tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News September 16, 2023 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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will: uh-huh. rachel: will is grumpy about this whole topic and i rank them and rank you guys second. i said midwest men. will: excluding an entire block of the country. rachel: let me make this clear, i'm telling women on the coast having trouble in their blue cities finding men to expand their horizons and can include the south and i highly recommend the midwest. pete: you're telling them to come into the interior and only go up and moving from the west coast and living in la and went up to wisconsin and i realized there was a great line and wonderful time. go ahead, will. will: if i might. you didn't really pick the
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midwest. you drew a map of the united states and it was fairly large and far beyond the midwest. you said pick your men. rachel: i expanded a bit because the edges might go some places. will: one might suggest your map was ex-clues natural rights approach than identifying the specific geographic regions. rachel: you're getting grumpy about this. will: our friend joey jones gave us the perfect explanation for rachel's advice. rachel is onto something, like their food and they're planning to adapt to a woman from any other region f. you come from the south, you better be ready to cook friday food and tweet tea. rachel: pump your own gas apparently, will. will: that might just be with the cains. pete: that's just the cains. rachel: i'm saying there's wonderful men in the south and have many of the same quality and values but i think up in the midwest there's men that have been, you know, they're a little sturdier because they've had to
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endure the weather is a little tougher, they've had to ---pete: little sturdier and had to pack on some insulation. rachel: that's not true. that's not true. pete: listen, i will proudly represent the midwest. i proudly will, but your representation of the midwest is a caricature because your husband is literally a lumberjack, which is 0.0001% in the midwest. rachel: the midwest has all american adel mean and unassuming and kind and oriented and i've had many people in my family, in my friend circle i've told them to expand their horizons and they've found success. that's my tip tip for the day. pete: speaking of midwest men, they're on strike right now. rachel: that's true. pete: outside of the big three auto dealers and there's a show down. let's move to that. united auto workers union plans
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to resume talks with the big three detroit auto makers today. will: a striking uaw union members hit the picket lines and biden says record profits should be shared fairly. rachel: alexandria hoff has the latest on this important story. >> yeah, good morning. president biden didn't think a strike was eminent last week but now it's here. >> auto companies have seen record companies and -- record proprofits and those record pros have not been shared fairly in my view with those workers. worker deserve a fair share of the benefits if they do not create an enterprise. >> the phrasing of the united auto workers union and 13,000 workers walked off the plant
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striking with ford, jeb motors, still leeanne tis for the -- stellantis all at the same time and they're planning to hit the strike if the deal cannot be reached. the production system is highly interconnected and that means the uaw and not having facilities that are directly tactorred of work stoppage and temporary layoff of 600 nonstriking workers due to components of them working on and being halted by the strike. uaw current demands include more than 40% wage increase of four years and employees and shorter workweeks and members seeing stronger job security is the biden administration and fuels a push towards electric vehicles and so far dealt losses in companies like ford and how the white house responded to that. >> these are the auto makers in the strike and the president going for the people. >> we don't believe that to be
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and what you've heard us spayard was here just the other day and relating to the future of auto industries and how it's going to build america. >> going there and explanation for the auto workers saying they've come to the table with his historic pay raises and no deal has been reached. back to you. rachel: thank you, alexandria. this story has an impact on the economy and it's also a perfect sort of scenario to explain what's happening in the democrat party and that is that push and pull between this rivalry in so many ways for the attention of the democrat party and the working class and urban elites and it seems like the urban elites are always getting to the working class and they're catching on and workers and manufacturers are going this problem is in many ways because of this push towards ev
