tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News October 15, 2022 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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& friends." and what you're seeing there are some entrepreneur who just happen to have down syndrome because this is town syndrome awareness month, and we brought in some people who are very, very special and are showing us that special needs doesn't mean you can't be accomplished. there her, and we went wait to get out on fox square -- joey: i've been following them on e social media. it's all about doing good, being good people. rachel: can i say one thing in remember colette9? she is now going bigtime next month, her cookies are going into shoprite, which is a big grocery store here on the east coast. listen, incredible. pete: dud can you invest? -- did you invest? rachel: should have. pete. pete: if nancy pelosi can get stock tips, we should be able to
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invest. if they're playing the game, we can play the game. aye never done that yet, but now i'm thinking about it. joey, it's great to have you here. joey: pleasure to be here. pete: bug -- bulldogs played today. joey: that tennessee-alabama game, we'll talk to clay travis in a game. pete: welcome welcome to the fourth and final hour of "fox & friends" on this saturday, october 15th. mid october, year of our lord, 2022. which means if it's 9:00 and it's saturday, it's one of our favorites, maybe our favorite guest, i mean, dan bongino, host of unfilteredded -- look at him. [laughter] pete, did you really mean that? i do mean it, dan 'em. rachel: we haven't had you on for a couple of weeks, and we've been missing you. >> i know. i ran into pete down in florida, that's why he looks nice and tan. i said i really look forward to these 9:00 hits.
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pete, did i not say this? friday night's date night. when i get up, i really love you guys. getting up at 9:00 -- i get up at 4:30 in the week for my podcast, getting up at 8:30 for "fox & friends," believe me, it's a struggle. i'm, like, cragging myself. i told paula, double shot of espresso, please, so i'm ready for fox and friends, and she's like, whatever, you got it. joey: when you say date night, i think you're asleep by 9 -- >> listen, rachel and i did this special, and sean, on value. en type's day. not to get off topic, but it's important. date your wife, really. i'm not one for advice, ooh i've screwed up so many relationships, but i'm telling you, go on dates. it matters. it really does -- rachel: and it works, because paula actually makes you coffee in the morning. i love that. [laughter] >> listen, man, she knows if i
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don't have some espresso mainlined into my veins, forget it. especially on the weekends. pete: it's got to counteract the other substances. i get it. >> that's right. joey: we're not talking about hunter biden just yet. let's move on. [laughter] >> it's true. that was good, joey, i love that. pete: speaking of investigation, we have to get your take on the latest revelations that the fbi paid igor danchenko $200,000 to serve as a confidential source as a democrat operative admits that he lied under oath about team trump and the steele dossier. and we're also learning that the mueller team denied requests by the fbi to investigate a democrat operative with ties to the kremlin, his name is charles dolan. so we're paying for a source we know is corrupt, at least we soon after knew, and not investigating another? help us out, dan. >> pete, this story is so
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atrocious. it's really incredible. like, even the mainstream media that are, obviously, in the tank for the left and have been for a while, even they're not picking up the gravity of what's going on here. i get it, their moveon.org strategy, the left, this is their strategy, drip it out and then at the end, they're, like, move on. this is what they do. so everybody's, oh, ooh i'm tire of that. no, it's not old news, this is new news about an old event. the difference between us and, say, north korea and cuba and tyrannical regimes is in a constitutional republic we investigate crimes in search of people, right? someone walks many and makes an allegation, you investigate the crime looking for the perpetrator. what happens in north korea, they investigate people and then find the crime later. please tell me how that didn't happen to donald trump here. the fbi, the most powerful --
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think about this, folks listening, even the liberals. i know you lunatics can't take any criticism at all because you're crazy people, with but think about what i'm telling you. how is it that the most powerful law enforcement entity on planet earth was throwing around nearly $1.5 million begging people to produce a tape that no human being on planet earth could find. magically. we know everything about donald trump including his procliff i for two scoops of ice cream. but there's a pee pee tape and a million dollar bounty, and nobody can produce it. now, i want you to put this other part into perspective. tell me again how the fbi's priorities aren't trying to hunt donald trump and find a crime later. you're telling me the january 6th bomber, right, you remember the bomber? there's a $100,000 reward out for this person, but you don't hear anything about it.
