tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News September 17, 2023 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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♪ ♪ this is our country. ♪ from the east coast to the west coast. ♪ down the dixie highway. >> that's a beautiful shot of maine. a song by john mellencamp p. did you listen to zach brian as we discussed. >> i really like zach brian. >> we both liked oklahoma smoke show and something in the orange. >> i told you to listen to heading south. >> i did listen to it. good song, in the play list. what about you. >> i haven't listened to that song yet. now i will.
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♪ smoke show. >> talking about a girl? >> from a small town and he's from a small town. >> good for her. >> he's not a nice guy, though. >> it's a dramatic arc to the story. >> it does. >> everybody listen to that song, apparently it's a good one. >> it's a great one. >> good. >> we're glad you're here. >> glad to have carley with us here as rachel is out today. >> a well deserved family day off. for sure. >> now we move to a tough story, a retired police chief is killed in a shocking intentional hit and run in las vegas. >> the details are horrific, a 17-year-old is facing murder charges, accused of plowing his car into the man while he was out riding his bike. >> alexandra huff joins us live from washington with the latest. >> reporter: the details are so bad and so bad that we can't actually show you the video itself. it has appeared on social media, calling a fire storm and what it shows, two young people driving recklessly in a stolen vehicle, the 17-year-old driver is being
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filmed by the passenger. both are laughing throughout the video as they agree to ram the vehicle into the back of a man who is taking his morning bike ride. they do so, the car speeds off, unphased. just like it was a video game. this is back on august 14th. that cyclist was 64-year-old retired police chief andreas prost. he was killed in the crash. the 17-year-old driver was quickly caught and taken to a juvenile detention center. the las vegas review journal reports charges will be upgraded to include murder. this happened around 6:00 in the morning. the international conference of police c chaplains weighed in stating this is nothing but pure evil, evil that has taken him away from his wife and children. he retired as a police chief in california. the journal reports that last month his wife and daughter got an alert from his apple watch
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that a fall had taken place. his wife described the scene they found when they rushed there, because the apple watch will tell you where they are. she said i come from law n forcement as well -- enforcement as well in my younger days. i was able to ascertain, there's the bike, the helmet is over there and the phone is over there. this is not good, there's no ramifications, it's not getting better. the daughter taylor described her father like this, being around him was like being next to a ray of sunshine, he was always laughing, smiling, offering support, life advice, career advice. the driver's name has not been released because of his age. of course, that could change if the charges are upgraded as they're expected to be. it's inclear if the passenger will face charges. if you watch the video it's clear that the passenger is encouraging the driver the entire time. guys. >> thank you. >> horrible story. it's so sad. and to hear the family's reaction, he was a ray of sunshine, he was a police chief
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so he was intention senately putting -- intentionally putting himself in danger his whole life. to think he dies because two kids think it's funny. in the video they're actually laughing as they hit him and he flies onto the roof of their car. it's just absolutes tragedy. it's the definition of evil. >> you see the video go back and show him. so this happened in august which i didn't realize when i first saw the video. they didn't know who it was. they took a video. they held ontto the video. was it shared? was it posted? it's the evidence that ties them to a deliberate hunting down and hitting of a cyclist. >> just a horrific story all around. another story suggests there's a freeze, a deep freeze in the relationship between president joe biden and attorney general merrick garland. it's driven in part by i guess garland's -- this is as the report suggests -- garland's
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pursuit of hunter biden and gun charges but most feel like -- most with clear eyes, that's just a ruse, a coverup, a small charge to go after, to continue to protect hunter biden from deeper investigations and as mark levine was on the program a little earlier, doesn't buy this is a freeze in the rel relationp between garland and biden. >> this is how the wall street journal lays it out. they say some biden aides say they see garland's handling of the inquiry, driven less by a pursuit of justice than by a punctilious desire to give the appearance that sensitive investigations are wall seresedf from political pressure. mark levine responded this way on our show earlier. >> there's no freeze between the two. i mean, garland has been the greatest mob attorney that the
