tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News October 9, 2022 3:00am-4:00am PDT
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that, two tractors with a flag? will: lit up,. pete: lit up. rachel: you guys love all the sports patriotism. pete: football farms. that works for me. rachel: that works for me too. the other day someone sent me an instagram, it was kind of sad. classroom of kids singing national anthem. only five kids stood up. pete: saw similar photo if it wasn't that one exactly. rachel: we tell parents these are important moments for us and our kids to pass on. pete: for sure. good morning, everybody. will: good morning. pete: i'm glad i'm here. i'm glad will is here. rachel: i'm glad you were born. isn't that ainsley's book. i'm glad you're all here. we'll start with a fox news alert. pete: we'll get to it. >> all right. top of the news, top biden administration officials meeting
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face-to-face with the taliban. will: the first interaction since al qaeda's former leader was killed during a drone strike back in july. pete: alexandria hoff is live in washington, d.c. reporter: good morning to you. the cia and state department yet comment on the meeting. it involved david cohen and top u.s. official. they met with the taliban. they cut communication with afghan leadership. it was blatant violation of the doha agreement that the taliban vowed to not harbor terrorists if the u.s. with drew troops. al-zawahiri was killed july 31st, after a hellfire missile was launched at his apt in kabul. this is the first meeting after the leader was taking out. the taliban as been struggling their request to legitimatize control of afghanistan.
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includes preventing violence at the hands of the offshoot, isis-k. guys? rachel: thank you. will: united states now re-engaging with the taliban that maybe this is somewhat positive that we gather more intelligence. pete: seems like a giant self-inflicted hostage situation. would have all the people there who were left behind which they still control which means they still have leverage. of course the taliban is back in cahoots with al qaeda. it is who they are, what they believe. we knew that would be the case. we killed one of those leaders. all the talks will continue to be ongoing as tons of people in the united states are still interested in people allied with there still caught behind their lines. >> general anthony tata spoke about this, breaks down what he thinks is a real opportunity line these talks. listen. >> the only real opportunity here is the intelligence gathering. if the taliban is beginning to
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worry about isis-k, to the extent that the cia and other agencies can gather intelligence that can help us find and rescue any americans that are still there of course that's a vital interest, that we should pursue. but you know the biden administration set aside 3 1/2 billion dollars for the taliban and i would say, let's take that 3 1/2 billion give it to veterans who fought in afghanistan. u.s. army, navy air force, marine corps veterans that fought as opposed to giving money to the taliban. the intelligence sharing, lawrence is a good thing. getting that information, you see part of that delegation was from the cia. as long as that is what they're doing, low level kind of conversation about gathering intelligence and getting u.s. citizens out of there i think that is our only interest there. rachel: i hope that the 3 1/2 billion dollars, i hope the
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information we're gathering is worth the 3 1/2 billion dollars. it is just interesting the numbers and how easily things get spent out of washington, d.c. will: pretty amazing we spent a 20 year war to take down the taliban. 20 years later outcome of that war, not only is the taliban back in charge but we're funding them. pete: here is more money for humanitarian aid we know you won't use for that. rachel: no. pete: low level talks, maybe some intel, maybe some hostages, that's about right. otherwise i don't see what is worth talking to the taliban at all. another piece of news, we'll travel down to texas because vice president harris was there, but of course she didn't go to the border which would have made some sense. i think she still the border czar? rachel: yeah, she is. pete: they have not revoked the title, in charge of border, non-border policy. she took plenty of time to talk about abortion, topic she most
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likely talks about anytime she center viewed or give as speech. here is harris talking about that. >> i spent the majority of my career as a prosecutor focused on crimes and harm and violence against women and children. the idea that there would be a policy and an approach that would say to someone who has survived an extreme act of violence and violation, and to then say to her, and you do not have the autonomy, the authority, as it relates to your body, that has just with stood that act. to make a decision about what happens to your body next. it's immoral. it's truly immoral. rachel: right. so interesting to take morality
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and turn it on its head. pete: exactly what i was thinking. rachel: it is astounding. it is also worth noting she was the prosecutor, the d.a. in california when there were whistle-blowers come out and found that there were, the sale of human baby body parts and she was the one who squashed the whistle-blower to get his videotapes, made that whistle-blower a, his life hell. so i mean she is somebody who is not really interested in getting to the got of crimes and indeed selling human body parts is a crime and planned parenthood was involved in it. there was evidence that they were involved in it and helping to cover that up. to get a lecture about the border czar about the morality of abortion, it is astounding. will: you say turn morality on its head. all three of us agree, you hear
