tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News September 21, 2024 6:00am-7:00am PDT
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rachel: well, it's the 9 a.m. hour of "fox & friends" weekend starting with this: who's the boss? president biden holds his first cabinet meeting in nearly a year, but first lady jill biden is taking the reins. >> sometimes the white house surprises you. when joe became president, i knew i wanted to keep shining a light on the issues that i'd worked on for so many years. will: plus, critics call out harris' authenticity as she claims she grew up in a working class neighborhood. >> -- live in the hills or the9 flatlands. we lived in the flats. if a beautiful -- a beautiful working class naked. will: the neighborhood she actually grew up in -- pete: in canada. [laughter] rachel: french canada on top of it. pete: and it's college football saturday is. our own adam is live in columbus
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with some form of a weapon with. [laughter] a modified mortar tube. the final hour of "fox & friends" weekend with a t-shirt cannon if starts right now. ♪ ♪ sweet caroline, good times never seemed so good ♪ will: good morning, by the way, welcome to "fox & friends." a little technical difficulties, if we're being honest. pete: could be the outer banks. will: oh, is this a game we're playing? pete: just a beautiful scene. it was up for a -- will: south carolina, i'm sure. pete: nicely done. will: today's national dance day, and you know we love to show off our moves. pete: do we have it? if. will: i think we got something. rachel: oh, boy. pete: always.
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[laughter] it never gets old. rachel: you're doing good, will, look at you. [laughter] >> we were feeling each ore's rhythm. >> there you go, then take a step and then throw the hands. will: we're line dancing there, and the reason why we're showing you that is we're going to be line dancing again today. pete: more of that one, please. rachel: yeah, more leprechaun from will. rachel: you were pretty good with the salsa -- [laughter] pete: we've got a touch of texas dance instructor. rachel: you're from,. are you a good line dancer? rachel: what? you don't take kathleen line dancing in dallas? will: no. rachel: what kind of a -- pete: doesn't your country club have line dancing?
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will: listen, i don't know how to say this without offending people, but just the way it is, i grew up -- i mean, i'm not line dancing. pete: i've never if line danced either. will: not this guy. pete: did your -- will: i'll take kathleen out and and we'll do a little two-stepping, a little western swing, but i'm not going to to line dance. rachel: maybe we could do some two stepping and see huh that goes. will: anyone can learn how to two step. that's easy. pete: that's junior prom easy. will: pretty much. two forward, one dance. rachel: looking forward to that. will we'll see. the secret service is owning up to the security failures that led to the first assassination attempt on former president trump in july. pete: the acting director going into some detail about what went wrong while saying accountability ising. rachel: madeleine rivera is here with more. >> reporter: good morning, guys. lack of communication appears to be the biggest reason for the missed opportunities to stop the
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gunman. acting secret service director ron rowe admits the secret service did not give clear instructions to local authorities. >> -- assurance review has identified deficiencies in the advanced planning and its implementation by personnel. these employees will be held accountable, and this agency has among the most robust stable of penalties in the entirety of the federal government. >> reporter: the agency's internal report details how personnel on the ground relied on phones instead of radios to send information out on the day of the rally. that meant the secret service did not know how focused local and state police were in trying to find the suspect, thomas crooks. secret service also knew from the beginning that securing the rally site in butler was going to be a challenge. there was even concern about the position of the local tactical team who were stationed on the second floor of the building from where the suspect fired his shots, but there was no follow-up about changing their location to the roof, for instance. in fact, there was no communication at all between
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that team and the secret service before the rally. >> -- were encountered the day of the visit with respect to line of sight concerns, but they were nots escalated to supervisors. while some members of the advance team were very diligent, there was complacency on the art of ore others that led to a breach of security protocols. >> reporter: and on friday the house passed a bill to boost security for trump and vice president kamala harris. if signed into law, it would give them the same level of secret service protection as president biden. will, pete and rachel. rachel: thank you,head lin. there's -- madeleine. there's so many questions surrounding this, but in addition to the lack of good security and so forth, i saw questions about -- i still have questions about what happened. who is thomas crooksesome why was his body cream mated, you know -- cremated so quickly? why don't we know anything about his parents? you guys know that if this had happened in the reverse, if a maga person had shot at kamala
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harris, we would know everything instantaneously. is and that's why all this, these stories and all this, these hearings and press conferences, it just feels like they're holding back because there's so many other questions with surrounding this. will: well, what we end up learning about the second asaws tin -- assassin, alive, what we learn from his integ division. pete: we still don't know his motive, apparently. this ronald rowe had a chance to come out, he's just a company man, played defense. the same culture that denied secret service protection to donald trump before that first assassination if attempt when they were asking for it. will: well, brian kilmeade interviews donald trump, it'll air tonight the on "one nation." i thought he asked a fascinating question about how he feels after these assassination attempts. pete: check it out. brian: i know you and your safe the city, but do you worry about your family too?