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mob family could ever hope for so this is propaganda and people need to understand that the vast majority of the media in this country exist to serve the interest of the democrat party but the democrat party monday oy --monopolizes the media and so-called justice in the country so this is nonsense. >> that's what it feels like. you're going to want reports that there's a wall, there's a freeze, there's no communication. >> that would be a good thing. >> it would be a good thing. it's also a false reality. there's no way -- maybe it's not merrick garland and joe biden getting together but their aides, their advisors of course there's an understanding in conversations ongoing and when you watch the special counsel, whichs was really appointed just to continue an ongoing investigation and make sure that further offed didn't have to go to house republicans investigating, it just zincs the article does say biden aides are
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angry that the doj closed the investigation into mike pence's, the fact they he had classified documents. they appointed a special counsel counsel. the last thing is garland should not have -- should have taken a firmer hand according to some biden officials with the whistleblowers that came out. i don't know how you could take a firmer hand with the whistleblowers. that's how the article says the biden administration feels like now. >> yeah. spokesman for attorney general merrick garland declined to comment to the wall street journal. meanwhile, joe biden's border crisis literally caught on camera. watch this. you can see migrant children crawling underneath razor wire in texas. they're illegally crossing into the united states. and officials are demanding that a democratic governor sue biden over the migrant crisis that is impacting every one of those, including democrat states, there
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is the video referencing the children getting under the wire, caught under the wire. the wire is then cut and they're freed. this happened 10 days, a week after a 10-year-old drowned in the river. >> it's just so sad. yeah, absolutely. and bill melugin posted this, witness migrant families irresponsibly having children crawl underneath razor wire as they cross the river during a thunderstorm. troopers later responded and cut the wire for the safety of the children as more arrived. >> by the way -- >> what a situation. >> cue the april of the administration and the legacy media pointing the finger and pointing the blame at texas. that's what they'll do. this is inhumane of texas to put up razor wire and bouys to try to defend their barrier. they had haven't done anything. more people than ever have tried to make the perilous journey. we've been flooded with
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illegals. one state tries to do something about it. what about parents that are pushing their kids under razor wire. >> i think it's heart breaking to see. they're children. i think it shows desperation on the side of the parents' part. >> or it's not parents, it's coyotes. >> in a way, i think it shows a love because they want a better life for their child but there is -- gosh, a way to do it and this is not it. it's not just children that are crossing the border. it's 160 people on the terror watch liss. i think that's the greater point that tried to cross the border that we know of. >> that's how it starts. that's what it looks like in texas. then it ends up on the streets of new york city or chicago or los angeles, as it should, by the way, if we're going to have this problem at the border, it makes sense that you should have that problem in the sanctuary cities, a city that i invites te problem, the city that says our virtue is so profound that we welcome with open arms is the problem. that's easy when it's so far
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away, it's like posting on social media about how virtuous you are. it's easy from your basement until you live the repercussions of the virtues yousys you espo. mayor adams is saying this will destroy us. >> there's a cou co a coin silln new york who said we need to take legal action against the biden administration. listen to what she had to say here. >> it is impossible for a locality to take care of a humanitarian migrant asylum, whatever you want to call this crisis, it's impossible for a locality to take care of it. the governor and the president
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created this crisis and they're doing little to nothing to help our city and all they want to do is to keep our borders open, keep the flow coming in, and when you're offering free room, free board, free healthcare, free education, ipads, phone, and the potentiality of work permits, we're actually enticing people to come here. >> yeah. i mean, joanne ariola is correct, spot-on. i wish there was more common sense in the city. >> it's the crisis of the city, the leadership's own making, the state, new york is a sanctuary state. the way they're trying to sort of go about explaining their position is very interesting. mayor eric adams who used to say it was inhumane to even have any border security and we're going to welcome illegal immigrants in because we are a sanctuary state, that's what we do. now he's also saying if the crisis continues, these illegal
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immigrants are going to destroy the country. so they're just like wrapped up in their own sort of -- >> in the process, trying to milk the federal government for all they can. >> yeah, absolutely. >> valid point. >> turning now to your headlines. new overnight, sheriff's deputy who was killed in los angeles in what his office is calling an a aimless attack has been identified. deputy ryan clingengroomer was found unconscious in his car, they am a bushed the deputy, reportedly shooting him in the head. he was taken to the hospital where he later died. police are looking for a suspect and asking for the public's help. doctors say years of vaping are to claim for a florida teenager's collapsed lung. a pulmonologist joined us earlier to talk about the dangers of vaping. >> it's marketed by the industry as safe.
