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tv   FOX Friends  FOX News  August 28, 2018 3:00am-6:00am PDT

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>> a talk with the teacher. this is ridiculous. jillian: can you write in mom, dad, brother, brother-in-law, dog. friends? rob: rob see you later. ugly president trump announce as new trade deal with mexico sending stocks surging. >> we are going to call it the united states-mexico trade agreement. and we will get rid of the name nafta. it has a bad connotation. >> just another in a long line of campaign assurances and promises that have been kept. >> another tropical storm zeroing in on hawaii. this as people begin to assess the damage left from tropical storm lane. >> demoted doj official bruce ohr heading to the hot seat today. house lawmakers returning a week early to grill him behind closed doors. >> lawmakers are going to be honing in on the communications between bruce ohr and christopher steele, particularly after the fbi
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severed its ties officially put author of the dossier. >> oh my god. >> beautiful moment a soldier reunites with his best friend. [wimping][whimpering] ♪ more than a feeling steve: well, it's the last tuesday of the summer, more than a feeling, summer is slipping away. >> it never ends though. favorite time of the year. i refuse to acknowledge it's happening until the end of september. steve: why not the end of october? >> katie: why not. until the leaves are changing. brian: katie pavlich making her debut on "fox & friends" have you seen her on the fox news channel since the early 60's. did you have fun last night. >> guy ben son was in for
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kennedy. we had fun. brian: i'm predicting setting will be stifle ling hot. >> katie: there is enough cold winter months we don't need the fall to be cold. steve: going to be a hot one here in new york city. i will tell you what, it's going to be hot down on capitol hill where bruce ohr is going to get grilled. we will be talking about that later this morning. brian is going to talk to ron desantis who is running for the governor job in the great state of florida in a minute. why did the stock market, the s and p and the nasdaq hit new records? i think it was a relief rally because the president on the speaker phone like charlie's angels. >> katie: it was great. i loved that. steve: it was. they have come to a new trade deal in which the president of this country regards is better than nafta but because mexico is in it and canada is not it's really kind of just a half a nafta. >> we will see what happens.
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the president put a lot of pressure on canada. the fact that they would come to the table without canada a long way to go here. the idea of that they would have their negotiation and talk about it, again, president trump is a man of his word and get things done he said is he going to. brian: deadlines matter. they want to get this before the president leaves in december. they were pushing as quick as they can to work with mexico to come up with two thirds of the nafta deal. here is a quick look at what is in this deal. first off, when it comes to autos and intellectual property they are tackling this. 75% of the auto parts produced in north america. 40 to 45% of auto parts made by workers. they are going to make at least $16 an hour. when it comes to intellectual property, take notice, china, they are strengthening some of that especially as it applies to us as well as also with pharmaceuticals, also extending that, the intellectual property with that. >> regarding the car
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industry i was reading this in the "wall street journal" that the cars built, in for instance, tennessee or alabama or in the south, those companies could actually suffer if they import more than 25% of the parts. the "wall street journal" has taken a look at all the details. they don't really like it. they say we are glad to see mr. trump step back from the suicide of nafta withdrawal on the public evidence so far this new deal is worse. nonetheless, the markets took off and we're going to have larry kudlow the director of national economic concerns with us live at 8:30 to talk a little bit about this. >> katie: we will see where it goes. steve: it's one of those things where the president of the united states, donald trump, was able to get something done that others have said they were going to fix. for instance, remember when barack obama said he would fix nafta. >> scrap nafta, senator obama or fix it. >> i would immediately call the president of mexico and the president of canada to
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try to amend nafta because i think that we can get labor agreements in that agreement right now. and it should reflect the basic principle that our trade agreements should not just be good for wall street, it should alsoable good for main street. steve: sounds good. brian: i wonder what happened to that guy who asked those questions. that was president obama he never was able to accomplish it as far as i know, he was not able to tackle it. many people thought well, the success is going to start with canada. we went right to mexico. both sides seemed to want to deal. i thought it is going to be very interesting because the canadian trade representative left europe and flew immediately to washington. they are meeting today. >> katie: last night president trump had a phone call justin trudeau the prime minister of canada the readout from that from the white house was very cordial. we don't have any details about how they are going to move forward to bringing canada to the table.
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steve: how do we move forward to the united states if they come to some sort of a deal it has to pass through congress. there is not enough time to do this one. this new deal would a donald trump endorsed trade deal get through a nancy pelosi run house? probably not. brian: steve, the thing is, this is for workers, afl-cio will have a role, expand their voter roles into mexico. so this is a pro-worker deal you would see on its surface and pro-farmer. sonny perdue the secretary of agriculture is lauding this. they say this will relieve some of the tariffs put pressure on iowa farmers. so prices on cars may go up but more opportunities for workers here. also blowing um global supply change which are anti-american. steve: no trade deal is passed in decades without a preponderance of republican votes and democratic leaders have fought every one. caft indicate they have. brian: first time we used
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preponderance in the show in a long time. steve: not sings last night. >> katie: that's true or rush limbaugh says the new deal is another promised kept by president trump. >> the stock market hit a brand new record high today of 26,000. nasdaq hit 8,000 for the first time ever on the news that we have a renegotiated trade deal with mexico. tell me did, any democrats have anything to do with this? they didn't. this is a donald trump production. mexico, supposedly mexico hates trump, supposedly. this was not possible. it's just another, in a long line of campaign assurances and promises that have been kept. steve: well, there you go. ultimately we don't know what the new nafta will look like. i said that twice in one long sentence the president of the united states made this something he ran on. i'm going to work for the little guy. i'm going to work for people
quote
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to try to figure out better trade policies for the united states. it is, he says, a step in the right direction. >> katie: we will see how democrats spawptiond. thchuck schumer aaccused the president for all talk. and so has nancy pelosi. we will talk with larry kudlow coming up at 8:30. brian: bragging. >> katie: i got to get it all in. brian: michael cohen has made a lot of dumb statements and done a lot of dumb things. dumbest thing is hiring lanny davis. a smart guy, is he a lawyer. i get it he is a crisis manager, that's true. but lanny davis is representing michael cohen simply on behalf of hillary clinton. you want more proof of it. look at what he has done over the last few days. caught lying. lying lanny caught lying about what michael cohen
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knew about russia hacking and that famed trump tower meeting. steve: in particular, let's talk about that trump tower meeting. mr. davis made it clear that his client, michael cohen was willing to talk to the mueller team because he had information that donald trump personally knew about that meeting before it happened. well, now, lanny is walking that back because he doesn't have a little egg on his face it's a whole omelet. he talked to buzzfeed last night and here is the headline. lanny davis says he was a source for cnn's trump tower story. brian: and "the washington post" story. unnamed source. steve: he told buds feed he was one of the anonymous sources to the cnn report to that effect. here's the thing, now that he is backing off, he admits that he lied last week when he denied being a source. brian: story this is, steve, if the president of the united states and katie and
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i'm building off the preponderance of the evidence that you laid out. >> katie: preponderance. brian: puts this out there and michael cohen he wants to talk to robert mueller. representing michael cohen why is to to michael cohen's advantage to talk to robert mueller. you already cut a deal with the southern district of new york. why are you offering him out there to hurt donald trump? steve: because it's not a very good deal. >> katie: look at the sourcing from a reporter's perspective. there have been some false stories based on anonymous sources who have not been revealed. we know in this case it was lanny davis who is a political operative. so it brings into question not just the reporting on it but what michael cohen's -- what his motives are. what lanny davis' motive was in getting involved in the first place. quite frankly if he is walking back one bombshell he thought they had for the mueller team, do they really have anything else? steve: think about last week. last week it was michael cohen has flipped. he has cut a deal with the
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southern district u.s. attorney's office. that was gigantic. but then he got bigger because lanny said look, he has stuff he can tell him if he wants to talk to him. >> katie: just kidding. doesn't have any stuff to tell because he lied about it too bad. brian: we have to find out the real story. you don't just get that wrong. steve: that's the real story. made it up. brian: why would you make it up knowing the political ramifications of what he said indicated indicate that is his goal avenging hillary clinton's loss. steve: maybe again he wanted some sort of deal from the mueller team. my guy doesn't have much of a deal from the southern district. if mueller wants to give us a deal we're ready to talk. since then it is has exploded and mr. davis is embarrassed. brian: somebody else is willing to talk is jillian mele. jillian: if you will let me. is it my turn now? steve: yes. jillian: learning more about the gunman who opened fire at video game tournament in florida killing two people before turning the gun on himself. david cats was hospitalized
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twice for psychiatric treatment. divorce papers from his parents revealing he was prescribed antipsychotic and antidepressant medication as early as 12 years old. his parents disagree with how to treat his conditions. senator john mccain's final words to the american public revealed in heart felt letter read by long-time aide. >> i lived and died a proud american. we are citizens of the world's greatest republic, americans never quit. we never surrender. we never hide from history. we make history. farewell, fellow americans. god bless you and god bless america. jillian: mccain also taking a thinly veiled shot at the president referencing hiding behind walls. the president ordering the flag back down to half-staff releasing a statement in part quote i respect senator john mccain's service to our
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country and in his honor have signed a proclamation to fly the flag of the united states ought half-staff until the day of his internment. his senate seat draped in flag and white roses. march to the mid terms in florida. we will get to florida in just a second. they said no more headlines. we will talk about florida later. steve: brian is going to talk to ron desantis in the next segment and also a big day in -- brian: bruce ohr will be grilled behind closed doors about the anti-trump dossier. congressman ron desantis has a lot of questions for him. not to mention big day in florida, he wants to get the nomination and represent the republicans in the race to be the next governor. what bad shoulder? what headache? advil is relief that's fast
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♪ brian: bruce ohr heading to the hot seat behind closed doors, the doj officials set to face the oversight committee his tie to the anti-trump dossier indisputable. what can why expect? let's ask house oversight committee member ron desantis who in a moment will tell us how nervous and how optimistic he may to be represent the gubernatorial race in florida.
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congressman, what are you anxious -- i know you won't be there today because have you behind closed doors. what are you anxious to hear from bruce ohr? >> i want to know his precise role. we know from the documents we have that he was functioning almost as an intermediary between the clinton campaign and fusion g.p.s. and the obama justice department. he was one of the highest ranking officials in obama's justice department. reporting directly to the anti-trump deputy attorney general sally yates. it's really an unprecedented use of official prosecutorial resources. to have him that deeply involved in generating this opposition research. we need to know who else at the fbi knew what he was doing. we needs to know when he started dealing with people like glenn simpson at fusion gps. what his interactions were with christopher steele. and the financial interest that he had in stake because his wife, nellie ohr, worked for fusion gps. and you are not allowed to be a federal official and participate in matters that you have a financial interest.
