tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News April 29, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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hi, i'm jill and i've lost 56 pounds on golo. hi, i'm barry and i've lost 42 pounds. jill and i are a team. if she tells me to do something, i usually jump on board. golo was doable, it's realistic, and it's something we can do the rest of our lives. >> looking at a shot of green bay, wisconsin. i was just asking shane, how's the weather in wisconsin south of green bay?
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it looks really good, doesn't it? rachel: city waking up without a quarterback. we will see. will: we are going to have the kid, she's got nothing. leaving blue skies behind us. it is like i'm talking to a wall. she's full of life, passion and opinions in the slightest hint, all the lights go down. rachel: except i through todd office set yesterday because he said he didn't thing -- this thing my nephew with the avalanche in hockey. pete: you predicted they would win the stanley cup yet again based on your opinion for your nephew and that was all you need. they are on their way but this is the first round. rachel: i don't get into the details.
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what do you think of this? will: i like it. pete: it's okay. rachel: clear skies. if we look forward we are looking out the window and it is raining hard in new york city. will: thanks for being with us, 8:00 eastern time. remember when the supreme court before the supreme court decided in the dobbs decision to end roe versus wade there was a pressure campaign against justices because the draft opinion was leaked and justice roberts said we will find out who did it and a year later we still don't know who leaked that draft. they did an internal investigation, still have no idea but justice alito speaking to the wall street journal says he thinks he might know who did it. he said i have a pretty good idea who is responsible but
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that's different from the level of proof needed to name somebody. the leak created an atmosphere of suspicion and distrust, those of us thought to be in the majority thought about the draft opinion, it targets assassination, they might be able to stop the decision in dobbs by killing one of us. really strong words. you get the sense he and his office probably know who it is. maybe we will never know. rachel: you talked a lot about chief justice's role making sure the internal investigation instead of bringing in the fbi and wanting to keep things tight for collegiality, this is justice alito stepping out saying i want everyone to know i know what happened here and it is kind of a little bit he is crossing what the chief justice wanted to have happen. he doesn't want to sit and discuss who is out to kill
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pro-life justices or justices -- will: a good observation. roberts would not want alito to say this. we will go off the wall because it has been one year since the dobbs draft opinion was leaked. rachel: since the draft opinion was leaked, not only were justices lives put in danger but we have had 80 pro-life senders that give away free diapers, milk, and all kinds of services to people who have a pregnancy and need help, 80 of them have been terrorized. they've had molotov cocktails thrown at them. they are not identified, not a priority for the fbi. they don't care about the mystic terrorist attacks in america. pete: the cut ability of the court is at stake. keeping a lid on it doesn't
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help that credibility, you can only do it by finding out who it is, punishing them and restoring credibility to the courts. pete: to the southern border the border crisis continues, 51 illegal immigrants located in a single stackhouse has border patrol teams in el paso uncover 165 stash houses in the region. that is the front line of what is happening when it comes to the crisis. once you are over the line, there's the question of what happens to everybody in the country specifically when it comes to children. we've done this story, there are numbers, how many children are in essence lost within the system in america. will: republican senators demanding to know how we lost 85,000 illegal or migrant children over the last two years.