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vehicles; right? it's pushing them prematurely into that and it's not going to help the workers and not going to take as many workers to make an ev vehicle for one and that's gonna put many out of work in a long run. as donald trump has said, this is hurting workers, but also consumers because there's just not the demand for these expensive cars. jaire if you take a lock at what they're doing with electric cars. they're going to be made in china. like in school, i won school choice and if somebody wants gasoline or all electric, they can do what they want and they're destroying the consumer and the auto workers. pete: yeah, all the above strategy on cars and provide consumer options and let them pick right now. the democrats are saying we odell beckham jr have one option we like and that's -- only have one option we like and that's evs and trump folks said we'd put tariffs on cheap vehicles from china and a big part of the
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america first policy. will, he wept on in the interview saying auto workers being sold down the river by leadership. biden saying a lot of pro union stuff and policies aren't delivering. will: bob nardelli the former chrysler ceo and inflation as well in the strike. >> what cause that had and day one of the administration and they surrender energy independence and the same administration that's forcing the auto companies to advance electric vehicles and think about all the dealerships out there and what do they do, starting to raise prices for the inventory and they're going to run short and this woefully underestimating this impact and this is all the result of this administration forcing the impact on these household
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incomes not keep up with their administrative flaws. flaws. will: i don't know that my history is exactly correct and there was a point where there was an overlap between knee and that wills and humans and they were probably going what's going on and look at all these other being and they seem to be taking over and that's what's happening with this -- what's happening with joe biden right now and we're starting to see the glacers crack and we're starting to see a tide turn against joe biden. i'm not just talking about the auto union strike and the way he's covered in the mainstream media and fact checked by cnn and not just from conservative circles and from previous castles, fortresses and protections of joe biden and knee and that wills and ap -- knedemand tolls and karine
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jean-pierre is walking among people saying 80 is the new 40 and everything is walking and humans not taking over. >> west 40. didn't you hear. i get asked this question about once a week, twice a week, i don't know. i've lost track. this is a president if you think about it in 2019, he got the same criticism. in 2020, he got the same criticism. in 2022, he got the same criticism and every time he beats the nay sayers and every time he does above and beyond and makes history in doing that. that others are not able to do. pete: i wonder how long she worked on that. that's a desperate attempt to spin in avalanche on the way.
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every year he gets older and older and older and the story doesn't stay the same. will, you mentioned it. morning joe worked extensively on his age and capability and looking for a new candidate and david ignatius of the washington post and normally glowing about joe biden and he and kamala harris should not run. he's not capable. big artillery round across the bow and now is the time to bow out and now is his most inner circumstantial of defenders and want his grip on power and american people see otherwise and in fact one of the fox news polls said recently, does biden have the mental soundness that served and that's not the real question or the age and aptitude of 61% of americans know. rachel: is biden effectively too old to serve a 64 year term. at 69, yes, he's too hold even.
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you're so right, will, about the cracks and the driver's license media and they're lagging indicator and first in new york city and aoc's district, where i'm sure she won handedly and this kind of revolt against border policy and hurting the working class and you see the working class normally solidly in the camp and union workers and not in the camp anymore with joe biden and you're seeing the working class and because of the economy and these policies that hurt the working class more than they do the elites. this ev and traditional gas powered cars. this is a huge rift in this party. and the media is only jumping on the let's get rid of joe biden because they just want the democrats to win no matter what. not like they feel pain for the working class. will: the other leading indicator to the media and polls coming out repeatedly showing
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donald trump winning over all and donald trump significant ahead in key battleground states. that's what rattles their case. rachel: yeah, and every time they indict and do a mug shot and anything else, his numbers keep going up. will: turning now to headlines, we'll start with this, the death toll from the valley wild fires dropping from 115-97. pete: how does it drop? glad it did but how? will: only explanation it comes up with is it was so hard to identify bodies and further dna testing shows some samples were duplicates and 31 people are unaccounted for. meanwhile on capitol hill, the house oversight committee launching a probe into the federal response. some republicans say the biden administration failed to provide enough government aid. at least 50 slot machines at the venetian in las vegas were out of service for nearly two hours and resort officials denying claims it was out age due to cyber attack.
