 1.5 million people in this country. brian? new documents released show the clinton foundation executive named doug band sought diplomatic passports with the help of huma abedin during her time at the state department. and in an e-mail abedin replied she would work on it. a violation of federal law by the way. the law states a diplomatic passport is issued to a foreign service office or to having a person having diplomatic status or comparable status because he or she is abroad carrying out duties on behalf of the u.s. more on this, we bring in author and filmmaker dinesh d'souza. dinesh, do you have a problem with this revelation? >> it's very disturbing.
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it actually shows for the clintons they look at the government as being an extension of their own feathering of their own nest and they use the apparatus of government to gain favors for themselves and their friends. to make money for their foundation and for themselves. and, you know, we have seen this kind of corruption in america at the local level before. but i have never heard of a secretary of state in a sense renting out policy, renting out access in the shameless way that the clintons have now done. >> unbelievable. we are getting the revelations now because the e-mails were put on the unsecure server and this investigation has exposed all of this linkages which you have chronicled and told people about before. another linkage, bill clinton using taxpayer money as a former president to subsidize the clinton foundation staff and a private server set-up. now, that money is coming to him as a former president. but to use it for this, is that a problem? >> well, let's think about this.
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the purpose of tax exemption is to encourage people to do charity. if you look closely at the clinton foundation it's not a charity, it's a charity front. it reminds me of the foundation that juan and eva peron set up in argentina to accumulate influence and cash for the perons. and the clintons are the same thing. the foundation is a receptacle for them. that's allowed them to go to zero up to $3 billion in donati donations. >> when he says mine and all the other supporters say they -- the clinton foundation does great things for a great number of people, you say that's not true? >> i think when you look at the clinton foundation's own reports, you know, somebody builds a school in haiti the clintons visit the school and then they list the school as something that they funded. it's almost like they paid for
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the school, it's not true. so the way that the foundation structures the quote giving it takes symbolic credit for things it never did. >> i want to talk about "hillary's america." you're releasing it through selected theaters this weekend. is it because hillary is back in the news for a lot of the things you put in the movie? >> it's partly by popular demand. people are cave calling the theaters and saying, hey, we want to see the movie. so the theaters decided to re-release in 400 theaters this weekend and it's so timely. trump is all over them. the whole sordid history of the democratic party, the clinton foundation and its rackets, it's all there. it's a way for people to equip themselves as we go into the final stretch of the election year. please see the movie this weekend. >> to find out more, we go to where to find out if it's playing near me? >> the website is
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hillarysamericathemovie.com. plug in your zip code and see where it's playing. >> now we do understand, dinesh, they'll be releasing hillary clinton's schedules. they have to reverse themselves, the state department. so we'll find out who she was meeting with and why. and of course that first came out with the a.p., with the disturbing linkage. dinesh d'souza, thank you. coming up in the final 90 minutes, people are reporting that a creepy clown is trying to lure kids into the woods. who's behind this? new details just released. plus, they're a political dynasty at the ripe ages of 7 and 4. our child prodigy series continues with two brothers dubbed the mini mayors. meet them, next. introducing carrabba's new family bundles.
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we are back with our top story. pragdz new video of the strong winds and the high tides crashing the georgia coastline, as tropical storm hermine barrels the northeast. >> the storm leaves behind massive flooding and damage in its past across florida where it made landfall overnight. >> dana ray joins us live from franklin county outside of tallahassee. what's the latest there? >> reporter: we're actually in apalachicola here, and the high waters that were the result of hermine coming on shore, starting to recede a little bit. this is a nice little marina and boat dock area here in apalachicola. the water was up over the docks here, about an hour and a half ago. the good news here in apalachicola, the water is receding. the storm hit an hour east of
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here, in the st. mark's river area. that's where they have a lot of wind damage and flooding. they saw a big storm surge as well. hermine came in at 1:30 last night, with lots of wind and rain so she tried to do some damage. but here in apalachicola at least, things are looking pretty good as the sun comes up. live here in apalachicola, i'm dana jay. >> better than expected. thanks. now let's hand it over to janice dean. where it is headed next? is it moving up the coast, janice? >> yes, we'll be dealing with the storm well into the labor day weekend. we still have tornado watches in effect for parts of north florida, georgia and south carolina. the center of the storm now crossing into georgia. we still have tropical storm warnings that extend up towards north carolina and then we get into the watches because this storm is going to exit the coastline and then just sit and spin for days across the east coast. so just off shore.
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and as we get further out into time a lot of uncertainty here. the one thing is for certain, we'll see heavy rainfall in the path of the storm on the order of four to six inches. maybe higher totals, i have seen close to two feet in the area. flood watches and warnings are posted. watch this, guys, as we head out further in time. this is one of the reliable forecast models as it becomes a nor'easter, we could have winds in excess of 90 miles an hour close to the coastline. this is not going anywhere fast. we'll be talking about this next week and it could be a major headache for the holiday plans this weekend. >> oh, man. >> wow in the northeast. thanks a lot, janice. 25 minutes before the top of the hour. >> heather has some headlines for us. >> i certainly do. hi, good morning, gang. i hope you're off to the great day. police are looking for this man who held a gun to the pizza delivery guy's head, demanding money and the soda he was carrying, mountain dew.
