0 car insurance so you only pay for what you need. >> well use the bible lineas the rise of all the theaters. >> hey so tonight we're nearing 200 interviews, believe it or not, for tucker carlson today over on fox nation, thesese are extended and very wide ranging interviews with people who'd never have time to sit down on a regular nightly d show here on fox that includes some of the most prominent entertainers, authors, thinkers and generally interesting, entertaining people of our timeu . you may have seen a couple of minutes these interviews because we broadcast them at night sometimes. but on this show this evening, we're focusing on just two people. the firstsi is football legendl brett farve and the second is hollywood actor jon voight. we're bringing you two extended portions right now.wo e you can get a sensextende of whr fox station show is all about. >> here is part one of our conversation with brett favreett . > who's your dad? what was he like? well, as i explained to you last night, if you're familiar with gomer pyle and our generation or older certainly is familiar with gomer pyle, sergeant carteram., who yelled at a flattop, was constantly everything he said was yelling even when he was polite w and speaking softly. that was my dad. >> he was he was my baseball coach . he coached american legionca baseball for 35 , 40 years. and he he coached high school football for about thirty five years. and so me and my two brothers, we grew up playing, being coached by even when he was notl officially our coach, there was we were there was a lot of hard work, a lot of, yelling. t >>wa but that was that was the way we grew up. you know, my dad and like i said, he was coaching high school football since i was a little kid. so screwed up he didn't make excuses for you . he never felt sorry for me. no, i was probably treated the worst on the whole team and ,you know, strangely, i got that i didn't particularly likeg ,but i got it, you know, the things that he said to meai and i think sometimes don'tet get me wrong and i think i told you the story i had had he and. i had been riding back from a practice home one one evening and we had a little little small pickup truck and he walked over to me and said, son , how are you doingka in school? everything you need. okay,y? i would have i would hae thought that he had t lost his mind. that was just not his nature. when i did. >> and another example. so while i'm in green bay, gr especially three or four years and when i really was playing exceptionally i well, he would he would come to t games and after the game, he, he ride to the game with me i in my truk and he would ride back home after the game with me in my mru truck and he would critique the way i playth. >> now, my dad was he was not really a a technician from a coach's perspective. it was more just work hard,e be tough, be a great teammate. that was kind of his three three things. like we're going to steam them to death. he was noto d steamer. he was just we ran the football and i'm going way back to wherek the younger generation doesn't know what the wishbone is . you know, wishbone was prolific back when barry switzer osborn we're doing it back in those i don't know what is the wishbone? it's quarterback under center. you have a fullback, you have a halfen back and a half back ad you run the misdirection options. >> i would say if you had0 70 plays in the game. sixty eight runs, some some type beer option. i don't even know how to explain it, but that's what we ran. so i say that because my dad critique me. that's for example, maybe i wasi twenty eight four thirty two in the game which is great. yards, two touchdowns, maybe anya interception, maybe no interceptions that would give it a try ratherr than saynd oh i'm proud of you , a really good job, he would say, you know, you got to complete those other four passes. and i would say that don't even think about trying to critique me for a man who would throw a pass or allow his son to throw a pass. should throw what i should have done better and he'd get all bent out of shape. >> but, you know, i thoughtad i had a fair argument. >> you had to be able to take criticism. yeah. yeah,m? certainly from him is where it started. so like i've had some great and the really good coaches will get on your a little bit. yeah. no matter who you are. and that's okay that i particularly like it. no, but i understood that was part of the process and needed to be done. >> and i've even had coaches say, look, now i'm not surewa you asked a little bit, but i want the other guys to know that you're no different thant anybody on the team and i'm all in on that five. and but that started with my dad. you told me a story last night about being a kid, riding >> would you would you mind repeating that story? so my wife loves this story. >> so me and my brother, my older brother scott, we're two years apart. >> i'm guessing we were probably he was twelve say nine or ten .t >> so we lived on a half a mile dirt road one way and one way out. no neighbors anywhere remotely close several miles away. >> so for whatever reason, wede didn't ride bikes a lot. butt this one particular day wecu were riding down the gravel road and i got my you rodeid bikes as a kid. l you probably got caught in these chain at some point. so i got my pants leg caught in the