tv FOX and Friends FOX News August 29, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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listen, your deodorant just has to work. i use secret aluminum free. just swipe and it lasts all day. secret helps eliminate odor, instead of just masking it. and hours later, i still smell fresh. secret works! ohhh yesss. ♪ >> this is going to be a major impact. >> we are tracking idalia. >> state of emergency declared in dozens of counties. >> 5400 alias e-mails to his son. >> he sold apeerance of access. >> peter, i will not get into this.
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>> 77% of americans say president biden is too old to be president. >> we will discuss what the president has been able to do. >> san francisco police officer called out a bakery who refused to serve a police officer. >> say what you mean. >> the bakery prohibiting guns in our restaurant keep us safer. >> airlines are offering child-free zone. >> it is called carindum. >> steve: separation from kids and adults by walls and curtains. >> brian: straight to fox weather alert, we are tracking hurricane idalia. intensifies to a category 1 off the florida gulf coast. >> steve: where is the hurricane expected to grow stronger before making landfall tomorrow.
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>> ainsley: robert ray is in florida, in clearwater. what is going on there? >> it is beautiful, you wouldn't know a hurricane is on the way unless you had technology out there. take a look at this category 1 idalia entering the gulf of mexico. hurricane hunters just went through and they see intensification of this. it is expected to be up to category three. residents are in mandatory evacuation iaries and readying. take a listen. >> we know the perils it could bring. we prepare and just do it. >> i will prepare myself, go to get water and food and be ready.
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>> take it seriously and be prepared. >> sandbagging and boarding up buildings and structures happening. people packing their bags, they have until this evening to get out of the flood zone. storm surge is biggest issue. six to eight feet, where i'm standing tomorrow will likely be inundated. we have seen damage in cuba. where it lands, where landfall happens, it is not about that, it is impact of wind and surge from fort myers and up here with hurricane warning and storm surge warning. we're in for it and will experience this for next 24 hours. hope everyone is safe. back to you.
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>> steve: robert with the calm before the storm. janice dean joins us at the big map. the winds are significant at 80 miles per hour. storm surge is the killer. >> janice: right. you can take shelter, but the storm surge is biggest threat. 80 mile per hour wind. intensifying over next 12 to 24 hours, we have all ingredients that make for a strengthening system as it impacts big bend of florida. low wind sheer can take this apart. high moisture content can attack the storm. we have warm water, above average temperatures near 90
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degrees in the path of the storm making its way toward the most vulnerable coastliege in the u.s., water on top of a shelf piling into inlets and lakes and we have tampa bay, we're concerned about, we have high storm surge from six to nine to 12 feet, that will be historic for the big bend area. we'll watch this storm as hurricane move to georgia and carolinas over next couple days. in the weekend, it stops and lingers and forecasts bring it back to the u.s. coast line. rainfall forecast, storm surge biggest concern, upward of 8 to 12 inches of rainfall. that is concerning. storm surge warning from the know pahandle to sarasota.
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water will pile up across west k0e69 of florida. hurricane warning in effect from tampa to sarasata, and the storms can wobble east or west, we are concerned about tampa bay area. 12-foot storm surge is over your home and that will cause catastrophic situations here. here is wind field, category three, border line four moving into one of the most vulnerable coast dlts lines and category one moving to the southeast. georgia and carolinas. widespread power outages, hurricane force wind and power outages. we have storm surge warning on east coast of florida. power outage forecast could happen for days or weeks, depending where they can get in
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to repairs the damage. east coast, west coast of florida, carolinas listen to local officials. preparations have to be in place now and you have to evacuate now if you are told to. over to you. >> ainsley: reminds me of college, i went to college at florida state and we would have hurricane warnings. kids have gone back to school, that affects fsu, and gainesville and college of charleston. >> janice: 12-foot storm surge in this area has never happen before. >> steve: it is marshland. thank you, follow all of the developments with fox weather and get it on your app. join us now, we have florida governor and busy guy ron desantis from florida,
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tallahassee. you will give a briefing to the public in about an hour, what is your headline this morning? >> well, this thing is going to hit us wednesday morning, major hurricane, people need to heed instruction from officials. you still have time to make the preparations you need to. you will start seeing the effects of this getting into tuesday night. the state, we have tens of thousands of utility workers staged and ready to go in for rapid power restoration and urban search and rescue ready to go, if there needs to to be rescue operations. we have supplies. we are ready to go. this storm is hitting a part of the state that hasn't had a major hurricane in a long time.