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this happened in daytona beach, florida. he's chowing down on the food after he steals it from the delivery guy, but it gets more bizarre from there. he then offers a slice to a complete stranger who was walking by. well, dallas police chief david brown announcing his retirement. chief brown making national headlines for his leadership after five of his police officers were killed in an ambush sniper attack. >> we don't feel much support most days. let's not make today most days. >> well, chief brown saying he would step down october the 22nd. he served more than three decades as a police officer. no word on what he'll do next. well, for the first time we are seeing that creepy clown who is targeting young kids. police in south carolina say that this man dressed head to toe in a horrifying costume. terrifying the community there.
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parents reporting the string of bizarre incidents saying the clown makes strange noises and tries to lure their children into the woods. police say it's dangerous and inappropriate. and the clown -- well, that needs to stop. yuck. well, the feds want god to prove he exists before they let him on the november ballot. the federal election commission cracking down on fake candidates and they believe that god is one of many characters trying to make the cut. others include satan, cap'n crunch, darth vader, luke skywalker. god has 30 days and then he's kicked out of the race. those are your headlines. see you here real soon. thanks, gang. thank you, heather. well, our week long child prodigy series continues this morning with a history making pair. these are two brothers from minnesota who at the tender age of 3 each served as mayor. >> get out of here. >> one for two terms. >> yeah. let's meet the pint sized
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politicians here. 7-year-old robert and 4-year-old james tufts. welcome, brothers. how are you? >> nice to see you. >> what made you get into politics, james? why get into this? >> because we were brothers. >> your brother pushed you into it? you're 4 years old and you have been mayor. you were the mayor at 3 years old. what was that like? >> it was funny. >> it was funny, why was it funny? >> because at the age of 3, you can't be that. >> but you did. robert, what got -- what did it take to become mayor? tell us what happened. >>well, my mom, she said do you want to be mayor some time soon? i said, yeah. she said, let's go to dorsett and make a vote. i said, okay. and so we went in and made a vote and then we did it many
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more times and then we -- and then until the -- that's when we turned into the mayor. >> wow. what is your advice? give us some political advice? >> well, look people in the eye, shake hands. and no poopy talk. >> that's a good one. no poopy talk. have you learned that from your brother as mayor? >> do you guys work well together? do you guys work well together to keep your town safe? >> yes. >> right. >> because we rebuilt it. >> you rebuilt the town? bless you. how did you rebuild it? >> we didn't rebuild it. but the big tall guy rebuilt it. >> the grown-ups? >> what is a meeting like for you? do you have a lot of meetings as
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mayor? >> no. no. >> not a lot? how many a year, how many would you say? >> probably like one. >> oh, just one. do you lead that meeting? >> no. >> who leads the meeting? >> most of the time it's the town owners. >> there's good. well, you know, james, you have plate full. this is the year you start preschool. you start on tuesday. you love pizza and hot dogs. it's hard to have responsibilities and start preschool. >> and i like ice cream too. >> oh, i forgot that, brian. what's your favorite flavor? >> probably rainbow sherbet. >> oh, a good one. >> probably the best. >> how about you? >> peppermint bonbon. >> sometimes you can only get that at christmastime. i wish they sold it year round? you found it year round? i need to come to your town. >> we find it, not in our town. well, we find a lot of it in our
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town too. we find it all over the place. >> oh, great. could you just tell us a little bit about dorsett, your town. tell us about it, james. >> we shake hands. we do stuff that is nice. >> is nice. >> good. >> love to fish, sports? >> you love fishing, right? all right. >> biggest fish you got? >> we caught probably a walleye this big on a lake. >> get out of here. >> yeah. really big walleye. >> and he caught the biggest -- um -- when it was -- and they got the big -- i got the biggest bass and we put it in the tank for the great lakes aquarium in --
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>> wow. that's amazing. giving back to the town. building up the aquarium. good job. >> the youngest mayors, thank you so much. you're not even old enough to vote and you became mayor. pretty impressive. >> i have never seen anyone sit more comfortably on our couch. good job. all right, guys. you have a town to run. i guess you have to run and preschool to attend. all right. >> thanks for joining us. >> kind of just lost their attention. i mean, this is -- after a while, he stops talking to us. coming up straight ahead -- bye, guys. >> bye. >> you don't have to get up but you can if you want. go ahead, sorry. trump and clinton are making a major play for african-american voters but which candidate offers a more promising platform? we'll break it down next. plus, twisted sisters isn't the only ones rocking with us this friday. kix brooks is out on the plaza. >> right. he's cooking for us. nexium 24hr is now the #1 choice of doctors and pharmacists
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the policies of hillary clinton have produced only poverty, joblessness, failing schools, broken homes and rising crime. and it's only getting worse. they don't care about you. remember that. >> in just this past week, under the guise of outreach to african-americans, trump has stood up in front of largely white audiences and described black communities in such insulting and ignorant terms. >> well, the race is heating up of course. donald trump and hillary clinton making a major play for african-american votes but which candidate offers a more promising platform on the merit? here to weigh in is the national director from the urban renewal and education, the reverend derrick mccoy. great to see you this morning.
