tv Fox Report Saturday FOX News August 20, 2017 2:00am-3:00am PDT
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regular sunglasses will not cut it. >> more racially charged protests a week after the horrific events in charlottesville. the demonstrations largely ending on a positive note. i'm kelly wright in for kelly banderas, you are watching " the fox report." a handful of protests are taking place across the country, the biggest in boston. despite some tense moments between officers and protesters, the city is praising all parties involved after a massive, mostly peaceful counter-protest in response to what was billed as a freedom of speech rally organized by conservatives. police arrested more than two dozen people out of the estimated 40,000 that took to the streets. mayor marty walsh expressing his
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gratitude. >> want to thank all of the people that came out today. i want to thank all the people who came out to hear that mention of love, not hate, to fight back on racism, to the fight back on anti-semitism, to fight back on the white supremacists that were coming to our cities and the nazis coming to our city. i want to thank everyone who came here and expressed themself in such a positive, great manner today. kelly: and president trump also tweeting: i want to applaud the many protesters in boston who are speaking out against bigotry and hate. our country will soon come together as one. we have fox team coverage on all of this. steve harrigan is covering the protests in boston. but first, for more on the president's response, we go to rich edson reporting from bridgewater, new jersey, near the president's golf club. rich, we're hearing a much deferent tone now on protests -- different tone now on protests from the president. >> reporter: kelly, a much more positive, hopeful tone that you read right there from the
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president's tweet, certainly compared to the combative remarks earlier week from new york about charlottesville. the president also tweeting: applause for the boston police department, boston mayor, marty walsh, and then saying our great country has been divided for decades. sometimes you need protests in order to heal, and we will heal and be stronger than ever before. the president began his day on twitter thanking his former chief strategist, steve bannon. the white house announced his departure yesterday. shortly after, bannon spoke to "the weekly standard." he said, quote: the trump president city that we fought for and won is over. we still have a huge movement, and we will still make something of in this trump presidency, but that presidency is over. it'll be something else. he also told bloomberg that he is ready to go to war for this president, to fight the establishment essentially. earlier week in an interview with a liberal publication, bannon rail mostly on u.s.-asia policy. he claimed that the u.s. is in
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an economic war with china. he railed against some in the state department, said he wants to move them out, move the hawks in and so really change that economic and posture certainly towards china. now it's something he's going to do from the outside at breitbart. kelly? kelly: on the manner of afghanistan, do we expect a decision on that policy soonsome. >> reporter: the president has indicated that there have been some decisions made, we just don't know what, and we don't know when the white house is going to announce it. the president, convening a meeting of his national security team yesterday at camp david, they discussed south asia policy including afghanistan, also pakistan. the president tweeted earlier today: important day spent at camp david with our very talented generals and military leaders. many decisions made including on afghanistan. the administration is deciding whether to commit more troops and an overall strategy, also where to employ security contractors as a larger role to supplant american military forces. there are also questions about aid to pakistan, there are
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concerns whether that government is doing enough to address the extremists who may be seeking harbor and actually harboring inside the borders of pakistan, something the pakistani government has denied, kelly. can. kelly: rich edson, thank you for the report tonight. boston's police commissioner is praising his city after a massive and mostly peaceful counter-protest against a conservative freedom of speech rally. commissioner william evans telling reporters that with the exception of a few troublemakers, most people were there the stand up for what they believed in. >> 99.9% of the people here were for the right reason, and that's to fight bigotry and hate for the most part here today. we knew we were going to have some people who were going to cause problems, and we had to make the latest is 27 arrests so far today. most of them disorderly, a couple assault and batteries on police officers and other charges. kelly: steve harrigan is in boston tonight and, steve, we're
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getting a better picture of the turnout there. it seems to be pretty lopsided. >> reporter: kelly, some remarkable numbers just released by the police department here, as many as 40,000 protesters out on the street today, dwarfing expectations. it appeared at least 39,900 were on the side of those counter-demonstrators. fewer than 100 on side of the far-right, free speech demonstrators. it was a largely mixed crowd out on the streets today. they marched about two and a half miles from roxbury to the boston common. it was a mixed crowd of men, women, old and young, a lot of people with their families as well. i can tell you the mood, there was a lot of chanting, some swearing but also a lot of celebratory chants as well. as far as property damage goes, it was minimal. there were, according to police, some troublemakers in the group, some urine bottles were thrown at police. 33 arrests made overall, most of that for disorderly conduct,
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kelly. kelly: while those activities are are disgusting, it seems the fear was the protest, counter-protest could turn violent like they did in charlottesville last week, but they didn't. how did they avoid the violence? >> reporter: that was the real concern, two competing protest groups meeting here in the park and going at it head to head in a real orgy of violence. that simply did not happen in part because the numbers were so lopsided. the right-wing demonstrators pretty much fled the scene as the thousands and thousands of counter-demonstrators arrived here. the police did really a textbook job to anyone who's seen street protests here. their response was rapid and measured. initially, the police used soft power. they were on bicycles without riot gear, but when the riot gear was necessary, when there were scuffles with some of the more violent protesters, they were able to move in quickly and really seize control without letting a spark flare. there are also a lot of rules, there were no weapons.
