tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News September 21, 2024 5:00am-6:00am PDT
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will: it's the 8:00 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" weekend starting with this, early voting already underway across the country and if you feel like you don't know anything about kamala harris' policies. interviews like these might be why. >> i'll never forget my banana seat on my bike. i call myself a joyful warrior. i love to laugh. rachel: you get a word salad and you get a word salad and you all get a word salad. channeling oprah. watch. >> we are an optimistic people and we have more.
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on one side and not all around it. will: i would not have guess that had because to your point-blank layups, sun's up. pete: yes. will: atlanta is further inland. pete: ohio state taking live shots all morning. definitely up. will: sun is up there and thoughts on this rachel: no, i don't love the game the way you
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guys love it. pete: at least participate. pete: okay. the first time of participating in voting and l you were in virginia yesterday morning for breakfast of friends and voting started there and before this hour when i said, will. early voting and that's why you were there; right? yeah, yeah. looking over at early voting in virginia and he's the expert and i look at his phone, he's watching a i felt like your wife and putting the phone down. will: early voting in virginia and begins today in the following states: new jersey,
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vermont, absentee voting begins including in person voting in oklahoma, rhode island, and then absentee voting begins strictly out to date. pete: election day is the last day to vote. that's your final day to vote and most places you've got weeks and weeks and weeks with over the mail and rachel: i'd love to have an election holiday where on the day there's no work and people go and vote in person. i want to go back to paper ballots and i'm all for that. do you think that genie will go
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back into the bottle? pete: makes me sad. rachel: something unifying about going on the same day as all your neighbors and we're trying to stand if line. pete: everybody has a opportunity over the course of four days and reduce line times and you get an actual result. it's not that hard. rachel: people are voting starting now. i guess maybe last week some people started voting. but in any case, it's questions about the candidates and going to deal with wired magazine and anxioused all the questions and they were most popular for about her going online and what she had to say.
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>> how to pronounce kamala harris. kamala harris. how was kamala harris' life as a child? i had the blessing of growing up in a great neighborhood and everything from construction workers and teachers and people who were proud of their lawn. as kids we used to ride bikes in the neighborhood and never forget love is love. my banana seat on my bike. kamala harris laughing. i love to laugh. it's important to be able to laugh at yourself and laugh with folks and obviously there's moments that require serious thought and serious approaches, but i hope everybody has a moment to laugh from time to time.
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where i recollects she says i like to laugh but she's not very funny. but donald trump is funny. i watched hip on the show and 5 million people watching and breaking records. the funniest person was donald trump. he was hilarious on there. it was natural to him. pete: he almost never laughs and don't see him smile or laugh very often and traffics in comedy all the time. kamala harris is never funny but always laughing. because the more you see, it's a reflex and defense mechanism and it's a tick. and it's something she's used throughout her entire career to deflect and said it so well and
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will: the calculated parking lot is the cam tiana's pin into joy. pete: yes. if you ask stormer campaign staffers or presidential and office and turned over at a 9% rate and lack of reparation and a lot of finger pointing and doesn't feel like a lot of joy to your point, will. it's fake and it's real moments or real formats and finau sad breaks down and it's highly curated. rachel: they were told not to look at her when she walked in. there was like rules like she was some sort of -- pete: i read that with dc reporting and at one point they said don't look her in the eye. rachel: that's not joyful.
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will: she sat down with oprah winfrey and talked about guns and the illustration of everything we're talking about here plus her attempt at guns. >> i knew that but probably shouldn't do that. my staff will do that later. pete: let the staff deal with it. rachel: that was weird. pete: my staff will deal with it later. rachel: oprah says that later too. pete: if donald trump said it, it's unsubstantiated and they'll deal with that. pete: where do you keep the gun? where do you keep it? i'd like to know more and that's
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go off the wall and break down more from that and the product word salad. speaking of talking point that's something from the past. in is an article and column at usa today. will: elite athletes born with gifts and dedication and moral courage to find for themselves and this week was a reminder that not many do because neither mahomes or clark would make a political endorsement. when i say this is a blast from the past, this feels like something required in 2017 -- 16, 17, 18. like everything had to be political.