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>> good to be with you. >> so hillary clinton essentially accused donald trump of racism for attempting to appeal to african-american voters. do you think it is racist to make a pitch to those voters? >> absolutely not. i think it's imperative they make that pitch. one of things that's really clear we cannot go on like the nixon strategy of the 1960 east's where he reached out to more white voters and say that get us over the aspect of it. i think you have to reach out. >> i think in the last election, 96% of black voters went for the democrat, president obama. trump is now polling in the nbc poll at least at 8%. is it a question of not hearing what he says? a lot of black voters decide the republican is not on my side, doesn't like me and i can't hear the details of what he's saying? >> well, you make a good point. i think what we have to look at, when i looked at the whole
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thing, trump has a great opportunity in front of him as well as hillary is going to have to make a big play to really include the african-american vote. here's the deal. the african-american community, while you have a lot of folks that may be strapped in poverty, but are disproportionately represented in the poverty mix, 12% of the population, you're looking at us being a third of the population -- of the poverty rolls. on the other side of it though, which i don't think they're quite getting is that there's $1.1 trillion in the african-american net disposable income. it's a population pool of growing people that have managerial, professional jobs, college in their background and so that voting bloc especially over 25 is going to be critical and i think they're a little bit more conservative and open to hear, but you have to be able to understand the distinguishments of both sides of the african-american community. >> so obama's election was seen as a great vick for particularly for black voters.
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2009, 9.9 million african-americans living in poverty. as of 2014, the number is up to 10.7 million. the overall poverty rate in america is a little over 4% for black americans, 8.5%. these are not numbers that suggest a victory really. they're numbers that suggest a failure. >> absolutely. and that's why many in the african-american community and i think what you're looking at is many people are dissatisfied with the policies that have been put in place for years in several communities that have been run by democrats. so if you look at baltimore city, milwaukee, other places, these places have been run by large majority of democrats and i think a lot of african-americans are becoming discontent with the policies and what has been the strategies to date. they're looking for new solutions. they want to see jobs created, they want to see people come off those welfare rolls. they want to see economic opportunities in terms of entrepreneurism and other
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things. >> you hope that someone wants to try something new because it's definitely not working. >> absolutely. >> thank you for coming on, reverend. you know him one half of the brooks and dunn, and i bet you didn't know he's a great cook. we're cooking with kix brooks, next.
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♪ ♪ only in america where we dream in red, white and blue ♪ ♪ ♪ cadillac, black jack >> you know him as one half of
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the best-selling country music duo of ail time, brooks and dunn. but did you also know he's a lean, mean cooking machine? >> i did not know that. but here from the cookbook, "cookin' it with kix", kicks brooks. >> i like the lean and mean. and having breakfast with something like pimento cheese. >> what is that exactly? >> do you know what a pimento is? >> i have no idea. >> it's the little thing in an olive, but it's actually a red bell pepper. so you have cheese and you have some mayonnaise -- so we're making pimento cheese. >> this is sharp cheddar, yellow cheddar. got to get this whipped up, you know? this is actually in the recipe book. this is called wingin' it.
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that's all you're doing. there's a lot of different ways. we're in the kitchen here. >> do this on the tour bus ever? >> yeah. i have a driver -- put in the mayo to make it stick together. >> can i put in the pimento? >> put it in the pimento. >> what is it about cooking with your family? >> it's being from the south, dudes have to do that. you grow up with the barbecue grill and hot sauce. get in there and go. >> you're like the perfect man. you cook and you play music, you sing. >> get a guitar, you know, when you're a dork like me, you have to learn how to cook and play the guitar to get a date. >> that's how it works. >> exactly. so you whip this up. >> put cayenne pepper in here. >> yeah. >> what about this drink? >> this is called blood orange madras. that makes a great cocktail. we did the virgin version of
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this. blood orange, do you know what that is? looks like a grapefruit when you cut it open. >> what's in here? >> there you go. you have blood orange juice. cranberry juice. >> grain alcohol? >> i like that. that's good. there's no alcohol in here. >> cranberry. >> but you can put alcohol in there. it goes great with tequila. any tequila drinkers in the house? >> we're at a twisted sister concert. >> apparently a lot in the house. so you cut your orange -- >> what do we get in your book? >> it's fun stuff. this is for -- i learned, you know, cooking is not something that should intimidate you. i'm not a chef. but i love to cook. we have a lot of tailgaters here too i bet. yeah. fun ideas. pull your grill out, have some fun. make it happen. >> personal stories. >> absolutely. >> "kickin' it with kix." >> there's some bad stories about the road too. >> geraldo rivera, coming up next. >> great to see you!
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could be a missing piece for you. see if you're eligible for 12 months free at mybreo.com. good morning to you and your family. it's friday, it's september 2nd, 2016. i'm ainsley earhardt. we start with a fox news alert. hermine making landfall overnight as a category 1 hurricane, the first one to hit that state in 11 years. half a million people now in the path of its dangerous storm as it's moving up the east coast. will it ruin your holiday weekend plans? we have details. and then trump lays out the ten-point plan on immigration, and all the press focuses on is deportation. he wants to get rid of
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criminals. they call him mean. geraldo will join us next. and colin kaepernick takes a knee, getting booed by the entire stadium in san diego. [ crowd boos ] and what he did earlier at a practice in august, bashing police with pigs wearing police hats on his socks. we'll debate that, where we go from here because he spoke about it. keep in mind despite all you're hearing, despite all you might be reviewing, your mornings are better because you're with "friends." ♪ ♪ ♪ rock i wanna rock, rock ♪
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♪ i want to rock, rock i wanna rock ♪ ♪ rock ♪ >> we're going to need a bigger applause. they're lined up around the rock to hear twisted sister. dee snider singing "i wanna rock." the fabled gospel calypso infusion band. >> they are heavy rock. >> yes, they are. they're great. they're very popular. i have never seen it more crowded out there. >> look at the crowd -- the line is still going. i hope we have enough ribs. >> there are some trump voters out there. >> i'm not a person who would go to the heavy metal concert but i love their music. >> right. >> we're not going to take it,
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such a famous song. >> it is your theme. you're not going to take it anymore. >> that's right. >> right. absolutely. >> they're nice people, i have to say. they are. >> they really are. what's happening, tucker? >> right to the top story and that would be tropical storm hermine, formerly a hurricane, but still leaving a path of destruction as it crawls up the east coast, devastation in its wake. >> all right, steam pouring into the air from the broken pipe at florida state university in tallahassee. the campus losing power in the storm. >> wow. check out this lucky mustang, just missing a downed tree in the storm. oh, there's the mustang, the blue one on the right. a huge tree. >> the car, not the horse. >> right now, hermine is moving up the east coast into georgia. that is where we found our phil keating. live in the storm zone.