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we also saw people even carrying their signs by hand. they didn't want anything between these two groups that could be used, even a stick to hold up a sign. they also were careful to keep the two groups separate. the mayor had said we do not want a repeat of charlottesville, and they succeeded in that today. kelly: steve harrigan from boston, hanks. -- thanks. a second police officer has died in florida. officer matthew baxter and sergeant sam howard were looking into suspected drug activity in kissimmee when they were shot. baxter died at scene, howard died in a hospital. the police department says they're working through their grief to the make sure justice is served. >> you see, we don't get to stop for a minute and cry for somebody that we've lost or mourn a hero at the time that we're going through it. the men and women of law
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enforcement are required to continue working and bring this individual to justice. i am excited to tell you that we have charged glenn -- i'm, everett glenn miller, 10/5/71, with first-degree murder. kelly: and this is just one case from a string of shootings. officers targeted in jacksonville, florida, and fair chance, pennsylvania, as well. in all, six officers were wounded friday night. phil keating is arrive from miami following the details of these stories, and he has the very latest. phil, at first the kissimmee, florida, police chief thought this might have been an ambush. >> reporter: yeah, kelly, that's what he said just before midnight last night during the chaos of the breaking situation, but after investigating for about nine hours this morning, he walked that back to just a senseless and tragic double cop killing leaving behind two widows and now five fatherless
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kids. officer braxton and sergeant howard saw three suspicious men happening out on -- hanging out on the corner. they pulled up, got out and approached them. within seconds, one of the three men shot the two cops at point-blank range. the chief said they never even drew their guns. all three suspects now in custody, the last one caught -- everett miller, a former marine recently hospitalized for psychiatric reasons -- captured dramatically inside a bar. >> they went hands on, tackled him to the ground, secured him. located a .9 mm handgun and a .22 revolver on his person. >> reporter: president trump responded via twitter, quote: my thoughts and prayers are with the kissimmee police and their loved ones. we are with you. the police chief also believes all suspects in this case in kissimmee are now in apprehension and are among no lr looking for anyone else. kelly? kelly: we also understand more
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details are coming out tonight, phil, about the double officer shooting that took place in jacksonville. what can you tell us about that? >> reporter: yeah, up in the northeast part of the state. those two officers had responded to a house after reports called in of a suicidal man with three people also inside that house whose lives may be in danger. but when they got to the house, they say the suicidal man barged out the front door with a high-powered rifle, shooting the two officers both of which are now in stable condition. the suspect died at the scene after being shot by the cops. >> the suspect had been drinking all evening. this, something led to the arguments. those arguments head to threats for him to harm himself and to can kill the other residents -- and to kill the other residents of the house. basically what we have is a violet, alcohol-fueled domestic situation. >> reporter: and lastly in fairchild, pennsylvania, the
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southwest part of that state on friday, two state troopers were approaching a burglary suspect when suddenly a gun's pulled and bullets start flying. according to police there or state troopers' office, the suspect shot one of the troopers in the stomach, the other in the hand. those troopers will be okay, and that all ended when they shot that suspect dead right will on the property. kelly? kelly: phil keating reporting from miami about a very tough and sad couple of days for police officers, six of them. and, of course, we've lost two. or our condolences out to their families as well. thanks, phil. well, right now drills underway in case north korea fires missiles towards guam. the town that fears it could be in the line of fire. and a manhunt intensifies in barcelona for suspects behind two deadly terror attacks as people come out and honor the victims. ♪ ♪ >> it's terrible that something like this happens on a big street like this. ♪
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kelly: a memorial honoring the lyes lot in spain growing larger at the site of thursday's deadly terror attack in barcelona. mourners leaving momentos like flowers, candles and teddy bears. meanwhile, authorities say they're still looking for the driver who mowed down can pedestrians on the promenade, killing at least and people. -- 13 people. the 22-year-old moroccan native is believed to be part of a radicalizedded terror cell that may have been led by a missing imam. benjamin hall, what's the latest on the manhunt? >> reporter: you know, until this morning there was no manhunt. police really believed they had the cell, they had the man who drove the white van down the road that i am on right now, but that turned out not to be true. they are desperately looking for him.