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>> i do. i do. i don't talk about the it, but i do. i have to worry about family, i is are to worry about everybody. i worry about you. i worry about everybody because, look, we're under siege, and no country has ever suffered like we have for the last three and a half, almost four years. when they allow millions of people to come into our country from prisons, right? from prisons and terrorists and people from mental institutions, when they live in hotels better than our incredible veterans who are lying on the street opposite the main entrance to the the a hotel, and in that hotel you have illegal aliens half come in and, by the way, destroying the hotel. fighting at levels that the police don't even want go into the hotels. when you have that happening in this city and this country, i do. i want to protect everybody. rachel: fascinating. he's asked about his safety and his family's safety. he addressed it so quickly and immediately went on to the safety of the country. which i think says a lot about him. pete: and you heard it from i
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think it was senator ted budd from north carolina, just talking about how much security and of safety is front and center for people -- rachel: yes. in the election, yeah. pete: in the election. just basic, you know, big cities, schools, all those places, it matters to folks. will: tonight on "one nation" with brian kilmeade. meanwhile, the cover of "the new york post" if asks, who's the boss? a cabinet meeting, the first in a year which in and of itself pretty stun thing. now, i've never been president of the united states. my assumption would be that's something that happens a little more often than annually. pete: correct. the last cabinet meeting was october 2nd. so before the october 7th attacks. think about that. it is, it's staggering. i don't -- we have a government on some form of an autopilot with no pilot. rachel: pilot -- pete: yes, there's a visiting angel pilot. [laughter] and normally the first lady doesn't attend cabinet meetings, but if she's running the show,
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then she ought to be there, and that's exactly what happened on friday at the white house. joe biden starts his remarks, and then he hands it over to jill. watch. >> today the top of our meeting jill's going to give an update on the house initiative, white house initiative to fundamentally change the approach and fund, how we approach and fund women's health services. is so i'd like to turn the it over to jill and for any comments she has. all yours, kid. >> thank you. you know, sometimes the white house surprises you. when became president, i knew i wanted to keep shining a light on the issues that i'd worked on for so many years. will: so who's the boss? pete: we know who the boss is. will: jill biden? rachel: it's obama. but she gets to play cosplay and pretend she's president for the day. here's the thing about the people around the table, they
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all have to pretend to take her seriously -- [laughter] pete: you're wondering what those cabinet secretaries -- of course, they've faced no accountability or oversight for three and a half years. kids can't read, vets can't get service, transportation isn't working, none of those people are being held accountable. they're just doing whatever they want. well, let's move on to the woman who wants to be the president of the united states. we broke it down on off the wall, will, the way in which -- the winding way many which she speaks, half ofs which is about a her own narrative. she's a middle class, working class kid, i grew up where everyone prides themself on a green lawn. she's creating the image she grew up just like you, just like where i grew up in forest lake, minnesota. and what's the name of your town again? will: sherman -- pete: sherman,,. and where'd you grow up. rachel: all over. i'm an air force brat. pete: she grew up just like you. and i think we have some new video that has been made available of the neighborhood
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where kamala harris did grow up from age 12-18. it's in westm if ont, quebec, in canada -- westmont. i see some nice green lawns, but i also see some nice if new houses -- will: on the hills, not the flats. rachel: she said she grew up with construction workers and blue collar workers and teachers, and that doesn't look like that. and, by the way, this is french-speaking quebec -- will: you keep saying that. are you associating french with fancy? rachel: a little bit. [laughter] will: i don't think all the french people in canada are fancy. rachel: no, here's what i'm saying. she tries to play like she's got this all-american thing. you can go up north of canada, and it's, it can kind of feel similar. it does not feel like that in quebec. pete: by the way, it's considered one of the richest neighborhoods in canada. rachel: like, the, like not just in that the province, in the well country.
