tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News September 14, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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♪ ♪ pete:s the 9 a.m. hour, on the east coast, of "fox & friends" weekend, starting with this: a new report details the failures before the trump assassination attempt including a lack of communication between local police and secret service agents. we have a live report. rachel: the latest threat to free speech online as another country considers fining platforms over misinformation. if could something like that happen here under kamala harris? >> if you act as a megaphone for misinformation, if you don't police your platforms, we are going to hold you accountable. brian: and it's the badgers versus the crimson tide. adam is live, more live than ever, from madison, wisconsin, ahead of the big moon kickoff on fox. the -- big noon kickoff on fox. the final hour of "fox & friends" weekend start right
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now. ♪ ♪ wouldn't it be nice if webbed wake up -- wake up -- ♪ -- when the day is new ♪ pete: minnesota. gray skies but it is white bear lake, minnesota. very far from the beach but very close to where brian brenberg and i grew up. that is about 15 minutes from forest lake -- rachel: did you guys spend a lot of time on that lake? pete: no, but we drove past it a lot. he were in our conference in sports -- brian: i think pete had some or success -- pete: as i was regaling him with stories, i once scored 36 if points at white bear lake high school at a basketball game. rachel: how? pete: through shooting. brian: like he just did out there. white bear lake, that was the first game i ever started in varsity football -- they ran the
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ball every time -- rachel: you were football and you did basketball -- pete: we did both, but he was better at football -- rachel: did you play for your university like -- brian: yeah, i went to harvard for grad school, undergrad. pete: st. thomas in minnesota, great football school, and for the rest of the hour, brian and i will regale you with stories from high school -- [laughter] brian: is that what the 9 a.m. hour is -- pete: story time moderated by rachel. brian: if you're going to love it, rachel. rachel: tell me the naughtiest thing he ever did as a kid. brian: i don't think he was a very naughty -- pete: if i wasn't in high schoo- brian: i have something for you. can i tell you something? i don't know if you've ever said this on air. pete had this habit of chewing pre-chewed gum. like, he would with find gum underneath -- rachel: what? that can't be true. brian: he can't deny it --
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pete: why would you bring that up? brian: because she asked. pete: like on a dare -- brian: you did this regularly. rachel: there's no amount of -- pete: i'm the guy who made the germs comment. [laughter] aye never really been concerned -- when you're a kid -- rachel: like how old? are you talking -- brian: oh, definitely old enough to do -- you didn't have to the dare him, oh or, or pete, there's some gum under there -- do. pete: sometimes there was some good flavor left -- i don't do it anymore -- rachel: do you remember the scene from elf where he takes the gum -- brian: it's based on pete's life. rachel: thanks, brian. brian: did i deliver on that one? rachel: this information was well worth your coming on the show -- pete: you're never invited back. [laughter] rachel: all right. i'm having a hard time getting the out of my head, but we are going the move forward here. a new report detailing more failures that occurred before the attempted assassination of
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president trump at his rally in butler, pennsylvania. brian: this includes a lack of communication between local police and secret service agents,. pete: madeleine rivera is here with more. hey, madeleine. >> reporter: good morning. a secret service investigation into former president trump's assassination attempt the reportedly found the strategy to protect him was flawed from the very beginning. "the washington post" reporting agents had talked about using heavy equipment and flags to block the line of sight between the rally stage and the building where the shooter was eventually found, but on the day of the rally the supervisors who arrived in butler found that cranes, trucks and flags were not laid out in a way that would have formed some sort of visual impediment. there were also several communication breakdowns. a secret service radio room where agents were supposed to monitor potential threats that had no way of getting realtime alerts from local plissments local police, who had noticed a suspicious man, texed a photo of
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him -- texted a photo of him to just one secret service official. these findings may be part of an internal review that could be released next week. >> i think the american people are going to be shocked, astonished and appalled by what we will report to them about the failures by the secret service in this assassination attempt on a former president. finish. >> reporter: republican missouri senator josh hawley is also calling into question the qualifications of the lead advance agent in charge of trump's rally. >> it was the understaffed, they did not have people who had experience on it, and now this advance agent, i'm told, may have failed one or more of her training exams and was moan not to be a top quality -- known not to be a top quality agent. >> reporter: a bipartisan report is expected in the coming days. brian, rachel and pete. pete: wow. to hear the -- thank you, madeleine. to hear the bipartisan nature of that type of rhetoric, that the