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so, i think there is a whole host of questions. but he really is a critical, kind of wheel in this whole collusion cog that we have been able to expose over the last few months. brian: but, ron, he has no business being in. this he griewcially does narcotics cases. we very 60 known contacts with christopher steele, a guy working as a private contractor for his wife's company. here is an example of some of the texts that we would like to have him explain. here's one. christopher steele to bruce ohr, hi, wondering if you have any news. obviously we are a bit apprehensive giving the scheduled appearance at congress on monday. hoping that important fire walls will hold. what's that mean sorry that's the voice in my head. bruce ohr, sorry, no no new news i believe my earlier information is still accurate. i will let you know immediately if anything changes. this guy has a lot of answers, i sense he is not going to give any. we will hear from jim jordan who will be on our show
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later. when i talked to you you were behind. most polls have you 2 points ahead. what is your sense going into election day? >> i think we are poised to have a strong victory. all the credible polls that actually poll likely republican primary voters show us with a really really strong lead. it's been that way, brian, for the last two months. i mean, coming out of fox debate at the end of june, every single poll we have taken in our campaign has had me up and up strong. i think you are going to see a strong victory but a victory that shows strength in all corners of florida. we have a big diverse state. you have got to be able to compete in miami. have you got to be able to compete in pensacola i think i have demonstrated that and the results tonight will reflect that. brian: formidable foe putnam. may out best man win. we will find out today. congratulations, congressman. >> thank you. brian: you heard the left say liberal ice over and
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over. a new poll reveals that's not what democrats really want. what's up? jessica tarlov, caile kayleigh mcenany debate that next. steve sat down in the chair, roll a little bit. now he has settled. sometimes, the pressures of today's world can make it tough to take care of yourself. but nature's bounty has innovative ways to help you maintain balance and help keep you active and well-rested. because hey, tomorrow's coming up fast. nature's bounty. because you're better off healthy. ayep, and my teeth are yellow.? nature's bounty. time for whitestrips.
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this wi-fi is fast. i know! i know! i know! i know! when did brian move back in?
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brian's back? he doesn't get my room. he's only going to be here for like a week. like a month, tops. oh boy. wi-fi fast enough for the whole family is simple, easy, awesome. in many cultures, young men would stay with their families until their 40's. brian: quick headlines now. untraceable 3-d gun bliewpghts will stay offline for now. a federal judge in seattle issuing a temporary restraining order against the controversial weapon until the case is resolved. 19 states and washington, d.c. are suing the state department after settling with the man who wants to publish them. and, just weeks before the mid terms federal court is ordering north carolina to throw out its congressional map. a panel of judges ruling the current version unconstitutional because it gerry man dered to help
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republicans. state republicans expected to repeal the ruling. this will have a major effect on election day in november. steve? steve: thank you, brian. democrats not giving up their attacks against the president's border policies doubling down on their calls by some to get rid of ice. >> it has become a deportation force. get rid of it, start over, reimagine it. and building is that actually works. >> what it has turned into is frankly a terrorist organization. >> we can replace it with a humane agency. steve: brand new poll now showing their voters, democrats, may not feel the same way with barely a quarter of democrats agreeing to get rid of ice is it time for the democrats to come up with a new talking point? here to debate we have r ngs spokes personal kayleigh mcenany screen left that's weird and fox news contributor jessica tarlov on the right. >> jesse: it happens. >> it happens.
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steve: kayleigh, this is an interesting thing for people to take a look at. for the most part republicans have supported ice and you see sound bites where democrats are trying to tear it down. which is it. >> democratic voters clearly do not support abolishing ice according to that poll but the democratic leaders do. these are mainstream democrats. care citizen gillibrand kamala harris. steve: are you saying they are out of stoll step with the rank and file democrats? >> clearly out of step. 90% of house democrats would not vote in support of ice. so 90% of house democrats are out of step with their voters. steve: actually, have you been on this program and have you said democrats do not want to get rid of ice. >> yes. steve: some democrats do. these are democrats on t. have a lot. >> it is a vocal minority is what i'm going to say about them. we have talked about this a number of times. very convenient obviously for the right to say as donald trump does at his rally fuss elect democrats you have open borders and abolishing ice and also the economy is going to tank.
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because no one can make you rich but me. i was being trump at that moment. you will be so poor. there are a number of mainstream dems doing it like christian gillibrand. she is not talking about let's get rid of this. steve: walking back her earlier comment. >> totally. cynthia nixon is trailing cuomo by 35 pounds and running a real leftist fringe campaign at this point. i think that poll is great news for democrats because at least we can use that for messaging and focus on the issues that republicans want to as well, economy, healthcare, national security. steve: kayleigh, you know as we get closer to the november election, the democrats going to keep bringing that up it was donald trump who tore those families apart at our southern border. >> right. democrats will keep bringing that up to no avail. the american people want border security. we have seen that in the harvard hafers poll every time it's done 61% say current border security is inadequate. we just saw the tragic death
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of mollie tibbetts. democrats want to abolish ice. mean while illegal immigrants are running rampant in this country and some of whom are committing crimes. may not agree with your own party you have a small con continue general self the radical left tending to run the party. 43% of the vote is what bernie sanders got. 13 million democratic voters. they are controlling this party and making them out of step with the american people. steve: because alexandria and bernie are getting so many headlines people try to outdo them to get cable tv time. >> make sure they don't show up and campaign against them. as we saw in the primaries gone on we will see today the more moderate democrats are the ones winning these primaries as they should be in states like michigan and kansas. steve: jessica, kayleigh just mentioned border security. what is the official democratic viewpoint on border security? obviously you don't want the wall. >> not fans of the wall. we do want border security. steve: what does that mean? >> i think it does mean an increased presence on the border it means hue mainly
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treatment of those who are here it does mean not separating families. if you look at the fox news poll. you see the president who has made national security and border security the forefront of his campaign is actually -- doesn't have a high approval on it 51% disprove of the way is he handling it only area not under water is the economy. i think democrats can seize upon that. >> numbers far higher though. a lookout of americans support the president. doesn't show up in polls we saw it in wisconsin, pennsylvania, michigan. no one had won since the 80's. trump voter wouldn't talk to a polster. >> we could have a repeat of that all we can go on right now. >> he has a higher approval rating than president obama. >> rasmussen. >> that's not just rasmussen. is he 1 percentage than obama was. >> 46 versus the 45. >> >> yes. higher. steve: a lot of the polls out there. jessica, hey democrats, stop saying let's get rid of ice because that's a loser. >> thank you for translating.
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steve: you bet. thank you for joining us. noble needs coffee. we are wide awake now. 6:30 here in new york city. how will the roseanne barr spinoff explain the absence of roseanne? well, we think we got an idea. stick around. plus, you know katie pavlich loves politics, did you know she really wanted to a country singer like her idol reba |1 mc 0 entire? we'll get to know katie coming up next on "fox & friends." ♪ dancing in the moon light ♪ everybody ♪ when did you see the sign? when i needed to create a better visitor experience. improve our workflow. attract new customers. that's when fastsigns recommended fleet graphics. yeah! now business is rolling in. get started at fastsigns.com. with uncontrolledw business moderor atopic dermatitis,.
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the more you know ththe commute is worth it.,
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you and that john deere tractor, you can keep dreaming up projects all the way home. it's a longer drive, but just like a john deere, it's worth it. lojust use priceline.ls on travel? you can save up to 60% on hotels. that's like $120 a night back in your pocket. go to priceline to get deals you won't find anywhere else. >> oh my god. [whimpering] steve: if you have got a dog, have you seen it before. shot of the morning, dog is completely shocked when his best friend suddenly
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reappears after being gone for nine months of military training. katie: private first class kevin lord in california after he came home from fort bragg. that blanket drop is known as what the fluff challenge gone viral on social media. brian: i try do that with my dogs, they would not cooperate. katie: too smart to you. brian: they wouldn't buy into it i tried to show them on iphone and they wouldn't buy into it give them a tutorial how that is supposed to work? brian: try to show them what other dogs are doing. katie: not supposed to show them because they know they are going to leave when you drop the sheets. steve: hold on, you are showing your dog youtube videos on how to do dog stuff? brian: yes. they weren't cooperating. katie: my dog gaddston has not done the what the fluff challenge yet. he likes airplanes. go over to ronald reagan airport in washington, d.c. he loves to match me. you see my american flag
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counsel boots. he has american flag bandanna. we oftentimes coordinated our outfits his decision. we love chick-fil-a best fad food dana america. very patriotic. he loves their refreshing drinks in the hot summer sun. steve: your dog questions gnsd has rubbed off a little bit of the dark end of his nose. katie: he has all pink nose. steve: is he a digger? katie: is he most lay condo dog. i wish he was more of a digger. is he a little more of a diva. high maintenance. emoji face. the heart emojys with the eyes on your phone. this is what it looks like. gaddson is pretty awesome. if you ever want to meet him maybe you will see us sometime around the national mall. steve: brian would like to show him youtube videos. katie: he will not pay attention. he hates the camera. those pictures i took probably took 50 pictures to get one of them. he turns away like is he too good for it.
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brian: katie, let's get to know you a little bit first off where did you grow? katie: flagstaff, arizona. many generations. i'm proud to be from arizona. i live on the east coast now. steve: katie and i were just talking i grew up on a gravel road in kansas you grew up dirt road. >> end of two mile dirt road on five acres of land there i am in very northern arizona near the vermilion cliffs which is near lake powell. steve: whose truck? >> a good friend of ours. it's her truck. brian: were you stuck? >> i was not stuck. here i am in high school playing basketball i was 21. i played forward and guard. a high school career ended when we lost the state championship after losing to a team we beat three times. here i am playing volleyball. we also went to the state championship for volleyball and lost. i don't know how that happened. still not bitter about going to the state championship twice and losing both but, hey, there you go. brian: do you have any video? katie: i don't think i watched that i watched it once and didn't need to relive the memory of losing
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both of those championships. steve: you have been a traveler as well. you have been all over the world. katie: i loved traveling great education. i have been all over the world and country. steve: traveled volleyball court. >> as you can see go mustangs number 10 is my favorite number. my birthday is also on july 10th. i have been 42 of 50 states. got to get to some of in the middle. steve: you haven't been to my home state. brian: you have been to all of those states? katie: i have alaska, hawaii. my face is in every single one of those states. that's where can you find me. steve: when you cross over into oklahoma great big katie face. katie: all those signs welcome to colorado. my face is on every one of those signs every border see. brian: i have never noticed that until today. indicate i couldn't went to israel, china, thailand and holland. some call it netherlands. katie: they do.
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i got to eat a lot of the cheese in netherlands. china was very interesting. was glad to come home. there i am in thailand washing an he will fact so we walk down to the river. here i am at the western wall in jerusalem. which is an amazing special spiritual place. i highly suggest everybody go even if you are religious, not religious. definitely go and see it no baby elephants in israel there are camels that you pay to ride there which is a fun experience. be careful. they are very tall. did i not see any horses. no horses. steve: over there uber actually owns the camels? katie: uber camel is definitely the thing. here is a video of me getting cisd on the cheek by the he will fact was very sloppy and wet in thailand. brian: was he also told to kiss you? >> yeah, he was trained. steve: for tips? katie: it was consensual u. steve: trying to get a good picture. katie: so many pictures. amazing animals. one of the babies, they have
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such an apersonality. walking down this trail to the river to wash her. she kept bumping us off the trail. 400-pound little baby it's no joke. after we wash her she rolled around in the dirt because she had no interest in a bath. brian: katie, you also are an adventure you are. katie: have you got to live life. you only live once as they say sky diving for my 30th birthday. my best friends and husband love me enough they came with me and risked jumping out of a plane which is awesome. steve: who are you tethered to right there? katie: a professional, thank goodness. he told me i could pull my own chute if i wanted to and i kind of forgot. so luckily he was there to do it for me. steve: did you have to pack your own chute. katie: i didn't. i left everything to the professionals. here i am in wyoming and tee tan national park. didn't see any elk. here i'm shooting.