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i was in sports then. i remember this. i don't think it's that way anymore. some people still believe it has to be. pete: they'd say i'm not doing politics. goes back to michael jordan and watch the document that they did about him recently, years ago. anyway, he talked about the pressure as greatest athlete in the world that came upon him to endorse or push for a political candidate. he said i won't do it. i don't want to be involved in politics. that's not why i play sports. rachel: also the rules are different. imafen, if you're -- if you endorse a democrat, you're fine. if you endorse donald trump, you might lose your contracts for things that you're advertising for and sponsors so the rules
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are not there. rachel: i'm not saying for them to endorse trump but there's a reason why athletes don't want to endorse. you'll pay the price and taking over all kinds of advertising boards and all kinds of places and they make sure that you pay a price. will: as a fan, there's no hit t for this and no were appetite for this and no one is asking for it to endorse. tafanely moment of hysteria, that's going to be reporting. rachel: do you know the reporter? ever heard of her? will: yeah, looking for endorsement of kamala harris. pete: looking to tease out anybody that might be a trump
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supporter and try to shame them. will: well and patrick mahomes wife. rachel: britney mahomes. will: yeah and the view spent time being racist. caitlyn clark, i don't know. she's white and controversial. good at basketball in the wnba. why those two in particular have to be singled out. there's hundreds of athletes going for them rachel: very good point. will: aurora police made more arrests and warrants after three of the men identified for that and going for the complex and charges include first degree burglary and mannansing with the firearm -- menacing with the firearm and going for that and not able to connect the suspects for the venezuelan gang tren de aragua. they're making policy changes
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with a second look at dei and manufacturing with corporate training for this business operation and going with speakers going to need approval and caterpillar is the latest in a growing place to scale back or ban the policies. shohei ohtani getting a standing ovation and getting game back and only member of the 50/50 club and just keeps getting better, watch. the playoff pitch.
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rachel: he ordered food and not the sriracha. will: so much going on. pete: adam, reporter: good morning, i'm in columbus and at ohio state university. it's not ohio state. it's -- >> the. reporter: the ohio state university. oh. >> ohio. reporter: everyone is rushing in for the big noon kickoff and absolutely great show and getting started here. guys come over here. we're on tv. these guys got here at 1:00 a.m., 2:00 a.m., 3:00 a.m.. is the energy going? >> absolutely. the energy is higher now and coming down and look at signs and i wanted to get down here
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today to these guys signs and the boys are so funny when it comes to making signs and they called me over and said do you have good handwriting and i was like no, i don't have good handwriting. >> this is my writing. this is my writing. i took the time to write this sign. it looks great. reporter: should have seen the pressure of everyone standing around trying to make this sign. conner stallion's football team is 0-4. i don't if that'll win you $50 but there's great signs and the show is here and back over to you guys. pete: trump's first assassination attempt and secret service never spoke to the team responsible for covering the roof. rachel: brian kilmeade spoke to president trump about it and he is next.
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the moment i met him i knew he was my soulmate. "soulmates." soulmate! [giggles] why do you need me? [laughs sarcastically] but then we switched to t-mobile 5g home internet. and now his attention is spent elsewhere. but i'm thinking of her the whole time. that's so much worse. why is that thing in bed with you? this is where it gets the best signal from the cell tower! i've tried everywhere else in the house! there's always a new excuse. well if we got xfinity you wouldn't have to mess around with the connection. therapy's tough, huh? -mmm. it's like a lot about me. [laughs] a home router should never be a home wrecker. oo this is a good book title.