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will: of course, the your point, pete, the overarching theme the understand is how much real and how much is fake. how many is phony, and how much is authentic. it'sal tied into some of the accents she does when she's -- rachel: does she speak french? will: i don't know -- rachel: why wasn't that on the wired interview? will: i don't know if she's given a speech in quebec. i would be really curious, does she do a french accent? if because she does one when she speaks to latinos. that's the newest entrants in the kamala harris accents. >> i love you back. hello the all my define nine brothers and sisters. [laughter] [cheers and applause] and my -- [inaudible] if -- [laughter] and to the all my hbcu brothers and sisters. [laughter] [cheers and applause] if you better thank a union member for sick leave, you better thank a union member for paid leave, you better thank a union member for vacation time.
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[cheers and applause] you all helped us win in 2020, and we gonna do it again in 2024. i come from the middle class, and i have never forgotten where i come from. >> do you believe americans are better off than they were four years ago? >> so i was raised as a middle class kid. we lived in the flats. a beautiful, working class neighborhood. will: you know, so, okay -- [laughter] again, what's -- the question is, are you being pandered to. is somebody faking something to you in order to get something in the if exchange, in this case a vote. when first came out about kamala switching her accents, at least online there was, like, you know, you you don't understand code switching, right? that black americans have to understand code switching and the way to speak in different audiences. the point, you made this, rachel, t t not just kamala, it's hillary. it's joe biden. rachel: i wish we had that hillary clip. will: we have clips of all these
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democratic politicians doing different accents, and now i'm asking you, is joe biden code switching or pandering? pete: exactly. and you contrast that with donald trump go who, when you love him or hate him, is the same in project of each audience. it comes off as authentic. he is who he is at the iowa state fair or downtown new york city. with kamala harris it all feels fake, and that's why it's all so curated and so comfy and everything's a cozy confine with oprah, highly scripted, questions off of a note card because the minute she meanders, he might end up being honest. which if you're honest, it doesn't stay inside the bubble of what they told you. yes, everyone had green lawns, they just didn't tell you that someone else mowed them. [laughter] the little detail they didn't include in the fancy quebec neighborhood. it's all highly, high liqueur rated. rachel: i saw because she did this oprah are town hall, some people were clipping online on twitter and other platforms
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footage from 30 years ago of oprah interviewing donald trump. and it was fascinating. he was talking about how the japanese were ripping us off and how people need to pay tear share. their share. you could have taken everything he said 30 years ago and forwarded it, and it would still be the same message he has about keeping america safe, not getting ripped off by other people, fair trade instead of free trade. andthat was 30 years ago. we don't know her poxes 30 -- positions 30 seconds ago with kamala harris. they keep change. now she's, like, this big gun owner who's going to shoot people who come into her house, but then we have footage not long ago of her saying she's going to take people's, con first if candidate people's guns guns. the one thing you get with donald trump is pure authenticity and a beef of what he said 30 years ago d and a belief he believes it today.