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these are clearly not benign and not safe. this ritual, the oral rich l wall, the hand oral ritual, the inhalation, the extent to which they inhale puts their lungs at significant risk. >> the teen felt chest pain and could barely walk before his diagnosis. to college football, frustrations boiling over in florida's upset over 11th ranked tennessee. punches being thrown by florida's quarterback after the quarterback tried to take a kne at the tend of the game. missouri huge upp set over kansas state, winning 30-27 with a last second field goal. >> it's brooks, a kickoff away. and it's good! missouri at the moment has walked it off. >> a lot storming the field. colorado, the buffaloes pulled
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off a comeback to beat colorado state, 43-35. >> better and better in the second half. >> sanders open, there he is again, touchdown. >> you just asked me if i thought he was a heisman contender. no doubt. no doubt. this is the buffaloes third straight w win. those are your headlines. >> coming up, not guilty, that's the verdict handed down yesterday in the historic impeachment trial of ag ken paxton. >> an piers morgan on the latt campus craze, it's coming up. ♪
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state senators. the ag says the white house was pulling the strings and he's putting them on notice. in a scathing letter he writes i can promise the biden administration the following, buckle up because lawless policies will not go unchallenged. we will not allow you to shred the constitution and infringe on the rights of texans. you will be held accountable a. joining us now, tony bus. danby, t attorney for ken paxton. what did you anticipate the outcome would be? how close was it. >> it wasn't close. the press in texas and the press nationally spent three months convicting ken paxton on nothing but innuendo and rumor and we had a lot of high drama in texas and we finally got a chance to cross-examine witnesseses and when that happened the case pretty much fell flat and it was very clear that everything that
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this attorney general, our attorney general of texas has been accused of was completely false and so the vote came out the way it should have come out. it was a just trial, finally people were put under oath, finally people were examined and we proved it for what it was, a complete sham. >> tony, in your mind and in the mind of your client, ken paxton, what was behind this? what was the reason for this impeachment? >> there were several factors. first, there was a lot ofal lee ofallegations made with no proo. there were lobbyists that got behind it and apparently they went -- they started something that they had no proof and it was out of control with the liberal press in texas and everything that ken paxton had been accused of, nobody who made the accusations were ever put under oath and when they came to court and they were put under oath, had to be cross-examined, it completely fell apart so one of the things we did show was that when this all started the
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bush regime got involved. we know they that george p bush reactivated his law license. we know the so called whistleblowers were represented by you a bush wr protege. we know a lobbyist group was pushing for representatives to vote for impeachment. this is a resounding victory for ken paxton and texas and i'm happy to be part of it. >> the house passes it, the senate had the trial. you said once the evidence came out, it was clear. what does he plan to do next if. >> he is ready to get to work. he was suspended without pay. he couldn't do his job. they appointed somebody else to be the ag. he had to sit back and listen to all of these lies thrown at him at the press and it was really his time to put people under oath and make them respond,
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confront the accusers and it all fell flat and so i think he's very proud of that. he's proud of the support that he received. he is proud of the verdict, he's proud that the trial was fair and i can tell you, having talked to him many times, he's ready to work. >> he certainly got the support of former president trump as well who put out a strong statement backing him afterwards as well. tony busby, attorney for ag ken paxton, thanks for joining us. appreciate it. all right, still ahead, the picketing continues. the united auto workers strike enters the third day, general motors and ford returning to the negotiating table. maria bartiromo joins us next with her take as workers speak out against union joe. ♪ it's easy to get lost in investment research. introducing j.p. morgan personal advisors. hey david. connect with an advisor to create your personalized plan. let's find the right investments for your goals okay, great.
