[national anthem] [national anthem] pete: they continue to roll in, our nation s anthem. beautifully tone do. cone. we had an iwo jima salute rachel: and two lassies. [laughter] better president welcome to fox & friends at this 6 a.m. hour. we ve got joey jones in for wil. joey: yeah, i guess all that saddle soreness for will this morning concern the. [laughter] i didn t know you guys were going to roll a band out and everything, the welcome wagon is here. rachel: house fire s here just for you. that s the band we re having for faith and friends. pete: faith and friends. stick around for the 9 a.m. hour. feels like a long time away but it s actually, technically, the 10 a.m. hour because overnight we rolled back our clocks. rachel: yeah, that was hard. pete: our viewership is probably half of what it normally is rachel: but rick is going to bring those numbers right back up. [laughter] joey: we begin with a fox weather alert. two people are dead in california as m
this is a film about storytelling, about how we tell the story of our country s past. why do we want to believe one version and not another? maybe because it makes us feel safe at night. there is one episode of america s history that is told very differently, depending on who you are and where you live. it is the story of our civil war and what came after. the hot winds of war blew across the land. made of it, a country divided. friend turned into foe. brother fought against brother. it was such a long and drawn out struggle. and the feeling on both sides was so intense. we re all just romantics, lost in contemporary times you might say. every one of us feels like we were born 125 years too late. to introduce myself, my name is rachel boynton. this is nelson walker. we are independent documentary filmmakers. we re making a film about how we tell the story of the civil war. we re filming in different schools all over virginia and we re going to place this with a deep
a confusing world. welcome to your world. i m neil cavuto. happy to have you with us. let s go to jacqui heinrich on what we re likely to hear from the president. hi, neil. we re getting a closer picture of the strategy here at the white house. we ve heard from the president before and seeing more of now telling voters that things will get worse with the economy if republicans take back control of congress. we got an unusual e-mail in the white house press core from andrew bates telling us to watch an interview that house minority leader kevin mccarthy is going to be doing with punch bowl next week. bates writes to us in an e-mail, kevin mccarthy continues to show cause how eager maga republicans are to make inflation worse if it minds a wind fall for rich special interests at the expense of the middle class families. nobody gives more compelling proof for the fact that republicans in congress would exacerbate inflation and sell hard working families out to special intere
Storytelling, about how we tell the story of our countrys past. Why do we want to believe one version and not another . Maybe because it makes us feel safe at night. There is one episode of americas history that is told very differently, depending on who you are and where you live. It is the story of our civil war and what came after. The Hot Winds Of War blew across the land. Made of it, a country divided. Friend turned into foe. Brother fought against brother. It was such a long and drawn out struggle. And the feeling on both sides was so intense. Were all just romantics, lost in contemporary times you might say. Every one of us feels like we were born 125 years too late. To introduce myself, my name is rachel boynton. This is nelson walker. We are independent documentary filmmakers. Were making a film about how we tell the story of the civil war. Were filming in different schools all over virginia and were going to place this with a deep connection to this history. What made you cho
heartbeat. there is no such thing as a heartbeat. it s a manufactured sound designed to convince people that men have the right to take control of a woman s body. kayleigh: in response to abrams studying comments, the left rest of her defense, of course, because i wouldn t they? the washington post fact-checker tweeting this. for what it s work, fetal heartbeat is a misnomer. the ultrasound picks up electrical activity generated by an embryo. the so-called heartbeat sound you hear is created by the ultrasound, not until ten weeks can the opening and closing of r machine. wouldn t you know, planned parenthood, they redefined how they see it, too. as recently as july, here s what the abortion provider said in their website about fetal development between 5-6 weeks. a very basic beating heart and circulatory system developed. now it reads this. a part of the embryo starts to show cardiac activity. it sounds like a heartbeat on it ultrasound, but is not a fully formed