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worse than pearl harbor, worse than 9/11, 100 grand. you offered 15 times as much money to go find a freaking pee pee tape that no human being on planet earth has seen? tell me again how the fbi's priorities aren't bass ackwards? 15 times as much money to produce this stupid tape no one on earth has ever seen and yet 100 grand to find this supposed pipe bomber who's participant of the worst insurrection -- joey: you're not just shooting from the hip here. people are coming out, whistleblowers, talking about seriously what canned be corruption or at least -- what canned be corruption or at least malpractice. you spoke to one of these whistleblower. let's check it out. >> i am happy this has come to the public's awareness similar to my complaint, and it does bear out to be something that's accurate. i think it indicates a pattern in the fbi's behavior that's
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willing to operate outside its rules for carrying out proper investigations which is what i expressed in my whistle blower complaint. pete: so that entire interview will air live tonight at 9 p.m. on unfiltered with dan bongino. dan, you've been saying for a while you think fbi agents rank and file are going to come out and speak. this guy did. what does he say has happened to him? >> i can't thank you guys and the producers enough for allowing me to tease this interview. we obviously taped part of this interview in advance. pete, you got to hear some of it. that's fbi agent steve friend. the information i has is, again, i don't want to be hyperbolic, but explosive, stunning, disappointing in a way. i don't mean disappointing that the information isn't shocking, i mean that our fbi acted like this agent saw is so incredibly disappointing. he talks about what happened
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with the january 6th investigation which was a perfect segway from the last segment we just did, how it was treated entirely different from just about every other investigation he's seen. and the reason he believes and others in the fbi who have come to me as whistleblowers, that they were looking to inflate domestic terrorist numbers and make this look like a white supremacy threat all over the country, using the vehicle of january 6th is so deeply troubling. if the fbi really believed this was an insurrection, they should have handled it as such and not as a political football used to inflate numbers to help democrats win elections. the interview is shocking. we actually went on for over 10 minutes. the key components will be on tonight. pete, you got to come on and comment on it. you herald it live. it really is a shock. >>ing interview. i think these guys come to me, a lot of them, because i know there are a lot of patriots there. i worked with them. and i left my job too.
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i walked away from my pension and a career i loved in the secret service, you know, because i felt like, you know, i had a bigger mission there too. and i think a lot of these guys are, like, hey, i'm going to go talk to this guy. and believe me, i appreciate it. i knew it was going to happen. there's no way the guys i knew in the fbi were going to sit back and tolerate this crap, no way. rachel: you talk about the january 6th political prisoners, and now we've seen they're going after pro-lifers and also saying they're domestic terrorists, also saying it's a sign of white principle city. this thing is getting out of control, and i'm glad there's whistleblowers coming forward. how many more do we need before we actually get reform and change at the fbi? because this is turning us into cuba. this is serious stuff, when you have a police state like this. >> listen, i've been vocal about this and, you know, i get there's a lot of different perspectives on this channel and elsewhere, that's why i like working here. no one tells me what to say, and
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iepped say it anyway regardless, so it doesn't really matter. [laughter] i think the fbi needs to be disbanded. i think there are a lot of good people left. i think those people should retain their gs-1811 investigator status and other entities. the fbi is a broken agency. it's not about the defunding, cut the crap, i'm not going to get your stupid lectures. take the money, it's a substantial amount, billions of dollars. take that money -- increase the funding, i'm all about that, but the entity has failed. the entity has totally, completely failed. how many more examples do you need? i mean, they missed all of these terror cases, we could list them out all day, and yet you focused on bounties on donald trump's pee pee tape, showing up on pro-lifers' doors? who the hell thought that was a good idea? to the left-wing media, you guys
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are a disgrace. i see an article pop by that hack, ken delaney. of this guy's just talking for the cia every time, him and adam gold match, they're deep state hacks -- goldman. delaney wrote this piece attacking the whistleblowers who talked to me. so when vund -- vinman comes forward, he's a national hero. you get these fbi whistleblowers suggesting the fbi's making political, not law enforcement decisions to enforce for the regime, and ken delaney, all he wants to do is attack the whistleblower? i hate to give him clicks, but the article is so unbelievable. who do they go to? the guy who was, like, 8/8. remember this one? they lowered the flag. that means heil hitler. what? are you crazy? it's the same guy they go to for a tip on these fbi
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whistleblowers. so ridiculous, these guys. pete: well, dan, i did have a chance to watch the interview. it was very well done. people need to watch tonight on "unfacility everied." -- unfiltered. i was struck by the professionalism of steve friend. this was not something he wanted to do, but he knew based on what he saw on his job, he could not be a part of something that was clearly political. rachel: so glad there are still guys like that out there. pete: i think people are going to get a similar reaction. >> i appreciate you coming on. folks, don't miss it. pete: dan and i saw each other in florida this week, we're going to see each other in florida next month november 17th in hollywood, florida. >> that's going to be awesome. pete: it's going to be great, right? joey: it was a good time last year. >> it was crazy. there were so many people there, it was awesome. i've never felt so much love.