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he's a 22-year-old moroccan. he's believed to have been the leader, and people are not sure where he is. they are quite concerned at the moment that he may have escaped to france as well, and so border security has been beefed up between the two countries. if that is true, it means this manhunt for the potential leader has moved into europe, and it means a lot of people here are continually worried. there were people here saying they don't feel that the street can get back to normal. have a listen to this. >> translator: i think the image i had of las ramblas will never be the same. >> reporter: yeah, so there you are. that's something that we're hearing up and down here. manhunt still very much ongoing at the moment. back to you. kelly: benjamin, what do we know about the terror cell? >> reporter: well, police have come out earlier today, and they said this terror cell was entirely disbanded, but there were still more arrests today, two people arrested where the
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man who they're hunting is from, and that's believed to have been the epicenter of this plan where it was all plotted. what they are also looking for, one person they are also looking for, rather, is the imam of the local mosque there. he is believed to have potentially radicalized this group, and he is now missing. there are some theories that he may have been caught up in the bomb explosion on wednesday, but that's just not known. so, yes, the police say this cell is disbanded, but they are still looking for people. and, of course, we always have to remember the victims, 13 in total here, one other just south of here in that other attack. among them, a 3-year-old boy, a 74-year-old woman from countries like italy, portugal and the u.s., of course, 42-year-old jared tucker when died while here celebrating his first wedding anniversary. this was an indiscriminate act of terror, and they just haven't found everyone involved yet. they are trying to, and for the moment that manhunt is ongoing. back to you.
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kelly: benjamin hall reporting from barcelona. north korea and the u.s. taking it down a notch on nuclear talks, but one japanese town is still preparing for the worst. residents of a coastal town in the west holding evacuation drills in case pyongyang should fire missiles towards guam. the town's location putting it in the path of any missiles launched. north korea recently backing off threats, but experts say tensions could ratchet back up when the u.s. and south korea begin joint military exercises next week. north korea's also threatened to attack japan before. and for more on this and other topics, don't miss an exclusive interview with senate foreign relations committee member ben cardin. he sits down with bill hemmer, in for chris wallace on fox news sunday. check your local listings. confederate monuments coming down across the country as the debate over these statues intensifies nationwide. why this movement might not be
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♪ ♪ kelly: a final farewell to the second virginia state trooper who died during the violence this or charlottesville. in charlottesville. the funeral was held for 48-year-old lieutenant pilot jay cullen in chesterfield, virginia, one of two state troopers who was killed in a helicopter crash while doing surveillance work during last saturday's white nationalist rally. virginia governor terry mcauliffe knew him well and
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spoke at his service. >> it'll never be the same when i step into that helicopter and not see jay in that front right seat with cullen on the back of his helmet. however, when i do get in that helicopter, i will think of jay, and i'll think what a silent giant he was. he was the best of the best of the virginia state police. kelly: a very fitting tribute from the governor. cullen, by the way, was the pilot for the governor and his family. the cause of the crash is still under investigation. protesters held a peaceful rally in texas in response to the violence in virginia. about 1,000 people in austin showing up at city hall to voice their opposition against white supremacy. one participant saying the events in charlottesville are stark reminders that racism remains a major issue for the united states.