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four years, it's sad to say i could go to a fast food restaurant and make more an hour than what i'm making now. cost of living should be in our hourly pay, not just one bonus check a year, we worked for that. >> how long are you willing to strike? >> as long as it takes. >> uaw workers weighing their wages against inflation as the strike against the nation's big three ayou toe makers enters the third day. it's a test of president biden's long-standing pro union position as workers worry his ev push will cost them jobs. here to weigh in is sunday morning futures anchor maria bartiromo. maria, good morning to you. what a predictment for the most pro underpresident ever as he is self described. it's clear his policies created this situation. ev policies pushing things in one direction, workers pushing things in another direction. maria: we call joe biden union
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joe but interesting the united auto workers have yet to endorse this president because of all of the items that you just mentioned. look, i think this is going to be a very dangerous situation to watch. this is layered on top of a lot of other issues facing this white house which we'll get into. we're coming to this morning live from the rayborn room at the congress and at the capitol which is of course the new cheese of all of these -- new nucleus of all the things happening, from the impeachment to the spending fight. i think the workers will get improvement in pay and benefits. why are they striking? they're striking because they can. they're striking because they've seen other strikes result in in higher pay which is what we saw from the ram rail strike a yea. the workers are dealing the hard frtruth they're attacking the companies that may fire them at some point. it takes fewer employees to make
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electric vehicles. much of the production is made in china and in mexico. the production of the batteries and other components of these electric vehicles are made in china. and so this is something that they are upset about but at the end of the day it is reality because of joe biden's climate change agenda. the only sad fact that these auto workers have to face is you know who is not striking right now? we're not seeing strikes at toyota, at tesla, other international automakers that will likely gain market share as a result of this so the united auto workers, while they may very well end up getting more money, perhaps better benefits because of this strike, it's going to cost the economy at least $5.6 billion just in the first 10 days and it also is going to lead to wherever joe biden and the democrats want policy to go and that likely means an increase in production of electric vehicles and a decrease in the number of auto workers longer term. >> which by the way, maria, is
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-- besides losing more auto workers to your point, it's a loss for america. we can't beat china at this electric vehicle gain. we neither have access to resources nor do we subsidize at the level they do. it's like we're signing up to lose. maria: yeah. well, we're signing up to lose because of the policies coming out of this administration. and this soft approach toward china. these supply chains that we talked about being moved for a long time, you even see companies like apple even with the iphone looking for new production opportunities in places like india. whether or not corporate america is getting the message that you really don't want to be producing so many important elements of the auto business and other production of other essential items in an adversary's country but you also probably do not want to be going all-in on an agenda which so far has not been helpful to the american people. we're going to be talking about that this morning as i
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mentioned, we're coming to you live from the capitol where all of the action has been originating, whether it's the impeachment inquiry against joe biden and these allegations of bribery and money laundering to this fight over spending, the days are numbered in terms of the government running out of money september 30th deadline. the speaker has already said nobody leaves for any more holidays beginning monday until a deal is worked out. they have been doing meetings throughout the weekend this weekend and it appears to me that the real area of common ground has been the border and most people agree that the border is wide open and more money needs to go toward securing that border but that still might stop -- might not stop people like matt gaetz from trying to pull a motion to vacate the speaker's seat this upcoming week so it's going to be a week of fireworks. we're going to be first in talking to the speaker of the house, we have an exclusive this morning with kevin mccarthy and he's going to give us the
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most up-to-date information on where this stands. we're also talking about the china threat and that $6 billion that the administration just unleashed for iran with michael mccall, the chairman of the house foreign affairs committee. we'll get into the impeachment inquiry and we'll hear all sides of the the story with regard to the department of defense appropriations bill when we talk with marjorie taylor greene and michael waltz. they will also discuss all of those issues. we're going to round it out with a panel on the high crimes and misdemeanors that we're hearing about and talk with peter schweizer and miranda divine about how close joe biden was to the foreign business deals that allowed the biden family to take in more than $20 million according to house republicans. what exactly was that money paid to the biden family for? we're going to get into it. we've got breaking news, about 30 minutes. >> right there from washington, d.c. thank you so much, maria. maria: thank you. >> coming up, shocking new video shows a massachusetts
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state trooper dragged down the street during a traffic stop. we'll tell you how the suspect was eventually apprehended. first, the word woke or word to the woke, how harvard student is making claims limiting applicants to 200 words in an essay is racist. piers morgan on the campus craziness, next. ♪ imagine how the world so very fine. ♪ so happy together. and year after year, you weathered the storm and just lived with the damage that was left behind. but even after all this time your thyroid eye disease could still change. restoration is still possible. learn how you could give your eyes a fresh start at tedhelp.com.