chain and it kind of wrapped up g pretty good. and so we're trying to get it out. me and my brother scott. so my dad comes driving down the road from home going out. >> you can hear the truck coming. you see the dust and he stops. and i was telling you , i'm telling you the truth. the passenger window, there was no passenger went in the door was held shut or somewhat shut with an extension cord. so he pulls up, he looks out the window and he says, well, you are doing so riding bikes. my pants. i gotau caught in chain. we helped me get out. oh , , i ain't got time for that. >> he gets about 50 to 100 yards down g the road and i do that and all of a sudden brake lights, you see brakee lights and you see t a truck sta and gravel flying and hend hits the reverse and starts coming back . and my brother scott says, i got my pants. i caught in the chain and i'm not running anywhere. so i'm trying toi a hopm into the wood. >> needless to say, it was the last time i flipped any one off the long time . and thiss is the god's honest truth. i told my dad t that i only did that because i saw people do it when they were mad at other people. he didn't buy it. you didn't even know what it meant. i don't know k, man. >> i just knew that people did it when they were . so it was quite a bit longerr before i ever do that . but that was yeah, that was my dad. he was you again. >> if he was there was very little compassion and if my dad would have said to me, son , i love you , i would stop. dad, are you okay? you got guys fever. but i knew he loved me in his weird sort of way when he diedn famously suddenly you played one of the best games of your life. the next day i would sayay it ws the best game. statistically speaking, i don't think anyone can argue just the first half alone. you're not the when i lefte the game after twenty years and i will say this briagolong ,i had every passing record , good and bad that you couldd possibly now since they've all been passed. i say that only because only once in my career i think once, maybe twice that i throw for four hundred yards every now guys do that all the time. now one time i had yardage passing record but but was it was it because i was still four four or five hundred yards game i had three hundred ninety nine yards. guys do it all the time out. but for me in the way i played that wasas nothing short of a miracle. and four touchdowns at the end f of the first half. t so i could at the end of the game right there with better statistics than i'd had in any other ball game in my career. the dayth after your father tody after how'd you do that ? >> well, it was the hardest w thing that i ever had to do. there was a lot of talk prior to the game on whether whether or not i would play speculation . meanwhile, at the hotel in oakland, h i knew i was goina to play because that's what my dad would have wanted me to do.d and the people who knew my dadeo and the way that he carried himself all understood. you better play in a game. i mean, i can just hearing you don't you set out for this the hard part to me was not not playing in the game but playing well enough to honor my father in my mind. >> and that was exceptionally hard because it was hard to focus on the job at hand . it was a second to the last regular season game. we had to win a game to continue our playoff possible. we had to win that game and quite frankly, win the next game. hopehe n lost by another team te get in. so we neededt to win and i knew that my teammates were counting on me k, but i've kind of lost track of the game plan for obvious reasons. so i there was a lot going on in the least of which was steam and game plan issues. so the pressure, the form that i have placed upon myself was and i've played in two super bowls, played in pro bowl, was played in a lot of big games. but the pressure to perform at the level that i ended performance was almost unreachable. >> but yet in that it happens, i didn't you get the memo. we're still hunting for treasure. these are back paneling for treasure for the expert, the brain chase and jeff is anything he's already got the filthy part out now just we're going to get rid of the family treasure, the new series on the fox nation. are you going to help? you're right, sweetie. >> he's in australia now. fully own fox news sign up to say hello. >> i'm mike lindell and i want to give each and every one you one last chance to get my original my slippers go on mypillow .com or call the number on your screen. now use your promo code and you'll get your very own. my slippers for only forty nine . ninety eight . that's ninety dollars off in the biggest savings ever. what makes my slippers different is my solution for later design that you won't find in any other slippers. my slippers pattana layers make them ultra comfortable, extremely durable and they help reduce stress on your feet now that they come with an indoor outdoor so you can wear them any time anywhere. i guarantee they'll be the most comfortable slippers you'll ever own and you can get them for the best savings ever. only forty nine ninety. go to mypillow cover. call the number on your screen now to get your very own buy slippers for only forty nine ninety eight . that's ninety dollars off. we have extremely low quantities. >> once they're gone they're gone. so order now home. diepraam