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they crossed, we identified who they were, presumably took information about them, policed them. rachel: potential abusers. will: to your point, people could traffic or abuse them. or child labor. we can't find, we don't know where 85,000 kids are. rachel: remember when donald trump was separating children from adults trying to figure out are the is truly the parents are not. if you come over with a child you are prioritized. a lot of people claiming that is my kid. they were separated. this caused uproar in our country. aoc went down to the border. don't know if she's been down there since. she cried right outside, has she been where many of these kids end up? has she been at the
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slaughterhouse, trying to pay off the money that they owe the cartels? has she been in the field trying to find out, to locate these children? 85,000, not a people. when you hear these people talk about compassion, just know that if it doesn't meet their narrative she will abandon them as she abandons, as the cartels abandoned children in the middle of the desert. i spoke earlier this morning to two women who were trafficked in the united states. one of them came over because she was told she was going to be in the hospitality business and was held as a slave and put in the sex industry, the other through foster care system. these things happen. here they talk how devastating this could be. >> very important for everybody to learn the sign and identify
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the signal because the symptom, the dynamic of what is involved in the trafficking but many many -- >> when somebody does this we need long term, cannot be only one time, one month, 30 days. it is a very long process to heal. these are our children and women and men and boys. trafficking isn't only women, only girls, only boys. it's a human issue. rachel: it is sad that our government is complicit in the last leg of the jersey helping the cartels, connecting them with their accomplices in the country and handing over
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innocent, vulnerable women and children. pete: hunter biden is playing the part of starving artist. will: he still living a lavish lifestyle. >> reporter: good morning. a trip to arkansas could provide an interesting glimpse into the finances of the president's son. he' s headed to independence county where his team is tasked with expanding to a judge why hunter has petitioned to reduce child support payments to the mother of his 4-year-old child. in a thursday filing roberts's attorney accuses hunter of distorting his financial capabilities to provide less and seeks to have the court for center to reveal how much he is paying high-powered attorneys. mister biden claims to be nothing but a yale educated attorney, artist to somewhat financially destitute and need to child support adjusted but for an artist living on meager means mr.
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biden is living lavishly. house oversight but he chair james comer offered this. >> arguing he can't afford child support, we've seen millions of dollars, says a lot about this. >> reporter: congressman comer has been leading the investigation into hunter biden's business dealings which he says resulted in multiple family members getting rich off of the biden name. no final ruling is expected in monday's child support hearing but since this dispute so heavily relates to finances, the public could learn a lot. rachel: a lot of people think he had sex with this stripper, she was a stripper and a grad student. she was in grad school. she has outsmarted hunter biden
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on so many levels, forced him into this paternity test, where it was confirmed he was the father and when he tries to pretend he doesn't have money, wait a minute, she brought in an expert witness whose an expert on hunter's a laptop, happens to be a nemesis of the biden family. she's going to use that laptop to prove he does have the money. we talk about this case and break it down not just on the laptop and the mother here but also little navy biden, the daughter who has been rejected not just by hunter but also jill and joe, the grandparents, haven't found in in their heart as millions of grandparents have across the country, when their children fail, to open their home and heart and wallets. pete: there are plenty of broken situations. it takes grandparents and other family members have to wrap
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their arms around situations that are less than optimal. a classic example of that. cannot even count someone as a grandchild, self-evidently is -- rachel: they have a huge house, the white house that you see behind us, the people's house, there's plenty of room for little navy. this says a lot, reveals a lot about the values of the biden family. good luck to navy. she deserves every penny of benefit did come from china. will: deputies investigate a shooting in cleveland, texas but led to five people dead including 8-year-old child. police say the shooting happened inside a home and they are looking for a suspect to used an ar 15 rifle. they believe the shooter was intoxicated. several other people are being
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treated for injuries. doctors sounding the alarm over outbreak of brain infections in the vatican. health officials report a spike in cases of 300% in clark county area of nevada. they've never seen anything like it warning it could be a result of weakened immune system developed during get covid 19 during lockdown. if untreated these brain infections could be fatal. turning to a foxbusiness alert, reuters reporting the of the ic planning a takeover, first republic bank, making it the third bank to collapse since march as the of the ic led to asking jpmorgan chase and company and pnc financial services to submit their bids to purchase first republic tomorrow. i had a parenting do you bait this week, slow on the pictures. not yet. my son west, probably doesn't want to be on tv, this is for
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you. i told it. west comes home a week or 2 ago and says i need a haircut. my buddies have but me significant money that i won't get this specific haircut. it is called the 9 haircut my famous from the original run although. he did this in the world cup so his coach would notice he had an injury, then he would look at the stupid haircut and not the injury. he got the dumbest haircut he could imagine so now i'm in a parenting debate. do i let west get this haircut? rachel: how much is the back? pete: a couple hundred. will: he's resolution. he says i want to do this. in this parenting do you bait if i stop him do i teach him hair is important? i like that he doesn't care. am i supposed to tell his -- you can't take your friend's
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money, if they want to do that, that is their thing. i said how much money have you seen? about 1/3 of it. my friends are good for it and another life lesson. thinking about these life lessons, i could only come back to you are allowed to get the haircut and i gave it to him. you see this picture. rachel: oh no! will: he had to have at the entire week at school. pete said he would not have allowed it to happen. rachel: now that i see it matter how bad it is. this is -- character building. i would have said no because of the vanity issue. will: i want him to -- doesn't care about his hair.