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i didn't know people liked me. [laughter] i didn't -- i don't get out of my house ever except for date night. i'm like, wow, these people really like us. joey: don't come on here with that garbage. you know that you're loved. >> i do, i know. rachel: judge georgia judge jeanine -- judge jeanine, by the way, you get to pray with everybody in a way you don't get to at the office. pete: it's going to be a heck of a party. it's sold out six weeks in advance this year. it's going to be a packed house. if you already have a ticket the, look for e-mails for opportunities for exclusive preshow parties, book signings, meet and greets, cocktail parties. andty by the way, dan, if you go to stubhub, there are secondary tickets on the market. >> oh, man, you know me, i'm a entrepreneur. i should have bought 'em all. what an idiot! what a dope! rachel: the one business opportunity dan has missed.
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[laughter] >> i know, right, rachel? i got my tennis balls and everything. how did i miss that? i'm doing my radio show from there as well. and pete promised to come on. and, joey, i want you and, rachel, you too. i want you to commit. joey? >> i'm there. >> i missed you last time. shameful. i need you on that show. i need you on that wall, i want you on that wall. i was supposed to wrap about 20 minutes ago. joey: we love you, brother. pete: double shot of espresso. >> another one. wait, wait, i got my espresso cup. never apologize, never explain. some listener sent me this. the producers are going to kill me right now. they were in my ear about 7 minutes ago. we're going to have to go over and take over cavuto's show. all right, i'm done. rachel: give paula a hug from me. bye, dan.
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pete: former defense secretary leon panetta is issuing a warning on russia's nuclear threat writing: the probability of tactical nuclear weapons in ukraine has risen from 1.5% at the start of the world -- from 1-5% to 20-25% today. this as a new toll shows 58% of americans feels the u.s. heading into a nuclear confrontation. let's bring in retired four-star general jack keane. general, we're end spending a lot of money supporting ukraine which is perpetuating their a ability to fight russia, and now we're looking at more nuclear concerns. how does -- i guess the question i have for you is, as someone who's done strategic planning, how does this end? where does the outcome come from that doesn't include nuclear weapons? >> yeah. well, i do think the probability of the use is relatively low despite the fear mongering
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that's going on by putin and the brandishing of the use of nuclear weapons. and the reason why is it's largely low, as other analysts have come to the same conclusion to include the president and his advisory team, is that putin loses everything in the end if he does that. i mean, it'll force the united states to react. i agree with secretary panetta's comments on that. it's a must situation for the united states and nato if a nuclear weapon is dropped in southern europe and the radiation gips to spread. begins to spread. so as a result of that, you know, putin obviously has some choices about nuclear weapons. and i think he would become an international pariah condemned by the world if he did something like that. even china, who's questioning the war, i mean, president xi has questions and concerns about the conduct of the war. those are his words. and i think he would assume this is pretty reckless. so what the administration needs
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to do without equivocation, make certain that russia understands what our response would be, and it would be likely with conventional weapons, and they have to clearly understand that. and also i would share that with our allies to get them onboard. and i would talk to our adversary about this, because nobody is interested on this planet in any aggressor using a nuclear weapon and what that portends in terms of nuclear proliferation and the danger to the world at large. so there's a lot that can be done here, and i think we take it seriously. we're not flippant about this or cavalier about it. but if you look at the probability of it, i still think it remains low. pete: you're right, nobody wants a nuclear war. you're preicely right about -- precisely right about that. are we at a moment that we should reconsider the scope of it, initially there were fears would he have the capability, would he want to go further, challenge nato. at least from my calibrations at
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this point, nato is not under threat. vladimir putin couldn't take nato if he try. he can't even take ukraine, so can we make the argument that this is about the defense of europe and nato anymore when this is really about a pretty small sliver of eastern ukraine where vladimir putin is not doing well? >> well, i think, what do we do? do we just walk away? i think the ukrainians have a clear opportunity here to drive the russians out of the occupied territory that they're in. and they're controlling thousands of lives of ukrainians. we're seeing them shipping tens of thousands of children unaccompanied to russia and also hundreds of thousands of ukrainians also to russia. there's general side being committed -- genocide being committed here. i think the opportunity here to stop this and end this kind of suffering for ukraine is real. pete: but i think, general -- >> actually winning it.