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good morning, phil. >> reporter: good morning. we are at historic st. mary's georgia, near the florida state line. currently, experiencing what a lot of the south has to look forward to for the rest of today. strong winds, heavy rains whipping through. that's the cumberland national seashore. and the waves are choppy. the winds are blowing, but the story of the day is going to be these bands come and then they go. then they get -- things are more gentle and calm, but it's not over yet. the outer bands because the storm is covering such a large area. that's what you have to look forward to in tallahassee, florida, heavy winds, strong rain. the state capital. last night and through this morning, in fact 70,000 people right now have no power. that's the result of hundreds of trees toppling into power lines. knocking out power. then gainesville, florida, where you have the university of florida. many trees down there as well. you can see one homeowner not so lucky as that big tree crossed
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on to their roof. in georgia, as tropical storm hermine goes up the coast, a lot of tornado activity is a real threat for much of the area throughout the day. back to you. >> thanks so much, mr. keating, out there in the field. not quite as bad as we thought. guess who's here? >> hi. i lost power in new jersey yesterday. >> why? >> i don't know. one drop falls. >> the bill comes every month. you have to pay it, geraldo. >> i actually thought of that. i have a new accountant. did than? >> so did you see the trump speech on immigration? >> i thought much more movingly from my point of view was to see him with president pena nieto, to see him presidential and measured and to see him really on par with the world's leader. i thought it was terrific for him. i applauded the substance of his remarks. the tenor of his remarks. i thought that in the battle for
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the soul of donald trump between me and ann coulter, i thought i was triumphant and the people that she represents is a loser. >> what? that's not what ann coulter thinks. >> and then flash forward three or four hours he gets to arizona and he delivered a speech that could have been a speech he made during the primary. it was way too harsh. it was strident in my view. you know, you know more than anyone, tucker, how politics is a business of arithmetic. you want to add people. i thought the morning in mexico added voters. and the speech he -- >> in the speech, the core of it was this. he said the united states has a right and an obligation to admit people who improves the lives of americans. but the president's job is to help americans. you can't disagree with that. >> he could have said the same thing in a much more moderate
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tone. even if the words were exactly the same. >> so it's the tone? >> but it's not only the tone. ainsley, it is the fact that he in his own mind i believe makes a distinction between criminal illegal aliens and undocumented, otherwise law-abiding, particularly those with citizen children. i know in donald's mind, mr. trump's mind he makes a distinction and he didn't say it. >> yes, he did. >> this is a what he said. i want to build a wall and then the bad people t criminals, let's get them out. >> so i will submit to you he has had major resignations from conservative hispanic people who had aligned with donald trump as a result of the speech in arizona, his absolute evidence of what i'm talking about. he lost hispanic support that he could have gotten if he had kept the same tone. >> why? >> you think there should be a dissemination between the criminals and the people here. this is what he said yesterday.