servpro first hope and those who need it most and we need you to join our team. we have thousands of jobs available, premium compensation and the opportunity to move into management and even owners visit servpro .com slash careers. >> today we need a small business plan. >> we got this loan fulgoni there's a better way to get a fast small business loan. go to on deck .com and if approved, get your funds as soon as the same day your loan is contact. so we'll take a look back at some of the most compelling some of the most compelling argume every search you make, every click you take, every move you make, every step you take, i'll be watching you. the internet doesn't have to be duckduckgo is a free all in one privacy app with a built in search engine, web browser, one click data clearing and more stop companies like google from watching you, by downloading the app today. duckduckgo: privacy, simplified. a detailed vehicle history report. an estimated value of your car may be worth at bompard .com. you know, i said this on the field after i said,vi you know, divine intervention ifne there ever was a , you kno, an example of it in football, it was the way i played in this game. >> there's no question. did you say a prayer beforehand? absolutely. absolutely. almost as surprising to me o is that like a lot of professional athletes that you got handed a bunch of pain pills, you became dependentded t on them. he but even as you're going through that, you continue to win. >> how do you how do you how do you do that ? i have no idea. i won three mvp, 94 , 95 , 96 or or in that span, 95 , 96 , 97 short and it was in the right in the middle of my drugof addiction m. it all started. . we were playing philadelphia, milwaukee. e >> ninety four and reggie white, who became a teammate of mine the following year, slamming the ground, separated my shoulder and sometimes you watch a game and you go like that hits got to hurt really bad. yeah. and it does then others you go. i can't believe he's not getting up frombe that . this one in particularis that reggie it was like every force that he had along with his wife drove my shoulder and i want to keep playing so i had to get it injected at halftime to keep it playing. the second half played. we won the game. i was given to pain pills after a game for the ride back from milwaukee to the green mile and a half drive and d it worke. i didn't feel the shoulder not i felt more kind of fuzziness, the pain. so i kind of liked it and itsp just kind of spiraled out of control from there. so i found the most minor injury in the injuries kind of m provoked me into asking fore pills and that happened more and more . i sprained my ankle. i you know, i still play, but i need some pills and it just got worse and worse. >> and as you -- you know, you take so many for so long, then those are not goodod enouge you have t to add one or two more . and so so at my worst i was w taking sixteen vicodin. yes. a just a handful at one time and we talked about it some last night. i knew it was a problem. you know, i knew it was a problem way before that . but you know, it was to a point where i would throw up, i would have a gag reflex. nt i got to a point where so many w pills i would throwou back up and i would pick the pills out of the bombing and fly again. now i've certainly knew that that was a problem to people around. >> you know,heple i thought no, right? >> yeah. i think when you're kind of in the midst of the addiction, whatever that may be , you think you're the only one who knows you've got it all when in fact everyone knows and they're trying to figure out how best approach or how how to handle this . and that was the case with me. >> my life was not all because she didn't want to give it away . she was flushing pills down from time to time , makingwn my job harder to try to findse these. yeah, but obviously you sharete my best interests in mind. but you don't mean meanwhile, as i'm playing, i'm taking this pill that took me every night no matter what . i had two seizures, one during the season, one after a routine ankle surgeryson after the niney five season and that the second one that they were not that far apart really was kind of okay. we got to do something k that really kick started going to treatmentea and getting some help. but you know, i was one that was thinking well i'm playing my best football. itit can't be that bad. i mean that was the reasoning i have within myself. >> i knew i was wrong, but i was playing exceptionally well. so i was justifying my actions because it can't be too bad and play well. >> it's kind of a fair point. i mean, i'm not you know, opiate addiction is the worst thing imaginable, but most people get really passive and out of it. and you're winning the super bowl. how did you do a that ? y >>ou i think there's some what g got me to where i was at that point and from a professional perspective also got me in the addictive cycle that i was. yeah, you know, that i'm all or nothing. and so i was i was sort of all on those two fronts football. so i was devoted to my team, but i was also devoted to the pill and really or pills that got to a point where hadhe i continued it much longer rather than comingat back and being fine after a seizure, maybe i never wake up from it. yeah. you know, 65%. yes. w for anyone will kill you , no