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mgm resort reel from an attack -- hack last weekend that locked doors and shut down elevator, slot machines and cash machines. cesar's palace now confirm a recent cyber attack exposed customer's social security numbers and and cell phone numbers. lionel messi missing inter-miami's game against united fc later today. he did not travel with the team and fears an jury is to blame. he didn't play in argentina's world cup qualifying game last week and inter-miami's coach said mess sixer fine and has a lot of important -- messi is fine and has a lot of important games in a short time. pete: we're going to need a refund on the tickets. latest on lee a post-tropical cyclone and warning in effect for new england. rachel: plus, virginia governor glen youngkin outlining historic freedom for mental health services in the last state
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budget. >> we have a mental health crisis and behavioral health crisis across the country. it's been a nonpartisan topic. will: dr. m mark siegle went on within dr. marc siegle went on within one with the governor of colorado. stay with us. ♪ oh, booking.com ♪ somewhere, anywhere... ♪ ♪ i just want to lie motionless in a chair! ♪ booking.com, booking.yeah ♪ ♪
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ricker the virginia governor signed right help right now for mental healthcare. dr. marc siegle went one-on-one with him to learn more about it. doctor. >> rachel, this is national suicide prevention month and one out of three teenage girls c the cdc considered suicide in the heart of the pandemic. this is a huge problem opportunistic historical proportions and governor glen youngkin of virginia has a
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historic answer, watch. >> we have a mental health crisis and behavioral health crisis in the country and we're seeing it in an acute way in virginia. it is to startling amongst our young people. in the emergency rooms today seeing twice the number of young people admitted because of attempted self-harm. this is a moment to come together. we rolled out our right help right now transformation of our entire behavioral health system last december. >> how much is already working because of consensus across the aisle? >> yeah, this has been a nonpartisan topic. i think this is a moment for us to put politics down and it's a thee year transformation and build capacity in work force and provide that preventative care and in crisis care and postcrisis care. >> you're a very passionate person about that, you have four children and i have three. talk briefly to me about social
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media because i think there's a contagion going on and that's part of your right help right now program. >> we have a huge challenge and that correlates with the rise in suicide attempts. this is a moment where empowering apartments is so important in the social immediate -- parents in the social media part of their lives is important. shutting schools, locking people in their homes and causes crisis of isolation. it is only, only exacerbated by the intrusion of social media in the aspect of every american's lives. >> fentanyl crisis is addressing effectively and well. it's an enormous epidemic. >> it is the most damaging drug we've dealt with and the reason is that it is pervasively introduced into our society, it's poisoning our kids, it's poisoning our friends, no family has been spared. and the terrible part about it
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is we know where it's coming from and turning every state into a border state and the reality is we have on average five virginiaens a day that die from fentanyl overdose or poisoning and we know that oftentimes someone is bar rowing a -- borrowing a pill or painkiller from someone and he wills laced with fentanyl and fentanyl is being laced into vape cartridges and it's a horrible drug killing our kids and friends. >> final question, governor, about education. i was so invigorate to see that you pardoned scott smith whose daughter was attacked in a bathroom in virginia. i am a parent who has participated in all of my children's education and it's a partnership and you ran on family values and seems to me there's a collision of super imposed philosophies and politics on top of education with the families fighting back. you're a leader for that.
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>> yeah, so let me just start with the fact that i don't believe there's controversy here. the idea that i hear from virginiaens every day, well of course parents are at the head of the table in their children's lives and children belong to families, not to the state. therefore constantly making sure that parents are empowered and they have the right to make decision withs their child and not be shut out of their child's life. it's imperative and it's also a fundamental right in virginia and the nation. we have got to save this generation that we're at risk of losing. at the heart of it is the role of parents and their children's lives. >> we've talked about the role of communities and families and the right help right now program, insurance coverage with laws for insurance coverage more provider help before care, during care and after care. he's one of the new leaders of the country that senator romney was talking about. rachel: there's no question we
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need more money going into mental health with our children except there's only so much the government can do, a loneliness crisis start withs the family and what is the government doing through their economic policies to make it tougher on families and what can the government do to encourage more family formation or incentivize it? instead that's really the answer to loneliness is family; right? >> rory harmon so right and because of the dollars cover up and it brings along the political philosophy and in education and what your children are up to, they're going to do better. rachel: good on him for pardoning that dad by the way. from that school board meeting from the daughter that was raped by the tran sexual. >> i would have done worse than that guy. rachel: oh, absolutely and i would have pardoned him sooner and i'm with you, i would have -- yeah. i don't want to talk about what i would do. thank you, dr. siegle. >> great to see you, rachel. rachel: coming up, president biden claims to be the most pro union president ever, but the