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>> most of us here would like to think of images like we saw in charlottesville last week as part of our past instead of our present reality. we live in dangerous times, because white supremacists and neo-nazis that tear sympathizes didn't -- their shy exercise have taken power in the highst offices of our government. kelly: also mayor steve adler was named to lead a national anti-bigotry effort. he'll head up a group of mayors from around the country speaking out against acts of hate and aggressively enforcing hate crime laws. today's protests, by the way, in boston come just one week after the deadly violence we saw in charlottesville, virginia, reigniting a national debate over confederate monuments. across the country protests are being held to have them removed, one in new orleans where hundreds came out to push for the removal. this as duke university moved a statue of general robert e. lee early morning after it was
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vandalized earlier this week in the duke chapel. bryan llenas joins us now with the very latest and, bryan, it's a debate that doesn't look like it's going to end anytime soon. >> reporter: kelly, it's a conversation being had in city councils, between mayors and those on the streets, those like the president when say these statues and monuments should remain, they are a part of teaching history. those opposed say the statues glorify slavery, oppression and a painful past. in memphis university of tennessee students today and others protesting, demanding the statue of confederate general nathan bedford forest be pulled from a park at the center of campus, only even climbing the monument attempting to cover it with a cloth. and in new orleans today protesters marched to jackson square and city hall demanding city leaders remove confederate statues in the city. the city has removed four confederate monuments this year. and this morning duke university
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remove a statue of confederate general robert e. lee from the entrance of the university's chapel. the statue was vandalized on wednesday, and in a letter duke's president, vincent price, said in part, quote: i took course of action to protect duke chapel, to insure the vital safety of students and community members who worship there. and above all, to express the deep and abiding values of our university. the removal also presents an opportunity for us to learn and and heal. and tonight in dallas we will monitor a rally expected there, demanding confederate monuments be taken down including a statue of confederate general robert e. lee, kelly, which was vandalized today and then cleaned up. kelly: do we know what the majority of americans feel about this issue? >> reporter: you know, it might be surprising to some people, but the majority of americans based on a latest poll from npr done two days after charlottesville, shows that the majority of americans, 62%, are for keeping confederate statues and monuments where they are.
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27% say they are for removing them, and 11% are unsure. now, if you take a look at this map, since the violence last week at least nine communities from durham, st. petersburg have already removed statues. in durham eight people were arrested. if you take a look at next map, nearly two dozen communities who are now looking or in the process of considering perhaps removing their statues and monuments including in the lexington, kentucky, where the city council voted thursday to remove really i statues from their courthouse. and all in all, the question now is how far does this go? there are 718 confederate monuments in public spaces nationwide, 109 public schools, 80 counties and 10 u.s. military bases are all named for confederates. and this was part of point that the president brought up, how far do we go and how many conversations are going to be had and debates, hopefully not
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violence, as a result of this? this is more than just statues, with we've seen this. this is the genesis of the statues but obviously a conversation about race and much more. kelly: also about our history, which can be very complicated. and the conversation as well. bryan llenas, thank you. a world war ii relic lost at sea, found after 72 years. the uss indianapolis was discovered resting at the bottom of the philippines sea by a team put together by billionaire paul allen. the indianapolis was on its way back from delivering the atomic bomb known as little boy when it was sunk by a japanese torpedo on july 30, 1945. it sank in just 1 minutes. -- 12 minutes. 300 sailors died instantly. could the ousting of steve bannon have a major impact on the white house moving forward? plus, more on the massive protests in the streets of boston, how police were able to keep the situation largely under control. ♪ ♪
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>> we did have people who came here to to cause problems. but overall, i thought the men and women of our department and is all the other agencies who helped us performed really well. ♪ experience unparalleled luxury at the lexus golden opportunity sales event before it ends. choose from the is turbo, es 350 or nx turbo for $299 a month for 36 months if you lease now. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. hi..and i know that we have phonaccident forgiveness.gent, so the incredibly minor accident that i had tonight- four weeks without the car. okay, yup. good night. with accident forgiveness your rates won't go up just because of an accident. switching to allstate is worth it.
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skin symptoms. it's proven to help relieve pain, stop further joint damage, and clear skin in many adults. humira is the #1 prescribed biologic for psoriatic arthritis. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores. don't start humira if you have an infection. want more proof? ask your rheumatologist about humira. what's your body of proof? kelly: i'm kelly wright in for julie banderas, and this is "the fox report." it's the bottom of the hour. if you're just joining us, a second florida police officer has died after a friday night shooting that authorities are
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describing as a possible ambush. officers have taken a suspect into custody. >> he will be transported to the osceola county jail shortly, and he will be wearing officer matthew baxter's handcuffs. cel and an intensifying manhunt for the suspect accused of mowing down pedestrians on that barcelona promenade killing at least 13 people. meanwhile, a memorial honoring the lives lost growing larger at the site of the attack, and president trump announcing he and first lady melania trump will skip the annual kennedy center awards. the white house says the decision was made so honorees could celebrate without political distraction. this after a growing number of honorees said they might skip a white house reception. the kennedy center chairman and president say they respect the decision. >> boston police arresting more than two dozen people during a massive and mostly peaceful counter-protest to a conservative free speech rally.