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pete: i understand where you're coming from. i think the fear is world war i being a lesson that all young military officers study, does america eventually want to go into a wider war over donbas, or is there a point where we say, hey, we wish you luck, but we have our own border which is wide open and full of inhumane treatment. >> well, we've had those thoughts before. we had them about germany and hitler, and we wringing our hands -- wrung our hands, and i understand 20 years of 9/11 wars and there's a certain fatigue that you're expressing here. but i think the stakes are exceedingly high in the terms of russia's intimidation and what he's doing in europe, and they shouldn't be allowed to get away with that. and the suffering of the ukrainian people are real. and after all, we're not committing a single soldier from the united states in this commitment. we have given them about $18 billion in aid to help them with the drawdown of our military
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weapons, and that money is really being spent on replenishing those weapons. and our defense industry receives that money as do american workers. and we're spending that out of a $4 trillion federal budget. $18 billion. so for that price tag, it seems to me that the gain, what we get is stability in europe, is certainly a worthy geopolitical objective for the united states and worth the minimal sacrifice of those fundings. pete: unless we don't get the stability, and i guess that's the point of contention. we appreciate you breaking down and assessing it every weekend for us. jack keane, thank you so much, general. >> yeah. great talk to you, pete. pete: you got it. all right, the tampa bay bucs' coach is calling foul on the media's race number. >> we don't look at color. i think the minute you guys stop making a big deal about it, everybody else will as well.
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try lively risk-free for 100 days. visit listenlively.com pete: we are back with a few additional headlines. a woman with 40 prior arrests -- you might say things have gone off the rails for her -- including stealing from a car crash victim in new york city, is facing multiple charges. the man she stole from was pinned under a vehicle. her release due to new york city's sweeping to -- 2019 bail reform law. wow. and a north carolina veteran and dad who showed up for jury duty, this happened this week on mono, says he was thrown -- in monday, says he was thrown in jail for refusing to wear a mask despite there being no mask requirement
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in the state or worn by the judge with. here's what he told tucker carlson about the whole ideal. >> i got motioned in, got changed into an orange uniform. got a roll of toilet paper, towel, grab a mat, and i'm walking with inmates to a cell that i have no idea what this guy's in for, and i was there for about 2-3 hours, and then they put me in isolation until 2:00 the next day. pete: showed up for jury duty, ended up in jail. that man, gregory han, saying although there were 50-75 people in the courtroom with him, he was the only one willing to take a stand. and as i mentioned, the judge was not wearing a mask while telling him to go to jail for not wearing a mask. and those are your headlines. joey? joey: no mask around here for me, man. i'm sorry. don't send me to jail. so tampa bay's head coach, todd
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boles, is calling out the media for making his game about race. >> we coach ball, we don't look at color. >> you also understand that representation matters too, right? young, aspiring coaches or football players, they see you guys, they see someone that looks like them, maybe grew up like them, that has to mean something. >> when you say you guys and look like them means that we're oddballs to begin with, and i think the minute you guys stop making a big deal about it, everybody else will as well. joey: here to react is the firebrand at the intersection of sports and politics, clay travis. [laughter] looks like you're having fun out there. >> hey, we are ready for an incredible game here, university of tennessee is back bigtime, showdown -- [laughter] third saturday in october. we'll get to that in a minute, but, man, i absolutely loved that response. i know there's a lot of people out there watching right now
