tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News February 19, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PST
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♪ rachel: that was the edwards -- that is the edwards waters university triple threat marching band, performing live at the speedway at the daytona 500 which by the way starts at 2:30 p.m. today and they are a triple threat. they've got dancers, the band, two different types of dancers, they're amazing. >> they're amazing. i felt like i could pull off the shades. i need to take them off. it looks ridiculous. richard petty can do it. i can't do it. rachel: remember when i flew the f-16, my one regret was i
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didn't have off yatesers. -- aviators. i should have bought them before i did it. >> i made fun of him. those sunglasses lasted -- >> i looked at myself, i said you could do it. rachel: i would have looked so much cooler in the flight suit and this. that was a once in a lifetime -- >> you look cooler in those than i do. rachel: thanks, pete. >> just a fact. i'm looking a at the monitor. >.rachel: i need the air forceo send me back the flight suit. i want a picture with this. it was a nice moment, as well as a fashion moment. >> we're at the daytona 500 as we have been all weekend. we went to dinner last night. had a great time. i want to give a shoutout to the hyde park steak house. that staff took care -- it's hard to set up a table for 12. rachel: 12. seven of them kids. >> and they took care of us. it's great steaks. you've got to visit hyde park steak house.
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>> they were phenomenal. we were hanging out and they said reservations were sold out for weeks. and will said call rachel. rachel: rachel will make it happen. >> 15 minutes later we had a table for 12 and had a great time. everybody had steak and i'll be sending fox the bill. rachel: it was a testament to what we've experienced in florida. we experienced at the diner he's person bely. this state loves fox news. they love fox news. the steak house did too. we had a great time and met a lot of fox watchers. >> we got some cool swag, making us feel cool. >> we're going to continue the great conversation this morning. the ceo of norfolk southern railway is finally visiting east palestine, ohio, breaking his silence on the toxic train he derailment. rachel: this is weeks after the crash. residents are dealing with the
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health effects as they're pressed to return to normal. >> lucas tom l tomlinson is lin east palestine, ohio with the latest. >> reporter: the massive train derailment took place less than a mile from whatever i'm standing. many of the people in the small town of 4700 don't know what to believe. norfolk southern's ceo returned here yesterday to make the following pledge. >> i'm here to support the community and if you'll excuse me, that's where i'm headed right now to meet with some community members. >> reporter: he also added the following statement. i returned to east palestine today to meet with local leaders, first responders and group of norfolk southern employees who live in the area. every conversation today i shared how deeply sorry i am this happened to their home. we're going to do the right things to help east palestine recover and thrive again. federal, state and local officials say the air and drinking water is safe but not everyone is buying it. >> apparently they're sitting
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here and saying the air quality is safe. yet, when people enter their households they're getting sick. they're having migraines. there's people that are throwing up, bloody noses, and they're sitting back and not helping. >> reporter: some medical professionals are also voicing their concerns about these toxic chemicals. >> the biggest problem is vinyl chloride can seep into the soil and affect the ground water many that's what we worry about. we need to test the ground water, make sure it's safe to people that have wells can bathe and drink the water without fear of being poisoned. >> reporter: norfolk southern handed out $1,000 checks toes residents but only in east palestine's zip code only, not the surrounding areas. many people in the surrounding areas want that changed. former president trump is due here to visit on wednesday, g guys. >> lucas, thank you. >> worth noting had that a lot of action happened after
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president trump said he was going to visit. rachel: definitely worth noting that. for sure. >> meanwhile, china offering no apology in a meeting with secretary antony blinken in germany with chai noose chinese authorities. he said they were not interested in offering at this time an apoll l jay f -- apology for floating a spy balloon over the united states. >> there was no apology. i can also tell you, this was an opportunity to speak very clearly and very directly about the fact that china sent a surveillance balloon over our territory, violating our sovereignty and international law. i told him quite simply that was unacceptable and can never happen again. rachel: wow. that's unbelievably bland -- >> feckless. rachel: i mean i have more authority p when i put my kids in time out. it's true. they're not afraid of us and
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that's part of the scary point apt the fact they're in germany, talking about the ukraine war and russia and this is clearly the focus of our military and our pentagon and our white house, at the same time that we're seeing china getting more and more aggressive, vice president harris calling out china for deepening its relationship with moscow. listen to this. >> we are also troubled that beijing has deepened its relationship with moscow since the war began. looking ahead, any steps by china to provide lethal support to russia would only reward aggression, continue the killing, and further undermine a rules-based order.