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brian: elk? katie: not shooting. steve: do you have time to be hosting this show today? is there anything she hasn't done? katie: i have done a few things. it's pretty fun. pack it all in. use every moment of your life to enjoy it. brian: jill and i are just looking at each other and can't beliebelieve how our life. i'm not happy for you anymore. now i'm angry. steve: is all that you in your wikipedia page? katie: i'm not sure. it's on my instagram page. can you check it out there. brian: usually people get excited doing a morning show this is like a come down for you. he will facts will kiss nut end. steve: you win that quiz a lot on tucker and next hour we might actually have a surprise for you. katie: oh no, i better prepare. study diewrpgh during the break. jillian: now i feel terrible about myself. we have this surveillance video just really gives you chills. a panicked woman caught on
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camera ringing doorbells in the middle of the night wearing nothing but a t-shirt with take a close look, what appears to be broken shackles, perhaps, on her wrist. police in montgomery county texas now searching for that mystery woman reviewing this surveillance footage from one of the homes. this happened around 3:30 in the morning. the woman doesn't match any missing person's reports. still that is insane. someone on twitter wished for the murder of nra spokesperson dana loesch's children. the social media giant at first didn't see a problem with it twitter now banning the user for the vicious comments after backlash in an email to dana loesch wants husbandana's husbandwe ret you reported and locked it because of violation to the twitter rules. she will join to us discuss the ruling at 8:45 eastern. make sure you stay tuned for that how will the upcoming roseanne spin off explain the lead character's absence? she is dead. at least that's what co-star
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john goodman is hinting at describing character to the sunday times. quote, it's unknown. i guess he will be hop mopey and sad because his wife is dead. the show was cancelled because of roseanne's racially charged tweet: you probably haven't met this guy. is he being called the dine and dash deigner. facing more than a decade in jail and 10 felony counts for ungentlemanly actions. accused of ditching several women across southern california before the check came during their dates. the 45-year-old's crime spree came to an end when he was busted trying to skip out on $130 shrimp and fillet mignon dinner. steve: facing 10 felony counts on dining and dashing? jillian: that's serious stuff. katie: loser. what are you doing? steve: meanwhile, turn to the weather it, may still be summer according to the calendar. looking a lot like winters
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out west. katie: oh no, montana just got first snow of the season august thanks to unusually cold storm system. senior meteorologist janice dean is tracking the forecast. january january it's come. the snow is coming. steve: it's going to be 100 here today. janice: all the anchors complained about the heat. compile they will and put them all together when we get first snow fall in new york city we will play all of you complaining about the heat. welcome katie pavlich, you are awesome. katie: thank you, janice, back at you. janice: it is hot outside. it's 80, right? it feels even worse than that the humidity is crazy. my hair is going to start to friz up throughout the next three hours. the relief will be coming for some across the great lakes. 88 by thursday. d.c. though stays hot and sticky. all right. back inside where it's air conditioned. steve: i thought you said the snow was coming. janice: it is. winter will be here. brian: go to shelter. all right. 17 minutes before the top of
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the hour. all eyes on arizona and florida for today's key primaries. what are the races to watch and which contest is flying under the radar? that story next. great outdoors... especially when you're in accounts receivable. only one detergent can give you a sniff like this... try gain botanicals laundry detergent. one of the many irresistible scents from gain. a hotel can make or break a trip. and at expedia, we don't think you should be rushed into booking one. that's why we created expedia's add-on advantage. now after booking your flight, you unlock discounts on select hotels right until the day you leave. ♪
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brian: major primaries happening across the country today. kind of exciting. all eyes on the senate races in arizona and florida. what can we expect. to break it down a guy studying it for us a former trump campaign jim mcglaughlin good to see you. >> good to see you. brian: what's happening in arizona. the seat is wide open because jeff flake knew he couldn't win. big enemy of the president. have you mac that, kelli ward and joe arpaio. >> you still see the president's impact in that race. because the interesting part is that's why jeff flake couldn't run for re-election because he had gone against the president. brian: on every turn. >> he was very unpopular among republican primary voters there. and you see both kelli ward
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and joe arpaio trying to tie themselves back to the president. but even with all that, it looks like martha mcsally is the front runner. the last poll had her up by 20 points. brian: no presidential endorsement on that even though the president was getting pressured to go with mcsally, she is a veteran, too. talk about florida and we talked about ron desantis a short time ago. he has congressman, military veteran against the vernal adam putnam who has been training his whole life for this. putnam blew a 20 point lead. >> it's amazing. just a couple months ago, putnam had all the money, all the endorsements. he was the clear establishment favorite in florida. and then all of the sudden, ron desantis got the trump endorsement, the republican primary good housekeeping seal of approval. he has gone from being down 20. some folks say he could win by 20. brian: shows the president's power in florida. he won that of course, by just a points over hillary clinton. now let's talk about something that i think the most intriguing race outside
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of what is happening in new jersey. that is rick cot bill nelson expected to lock up their nomination to go head to head. this is a flat footed tie. nelson has had that job for decades. >> not too long ago the democrats thought bill nelson was going to have another cake walk. in the meantime the republicans are really excited about rick scott who has been a pretty popular governor. and he has gotten more popular has time has gone on because he has done a really good job and has a great record of success that he can talk to the voters about. brian: at that point into the hispanic community. how does a rich white guy at that point into the community. >> he cares. gone to puerto rico at least six times to campaign there he has learned how to speak spanish. is he always down in south florida. miami. he is campaigning vigorously and out there sees the people. and bill nelson is getting a lot of flack from even democrats for not campaigning hard enough. brian: is he rusty. he will doesn't have real opponents. going to cost him. look at the 27th district over in let's keep it over in florida on the g.o.p.
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side. a big roster of con tender, maria elvira. salazar. rodriguez. aguliara. who do you think is going to emerge as we turn the page again? >> i think it's interesting because this is the seat have ileana ross leyton retiring. maria elvira salazar tv personality. from the district. grew up in the district. great story as a single mom. and the democrats, again, thought they were counting on this seat being in the bank as part of the blue wave. but they are professional going to nominate donna shalala who is not even from the district. the district is more than 70% hispanic. and she doesn't speak spanish. brian: university of miami as well as hillary big clintons supporter. great job. coming up straight ahead. president trump honoring evangelize leaders during a special dinner at the white house. >> in recent years the government tried to undermine religious freedom.
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it becomes 'dancer', what!? all the stars tom hanks keep this movement going strong. every network every star kevin bacon dream big with us. one night to save lives get ready to see it all tune in live, september 7th 8/7 central katie: even local leaders honored in special event at the white house. with us now is a pastor who was there and author of living fit, make your life count by pursuing a healthy you. senior pastor of cross church in springdale, arkansas dr. ronny floyd. thank you so much for being with us. >> thank you for the opportunity. >> you were at the white house last night. tell us how it was. what was the event? why were you there? how was the opinion and his relationship with the evangelical communities going? >> well, the president invited about 100 evangelical leaders from across america to come and to celebrate all that's been going on across the country
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since he has been elected. and so that's the exactly what we did and we are grateful for his leadership at this time in our country. steve: dr. floyd, you are grateful for the fact that this president is in your estimation protecting religious freedoms. here is what a little bit of what he said regarding that last night. >> believers. and tonight we are joined by faith leaders from across the country who leave in the dignity of life, the glory of glod, and the power of prayer. my administration has strongly spoken out against religious persecution around the world, including the persecution of christians all over the world. steve: all over the world. dr. floyd, why is it that you as an evangelical leader support this president? >> well, when you really look at it, steve and katie, here's what we have. we have a leader in our nation who could go down to history as being the most pro-life, the most
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pro-religious liberty and the most pro-conservative judicial leader that we have ever had in making appointments. and so we're thankful for the president being willing to stand up for life, for the sanctity and the dignity of human life. we're thankful that he is out there on the forefront for religious liberty protecting religious liberty here in the country. and across the world. i mean, look at what they are trying to do and what they have already done for religious liberties internationally. we are really grateful they are standing in the gam and making a difference. katie: the president said the war on religion and religious freedom is over. so clearly there has been a big difference between his administration and the previous. steve: it was your third visit to the white house during this administration dr. ronnie floyd. we thank you very much for joining us live. his book is called "living fit." sir, thank you. >> thank you. steve: coming up on this very busy tuesday morning the dea crackdown on opioids charging doctors and
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steve: stock market hit new record because the president of the united states was talking to the president of mexico, and they have come to some sort of a new trade deal. >> we're going to call it the united states, mexico trade agreement. we'll get rid of the name nafta, it has a bad connotation. brian: lanny davis caught lying about what michael cohen knew about russia hacking, and that famed trump tower meeting. steve: lanny davis says he was a source for cnn trump tower story. brian: heading behind closed doors to testify about his source trump dossier. >> is he a critical wheel in this whole collusion cog that we have been age to expose. >> the president of the united states, he has the respect the office. >> i don't know if he even
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believes that's what he is saying. >> oh my god. >> the beautiful moment a soldier reunites with his best friend. [whimpering] ♪ shake it off ♪ brian: katie, you don't have a comment on your favorite artist? katie: taylor swift i went to one of her concerts and sold me completely. not a fan and then i became a super fan. i love her. brian: can we turbrian. steve: can we turn the music up. katie: karaoke hour way too early for that. steve: i took my daughter to the taylor swift show. katie: incredibly talented. brian: i would love to share in this moment but i can't. katie: brian feels left out. sorry, brian. steve: taylor swift and i had a conversation where we
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were talking about. brian: me? steve: not always but. her first tv appearance was on "fox & friends" right out there on that plaza. katie: when she was 15 probably. her record deal she signed when she was 15 years old about to expire. news about what she is about to do. brian: i predicted she would never amount to anything. i was wrong about that. katie: you are striking out today. come on. brian: another note, politics. president trump celebrating a big victory yesterday nut -- about 11:00 eastern time after reaching a deal with mexico to replace, i guess, two thirds of nafta. katie: once it's signed it will be a major first step towards fulfilling a campaign promise of renegotiating u.s. trade deals u. steve: kevin corke at the white house to break down a new agreement that is half a nafta. >> can i just say kilmeade is hilarious. katie: he is very funny. brian: have you been to a taylor swift concert? >> i have not.