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this is shocking and staggering, i'm glad -- they need to be digging the way that they're digging. the fact that the local cops never were able to communicate to the secret service? rachel: it's shocking. but i think what's most shocking about this story is how little we do know and how long ago it's been. again, i said after the georgia shooting, within a day we knew everything about the shooter from the school shooting. we knew about his parents, we -- what do we, what more have we learned about the parents, for example, of this kid? what more have is we learned about those incriminated accounts overseas? -- encrypted accounts? the american people immediate to know. and people could give the benefit of the doubt to the secret service, to, you know, homeland security which ultimately was in charge of this event and had their own people there. we'd be able to understand or give them a little bit of grace, but when you can tell that they
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are withholding information, that they're not being fully transparent, you start to get people -- pete: we speculate. rachel: and you can't blame us for doing that. brian: well, donald trump continues to talk about the bravery of those who provided protection for him. mistakes were made. take a look at what he said. >> the secret service, these are great people they were very brave. when i was hit and i went down, within seconds -- and there were bullets flying all over the place -- they were all on top of me. i had six or seven very large people on top of me to protect me. now, were there mistakes made? yes, there was a mistake made. should have been somebody at the building, etc. but i have to say their bravery cannot be yesterday. and had i not dropped that chart at that particular time within a second, i probably wouldn't -- i definitely would not have been here talking to you.
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preep brian pretty gracious statement. and i just point out, he never gets credit for that on this. rachel: you know who's not as gracious about it, and i say this just to use a play on your words, melania. she wants more answers, and she deserves them, and if i was, had a spouse who was almost assassinated on live tv, bare hi missed it by a millimeter, shooting his head off, i want more answers. as ang a -- angry as we are up here, imagine how his family feels. pete: absolutely. she put out a video saying very clearly, we need to know more. we need more answers on this. and let's hope this report, whens it is made public and it should be made public, is crystal clear, to your point p about motives. they still haven't even assigned a motive to this guy. rachel: yeah. senator ron johnson was on jesse watters last night saying they're stonewalling. we'red asking for information, they're not giving information. why? pete: great question.
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well, on another topic that's fundamental to our remix, we're a republic, first the it was the u.k., then it's brazil and and now australia threatens fines really for, and, but social media giants, enabling -- here's the word -- misinformation. but what we're also now learning, kamala harris believes that same way. in a -- i don't know if we have the video or not, but if we do, let's show it. kamala harris in 2019 when she wanted to be a candidate talking about the threats to free speech. watch. okay -- rachel: they're loading -- pete: we're going to get it in a second. before we go to her clip, you had michael shellenberger -- rachel: yeah, the journalist charged with looking at the twitter files. we talk about all stuff happening a abroad, we've had our own censorship. and what's concerning our government is the fact that elon musk has freed twitter and unleashed free speech, and our
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intelligence apparatus and parts of our government are not happy about it. he a talked a little bit about it. listen. >> if you do not have free speech, then you cannot have free and fair elections, and you don't have democracy. our country was founded on the idea that the government doesn't give us permission to have free speech, free speech is an inalienable right given to the us bid god, and it comes before -- by god, and it comes before the government. it's terrifying because they're attempting to censor us in the united states in part by getting censorship in other countries that then would ban content in the united states. and as you just saw there, both kamala harris and her vice presidential candidate, tim walz, have both endorsed government censorship. i mean, it's shocking to say government censorship of what we're allowed to the say online. brian: he makes a really fundamental point there that a free speech precedes anything that government has to say about it. that is an inalienable right. government is there to protect