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this is why i wanted you to hear this. >> well, look, we'd do it in a very humane way and we'll see what the people that are in the country, obviously i want to get the gang members out, the drug peddlers out, the drug dealers out. we have a lot of people in this country that you can't have. and those people we'll get out and then we'll make a decision at a later date once everything is stabilized. i think you will see there's really quite a bit of softening. >> that's what he told laura. >> why didn't he have that tone in the speech of arizona? everyone in that room was voting for donald trump anyway. he needs to broaden the support. the republican is a minority anyway and to win you have to broaden your constituency. you have to reach out. >> i think he's saying the same thing. i think that's what he's saying. he's not going to separate moms and kids if i understand him. >> wait one second. you said the exact -- exactly what i have on my mind. why doesn't trump add a line? i'm not going to separate
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families from their citizen children. >> he did said that. if you here we can make you citizens but you'll pay back taxes for all the years you're here. >> what i heard and what i believe every person who is pro immigration reform heard was same old, same old, donald trump from the primaries. he took the harshest lines. right now, i mean, with laura ingraham now he sounded like jeb bush. he sounded like marco rubio. why doesn't he sound like that when he makes a major speech? >> maybe he'll hear you today. >> but they're shallow and they're distracted by the shiny objects, aren't you playing into the stereotypes and critiquing the sound of his voice? >> the sound of his voice, if you're shouting and if you're militant in the -- in the sound of your voice your message gets totally overwhelmed and it's
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more than that. the fact that he did not distinguish between law abiding mothers and fathers who here for 15 or 20 year, never committed a crime. you know, they have put their kids through harvard for goodness sakes. i think you could easily have kept the sentiment of all of those allies in a much more humane, compassionate, inclusive way. i could have drafted the speech -- it sounded to me like he wrote the speech. i think he wrote the speech, then he went to mexico. had that great session with pena nieto and came back and used the old speech. >> so you know, he did change -- the report is he changed the beginning of his speech when he saw nieto's tweet that said, i told donald trump i'll never pay for that wall. he changed a portion of the speech when he saw that because i think he thought it was a breach of trust because they really never discussed the wall. i want you to talk about something different that you have an opinion on, 49ers
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quarterback colin kaepernick on the salute to military day, when he came out to join the teammates, the fans booed every time he touched the ball on all 16 days and he took a knee during the national anthem. your thoughts? >> i was very disappointed in colin kaepernick. i think that as a first amendment -- amendmentist and as a lawyer and as a constitutionalist, colin kaepernick is clearly within his constitutional rights to do whatever he wants to do short of any obscenity when the national anthem is being played. but it is bad manners. he's not muhammad ali. he compared himself to ali and his resistance to the draft. muhammad ali was the best fighter in the world when he sacrificed years of his career to take a principled stand. colin kaepernick is second to a third string quarterback for san francisco. he may never really start a football game again. i was talking to kevin out here, you know, one of our strapping
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athletic stage managers. he said that it reminds me that colin kaepernick, he went to the university of nevada, a great scrambling quarterback. all pro terrific. he had one good year in the nfl and then he started screwing up. and now this is the action of a man who's frustrated in his career, who's going nowhere in his career. he's making this stance. he may -- what are we going to start having like on helmets, you know, black lives matter or, you know, vote for trump or vote for this? >> i don't think we should be focused on whether he's starting or not. i think that he feels as though the country is letting him down. he wants to -- that's why he doesn't want to salute the flag pause it's not represent -- because it's not representing the america he knows. >> this is football, for god's sake. he gets paid big money to play football and in his case sit on the bench. >> where are the owners on this? are they too cowardly to
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stand -- >> i think it's bad manners. he'll be booed in any stadium, it will affect his teammates ultimately. it will affect the franchise. it will bring people down. you're going to a football game, it's not a political rally. you don't want to see cops are pigs on people's socks. >> no. you want to see a game played. >> on armed forces day, i come back to the manners. really, really bad banners. >> wouldn't it be nice to see someone in charge of -- a billion dollar owner stand up and be counted once? >> i think the san francisco market and the fans will take care of this problem. i guarantee you this colin kaepernick, this is his last year with the 49ers. >> thank you for waking up early. >> i love it. every friday. and to see dee snider in the morning. >> come out with us. >> he needs the hispanic background, don't be surprised if you're not on the stage. a new batch of hillary clinton's e-mails from her time as secretary of state just
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released. one in particular could prove controversial. ed henry has the breaking details. [ tires screech ] ♪ flo: [ ghost voice ] oooo! [ laughs ] jaaaaamie, the name your price tool can show you coverage options to fit your budget. tell me something i don't know -- oh-- ohhh! ahh! this is probably more of a breakroom activity. ya think? ♪
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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 you 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. this is for real. i'm a non-smoker. ask your doctor if chantix is right for you. moving up the timetable, we're soon going to know the minute by minute details of hillary clinton's daily meetings as secretary of state. >> it's now been 272 days since
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clinton has held a full blown press conference. even the press appears to be getting fed up. >> possibly because they don't have any access. ed henry, live in washington. hey, ed. >> reporter: good morning, guys. one new e-mail out shows bill clinton making sure huma abedin lines up a meeting for hillary clinton with the chief executive of dow chemical who gave between 1 and $5 million to the clinton foundation. the latest document dump from judicial watch shows the july 2009 exchange between doug band at the clinton foundation and abedin. a top aide to the secretary of state. he got her with some diplomatic help and that was tied to bill clinton's trip to north korea. judicial watch is now attacking state department officials and the 42nd president of the united states for rescuing two american journalists from north korea. this is a new low even for this right wing organization that has
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been going after the clintons since the 1990s. well, tim kaine claims his running mate has news conferences all the time. listen to this. >> when will hillary open up the floor and take questions from reporters at any event? >> well, you see hillary take questions from reporters every day. she does -- she talks to the press everywhere she goes. she did a press conference when she was at a recent -- >> really? >> she did a press conference at the recent meeting of the african-american and hispanic newspaper publishers. >> but that was the first time in a long, long time. she doesn't do it that often. >> well, look, i don't see what the massive difference is between a press conference and talking to the press everywhere you go. >> reporter: that off camera remark from the anchor at cbs may have said it all -- really? in fact, the vice presidential candidate's claim about hillary clinton talking to the press every day is simply not true,
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even though there are a lot of questions building up. >> guess who did it yesterday? he did all the shows yesterday. where was hillary clinton? nowhere to be found. she gets small crowds but raising a ton of money. >> i did not see tim kaine on "fox & friends" either. >> we asked him. we all called. we made lots of calls. >> she called personally. can you imagine? >> by the way he's come on before. i don't understand. when he was senator -- >> he'll do it next time. >> he cannot be making the decisions anymore. >> probably not. >> people cannot keep turning kilmeade away. he's a force to be reckoned with. >> why so sarcastic? >> it's so true. >> thank you, ed henry. so "the new york times," "the washington post," politico, all the hillary shills they are hysterical about donald trump's immigration plans. former speaker of the house, newt gingrich, is here to weigh in on it. plus it's a birthday gift that literally brought a stepdad to tears and the reason behind the gift might do the same for you. >> my dad has the legal papers that don't change anything. >> you'll meet the entire
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family. their story going viral this morning. there they are.