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>> so get this one. word limits on college applications are now racist? at least that's what harvard student newspaper claims in a new op-ed, taking the university to task for limiting student applications to 200 word essays. >> the harvard crimson piece wrote shortening essays falls heaviest those who marginalize backgrounds. learning to package yourself in a smaller amount of space is part of advanced application. >> people had to write one long essay and they changed to five shorter ones and now that affirmative action is overturned says it doesn't give people in marginalized communities enough space to describe their background. >> how did you not laugh when you read that. if i was doing an a applicationo
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be on "fox & friends," i wouldn't need 200 words, it would be about massive thoughts. it's not difficult. let's just think about this for a moment. a, of course everything is racist and everything at hair a harvardhas to be racist. how stupid would you have to be to think you can get into harvard, one of the world's most important academic institutions, if you can't do a 200 word essay about yourself. you go forward to what harvard is basically implying is that people from ethnic minority groups are so stupid they can't do that which is unbelievably patronizing. i would argue that's where the racism is. like people think because you can't achieve a 200 word
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analysis of your own life. imagine if you were on the back end of that thought process. it's completely nuts. it's indicative of what's going on at universities. not just here, we have the same nonsense in britain. my message of anybody thinking to go to harvard, if they ask you to do that, don't bother, go somewhere else. go to the university of life. go work at starbucks down here and you'll have a better education than a place run by people with that mindset. i promise you. if you go through life thinking everything is racist, you're going to have a nightmare life. >> totally agree. >> bravo. >> we were talking about this with you during the commercial break. i think we're genuinely fascinated by this. you have a new series coming out on fox nation. you interviewed how many is it, eight? >> it's called the killer interview with piers morgan. i would argue all my interviews are killer. >> different kind. >> these are actual killers, these are some of the worst killers in america actually. eight different people, very different stories.
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there's one that's airing on fox news tonight at 10:00 called carlson, probably the worst liar and insurance scammer you'd ever meet. he was insuring people like his wife and then his son and then they died in accidents days after he insured them and he took the payout. horses, cars, you name it. this guy, if he was insuring it, get the hell out of there. >> is this him on the screen right now. >> this is another one -- this is a more interesting story. some of them like this guy, he's a very smart, intelligent, thoughtful, quiet kid who apparently axed his parents to death in the most brutal manner in their bed. he says i didn't do it. there is no actual hard evidence that he did. so it's a fascinating encounter. the police think he did. they think he's so smart, he managed to cover his tracks. we have some like that. others you know they're guilty and it's cat and mouse. >> how do you approach the
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killer interview. >> sometimes you get one hour with these people and you're talking about despicable killers who had years to prepare for an interview like that. it's like cat and a mouse. you put the bait out. you let them effectively in words hang themselves by lying, lying, lying, but of course they don't have to stay in the room. they can walk out at any moment. you have to be careful. if you know their life, you go three quarters in where you go actually, when you said this i know that's a lie and you go through it and they take an interesting turn because some of them react as you would expect, very aggressive. >> really quickly, is that what attracts you to this. you interviewed a lot of guys, the u.k. prime minister, you had the spanish soccer federation president. you get a lot of great interviews, you do a great job. why these guys why did you want to -- >> there's something uniquely compelling about going into a