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pete: it's a seinfeld campaign. s it is a campaign about a nothing from kamala harris, and they're hoping you'll buy it for 45 more days or, actually, buy it today the because people are voting right now in certain state thes across the country. 45 days from now is just the last day, unfortunately, you can vote. rachel: that's what they hope you do, vote now before another gaffe. pete: correct. turning now to some additional headlines starting with this, the united states and iraq are now coming to an agreement to remove nearly all american troops by the end of 20 to 26. that's according to u.s. defense officials who spoke with "the wall street journal." right now an estimated 250 0 to u.s. troops are serving in iraq, season and an official announcement could come as early as next week. and federal authorities issue a subpoena for the new york city mayor's head of asylum seekers' services. giveaways for illegals is the other name of the title. they want her to testify before a grand jury. if officials are seeking information on illegal or migrant contracting which is
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tied to an ongoing investigation into one of mayor eric adams' other aides. you mean, money's washing around and they're not all aboveboard with it? shocking. sources say authorities want the know if contractors were selected in exchange for illegal kickbacks. the head of asylum services has not been accused of any wrongdoing. and finally, a riverside pub in london is gaining popularity on social media for making the most of high tides. serving up pints in their flooded beer garden. the pub's patio along the thames river gets several inches of water roughly twice a month, so patrons simply go barefoot. this spot gives a whole new meaning to the phrase local watering hole. will: ah. pete: kudos to the writer, whoever wrote that. that's nice -- rachel: is that river clean? is it, like, having the hudson flood?
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will: well, we swim in the hudson. rachel: i know, but that's not san sanitary -- will: will we just had to olympics, and the seine -- when i read how much e. coli was in the seine, i started googling how much was in the hudson. i couldn't get a good answer, and i was relieved -- pete: you know what else they saul it -- they call it? they call it a dive bar. get it? will: uh-huh. rachel: all right. mike pompeo joins us live this hour concern. will: but first, the ohio state only allowing 6 points from their last two opponents. pete: he led them to their last national championship. urban meyer's expectations for this season coming up next. oh, he turned his head. will: it's really urban meyer! ♪ ♪
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♪ rachel: another week of college football is here as marshall university takes the on number 3-ranked ohio state the on fox. the buckeyes coming in as the heavy favorites this week allowing only 6 points against them in their first two game of the season. fox news meteorologist adam klotz is live with their former
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head coach and college sports studio analyst urban meyer. hey, adam. adam: hey there, yeah. it's an exciting scene out here. the crowd is always ready to go, coach. you still live in the community, you won a national championship here. what's it always like to be on campus for you? >> i call it the friendly confineses of columbus because with we go to some unfriendly confines once in a while. i'm an ohio boy, we did live here 10 years, so t t great to be home. adam: i was with you a couple of weeks ago, you were in ann around bonn -- ann arbor, little rougher seen. >> -- rougher scene. >> i always keep charles woodson right here in case someone wants to take a swing. adam: ohio state, heavy, heavy, heavy favorite in this game. what are you going to be looking for? >> you know, marshall can come and stand up and beat you. real listly, there's not --
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realistically, there's not one place, so the best thing is play clean, take care of the football, and i don't say it publicly when i was a coach, stay healthy. you know, i want to keep this team healthy because there's going to be some questions that the have to be answered when they go to eugene. they haven't been challenged this year, and they won't million they get to eugene. adam: do you think from what you've seen so far, as you're saying, they haven't been challenged, but what is this team made of? what can they do? >> i made a comment on our podcast that when i study these teams, it's different than when i coached, you always have a weakness here and there. now you just kind of do like the genie and hit the portal, and that weakness turned into strength. i think texas, georgia and ohio state have figured it out. there's not a weakness on team. there's nfl players across the board. adam: i don't know if you've noticed this, but this is the fourth week of big noon if kickoff. so far the home team has actually lost every ing ising
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game. maybe there's a little bit of a curse going on there. could something come into play today? >> no. no, not at all. i'm not a betting man but, yeah, no. adam: i set you up for that one. all right. the last couple of weeks i talked to brady and matt leinart, and i asked them if i was a football player, just by my build, what would they see me as. they didn't have the nicest things to the say, but you're a coach. where could you use me on the field treat? well, if i was recruiting you as a high school, i'd look at the video, the picture and your size, and we'd just keep going to the next high school. adam: all right: now i'm not even on the team anymore, guys. maybe kicker. maybe i feel okay with kicker now that i've heard that. i appreciate it, coaches. thanks, guys. rachel: all right. thanks, adam. thanks, urban. fox's big noon kickoff airs live live from ohio starting at 10. amy:. former secretary of state mike pompeo with is us -- is with us.