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the american people, you see, are awe of the resolve of the people of ukraine. rachel: wasn't that he predictable, though, that russia -- people were saying this before the invasion, when there was plenty of time i think to hold off that invasion and have negotiations and keep that from happening from many points that could have happened. that said, when that happened, a lot of people were saying this is going to bring china and russia closer together. this is going to make it worse for the united states in terms of its relationship with china and here we have it. >> there was a fascinating article this week where a french intellectual, his name is emanuel todd i believe is his name, said in he's owns -- essence, world war iii in his estimation as he begun. we have divided the world in the
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west and it's essentially an economic warfare that has begun. he said the real question is, is there an exit strategy, us there an off ramp for this. it appears the united states has no exit strategy for what's happening in ukraine. if that's the case, then we have to come to grips with the idea that almost every real world, world wars have been predicated by economic wars. japan bombed pearl harbor because we sanctioned their ability to import oil. that's not excusing it. that was japan's rational. what did hitler do when he decided to invade east, he went dowdown to romania to get oil reserves. economics precede wars. >> that's why blowing up a pipeline is considered and act of war which is why the biden administration so adamantly denies what has been reported in he detail likely happened at the united states blew up the nord
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stream pipeline. it feeds into that. you watch, i stumbled upon a minute 30 of kamala harris' speech in munich. we played a portion of it. absolutely brutal. the slower you talk when you read a teleprompter, the deeper meaning it has. rachel: yeah. >> i mean, it just -- there's no -- and then all the seals in the audience were like good job. it's so unserious that if that war ha begun, the other side hao be licking their chops saying this is an advantageous administration to set the terms for a future shooting war which we hope doesn't happen by moving the chess pieces around in a way that helps them, that's the scary part. rachel: you said this administration doesn't appear to have an exit strategy out of this war. indeed, this administration has -- >> has an entrance strategy. rachel: they had an entrance
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strategy, remember. and there have been different points, different nations who have tried to bring about peace and our country has not only not been part of that peace strategy, they've actually been -- they've thwarted those peace strategies. more importantly, i think, you see what the priorities of this administration is. they are being distracted by ukraine. the chinese don't know that. our weapons have been depleted and our treasury is being depleted, billions of dollars going there as our own people suffer and we destroy our own energy capabilities. it makes no sense. you must hate america to do do all the things they're doing. >> look at the war in ukraine, increase day by day. what are we doing here. originally you could understand the he defense of a country if russia was attempting to challenge nato. if it's going for the continent, i get it. this is a give me my stuff back war which is escalated quickly.
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if you look at the last 20 years, if you look at history, this is how we get into wider wars. who wants that over donbas? you know what i mean. rachel: i would rather get into a war over spy planes. i don't want a war. but what are our priorities? our own air space? you had the general on -- >> our own border. rachel: saying we have holes in our ability to track what's going on over our air space. that's where our money needs to go, to that kind of technology. >> let's check in with ashley strohmier who has additional headlines. >> a catholic bishop is shot and killed at his los angeles home yesterday afternoon a. police say david o'connell was shot in the chest. they have not released any information about a possible suspect. he has served the church for 45 years and has been described as, quote, peace maker. pope francis named o'connell the aucauxiliary bishop of the
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archdiocese of los angeles in 2015. a woman in washington state says criminals have overtaken her home and she can't get them to the leave. the group started squatting on the property during the pandemic without paying rent and with no permission to be there. the police were kicked off by the s.w.a.t. team on wednesday. the homeowner said they're already back. she said they changed the locks but they broke in. police say it's up to her to keep them away from the property. country star chris stapleton is teaming up with pink for a new song called "just say i'm sorry" listen. >> ♪ just say i'm sorry. ♪ it's not the hardest thing to do. ♪ just say your wrong sometimes. ♪ and i'll believe you. ♪ because i love you. >> the duet comes fresh off