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katie: got to get you to one with brian. get you some tickets. >> trying not to laugh, very funny. she is quite the performer and quite the performance yesterday by the president of the united states in completing hafta. i love the way you said that not quite nafta and not fully ixz cuted deal between u.s. and mexico. something the president has been pointing to quite some time. let me show you what we learned yesterday about this deal between the u.s. and one of our largest trading partners in the world. 75% of auto parts will now be produce new north america. that's important. you have to understand often other players, china, for example, can sort of sir couple venting some of the existing rules between the u.s. and, say, a country like that by going through mexico. a lot of that will now be paired back. you see 40% to 450% of all auto parts made by workers earning at least $16 an hour. again, a at this point of the if a dora t fadora.
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making that cinksd money u strengthens protections of incidents electric actual property and financial services trade. huge advantage for the u.s. economy. it improves trade of digital products there is a lot more involved in this, guys. not just about making a deal with auto mexico. this is about shifting the paradigm with respect to the way the united states handels trade. for decades it has simply been the u.s. sort of does a deal which benefits those around us so that they can improve their businesses and then do business in turn with us. well, now, the president said it's time to focus on america first. here is what he said yesterday about this new deal with mexico. well, he said among other things i can tell you, this he said we are looking forward to not only continuing the conversation with canada. he said we are certainly pleased that we have been able to navigate what has been previously thought to be a fairly thorny road between the u.s. and mention me.
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when you think pack to all the rhetoric we saw going into the election period back in 2016, the fact that they were able to knock this deal out with mexico right out of the block is certainly important for the u.s. keep an eye on mexico but also on capgd, guys. you may have heard that the trade ambassador from our neighbors to the north will be making her way here to the u.s. that will be pia toll as the president and canadian counterpart try to work out a deal between the u.s. and canada. back to you. brian: great job. you know what companies benefited if you want to know this trade deal looks good. stock market overall. g.m., ford, one fly jp morgan sak's and industrial firms all benefited as did boeing and caterpillar. they looked at this and said this is going to help a lot of the companies. price of cars go um a little. small price to pay if we get more people that work here. i think that will be fine. steve: it's a big if. ultimately, katie, this is what donald trump ran on as
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president. is he going to reez negotiate stink bomb trade deals. is he two thirds of the way to doing that right now. actually half way. katie: i'm interested to see where this goes if canada comes to the table. earlier this year the president talked about redoing tpp he pulled out of the trans-pacific partnership. renegotiating nafta. redoing it bring to the table together or separately as you said. maybe he will go to the asia pacific region as well and renegotiate that deal to put china in more of a spot. brian: katie, do you know why i think you are right? become so clear tpp is a penalty against china. trying to get china's attention. is he not happy with the second tier delegates that showed up last week. the tariffs are a tit-for-tat. wait a second what if i go into tpp and become that wedge that president obama talked about but in a deal lake that i like and now a group of countries that wants us in. katie: we will see what happens with that and china, of course, is what is on the mind of the president at all times. they come to play at every
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single trade negotiation whether it's nafta or tpp. steve: where were the trade negotiations during the obama years? because here's a flashback to august 7th, 2007 when barack obama said, you know what? i'm going to fix that thing. >> scrap nativity tax senator obama or fix it? >> i would immediately call the president of mexico and the president of canada to try to amend nafta because i think we can get labor agreements in that agreement right now. and it should reflect the basic principle that our trade agreements should not just be good for wall street, it should also be good for main street. brian: that was can datz obama saying it's time to renegotiate. i keep going backing to what ross perot said everyone said he was wrong turns out he was right. if it passes you will hear a giant sucking sound of jobs leaving the country and going south. they did. this president is trying to bring it back. katie: interesting how the
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democrats react. steve: we want to know what larry kudlow's reaction is, actually we know. he thinks it's great. is he going to be with us just an hour and 90 minutes from right now on the channel. meanwhile, yesterday, replayed a sound bite for you over the weekend with tiger woods after he finished big tournament out at ridgewood country club in new jersey. he was asked a question, so you played golf with donald trump recently. i think last thanksgiving. would you say that donald trump is a professional friend or a personal friend? and this is what he said. >> i think a lot of people, people of color feel threatened by him and his policies. spore throne himself into sports debates. anthem. what do you think people who might friendly relationship with him? >> he is the president of the united states. he has the respect of the office. and no matter who is in the
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office, you may like, dislike personality or the politics, but we all must respect the office. brian: i thought that was a great answer by an athlete a very smart guy. even though is he friends with trump i have known him 20 years played golf. same business. they live right next to each other. fine answer. as soon as i heard it i thought to myself this is going to be big news. katie: if you were watching espn their reaction was not a positive one. lirvel to next change between max kellerman and stephen smith. >> we must respect the office, therefore, that confers respect to the occupant. tiger is, that what you are saying? if that's what you are saying? that is a stupid comments. i don't even know if he believes that's what he is saying. >> first of all we don't know what tiger woods believes. is he asian he is not black. when he got arrested, weighs black. katie: oh, so now they are questioning tiger woods'
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race because he dares to say that he respects the office of the president of the united states. pretty unbelievable, actually. brian: smith, max kellerman usually i hear him on sports. liberal guy going off. steven a. smith is a deep thinker. he does not have knee-jerk reaction to obvious big questions. i'm very curious what he thinks in the big picture about the president. steve: mr. kellerman said are you saying that the office, therefore, confers respect on it to its present temporary occupant? no, having respect forever the office means principally in my view is the office holder should have respect for the office. and he feels that donald trump does not. so, he is questioning whether or not are you talking about our respect for the office or the respect of the office holder? katie: just be nice if espn could stick to sports something we all could watch and pay attention. to say i find it unfortunate that these athletes like tiger woods put in this
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position for simply having a round of golf with the president of the united states. having a relationship with the will business. entertainment sector. it's clearly difficult. brian: in this respect i don't blame the questioner because they golf together and should be a topic on the debate show because because is he a golfer and came up. katie: i think the premise of the question was pretty loaded though there are immigrants and people of color who are threatened by the president's policies what do you have to say about that. that's pretty front loaded question with an answer -- one way they want that question answered. steve: in the end, tiger woods who was trying to get out of that questioning barrage just said, look, i just played like 36 holes. i have got to go. indicate caught i'm hungry, leave me alone. brian: coming up in an hour, please watch. jim brown is going to be joining us live. he got up early for us. he wants to respond on his comments he said on. he finds himself pulling for
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the president and said this might make me unpopular in the black community but jim brown joins george brown, kanye walker of prominent african-americans that seem to like the president. mean while, jillian, we seem to like you. jillian: i like you guys, too. isn't that wonderful? let's get you caught up on some of your headlines we are following starting with. this senator john mccain's final words to the personal public revealed in a heart felt letter read by his long-time aide. >> i lived and died a proud american. we are citizens of the world's greatest republic, americans never quit, we never surrender, we never hide from history. we make history. farewell, fellow americans, god bless you, and god bless america. jillian: mccain also taking a thinly veiled reference at the president hiding behind walls and current difficulties. the president ordering the white house flag back down
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to half-staff, releasing a statement in part, quote: i respect senator john mccain's service to our country and in his hearn have signed a proclamation to sig fly the flag at half stay until the day of his internment. john mccain's senate desk draped with black fabric and white roses: demoted doj official bruce ohr heading to the hot seat today. house lawmakers returning a week early from summer recess to grill him behind closed doors over the anti-trump dossier. ohr's wife nellie worked for fusion g.p.s. which helped assemble the dossier. ohr also communicated with former british spy christopher steele, the author of the dossier. so a lot of ties there. steve: indeed. too bad it's not going to be on tv. brian: i would love to get a cup and put it by the closed door and see if i could hear anything. steve: i'm sure a guard -- >> brian: would knock my head in? steve: no. i'm sure he would say stop
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it. brian: oh. steve: imagine this your child wins a toy at the county fair guess what it's stuffed with? the hidden camera. the horrifying story coming up. it. steve: that is pretty much it. brian: ofstare at us. thin 24 ho. while meningitis b is uncommon, about 1 in 10 infected will die. like millions of others, your teen may not be vaccinated against meningitis b. meningitis b strikes quickly. be quick to talk to your teen's doctor about a meningitis b vaccine. be quick to talk to your teen's doctor ♪ lean on me, when you're not strong ♪ ♪ and i'll be your friend ♪ ♪ i'll help you carry on ♪ ♪ lean on me. that skills like teamwork, attention to detail, and customer service are critical to business success.
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>> they used to call it nafta. we are going to call it the
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united states, mexico trade agreement. we will get rid of the name nafta, has a bad connotation because the united states was hurt very badly by nafta. for many years. and now it's a really good deal for both countries. brian: president trump celebrating a big trade victory charles angel style. overhaul nativity tax the stock market immediately smashing records in a good way on wall street as a result. steve: what does it mean for you, stuart varney the host of varney and company on the fox business network joins us now. stuart, this is a win for the president. >> yes, it is, in my opinion. we have seen a lot of different things from this president. and, yesterday, we saw one of the most different things have you ever seen in your life. foreign policy conducted with a foreign leader via speaker phone in oval office on camera for 20 minutes. that was a sensation. steve: do you know what would have been great i have many other lines here justin trudeau if you want to call in call 1-222. >> i was waiting for the president to say and you are
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going to pay for the wall as well. katie: and the phone call 99 cents international. >> political win for the president and economic win for america. what this deal does is a two-way deal. it's america and mexico. it encourages vehicle production in north america rather than asia. and by bumping up the wages earned by car workers in mexico they go from like 3.50 an hour to $16 an hour. that's a major disdisincentive for produce here because they no longer have that big labor cost advantage. bottom line a win for president trump and win for america. canada's foreign minister arrives in d.c. today to complete, maybe, the third leg. steve: the pressure is on. >> a new nafta will. katie: do you think canada will come to the table. >> yes, as steve said the pressure son. the ball is in their court. join, in negotiate or face
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tariffs. brian: wants that 300 percent for dairy farmers, he wants that reigned in. he wrote a check to farmers because he knows they are going through hell right now because of these tariffs. >> that's the president's hard line. that's his leverage, do, this negotiate, or tariffs. and you can't afford the tariffs. brian: when do we see varney and company? >> 9:00 eastern time, five days a week. brian: because you wet my appetite. i cannot wait for more of your show. >> really? a fine promo, brian, thank you very much indeed. katie: we love your show one the best nu in the biz. >> only been to 42 states. katie: have you been to 49. >> i'm a poor immigrant. steve: tutor, thank you. >> thank you. steve: meanwhile, a town of just 1500 people. why are far pharmacists dispensing 1.3 million
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♪ brian: time now for news by the numbers. football edition. first nine days away the nfl season just around the corn but the league and the players still don't have the solution to the national anthem policy. in may the league announced the protesters on the field would be fined but gave in to a grievance by the players when they started doing talks. next $95 million. that's how much giants wide receiver odom beckham new contract is worth. highest paid wide out in the league. see if he can stay on the field and boats.