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the demonstration drawing an estimated 40,000 people, prompting the city to deploy hundreds of officers. molly line is reporting from boston. molly? >> reporter: kelly, what a day for the city of boston and the boston police department. they remained busy well into the evening hours, although the vast majority of the protest ors that came here -- protesters that came here, the counter-protesters, there were still some troublemakers that hung around well into the evening. we have video of one of the final arrests made most arely for disturbing the peace but also some assaults on officers. officers today were faced with rocks being thrown at them, bodily fluids, bottles as well, well into the evening hours from some of the stragglers, some of the troublemakers that stayed behind throughout the day. earlier in the day that boston free speech rally, for which city and state officials had said hateful speakers would be speaking, it wrapped up early, and the boston police helped to
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secure those individuals to help those dozens of people that attended that rally to get safely off of the boston common because tens of thousands of people poured out to protest that rally. they held signs, no kkk, no white supremacy. now, the boston rally folks that organized that initial rally that caused this outpouring say that they had no affiliation at all with the kkk or white supremacists or what happened in charlottesville, but still that counter-response was immense. pretty high tensions there are on the boston common as well. we have some video, we've actually muted the sound just to give you an idea of what it was like for folks that had political views that were different from counter-protesters. they could sometimes be surrounded. for instance, if they showed up wearing a trump slogan, any support of the president, they could be surrounded by those counter-protesters who essentially were chanting them away. boston police did their best to protect those individuals, to help them move throughout the common today. but tensions just were very,
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very high. we saw the police being shoved, we saw the counter-protesters pushing. it was really a dramatic day but, thankfully, no serious injuries to be reported, no dramatic violence, some skirmishes and some fights but, ultimately, a fairly peaceful day in the city of boston where tens of thousands of people came out to speak their mind. kelly? kelly: molly line from boston, thank you. a tumultuous week for the white house ending with the departure of the president's chief strategist, steve bannon. president trump thanking bannon for his service. the exit not completely unexpected with rumors swirling were weeks now that bannon's job was already in jeopardy. garrett tenney is in washington with more details, and why is this departure raising more concerns among the president's supporters than previous exits? >> reporter: kelly, this is the culmination of the power struggle that's been taking place in the white house for the past eight months. steve bannon has been a torch
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bearer of the agenda president trump ran on, fighting for immigration, trade, tax reform and putting america first when it comes the foreign policy. but not everyone in the president's circle holds those same beliefs, and that's why a number of conservative groups are are now worried those campaign promises are in jeopardy and that without bannon's influence, the president will be pushed to moderate his positions. in a letter to the president yesterday, a group of 19 conservative groups wrote in part: it is important that those who have been your staunchest supporters know that they are not being drowned out by swamp which, due to its nature, seeks to engulf the white house. steve bannon and kellyanne conway provide that assurance that you will always have people close to you who support your vision and ours for this great nation. with steve bannon out, conservatives are now looking for that extra reassurance that the president won't divert from those things that he campaigned on and won't to be pushed to the left by other advisers whom bannon has referred to as west wing democrats.
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kelly? kelly: well, bannon has said he plans to fight for the president's agenda. how does he plan to do that? >> reporter: yesterday he told several reporters now that he's back as head of breitbart he's, quote, going to war against anyone who opposes the president's agenda. david bossie said last night on "special report" bannon may be even more effective at helping the president outside the white house than he was in. >> steve's position is with me today is that it's now easier for him to do the things, to participate in a way that he's not handcuffed like he was inside the white house. being on the outside there's a lot of freedom, and you have a lot more weapons at your disposal than when you're handcuffed inside the white house. >> reporter: in an interview with "the weekly standard," bannon said: i feel jacked up, now i'm free. i've got my hands back on my weapon. someone said it's bannon the barbarian. i am definitely going to crush the opposition, there's no
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doubt. i built a machine at breitbart and now i'm going to go back knowing what i know, and we're about to rev that machine up. at the top of his list are moderate and establishment republicans who he blames for blocking the president's agenda, and while some gop lawmakers might pay attention to breitbart, many of their constituents do, which means bannon can make life difficult for those republicans he decides to to go after. kelly? kelly: steve bannon's sudden exit from the white house also the focus on watters' world tonight. here's a preview. >> steve ban nonout at the white house, what this means for donald trump's agenda. plus, a cannabis church opens up in denver. and watters' world takes on the solar clips, tonight. kelly: be sure to catch all of that and more on watters or' world next on the fox news channel. the total solar eclipse is just two days away, and preparations for viewing the rare spectacle are underway across the country. so will the weather cooperate?