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it,s it is not there to say when you can and can't do it. i think we've lost sight of that foundational principle, or at least the left has -- pete: absolutely no doubt, because the instinct of the modern left is to do the same as was done in the u.k., brazil or australia. you want evidence? here's kamala harris just five years ago. >> we will hold social media platforms accountable. if you act as a megaphone for misinformation or cyber warfare, if you don't police your platforms, we are going to hold you accountable as a community. there has to be the a responsibility that is placed on these social media sites. they are directly speaking to millions and millions of people without any level of oversight or regulation. that has to stop. rachel: did you hear that? they're speak on social media without our permission. pete: how terrible --
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rachel: like, how dare you. brian it's the a complete reversal of the declaration of independence, it's a complete reversal of the constitution, the bill of rights. all of it, it's a reversal. because they assume that government is first and then you and your rights are second. pete: that's right. brian: and if you get that wrong with, you lose the republic. you lose democracy. rachel: in venezuela the dictator, of course, banned x for ten days following that election. you saw what happened in brazil. bra, make no mistake, our -- brazil, our government is funding the ngos that are pushing and promoting remember corpsship -- censorship in brazil. this is an effort to censor us. they're going to have a hard time because elon musk has changed the game. it's really hard to underestimate the power of elon musk right now in our country in terms of free speech. they're trying to do it in a back door way. they're trying to get other countries to ban x -- pete: right. this is after they already did it the front door way, they banned donald trump off of
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twitter -- rachel: before elon was -- pete: before elon bought it. we were on the same glide path except for the shield of the first amendment, the supreme court still willing to defend it. but the instincts of the modern left are the same as the autocrats'. brian: and a private sector actor who put his money where his mouth is. rachel: censorship and surveillance, they want to do both of these things through these social media companies, and it's it's very dangerous. pete: for sure. now to college football, number 4 ranked a alabama takes on wisconsin on fox. brianbroken both alabama and wisconsin are undefeated, but the badgers head into their home game as double-digit underdogs. rachel: fox news' meteorologist adam klotz is live in madison is with the host of the new throwbacks podcast, matt leinart. adam? adam: hey there, guys. yeah, i have matt leinart with
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me, as you were saying. you played at usc, usc's now in the big ten, the whole landscape's changing drastically. before we talk about this game, how do you feel about all those pac-12 teams joining -- >> it was kind of strange at first, just getting used to seeing usc, but i think it's the great for the big ten conference, more exposure, recruiting and speaking as a former trojan and a fan of our program, you know, having michigan, wisconsin, ohio state, those types of schools come to the coliseum, i think it's great for the west coast. so i'm excited about it. usc's off to a great start, so -- adam: what are you expecting in today's game? what should we be looking for? >> i'm expecting a rowdy crowd because they're going to need this crowd behind them. when you look at alabama, obviously, it's a great football team, a legitimizeman candidate, explosive offense with a good defense. on the flipside for wisconsin, they're undefeated by -- but kind of uninshiring.
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at the end of the day -- uninspiring. they're at home, i think the coach has done a great job. how they slow down this offense, that's going to be key. do you pressure them, blitz them or stay back? we're going to find out in a couple hours. adam: so alabama is roughly a two-touchdown favorite, but it's at wisconsin. does that seem like too many points? do you think it could be tighter than that? that are your thoughts? >> you know, we'll see. again, wisconsin, they have to throw the first punch in the fistfight, right? they have to get out to a quick start whether it's special teams, a trick play on offense, whether it's the defense that creates turnovers. last week bama had three turnovers, so there's an opportunity here x they need to get the crowd and this home stadium behind them fast. if they do that, i think they can keep it close. adam: my last question, i talked to brady quinn last week, i'm shocked at howal quarterbacks are. if i played football, what would i be? >> a kicker, for sure. adam: a kicker? i'm a kicker?
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i got the legs. rachel: is that the an insult? pete: nice. matt leinart for the win. thank you, matt. adam would be a good kicker. rachel: he didn't say you'd make a good cheerleader. pete: no, but you want to salinebacker -- brian: middle linebacker, punter, kicker is tough. will's son is a good kicker. rachel: so it's not an insult. brian: well, he didn't say that. pete: i just said will has a great athlete -- brianbone you're going to get in trouble, pete. pete: oh, we talk about it all the time. brian: kickers of the world aren't going to the appreciate it. pete: if you're a kicker, e-mail us. friends@foxnews.com. everyone appreciates a good kicker. brian: they matter. they win ball games, that's true. pete: and few yo miss -- rachel: you out. pete: and we'll talk later how my high school football career ended because of a bad kicker.