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texan star jj was foundation has raised $41.6 million in the one year since hurricane harvey. largest crowd source fund raiser ever. he stepped up big time. steve: that is terrific. meanwhile, switching gears. according to the centers for disease control there were more than 72,000 deaths in this country from overdose in 2017. two thirds of those tied to opioid use. katie: now the dea is cracking down on the doctors and pharmacies overprescribing opioids. brian: fox news correspondent at large is at large geraldo rivera saw firsthand as he traveled to clay county tennessee population 7,000 yet this year alone where 1.3 million pills dispensed. how does that make sense, geraldo? >> it makes no sense at all, brian. good morning, everybody i want to add my name to tiger woods, to football great jim brown and kanye west being broadly supportive of the president. we get one president at a
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time. his drug enforcement administration raided that little town is salina county, clay county. number one county for dispensing of opioids in this nation. the number one county. it's a little rural county halfway between here and nashville and the big eastern city in knoxville. so why are they dispensing all those drugs? there are four big busy drug stores all within sight of each other. all in a town of 1500 people. i asked the man in charge yesterday of the d.e.a. raids on those drug stores c. michael reed about what was going on. >> this is one of the drug stores that huge joints task force of the d.e.a. and the tennessee bureau of investigation. and local authorities is about to hit the drugstore opened just about an hour ago. we will watch as they do their thing. >> tell us what's going on. >> at this point we are going to make sure we get
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records. we look at records. we analyze the records. we will do a count of the drugs, just to make sure that there is no actual diversification happening. we want to look at everything came into the farm sismt everything that was dispensed from the pharmacy and what's on hand. and it should even out. we picture the pusher as a seedy guy on the corner in the shadows. it's changed, hasn't it. >> it's changed dramatically. now you are dealing with white coat drug dealers, whether it be a pharmacist or a doctor or somebody in the manufacturing business that's putting these pills on the street. kind of a shocking way to start your day. how are you feeling? >> i feel fine. >> do you feel confident that all of the opioids coming out of this place are legitimately prescribed and dispensed by you? >> very confident. >> why such a high number of opioids prescribed?
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>> would started out one clay county drug and about 100 feet you have anderson hometown pharmacy and about 25 feet have you got another pharmacy dale hollow pharmacy. how do you feel about the d.e.a. coming to your drugstore this morning kind of suspecting that you are dispensing more opioids than you should be? >> i really have no comment. >> but can you explain why so much traffic in this little town? why four big drugstores? >> no, sir. there is no comment. >> the four of them actually are very high prescribers or dispensers of the opioid drug that we're looking at de laud did morphine and oxycodone. >> how is it they justify 1.3 million pills dispensed in a community where there is 1500 people in the town, 5,000 in the entire county? >> that's why we are here. we want to find out why the high prescribing of four pharmacies a stone's throw
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away from each other. >> the county is actually 7,000 people. my goodness it's so obvious drugstores are there not to serve a legitimate purpose steve, brian, and katie but really to be drug dispense. they are in the business of dispensing opioids, opioids contributing so malignantly to the epidemic, 72,000 americans last year died of overdoses. many of the people being treated by the way are on medicaid. not only is this outrage going on in clay county but you are paying for it. steve: geraldo, so you took us to the four pharmacies. but, really isn't it the problem with the doctors who are writing out the prescription? >> absolutely. and some of the doctors and i'm not accusing anybody. but some of the doctor's offices are adjacent. they share an interior door with these drugstores. did you go and get your script and go next door and
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get your opioid pills. maybe you use them. maybe you sell them back on the street. but, clearly, that community doesn't need 1.3 million pills in a single year. katie: geraldo, you are going to follow up with the dea once they figure out what's going on there, correct? >> will do katie. will do. i will be on the case. katie: good to know. steve: geraldo rivera live in clay county, tennessee. thank you very much. that was really interesting. >> i'm in nashville right now actually. steve: okay. close enough. all right. meanwhile, it's 7:30 here in new york city. your child wins a toy at the county fair. what's inside the toy? a hidden camera. brian: katie pavlich is at the top of the class on tucker carlson big final exam. now she is gearing up to face shannon bream. we have a pop quiz for the pop quiz taker. katie: oh, no. better study. steve: nothing to study, trust me ♪ ♪
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♪ katie: we're going to have a show down. >> katie? >> coffee. >> katie? >> the lights went out. >> oh, you got it. >> cpr. >> madonna. >> yes. >> poor that potty. >> katie? >> wood chuck. >> oh. >> international house of burgers. his loss. >> katie pavlich? >> she is a nun. a kangaroo. >> katie pavlich takes the lead. [laughter] steve: if you watch tucker carlson he has this thing called final exam some weeks. >> he does. >> katie pavlich currently is tied with shannon bream. >> i'm tied with the champion all time nina row. we are going to go up
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against each other hopefully. we are trying to figure out the schedule. brian: every thursday, isn't it. >> every thursday. brian: here are. so people in the dust heap of katie's vanquish foes. steve: look at. brian: mike emanuel. sebastian gorka. guy benson, kevin corke, peter doocy, sean spicer and griff jenkins. katie: sean keeps telling me wants a rematch. brian: all these men trying to stop you and they can't. steve: we were talking in the "fox & friends" offices because she does the final exam at night where they review video from the past week. why don't we do the early exam. katie: oh, man a little nervous about this. ready. steve: these are questions that you normally do not see on television and are almost impossible to answer. katie: okay. steve: are you ready, katie? katie: i'm ready. steve: first up, what's the difference between normal ketchup and fancy ketchup? katie: the package it comes?
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[buzzer] steve: heinz is simply a usda designation that producers use a certain color, consistency and flavor. katie: it's all from tomatoes, come on. steve: you can't quibble. next question, katie, at a movie theater which arm rest is yours? katie: both. steve: i'm sorry general theater etiquette you always use the arm rest that you are sharing with your companion. if you show up with somebody else. katie: what if you are there alone? steve: in that case the first one who is there puts. katie: you get dibs. i get dibs on both. brian: what if you have to use the bathroom? do you go to the movies alone? brian: i don't use arm rests sit like this. steve: final question, katie, why did kamikaze pilots wear helmets. >helmets. katie: if they ejected and hit their head they would be okay. [buzzer] steve: i'm sorry. they wore leather flight caps that kept the pilots from getting too cold or going deaf on the cockpit
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canopy was open. it was less about actually surviving the crash and more about getting to the -- >> i wear one of those helmets too when i take the train it gets very cold. brian: oon route to death you don't want to get a headache. katie: we tried. tougher questions on "fox & friends" in the morning. steve: there you go. ultimately now you know the difference between regular and fancy ketchup. ainsley: that's do designation from the government. brian: katie pavlich just had humble pie. jillian: i find the arm rest thing is more of a debate on the airplane. that's what like especially if you are in the middle seat you get none. katie: you get none. brian: that's why i started flying private. katie: we all can't have is t. so good. jillian: get you caught up on headlines. 3-d gun blueprints will stay offline for now.
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judge in seattle temporarily blocking the controversial blueprints. emily taylor joined us on "fox & friends first" earlier this morning. she says this is a free speech issue. >> murder with a 3-d printed firearm is just as illegal as murder with a gun that i can go buy at the store right now. and we just have to simply enforce the laws on the books. jillian: 19 states and washington, d.c. are suing the state department after settling with the man who wants to publish them. seth rogan's amc series preacher inner geneticking politics into season finale. a scene? sunday's finale featuring a character wearing a nazi uniform and supportin sporting e america great. some slamming vowing not to watch anymore. openly criticizes president trump. a mom calls police after finding a hidden camera inside her child's teddy bear that got the toy as a prize at a county fair in
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tennessee. police say it had a lens but it didn't work. the booth that gave it out says they bought it in a bulk order and this is the only bear of its kind. investigators do not believe there was anything illegal going on. but a little startling there. huh? so if disney is the happiest place on earth then this is the hoppiest. can you vacation inside of a brewery. brew dog opening dog house in ohio. get this. each room is decked out with a fully stocked beer fridge and personal keg bar but even better the showers are stocked with beer. brian: what? steve: wow, look at that. >> more than 500 nights have already been booked. i think it sounds like a fun road trip if you ask me. katie: sounds like a good time. steve: bathe with beer. jillian: it de feats the purpose. brian: janice dean, you know this there used to be body on tap beer and shampoo. very successful replaced
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prell as my favorite. body on tap? >> oh you mean the shampoo. i remember there was beer in the shampoo, right? brian: i think it was rangold. janice: a fair here i con the tucker carlson challenge with adam, i never received the wemple mug. katie: oh, you didn't. janice: can you make that happen? katie: i will give you one of the ones that i have won. you earned it, you deserve it. brian: a writer big fan of the network. janice: hi, guys how are you? hands from georgia, texas, rochester, very nice. take a look at the weather right now. so sticky outside. here is what it is going to feel like around 3:30 p.m. today. 103 in boston. going to feel like 100 in new york city. we still have a heat advisories up for millions of folks here so dangerous heat, especially this afternoon just take all the precautions. we do have the potential for severe weather today.
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here is the cold front going to move through. we have the potential for large hail, damaging winds isolated tornadoes in these areas. tropical storm-mile-an-hourtropt going to directly impact hawaii. >> anybody you want to say hi. >> to um. my family i couldn't think. >> >> candidate and matt. >> mom. >> rochene. >> my wife and daughter add son. >> anybody else. >> hi, marianne. janice: yeah i. yea, marianne. brian: from gilligan's island? marianne in gilligan's island no last name. steve: and gingers as well. 19 minutes before the top of the hour. remember when michael cohen's attorney said this about that touch tower meeting? >> the reporting of this story got mixed up and we were not the source of the story. brian: yeah, you were. steve: lanny davis may have
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lied. senator lindsey graham here with the reaction. is he coming up next. good morning to you, senator. ♪ it's the final days of the ford summer sales event. ♪ there are only a few days left to take advantage of great deals like zero percent financing for sixty months on the built ford tough f-150. so hurry and save big on ford, america's best-selling brand. get zero percent financing for sixty months plus twenty-eight hundred bonus cash on a 2018 f-150 xlt equipped with 2.7 liter ecoboost.
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♪ [ laughs ] ♪ whoa, whoa, whoa. your one item would be the name your price tool? it helps people save on car insurance. why wouldn't it save me? why? what would you bring? a boat. huh.
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indicate quake hope you are having a good morning so far. welcome back. get ready to cough up more cash at check-in. jetblue charging 30 bucks for first bag. $40 for the second and 150 for the third. that's a $50 hike for that third bag. yikes. a navy veteran is now a millionaire after selling his ferry for more than $5 million. retired rear admiral robert
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phillips bought the 1955 race car 58 years ago. he found it at a dealership in california and paid $2,200 for it. wow. steve: that's a pretty good return on your investment. jillian: yes, i would say. so. steve: jillian, thank you. meanwhile michael cohen's attorney lanny davis under fresh scrutiny over comments he made about what the president knew in that 2016 meeting with the russians. >> i think the reporting of this story got mixed up in the course of a criminal investigation. we were not the source of the story. brian: got mixed up? you really think we are buying that? lanny davis or the president is probably going to call him lying lanny walking ba b. those claims admitting he was actually the source behind that report. the anonymous source. katie: here to react lindsey graham, thank you so much for being here. >> thank you. katie: appreciate it.