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pete: it is a shenanigan thing. betting at school. rachel: there are worse shenanigans. will: the first step, west will do it. pete: i love the will psycho analyzes every aspect of parenting. will: and back to the 0 guard. rachel: good job. will: we will have a guest tomorrow to talk about it. rachel: up next keeping parents out, teachers claim their school forced them to lie to mom and dad about their child's gender identity. one of them joins us next. ...everyday products... ...designed smarter. like a smart coffee grinder - that orders fresh beans for you. oh, genius! for more breakthroughs like that... ...i need a breakthrough card... like ours! with 2.5% cash back on purchases of $5,000 or more... plus unlimited 2% cash back on all other purchases! and with greater spending potential,
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rachel: the race for the white house still up for debate, one thing that does not seem to be whether candidates are up to primary debates or not, with the dnc not letting primary challenges faced primary -- biden and trump suggesting he will skip the primary, what should candidates do? should they be required to participate in the debate? we start with you, chris. do you think the presidential candidates in the primary and
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later on after we select primary candidates should be forced to debate? >> the debate is a strong part of the process. we have to see how they react under pressure. answers come out of their mouth when they are under pressure, an important process. rachel: do you want to see robert kennedy junior debate president biden? >> absolutely. more transparency rather than less transparency especially at a time the trust of the government is at an all-time low we need accountability, we need people to answer questions. rachel: trump has suggested he doesn't think he needs to debate his rivals because they are so much lower in the polls, do you want to see him debate ron desantis, nikki haley? >> both sides should debate. it's part of the process. there's so much going on people need to hear everyone running
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for office. one of the reasons president biden does not want to debate is he has no accomplishments. we saw that from his reelection, he didn't cite one accomplishment. rachel: let's talk about some of the topics, the issues animating this election. abortion, we saw the dobbs case, everything back to the states but a lot of consultants and politicians are weighing how this will play in the presidential race. how long does this rate for you? >> is a democrat it is very important. we should be entitled to the freedoms we've always had. there's also national security that is top of mind, the economy, so many issues we need answers on and as of voter i would like to hear from all the potential candidates on where they stand. rachel: you said it is about the economy for you.
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abortion, something you want to discuss? >> absolutely not. rachel: you are fine with states departing it - deciding it? >> that's the way the government is constructed. i believe we need to focus on the economy and borders. we are destroying our country by what is happening on the southern border and we need to look at that and fix it. rachel: the republican parties trying to brand itself as the party of parents. there's teachers being told they can't tell parents their child is transitioning. do you think the government needs to be involved or have a discussion about the role of the state versus the role of the parent? >> love to hear debate on the subject. everyone has to manage their
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household a certain way and control that domain to a certain degree. rachel: it's unbelievable to me to think you could make a decision like that. i see a hypocrisy about public schools having the ability to hide something like that from parents which can't imagine what would happen if there was a teacher secretly baptizing kids in school. >> that is terrifying. the issue, we should be more careful and, getting involved, that they are -- they really are who they really are. very confused thing for our kid. rachel: what do you think about
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attaching the money, school choice, parental choice and education, giving the money to the family. how do you feel on that issue that you see this play out? >> it's important to give parents the choice where they send their child to school, wealthy families, only the poor families are not able to make those choices and we see how fiercely teachers unions fight school choice because they don't want to be held accountable. i think it is a bad idea for members. people want to do well, people go into teaching because they want to connect with students and be held accountable to the organization the doesn't want them to be held accountable is the teachers unions. you see black and brown families rallying for charter schools, teachers unions just push them away. i believe in school choice but
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also funding public education. rachel: a great point, not just the teachers unions but the politicians who claim to represent minorities like barack obama. you are a democrat. tell me how you feel about school choice. i'm fascinated how democrats feel. >> even as a democrat i choose to send my children to private school. i believe they are getting more education that is appropriate to them. i wish everybody had the choice to do that, some things you agree with, and the democrats. rachel: i am curious how much covid change, raise a hand, the idea about school choice was covid a factor and how was it revealed?