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rachel: oh, now i'm getting -- pete: ended. now to your headlines, starting with this: a newly-released report shows there was ors quote, no evidence that hawaii officials prepared for the deadly wild wildfires last year despite warning. the hack of plan being delayed evacuation efforts in lahaina as the fire quickly spread, also revealing how victims struggled to escape because of traffic and poor visibility. the mayor of maui believes these findings will help them better prepare in the future. and two jurors are credited with helping capture a convict who tried to escape a courthouse in maine. the man started to run after a being found guilty of assault against a child. two jurors and a detective tried to slow him down. moments later, the convict trips and police officers take him back into custody. and on this day someone texted me about this as well, on this day in history 210 years
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ago, francisth scott key was inspired -- francis scott key was inspired to write the star-spangled banner. he woke up aboard a british warship after the bombardment of fort mchenry and by dawn's early light was stun thed to find our flag was still there. fort mchenry is outside of baltimore. i can't read the prompter. brian: maybe you should pay attention to that -- pete: -- spirit of america against the british fueled key's patriotic response. we know his words as our nation's an hem. rachel: i have one more headline for you guys. ready? i just got a text from jason chaffetz. he was a kicker for byu. good job, you guys. you just insulted our next guest. pete: i did not. brian: i defended kickers. pete -- pete: i love all people. brian you can take on jason. rachel: i love jason chaffetz --
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pete: he was also a very good kicker. rachel: and he was a great congressman. all right, kamala harris is sitting for her first solo interview since becoming the nominee. pete: college football kicker jason chaffetz -- [laughter] on this classic response from her. >> -- bringing down prices and making life more affordable for people. what are one or who the specific things you have in mind in. >> i grew up a middle class kid. i grew up in a neighborhood of folks who were very proud of their launch -- of their lawn. you've been looking at tires for hours now. it's just so confusing.
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♪ >> when we talk about bringing down prices and making life more affordable for people, what are one or two specific things you have in mind for that? >> well, i'll start with this, i grew up a middle class kid. my mother raised my for and me, she worked very hard. i grew up in a neighborhood with folks who were very proud of their lawn, you know? brian: vice president kamala harris when pressed on her plan to bring down prices along with a range of other issues in her first solo interview since becoming the democratic nominee. here to react, fox news contributor and former congressman jason chaffetz. good to see you, jason. she didn't have very specific answers to a very specific
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question. how much do you think that interview is going to hurt her? >> it looks like a donald trump ad a, it really does. i mean, if you're looking for platitudes, kamala harris is your person, that's what you -- where you want to go. she has promised a few things, to raise taxes on corporations, to raise -- to put taxes on unrealized capital gains, she wants to the raise the capital gains, she wants to get rid of the trump tax cuts. so everybody gets a tax increase. that is her approach. and she did support and brags about the green new deal and brags about the so-called inflation reduction act which was a major cause of inflation in this country. so if you want higher prices, you don't want energy, an energy plan that will drive our economy forward, kamala harris is your person, and she's proving that to the nation. just watch the whole tape -- brian right. >> -- and you'll be amazed
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somebody at that level could be so bad. brian: well, so one of the things she feels like she needs to do is differentiate herself from biden because of all the things you just listed. she's, i don't know, kind of trying to do that. listen to this, jason. if. >> some people have a question given maybe your current role as vice president of the united states, how different you are from joe biden. >> well, i'm obviously not joe biden -- [laughter] and, you know, i offer a new generation of leadership. >> you drove here today, you likely saw a lot of trump signs. how do you speak to his voters? >> i, based on experience and a lived experience know in my heart, i know in my soul that the vast majority of us as americans have so much more in common than what separates us. brian: jace, in their hearts and souls -- jason, in their hearts and souls, do you think voters are going to think harris brings anything different than biden?