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pompeo with is us -- is with us. live next. stay with us. tive. shingrix is a vaccine used to prevent shingles in adults 50 years and older. shingrix does not protect everyone and is not for those with severe allergic reactions to its ingredients or to a previous dose. an increased risk of guillain-barré syndrome was observed after getting shingrix. fainting can also happen. the most common side effects are pain, redness, and swelling at the injection site, muscle pain, tiredness, headache, shivering, fever, and upset stomach. ask your doctor or pharmacist about shingrix today. (♪) check in time is 3:00. it's 2:55. i know. is this what he's doing now? as your host, i have some rules. first, no showers longer than 5 minutes. this isn't a spa. no games. no fun. yes, coach. meanwhile, at a vrbo... when other vacation rentals make you share your turf with a host, try one you have all to yourself.
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pete: fox news alert, israel launching a targeted strike against hezbollah in beirut killing 14. the the idf confirmed the strike killed a temperature hezbollah commander that the u.s. says was behind the 1983 beirut barracks bombings that killed more than 200 americans. here to react, fox news contributor and former secretary of state mike pompeo. mr. secretary, thank you for being here. first off, these -- you have the page everybody -- pager attacks, then the radios, now you have this. how much of -- do you think they were able to get surveillance or gps locations and now they're able to the hone in on remaining hezbollah commander s? what do you make of how this is all unfolding? >> pete, good morning. it's great to be with you with. it's certainly a common straight of really good intelligence work, years and years of effort would have had to have gone into
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this to identify these things at, apparently, the very granular level. and what it's allowed them to do is impose real costs on hezbollah, its senior leadership now, the second major strike and then do this in a way that minimizes civilian casualties. this is excellence in operations. pete: yeah. >> and i'm guessing that the israelis continue to know more and will be able to continue to put pressure if on hezbollah the protect their own nation. pete: how devastating has this been for hezbollah? are they still operational? i mean, can can can you give us a sense of that, and also does it make a wider war more likely or less likely? have they reestablished some level of deterrence, israel? >> pete, my guess is that hezbollah's still pretty capable, still has hundreds and hundreds of precision-guided munitions that could attempt to be launched into israel. i know the israelis have taken out many rocket launch sites and will probably continue to go after them, but the threat remains because it's not just hezbollah, it's not just hamas,
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it's not just the houthis. in the end, it's the iranians that will continue to underwrite and fund them and help them rebuild even in the pace of israeli excellence. as for escalation, yesterday the secretary of defense -- after the israelis took out a guy who had killed hundreds, who had killed dozens and dozens of america in 1983 in our embassy in beirut who we'd been looking for for decades, they took him out, and our secretary of defense said, hey, slow down, israelis, going to escalate this war. my thought would have been thank you, israel, for taking down someone who had taken american lives and for every family who who lost a loved one in that bombing, this was a, an act of justice and rightful vengeance. so i think this will actually deescalate because hezbollah has to risk its entire organization and infrastructure if it continues its efforts to support iran in this conflict against israel. pete: you know, you mentioned the way america put its thumb on
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the scale, usually telling israel to pull back. why is it that this administration, harris-biden, seems so hell bent on accelerating the war in ukraine, in expanding it, widening it, giving more capabilities to the ukrainians to the the launch into russia, but time and time again pulling israel back and saying we need to des late -- deescalate their fight against hamas and hezbollah? why the difference? >> frankly, pete, we're kind of the same storyline, we've been very slow. we've provided weapons to the israelis, but what this administration gets wrong, i think, in both cases is it doesn't understand that there is evil in the world, and the only thing that they understand is power and brute force. these guys think, right, you can sit down with the ayatollahs, they've been negotiating with hem for three and a half years giving the iranians billions of dollars and you end up with what we saw now almost a year ago on october 7th. americans held hostages by the iranians in gaza, kid americans,