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was that a factor in the decision on school choice? >> we went to private school beforehand. rachel: your desire to have other people have the choices you had in terms of education? >> i have seen it play out differently. >> school choice is a civil rights issue. everything else in america, we should have free choice. parents should be able to send their child to a place, public, private or some other opportunity, homeschooling if you will because tax dollars, you pay them, you should be able to direct them accordingly. school choice is the underground railroad in our modern day society. rachel: great panel, thanks so much. keeping parents out, teachers claim their school forced them to live to moms and dads about
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rachel: two middle school teachers suing their school district claiming they were required to live to parents about their children's gender identity. they teachers staff at test -- say a staff presentation said they could, quote, not reveal a student's gender status to those without legitimate need for information without the student's consent, including parents or caretakers. joining us, the attorney, to join us. let's start with this. you got this from the district, this instructive don't tell
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people who aren't necessary, including parents. what are your thoughts? >> my thoughts were the district, my employer is violating my constitutional rights. my freedom of religion, under threat of termination to lie to the parents that i serve and the second is the free-speech piece. i was very taken aback. pete: the word lie you use, clearly at the lie of omission. you can't tell parents, is at the other kind of law, i to sc? were you not supposed to respond to that parent >> i was told to tell parents it was outside the context of this meeting.
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and i was only allowed to discuss classroom instruction, homework, and assignments. pete: elizabeth's attorney brings up first amendment issues, set aside how scandalous and ridiculous and immoral it is to say parents don't have a say in their children. there's a constitutional -- elizabeth has a right to speak, their school to standing in the way of her constitutional first amendment right. >> the school is violating parents fundamental rights to raise their own kids but in addition, compelling her to speak in a way that violates her faith and kids express view she disagrees with and to deceive parents participating in social transition. she is supposed to you students legal name but with the kids, they are supposed use the preferred name. it is actively deceiving parents, blatantly unconstitutional.
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will: that is forced, not just what you can say, they are forcing her to speak in a certain way which is a lie. >> absolutely, compelled speech. in policies like this have been struck down. we are confident this would be struck down. we are seeing proliferation of these policies nationwide. we hope to stem the tide in this case. will: in the school district they say the district is committed to providing a safe and positive environment that enables students to learn and actualize their unlimited potential to excel as educators. part of that commitment to student learning, the district observes under federal and state laws. i hear that schools don't just hide this from parents but encourage it among many children. it is a positive push. is that something you've witnessed?
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schools are in fact helping kids down this path to transition? >> anytime -- the school has a legitimate reason to step between children and their parents and if we are teaching these kids it is okay to live to their parents about their identity at school, that pushes them down this path. at the school where i work, there is a big push towards that. there's a lot of displays in almost every classroom. kind of encouraging students to accept a certain point of view rather than focusing on learning. will: sending your kids to school so they can be taught the value of deception. not just taught the value of it but a system where deception is part of the education.
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it is stunning. thank you for being with us this morning. thank you. straight ahead, biden pushing americans to go electric. evs drive cling about the process to assemble them is not. pete and i will go off the wall to show you next. he stole the show, the nfl draft, living his make a dream wish. this cancer survivor, a star, coming up. >> je t ass, , jets,s, je jets! mcdonald's linebacker, iowa state, let's go.