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>> no. she's the one that's been in office. she was a longtime united states senator. she is the current vermont of -- vice president of the united states. she tries to say let's move forward, but she is the current administration. 9 and the policies that have been in place from immigration and crime, inflation, overseas, last person in the room on afghanistan with, where we lost americans. those are all on kamala harris. brian: we also want to point out on a very different note, jason, given our last conversation that you, in fact, sir, were a very successful and highly regarded kicker in college football. i believe we actually even have a pick weture to embarrass you -- picture, or make you feel good, of your kicking days at byu. do you have any comments for pete on his disregard for that very important position on the field? >> well, for being a lowly kicker, i can tell you i can outshoot the two of you based on your basketball prowess. holy cow, that was a bad
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display. [laughter] i can tell you that. but, hey, let's remember, we never lost a game by the margin of my missed kicks that. 's the only way i could run for congress -- brian: well, pete, i think he told you, but i think he somehow told me -- pete: listen, a, jason, i apologize. b, i had a bad experience with a kicker in high school and, c, i'm a vikings' fan where we've lost multiple games from the kicker, okay? so i have a lot of animus for your proif fission, but -- profession, but with i like you personally. >> that's very nice. we're only the leading scorer on the team -- brian: that's true. pete: i salute you. brian: jason, i'm a big fan of kickers and of you. thanks, brother. >> thank you. rachel: bye, jason. brian: it could be the first federal school choice program in the country. a school choice advocate on what it could mean for your kids. ♪ ♪
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♪ rachel: the educational choice for children act became the first nationwide school choice initiative u.s. history to advance out of a house committee. the bill is set to advance to the floor and creates a tax benefit for private donors to give students scholarships for things like tuition and tutoring. corey deangelis is a senior fellow at the american federation for children, and he joins us now. corey, this thing passed out of the u.s. house ways and means committee just this past week with. tell us what the bill actually does. >> yeah, look, this is a federal tax credit that allows you to keep more of your own money for providing scholarships to kids to go to k-112 education private schools, tutoring, the pay for if textbook or any other approved educational expense. this does not interfere with the
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republicans' plan to also abolish the department of education because it's not federal money. it is a federal tax credit, again, letting you keep your own money. this would supercharge the school choice revolution that's already happening in red states while also expanding educational opportunities to families in blue states california and new york that this have legislatures that are controlled by politicians who are owned by the teachers' union. rachel: yeah. this is, this actually hits close to home. i actually donate and am part of an organization called home through education that provides scholarships for children from disadvantaged backgrounds. and i love this organization, corey, but i by -- wish it didn't have to exist because the truth is if we had universal school choice, i mean, the left talks about equity all the time, but nothing could be more, you know, create more equity or be more equitable than to make sure the privilege gap between rich and poor when it comes to education is closed, correct?
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>> correct. there is so much inequality baked into the government-run school system today. families have actually gone to jail for lying about their address to get their kids into better so-called public schools. they're not really public in any meaningful sense of the world. i like to call them government schools instead. rachel: that's right. >> but if you give that money to the family directly instead at the state level, local level and also to supercharge those efforts at the federal level as well, we spend about $20,000 per kid per year in the government schools. give a portion of that fund, even just half or two-thirds of that money, that would be a lot of equalization happening, more families getting more opportunities hand the schools that they're -- than the schools that they're zoned for. we have kids in chicago, you have, like, 50 public schools that have 00% proficiency rates. they spend about $30,000 a kid. meanwhile, theirs teachers' union boss sends her kids to
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private school. more families should have those opportunities too. rachel: yeah. like the obamas who fight against school choice but send their own kids the private schools. corey, you are a warrior on this issue, and we have never seen more success than over the last couple of years in the school choice movement, and a lot of it is thanks to you. we want you to to keep going. the success is giving us all a lot of hope for the future, so thanks, corey. >> thank you. rachel: you got it. trump rallies in las vegas. could nevada be the key to winning in november? >> nevada, get out and vote. we win this state, we're going to win the whole thing. [cheers and applause] we win this, we're going to win the whole thing. [cheers and applause] rachel: retired army captain sam brown is running for senate in nevada. he breaks down the state of the race next. ♪ ♪ subway dropped the price on all their subs. 20% off any sub, any size. subway did what?! any sub?
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thanks to the donations. and our family is forever grateful because it's completely changed our lives. we all know costs are too high. but while corporations are gouging families, trump is focused on giving them tax cuts. but kamala harris is focused on you. building up the middle class will be a defining goal of my presidency. she'll make groceries more affordable by cracking down on price gouging. and she'll cut housing costs by taking on corpora ulors. middle class families built america.