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it is a lot of woods and forest and you will see a lot of debris. that means we have guyings ready to clear the roads, restoring the power will be tricky when you have trees knocked down much >> ainsley: who has to evacuate? what parts? there are mandatory evacuations, i believe, if so, where? >> done on county by county basis, gulf coast from tampa bay up until north florida on the coastal areas, barrier island or places low-lying on the coast are under mandatory or voluntary evacuation orders because of storm surge. storms of this nature, you run from the water and hide from the wind. if you get away from coastal areas to higher ground. in florida, most structures are able to withstand a hurricane as
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long as you don't have three or four feet of storm surge. that is really what people are looking at. when someone says to evacuate, you don't need to get in your car and drive 200 miles to outrun the storm, just find higher ground, hotel, shelter, friend's house not in danger of the storm surge and that is sufficient and i think people understand that. it is easier, less stresful, ride out the storm in a safe place and go back and inspect your property right after. >> brian: what percentage of florida buried lines because of so many hurricanes and natural disasters and how much better to get your power back if the lines are buried? >> well, look, i think by and large buried is good, higher percentage than it has ever
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been. with hurricane ian at coast of captiva, the storm ripped up even the underground. i don't know if this storm will do that. they had to replace all of that, it is a mix. ian, we had fastest restoration, millions were restored relatively quickly. in order to do that, we have different utilities, and what we have told co-opes, accept linemen, this is mutual aid, we want force multiplier to get people back online as soon as possible. >> steve: sure. in one briefing you talked about this problem complicating things. people look for gas for evacuation or generatorses, there is story that some gas from fort tampa bay by citgo
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might have had diesel mixed up with it. what are you telling people about bad gas? >> so that problem has been rectified, they identified 29 stations and the stations listed by department of agriculture, any motorist who used that can look. some people may have had dilution of gas fchl they had a lot of diesel, that is problem for the motors. that has been rectified, we don't anticipate major gas problems. we have 400,000 -- >> ainsley: i remember the governor of south carolina was under scrutiny because they didn't open lanes of the highway, so people were stuck
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and running out of gas and having to go to the bathroom on the side of the interstate. how do you navigate that? do you open both sides? >> our department of transportation can do contra-flow, they do not see the need to do it now. people have understood, you don't need to flee the state, there are places within the community that are safe, there are shelters available. we have shelters for people with special needs, we have pet-fr pet-friendly shelters, bring your pets, they have accommodations for that. it is more manageable. department of transportation can expand the lanes. i have waved tolls, so people will not have to pay tolls leaving the area. >> brian: i watched you at 6:00
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yesterday eastern time, what has changed since? these things change paths, anything changed today? >> they nudged it further west. what i would say, everybody on gulf coast of florida, things wobble back and forth. stick to your plan. further west it wobbles, that would mean tampa bay would see less impact. if it wobbles east, tampa bay would see more impact. hurricane center moved it slightly to the west and looking at taylor county. yesterday we were looking at it further southeast on impact. no one is out of the woods, things can change, that has been a thing the models have agreed upon. >> steve: cone of uncertainty is becoming more uncertain.
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we will look for your briefing at top of the hour. >> brian: thank you, governor. he leaves campaign trail and handling the jacksonville shooting, goes there and deals with the hurricane. i think it is best way to see if that candidate is the type of person that can run the country, how do they act in crisis with the state. >> ainsley: right. fox news alert, national archive revealing thousands of e-mails sent by joe biden under a fake name, pseudonym, according to a lawsuit. >> brian: e-mails show the two parties coordinating response to inquiry from house republicans. >> steve: griff jenkins is in the nation's capital and joins us with this report. >> griff: paging robin, robert and jrb wehr, joe biden
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according to the foundation who filed a foia request. we performed a search from vise presidential record related to your request and identified 5138 e-mail messages, 25 electronic files and responsive recorded that must be processed to respond to your request. then press secretary jake carney in 2013, had this to say. >> having alternate e-mail addresses for cabinet secretaries and other high profile officials makes imminent sense like collegumnist publications who have alternate work e-mail addresses.