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stapleton's widely celebrated rendition of the national anthem. last week at the super bowl and, guys, whether you like country music or not i feel like it's pretty hard not to like chris stapleton, especially paired up with pink. it's going to be a good one. >> yeah. i mean, his voice, he's got a real country voice. >> that rendition -- thank you, ashley. take that rendition of the national anthem, i don't know, people have compared it -- i don't know which -- when you say what's the best version of the national anthem you've heard usually it's in reference to the super bowl, it's whitney houston and chris stapleton now. rachel: i still say it's whitney houston and then chris st.chrisstapleton. >> that anthem impressed our next guest as well. country sing r brreland tweeting no one wants to follow chris stapleton but i'll be singing the national anthem at the daytona 500 this weekend. >.>> he joins us on set this
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morning. you said it yourself, the bar has been set high. >.>> the bar is high. i think it goes whitney houston, chris stapleton. you're watching coaches on sideline with tears in their eyes. i was sitting there watching it like here we go. [laughter] rachel: it's true. the song, when it's done well, really does bring the emotions out. tell me bow why you like singing the national anthem. >> i love singing it for that exact reason. i think it's an emotional song. it's a song that has an incredible amount of history and it's a song that tends to bring people together and so that's part of why i make music. i make music in hopes of being able to bring people together, to inspire people. we have a flyover today as well. so it should be a good one. >> you're going to be singing in front of -- i don't know what the capacity is for this place. >> 103 to thousand. >> 103,000. rachel: it's just 103,000.
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>> no pressure. >> 10 million people watching on tv. >> you're on the start, finish line. the cars are about to go. what's going to be going through your head? >> just remembering gleaming, streaming. [laughter] rachel: home of the brave. >> you don't want to be the guy that messes up some of the words. it's not super conventional english. it's very like old english so i've done it a few times. i've done it at football games, basketball games, hock hey games but never here a nascar event and it being the daytona 500 the stakes are higher. but no pressure, right. rachel: right. >> we're sure you're going to do a great job. it's going to be beautiful. we can't wait wait to listen tu and watch the daytona 500. rachel: congratulations. what an honor for you. >> you can watch brrela in nd and the rest of the daytona 500 on fox today at 2:30 p.m.
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eastern time. >> coming up, more backlash over cnn's host attack on nikki haley. >> nikki haley is in her prime, when a woman is considered to be in her prime in her 20s, 30s, maybe 40s. [laughter] >> trey gowdy joins us, even liberal groups are calling out non-liberals. >> it gets worse every time you see it. and switching gears to a nascar ddynasty, richard p petty and hs son join us live. ♪ it feels like the first time. ♪ feels like the he very first time. ♪ it feels like the first time. ♪ it feels like the very first time.
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>> jimmy carter, the oldest living u.s. president, said he will spend his final days at home after several recent trips to the hospital. jonathan siri is live with more. >> reporter: good morning to you. will. the carter center says the former president has decided to spend the rest of his time with
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his family at home in hospice care. this comes after a series of short hospital stays according to the nonprofit which adds that he has the full support of his family and his medical team. carter's grandson, jason, a former georgia state senator to, tweeted saturday, i saw both of my grandparents yesterday. they're at peace and as always their home is full of love. back in 2015, mr. carter underwent treatment for melanoma that spread to his liver and brain, a devout christian, carter continued to teach sunday school and explained that he was perfectly at ease with whatever came. but he's responded well to treatment and was able to continue an active schedule working on international health and peace initiatives through the carter center, delivering lectures and town halls at emory university and volunteering with habitat for humanity. the ceo issued a statement saying we pray for his comfort
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and their peace and that the carter family experienceses the joy of their relationships with each other and with god in this time. and the spokesperson for the secret service tweeted rest easy, mr. president. we will be by your side. and will, at 98, jimmy carter lived longer than any other u.s. president. back to you. >> jonathan, thank you for that update. so embattled cnn host don lemon is facing backlash after saying nikki haley is past her prime at 51 years old. liberal women's advocacy group ultraviolet ripping into the anchor saying from at l lemon hs used his power and platform to undermine and demean women. he should be suspended from future political coverage indefinitely. foformer south carolina
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congressman trey gowdy joins us now. what do you make of this situation with don lemon? >> well, i actually see you're a little past your prime. is there any way i could speak to rachel this morning or do i have to talk to you. [laughter] >> i figured something like that would happen. whats is a prime? what is it? >> kataji brown jackson is older than nikki haley. he didn't say a word about her. kamala harris is older than nikki haley. it's one of the most p profoundy stupid things that i've heard someone say. he said it on cnn's morning show which means nobody heard it. [laughter] >> it has been sort of the shot heard round the world since that time, trey. and you make a great point of the selective -- i think that's