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the forecast ahead. ♪ >> we're going to be here come hell or high water. this is three super bowls along with the winter olympics andre is confident. but when it comes to mortgages, he's less confident. fortunately, there's rocket mortgage by quicken loans. apply simply. understand fully. mortgage confidently. with some big news about type 2 diabetes. you have type 2 diabetes, right? yes. so let me ask you this... how does diabetes affect your heart? it doesn't, does it? actually, it does. type 2 diabetes can make you twice as likely to die from a cardiovascular event, like a heart attack or stroke. and with heart disease,
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this august visit your local volvo dealer to receive sommar savings of up to $4,500. ♪ kelly: for the first time in a century, the entire u.s. will witness a rare total solar eclipse, and across the country tens of millions are preparing for the event on monday. the path will start in oregon and end in south carolina. dan springer has a review of what to expect. >> reporter: madras, oregon, population 6,000, is fast becoming a madhouse. long ago identified as one of the premiere places to see the first coast to coast u.s. solar eclipse in a sent i -- century, the city is bracing for 100,000
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visitors. >> this is three super bowls along with a winter olympics coming to madras. >> reporter: many homeowners are renting out their houses, this one is $1500 a night with a four-night minimum. j.r. brooks is organize nicing solar -- [inaudible] creating a makeshift solar town. he'll house 20,000 campers. >> it's got air-conditioning, beds, daily changeout, showers, electricity, wi-fi, tv. the whole nine yards. and that's the top of the line. >> reporter: it's all to see the rare solar system dance that occurs when the moon is at the closest to earth and sitting perfectly in front of the sun, turning day into night. everyone in the lower 48 states will see at least a partial eclipse, but a total eclipse will be visible over a 70-mile-wide area that will start at 10:17 in the morning and end 93 minutes on the south
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carolina coast. >> we're going to be here come hell or high water. >> reporter: special viewing glasses are a must, and watch out for scams. retina specialists say millions they're made with iso to-123, 132, permanent damage could be done quickly. >> anything more than a second or two is really very risky. >> reporter: oregon's governor declared a sate of emergency -- a state of emergency to deploy the national guard. the wait for the next eclipse will be august of 2045 or 28 years for the next chance to bark at the moon in the middle of the day. in seattle, dan springer, fox news. kelly: dan springer, thank you. and across the country millions are preparing for that spectacle, but will the weather cooperation in for more on that, adam klotz is live in the fox extreme weather center with details. what can we expect? >> reporter: well, depending on where you are, maybe some
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folks are going to need the umbrella. that path is always way back from the pacific northwest, oregon, running down through the carolinas. it's this red line, that's that 70-mile gap where you get the totality. outside of that you begin to see less and less of the sun blocked. but that's the region we're really paying attention to where i know folks are heading that direction. your cloud cover forecast, this is a little dicey to get exactly at a specific time where the cloud cover's going to be at that hour, at 2:30 eastern time, but you do see areas where the cloud cover is thicker. the reason for it by monday afternoon there are going to be some areas across the country where we're tracking at least some pop-up showers. he's what that could look like -- here's what that could look like for your monday, again, as we're looking at some spots, spotty showers. i think folks in the pacific northwest all clear, so viewing is going to be fantastic there. but as you run into the plains states, some isolated shower activity. again, none of it an all-day rain, so there are going to be
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periods of breaks in the cloud coffer, but stretching to the carolinas we're tracking at least some isolated shower activity on monday which, again, you might be dodging some rain drops, may be a good idea to have that umbrella. large cities along the path, partly cloudy conditions in nashville, actually the biggest city along the path. the plains states, some of those isolated thunderstorms. that's the case across the midwest to the north. but again, if you are farther off to the west, the pacific northwest, that's where you're looking at conditions sunny, sunny, sunny. plenty of areas where it's going to be good, unfortunately there are going to be some areas where we're dodging cloud cover. what does that mean eventually? again, here's our path. we haven't seen it since 1918. when is the next, not from coast to coast, but the next to total solar eclipse? there you go, in 2044, all the way up from texas to new england. the if you don't catch this one, it is going to be at least a little while, kelly, until we