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we need a leader who has their back. i'm kamala harris and i approve this message. rick: welcome back to "fox & friends." a couple big stories we've been watching this week, one of them is out across california where we've had these amazing fires that have been so destructive right towards the city of los angeles. three different, big fires burning there right now. getting a little bit of containment, i will tell you the weather is going to improve just a little bit this week, at least some cooler air that is going to come down starting tomorrow and new much of the next, say, 7-10 days. a temporary break temperature wise across much of california. then we had the hurricane made
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landfall in louisiana this week as a category two. we still have about 38,000 households without power. that will begin to the improve, but the storm the itself, what was hurricane francine, you still see that little bit of spin bringing a lot of rain in across parts of alabama. st it's not going to change much, so more flooding there, and a new storm we're watching, 30% in the next couple of days of another tropical system off the coast of the carolinas. all right, to you inside. pete: thank you, rick. former president trump rallying voters in with the battleground nevada saying if he wins there, he'll win the whole thing. he also a gave a hero's welcome to retired army captain sam brown who's running for a crucial senate seat in the silver state. >> sam brown has given up more than anybody who has ever run for the united states senate. sam is a fearless patriot and purple heart recipient who served our country as a u.s. army captain, totally respected in afghanistan. i said to him tonight, sam, i'm
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going to be the border president. you should be the border senator. pete: retired army captain and nevada senate candidate sam brown joins us now. sam, thanks for being here, thank you for your service. you were on stage, you were there yesterday with donald trump. what's the feeling on the ground both at the presidential level and in your senate race? >> you know, look, people are excited. there is, there's so much on the line for this country right now, and president trump has displayed the warrior spirit, you know? yesterday was two different anniversaries. one, it was just two months after president trump had been shot in pennsylvania, but it was also the 4-year anniversary for the first president trump rally i ever went to in minedden, nevada, as a volunteer. as part of the american dream that can only really happen here in america, i went from being a volunteer four years ago to standing on the stage as the republican nominee for u.s.
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senate right here in las vegas and even had the opportunity to present president trump with a book that that i just published about my alive day, how to find purpose and hope after losing everything. and to be able to give that to president trump when he's been such an inspiration, such a champion for me and for this country just meant so much. and it's a great place for us to gather volunteers. people are excited because they see hope many if his leadership -- in his leadership and also hope through this senate race where we can take back the senate majority. pete: very cool. the book is alive day, folks could check it out. and this senate race in nevada is a tight one. you're running against jackie rosen. if you don't beat them in the first time up, it's hard to beat senators, because they get really lodged in. so this is the time to do it. here's the most recent cnn poll, who would you vote for if the race were held today to. it says 50-40. i would imagine you see it tighter on the ground because
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presidential's at 47-47. give us your progress mow sis of the candidate you're running against here -- prognosis. >> look, i mean, this is harry reid's protege is, jackie rosen. the country knows what leadership harry reid had in the senate. but jackie rosen hasn't served nevadans. our internal polls are much tighter, but cnn is known as fake news. and, look, when we go to rallies hike this, one of the benefits is we get so many people signing up and volunteering. and those who weren't at the rally, they can still support through captain sam brown.com. there is palpable excitement. and, again, people are desperate for a champion, someone who will be strong on the border like president trump was talking about yesterday, confronting the cartel. but also people immediate economic relief. and president trump -- need economic relief. a republican senate will deliver that, and as president trump said, he wins nevada, he wins the white house. similarly, when i win this
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senate race, republicans take back the senate majority and or or again, people can join me at captain sam brown.com. pete: there you go. it's a big race, it's a big state. all eyes on it, and your background and your service, it's amazing to see you have this platform, go from four years ago to today. we wish you the best and thank you for coming on our program, captain sam brown. >> thank you, pete. pete: you got it. welsh there is a month to celebrate everything, as we mow on "fox & friends," and september is national potato month. yes. take that, football. and we're going to celebrate. and it's time for some football, so adam is live ahead of alabama versus wisconsin, the game today on fox. if he can hear us, he'll talk. if he can't, he'll just keep waving. ♪ ♪ for twice as long as pepcid. get all-day and all-night heartburn acid prevention with just one pill a day. choose acid prevention. choose nexium.
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♪ pete: fox's big noon kickoff is in wisconsin this week as the alabama crimson tide take on the wisconsin badgers. rachel: fox news meteorologist adam klotz is live in madison. adam, how are you? adam: how am i? i'm doing fantastic. i found the party platform. my first question is, on? >> wisconsin! adam: on? >> wisconsin!