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her talking like that, probably comes from a place of sincerity she believes what she is saying i hear that but such a disconnect about the conversation about abortion, because the missing part of her equation there is a human life at stake, right? pete: yeah. will: for people to seem to understand that, of course that is the primary morality involved. like, can you solve one sin by committing another? rachel: right. will: right? can you do that? rachel: or can you undo the pain -- by the way they love to use this, the rape excuse there because it is such a small you know, number of abortions that are because of rape or incest but they love using that. pete: they argue the exception. rachel: always. but it is not going to undo the pain of that. abortion, it doesn't solve any of the problems. it creates a whole new set of problems. it is really very clear when you talk to women who had abortions.
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this is something that sticks with them forever. having an abortion is not going to undo the pain of a rape or some other tragic situation. will: really quickly pete, to your original point, here you are in texas, never go to texas to deal what is really the major issue in that stay right now, and for that matter, our country, zero acknowledgement of the border. pete: rapes and human trafficking that happens because of the opportunity that is our porous border? representative henry cuellar democrat from texas who actually believes in the border, talked about what the cartels are doing when the vice president is not looking. watch. >> every part of the border is different because the criminal organizations, they control right across the river where i'm at, they control where the people are sent and it is important to know what they're doing now, they're probably making more money passing people than passing drugs, and they're
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looking at smuggling. smuggling is a voluntary coming across. now they're changing it to trafficking and when they do traffic people, they're trying to get people in the united states for their own, for the drug cartels for many years to come. rachel: i don't quantity to plug my podcast but i'm going to plug my podcast because this week on, from the kitchen table, we have john michael davidson on and he is talking about how, just how much money the cartels are making, how much control they now have over mexico itself. they control 40% of the land in mexico at this point. they are now working with the mexican government because the mexican government can't fight them. they have to work with them. and so this is now a national security issue. we're turning mexico into a narco state. and we have to deal with them because they're one of our biggest trading partners. they're right on our border. it changes all kinds of things.
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they're absolutely fundamentally altering the way our southern border works and the way our neighbor, mexico, is functioning. pete: look at a guy like henry cuellar. what a lonely guy. rachel: he is pro-too, by the way. he is pro-life. pete: he should be a republican. if he wants to stay a democrat but all signs point to republican. but he is, just be honest with your caucus, no one wants to say what he sees. >> he is a brave guy. they siced the fbi on him for that. will: coming up later in the show, pete and i will go off the wall. we'll talk about walls, talk about borders across the globe, how effectively actually having a wall a secure border is in various global scenarios. pete: very meta, off the wall about walls, on a wall. will: right. rachel: all right, guys. this "mansplaining" seth meant will be off the charts.
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make sure you stay tuned for that. here is another topic, paypal is reversing course saying they would fine users up to $2500 for spread what it called, this is a term, pete you talked about, misinformation. will: they abandoned that plan yesterday following quick backlash including from former paypal president elon musk. pete: ashley street mire joins us live. reporter: paypal sparking some outrage revealing new acceptable use firms would have fined users $2500 per infraction for spreading so-called misinformation. after the sharp criticism the company took down the policy yesterday, saying it was all a mistake. they told fox news last night, paypal is not fining people for misinformation and this language was never intended to be inserted into our policy. our teams are working to correct our policy pages. we're sorry for the confusion this has caused. former paypal president david
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marcus slamming the company before that retraction saying, it's hard for me to openly criticize a company i used to love and gave so much to but paypal's new acceptable use terms goes against everything i believe in. a private company now gets to decide to take your money, if you say something they disagree with, insanity. paypal co-founder elon musk also weighing in simply saying agreed. the reversal from paypal comes just days after they canceled three accounts linked to free speech advocate toby young who run as nonprofit called free speech union. the policy was supposed to go into effect next month. paypal never said whether they would introduce amended updates to their current terms. will: thank you, ashley. rachel: is it possible that was a mistake? is it possible? will: paypal is saying that is a mistake. i don't understand what that means it is a mistake.