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will: the biden administration is pushing americans to transition to electric vehicles. they claim cars can drive clean, the process to assemble those cars not so clean. pete: let's go off-the-wall to learn the real cost of the electric vehicle revolution. we know joe is pushing and, there he is with his mascot in the electric car. if you create the batteries the power these cars it is not just cars, what about trucking industry, truckers that move everything across the country, you need could on minerals. a lot of them don't come from the united states. will: we can go to crackle minerals necessary to make ev batteries.
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just showing you where production is, lithium, australia. the key as we go through, you look at manganese in south africa, the us is not one of the leading producers. pete: they have one production operation in the united states, 0 in the united states. if you look at nickel, one mine operating the nickel concentrating in the united states. think about the massive geographic area we have. as opposed to indonesia which has most production capacity. will: we talk about china dominating the market, part of it is what they have at home. and cobalt. pete: kongo has the highest level of production where china is making a play. one domestic mining operation. if you have one vulnerability, you have almost all those vulnerabilities, those components create the batteries.
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we don't have just one but a ton of them. will: you brought up congo, the leader in several of these materials that are necessary, 2 thirds of the world's cobalt, they are part of a greater african domination of copper. pete: you've got geopolitical concerns why this is significant, china is working to take more control over what goes on. then the human rights concerns, the reality of a form of modern day slave labor, younger, local kids being exploited. the decision is do i go to school, learn more, and power myself or work in a dangerous, dirty mine to feed my family. these big companies have plenty of labor and say take your choice. will: it reveals the conflicting priorities are inherent hypocrisy. on the one hand saying we want to make the world better for human rights but at the same
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time we want to electric vehicles, or we want to make the world better for climate change and the environment, but we also want electric vehicles. what is happening in africa, not just human rights abuses but what happens to farmland, to the environment. we spend so much time looking for things like bauxite which is used to make aluminum, replacement for the metal in our cars. will: if you want a battery to power your car, steel is heavier so you switch to aluminum but you've got to have those products to do it, they are tough to get at. mining companies are requiring hundreds of square miles for operations. it is almost of this idea that if we are going to save the environment we have to destroy the environment at the same time. there's a study showing 200,000 acres of farmland will be destroyed to mine bauxite. will: environment and human rights abuses, and you're making this push for electric vehicles. than there is the national security applications.
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what have you done when you empower those with those rare earth materials? the united states is one of the leaders in fossil fuels, the source of our independence, the source of our strength. if you shifted this electrical model, who benefits? who has the resources? who has the world's power? the answer, you're not going to lie, it is china. pete: g wh's gigawatt hours, 77% of it is created in china. fast forward, glimpse at the future, that doesn't change that much. they are still at the top of that. mid, the united states at 10%. they have the market cornered on what we are obsessed with, which is electric vehicles. will: not only do they have these materials at home but they've artie got into africa or south america and set up their relationships to bring those materials to china, to
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make the evs that we are compelled by the government to purchase. pete: we are subsidizing this push for ev giving credits to other types of vehicles. it is taxpayer dollars supporting the ability for china to corner that market. we talk about this electric vehicle a little bit and have a graphic that shows the types of components, all electric vehicle, we talk about cobalt, that is the battery, the bottom four, the battery is no longer in the front, it is in the bottom. will: that is the car, everything going into it. you can see the portions of the vehicle made from aluminum, we talked about bauxite that comes from places like africa and dependence on copper when it comes to whether elements in the electric traction. the entire ev vehicle, there you have it, from the materials in africa to the power in china, what it means if you want to go green.
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pete: if you want to go green, maybe you are not going green out all. what if you want to take that road trip across the country? in your family vehicle, you don't know where you plug it in or how you make it happen. rachel, over to you. rachel: i to not want a vehicle that makes my country more dependent on china. thanks. we begin with your headlines. a story showed by pro publica shows train cars stuck, forcing kids to go miles out of their way or worse, climb over the trains just to get to school. the mile-long trains stall when they are waiting to enter into an already crowded railyard. one student says she's nervous to cross as cars sometimes start moving without warning. the problem has been reported for years. has reportedly gotten much worse in recent months.