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adam: on? >> wisconsin! adam: you know it's the party platform because they've got these red solo cups full of milk because they're good students, they want to take care of their bodies. what are you expecting in today's game? >> a blowout. adam: which direction. >> wisconsin, of course. adam: what do you think about these alabama fans out here? is it, like, a big boo? >> big boo. major boo. [laughter] adam: milk is what we're drinking. it's good for us. all right, on? >> wisconsin! adam: on? >> wisconsin! adam: this is so much fun, guys. i'll throw it back to you. pete: if you have lost control. there's a lot of milk being shared there, a lot of dairy. rachel: we're already eating over here. we're getting into fall weather, so it's the perfect time for comfort foods, and lucky for us, september is national potato month. brian: here to help us out, chef
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eric. >> thanks for having me, as always. there's so many different ways to play with potatoes. you can go from savory, at 317 main street, we do lot of variety. so we have our extra large potato crow debt. this is a little pistachio -- pete: what is that? rachel: you don't know what it is? pete: there's mashed potatoes? >> really, really different. so usually it's just mashedded potatoes, but this is one of those specialty things we do -- absolutely. as you know, easy to get to by train, it's about a minute walk -- brian: i like that. >> and we also have fun. lots of ways to play -- what you have over there, you're jumping way ahead, but that's a sweet potato -- rachel: that looks really good. that's dessert. >> yes. we're going to go from this side to that side, roasted vegetables, purple peruvian potatoes, some yukon gold, sweet
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potato, here we have a sweet potato crustini, walnut, rose marry and traditional french fries and two types of gnocchi. it's made with potato. the one on the side that you're about to dive into, that's to our sweet potato. so, again, it's made with sweet potato star the. , and we add -- brian: what else goes into it. >> potatoes, a little bit of flour, pepper and a lot of love. rachel: what are we making here? identify got the gloves on. i'm ready to go. >> we're going to make our sweet potato waffle that has roasted barbecue chicken. put the flour in, right? then make a little well in the middle. and then you're going to the take your potato, grate it right into the if middle of that. i'm going to crack the eggs for you. rachel: okay, you do that. >> the other things we have on
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the left side, on your right -- rachel: do i do both of them, chef? >> no, that's good. that's perfect. that a that's a potato gratin. with fennel in it. we have sweet potato wedge here that has owe gutter and a little bit of cherry pepper in it -- yogurt. >> throw some onions into that, and we're going to give it a nice mix in the middle. i'm going to let you mix that, and we're going to add barbecue sauce -- brian: oh, barbecue? rachel: yeah, because that's going to give it the spice. >> a little flavor in that. and then we have our seven dust, potato chips with seven dust di- brian: is it hot? >> no, barbecue flavor. we make them homemade -- brian: seven different types -- >> there's actually a band called seven the dust, but both restaurants, a couple of minutes away from the train station, and we do clicking -- cooking classes, live music, all cool
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stuff. pete: we should do a "fox & friends" weekend field trip. >> we'll do some pasta, some burgers. rachel: what happens after we do this? pete: we do not have enough time. rachel: what would happen, we'd get a batter? >> we put it into our traditional waffle maker, and you wind up with the right here. a little bit of aioli on top of it. one of the things we do, 317 main street -- rachel: who knew the potato was so versatile? brian: this is sod good. >> try that sweet potato -- brian: i didn't know i liked potatoes like that. that was great, chef. rachel: it's always good. brian: we'll be right back. ♪ ♪
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really good for dribbling. pete: do you know why? if because it's mesh's most trusted court builder. rachel: that's right. brian: is that what it is? pete: absolutely. rachel: and if your kids fall, you get less hurt. pete: our special edition of may the best friend win, me versus brenberg, i did win, so -- brian: you won every time. every single thing today, he's won. pete: sport pros.com. a awesome court. >> thank you. brian: let's shoot 3-pointers, but let rachel -- pete: come on rachel. brian: pete, you're up. pete: oh, that's a brick. brian: right back at me. rachel -- mice shot. pete: there we go. thank you, thank you, thank you. th. brian: oh, rachel! that was my teammate. rachel: did you hit -- pete: no, i hit that. don't hit me.
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brian: i didn't mean to do it. do it, rachel. >> theres it is. pete: oh! brian: i'm not helping the team out. pete: aye got three in a row. rachel again? brian: we're tied, by the way. pete: not anymore. oh, rachel's carrying you! we're tied. this is for the win, for the win. oh -- pete: i'm ahead again. rachel: yeah! pete: thank you, ladies. brian: did his go in? pete: finally, some fans. brian: i don't get the roll. pete: hey, brian, it's been fun. his first time hosting "fox & friends," nailed it. he didn't get a trophy - brian: where's the trophy? pete: rachel, you're a pro. brian: thank you. neil: here we go. fox on
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