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in reference -- i think this should be applied to the outrage about the comment as well. this has never been brought up in other circumstances when, say, the political party was swapped. he didn't make this statement as you pointed out for any number of liberal women that have held high positions. >> nikki haley has seen it and heard it all before. she ran against three guys to be the governor of south carolina. she is not going to be intimidated. i think it's just -- it is bias in every form it can manifest itself. it's just so patently stupid. have you to be 35 to run for the presidency. if you're a woman and you age out of your prime at age 40, does that mean you just run for one term? i mean, don lemon is older than nikki haley. what does that say about him? >> it's really, really great
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point. let's touch on this, trey. you've got a new book out, start, stay or leave. it's out now. it's a fascinating book about your life. it's not just about your life. it's really about the way you went about making decisions in your life, trey, and helping others down that decision tree. >> yeah, we only get one shot at this gift called life, will. and i made enough mistakes for all of your viewers. i wish that i had been able to read or write this book when i was in my 20s and, you know, how we define success, the voices that we listen to, the career choices we make, all -- i mean, life boils down to decisions so if you want to have a really consequential life, we should make good decisions and that's why i wrote the book. >> if you want to learn more about the book, go pick be it up wherever you buy your books trey was on the will cain podcast.
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he wore a beanie. you can watch is on youtube as well, i believe. you'll get insightful wisdom from trey, also a conversation about his various hair styles throughout his public life so it's a good behind the scenes on the man there on your screen and i loved having him on the will cain podcast. trey, thank you so much. >> thank you, will. tell rachel hello for me. >> okay, i'll do that. up next, we go back to our featured friend, nascar legend richard petty. we'll tell you inside his garage and the family dynasty. richard petty and his son kyle join us next. ♪ i was racing with my heart and with my soul. ♪ and never looking back around the oval track, was a feeling i couldn't let go. ♪ i took the checkered flag at the finish line
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♪ rachel: boy, we love bringing you in on the real conversations that happen behind the scenes. talking dip flavors over here. earlier in the show we saw part one of pete's featured friend interview with the legendary richard petty. >> pet the at petty is the kif daytona, he has the most wins are record seven. >> we saw where his legacy started in north carolina and met more of the pet the at this family -- petty family. take a look. >> the petty story is all about racing. it's all about racing.
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♪ >> this was the last shop that petty enterprises worked out of. to begin with, i wanted to reveal the museum and we had customers coming in wanted a bigger motor, bigger tires. >> why wouldn't you want your car fixed by the king. >> i have my daughter here. it's still in the family. >> we do restorations and aftermarket. the number one thing we want to sell is our parts. so we actually manufacture strut bars, covers, catch cans, stuff like that, with our brand, the petty garage. >> if you want adjustments made, you can do it here. >> anything you can think of, we can do it here. >> my wife has a corvette, it's been sitting in the garage. >> we can fix it. >> we can make it better. >> might have to do that. >> we've got a new customer
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here. >> >> then we've got different kinds of parts and different areas of our career. this is the daytona one here. >> daytona winning car from 1979. >> '79. >> what makes that car special? >> it won. it's a winner. probably the only team in the whole world that has the whole team in the hall of fame. my dad, myself, my brother and my crew chief is the cousin. it's a family affair. >> where did this come from? petty blue. >> a mistake. we had a little bit of white, little bit of blue. didn't have time to tape it off so we poured it together and once we seen it we said that's a pretty good color. ♪ >> my daughter, she runs the
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museum for us. >> you run the museum. >> i try. >> the family business continues. >> yes, it does. >> do you have a favorite part of the museum? >> my favorite thing is my mom and dad in the back. >> you're a winner to me, you old daddy rabbit. >> thanks, dear. >> just that part of the movie, because it came out when my children were young and now my grandchildren watch the movie and they just get so excited when they hear my dad and they never had the privilege of knowing my mom so they get excited when they hear their meemaw talk. i'm proud of all of it. i was around it all my life. and, you know, now that i'm here and in the middle of this i learned more about him in the last seven and-a-half years that i've worked for him. ♪ >> presidential medal of freedom. >> that's right.