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reveals that local police responsible for the roof where the shooter was found never spoke to the secret service prior to the attempt on trump's life. pete: we have brian kell immediate with more. >> i appreciate the fact he's coming out and addressing us and the one that didn't is the acting director responsible, kimberly cheat and will looking at her resume, she had no business running the secret service and came out arrogantly and smugly sat there and said after her testimony, which was such a train wreck, she resigned. but to me, he comes off defensive. we know these people were great. i have a lot of trouble, as do you, being critical of law enforcement and people that
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throw themselves in front of the bullets should be awarded and not criticized and i worry they're watching me and you and saying, i work 18 hour as day and haven't seen my family in three months and now these guys are going to be critical of me. i'm not. but the systems are broken. i can't believe how bad this was. do you know one of the highlights for me was instead of using their radios to say we're looking for a would be gunman, they can't find him. they're texting. how hard to use your radio and how many other events, mostly trump and they would be fairly protected and a handful of cop withs no coordination with the secret service and you really cared and you'd go back not just to butler and i like to get secret service involved and the
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requirements for the secret service is college. if you are an operator and come out at 32 years old ask retire and do something productive and go into the secret service and go back to wave that. get some of the best trade people in the country around the most important people in the country. pete: especially with a shortage of counter snipers and specialty that can be filled by experts from the military. >> i don't know how they consider the golf thing a success. somebody walking in saying i love what my agent did spotting the barrel of the gun, but i'm disappointed we didn't have someone on the other side of the fence. don't just say we did enough because logic gets in and say what else are you not being candid about. i asked president trump, i know you feel protected but what about your family? and this is what he said.
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>> i know your safety and special secret service, but do you worry about your family too? >> i do. i do. i don't talk about it, but i do. i have to worry about family and everybody i worry about you. i worry about everybody because we're under siege and no country has suffered like we have for the last three and a half, almost four year when they allowed millions to come into our country from prisons; right. from prisons and terrorists and people from mental institutions and they take over our parks and look at new york. you can't play little league baseball anymore. that doesn't sound serious, but it is serious. when they take away your whole lifestyle, living in hovels better than our veterans and illegal aliens that come in and destroy the hotel and fighting at levels where the police don't
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even want to go in. that's happening in thety and country, i do. i want to protect everybody. taking pictures with 300vips and ten minutes with me, which is taxing and exhausting and then does a two hour live event in front of 18,000 people and maybe 6,000 on the outside. then who know what is he did on the way back. in new york. that's tough for a 28-year-old but what about a 78-year-old. he thinks he can do that and we'll find out in the next 45 days if he can. pete: who has more energy, donald trump or brian kilmeade?
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that's an open question and we'll debate it on the couch and it's a toss up. it's a toss up. >> but, pete, i have a chance to talk to you tonight at 9:00. you've done something for me i can't thank you enough, you watch thousands of hours of video and pulled out media moments of the week, and i can't wait to see what you have. robert doddy overdressed and talking about singers and celebrities and what to watch coming to the elections and they break it down for us. us. pete: entire interview with donald trump on one nation. don't miss it. brian, thank you. >> stay within yourself, pete. pete: i try but fail. next generation of conservatives are gathering in texas this
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weekend. more on the movement coming up next. of bringing textile manufacturing back to america. we're taking the best fibers our farm can produce, spinning it at one location, weaving it, then finally into a cut and sewn product. there's value in buying american made it has a real life impact up and down the supply chain. we want our customers to feel how special this product is, right when they open the box. go to redlandcotton.com and receive 20% off your order with code fox 20. new centrum menopause supplements help unpause life when symptoms pause it. with a multivitamin plus hot flash support. daily zz for quality sleep. and enxtra for focus and clarity.
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live in the moment. ask your doctor about otezla. will: christian, great to see you this morning. talk to us about the texas youth summit. what do you talk about, who do you get into the summit. help me un-. >> thank you, i was oocollege teacher for over a decade in the houston area and working to help
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with conservative values and christian people and don jr., wesley hunt and going for them on the report and it was a great morning and thousands of youth here at the marriott this year and it was a great production and better than ever and we're excited about all of the young people that want to make a difference. we're a nonprofit and going for that at 41 and eligible voters that are gen z and we need to make sure that we're reaching the youth and spending time on them. going for texas and going to push it in a conservative direction and the youth summit was the place to play. pete: what kind of turnout do you expect? >> we started yesterday and grateful for fox nation to be partnering with us and streaming
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this event and all the support we're getting and people around the state and not just houston. it's the fourth largest city in the country and dallas and san antonio and other st states and it's neat and we're excited about the great work we're doing. will: promoting principles like fiscal responsibility and free market and government and christian values and certainly a fast moving market and best state. this is streaming on fox nation so stream and watch today. thank you for joining us. >> thank you for having me on. go ahead bless you. will: kamala harris making sure we get daily dose of greens. we're going off the wall to try and translate the word salads. >> we're an optimistic people and literally in the face of a stranger see a neighbor.