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parents say the train company has refused to share a train schedule with the school. get pete buttigieg on that one. tornadoes and thunderstorms in c florida forcing space x to delay the launch again. space x inspected the system and pushed back the launch to today. and an update in an update, citing severe weather, space x says they will now aim for tomorrow instead. let's turn to rick reichmuth for our fox weather forecast. >> reporter: more severe weather in florida, they had an incredible week with severe weather, hail that's very anomalous, up to 3 inches. a lot of tornadoes and today, severe threat this afternoon. tornado threat where you see this read. red. all part of this storm that brought tornadoes yesterday or a lot of severe weather from texas, that storm is across the deep south of this afternoon.
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florida takes aim for severe weather. rachel: the cancer survivor who took the nfl draft by storm. he joins us next. ♪ jets, jets, jets! mcdonald's linebacker, iowa state, let's go! now i feel free to bare my skin, thanks to skyrizi. ♪(uplifting music)♪ ♪nothing is everything♪ i'm celebrating my clearer skin... my way. with skyrizi, 3 out of 4 people achieved 90% clearer skin at 4 months. in another study, most people had 90% clearer skin, even at 5 years. and skyrizi is just 4 doses a year, after 2 starter doses. serious allergic reactions and an increased risk of infections or a lower ability to fight them may occur. tell your doctor if you have an infection or symptoms, had a vaccine, or plan to.
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>> with the 15th pick in the 2023 nfl draft, the new york j-e j-e-t-s, jets, jets, jets, select will mcdonald, linebacker, iowa state, let's go. will: that was kyle stickles, 13-year-old cancer survivor who stole the show during opening night of the nfl draft. rachel: he was diagnosed with a rare bone cancer at 11. now cancer free since last june, his dream of announcing his pick came true thanks to make a wish foundation. will: kyle joins us now. good morning, kyle. >> good morning. will: i can already tell the answer to this question in this moment. you are not nervous now.
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when you walked on stage in front of that crowd, live event, huge crowd, you will announce the pick for the new york jets. a little bit nervous? can you hear me? >> can you repeat the question? will: were you nervous? >> i was a little nervous. i would say once i got out there and started saying stuff, i kind of let it go. rachel: you survived cancer. you say sport helps you get through that period of time. working with make a wish, you could make any wish you wanted and you chose this why? >> yeah. i am a huge jets fan, and fan of the draft. an opportunity to announce the jets first round draft.
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pete: how many times did you rehearse this? did you know you were going to say that? was any of it in the moment? what was your plan? >> i rehearsed a lot in the upcoming weeks leading up to the draft. pete: you rehearsed everything except the name you had to read mcdonald's. are you excited about will mcdonald? >> definitely. it will be a good year. i can't wait for the coming season. will: you started off, jets fans, incredible well. are you going all the way this year? >> i think they definitely could. hopefully. fingers crossed. hopefully we can get back to the playoffs. rachel: we are so happy that
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you are doing well, and how much you practiced that. you blue everyone away. we are super impressed and that is why we have you here today. pete: congratulations on overcoming what you overcame. no one should ever go through that. we love it, thanks for joining us. >> thanks for having me. will: more "fox and friends" coming up in moments. rd is made sam who make...? ...everyday products... ...designed smarter. like a smart coffee grinder - that orders fresh beans for you. oh, genius! for more breakthroughs like that... ...i need a breakthrough card... like ours! with 2.5% cash back on purchases of $5,000 or more... plus unlimited 2% cash back on all other purchases! and with greater spending potential, sam can keep making smart ideas... ...a brilliant reality! the ink business premier card from chase for business. make more of what's yours.
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plus it's safe for use around people and pets. zevo. people-friendly. bug-deadly. ♪ ♪ ♪ found me all messed up, you found me down on my if luck. ♪ so lost but then i woke up in love ♪ will: california. beautiful. cored mad doe. rachel: oh, i love coronado. pete: you're right, i don't know that i've -- will: i'm trying to think -- pete: i'm sure we've had wake-up sh
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