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somebody took time to write down the policy and took time to upload it into the acceptable terms. it is is not a typo. what does that mean it was a mistake? is it a rogue e employee, if so -- rachel: fire him. let us know who he is. will: right now it fits in, hard for me, for you guys to accept it was an isolated rogue employee when the entire culture, particularly the tech culture is moving in the direction, i heard this yesterday i was shocked but unsurprised. oh, of course they're diving into misinformation. pete: amazing. cancel something not enough. they already banned people from their platform. laura loomer who is banned, because of stuff you do over here you can't transfer money this is the next step we'll take money from you? rachel: this is what think do in china. why i'm concerned about digital currency as well. it has all these other implications. will: anecdotally i know people canceling paypal accounts. >> will it be like netflix?
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will: starting yesterday. i don't know if paypal can stem the bleeding. i don't know how big the bleeding is on this. this is big. who wants to have $2500 taken from their account because of something you don't like what i say? rachel: but it is like the camel's nose in the tent. this is like the beginning of i think a lot of what -- pete: for now, it was stopped but they will take every inch they can get when you're not looking. >> absolutely. pete: got a few additional headlines for you this morning starting with this the illegal immigrant charged in a deadly stabbing spree on the las vegas strip was still on the streets because of previous charge for domestic violence was not prosecuted in time. in 2019, barrios was charged with domestic violence in los angeles but the d.a. did not comply with the state's speedy trial lawyers forcing the case to be thrown out. if convicted of that crime, he would have faced four years
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behind bars and deportation. instead he attacked people. authorities in florida arrest six suspected looters after hurricane ian. they are accused of stealing sneakers from a closed outlet mall. the lee county sheriff had this to say. >> people are have a right to be safe and secure, we're 100% on it from the air, waterways, boots on the ground. pete: he stressed florida has zero tolerance policy for looting. makes sense to me. big day for the michigan wolverines keeping their undefeated streak alive of 31-10 win over indiana. michigan state perfect at 6-0. usc staying undefeated thanks to a 30-14 win against washington state. texas shutting out oklahoma felt like a thousand to nothing. 49-0.
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nail-biter for tcu in the game against kansas as they won 38-31 thanks to a late game touch down. >> pressure coming, he saw it, he releases it in the end zone. johnston with a flag coming in. it's a touchdown. pete: nice grab. pro football action coming today in the nfl including the dallas cowboys taking on the los angeles rams here on fox. it is probably america's game of the day, what is that called? will: game of the week. pete: game of the week, 4:00 p.m. eastern time. the washington commanders, formerly known as the redskins, rookie running back brian robinson set to play his first game of the regular season after he was shot in a botched carjacking. will: what was your favorite play in the texas game yesterday? pete: all of them. rachel: do you remember the game? pete: i do remember the game. will: we watched the game yesterday, one of us watched the
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game. pete: i haven't seen rick. i don't know where he is. will: he hung tight with us. rachel: if we don't have weather today we'll know why. pete: we will know exactly why. will: alabama survived texas a&m. pete: who won the lsu-tennessee game? will: tennessee did big. pete: interesting. will: caught dumping dairy inside of high-end department stores. more on the protest to save the world. rachel: american taxpayers funding salaries of staffers whose job is to deflect stories about the president's son. the price of protecting joe and hunter next. ♪
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relatively compared to the kind of charges they could be and, that's up to them but are they actually going to do the right thing and hold the bidens accountable or is this just a charade and an excuse to continue targeting me and our movement of make america great again and america first? i don't know. pete: president trump in nevada. the rallies continue. he continues to stump on behalf of candidates, unlike really anyone else in the republican party that can do that. he still does. rachel: yeah. pete: he raises the point if there is justice for hunter is it really justice or a box-checking exercise to make it look like they're holding hunter biden accountable but they really just want the problem to go away? rachel: do we really care whether hunter biden checked the right box whether he got a gun or not? i have don't care about that.