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numbers tell a very different story. why bibs could be to blame for the ongoing auto strike. plus, it's the biggest story in sports. deion sanders taking college football by storm. lawrence jones is live in colorado. we're going to check in with him, next. ♪ they say seeing is believing, but with stearns & foster® that's only part of the story. we handcraft every stearns & foster®
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♪ >> i intend to be the most pro union president. i would not be standing here without labor, union, union labor. [ applause ]. >> middle class built america and by the way, unions built the middle class. they look at me like why am i always talking about unions? because they don't appreciate how dam hard y'all work. i make no apologies for being labeled the most pro union president many history. will: recent strikes like united auto workers union, they tell a different story. pete: if they love him so much, why are they on strike nor minnmore -- more than ever. a growing trend of work
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stoppages under this administration and a couple of graphs in a moment that will explain this. you've got the united auto workers, united if this is a historic in that often there's strikes against maybe ford or gm but to be on all three, this is stellantis and more. will: couldn't come to an agreement on thursday anything and planning to meet and 146,000 workers could walk off the job. pete: it's only a fraction of this on strike. with the uab is saying is if our demands aren't met more and more and more plants will be targeted for chose yuri colins and ford has laid off 600 people as we learn this morning and it'll go both directions. will: the auto industry is a major impact on the economy and our political landscape and michigan ski to the auto industry is a swing state. pete: it's a big state and we have expectations from whether this industry will survive or
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not and there's very different views between donald trump who says let's produce all types of tariffs from china and the green bargain that biden made speaking and talking a lot about unions. will: minnesota causes in a moment and file this away in your memory and push for electric vehicles. first, talk about the impact of the strike and not just politically but economically. what will this do? well, take a look at what's estimated to be lost if the strike goes ten days from the three auto makers. pete: yeah, ten days. add it all and you happen look at north of $4 billion if you add it all up between those three and big loss is coming and look at 2023 and by the way, ten days is very likely and this is one of the absolute stalemates and no side budging and that's not hypothetical. will: you're talking about expanding this whole idea of what's going on with unions under the most pro union president. it's not just the united auto workers union in 2023 so far and 353,000 workers walked off the
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job. pete: 340,000 on ups narrowly negotiated a contract and change ago two-tiered system for drivers and they're being paid. will: this is interesting and i don't know if you realized this and point out 180,000 writers and actors on strike and this has been going on since mid july and the reason i bring it up, i don't know if it's because there's a content glut or what it may be. this one has been missing. pete: like evs here and the disruption streaming in the industry and folks that have done writing and fighting back by cap holohealthcare with the pomoxus ten -- capital healthcare and strikes and shortages and imagine what that could do. if we go to the next wall, just breaks up why are there 50% more strikes under this administration than under donald trump. will: let's analyze why this is happen ago moment ago. coming to the auto industry, one of the reasons is the political
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push for electric vehicles and subsigh disagreement and -- pete: inflation is the yellow line and yellow line under biden is skyrocketed and everything you're paying for costs more and the blue line is the amount of strikes that occurred in the process and if the goods that are being bought by union workers who are more or less on a fixed wage by the year are getting that much more expensive. they're going to get that much more irritated by what they're making and saying we don't have a cost of living adjustment that matches the reality of oriented life. that's the -- our life. that's indication of policies. . will: no doubt, strikes and inflation correlating can be found across the world in socialized economies and workers need enough to keep up with rate of inflation. pete: you tell me what's more pro union or is this more pro union when they're dissatisfied with what they have.
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not just because the macro and micro-realities. will: turn your head like this when looking at television like you're turning your phone. we'll help you make sense of the last graph. it's a horizontal barograph showing union strikes by industry. look this way. pete: took us a while to figure this out. this is add them all up and you've got 314 different types overtricks by industry in 202t education, manufacturing, healthcare and could be more healthcare to come. or we're just putting your -- this is what used to be on your tv after midnight when there was only three channels. will: yeah, before "fox & friends". pete: yes. will: or color bars. pete: that's it. coming up, service dogs helping our heros and how you can contribute. will: first, back to boulder where lawrence jones is live ahead of the locky mountain show down. lj.
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reporter: hey, family. we're about 14 hours out until the big game, and the cheerleaders, y'all ready? [ cheering a cheering and screa. j.p. morgan wealth management. ♪ oh what a good time we will have ♪ ♪ you can make it happen ♪ ♪ yeah oh ♪ now, try new dietary supplements from voltaren for healthy joints. she runs and plays like a puppy again. his #2s are perfect! he's a brand new dog, all in less than a year. when people switch their dog's food from kibble to the farmer's dog, they often say that it feels like magic.