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good morning and welcome back. 24 minutes after the hour. a quick look at your headlines now. the romanian hacker known as guccifer who exposed hillary clinton's private e-mail server will now spend four years behind bars. marcel lazar leaked e-mails from colin powell and from the sister of george w. bush. they survived the aurora movie massacre and now they have to pay $700,000 to the theater where they almost lost their
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lives. a judge ordering four victims to cover cinemark's legal fees after losing a lawsuit over security flaws. those are your headlines. brian and ainsley, over to you. >> thanks. well, being a parent is the gift that just keeps on giving. >> one stepdad was brought to tears when his step daughter gave him a priceless gift. >> do you know what that is? >> am i adopting you? >> i want you to. you don't have to. you can say no. but i want you to adopt me. you have been my dad, i know legal papers don't change anything, but i appreciate it. don't be crying. >> joining us right now from florida to talk about this emotional moment is david lynde and his wife and their daughter gabriela. thank you for joining us. where did this idea come from, 22-year-old gabriela? >> i had this idea since i was
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about 9 years old when he came into my life. but i couldn't do the adoption because i was a minor and i needed the consent of both my parents and that wasn't a thing at the time. i let the idea go wince i turned 18. now i'm 22, my boyfriend let me know that i could be adopted still at 22. so we looked into it and it's a possible thing. so we decided to do it for his birthday. >> that's so awesome. you seem like a great guy. you married your wife, you have one child together. so you have five children in the house. i know that it was so special. what was going through your mind when you saw those papers? >> i was shocked. shocked, overjoyed is an understatement. unbelievably awesome feeling. >> lorianne -- >> she's -- >> go ahead, i'm sorry, david.
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>> no, no, thas good. go ahead. >> for you personally, what was it like for you seeing that? >> oh, my, it was beyond emotional. she had told me a week before because she was getting everything, i was hysterical, crying. then when it was happening i was just as nervous as her as you saw in the video. if you heard, i was ready to kill him, open the papers. i wanted him to see it. i knew he would cry. i know thousands and hundreds of people got to see him cry on national tv. >> yeah. >> thank you. honey. >> gabriela, what about your biological dad, he's not in the picture and what about the three other siblings. are they planning on being adopted by david too? >> they're talking about it. okay, we want to do this too so i think they're on board as well. >> here's the hardest question yet. tell me about david as a dad. >> uh-oh. >> he's always been there for me. he's definitely watched me grow
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and go through school, go through breakups just like any dad would. so i appreciate it very much. >> very proud of you. >> that's great. >> david, do you know what this means? you have to walk her down the aisle. >> when that day comes, i would like to make that a team effort, both me and mom walk her down. >> that's sweet. >> there will be more crying. >> surprised this has gone viral, lorianne? >> oh, my gosh. i said i was putting it on youtube. i didn't think it would go this far. i'm overwhelmed. but it's nice that there's finally good stories in the news. hopefully we'll see more like this. >> yeah. david, we need more men like you. thank you for standing up and for being a strong role model. god bless you. >> i'm the lucky one. i'm the lucky one. >> thank you so much. >> such a good guy. >> thanks so much. great family story. we appreciate it. >> thank you. >> have a great labor day. well, coming up, an explosive new cell phone recall that it can blow up in your
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hands. what you need to know next. and former speaker of the house newt gingrich joins us to talk about donald trump's immigration plan. but first, more two twisted sister. here is "shoot them down." ♪ ♪ shoot them down, shoot them down, shoot them down, shoot them down to the ground ♪ ♪ ♪
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the age of 3. so they're veterans now. >> man, you grilled them. like a hillary press conference. they had some valuable political advice for all of us. watch. >> now, what is your advice? give us some political advice. >> well, look people in the eye, shake hands and no poopy talk. >> that's a good one, no poopy talk. have you learned that from your brother as mayor? >> newt gingrich was jotting down notes because he's always looking to learn. joining us now is former speaker of the house, newt gingrich. newt, is that good, solid advice this morning? >> that may have been the most mature statement we have gotten out of a candidate this year. >> absolutely. >> that was great. >> good to see you again. how would you rate this week for donald trump with one of the biggest days, saturday, at an african-american church in detroit still straight ahead? >> well, look, i think he's showing that he's daring, he's aggressive. he's going to be donald trump.
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and people have to decide whether or not that's the future they want for the country. he was very successful i think in immediately taking up the president of mexico's offer, going down there and doing an event where he looked very presidential. his speech has sort of -- that night was pure trumpism. but it clearly it drove the elite media crazy. it will be interesting to see what happens in detroit. i think what he's decided is he's going to be very blunt, very direct and people have to decide if that's a future they want. i think that he's gambling -- he's thoughtfully decided to gamble on people being sick of corruption and sick of dishonesty. and sick of poopy talk, if you will. >> right. >> i think that he's trying to give you something much more genuine and much more authentic. >> you described the press as the elite media. i thought the purpose of the media were the afflict the
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comfortable. when did they swing in long step with the hedge fund managers and the politicians? when did that happen? >> i think charlie murray's book "coming apart" tells the story brilliantly. people who go to harvard, yale, princeton, marry those who go to harvard, yale, princeton, they have no real relationship with 70 to 80% of the country. how can you go through the cycle where there are over 3600 dead in chicago, more killed last month in chicago, more americans killed in chicago in the last 20 years and they are indifferent. they have no notion this involves human beings because they don't go do their cocktail parties, their prep schools, they're not part of their world. they don't vacation where the elite media does. so you have an enormous growing gap which by the way will be the biggest single challenge in the debate.