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what i care about -- pete: or his taxes. >> they're trying to go into paths that don't lead back to joe biden which is the real thing. you know, that is what everybody needs to keep in mind here, when you hear about hunter biden it is not about hunter biden. it is not about the hookers. it is not about the homemade porn. it is not about the m&ms. it is not about the fact of any of that stuff. that our president is potentially compromised, i believe he is, by the chinese government around the russians because of the dirty deals this family has been engaged in for years in order to enrich themselves. finding out not only did this to get their power and influence to get rich, now using our tax dollars, getting our tax dollars to cover up for them in the white house. now two employees, one at 155,000, the other i think. will: 110,000. rachel: 110,000, $265,000,
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people who work for our government, their whole job is to look at stuff that hunter biden, stuff coming out of the laptop, stuff coming out of the media, provide cover, make sure it doesn't lead to joe biden. will: sources saying those two jobs specifically focused on deflecting stories about hunter biden. you heard when we came in former president donald trump offer up a theory that if the charges, if the investigation against hunter biden against deeper issues you laid out, rachel, it is serving some ulterior purpose. that ulterior purpose could be a box-checking, broom-sweeping exercise to make this go away. that box-checking exercise could be to forward the perception of impacter alty. of course there is questions about the doj being politicized. could this be sort of a hand waving exercise, a way to go, see, we're not exclusively focused on republicans. we are focused on corruption wherever it goes?
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interestingly you're not just going to hear that from donald trump. take a look at this, this headline by "politico." written by a guy named jack schaefer. he lays out the theory donald trump forwards as bell. if hunter biden gets indicted there upside for joe. in the op-ed even if the case isn't as conclusive as anonymous agents tell "the washington post" it is, the president should, shaking off the natural parental gloom, allow him celebrate political gain he stands to reap in the wake of hunter biden's criminal justice misfortune. a hunter biden indictment and prosecution of course on smaller charges, not on corruption would demonstrate the integrity of the justice department. he is not saying that by the way, pete and rachel. he is not saying that in a ernest, an ernest pursuit of justice. he is saying that as hooray, political win for joe biden by the very same theory forwarded
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to you by donald trump. pete: that is a cynical political calculation written by a, i don't know that particular reporter but who wants to see upside for joe biden and says, get him over here for the little stuff. everything else is gravy for joe. unbelievable. rachel: not hard to get joe biden on this stuff. we know that they were, you know, hunter biden was paying bills for joe biden. this is a very simple, you know, white-collar, forensic investigation. it is not hard to figure out but they have stopped it. so we talked about how much money was spent on these two employees? how much money and time was spent by the fbi, the secret service, the doj, all providing interference on the laptop, on what hunter was doing? i mean these are such, such a corrupt family. they have used our government to enrich themselves. they have used government employees to cover for them. it is, it is, this is the kind of stuff you see -- pete: maybe that is part of the problem. if you indict one part of that
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coverup the whole coverup happens. so there is incentive to say only look at little tax charges here, a small part of the gun charge, because if you look at everything else, there is a whole cascading effect of people involved covering for the bidens. rachel: we have a national security problem on our hands. coming up the "squad"'s cori bush telling all in a brand new memoir, including these chilling claims that doctors went ahead and performed an abortion on her despite her pleading to them to stop. >> they absolutely ignored me, even to the point of you know, like, calm down. rachel: former planned parenthood clinic director abby johnson says this exposes another terrible truth about the abortion industry. she is going to join us next. when my last customer discovered a crack in his car's windshield, he scheduled at safelite.com.