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pete: lee is no longer a hurricane and post t tropical cyclone is packing a punch. rachel: robert ray is in nova scotia right now. robert, good morning. reporter: good morning to you from yarmouth, nova scotia at the southern end of this peninsula and look behind me as lee is making its way up. see the wave action here in the yarmouth sound. take a look if you can. we're going to have to retreat from this location soon as high tide is making its way in at about 11:15 a.m. and we're an hour ahead here what that means is it's not getting its energy from the water temperatures. it's getting it from the mix of hot and cold atmospheric air and this is going to get more
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intense with huge swells happening in the atlantic and moving into the yarmouth sound and you can see the action meameauxing in on this rocky shoreline and we see wind gusts up to 50 miles per hour thus far and we could see a hurricane strengths wind gust up to 70 miles per hour. we just don't know yet. a land fall will occur, guys between 11:00 a.m. atlantic time and 3:00 p.m. atlantic time somewhere near yarmouth on the southeast of here as lee is making its way up. that's according to nova scotia power and they have crus up and down this area ready to rock and at any moment when these winds calm down and rain stopped spinning and now a post-tropical storm and you can see out in the distance leer it's getting
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gnarly and this system is throwing right and left hooks and jabs right into the gut so here we go, we're monitoring that out here and all the way through the day into the evening and we expect this to put a wall up here on nova scotia, guys. liberals on the fox weather app or stream on any tv connected device. starting with this. the parents of one of the four university of idaho students killed last year now revealing chilling details about the night her daughter died. >> he was there to kill. >> you believe that everything right down to the implement of destruction, this large marine knife that was all planned? >> all planned. >> it was inhumane and you wouldn't do these types of things to any living creature. >> way the bed was set up is what -- >> she was trapped. pete: accused willer brian kohberger facing four counts of
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accused murder and his trial is set for october 2. a group of mcdonalds franchise owners are slam ago new bill recent i cently passed in -- recently in california and if it's passed into law, it'll devastate them financially. among the key components the minimum wage for fast food workers rising to $20 an hour. and governor council is going to regulate chains operating in the state. this would apply to restaurants at least 60 locations nationwide. if you've lost mcdonalds, you're in trouble. boston college is getting ready for the biggest game of the year this afternoon hosting no. 3 florida state in the annual red bandanna game. it's a special uniform for the lacrosse player wowing them and he's a 24-year-old working in the world trade center on 9/11 and helped more than a dozen people to save before he was killed. when the south tower collapsed and his heroics were
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memorialized and survivors told stories of the man in the red bandanna that reentered the building several times to save anyone that he could. his words, everyone who can stand, stand now. if you can help others, do so. have served as a living inspiration in the 22 years since the attacks. his legacy lives on. the red bandanna gang, really cool. will: very cool tradition in boston college. laurence jones is live from the big game in california. lj. reporter: hey, good morning, family. the crowd is still wild here. i got the cheer leereds and the -- ram's cheerleaders and the buff's cheerleaders and everybody is here because it's been a rivalry going on between coach and csu.
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ladies, i know this is a big game. do you feel like y'all going to have the energy of the crowd? >> of course. we are so excited to be here and the energy from everyone is so fun so electric and we're excited to be here. you've got home field advantage and we have game day. we're so excited. reporter: how do you think the score will turn out? >> i'm hoping for a good day, you know. it's personal. so it's personal. reporter: is it personal? >> going down here and on the part. reporter: guys, people have been here houser and some here since 2:00 a.m. and some of the kids haven't even gone to sleep last night. we're expect ago big game. i'm going to send it back to you guys in new york. will: are those colorado state ram cheerleaders safe? they might need you to protect
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them, lawrence. reporter: listen, nala is here to protect them. nala is here. pete: nala being lawrence's sideline companion, side can i recollects everywhere he goes. his canine. will: good stuff. catch the big noon kickoff this morning at 10:00 a.m. on fox. they're live from boulder. rachel: hard to believe those kids are still going. they're going strong. pete: they're going to go for another two hours and then take a big nap before the game. rachel: they'll crash. up next, someone that won't crash is emily revealing how to help her favorite veteran charities and that patriotic surprise is next. ♪ i have active psoriatic arthritis. but with skyrizi to treat my skin and joints, i'm feeling this moment. along with clearer skin skyrizi helps me move with less joint pain, stiffness, swelling, and fatigue. and is just 4 doses a year after 2 starter doses.
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because one dose a day helps keep my asthma symptoms under control. and with 3 medicines in 1 inhaler, trelegy helps improve lung function so i can breathe easier for a full 24 hours. trelegy won't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden breathing problems. trelegy contains a medicine that increases risk of hospitalizations and death from asthma problems when used alone. when this medicine is used with an inhaled corticosteroid, like in trelegy, there is not a significant increased risk of these events. do not take trelegy more than prescribed. trelegy may increase risk of thrush and infections. get emergency care for serious allergic reactions. see your doctor if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. ♪ what a wonderful world. ♪ ask your doctor about once-daily trelegy for asthma - because breathing should be beautiful.