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get another opportunity. fingers crossed if you're in some of those areas where there's showers, maybe it'll break apart just long enough to see it. kelly: a lot of people hoping for that. of course, for tips on how to watch the total solar eclipse safely, we've got a few with dr. marc siegel from our fox news medical a-des moines tomorrow -- a-team. that's tomorrow right here on "the fox report." hamilton could now be coming to a city near you as the show gets ready to to go on the road. we'll hear from some of the stars of the history-makeing musical. plus, a brutal stabbing caught on video, and the suspect hasn't even celebrate her 13th birthday. how this violence unfolded. >> the littler one started to fight with the bigger one, and then the other one -- the beggar one had a knife -- the bigger one had a knife right here. so she pulled it out and came up ♪
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♪ ♪ kelly: at least 23 people are dead and more than 80 to others injured after a passenger train derailed in northern india. the chaotic scene capture on video. first responders along with volunteers rushing to the scene. officials say the train cars smashed into each other while four others toppled off the tracks. in word on what caused it. nevada authorities have arrested a 12-year-old girl accused of stabbing a 16-year-old in an attack caught on video. the violence unfolding at a middle school friday. parents reacting in disbelief. >> it makes me feel unsafe serving my kid to a school where i know kids are bringing knives
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to school. it's crazy. >> i just feel like i don't even want her to go to school anymore. seems like everywhere something's happening. seems like you're better off to just learn on your own. >> you're at a school. of it's supposed to be safe, and then you just hear some kid gets stabbed. like, it's like you're in a nightmare. >> just really scared because who knows, that could have been anybody. anybody could have been in the area, and i feel bad for the people that had to watch that. kelly: the victim is a student at a nearby high school. police say she wandered onto campus. her injuries are cede to be non-life -- said to be non-life threatening. well, it is the most talked-about musical of the last decade, and now hamilton is heading across america on its first national tour. but if you want the see it, prepare to shell out some serious cash. chief correspondent jonathan hunt has story. ♪ ♪ >> reporter: it is still the hottest ticket on broadway, but
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now hamilton is blazing a trail across america. hitting the road on a nationwide tour. ♪ >> this has sparked some sort of excitement that i have never seen before. >> reporter: the tony award-winning musical about founding father alexander hamilton is an expensive night out. ticket prices range from $85-$857. some cast members are blown away by the demand. >> i've been doing shows for ten years now on broadway and around regionally. i've never seen anything like these fans. >> i blinked, the grammys. i blinked, we are at the white house. [laughter] i blinked, oh, hey, prince. it was happening so fast that it was like we couldn't fully get a grasp on the rope. >> i couldn't get a ticket. i didn't see it until two months before i was going to be a part of the show. >> reporter: with concurrent stagings across the globe, the cast comes out to perform a few
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live numbers. creator lin-manuel miranda serenaded fans before wednesday's l. a. opening. [cheers and applause] and for those not able to fork out several hundred dollars for tickets, will there is a $10 lottery for a few lucky winners. >> daisy -- [inaudible] >> oh, my god! >> reporter: in hollywood, jonathan hunt, fox news. kelly: it's worse than stealing candy from a baby. someone stealing a puppy from a pet store. more on that ahead. ♪ ♪ liz assumed she could trust her dating site. liz assumed all dressings were made equal. assume nothing. just like the leading brands, these kraft dressings are made with high quality ingredients, at a price you can feel good about. no wonder kraft is so good. but do they need help making more of their own tears? if you have chronic dry eye caused by reduced tear production due to inflammation, restasis multidose™ can help... with continued use twice a day, every day, one drop at a time. restasis multidose™ helps increase your eyes' natural ability
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♪ [national anthem] >> a handful of protesters across the country. some tense moments between officers and and protesters committed to be all parties involved. >> 99.9% of people you'd >> our great country is divided. sometimes you need protest in order to heal and we will heal and be stronger than ever before. >> a second police officer died in the wake of an overnight shootout in florida. >> threats to police officers has grown geometrically
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