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1200 dead israel israelis and the red sea almost impassable. when you think you can appease them into peace, you create exactly the conflict we sea in the world and the risk of's -- escalation is enormous. the next three or four months while president biden is nominally in charge are a really dangerous time period for our country. pete: indeed. when you were secretary of state, i'm pretty sure everybody knew who was in charge, a very different stir. mike pompeo, sir, thank you for your time. >> thank you, sir. have a good morning. pete: you got it. you too. democrats in panic mold, reportedly fearing trump could shatter the blue wall after the teamsters don't endorse kamala. marc thiessen reacts next. ♪ and over 400,000 of us have left blood thinners behind... ...for life. we've cut our stroke risk. and said goodbye to our bleeding worry
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union, that's obvious even if it doesn't accompany if an endorsement from the teamsters. the question, i think, for everyone now is, is that indicative of a wider movement in areas where unions are strong like pennsylvania, michigan, wisconsin that are key to winning the presidency? >> i think it very much is. look, donald trump has made the republican party the party of the working class, and the union leadership just hasn't caught up. i mean, he won the poll of teamsters members 60-30. you would think that would mean gets their endorsement ooh too, but they didn't endorse him even despite that. they should have given him their endorsement, if they were democratic -- the uaw admits, their leadership admits that donald trump has the support of most of their members, but they endorse kamala harris. so i think these unions have not caught up with the american people because the republican party under donald trump is now the party of the working class, and i think those people are going to come out for him this november. will: yeah, that's, i mean, everything is about
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pennsylvania. does this tell us something that might happen in pennsylvania that's not yet showing up in the polls. and, or at least not fully showing up in the polls. meanwhile, who's running america as we speak? joe biden held his first cabinet meeting in a year, marc. that's stunning. and there was a prominent -- [laughter] role, there was a prominent role for the first lady. watch. >> today at the top of our meeting jill's going to give an update on the house initiative, white house initiative to fundamentally change the approach and fund how we approach and fund women's health services. so i'd like to turn it over to jill for any comments she has. it's all yours, kid. >> thank you. you know, sometimes the white house surprises you. when joe became president, i knew i wanted to keep shining a light on the issues that i'd worked on for so many years. will: pretty unusual, marc, especially when people are
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wondering how on the job is biden. >> yeah. i mean, they're not even pretending anymore. look, the first lady doesn't have a job. she's not an official, she's not an elected official, she's not a member of the white house senior staff. though i remember when hillary clinton was first lady, she actually had a west wing office. i know that because it was near my office. i was the only person who had a full-length mirror in my office because of hillary clinton. the -- this is quite unprecedented. a lot of people on the left with saying -- are saying, well, ivanka trump addressed a cabinet meeting once. she was a member of the white house senior staff. the senior staff sits at the chairs around the table, around the back, and sometimes they're called on the speak, and they stand -- and she addressed -- she didn't sit at table, she addressedded them standing up. she didn't take a seat at the
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table like jill biden it's just absurd. will: i mean, it's also stating the obvious here, joe looks different. i mean, i don't know if some of the cosmetics that have been done are now ceased that he's not running for president anymore, but we can see it in the video. we can all see it with our own eyes, joe looks different. marc thiessen, thanks for the deeper analysis than what i just offered. [laughter] thank you, marc if -- rachel: i want the talk more about that. jill's not giving him any more botox? that's a great topic. [laughter] all right. thanks, will. turning now to your headlines. pennsylvania's democratic senator john fetterman saying he believes support for trump has only grown stronger in the key swing state ever since the first failed assassination attempt. >> -- can has a special kind of place in pennsylvania, and i think that only deepened after that first assassination attempt. there is energy and there's kinds of anger on the ground in