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it's what people receive for what you've done in your lifetime that people recognize and racing just put me out there to be able to do the things that i could. we did a lot of other things a that without a good background in racing would not have allowed me to do that. >> absolutely. >> so that is really, really something special, way above racing. >> it was something to see. let's bring in richard petty, legendary race car driver and team owner of legacy motor club and kyle petty, richard petty's son and former nascar driver as well. thanks for being here. what a treat to spend the day with you in north carolina. >> we had a good time. we had found out all the neighbors found out you was coming, we had to put a no
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visitor deal because everybody wanted to see what y'all was doing. >> it's a lot of fun. it's great to see you at daytona. one story that didn't make it in there, your 200th win happened at this track on the 4th of july and ronald reagan was there. rachel: what? >> the first time a president president had ever been to the track. >> right. we won the race on the last green flag lap, side to side with kyle yardboro. i was pretty excited. kyle was so excited that he stopped one lap before the race was over and wound up third instead of second. i think the president couldn't understand us running 200-mile an hour and the smoke flying from the tires rubbing each other so took his breath too. rachel: did you get the meet the president? did you get to meet reagan. >> oh, yeah. oh, yeah. we went up to the booth and a talked to him a little bit when the race was over they shut down
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the garage area and all the crews and drivers and the kids and stuff got to come and meet and eat kentucky fried chicken with the president of the united states. >> it tone get doesn't get betn that, nascar race, kentucky fried chicken and the president. >> kyle said he appreciated the way you i took out that fence when we were racing go-carts. i haven't read your new book yet. i practiced the lesson from the book. >> you practiced what i breach. i want you to know, i you called my dad as soon as i saw that and i said let's add another name to the list of potential drivers. your name is on the list. >> we won't have time in a minute and-a-half that we have left, you laid out a lot of family history and your experiences. >> during covid like anybody else you had the opportunity to
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be home. my dad told me so many stories, my grand dad who won the first race here they in 1959, my son and my wife and my little boy, they said you've got to put all this stuff down, man. rachel: that's right. >> so this is my story, a little bit with his story. and it was enjoyable to write. i hope you enjoy reading it. light reading on the plane ride back to new york. >> i found out a bunch of stuff i didn't know. lel.[laughter] >> he did know the story of the cops bringing me home when you was 8 years old. that's a crazy story. >> i want to ask you this. how old were you when you started racing? i had youth racers out here, guys as young as 7 years old. >> my dad wouldn't let me start until i was 21. they talked his mother into letting him run at 18. >> the first time my dad let me in a race car to drive on a
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racetrack, he brought me here. he put me out here, we ran 192 miles an hour and he's saying there's a bump over here, you've got to watch over here, like your dad would teach you how to drive down a city street, my dad taught me here. >> i looked like you, will. i took the flag. i was right next to the flag. rachel: i love the family as patient of this. it's beautiful -- aspect of this. it's beautiful. i will read it on the plane. >> the book is swerve or die. predictions, who do you like? >> right now, there's 40 drivers and all of them's winners. okay. after they run a few laps, eliminates some. by the end of the race you'll have one winner many nobody knows. that's the thing about daytona. it's a crap shoot from the word go. you've got to be in the right place at the right time a and is sometimes it's not the decision you make, it's the decision
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somebody else makes. that's what makes daytona so so exciting to watch the whole cotton pick being race. picking race.>> what do you th. >> this is the only race when you win this race you're a daytona 500 champion, not a winner. you're a champion. that goes with you the rest of your life. i got joey logano. we're friends. i've got him coming off the championship to be the champion of the azythromycin very of the daytona 500. >> richard and kyle petty, what a pleasure to spend time with you. thank you for being our few fead friend. >> we enjoyed it. >> still ahead, a worship marathon, a kentucky school has opinion praying and singing around the clock. they have not stopped for more than 10 days. two students join us next with what's in inspiring the meaningful movement. rachel: and fuel your daytona party with race day snacks, the mmacklemores are of course at te
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grill. ♪ i don't need dollar bills to have fun tonight. ♪ i don't need no money.ch oo♪ after years of chasing the big idaho potato truck... i finally caught it. oh man. always look for the grown in idaho seal. i've never been healthier. shingles doesn't care. but shingrix protects. proven over 90% effective, shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older. shingrix does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. an increased risk of guillain-barré syndrome was observed after getting shingrix. fainting can also happen.