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room with armed guards all around you, one of the cases they said be careful with this guy, he's the only inmate that broke out of handcuffs. i never interviewed in normal life people who axed people to death, people who committed horrendous murders. there's a friction. there's a tension. i owe it to the victims and families to hold these people to account. some have ne never given an interview before. some have pleaded the fifth in their cases. i have had letters afterwards saying thank you, finally you held this person who killed you my loved one to account. they're very compelling. they're despicable people. if that was a criteria for not being in the room, i obviously would not be in the room with you and pete today. i'd only be with carley. [laughter] >> fascinating. >> as i say, tonight, fox news,
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10:00. carley: you're a brave man. i'm sure you did a fantastic job. >> that's why he did it -- carley: he called me a rose between two thorns. i'm trying to return the favor. >> maybe we don't need these guys next time. i used to do a morning show back in england. >> really? [laughter] carley: all right why not. get rid of the two thorns. >> we can walk off this smith. set.carley: this is great. i love it. okay. all right. we have headlines to get to. the father of a 1-year-old boy who died after possible opioid exposure at a day-care center in the bronx is breaking his silence. he told the daily mail it was his son's first week at the center and looked like an ordinary day-care when he dropped him off. police say during their search of the facility, they found a kilo press, commonly used by
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drug dealers to package drugs. two other small children were also hurt. officials are still investigating the scene as the medical examiner determines if fentanyl is to blame. dashcam video shows a massachusetts state p trooper getting dragged down a busy street during a traffic stop. the officer initially pulled the car over for traffic violations and was leaning into the car when the driver decided to make a break for it. the officer suffered minor injuries as a part of the incident. the driver was found the next day and taken into custody. and the air force is teaming up with the national security nonprofit to host a video game tournament. players will get to try drone guardians, a new game that the air force says is meant to test decision making. the tournament ge gets underway next friday with other tournaments planned for virginia and san antonio. those are your headlines. >> let's turn to chief
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meteorologist -- carley: hey, i like it. >> with the fox weather forecast. that felt so natural. take it away. >> say my name again. >> rick. [laughter] >> come on, you're braver than that. you're braver than that. >> reichmuth. carley: you got it. nailed it. nailed it. >> no prep required. >> nicely done. the f phonetic pronunciation. there's a couple things going on. lee is gone. it feels like fall for a lot of people across the eastern part of the country, humidity is down, you have a big break coming to the southeast as well. show you what i'm talking about. we also have this front that is going to kind of hit parts of florida, it's hard to get the fronts to go that far south. this year, naples, florida is 24 inches below where you should be this of year, fort lauderdale, you're almost 40 inches above average. this is through next sunday, a lot of spots 3 to 5 inches of
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rain. we're going to watch a coastal system that develops over the next couple days, it's going to bring to the rain to the southeast and rain to the northeast tomorrow and that also is going to be tied into the front that stalls out there. maybe we see a little bit of tropical development later this week. this is next weekend, we're certainly going to see some more rain across parts of the southeast. does this turn into something tropical? we'll continue to watch it. rain certainly nonetheless. piers, back to you inside. >> thank you, rick. i could get used to this. >> you're not leaving. >> i'm not leaving. i'm not leaving. [laughter] carley: we only have 14 more minutes left. coming up, an inspiring story, a utah boy on a mission to throw the opening pitch in every major league venue. last night he threw the first pitch at city field. we'll be talking to him about the reason why coming up next. you don't want to miss this. ♪ play harder. ♪ get loud.
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here's why you should switch fo to duckduckgo on all your devie duckduckgo comes with a built n engine like google, but it's pi and doesn't spy on your searchs and duckduckgo lets you browse like chrome, but it blocks cooi and creepy ads that follow youa from google and other companie. and there's no catch, it's fre. we make money from ads, but they don't follow you aroud join the millions of people taking back their privacy by downloading duckduckgo on all your devices today. >> we're back, fittingly, with a few baseball headlines starting with a positive update as yankees pitcher anthony misovich has been released from the hospital after being hit in the head by a line drive during a game on friday night.