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saying way to go, coach, for firing back. look, this is what's unfortunate when you consider this is an espn if reporter lecturing, a white woman, by the way, lecturing a black head coach about why his race matters so much -- joey: yeah. >> -- in a game where, frankly, if you're a steelers fan or you're a bucs fan, all you care about is what's going to happen in the game. you don't care who's on the sideline. this thing went viral. i think 150,000 or so people liked it, just from my twitter account alone, millions of people have watched that clip. and i just am so proud of how well it's been received. you know this, twitter is often a left-wing cesspool, but i think that response just kind of solidified what's so great about sports. you get judged on the merits of your performance finish jee yeah that's exactly right. >> identity politics mixed with sports has never made sense, and
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i thought that was a perfect answer. joey: it was. and, you know, as a falcons fan, a reluctant falcons fan, i'm looking at tampa bay like, i don't know, maybe i can cheer for those guys after that. [laughter] talking about sports fans, i'm a georgia bulldogs fan, i know who you are is and where you are. tell me about tennessee and alabama. >> look, i mean, this is one of the best rivalries in all of college football. joey: yeah. >> i've got three kids though, 14, 12 and 8. they've never been alive to see tennessee beat alabama. nick saban is 15-0 against the university of tennessee since he came back to alabama. in order to truly get over the hump and argue that tennessee is back and that this is a rivalry again, sooner or later tennessee's going to have to beat nick saban. this is the best chance they've had in years. tennessee is undefeated, 5-0, going up against an undefeated alabama team, first time both teams have been undefeated since
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1989 in this storied rivalry. people are starting to show up for the tailgate scene, over 100,000 people are going to be in neyland stadium by 3:30 eastern, and as you well know, sec football is electric, and this atmosphere is going to be the best and biggest and baddest, i think, in neyland stadium since the 1990s by kickoff. joey: real quick, my bulldogs are 1-6 against nick saban. it's not easy. good luck to tennessee today. give me an upset, are we talking about clemson/fsu? you got an upset real quick? >> i like tennessee to pull off the you have set -- upset. i think tennessee gets it doned today. 35-31, vols finally get a win against nick saban. joey: right there from clay. >> get your money in right now. joey: don't forget to check out what's clicking on outkick. the one and only clay travis, appreciate you.
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>> appreciate y'all. joey: it's warnock v. walker, another georgia bulldog legend there, in my home state of georgia. ♪ ♪ >> too narrow and small and cramped a space for a woman, her doctor and the united states government. >> did he not mention that les a baby in that room -- there's a baby in that room as well. joey: our political panel weighs in on last night's debate right here next. ♪ ♪ hey, sorry i missed your game. it's okay. that's when i realized it's time to finally do the thing we've been talking about for years. so we're making plans for right now. start your financial plan today. ♪ where there's a pet there's always...this. that's why we have innovations like the maytag pet pro laundry pair. so you and your favorite sweater can forget about all about those hairy situations.
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♪ >> a patient's room is too narrow and small and cramped a space for a woman, her there and the united states government. >> did he not mention there's a baby in that room as well. >> i've not spent a minute thinking about what politician should run for what in 2024. >> i won't leave my allies, which is what senator warnock and joe biden did in afghanistan. >> one thing i have not done, i've never prestepped to be a police officer. i -- pretended to be a police officer, i am -- [inaudible conversations] >> mr. walker, mr. walker? rachel: wow, fireworks. herschel walker and senator raphael warnock pulling no punches last night as the latest polling shows the georgia senate race is still anyone's game.