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pennsylvania. and people are very committed and trump is going to be strong. and if that's -- we have to respect that. rachel: trump remains the only gop presidential candidate since 1988 to win the keystone state. venezuela's exiled opposition leader says he left for spain if after being told nicholas maduro's socialist security forces were coming for him. edmundo gonzalez said if he stayed, he could have been jailed and possibly tortured. they've done that to many of the protesters, so he left to seek support from world leaders for his case to be president. protests erupted across venezuela after tally sheets from the country's disputed july presidential election were never posted. the opposition claims gonzalez is the true winner. modearn family actor eric stone street expressing mixed emotions about leaving l.a. he moved to kansas city after his hit series ended, and he likes the the midwest better
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because hollywood types can be self-absorbed and phony. >> it highlights everything great about our business, the entertainment business, and it highlights all the [bleep] of our business. [laughter] it amplifies it because i'm here, i'm dealing with people from here, and i'm going into the store and having all these authentic, real moments and then the i go to hollywood and it's, you know, you're reminded of some of the types of people that you deal with. rachel: interesting. stonestreet says he likes visiting los angeles a lot more than living there. which those are your headlines. let's turn now to chief meteorologist rick reichmuth for our fox weather forecast. rick: makes a lot of sense there. rachel: it sure does. rick: all right. of let's talk a little bit of weather. we've got a few things going on including the tropics. obvious -- obviously, we expected this really active hurricane season. typically 39% of hurricane season is ahead of us, so we're
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on the downhill slide, and that's great news. four disturbances in the atlantic we're watching, none of them concerning except one. this is a very good chance we're going to see something develop here. this is probably a mid-week event next week and and maybe some sort of a landfall of something if this all gets itself together later next week. but if you're anywhere from louisiana towards florida, you need to be watching because something could pop up pretty quickly, say wednesday of next week, and maybe having an impact by friday. in the short term, temperatures 800 degrees in dallas -- 80 degrees in dallas. along with this warm weather comes a new system across parts of the rockies, our first big snowstorm coming for the central rockies. snow time, it's coming. rachel: it looks gorgeous out there. i can't wait to get out there and line dance with you. [laughter] i think you're going to be the best, rick are. rick: i doubt it. [laughter] rachel: don't miss tomorrow's show, vivek ramaswamy, florida
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♪ pete: well, in honor of national dance day, how about a little dancing with friends segment? rachel: and we're no strangers to to learning a new jig. watch this. ♪ [laughter] >> [inaudible] good, guys, yes. pete: you have to have your chin up. >> see, we're feeling each other's rhythm. >> there you go, take a step and then throw the hands. ♪ if everybody's getting down in this town. ♪ if ain't never gonna be the same ♪ i'll. will: see there. pete: never know. will: we tried a little line dancing in nashville a few years back. karen benjamin hayes is a dance instructor from touch of, t. if many upstate new york.
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rachel: wow, i lo that. if. will: you're here to teach us a touch of texas line dancing, right? >> yep, i am. will: all right. what do we need to know about line dancing? >> well, there's three basic steps that i'm going to the teach you today. if we had a little bit of a teaser. starts out with bind to the right, so you're going to step right behind right touch, the left behind left touch. now a k step. forward touch, back touch, back touch, forward now rocking chair, forward, back, back, forward. step, half-turn, stop, do it all again. right behind, right touch. left behind, left touch. k step, go forward and back, back and forward. rocking chair, rock forward and back, step-half turn, keep going. finish. rick: did do you say that you
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just wrote this dance for us? >> yes, we did. there were a ton of us that came down many in a van overnight, and we were -- then we came up with it, yes. rachel: these guys dressed the part. >> really did. rachel: you're code switching. rick: these guys dressed this part. it's not like for today. this is how you guys dress. pete: yeah. will: and you brought a lot of people with you all from upstate new york? [cheers and applause] pete: how many people do you get line dancing on a wednesday night? >> we've been averaging between 2-300 people. rachel: really? how big is the place. >>? >> it's a 2800-square foot oak floor, dance floor, one of the biggest in new york. so people come from all over -- rachel: what's the attraction? why do people want to do it? >> it's great exercise, you know? it's one of those things, you had a stressful day, you want to forget about everything, just come out on the floor.