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making a stunning revelation about one of her two abortions. >> i thought i was ready. i went in and i went through all of the steps and i laid there and i started to think, i needed more time. so i said no, you know what i'm not ready. they absolutely ignored me, even to the point of you know, like calm down as if i was the problem. rachel: the democrat writing about the experience that happened when she was just 19 years old. former planned parenthood clinic director abby johnson says bush's experience is not uncommon and she joins us now. abby, welcome. you worked inside of an abortion clinic. i was just going to ask you that, how common, do you think these types of experiences are? >> well, you know, rachel, we have helped over 628 abortion clinic workers leave the abortion industry. unfortunately this is not
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uncommon. we heard this happens many times. sometimes the abortion clinic staff will actually hold women down, restrain them while they're having an abortion. look, abortion is money in the abortion industry and they are going to do everything possible to complete that abortion. rachel: it is fascinating so of what we hear about abortion is framed around this idea of women's rights and, that sounds so exploitive. the money side of it but also so cruel. you should be able to you know, you didn't want to have this, no one listened to her. >> it is not about choice. rachel: right. >> they say this is about choice and if you decide, i don't want to have an abortion anymore, i don't want to exercise my right to choose, you should be able to get up off of the table and say i'm done, i want to walk out, and i want my money back, right? i didn't go through with this procedure.
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that is not what is allowed inside of the abortion industry. they will keep you on that table. they will complete that abortion. they will kill your child. rachel: so many euphemisms in the abortion debate and one of them this is health care. what does cori bush's experience tell you about that word, health care and abortion being somehow synonymous? >> well, abortion is certainly not health care. health care means to heal and when you have an abortion every single time you have an abortion someone is killed and that is certainly not health care. you know, i'm, i'm really sorry that representative bush had this experience but i'm, what i'm more sorry about, rachel, is that even after having this experience she is still a person who is out there, you know, cheering for abortion and she talks about being a black woman
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and being exploited as a black woman but yet she is really betraying her own people by saying abortion is still something that needs to be supported. if she really believes what she is saying she should be out there abortion clinics should be closed down because they are still doing this to black women. still doing this to many women, not just black women. rachel: you bring such an interesting perspective, such a first-hand account what happens behind the curtains, behind the closed doors they don't want us to see and interestingly as you mentioned, cori bush gave some fascinating insight as well. thanks for all you do, abby. we appreciate you coming in and giving us your perspective. >> of course. thank you, rachel. rachel: still ahead, milking this protest for all it is worth. animal activists dumping dairy in department stores for attention. what they're trying to achieve. plus more teen migrants flown to new york. a county executive says he had
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zero notice until they landed. he tells us what happened next. ♪ hit it!♪ ♪it takes two to make a thing go right♪ ♪it takes two to make it outta sight♪ ♪one, two, get loose now! it takes two to make a-♪ get double rewards points this fall. book now at bestwestern.com. shingles. the rash can feel like an intense burning sensation and last for weeks. it can make your workday feel impossible. the virus that causes shingles is likely already inside of you. 50 years or older? ask your doctor about shingles. ♪ ♪ from out of the blue, every room can be more innovative. with some of that. and a whole lot of this. meet our exclusive dent and scratch resistant stainmaster laminate. check out our most innovative products. only at lowe's.
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(fisher investments) it's easy to think that all money managers are pretty much the same, but at fisher investments we're clearly different. (other money manager) different how? you sell high commission investment products, right? (fisher investments) nope. fisher avoids them. (other money manager) well, you must earn commissions on trades. (fisher investments) never at fisher. (other money manager) ok, then you probably sneak in some hidden and layered fees. (fisher investments) no. we structure our fees so we do better when clients do better. that might be why most of our clients come from other money managers. at fisher investments, we're clearly different. ♪. will: the biden administration flying dozens of migrant teens to upstate new york without giving local officials any heads up. our next guest found out about the flight as it was landing on friday night. joining us now is orange county executive steve new house.