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>> in terms of both rightly having right aspirations for your family and friends and for this generation and far more elusive than it's been. pete: that was part of an answer of the question of what's the plan to lower the cost of living. you'd never know from the word salad from vice president kamala harris. trying to answer questions about how to lower cost of americans. will: off the wall with more moments in the sit down with oprah. pete: give me something. will: i was listening to that, pete, i was thinking is she overthinking it? she's like processing through the answer three or four words at a time. pete: yep. will: repeating words like rightly, right, over and over. you don't end up fulfilled. you gone end up with something you feel like you can sink your teeth into. pete: it's useful for recall and
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repeat and another example part of a closing statement and remember, this was not an interview. it was an interview but campaign event and staged as an interview and want it is to look look she's answering questions and very according photographed and part of the -- choreographed and part of the closing statement gave you this. >> we take pride in the privilege of being american, and this is a moment where we can and must come together as americans. let's come together with -- the character that we're so proud of about who we are, is we are an optimistic people. will: what's going on is an attempt of projection of sincerity. what the issue is is that at the end of that, it doesn't come off
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as sincere or deep. doesn't come off with depth or any sense of authenticity. pete: halting, just take this sentence. let's come together with the character that we are so proud of about who we are. there was nothing and then stumbles on optimism. that was a two minute answer. most of them come in the context of long windup and leading to substance at the end or sometimes none. will: we've been analyzing both these people and kamala gave us less information to analyze. for me, i've gotten to understand the rhythm of donald trump answer. it is begin to address the question, indulge all the other things popping into his head he wants to talk about, but it does come back around to your question. i've been there as interviewer and i've been there as audience
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member and cops back around to the question. this feels like a roller coaster with thomas mancino tracks. pete: not sure where it goes and moving to the next example. you've seen this in multiple things and end of unsatisfying answer, they assist a bit. this is part of a three min answer and the question was simple: when you see a question at the beginning from oprah. watch this. >> specific steps to fix the border. >> when united states members of congress including the most conservative republicans came up with a border security bill and donald trump called up those folks and said don't put that bill on the particular for a vote. he blocked the vote. >> to answer justin's question, now that that bill is gone and hasn't passed, will you reintroduce that? >> absolutely.
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will: she did not answer the question. pete: correct. went for three minutes talking about that but didn't answer the question. will: the question was what will you do? pete: and oprah didn't offer pushback but said kamala, here you go. clearly. hear's your answer. will: kamala harris talking about her vision of america in her campaign and something about turning into who we are as americans. pete: this one is something. >> this movement is reminding each other about that we have so much nor many common than what separates us. social security important and it's about the strength we have as americans and this movement as i like to say looking in the face of a stranger a neighbor. >> yes, yes, yes, yes. >> extension of love thy neighbor and in the face of a stranger see a neighbor.