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>> griff: heritage foundation says they have e-mails between david weiss and doj office of affairs, suggesting they rather than weiss were in charge for request of information on the hunter biden probe. doj wrote to a woman on weiss team this. hi, shannon, for your situational awareness, we have received a letter addressed to several department officials including weiss, ola will take the lead on drafting a span, i will share it with you. if you have questions issue please let me know. it comes as hunter biden is selling art to pay rent on fancy fancy house in malibu. >> pete: hunter biden is paying for rent in malibu, how can you guarantee people are not buying
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art? >> that is question for hunter biden and his representatives. >> griff: secret service bill request, she referred him to the secret service. make all e-mails public, we'll see where that goes. >> steve: peter pressed white house on the suggestion last week that people only be allowed two beers per day and they decided not to -- kicked the beer can down the road. >> griff: yeah, i have a feeling that will not go over well with the general public. we'll find out what happens. >> steve: can we vote on it? >> brian: no ceiling fans, no oven, no beer, i love this administration, fantastic. colorado public school diversity
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teachers he wants to burn things down for equity after staff didn't like his syllabus. leo terrell is smiling there, but not happy about that. >> ainsley: stuff of nightmares, record breaking 14-foot long alligator weighs more than 800un pos, caught in mississippi. can you spell mississippi? mississippi. the guy that caught him will join us next. >> brian: what did she just say? ♪ rsv is in for a surprise. meet arexvy. ( ♪ ) the first fda-approved rsv vaccine. arexvy is used to prevent lower respiratory disease from rsv in people 60 years and older.
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>> steve: a diversity teacher in colorado facing backlack or far left equity agenda. he claimed he wanted classes to focus on "bad things done by white people" while admitting he was struggling with the urge not to burn things down, if he didn't find them equitable. leo terrell was a history and social studies teacher. leo, these are i think things he said in private e-mail that became public. what do you think about it? >> leo: he is a clear and present danger of students at that school and he's a school teacher. this person, the biden administration, remember inauguration day, they wanted to unite the country. they have divided this country
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with dei. he is obsessed with race. white people, everybody does things that are bad regardless of color, this is obsession of dei. >> steve: what does he mean burn things down, was that contained in the e-mail? >> leo: yes, he said he wanted to burn things down, that is threat to school and school environment and that person is teaching within the school district. why? there is acceptance of dei in the school district. they are trying to indoctrinate young kids, solely by race. this is a warning sign that needs to be addressed and by leaving this teacher in the district, they are enforcing this conduct and mindset. this is dangerous. >> steve: we reached out to the
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school district and the teacher and have not heard back from either yet. you are in san francisco, there is a bakery last week that refused service to some police officers because they had a policy that bars anyone who is armed and in a uniform. when i think about it, think people who are armeds in uniform, pretty much cops, right? >> leo: yeah, and san francisco, the crime capital of the world. criminals are celebrating. this bakery does not want law enforcement there as a deterrent because they represent evils of racism. this is backward. companies are leaving san francisco. nordstrom's, they are leaving because of crime. this bakery is trying to make a social justice statement, we
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don't want cops there, makes no sense. >> steve: we have the san francisco police officer association, sound bite from tracey mccrae, here is what he had to say. >> put all kidding,a side, that is directed at police officers, who are visible most of the time? i'm like, just cut out the -- sorry, just cut it out and say what you mean. >> steve: that is what she said. the bakery put out this statement, all officers are welcome to come to our bakery when they are off duty and not armed. if you are wearing a uniform and armed, don't come in. >> leo: purpose of uniform is to protect and serve. after i do this show, i walk over to a coffee shop, officer's money is no good when i'm there, i'm buying them coffee.