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>> great to see you. will: fascinating this flight comes in friday night, the same day eric adams, mayor of new york city declares a state of emergency here in new york and what we find out something that has been happening for quite sometime, biden administration flying migrants up to new york. >> earlier in the year they were coming into stuart airport in the wee hours of the morning, two or three in the morning, buses picking them upbringing them to indus closed locations. mostly adults. second time in a week we have two airplanes showing up on friday evening. i'm literally standing on the tarmac when i get a phone call from el paso, just to let you know we have planes coming up to with kids. they assured me they were not coming to my count, but from there it is a mystery. will: adults in the past, kids now. you have no idea what happens to the children when they are dumped in county? >> no, that is the biggest concern. age 13 to 17, boys and girls.
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we're concerned, are they being trafficked? are they going to be sponsored? are they reunited with their family, their parents? so far they have been relocated to areas like kingston, poughkeepsie, and new york city. once our deputies, we see them leave the airport, get up to the highway, we don't know what happens to them from there on. will: you and i were talking earlier i asked you to h do the kids to your knowledge have parent, family relative. >> no. will: all the cities you mentioned are sanctuary cities. >> they will sponsor them, exactly. we're concerned about it. we run child protective services in the county. we follow up on issues if we have any questions, or any questionable background where these young kids are going to be. these we don't know about and i don't think the fbi or federal officials or marshals will check on them. we are concerned are they going to harvey weinstein's house or going to a shelter? are they getting a pathway to citizenship? that is what we're concerned about. will: what does it say to you,
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people like the mayor of new york city, eric adams complain about the governors of texas, florida, sending illegal immigrants up here while at very same time, quite hon necessarily for longer party happening under the guidance of the biden administration? >> they created this mess. this is a self-induced problem. when the mayor of new york city welcomed 10,000 january of this year. now they're saying a state of emergency, so they're getting pushed out to the other areas like my air in hudson valley. this is a problem they created. it is under really, under wraps. the public wants to know, who are these people, where they're going? they have a right to know that. will: the public is also experiencing, you know, to whatever percentage this happens crime associated with a lot of this illegal immigration. >> absolutely. there is a lot of questions. the more they operate in the clandestine atmosphere the more you see the public getting outraged. we have people showing up at the
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airport now, checking sky scanner, they see some weird flights coming from el paso. that is not typical in new york to have flights coming from el paso. they're federally funded. they are, you know, contracted out. so people are waiting on the side, public saying who are you guys, where are you going. will: dumped right off on your doorstep. >> absolutely. will: right in your county, the associated problems that accompany all that mystery. steve, thanks for highlighting this morning on fox. >> thanks for having us. appreciate it. will: rachel, over to you. rachel: thank you, will. we begin with a new video shows a so-called mystery waver appear underneath a bridge in crimea just seconds before it went up in flames. the mysterious video could contradict russian claims the fire was caused by a truck bomb. the bridge fire and collapse reportedly causing the death of at least three, comes as major blow to putin, disrupting a key russian supply route. most people are not crying over
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spilled milk but these climate activists in the uk claim it makes a difference. members of animal rebellion caught dumping milk in department stores, dumping milk saying it highlights the need for sustainable food. they vandalized a store with red paint. spooky season is here. top halloween searches according to pinterest, stranger things after four seasons heavy favorite, with character 11 coming in as the number one choice. summer favorite, "top gun: maverick" inspiring kids and adults to dress up as navy fighter pilots. the always creepy patrick bateman making a comeback as number three on the list this year. other top choices this year include elvis and priscilla. probably because of the movie came out. the fake heiress anna devy. those are the headlines. let's turn to chief
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meteorologist rick reichmuth for the fox weather forecast. what are you going to be this year, rick? >> i have no idea. is your outfit on that list? rachel: mine is not on there. rick: we're tracking the tropics. not much going on. we're still in hurricane season. hurricane julia made landfall at the coast of nicaragua couple hours ago. will pull off pretty quickly. all this area is susceptible to a lot of flooding when they get tropical storms or hurricanes because of mountainous terrain. we won't see rain pile up in some spots but five or 10 inches of rain will cause a few problems. florida, where we're still in the recovery mode. we have the rainshowers back with us four or five days. the front will stall out across this area. it is not a all-day washout for everybody. showers throughout the forecast for much of this week. you will have to dodge that working on recovery efforts right there. all right. over to you. rachel: thank you, rick. still healed. it is the greatest beer run
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ever. >> i would like to go over to vietnam, track down all the boys in the neighborhood, give them a beer. >> i could do that. >> do what? >> bringing beer. rachel: meet the man who nubbing into vietnam during the war to bring beer to his buddies. i think pete is doing the story. that is a perfect story for pete to do. we're kicking off ocktoberfest this morning on fox square. ♪.