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university's chapel service has turned into a marathon meeting of prayer. asbury university students began praying february 8th and now you the viral service is prompting talk of, quote, a nationwide christian revival. asbury student body president and executive editor join us now. it's wonderful to have you both here. i'll start with you, alexandra. this is not the first time your university has had a revival, isn't that right? >> yes, that is right. we had one in 1970. i believe another one in 2006. it's just amazing. you see pictures now like that are like -- you see an image from 1970 and you see people in the exact same position now and it's just -- it's absolutely beautiful. rachel: so t tell me -- i've never been to one of these
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before. what would i feel? what would i see if i walked into that -- i think it's the hughes auditorium, is that right? >> yes, that's right. it's in hughes. i feel it's more than just emotions or just an experience. you're encountering the holy spirit so that looks different for a lot of people. some people it means they just get filled with this like joy and other people it means they're sitting down and it's just peaceful and quiet. but you can physically feel the tangible presence of the holy spirit for sure. it varies but it's so beautiful at the same time. rachel: so many of us grown-ups looking at what's going on in the country and the world and youth culture. we're really shocked to see this thirst there appears to be for god in the lives of young people. people are crossing state lines to come to this service. what do you think is drawing them here? obviously, you'll say the holy spirit but what is going on in the culture that's causing them
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to look somewhere else for that sort of fulfillment? >> yeah, i mean, i think that -- i think it points to there being a universal truth and universal comfort and joy that far exceeds any circumstances that we may be encountering and i think one answer to your question is pain and loneliness. i can't name one person who hasn't experienced either of those things. especially in these past couple years, and so i think that's your answer. i think that everyone is looking for truth and everyone's looking for joy and many are finding it here. rachel: yeah, allison brings up a good point. so much of the interaction that a young people are having is this virtual sort of fake connection and here they are in a real setting, meeting with human beings. there's no tech there. it's just -- it's just praying and that sort of community. what are young people telling
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you when they come out of that room of what they're feeling and what -- how it's changing their lives? >> i witnessed chains being broken of things allison mentioned, anxiety, depression, suicide ideation. one thing i'll never forget is seeing my friends and other college students kneeling and praying before the altar, arms wrapped around each other. they're coming out of it with hope in their eye, unlike anything i've seen to this extent, to this scale and it's so amazing and just i'm still in awe. we're here like on the tenth or 11th day and god is still moving through these people and through us and it's just been amazing to see. like it's just uniting like our generation but then also the other generations to us too when there has been that divide and so it's just amazing to see the god of unity just completely shine right now. >> it's funny that you say that people are shocked to see our
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generation this way and i think we are too. [laughter] >> to be honest. [laughter] rachel: oh, wow. you're right. he is a god of unity and, boy, does our country need it now more than ever. allison and alexandra, thanks for joining us today and thanks for bringing our country hope. boy, do we need that now. thank you. >> thank you so much. >> thank you. rachel: all right. many coming up, nascar star kevin harvick will hit the track today for his last daytona 500. but first, he joins us live with what's next for his future. plus, fuel your daytona party with race day snacks, the great macklemores are next. ♪ joy ride. ♪ move y across the night like e separate wind. ♪ joy ride. ♪ when your hopes and dreams
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can say that they drove race cars at a very young age if they didn't do these and it's just -- it's really cool and it's really special being able to do it. rachel: those kids were so great, we decided to keep them around and of course feed them. [laughter] >> let's check in with them and the mclemore boys, john and john two. we've got hungry little guys, huh? >> we do. >> we are going to be feeding these guys right here and when you're at daytona, you need to do something that's like fitting for the daytona raceway. we're going to do a racetrack pulled pork recipe in the shape of a triangle. you take the crescent rolls, two cans, star them out in the shape of circle or racetrack. >> cheese, pulled pork, more cheese, barbecue sauce. >> great leftovers. rachel: looks good. >> there we go. >> barbecue sauce.