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here to break down the state of the race, republic if strategist chris proud home along with judith miller. chris, i'm going to start with you. what we didn't see after the abortion comment was that the house came down. that was a drop mic moment and especially revealing because warnock is a preacher who is pro-abortion. >> i couldn't wait to talk about that part morning. [laughter] i think that's going to -- he's come a long way down. obviously, as a christian man, right, even myself to make those kind of commentses, right, to even have that kind of stance. and i think georgia voters will look at that and it'll be a reminder of where they stand and what their values are. we know georgia's a different type of state in the south, and they hold true to their values. i think's going to affect momentum. rachel: judith, democrats have definitely tried to make abortion ap issue in their -- an issue in their favor, but in
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this case not working. >> it's not clear whether it's going to work or not. i was very, very stunned by the fact that warnock was so cautious, so controlled, did not go after his opponent. by a character issue and issues that he thought would resonate. abortion, he thinks, is going to work for him because he thinks walker's position is just too extreme. and when you say to georgia voters i believe in women and their ability to make a decision rather than the government, i think that's going to play very well. rachel: hard to make the case you're for women when your wife or ex-wife says that you beat her up, but that's another story. let's move on to the race in wisconsin. so that's a very important race. it looked like senator johnson was in trouble, and then once senator johnson ran ads, jiewldty, it looks like the ads on crime are really hitting hard against mandela. >> i think they are, and i think
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mandela's really this trouble. you can see that by his outreach to president obama who won the state handily both times. obama is going to go out there, apparently, at the end of the month and give him some help. but i think the effort to tie him to biden's unpopular policies is working, and i think that basically ron johnson's missteps -- the famous mouthwash declaration are, the other things, climate change questioning -- those issues which made wisconsin voters uncomfortable are now kind of forgotten, and we're focusing more on the economy, inflation, and those are ron johnson's strong points. rachel: definitely. although i do think ron johnson's been vindicated on some of the covid stuff as we start to get more things being revealed about some of the lies told to us during the pandemic. but judy brings up a good point. obama's coming in. it is a purple state. he is popular still, and is that
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going to be enough to decouple mandela from biden? >> i certainly don't think it will be. the reality is i think ron johnson has to continue doing what he's doing, talking about being tough on crime, he's expressed the words a war on crime. we're in a tough spot right now in america, and i think being strong is going to make a difference. i think when you look at barnes' record, people look at themself and saw, your -- and say, your record doesn't reflect that. i think having former president obama will not help. i think people are tire the of not just crime, but look at the way our economy's going. he's slipping in the polls because people have money slipping out of their pockets. people are tired of gas prices being enormously high, tired of being unable to bioslys. and a lot of folk -- buy groceries. 70% of americans today have to get a second job to make ends meet. that's a powerful statistic.
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having to get a second job to make ends meet? people are tired, and i think this election is about that. it's about getting things back on track. >> i think the other problem is money. basically, republicans have i don't want raised and outspent democrats in wisconsin. $78 million for the republican pac versus about $18 million for the democrats. so, yeah, man della barnes needs help. rachel: food and gas, important things that people aren't able to get these days -- >> it shouldn't be a struggle. rachel: it shouldn't. great having you both on today, appreciate it. let's turn now to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for our fox weather update. rick: before we start, we have to wish you a happy birthday. >> thank you. rick: i won't tell you what it is, but it's a big one. she said it. 50, look great. all right, show you what's going on. it is sill hurricane season, but we are almost done, which is great news. our weather pattern is really changing.
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tropical storm cl kind of interacting with the u.s. coastline, not impacting the u.s. at all. about 18% of our typical activity. we are almost done, and our weather pattern has changed to where i think we won't be seeing anything across the u.s. mainland, which is good news. we will, however, throughout the weekend see rain showers across parts of florida as they continue with clean-up efforts after hurricane ian. rachel, back to you inside. rachel: thank you, rick. the big show tomorrow on "fox & friends" weekend. we have sean duffy, charlie hurt, maria bartiromo and chef robert irvine, but first, we end the show by shining a light on two incredible companies founded by young entrepreneurs with down syndrome. you do not want to miss this. stay with us all the way to the end. ♪ ♪
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prop 27 sends 90% of profits to out-of-state corporations in places like new york and boston. no wonder it's so popular... out there. yeah! i can't believe those idiots are going to fall for this. 90%! hey mark, did you know california is sending us all their money? suckers. -those idiots! [ laughter ] imagine that, a whole state made up of suckers. vote no on 27. it's a terrible deal for california. we win. you lose.