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♪. pete: our next guest risked it all to bring beer to his buddies fighting in vietnam. his adventure, the you inspiration behind a new movie. >> you're embarrassing yourself, you're embarrassing your family. >> these protesters not know that our soldiers see that on tv? i would like to go over vietnam, track down all the boys in the neighborhood and give them a beer. i could do that. >> do what? >> bring a beer. >> he is not serious. he is hammered. look at him. >> the man is stone sober. that is his fifth beer tops. >> i'm going to vietnam and i'm bringing a beer! pete: joining us now, marine
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corps veteran, author of "the greatest beer run ever." chick donahue. thanks so much for being here. is that how it happened? i want to show my support by bringing my buddy as beer? >> yeah. essentially. that's how it was. it was a great suggestion and the bartender actually asked me for my papers, he wanted to go and do it, whether it was impossible to get there on my seaman's papers, in other words, get on a ship there. i volunteered for it. i was doing nothing. it sounded like the right thing to do. pete: you had seaman's papers you could get on a military vessel. what did you do? fill a duffle bag with beer? how did you know where to find them? >> well i had their military addresses, you know. the military address doesn't go by geographical like a town or a state or county, whatever. it is just the units.
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so i had to find out where the units were at that time when i was in vietnam. pete: once you reached them, we're looking at photos right now of you with your buddies delivering a beer, what was the reaction in a combat zone, to see the friend from their town with a beer? >> well the initial reaction was shock. the second reaction was, i must have had some kind of a job there in vietnam. and, the third, final reaction, was wow, you really came all of this way just to give us a beer? said, yeah. that is what the suggestion was and i volunteered. so here i am. pete: how much beer did you bring? >> well, i have to confess, brought, maybe two, three cases but it was a long trip. it was 31 days on an old victory ship from the panama canal just across the pacific. i drank almost all of the beer
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before i got there. pete: at least you're an honest man. i want to play a little more of the trailer of "the greatest beer run ever." >> no chance after ship to vietnam. >> 1700 hours. >> tonight? it is not going toby easy. >> i will show him this country is still behind them. >> you will get yourself killed over there. >> like you said, everyone is doing something. i'm doing nothing. ♪. >> smuggling beer into a war zone? that is not the smartest thing i ever heard of. certainly not the worst either. pete: amazing. exit question, what kind of beer did you deliver? >> it was a mixture, a whole bunch of them. pabst was there. sclitz. budweiser was there, miller was there, they didn't care, american beer. pete: american beer. chick donahue, you're a patriot. congrat races on the movie. thanks for being with us this morning. >> thank you. thank you. pete: love it.
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immediate changes to the nfl after few tua, hope me will. what the investigations did. ♪. ♪when i was but a child... eating heinz on spaghetti.♪ ♪i hoped and wished that i could be a grown-up already.♪ ♪adulting sucks!♪ [background singers echo] ♪adulting sucks♪ ♪you have to eat healthy... all the time?♪ ♪but fortunately...♪ ♪your ketchup can be, no sugar added heinz.♪
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i missed a lot of things when i was away. you know, cancer, chemo, covid, that kind of away. certainly missed my family, being with them. and i missed my friends, making movies. (light music) i love being alive, man. (sighs) and i almost lost it all. my immune system was totally shot. fortunately, you don't have to wait around for the worst. you can up your antibodies before covid comes knocking
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