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>> got mixed up for a very long time. katie: a mix up or a lie. i just think it was -- i don't want to call him a liar but the story did not hold water. steve: well, it was an extraordinary story though. last week when michael cohen was announced that he had cut a deal that was gigantic and then on top of that, lanny's going out with that tantalizing prospect that he might have something to tell mueller which was not true. >> word of caution to the public a lot of people try to convict president trump don't be so fast. i have seen no evidence of collusion after two years. mueller is looking at it we will see what he says. plenty of corruption at the department of justice and the fbi should be stunning. not one democrat seems to care. reverse the roles. steve: what do you mean? >> well, okay, just imagine if the republican heart hired a foreign agent to go to russia to get dirt on hillary clinton and they used it to get a warrant and never told the court about it, it would be the front page story everywhere. that's pretty corrupt. when the two fbi agent and the us attorney, i mean, the
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toj lawyer it's our job to stop trump. can you imagine what would happen if it's our job to stop clinton? steve: good point. brian: senator, when those emails were found on anthony weiner's laptop. reports they didn't look at 7,000 emails they loo look tenth of them. >> peter strzok clearly was in the tank for clinton. hated trump. no american would get the same treatment she did. if you were charged or suspected of this kind of misconduct, you would be in jail now. interview, not under oath. a couple lawyers who really didn't ask hard questions. and you pivot to russia before clinton is done. they had a bias against trump for clinton. it was obvious. they gave a politically corrupt document to get a warrant on an american citizen. this dossier though this day is still unsubstantiated. they never told the court that christopher steele was on the payroll with the democratic party. russia was involved in our
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election. they were involved in terms of developing this dossier. katie: senator, switching gears a little bit. you were close friends with john mccain. >> yeah. katie: there were things you wanted to tell us today on the curvey couch about the last couple of days and what's to come in the next week. >> i have been a basket case. to all the friends that i have who reached out to me, thank you, it means a lot to me. to the family, john has seven kids a bunch of grand kids and a lovely wife. all the tributes to john really matter. appreciate getting the flag down and the president saying something nice. any to pick one person to explain america to someone from another planet, it would be john. he could answer the question who are these americans along with mark salters, the most eloquent expression of what america is about came from john. john was my minute tore, my friend and i feel a real
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obligation to send him off well and continue the legacy. steve: was the last thing he said to you. >> i have not been complete cheated. steve: what did he mean. >> that he lived a life beyond any imagination that he had at 17. report common in military when a mission is complete or an operation is over lessons learned. from the time he was 17 until he passed a way a couple of days ago. what are the lessons learned from this man's life. i was in vietnam with him. we went to the hanoi hilton, taps museum. we are the bad guys in that museum by the way. looking, in you could tell his memory is going really quick, very nostalgic. and there are photos all over the wall of the prisoners sitting in chairs with sunglasses and playing volleyball and all of our minders are there with us. i said john, this doesn't seem so bad. and he smiled and says i don't remember it this way. [laughter]
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katie: a little bit of a different story. >> we had to get out of vietnam. brian: you have a life. live it he lived it? >> live it don't be afraid and make your mistakes and move on. katie: thank you for sharing with us. appreciate it. brian: look forward to your remarks on the senate floor. thanks, senator. back in a moment. keeping this tookus safe and protected... you can get comfortable doing the same with yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it.
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♪ steve: well, hundreds of though sands of college students are going to arrive on campus across the country sharing a similar burden college debt at the end of the road. katie: student loan debt crisis ballooning out of control is college still worth the guarantee of future success? steve: let's talk to larry winget our old buddy the pit bull of personal development and author of the new book "what's wrong with damn near everything," larry, good morning to you. >> good morning. steve: so, you know, as kids set off for college, you
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know, a lot of them will have debt at the end. ultimately, college is not for everybody, is it? >> you know, it's not for everybody. and what's interesting to me about this whole deal is we have 841,000 students who owe $9 billion that think ardefault on. that's our money, taxpayer money. i think that happens when the american dream is that your kid go to college. that's not always the american dream if they are going to graduate with that much debt. what we have to do is guide our kids so they don't end up with that much debt so they actually end one a degree that has value in the marketplace there are other options. katie: larry, what do you think is fueling this problem. the student debt issue has really ballooned in the past decades. a result of too much free money. student loans, the federal government being in charge of them and people not having the money when they get out of the school with the degrees they are
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pursuing to pay it back. >> i think it's all of those things. i think colleges cost too darn much. and i think we have got to bring down the price of college. i do think though that what you just said, katie, is true that we have to guide our kids so when they do graduate that they have got a degree that has value in the marketplace. you know, i appreciate we tell our kids that they need to follow their passion and if your passion is art history or anthropology that's great. just understand that you are probably going to graduate with debt and have that debt because there aren't a lot of jobs in anthropology and art history. katie: yeah. >> you need to look at things i have one kid who went to college and one kid who went into the military. went in the military and the nice thing is when you get out of the military you come away with a gi bill and that will pay for college. steve: exactly right. trade school learn a trade. >> . larry, thank you for joining us and giving us your perspective. >> thank you. katie: love the title of your book. huge hour ahead sara carter jim brown.
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national economic council director larry kudlow all here live. steve: these officers are going viral for jump rope skills. they will teach us some of the moves on fox square live ♪ >> tech: at safelite autoglass, we really pride ourselves on making it easy for you to get your windshield fixed. >> teacher: let's turn in your science papers. >> tech vo: this teacher always puts her students first. >> student: i did mine on volcanoes. >> teacher: you did?! oh, i can't wait to read it. >> tech vo: so when she had auto glass damage... she chose safelite. with safelite, she could see exactly when we'd be there. >> teacher: you must be pascal.
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>> tech: yes ma'am. >> tech vo: saving her time... [honk, honk] >> kids: bye! >> tech vo: ...so she can save the science project. >> kids: whoa! >> kids vo: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace ♪
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♪ ♪ >> the stock market hit new records because the president of the united states, he was talking to the president of mexico, and they have come to some sort of a new trade deal. >> we're going to call it the united states/mexico trade agreement. and we'll get rid of the name nafta. has a bad connotation. >> it was a political win for the president. and i think it is an economic win for america. >> lanny davis caught lightening about what michael cohen knew about russia hacking and that famed trump tower meeting. >> david says he was a source for cnn's trump tower story. >> i don't want to call him a liar, but the story did not hold wear water. don't be so fast. i've seen no evidence of
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collusion after two years. >> bruce orr head dog the hot seat to testify about his tie to the anti-trump dossier. >> the president of the united states, you have to respect the office. >> i don't even know if he believes that's what he's saying. ♪ ♪ >> i think that's reba mcintyre singing. >> the queen of country, there she is on the left. i met her in las vegas a couple years ago with my dad. there i am when i was younger when i had dreams of being a -- i am not a singer, no. my dreams of being a country music singer did not go so well. i would sing for the family. >> you in the front of a, is that a stove? >> that is a wood-burning stove. that's how we kept the house warm in the winter time. >> everything smells like a
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campfire. >> we love it. >> that was the way my grandmother's house. >> katie, you were kind enough to fill in today. >> i'll be back tomorrow. griff: we showed you video of a couple of police officers with community outreach were doing some double dutching. as you can see right there, they are police officers martinez and drago. they can really, as you can see right there, jump live, jump live. so anyway, we're going to go out there -- [laughter] we're going to go outside and try our feet at that as well. >> not only is this impressive, but they're doing it for uniforms that are not built for double dutch. a singlet -- [laughter] steve: they're uniforms at a moment's notice, they've got to
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be able to take off running. all sorts of stuff. haven't you seen dragnet? brian: my favorite cop show underappreciated, the rookies. tsa when we first saw -- that's when we first saw kate jackson. katie: for now, president trump celebrating a big trade victory after reaching a deal with mexico to replace nafta. steve: once signed, it will be a major step toward fulfilling a major campaign promise of president trump's to the renegotiate u.s. trade deals to help the little guy. brian: and it didn't just come off a teleprompter, it came in an interaction with the outgoing leader of mexico on speakerphone, and a translator was there. kevin corke took the it all down. hey, kevin. break down what we've got so far. >> reporter: so far we have an agreement in principle. the basics are these: you know after a deal is signed you have to have a 90-day cooling-off
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period the that gives people a chance to take a lack at the -- a look at the details. and then congress will have a chance to vote. i should also point out stocks really rallied on monday on the heels of that u.s./mexico trade deal. a lot of enthusiasm. let me take you inside the numbers. the dow jumping 260 points, reclaiming the 26,000 mark for the first time since back in february. the s&p gained 223 while the nasdaq -- 22 while the nasdaq rose a whopping 72 points, first time it's traded above 8,000. as you can well imagine, it didn't take the president long to celebrate the good news. in fact, he joked the record-setting day left him in a very good mood about which the president of kenya as you see there, hey, listen, why don't you send a little bit our way which, of course, drew very big laughs in the room. another big day at the white house on trade, the president announcing that sweeping bilateral trade agreement with mexico. the president keeping his
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promise, as brian said there, to scrap nafta. he spearheaded a deal that the white house says will strengthen protection for american workers while improving opportunities for the two countries to have a more balanced trade relationship. >> i like to call this deal the united states/mexico trade agreement. i think it's an elegant name. i think nafta has a lot of bad connotations for the united states because it was a rip off. it was a deal that was a horrible deal for our country. >> reporter: okay. so one deal down, one more to go in the region. that's with canada. their trade are minister, their foreign minister, in fact, is enroute to washington to try to stave off more tariffs between our two countries. for now, guys, back to you. steve: kevin corke live on the north lawn of the white house, thank you very much. the pressure is on our neighbors to the north to get in on this deal. mexico's onboard, we're onboard, canada, you're next. stuart varney just told us about ab hour ago this is -- an hour ago this is a big win for the president. >> bottom line, it's a win for president trump, it's a win for
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america, and canada's foreign minister arrives in d.c. today to complete, maybe, the third leg. the pressure really is on. the ball is in their court, and the president's given them a choice; join in, negotiate or face tariffs. brian: and, of course, when it comes to canada, they're going to focus on the farmers and dairy where there's a 300% tariff. i'm sure canada's got some complaints about us. for those people who think the president is anti-hispanic or doesn't respect mexico, oops, what did he just do now? forget about canada, let's focus on mexico. president nieto engineered it, the socialist new guy was all for it, he already put together a three-way deal between two one incoming, one outgoing government. so far that's a stunner and success story. i cannot wait to see what he comes to the table with. katie: it is interesting renegotiating nafta with mexico before cab da has come to the --
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canada has come to the table. it's going to be interesting to see especially going into the midterm elections how democrats on capitol hill react to this. they've been for redow doing nafta -- redoing nafta for years. whether they will choose progress on these trade deals they've called to be reformed for a very long time. steve: keep in mind, there's not enough time in the congress to vote on this. katie: true. steve: that would mean that would come after the midterms. there's a possibility nancy pelosi and company could be running the house. historically, the democrats have not been onboard when it comes to trade deals with the republicans. we're going to talk with larry kudlow, the director of the national economic council. he will be life with us -- live with us in about 20 minutes to talk on this very subject. brian: tiger woods, as he gets ready for the ryder cup, he met with the press. one of the questions, this question just was relentless, was about tiger woods and your relationship with president trump. when he said e respect the
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office, and i've known the president for years, that wasn't good enough. they followed up and says, well, what about the fact that he's had all these battles with lebron james and others? >> especially people of color, they still feel threatened by him and his policies. sports debates with lebron james and the anthem. what do you think of people -- [inaudible] >> well, he's our, he's the president of the united states, and you have to respect the office. and no matter who's in the office, he -- you may like, dislike the personality or the politics, but we all must respect the office. steve: we all must respect the office. and, katie, that part really has set some people off. katie: i just can't believe -- i can never imagine this question would be asked of barack obama of an an athlete or anybody else who happened to have a friendship or cordial relationship with them.