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he's now on the concussion injury list but is thankfully doing well. and angels two way star showy otani -- carley: i think i know it, shohay. >> shohay otani is done for the season. he is set to undergo elbow surgery -- i tried to pronounce that name so many times. i can't do it. to baltimore, the orioles are one day away from clinching the first post season berth since 2016, taking down division rival tampa bay 8-0 thanks in part to this shot from star rookie gunner anderson. i can do that. >> rbi number, and a gunner hen henderson, deep center field, that ball is out of here! >> in chicago, the twins fell short of completing the comeback against the white sox, losing
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7-6. the twinkies on top in the al central, the magic number to clinch the playoff remains at 7 where we will surely somehow shn the rangers. >> i hope so. carley: the next guest lit up city field, throwing out the first pitch. now he hopes to make it to every major league baseball stadium. >> cooper murray's inspiring story began on a street corner in china where he was aban donned at just 6 months old. a loving family adopted him. he has now hit the mound at three major league baseball stadiums. >> here to react is 11-year-old cooper and his father. welcome to the show, cooper. we're glad to have you. >> great to be here. >> so you guys -- you checked off the box of three stadiums, the goal is all -- >> four now. >> four now. >> red sox, braves, and the mets last night. >> how did this become your thing. >> this was amazing. so as we shared, coop was a abandoned on a street corner.
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we adopted him when he was 4. year going around the nation, trying to inspire people to adopt a child with down's syndrome and get people a cape. >> is it hard to go on the mound in front of that many people? >> a little bit, yes. >> i saw that pitch you threw last night. that was a strike. >> yeah. >> it was nice. >> was it scary? >> no, no. carley: you live for it, huh? >> yes. carley: he was athletic, that's what drove you to this and also of course to explain how important it is to support the down syndrome community. he's athletic so he's good at this. >> he is. i found these kids are very, very capable. coop has been playing since he was 5 years old. we're giving him a shot, trying to inspire a nation. >> tell us about the inspiration, rod's hero, you mentioned it earlier, to help
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encourage people to see the value, to see the mission, the purpose in adopting down syndrome kids. >> rod's heroes, our mission is to inspire families to answer the call to adopt a child with down's syndrome or other unique circumstances. take coop for example, all this kid needed was a shot. all these kids need is a shot. if the family answers the call to adopt them, you see what happens after that. >> yeah, yeah. >> no doubt. >> what stadium are you looking forward to going to, coop? what's your next one you want to go to? >> about -- >> i know which one it is. it's right here. >> yankee stadium. you would do great there. absolutely. >> what about -- we can't give you yankee stadium but we can give you fox square right here. >> that's pretty good. >> sixth avenue in new york city. would you give us a pitch right there. >> you want to do a pitch, buddy. we need a catcher. >> i think we've got a couple
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good ones right here. >> i got you. i got you. >> buddy, are you ready? that's good right there. perfect. >> come on. >> fire it in there. >> h here's the wind up. he's resetting. reset. carley: oh, nailed it. that was really good. >> the look off too. i didn't have to frame it or anything. that's right down the middle. >> that was nice. >> great pitch. great pitch. what an awesome cause. >> awesome cause. brady, thank you. visit rods.org, is that right, for more information on how you can find a hero like this. >> we having super special tore you guys. we have an ayo autographed coopr murray -- carley: that's the best baseball card ever. thank you so much. >> super cool. the cooper murray card right
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there. thank you very much. >> thank you very much. more "fox & friends" in just a moment. ♪ 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. 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. 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. there's nothing like clearer skin and better movement-and that means everything!
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pete: coop's the mvp of the morning, no doubt. will: no doubt. pete: what a pitch. this sunday.l for joining us go to church,, and we'll see you next weekend. carley: bye, everybody. ♪ ♪ maria: good sunday morning, everyone. welcome to "cund morning futures." i'm maria bartiromo. this morning live from the u.s. capital where the days are numbered ahead of a potential government shutdown as congressional leaders try to negotiate a bridge to a budget, a continuing resolution which keeps current spending levels for about a month until agreements on cuts can be made. all of this as an impeachment inquiry is underway against president biden into potential high crimes and misdemeanors such a
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