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[inaudible conversations] [laughter] [cheers and applause] pete: okay, guys. we're going to practice in the break, and then we're coming back for a full performance. does that sound right? we're going to the practice. don't go anywhere or, you'll see our skills, or lack of them, after the break. ♪ ♪ so, she can have those one on ones again. hey jim! can we talk about casual fridays? oh sure. what's up? get fast, powerful cough relief with robitussin, and find your voice. ♪robitussin♪
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we're told in genesis chapter 1:26 that god is made man in his image and by his likeness has he made him. genesis is a book of fundamental importance for the jewish and christian faiths and a literary masterpiece that has profoundly shaped western civilization. now, in this exclusive online course from hillsdale college, you can deepen your understanding of how this ancient book is essential to you today. sign up for the genesis story. absolutely free at learnfromhillsdale.org. dr. justin jackson, a distinguished hillsdale college professor, will guide you
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through this fascinating free online course that unfolds the biblical stories of adam and eve, abraham, isaac, jacob and joseph. when you sign up, you'll explore some of life's most important questions, gain a greater appreciation for how the bible confronts pain and hardship with redemption and hope and discover how the struggles people faced thousands of years ago are deeply relevant to us still today. take this six lesson course whenever it's most convenient for you at your pace or in your schedule. signing up is easy and free when you go to learnfromhillsdale.org today. so the fun thing with the serpent is how does a serpent talk? and not only that, but why is the serpent's punishment to crawl on its belly when that's what it does? join the hundreds of thousands of americans who are enriching their lives through this exclusive online course from hillsdale college and gain access to this premium content today. what i hope you'll get from studying genesis in this course
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is a deeper appreciation of the biblical insights with regards to the human person psychology, our predilection towards rivalry, but also reconciliation sign up for the genesis story free of charge, at learnfromhillsdale.org today. some days, you can feel like a spectator in your own life with chronic migraine, 15 or more headache days a month each lasting 4 hours or more. botox® prevents headaches in adults with chronic migraine before they start. and treatment is 4 times a year. in a survey, 91% of users wish they'd started sooner. so why wait? talk to your doctor. effects of botox® may spread hours to weeks after injection causing serious symptoms. alert your doctor right away as difficulty swallowing speaking, breathing, eye problems, or muscle weakness can be signs of a life-threatening condition. side effects may include allergic reactions, neck and injection site pain, fatigue, and headache.
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don't receive botox® if there's a skin infection. tell your doctor your medical history, muscle or nerve conditions, and medications including botulinum toxins as these may increase the risk of serious side effects. chronic migraine may still keep you from being there. why wait? talk to your doctor about botox®. and get in the picture. learn how abbvie can help you save. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ will: oh, no! finish hold on. pete: oh, spin! ♪
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[laughter] >> back, forward. will: couldn't jump in on the run, buddy. this is bad. pete: come on, will. oh, look at that move. ready? >> 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 -- [laughter] rick: i think i got it. >> forward, back, back, forward, rocking chair, forward, back, back turn. right 2, 3, left, 2, 3, rock, back, back, back turn, right, 2,, 3 forward, back, back,
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right, 32, 3. left, 2, 3, back. [cheers and applause] will: thank you -- [inaudible] more information go to -- [inaudible] rachel: this was faster than we practiced. rick: by the way, we're out of breath. pete: pete -- i'm definitely out of breath. will: when's the best dancer? >> this one is the best dancer. [cheers and applause] >> what's your name? >> [inaudible] will: how long you been line dancing? >> i started when i was 8. pete: come on, mom. >> i'm 10 now. peteere you go. [laughter] two years. have a great saturday, everybody. ♪ ♪
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