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donald trump has to debate both hillary and the moderators simultaneously. >> i live in that world, you're right. that's what's happening. >> if you read politico this morning it says that the bill clinton aides used taxpayer money to buy i.t. equipment including servers for the clinton foundation. >> actually, i prefer the line where they used taxpayer money to get rid of bedbugs. >> nice. >> one of the things -- we said two weeks where we got away, thought about and looked at it from a distance. one of the things that really struck me that makes this so hard is bill and hillary are -- the only way to describe them is they're grifters. these are people that show up at movies who lie to everybody, steal from everybody. if you think of them as grifters you sort of get it. here was a pot of money, why not take it? well, it's illegal, well, if they do notice we'll get lawyers and we'll lie about it.
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in a normal, healthy society they would be ostracized for being so unpatriotic scammers who go around using public trust and public money and then lying about it pathetically. instead we get numb to it. it's an astonishing thing to live through. >> unbelievable too. while she's doing this, it's hire sidney blumenthal, even though i was told not to. don't comingle money with the state department even though i was not not to but i'm going to. and we have the interlocking between the state department and the foundation and do you know who would be ticked off -- the person who hired her. barack obama. >> listen to what we learned about barack obama and the iranian deal. it turns out a secret agreement to the iranians to do whatever they wanted to do, unless they
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agreed to tell you about it. obama has lied for his entire presidency about everything from obamacare to the iranian deal. you can't be a modern liberal and tell the truth as you saw a moment ago. the vice presidential nominee who can't tell the truth about hillary's failure to hold press conferences. they have a belief that if they look in the camera, they seem sincere and they lie consistently that the lies will seem true. >> so tomorrow trump is going to detroit, he's going to talk in a black church. most people don't think he has any shot of winning over 8%, 10% of the african-american vote. do you think that's true? and why is he doing this? >> no. look, first of all, let me go back to chicago which is a devastating example. over 3,600 americans have been killed in chicago and liberal whose policies have led to this have done nothing. detroit, the city collapsed. large parts of the city are uninhabited. the school system is a disaster.
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people have no jobs, they have no hope, they have no future. all of this under democrats. to have a republican and this is where i have to say i admire trump. the places he and i disagree deeply, but i admire him having the courage to remind people about lincoln. second, remind people that all the segregationist senators were democrats and all the segregationist sheriffs were democrats and the democrats have totally mismanaged the biggest cities. you look at baltimore. you look at detroit. you look now at the southside of chicago. you look at milwaukee. the sixth poorest city in america. for trump to have the courage to go into those environments, he reese going to be -- he's going to be attacked and get beaten up, but if he can endure it by october you might see him in the 20, 25% range in the black community. it is impossible for a democrat to win if they're driven below 80% of the black vote. >> he'll win big if he gets that number. thanks, mr. speaker. >> thank you. all right.
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newt gingrich, 5% is separating them. donald trump's numbers are holding, but hillary's are dropping, but the question is where are the votes going? >> let's go over to heather with the headlines. >> a police officer stopped a horrific terror attack. police in illinois saying that 18-year-old keon cook was planning to blow up two venues to kill thousands of innocent people who were packed inside. authorities would not release the names of the target locations, but they say that he was attacking to a terror organization and was capable of carrying out a mass casualty attack. he's now behind bars. and nba star dwyane wade now responding to donald trump's tweet about the shooting death of his cousin in chicago. trump's tweet if you recall read this way. quote, dwyane wade's cousin was shot and killed walking her baby in chicago. just what i have been saying, african-americans will vote for trump. well, wade now says that that
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tweet left him feeling, quote, conflicted. >> i was grateful that he was part of the conversation, but on the other hand, it was -- it was a bad taste in my mouth because of, you know, what my family is dealing with and what our city of chicago dealing with and it looks like it's being used as a political game. >> well, chicago had the bloodiest month in two decades. we were talking about that with newt gingrich. 90 people killed in one month alone. a 5-year-old little boy ending up more than 200 miles from his home and now jetblue, the airline, is under fire. his terrified mother was waiting at jfk airport in new york, but her son was flown to boston instead. it turns out the little boy was holding another child's passport and that child was holding the 5-year-old's i.d. the mom was forced do wait for more than two hours, she was terrified, until the airline located her son. they by the way were flying from
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the dominican republic. she is thinking of taking legal action against jetblue airlines because they're supposed to keep them in order. >> that's a tough one though. >> the wrong passport. >> the wrong i.d.'s. >> the airlines mixed them up. >> but he can vote in almost every state without an i.d. so he has that going for him. >> and he could be mayor too. a fox news alert. hermine roaring off the east coast. janice dean is tracking it. >> don't miss that. and up next, one-on-one with the great dee snider of twisted sister. as the summer concert series rolls on. come one, come all. ♪
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10 years in a row. hi, i'm janice dean live from the extreme weather center. we are tracking hermine which made landfall as a hurricane, the first one to hit florida since wilma in 2005 and now tornadoes are a risk -- a threat today for georgia and the carolinas. this tornado watch good for until 4:00 p.m. local time. the threat will continue through tonight as it moves up towards north carolina and then virginia. and the northeast needs to pay very close attention to the track of this storm as we think on saturday, it moves out into the atlantic and starts to strengthen as an extra tropical storm system or a nor'easter that can cause major problems for the labor day weekend. we'll keep track of it.