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jalapenos. >> cheese. >> real quick, this is a breakfast one, with bacon, sausage, hash browns, cheese, eggs, you name it. it's a 12 to 15 minute recipe on the masterbilt pizza oven. i did mac and cheese, baked beans, all in the pizza oven. we are going to put it on, dad's going to bring one off. i'm going to let these guys taste the breakfast one. >> you ready? this goes in the pizza oven for 12 minutes. the barbecue's already cooked. we're going to slide it in. and we're going to show you guys -- >> there we go. >> that's the finished product. >> beautiful right there. >> i'm going to try it. >> i've been with you guys. i'm going to come by and get more food later on, guys. >> that looks great. thank you so much. rachel: getting me hungry.
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all right. after 23 nascar seasons race aing star kevin harvick is hitting the track today for his very last daytona 500. >> here to he reflect on his nascar career and exciting plans moving forward, former daytona champion, 2007, question von 20. thank you for being here. >> i appreciate you having he me. >> i know you love racing. >> well, it's interesting because, for me, it's just another plan. i'm a planner, so i've been fortunate to plan things out for next year. coming into the year, we wanted to have as many things set aside as possible so we can be competitive, concentrate on the competition and do the things that we have to do. i've been fortunate to be in a position to be successful and be a part of this this sport. my family's grown up in this sport, and i'm looking forward to today and hopefully having a chance to win. will: kevin, the sport has changed a lot. pete and i were hanging out
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yesterday talking about nascar -- rachel: is that what guys do? [laughter] will: well, we kid. i mean, i first got back into nascar in the late '90s, watching a lot of guys who are gone, and my buddy joey was i saying, look, when kevin retireses, it's the end of an era of a lineage of drivers that have a connection back to the earn earnhardts9 and the petties. >> i guess that's a polite way of saying i'm old. [laughter] you know, when i look back at when i came into the sport, it's the obviously different. it's a different generation, but it's very similar to when i came into the sport because a lot of those guys were at the end of their career and retiring, and obviously, i took over for dale when he died in 2001. but it's that same evolution, and i think as you look at that, it's the very important for the sport to be able ore fresh and -- to refresh and do new things. for me, i got to race against a
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lot of the older guys and the whole new generation that i'm going to be fortunate to be talking about as we go forward. pete: and you're going to be joining the fox nascar booth. so you're not going anywhere. >> that's right. i'm not going anywhere. i can't not work. i just needed some flexibility. i have a 10-year-old and a 4-year-old. key land are vases --key land races all over the world, and mom looks at me, like, am i going to do all this by myself? fortunate to have a new opportunity with fox and be in the booth. i don't know if mike's going to be the able to handle clint and i in the booth, but it's going to be to fun and something that i enjoy. rachel: kevin, we want to well welcome -- welcome you to the fox family. >> thank you. i appreciate that. will: enjoy your time today, your last laps around the daytona 500. pete:9 and by the way, you still have some fans. rachel: this is the pete's little guy. >> i love it. pete: full body suit. >> i love it.
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i'm going to have to get some brighter socks to match you. >> take a look at those stocks. pete: come on up, guys. thank you so much, kevin, appreciate it. do not miss the daytona 500 at 2:30 p.m. eastern time on fox. what a blast it's been to be here with you. will: you guys have a good sunday, watch and race -- pete: and then -- go to church first -- will: then watch the race. pete: then watch the race. ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. thanks so much for joining us. welcome to "sunday morning futures." i'm maria bartiromo. today, chaos and corruption in america. first, fema finally claim ares to assist ohio after a train derailment spills hazardous, potentially cancer-causing chemicals into the ground, the water and the air. after two weeks of initially refusing any aid for republican-led ohio claiming that the damage was not eligible. >> hey, guys.
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