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i want them around me. makes no sense. >> steve: who needs coffee, we got you worked up already just talking about the news. >> thank you, steve, glad to be here. >> ainsley: hi, leo. >> steve: she is nodding and screaming. thanks, coming up, new poll finds 74% of independents think joe biden is too old to serve another term. talk to an independent panel of voters coming up on "fox and friends." rs in active duty. i understand the veteran mentality. these are people who have served. they've been in leadership positions. they're willing to put their life on the line if necessary. and they come to us and they say, i need some financial help at this point in time. they're not looking for a handout. they're looking for a little hand up. my team at newday usa is going to do everything we possibly can to make sure that veteran gets that loan.
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>> ainsley: back with a quick headline. center for medicare and medicaid service announcing first prescription drugs set to price negotiation. under inflation reduction act medicare will haggle with drug makers over prices for drugs for the first time ever, never happened. president representing the drug industry saying politics should not dictate which treatment and cures are worth developing and who should get access to them. new poll finds 85% of republicans, 69% of democrats
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and 74% of independents think biden is too old to be effective for four more years. let's ask our panel of independent voters, we have doug, bernadet and brekann. doug, i'll start with you, you are an independent voter. what do you think about joe biden, too old for another four years? >> one thing i want to say, age distribute define us, it refines us. give respect to experience and years he served for our nation, same goes for president trump. there is a lot. they have passed that opportunity. there is reason why we don't see 50 year olds on the football field and we need to take a look at our chief executive of the
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united states and say possibly he does not have what it takes to run this country. >> ainsley: what do you think? >> good morning. i believe we're not talking about age here, we're talking about aptitude and ability to perform and we witnessed plenty of moments we are not sure he's sure what is happening in that scenario. is he mentally capable? there are 90 year olds who are capable and still drive. there should be serious questions about whether or not another four years will work out for this country? >> how about you? >> piggybacking off bernadette, it is about competency. i follow other older politicians, like bernie sanders, he is a very clear speaker. when i listen to president biden
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it seems like he's speaking in word salad and not very clear to follow and we need someone that will be able to express his needs and the needs of the country clearly. >> ainsley: doug, who is resonating with you? it is fun to talk to independents. >> sim scott has resonated with me, i think governor desantis has, as well, they have incredible intellect and ability and both have a clear vision for where this country needs to move economically, as far as defense goes and dealing with issues of mental health and people who have suffered from the devastation of healthcare costs. our border. i think these are individuals that have tremendous focus on the future and that is what we
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need at this point. >> i feel like what we need at this point and i haven't decided on a candidate, it is too many people to figure out and it is a mess. i'm looking for the candidate who wants to be america's president, not republican or democrats. we have had years of rolling back what the previous president did with no one doing anything. we want to listen to both sides and be one nation under god with liberty and justice for all again. >> ainsley: anyone that you're looking at? >> i'm excited for r.f.k. and also as virginiian, excited to see if youngkin announces a presidential run. >> ainsley: i think eventually there is a bright future for him. thank you, great talking to y'all. >> thank you. >> ainsley: coming up,
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record-breaking 800-pound alligator caught in mississippi. we'll talk to the guy who caught it next. the official provider of online acellus courses for parents independently homeschooling their children. acellus courses from power homeschool provide a self-paced learning solution that automatically adapts to help each student succeed. power homeschool has really transformed our child's experience. it allows my child to work at her own pace and on her own schedule. visit our website at power homeschool dot org. to learn more and start your child's educational journey.