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back outside to tucker, ainsley, brian, dee snider. >> thank you very much. we are back here. hey -- >> nice crowd. they have been rocking around the world for decades with hits like this one. ♪ i wanna rock, rock >> they have been on our plaza since 5:00 in the morning. they have the most loyal fans i have ever seen come out on 6th avenue. unbelievable. >> we love you guys! across the street, stopping traffic. >> dee snider, the lead singer of the band. welcome. can you believe it's lasted this long and gone this well? you have the number one dvd in the country. >> yeah, "metal meltdown." thanks to people -- thanks to the people here, yes. [ cheers and applause ] >> you are married 34 years. >> yes. 35 in october. >> but what happened with your son that took social media by
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storm and your daughter in law? >> yeah. we just got off stage in germany playing for 90,000 people, which i thought was pretty impressive. until i found out that my daughter in law birthed my granddaughter on the 405 freeway while my son drove. he pulled her out and suckled her. >> wow. what a daughter in law. >> i think she's a viking. >> i'm impressed. everybody wants to know if they're getting rid of the car. it's not like a slaughterhouse or anything people. just a birth. >> how many grandkids do you have? >> four. >> do they all live in california? >> yeah. >> but were you an apprentice guy? >> yeah, for three different seasons, yes i was. >> what did you think? >> you know, "the apprentice" was like -- they don't communicate how tough it is it. it seems tough, but 16 hours a day, six days a week. three shows a week. it's unrelenting. when the women are losing their mind, you know?
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well, they haven't slept in seven days. >> makes sense. >> here's a big story. this is going to be the last appearance in the tri-state area coming up shortly. >> yeah. tell them about it, jay. >> it's rock carnival, in new jersey. it's going to be october 1. that's our last show in the tri-state area because we are after 40-plus years retiring from live performing. the tour is called -- you know what it is. we can't say it on this station. but you know our goal is to make america rock again, ladies and gentlemen. [ cheers and applause ] >> that is our goal. >> we're selling hats. make america rock again. >> we had eric trump on the show earlier. he said you're good friends. >> yes. the trump family -- we have been friends. you get to know people. and we're friends of the family, we have done some charity work together which is really cool.
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st. jude's. he works for st. jude's. >> dee snider is going to play for you guys and twisted sister. is that okay? the best abs on the show so far. dee snider. >> he's a grandfather. >> i don't know. something is hiding under there. >> back in a moment. thanks, guys. >> are we playing right now? >> after we get back. ♪ turn the trips you have to take, into one you'll never forget. expedia plus rewards. earn points on over one million hotels, flights, and packages. therthat can be serious,ere. even fatal to infants. it's whooping cough, and people can spread it without knowing it. understand the danger your new grandchild faces. talk to your doctor or pharmacist about a whooping cough vaccination today.
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here's twisted sister singing our theme song. >> which is -- >> "we're not gonna take it." >> you knew this was coming, right? ♪ ♪ we're not gonna take it no, we ain't gonna take it ♪ ♪ we're not gonna take it anymore ♪ ♪
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♪ we've got the right to do this or else we'll lose it ♪ ♪ this whole life we'll fight the powers ♪ ♪ and we'll take the destiny because you know it's the law ♪ ♪ we're not gonna take it no, we ain't gonna take it ♪ ♪ we're not gonna take it anymore ♪ ♪ oh, you're so condescending but your goals are never ending ♪ ♪ we don't fight nothing and we take nothing from ♪ your life is quite defeated and it's so complicated ♪ ♪ whoa, whoa
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sing it! ♪ for the right, we'll pray, we'll fight ♪ ♪ oh, we're not gonna take it, no we're not gonna take it ♪ ♪ we're not gonna take it anymore ♪ ♪ we're not gonna take it no, we ain't gonna take it ♪ ♪ we're not gonna take it anymore ♪ ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ ♪ whoa, sing it! whoa ♪ ♪ we're right, we'll pray, we'll fight we'll sing it ♪ can a toothpaste do everything well?
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but there's plenty of time if you know where to look. now you can own a 1e sub-compact tractor for just $99 a month. learn more at your john deere dealer. welcome back. tomorrow on the show, david webb and -- >> it's a especially tailgating day.
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don't miss that. >> twisted sister, dee, you guys are unbelievable. you have another show for the "after the show show"? >> "after the show show." for these guys, yeah. because we don't melt. we don't melt. >> all right. so stick around. go to the "after the show show" on our website. they'll going to sing "can't stop rock 'n' roll." gregg: fox news alert, florida feeling the effects of its first hurricane in a decade as hermine makes landfall in the panhandle. that storm threatening more kay toss as it heads upped the east coast. fierce winds and torrential rains are going to wash out much of the weekend. i'm gregg jarrett. melissa: i'm melissa francis. what hit florida as

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