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apparel company, and it features catch phrases and artwork. why did can you start this company, grace? what's the message? >> spread awareness, kindness, love and shining the light. rachel: kindness, acceptance. we talk so much about tolerance and acceptance. these messages are amazing. be the light, hey, party people. is that your catch phrase? >> yeah. rachel: let it bin with me and just be -- begin with me, and just be kind. love it all. mom, what do you think? >> first of all, it's an honor to be here. we're really blessed, and we just -- the whole business has been a blessing from the beginning. >> yes. >> we had no idea where it would lead. grace started be the light in high school, painted that design, and that was, you know, it just kept growing and growing. and the people we've met and awareness, it's just been amazing. rick: grace, when did you figure out you were an artist and you
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had talent? >> well, when i was in high school, i started -- and then i learned to paint. >> that was her art teacher in high school. rick: that's beautiful. candidly kind.com is where people can go and buy this. and i'm sure you're going to sell out, they do all the fulfillment, and they're here in new york for two more days, so after you order, be patient with them because it's going to take them a little bit. rachel: these are great christmas gifts with a great cause. i love it. thanks for joining us. >> thank you. so much, guys. rachel: all right. pete, joey, what have you got? pete: excellent stuff. nate simon, ceo of # 1 pineappl. nate, the director. and his mom, lindsay. you're the ceo. tell us about 21 pineapples. >> so i'm a ceo of 21 pineapples. it's the # 1st chromosomesome,
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and pineapple means welcoming. joey: oh, wow. your shirt is right in my closet. i've been following you guys for a while now. >> thank you. >> he is known as the king of tiktok. >> yes. >> wherever we go. so we started this company to help change the perception of those with down's syndrome. one funky shirt at a time. >> yeah. >> he wears these shirts all the time, nate, he loves to be really stylish. joey: i can see. >> but we need to change the world. we need to have more inclusion, love and acceptance, and we need jobs for our children. so we created this to literally enhance their lives, give kids a future and remind if people what, nate? >> be a good rules. rick: and i need that reminder constantly. joey: what a simple and impactful statement. >> and the coolest part is, lindsay's going to show you, when you wear your shirt, you're reminded to be a good human.
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pete: and it's a beautiful shirt too. why did you decide on hawaiian shirts? >> i like the patterns and i like the colors. >> right? and we just dropped golf shirts. joey: oh, nice. listen, i don't golf, but i wear a lot of the clothes, because they're comfortable. which one of these is your favorite? do you have a favorite here? >> i like this one and that one. >> i like the one you have on. pete: the skull with the shades on it. >> it sells out every time. can i mention one quick thing? pete: yeah, real quick. >> we've also included these chevrons on our shirts, and that means we are the lucky ones to have kids with down's syndrome. it reminds people that we're part of a message and a mission. right, nate? joey: you guys are a blessing. pete: 21 pineapples.com, and today you can save 10% with the
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code fox 10. i think you're about to get busy. joey: you're going to get some business from me. pete: thanks for all you do, and i hope you make a billion dollars. >> thank you. one word, love. pete: amen. more "fox & friends" just minutes away. joey: so i like this finish. ♪ ♪ you be my sunny day, i'll be your shade tree ♪ ♪limu emu & doug♪ it's nice to unwind after a long week of telling people how liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. showtime. whoo! i'm on fire tonight. (limu squawks) yes! limu, you're a natural. we're not counting that.
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down syndrome people. we appreciate you guys joining us. last words here, grace? >> thank you. [laughter] joey: how about you? >> one word, love. rachel: oh! [laughter] pete: 21 pineapples.com and -- rick: candidly kind.com. pete: have a great saturday, everybody. see you tomorrow. ♪ ♪ neil: 24 days and counting. inflation has the majority of american voters worrying, and now fed hikes have big bank ceos saying a recession is coming. what will it mean for both parties come november? president biden is wrapping up his west coast tour today in oregon, pollsters mark penn and lee carter in a moment. welcome, everybody, i'm neil cavuto. happy to have you this very busy weekend where muse dominates -- it's always that way now.
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