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nicorette reduces cravings until they're gone for good. >> steve: people on the west coast of florida are bracing for oncoming hurricane idalia as it intensifies overnight to category 1 storm. >> brian: it is expected to intensify more before tomorrow morning. >> ainsley: here is the latest, hi, brita. >> you would never expect we have a major hurricane in just 12 hours. this morning it is warm and muggy, this is old tampa bay behind me and it looks serene. what is happening over 12 hours, idalia will explode. it is category 1, it will be at least a category 3. we are expecting landfall around
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big bend, it is worst case scenario for tampa bay. we will be slammed with maybe seven feet of water into the tampa bay area. that is not survivable storm surge. there are evacuation orders. franklin bridge connects us to saint petersburg. it is time to prepare. this could be historic for the state of florida for reasons we don't want. >> it is better to be prepared versus not prepared and have regrets. >> since i've been up, people been hauling trash and boats and getting everything put away hoping and praying for the best. we do this each time and we leave each time, this being loos
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like a biggie. >> talking to residents in tampa bay this morning, that is what they are doing, preparing for the worst and hoping for the best. back to you. >> steve: that is all they can do. thank you for the report. >> ainsley: over to ashley with headlines. >> ashley: start in san diego, police sniper killing barricaded suspect who shot at officers, flames could be seeing soming from the home the suspect was hiding in. one civilian taken to the hospital, no officers were hurt. in new york 400 protesters rallying outside of a catholic school turned migrant shelter. residents say no one warned them, the shelter can house 300
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people, so far neighbors say there are only nine living there. back to you. >> steve: all right, thanks. massive alligator shattering record books in mississippi. 14 feet long, weighing 800 pounds, largest one ever caught in that state. >> oh. where did it go? >> steve: now dubbed nightmare material, it took these four hunters seven hours to reel in this monster gator. >> brian: joining us, mississippi alligator hunter will thomas. were you seeking this alligator or did you stumble into it? >> we saw him early in the evening, we didn't know about him previously. we xu we were in a good spot and
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scouted and one team member, joey clark was first to spot this alligator and knew he was 12 feet and not until later the next morning we realized he could be a state record. >> ainsley: incredible. why? why in the world do you do this? >> well, it is a lot of fun. it is kind of like mississippi cold, there is a lot of people -- >> ainsley: your idea of fun is different. >> it is adrenalin rush. >> ainsley: you said like mississippi cold? >> yeah, culture down here to get out and do this thing. we are not the only ones that do it and probably not the best at it. >> steve: second day of
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alligator season. one thing that scares me, good time to go hunting for these thicks is in the dark when you think you know what is down there and it turns out to be the size of your boat. >> yeah, absolutely, night time is best to go. you can hunt them in the day, night time is best to go. >> ainsley: you are allowed to hunt them. when you bring them out of water, do you eat their meat and do you find anything in their stomach that is bizarre? >> no and yes. so we don't really eat them, i don't because we have cleaned way too many of them in 90-degree heat, you lose your appetite for them. we donated this meat to the state of mississippi and they distribute it out. 380 pounds of meat donated.
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we find crazy things. an alligator will eat anything. we found a rock in one one time. >> brian: is it like 500 years old? it looks prehistoric. >> i think this alligator was at least 40years old. >> steve: he is so big, he looks photo shopped. you did make a donation to the food bank to feed people. what do you do with the leather? a lot of shoes, handbags and belts. >> that is a lot of leather, i have boots and purseings for my wife. i'm sure everybody on the team will get something. >> steve: one for the record books. >> ainsley: bags are going for a lot of money. thank you. if you are up north and not used
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to algartss, don't walk near the lagoon or let your pets out. >> steve: there is an alligator loose in the new york city suburbs. >> ainsley: really? >> people are heading to that neighborhood. >> ainsley: that is where everything happens. >> brian: coming up, we remember my attempt to wrestle tyrus. >> i got you, ready? >> oh, no. [laughter] >> brian: he joins us next after officially retiring from wrestling. now i'll have to pay to fight him. >> steve: dana perino joins us, that was a piggyback ride. >> dana: i will try tonight when i fill in for gutfeld, tyrus, look out. >> ainsley: you are so teeny tiny, if that what it looked