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will: pete and i were texts about this this week. you had a lot of thoughts about this answer. pete: yes. she claims to be lead ago political movement that's going to literally change the way we view neighbors on the street as if she's sort of a messy onyx secular jesus and seeing a stranger and kamala harris and tim walz, not see ago stranger but a neighbor. just like jesus whole thing means nothing. it's a campaign alaska nothing. it's fake. joy and aspirations and deeps and hope and when you see someone, you see them as a neighbor. that's nothing to do with policy or what the president will do, and it's not true. yet oprah goes yes, yes, yes, yes. it's insane. will: works on oprah and works
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on other celebrities as well that are a big part of this campaign. pete: watch this. >> hello, president harris. >> i'm just smiling from ear to ear, oprah. i have never felt this much joy and optimism in a campaign in a long time. >> i've always been a fan of kamala. >> everybody is so energized. >> this campaign to beautiful, wonderful kamala harris. will: julia roberts, chris rock, meryl stream and chris stanson. caring about what celebrities has to say feels like something from 20 years ago. pete: they're trying and always from democrats and especially if they're desperate or close, they kitchen sink it with every single celebrity out there hoping that'll manipulate you to say if chris rock likes her, i need to as well. by the way, there wasn't a bump
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in the polls because of taylor swift. will: interesting. no bigger celebrity than taylor swift. turning to celebrity chief meteorologist rick mike mouth for the fox weather forecast. rick reichmuth. >> i have someone here and you watch every morning? >> yes, db of interaural. >> what time do you get up and watch our show? 4:00 in the morning. >> get up at 4 to watch the show? >> yes. >> that's because of pete and will? >> no, you and everybody else on fox. reporter: so good. thanks so much. take a look at weather map and what's going on and i tell you what, we still have summer-like temperatures holding on and it's a good thing. today is the last day of summer. tomorrow fall begins tomorrow morning and we're going to feel like it for some spots especially out across the west. we've got a storm brewing down across parts of the four corners and see that little swirl across arizona, that'll turn into a big snowstorm across parts of the colorado rockies and some spots over 1-2 feet of snow and denver getting rain and first end of
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fall severe weather across parts of the south in the next couple days. watching for that . pete: all right, thank you, rick. will: thanks, rick. pete: going gaga for trump and hitting a wall for dating apps and shaking off unlikeability. what could that combo be? only rachel's pop culture roundup is next. ♪ e rider, i've spent countless hours maintaining fences. i started ramm to provide fence and stalls that are safer, stronger and more flexible for every horse and rider. every ramm fence and stall is proudly made in america. combining durability with the beauty of traditional design. discover the difference with ramm fence and stalls. visit ramm fence.com and let us give you more time, to ride.
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rachel: time for another pop culture roundup and this time i'm joined by daily mail columnist marine. we're starting off with this, going gaga for trump with the pop star and actress' father endorsed the former president on "fox & friends" on thursday. watch. >> one of them is pure, you know, and he's a patriot. the other will say what is needed to get elected. i'm tired of hearing about her neighbor's lawn. rachel: thoughts in? >> my thoughts are this is amazing and gaga kept her silence and gaga if you recall sang at joe biden's 2016 inauguration. she and a host of biden backers
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stars are being very quiet and it leads me to believe that her dad spoke up probably with gaga's approval. rachel: that's interesting. he said he's tired of hearing about her lawn. >> tired about the lawn, middle class, what have you. rachel: exactly. taylor swift has lower favorability ratings than donald trump. but being propped up for the democrats. >> she did the impossible. she tanked her own mega stardom and wondering why her peers like beyonce are keeping their mouth shut, this is why. she's polling lower in favorability. rachel: is endorsing kamala a bad deal or these guys are talking about being sick of celebrities endorsing and giving us political opinion. >> people know this is a bad deal for business and despite the oprah special the other
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night, viewer celebrities are on board with kamala and word salad than you'd think. rachel: this is my favorite topic of the whole segment. young people are revolving against apps and taking pictures and posting on a wall and writing down information about themselves just, i mean, this is old school like when i was in college you needed a ride home and put a post on the wall. >> this is in williamsburg and ground zero and analog dating and more. rachel: leading to more date something >> i do not. sorry, i'm a cynic. not more than tinder on a wall. rachel: i think young people feel like they miss something and they were robbed of something and human interaction and they're taking a new step.
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>> they lived through covid, protesting, they're good. they're good. rachel: yeah,. >> i wouldn't worry about the next generation coming up. they'll be fine. will: they'll tape it to the wall. they'll be fine. rachel: not making me feel helpful for love but we're happy that you joined us. catch her column on the daily mail. it's the best and her book was a blockbuster this summer. it's called ask not, the kennedys and all the women's lives they destroyed. >> thank you. you got it. rachel: get that book. i read it and it's awesome. big final hour of "fox & friends" just ahead. marine, thanks again. >> thanks, rachel. rachel: you're the best. >> you are too. ♪
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