are we using power tools? will: i get the power tool thing. i want someone to show us, this is what i want some tips on, how about cleaning the pumpkin out? everybody shows you how to to make the designs, my least favorite art e part, the kids don t like the part of scooping rachel: really? my kids love that. will: getting it scraped so there s no strings on the edges. everybody likes to do the cutting and the designs, nobody likes the actual manual labor rachel: i bet if you went online, you could find the hack yesterday there was a hack about opening it from the bottom up. will: yes. rachel: i m going to try that this year. kids do love it. will: they don t finish job. i guarantee you sean finishes the job. todd: so this is what i have to look forward to with the little ones? will: you re super excited, and you will do rachel: most of the work. will: 70% of the work. todd: sort of like yesterday. yesterday all about the ponies, i can t wait we take her to the
of staff at the homeland security department during the trump administration. welcome to the programme. the votes are being counted in israel, in the fifth election the country has staged in under four years. the voters have before them two coalitions the hard right bloc led by benjamin netanyahu, and a coalition of right, leftist and arab parties led by the current prime minister yair lapid. netanyahu, remember, is still facing charges of bribery, fraud and breach of trust, and yet, in spite of it all, the first exit polls that emerged in the last hour suggest he could be on the brink of a record sixth term. this is how the coverage began. showing netanyahu s likud party on 31 seats, against yair lapid predicted 2a seats. we bring in our middle east correspondent. let s bring in our middle east correspondent tom bateman. as says that the exit polls are a good start. how trustworthy of the exit polls in israel? exit polls in israel? they tend to be broadly exit polls in
nathalie tocci, former eu foreign policy advisor. the longtime capitol hill correspondent, and now washington post live anchor, leigh ann caldwell, and christopher steele, formerly head of the russia desk at mi6. hello, welcome to the progamme. the photographs speak for themselves. red tabs, yellow tabs, top secret documents, some of them marked hcs human confidential sources which the us government believe the former president donald trump was attempting to conceal. the fbi seized 33 boxes from mar a lago earlier this month, more than 100 classified documents, three of which were found mixed with other papers in his desk and not in locked storage as where they were supposed to be. in a 36 page filing to a federal judge, prosecutors said that at a june meeting the trump team had certified in writing that all remaining documents were contained in a single sealed envelope that was handed over. but in august and in a matter of hours the fbi had recovered twice as many docum
protocol that would keep a tua-like situation from happening. the team said they didn t do anything wrong and they re saying some of the wobbliness from tua tagovailoa came not from a head-related issue but because he had a back injury issue that was making him a little bit uncomfortable standing up. we are both big fans. they have to get this right and they have to protect the players even when they sometimes don t want to be protected. bill: we ll see how they modify this. there was a system in place. the question is whether or not the system was followed. there seems to be trap doors on that. thank you, clay. clay travis from outkick.com. appreciate you. rescue and recovery efforts pushing ahead after ian caused a path of destruction from florida to the carolinas. the danger is not over. hundreds of thousands without power. officials warn of severe flooding to the north and along the coast. brand-new hour begins right now. hope you enjoyed the weekend. dana has the day o
for their own lives. guess you heard this morning i tested positive for covid. but i ve been double vaccinated, double boosted, symptoms are mild. it is friday, july 22, 9:00 a.m. in the morning here in london, 4:00 a.m. this washington where the january 6 committee has just provided its most revealing look yet into the trump white house as the capitol riot took place. former aides testified that trump watched the riot on tv but ignored all pleas from his family and top advisers to intervene. and while vice president mike pence was whisked to a secure location inside the capitol, the committee presented chilling testimony that pence s security detail feared they might not make it out alive. members were starting to fear for their own lives. there were a lot of there was a lot of yelling, a lot of a lot of very personal calls over the radio. it was disturbing. i don t like talking about it. but there were calls to say good-bye to family members. for whatever the reas