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like with brian. >> brian: tramp oline on top. >> dana: tyrus has small calves, i'll hide up here now that he heard that. hurricane idalia winding us, we have latest orders and storm path and former president trump ordered to court day before super tuesday, is that fair? mark levin on the swirl of legal news and did president biden use fake e-mail addresses to communicate with hunter? eye-opening source on that. get ready for a busy couple of hours, we'll see you at 9:00. ] struck out with the cheap seats? important things aren't worth compromising. at farmers, we offer both quality insurance and great savings. (crowd cheers) here, take mine. (farmers mnemonic)
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>> brian: tyrus joins us now and then with a big announcement. joe biden says two beers you better not cross him. >> he will forget. it takes three beers to fill my mug. that's not happening. >> brian: they knocked it down to two beers in canada? >> let's work on this. but telling americans what they will drink and think doesn't go well. i don't think we have to worry about it too much. >> brian: the world is responding and wondering if it's true. you said if you lost this next match an your title you are retiring. what happened? >> as you can see i'm 12 pounds lighter. no belt. ec3 was a better man. it was his time and although i'm
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retiring from in-ring life, i will always be part of the nwa. billy has been a tremendous promoter and owner and still be a part. maybe steal a page out of me and the jim brown do commentating. it came down to i wanted to keep wrestling so all my kids could see my wrestle and wrestling for 20 years and it has been -- it opened so many doors for me. wwe impact wrestling in japan, i was a little chubby kid who wanted to be like his heroes dusty rose and mr. wonderful and andre the giant and i accomplished those things and i was able to use that platform to establish myself here, to become an author. it was just you get to a point
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as an athlete where you -- it's a subtraction by addition. you get to be a great wrestler you have to go 300 days a year train and do those things. nwa is growing and they have live events now and doing all these things. my job was to promote and i was nwa champion. that's a small list. they can never take that away from me and it was just time. i talked to my family about it. my kids voted and they said it's one less weekend daddy is gone and it was unanimous. >> brian: when you said i'll wrestle to snoop dogg. you were his bodyguard. you go to the wwe twice. then the nwa. >> when i was bodyguard with snoop i had a job for life. he said you are not a guy to stand behind people. go be a star. the first time i was wwe, it was
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lightning in a bottle. thanks to hhh and mcmahon and de'monte and art anderson and dusty rhodes. times reality shows up and i had a live event. i do stand-up comedy shows standing up. they don't hurt as much as wrestling. we battled. he earned it. it took about ten chair shots. >> brian: this is your friend. >> your friends are the most dangerous people you wrestle in wrestling. sorry, buddy, i love you and -- but i was getting ready to do my stand-up shows and one of the guys i sweat and traveled with and had dreams of retirement with had passed away, and i had to go out and do my thing but -- he was 36. he was a baby.
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and it just really said i'm making the right decision. it's time. so -- it's bittersweet. one of the things that was really cool, match was over and my boys came out in the ring with me and it just -- it was such -- i'm so thankful for my time in wrestling and how muchist gave to me and how much hearing guys say things he changeded my life. we talk about my buddy junior, he bought his first home. not the wrestling that you have to stay until you can't go anymore. you can use that platform to build other things to leave other doors open for other guys and gals. so it's a happy time but these are happy tears and i am -- it was the right decision and it was time. >> brian: we're glad we have you here. if anyone hits you with a chair here you can hit them back. >> dana talking about my cavs is
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ridiculous. she don't get no shot. she is always taking shots. it's not my fault your career took you to be at the white house and journalism. she could have been the world's smallest champion in the wrestling ring if she wanted to. >> brian: you think dana is resentful of your success. >> and an issue with calf. i don't skip leg days. ridiculous, shocking. >> brian: tyrus will spend more time here and his family and in the gym. hanging out. >> a new book coming out in november. >> brian: when do we see you on stage again? >> look on my link tree i have a picture somewhere. i'm touring around the country with tyrus enough said tour. it is going to be a good, fun time and doesn't hurt as much. p >> steve: i've never seen you emotional like that. >> we don't spend enough time together.
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you cook, i lift weights. >> ainsley: why the tears? it is your career? >> this was my joy. this was -- so many times in life you don't get to follow your dreams and you didn't have -- no mom, no dad in the stands but there was the fans. the greatest thing was a child told me her grandfather had ric flair and her -- >> dana: god bless you, tire us. a federal judge setting the date for president trump's criminal trial. et sets the stage for a presidential primary unlike any other. mark le vin joins us in moments. first >> people need to heed instructions. a storm is hitting a part of the state that hasn't had a major hurricane on the current track in a long time. >> dana: bracing for i
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