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motorcycle for dogs for our brave. a nonprofit that pairs rescue dogs with united state veterans saving two lives at once. this is day one of their build. come inside and check it out with me. this is yak and johnny from johnny mac's chopper house here in philadelphia. how excited are you about this build? >> i'm super excited about this build. we are very patriotic at this shop. it's a military shop, jack's a marine, my dad's a marine, i'm a 9/11 volunteer and we love animals so this is the perfect project for covering all the aspects that we like. we're going to help military, we're going to help dogs. how can it get better than that? reporter: one final question, can i help build? >> absolutely. reporter: yes! it's time to weld the frame and johnny is letting me help. >> are you ready, elmore? reporter: i'm ready.
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>> let's go. just like i showed you. reporter: all right. >> very good. reporter: me beads are not as good as yours. >> they're not that bad either. reporter: nice. nice. oh, this looks amazing. >> here we are. reporter: oh my gosh. >> your flames. reporter: these are absolutely stunning. i love the deep glitter embedded. oops. okay. somehow that seems not as precise as yours. the paint has dried and it is now time for the dogs for our brave logo reveal. oh my gosh. this looks incredible. look how precise that is. and how sharp the white is
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against the glitter and the beautiful candy blue. this is just gorgeous. rachel: here to reveal the finished chopper, emily, john, and jack. they joins here at fox square. reporter: it's been such an honor to be with you for this journey and being part of this reveal today. what was building this incredible bike like for you? >> we're a military shop where dogs, children, to this two aspects of what we like to do. we wanted to help. you know, we got nation's heros that need our help. so we put the talented that god gave us, we gave to try and help them. what's what it means to us. thanking god. reporter: amen. brian, first veteran on staff and you guys save two lives at once and save veteran's life and dog's lives. tell us what this means to you? >> it's everything about the mission. all of our dogs we utilize for
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the program are rescue dogs and takes us about 18 months to train our dogs. after that, they're placed with injured veterans and the most important piece about our veterans and our program is the fact that our veterans will never pay a dime for the life of our service dog. so angel, who we're about to reveal; right, that just means more funds, more resources for us to take care of our veterans that we know there's so many out there that need that help. it's personal. reporter: thank you for your service and fighting the silent bat and will fighting the combat battle. you represent so many. you represent so many, all of us, patriots that support and thank you every day. that love dogs and that love bikes so stand by because we are going to reveal angel, which is the name of this bike, guys. all right, guys, who's ready to see the new bike? three, two, one! i don't want to knock it over.
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rachel: beautiful. beautiful. reporter: thank you. oh, wow. gorgeous. [ applause. reporter: this sin credible work of art, you're -- incredible work of art. you're absolute artists. pete: how do you know where to start? do you build it from scratch? >> yes. pete: wow. reporter: talk about the raffle and how listeners and viewer cans get involved to buy tickets for dogs for our brave. rachel: enter the raffle to win this charity dogs for our brave chopper at dfob.org. did i recollects dfob.org -- dfo b.org. will: tell us how this bike helps the organizations. >> it will go back to st. louis for the auction piece of this. will: raffle. >> the raffle piece. >> only a thousand tickets sold at 1030 hour as piece. you've -- 100 hours a piece and
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you have a great chance and you'll get emily's art work. show did that. reporter: a very small amount. i didn't mess it up thankfully. >> you did a wonderful job. pete: a thousand tickets at $100 each. you have a decent chance of winning and support an amazing charity in the process. >> yeah, save ago dog and a military man. reporter: that amount of money adds up to almost three dogs of service so this bike and the man hours that went into t the artistry and dedication, the honor that went into this bike will save many lives. >> that's the goal. reporter: two veterans paired with at least two dogs thanks to dogs for our brave and johnmy mac's chopper house and love for americans and our veterans. rachel: emily, john, jack. thank you. pete: amazing. will: amazing. rachel: thank you. pete: still ahead, trump is dominated the polls and letting his top opponent know about it. >> fox has us up by about 50
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points over sanctimonious and, he'soh fallen like a very injurd bird from the sky. oh!! searchable, verified reviews. that's better than the ham, and i've never said that. booking.com booking.yeah (vo) you were diagnosed with thyroid eye disease a long time ago. and year after year, you weathered the storm
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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ rachel: good morning, everybody. it's 9:00 a.m., and it's my way. look at that crowd it's just incredible. pete: yeah. big noon kickoff show will be on fox sports, because there's a big game out of colorado as a coach prime expect colorado buffaloes, they're getting some attention. and the crowds have been huge. it starts at 10, and our own lawrence jones -- rachel: there with us. pete: i forgot. rachel: lawrence, it's still a
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