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respecting the office used to be a basic tenet of how we operate and our civility in this country. and the question wasn't being asked once to get an answer, it was asked four times because they wanted tiger woods to say something negative about the president. of-trying to bait him -- it was trying to bait him. steve: well, this was a topic last night on espn. here's a conversation between max kellerman and stephen a. smith on this exact topic. >> we must respect the office, therefore, that confers respect to the occupant. tiger, is that what you're saying? if it is, that is a stupid comment. i don't even know if he believes that's what he says. >> first of all, we don't know what tiger woods believes. when he got arrested, he was black. >> i don't know what that means, but i just thought there was a noncontroversial answer, then to go off on his answer, i thought, was stunning. i also think that it's going to be great to talk to jim broken
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in about -- jim brown in about ten minutes. i find myself in support of the president, and and he says he ks that's not going to to be popular in the black community. he joins many others as prominent athletes of color that also support the president. steve: max kellerman followed up, and he said that the office holder needs to respect the office, and he feels that donald trump does not. let us know what you think about this topic. e-mail us, friends at foxnews.com. tweet, we read it all day long. brian: gillian, you could just yell. [laughter] >> so we're talking about this video, guys. it really gives you chills. take a look. a panicked woman caught on camera ringing doorbells in the middle of the night wearing nothing but a t-shirt and with what appears to be broken shackles or something of that nature on her wrist. you can see right there. really strange. police in montgomery county, texas, reviewing surveillance
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footage from one of the homes, there were many that she rang the doorbell. the woman doesn't match any missing persons' reports. the 9/11 trial in guantanamo is moving so slow, it has outlasted the judge. colonel james polis retiring from the military after 38 years of service. he's presided over the terror case involving five prisoners since 2012. the case is bogged down in pretrial hearings due to battles over what evidence can be used against the men. key primaries today, in florida ron desantis takes on adam putnam in the republican primary for governor. desantis is feeling confident ahead of today's vote. >> i think you're going to see a strong victory but a victory that shows strength in all corners of florida. we have a big, diverse state, and you've got to be able to compete in miami, in pensacola.
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i think i've demonstrated that, and i think the results tonight will reflect that. >> in the florida senate race, current governor rick scott is the gop favorite to take on incumbent democrat bill nelson. in arizona, a three-way race to fill the retiring jeff flake's seat. and let's take a look at this. a routine foul ball at a cubs game turns into this. >> catch the ball, tip the cap, chug the beer. >> or chug part of the beer. nice catch anyway, and as for the whole getting the beer into the mouth thing, not so much. i feel like we see this stuff all the time. how do they catch hem in the cup? steve: why so many beer stories? >> people like beer, steve. katie: he should get free beer for life for catching that ball. steve: all right. in less than an hour, bruce orr
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will go behind closed doors on capitol hill to answer questions. we're going to break down what questions he probably will be asked. katie: plus, a firefighter jumps into action after gunfire erupts at a convenient store using his body to shield women and children. the terrifying moments were caught on camera.
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>> i think that bruce orr is a disgrace with his wife nelly. for him to be in the justice department and to be doing what he did, that is a disgrace. steve: demoted department of justice official bruce orr sent to testify before members of the house oversight and judiciary committees later today. what are the most pressing issues? let's ask fox news contributor sara carter: she's been following the story since it first broke. so, you know, sarah, one of the things i want to know is why was this guy who, at the department of justice, was a drug prosecutor -- >> that's right. steve: -- at a very high level, why was he taking all the secret stuff about russia to the boss? i don't get it! >> a lot of people don't get this, steve. he was the number four guy at the doj. in 2016, i've heard this from a
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number of dea agents and other agents that were working cases with the doj at the time, he was basically falling off his job. he wasn't doing his job there. and now they say, well, look, it was because bruce orr was so focused on president, you know, on then-incoming candidate trump. and he was working on that, and president-elect trump, he had spent most of his time dealing with christopher steele. now that all these text messages come out, look, bruce orr was in more than 60 times in communication with christopher steele. of. steve: right. >> and i think some of the biggest questions, one of them is going to be for sure who authorized you to be the back channel after the fbi fired christopher steele for leaking to the media? steve: well, i think we know why the guy who was the drug prosecutor was presenting the stuff to the boss at the fbi, because he was getting it from his wife who worked for fusion gps. [laughter] and now as we fast forward to today, i've heard that what they want to know is why were you
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still funneling things from chris steele to the robert mueller's team after chris steele had been fired for leaking to the press? >> absolutely. so not only was he trying to get christopher steele involved in the mueller investigation, he was moving information to the fbi. even more important, steve, i think is the information that's recently come out that the doj, member obviously the doj -- we don't know who yet -- were leaking information to the media, then using those media reports to get the fisa, the foreign intelligence surveillance court warrant, on carter page. steve: right. and mark meadows, i saw this tweet. he's one of the high ranking oversight guys in the house. he tweeted out a couple of things. bruce ohr's wife nelly worked by the clinton campaign, bruce o to hr gave the dossier to the fbi, but also he has revealed that apparently they deposed somebody on friday of last week, and this fbi official said, yeah, you
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know, we routinely use press stories, news stories as evidence when it comes to things like fisa. >> it's incredible because, first of all, you would expect that the fbi would launch their own information. steve: yeah. >> this is what happened with the dossier. here we have an unverified dossier, a salacious dossier, a dossier that has not been proven that its own author, christopher steele -- an ex-british spy -- doesn't believe of it's actually accurate. he himselfer thed, no, i can't verify the veracity of my own dossier because he got it from russians. steve: why is bruce ohr still there? >> that's a question that a lot of congressional members still have. we don't know, but we'll find it out today. steve: sara carter, thank you very much. >> thank you. steve: meanwhile, president trump thank jim brown after the football legend says he is really pulling for the president and his policies.
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jim brown's going to join brian live next. ♪ ♪ at bayer, our roots run deep. so chances are, you've seen us around the house. or... around the yard. on the shelf... or even... out in the field. your mom knew she could always count on us... and your grandma did too. because for over 150 years, we've been right by your side. advancing the health of the people, plants and pets you love. so, from all of us at bayer... thank you for trusting in us. then... and now.
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>> well, i tell you, the greatest thing about america is that we all have our opinions and our thoughts. nobody is totally correct in everything that they do. i have access to the president, and anytime i have access to the president and he will listen to my thoughts, that's all i can ask of him, and that's what i do. so this president is accessible, and he's different, he's challenging, and he pays attention to what i say. brian: the numbers look pretty promising. black unemployment is down, wages are up, his approval rating in the black community is still low, but it's doubled really since the spring of 018. 2018. you're somebody who likes some of the things that he's doing. what is he doing that you like? >> well, to tell you the truth, there's two things.
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north korea, that is highly important to me because that's, the scenario there has changed, and he has made a change, and a few, couple of months ago i was looking at a nuclear war. and so he's dealing with -- [laughter] that gentleman that runs that country in a manner that makes me feel very proud of him. the other thing has passed my mind right now, but i'll tell you this, the number one thing is that if i have an idea and a concept and i'm working my butt off to make this a better country and i put in a call to the president, he will answer me. what else can i ask him to do? he has his job to do, and i also have my job to do as a citizen that has a certain amount of influence. so i don't blame him and what his office can produce. i look at what i can produce in the back community and the
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community at large and all the individuals that i can influence that will work with us to make this a better country. so we should look at ourselves first before we look at the president. brian: right. do you feel as though he's producing for the black community? >> well, i'll tell you, it's very hard to produce for the black community in a certain way. the black community, and i'm a part of the black community, has a responsibility regardless of what the president does. and if you have a homicide rate within your black community, it is not the president that's created that homicide rate, it's the black community itself that needs to address it. so i don't want to just put everything on him. and i'm sorry to say that the black community is not doing what we should do, and that includes myself. i can work harder, i can donate more money, i can go more places. but we have to be able to as
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citizens bring something that the president can join forces with and triple the effectiveness of it. brian: hey, jim, do you look at this president, the times you've sat with him one-on-one, is he a racist? >> i'm so glad you asked me that. of course not. you know, is america racist? of course not. the mass oppression, the advancement of black people in this country is based upon white people who risked their lives just to do the right thing to make the playing field equal and balanced. so we always talk about the negative, but what about the positive? how many black athletes are millionaires because of those fans, white fans that go to those games? the nba, the national football league, those organizations would be out of business if it
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were not for people of not of color, but white people that go to those games and support those teams. finish so we have to give credit to the positive aspect of what people are doing in america and stop going to the negative first. brian: well said. jim, you said, hey, listen, and i watched you on hard knocks on hbo, you said i would never be kneeling for the national anthem. shannon sharpe said if what jim brown's saying is true, if what colin kaepernick is doing is wrong, then what jim brown did was wrong in being a conscientious objector to the war. what do you say? >> i say thanks. [laughter] bottom line is this: we should never denigrate our flag and our national anthem. we should always be americans
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first, and we should work our butts off to do the right thing and make it a better country. but to not respect your flag and your national anthem is something that i would never do. brian: i want you to hear -- by the way, people that have joined you in the support of the president, dennis rodman, kanye west, herschel walker, mike tyson. i want you to hear what spike lee said at cannes film festival about america. >> the united states of america was built upon the genocide of native people and slavery. that is the fabric of the united states of america. brian: what's your response? >> well, i'm sure that's not the full quote. i'm sure there was more in spike's mind. and if you want to point to
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slavery and call it for what it is, he's right. but if you look at the other side of it, the people that gave their lives to make it better for those slaves, you look at harriet the tubman and that -- harriet tubman and that mar movement, you look at the -- the particular movement, the you look at the progress by caucasian people to deal with freedom, equality ask justice for black people. we are no longer in slavery. we have self-determination, and this country's the greatest country in the world. soal though when you look at -- so although when you look at slavery it is an abominable type of situation, it's the reality of our past, but we have gone way past that particular kind of situation. and we should look at the positive rather than the negative and do all the things that we can do -- not point the finger at someone else, but we can do as a society to make things better in our country. brian: right. hey, jim, i'm out of time, but
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i'll say one thing. one of the greatest things that happened to me so tom friends with you. thank -- to become friends with you. thank you so much for joining us this morning. >> thank you, brian. brian: back in a moment. mom: okay we need to get all your school supplies today... school... grade... done. done. hit the snooze button and get low prices on school supplies all summer long. like this case of paper for only $29.99 at office depot officemax.
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>> they used to call it nafta, we'e going to call it the united states/mexico trade agreement. and we'll get rid of the name nafta. it has a bad connotation because the united states was hurt very badly by nafta for many years, and now it's a really good deal for both countries. steve: that's the president of the united states yesterday in the oval office on the speakerphone with the president of mexico. let's bring in larry kudlow, director of the white house national economic council. larry, good morning to you. >> morning, thank you. steve: well, the stock market liked what happened yesterday. the s&p and the nasdaq set new records. i want to read you something that "the wall street journal" on the op-ed page says.
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they say we're glad to see mr. trump step back from the suicide of nafta withdrawal, but on the public evidence so far this new deal is worse. it's clearly a win for the president, larry, but why is it a good deal for american workers? >> you know, i think it's a very growth-y trade deal. in fact, i want growthier and growthier -- steve: are you making up that word? [laughter] katie: growthier. >> it's a kudlow word. i actually got it into a washington post editorial not too long ago. listen, i read -- my friends, my good friends at "the wall street journal," i think for them, you know, on a trump-adjusted basis, that was a favorable editorial, what can i say. [laughter] honestly, this thing does a lot are. we can cover the points as you wish. it keeps the integrated supply chain going in north america. that is huge for business confidence. it eachs up a -- opens up a lot
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of markets, it protects intellectual property, it actually extends some patents and copyrights for new drugs. all this is very helpful. it protects workers, okay? it has a higher domestic or north american content. that's a good thing because we don't want china to come on and encroach. they won't let us in their place, so we're going to have to protect our own workers. and on and on and on. i just think it's a very pro-growth -- it shows you two sides with goodwill can sit down and work out what is, essentially, a free trade deal, free trade, fair trade and get it going. nobody thought we could do it. i think to the president's credit, to bob height heiser's credit, to jared kushner's credit, we did it. and it's going to promote economic growth, both sides of the border. katie: larry, you keep talking about two sides. what about that third side of canada? the president has threatened tariffs if they can't come to
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the table. is there any kind of timeline about how long the president is willing to wait to make a deal with canada? >> well, no, i don't think he put any timetables on it. i was with him most of yesterday and heard prime minister trudeau. look, i think we would like to make a good deal with canada, okay? we've been negotiating with them for quite some time unsuccessfully. i think he'd like to make a good deal. that good deal, by the way, has to include among other things inte reck are chul -- intellectual property rights. but also, katie, it's got to the include the dairy farm stuff, you know? there's a word that canada has trouble with. it's m-i-l-k. milk. anything to do with milk and dairy. they have this government-run, centrally-planned system. some tariffs, some tariffs run upwards of close to 300%. [laughter] they're going to have to fix that. and the president did say if we
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cannot satisfactorily negotiate with china, he may have to the go to a large 20, 25% tax on canadian automobiles headed for the u.s. i mean, that's part of his negotiating strategy. i would take him seriously. but let's hope china comes onboard -- katie: china or canada? brian: yeah, canada. in terms of canada, i guess canada hates milk, hates to talk about milk -- steve: they're lactose intolerant. >> wait, brian, it's m-i-l-k. brian: you helped me save the headline, appreciate it. >> always. brian: larry, quick thing. as katie brought up, if you're looking to get china's attention, you hit them with tariffs. if you're looking to really get their attention, you say i'm interested in getting spank into the tpp -- back into the tpp on my terms. they love that we bowed out of that. i know you were for the tpp when
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you were a civilian, so how do you feel about it now? has the president entertained it? >> i never liked the adjudication features, and i thought they were stacked against america. but look, before we get to tpp, let's make some more steps here. mexico, hopefully canada. we've got an e.u., european union, deal cooking with a lot of goodwill on both sides that i'm involved with with bob lighthizer. regarding china, brian, okay, we've had all these meetings with china, and they have not come to anything. do you remember years ago, this is the first time i was in washington working under president reagan. mrs. nancy reagan was fighting the drug epidemic of that time in the early, mid 1980s and, brian, tumor what she said -- do you remember what she said, just say no? she was kind of ridiculed, but she had the story right. here's my advice to my chinese friends. just say yes occasionally, okay?
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[laughter] you can't negotiate if you're always saying no. no to drugs, terrific. no to any reforms on trade, not terrific. we've never heard anything really positive out of china, and i think that's a big problem. you know, i was reading nixon. nixon in china, for my birthday -- very grateful, trisha cox gave me a beautiful bound copy of the president's memoirs. i'm not going to go through it all on the show, but one of the things you see is as nixon and kissinger were negotiating for the first opening in china in i don't know how many lies, a number of things were said yes to. why won't this china today do the same thing if they're really serious? so far i don't see it -- brian: larry, tell the president to call their leader. they have this great relationship. it's going to have to be a president to president thing. >> it may come to that,
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president trump and president xi have talked, as we all know. the trouble is we don't seem to get any results. what i'll say about china though finally, wrap-up, our deal with mexico shows that free trade, fair trade can be done, that a pro-growth trade deal can be made. we're working on the european union. maybe we'll have some luck with canada. i think in this global game of world trade politics, i think china is now on the defensive because they see that the usa is beginning to get some momentum, and i think that's great. brian: larry, thanks so much for having us on your show. do you want to toss it to break? [laughter] you're hosting. steve: he wasn't only hosting, he was inventing words along the way. >> i never go through the break, never. [laughter] steve: larry kudlow, thank you very much for joining us from the north lawn. thank you, sir. and that's where he would normally say thank you. brian: not now. [laughter] steve: meanwhile, straight
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ahead, somebody on twitter wished for the murder of dana loesch's children, and at first twitter didn't see a problem with it. dana is going to be the live next to respond. katie: plus, these officers are going viral for their jump roping skills, and now they're going to teach us some moves. they are live on the fox square coming up. ♪ ♪ ♪ let your perfect drive come together during the final days of the lincoln summer invitation event get 0% apr on select 2018 lincoln models
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♪ ♪ katie: good morning. back with some headlines now. senator lindsey graham with opening up about the death of his longtime friend senator john mccain. the south carolina republican vowed to pay tribute to his mentor. >> he lived the life beyond any imagination that he had. he was my mentor, he was my friend, and i feel a real
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obligation to send him off well and to continue the legacy. >> graham praising mccain for his, quote, romantic view of the nation and says he is a better man for having known him. and the hero firefighter and a fearless man rushed to shield women and children in the middle of a shootout. the off-duty firefighter protecting a woman as shots rang out in a new mexico store during a fight. the other man stepping in front of the fun -- gunfire, grabbing two men -- two children and a woman. steve: dana loesch receiving a blurrily of death threats on twitter or following the jacksonville shooting including one targeting her children. the user writing the only way these people learn is if it affects them directly. if dana loesch has to have her children murdered, i guess that's what needs to happen. katie: according to the social media giant, that did not go
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against their rules. brian: here with her message for twitter is nationally syndicated talk show host dana loesch. dana, harrowing couple of days for you. do you feel as though that your worries have been assuaged? >> well, i'm concerned about -- i think my biggest thing in all of this is i just want social media platforms to treat users consistently. we just had a horrible tragedy take place, and we have families that are still grieving. and individuals, i think, believe that it is some form of advocacy to go out and continue to add to the nastiness and to the hate of the political environment by making remarks like these towards other individuals. and i get a ton of them. it's not just me, there are a lot of conservative women, katie knows this all too well, that receive all kinds of remarks and threats like this. i don't even share the serious ones. and it should not be, this should not be the rule.
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this should be the exception. but the sad thing is, as i was saying, we just had a tragedy take place, and instead of focusing on helping victims' families and instead of focusing on actual solutions, things that we can do to make sure these things never take place again, we have to deal with situations where you have crazy people running amok on twitter, and twitter having inconsistent applications of terms of service. and that's what this comes down to. i'm not asking for the government to step in and regulate social media platforms. i'm not asking for new legislation. i'm simply asking for these, for people like jack dorsey and mark zuckerberg and these individuals who own these platforms to maybe rein in their employees' biases and evenly and consistently apply and enforce terms of service. that's it. katie: this goes to your bigger point, right? there have been a number of conservativeses, both high profile and not, who have been shadow banned for far less than what was said to you about your children. >> right. i mean, just the other day
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kathleen mckinley, who is a wonderful woman, a sweet christian lady, wrote a column in a newspaper, shared it, and because the topic of that column -- and it was a well written piece -- because the topic apparently triggered someone, she ended up being temporarily suspended. and as you said, there have been a number of accounts, individuals who do nothing more than engage in advocacy or do what every other user on the right and left does, and they find themselves shadow banned because they're effective. enough is enough. it has to be even. brian: the plan all along was to push back on conservatives and suppress their vote, but they never expected this pushback on their pushback. katie: thank you, dana. stay safe. >> thank you all. thank you. steve: you bet. straight ahead, these officers are going viral for their jump roping skills. now they're going to keach us some moves live -- teach us some moves live out on the fox square. cue 'em. there
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♪ ♪ [applause] [laughter] >> police officers showing off their skills with a jump rope battle and a double dutch expo. brian? brian: oh, that's me. yonkers police officers martinez and drago. welcome, guys. >> thanks for having us. steve: you've already made history by what you did. officer martinez, can you tell us what led up to the double dutch momentsome. >> well, captain corps mack told me they were having double dutch ec poe, and i've been jumping since i was a little girl, so i jumped right in. steve: you grew up doing it, but you? is. [laughter] >> i'm more like the rocky
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balboa type of jumper. so, no -- katie: how do you do it? i don't think i've double dutched -- >> you guys didn't see brian doing it earlier. [inaudible conversations] you were a star. >> first, who are the two teams? katie: introduce us. >> we have the honeybees? >> yep. >> the honeybees. katie: i'm going to -- steve: oh, i want to see the professionals. katie: i can't jump that fast. steve: all right, how do you jump in? >> look at this guy! oh, my god! steve: pulled it out of the crowd. brian: nice going. there you go. there you go. go, bees. >> drago, you're next! >> oh, no.
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i can't jump like that. >> officer drago. >> yeah! [cheers and applause] >> the honeybees. bring the cameras down here. >> okay, you ready? honeybees ready? katie: honeybees. brian: oh, she's doing it. >> yeah! steve: very good. [applause] >> good job, katie! katie: good job, honeybees. ♪ ♪ it's three times more effective at removing plaque,
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[cheers and applause] >> sandra: fox news alert on the key figure in the early stages of the russia investigation, justice department official brews or heading to the hot seat on capitol hill this morning set to appear in a -- before a joint meeting of the house judiciary and oversight committees. good morning, i'm sandra smith live inside america's newsroom. >> good morning, i am eric shawn in for bill hemmer this morning. lawmakers are trying to connect the dots between mr. ohr and christopher steele, the former british spy who put together that infamous antitrust dossier. >> we know just from the documents that he was functioning almost as an

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