question about it.tu so i'm just fortunate that i quit as quick as quickly as it q started. >> did it affect your game and you got awesome? no, not really. for about a month or two, i i have to admit, i had cold sweat . i shook. i took. my last pill in allne season. thank goodness watch. i flushedss like six down the toilet and almost went back in after what , six wasn't enough. ro and it's a problem when you're in this addiction cycle. yeah. you know,n adad what you need and that becomes a really hard the more you -- you know, you elevate how many you take, that becomes harder to get . it becomes you're consumed every day by taking those pills and getting those pills. so when i quit, i didn't even think aboutt i went to treatment three times. i think most people now are p familiar with me. no k one for sure. the seventy three day stat prior to super bowl these i went prior to that for l twenty eight days and louisiana and then i went bac back for twenty eight days after the seventy three days. sosohe a year later and i learnl each time i learnedot a lot more and i also learned don't ever quit on cold turkey which is what i did because they can kill you . fortunately i survived for two months i struggled with colds. sure cambodge had you know night sweats i mean but eventually i got over it to him. >> you started on thisve addiction because you got an injury correct. your shoulder because you had hit so hard. es >>t who are the scariest people you played against? were there ever people on the field you thought i don't want them near me first and foremost have to be reggiehe like the guy who hurt me g later to join me as a teammate? thank goodness one of the nicest g, biggest teddy bear you would ever meet but was ferocious, didn't talk smack, was a preacher one of the nicest guys . funny it could impersonate anyone but just you blocking and he he wasn't out to hurtit you . you just played within the game. yeah. confineshihe the game. but he was three i think he was probably three thirty. ran like w a deer, hit like a mack truck. i knowruck firsthand. so he was the first and i wasam so thankful when he joined our team. >> but then, you know, the manyh ,manye battles i had with warren sapp, i wasn't blocking him. he was chasing me with tampa m baye . great player, one of the greatest trash talkersr. in history. >> but what makes a good trash m talkerak? >> well, i'll give you an example on so when when warrenwa was drafted, he was in as class a great class. john lynch, ronde barber, derrick brooks, all these great guys , whole thing guys . but they were kind of young. o so we were kind of beating up on him a little bit. but you could tell they was going to be good. so like every pass even even completed successful passes thought warren sapp would hit me either right through right after i threw away. >> after i threw just on principle just because he could pri and so i would i wb be giving up. he'd start a movie on you. i'm kicking your all day for kicking your all day for i said, warren, look, school board twenty eight seven we win it. i don't give a damn... iv i'm kicking your all day a and that's all it matters. 's that's the kind of guy warren o sapp was. you know, he wanted to win and they started winning a lotof of games, but he was relentless . he was going to let you know that he was close orwa he's hite you or he was going w to contine to do what he's been doing the rest of the gamesc regardles of what the score was. and like i tell my guys, i'm like just blocking, whatever you got to do.o. and weave can't we can't block. and that was the type of playerp and hela knew . >> so, you know, that was it. but we beat them. you knew you did something well, because you i mean, he gave you his best for seventy whatever the average game that seventy five defense. seventy five offense fifteen special team plays. he gave you every thing he had every play. did you ever talk to him off the field. we've become friends after believing if you told me like n while we're one of those games where we wereot john back and forth you said hey that guyo you're going to be friendsu with him someday. you got to laugh f about these moments. i said you're crazier and . yo >>u so when you get out of bed in the morning at fifty two and your back hurtsts heifers, do you think of him? >> you know, surprisingly i don't. but what i do i think just the twenty years kind of just flashes before how long it took but how quickly i can just scan through and the rolodex of what i saw was me being john wayne is now resulting in maybe being you like a pincushion. >> i just i feel every sack in here i think i've ever gotten so musty in here. the trucks and stuff in the the other side of i'm mike huckabee, former governor of arkansas. and i'm here with my wonderful wife of almost fifty years, janet and our puppies. over the years we've learned to make a marriage work. you love, respect and most importantly, a good night's sleep. much had real difficulty getting to sleep and schamus until he started taking relaxium sleep for years now we both fall asleep faster, stay asleep longer and wake up refreshed every 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comfortable, extremely durable and they help reduce stress on your feet now that they come with indoor outdoor so you can wear them any time , anywhere, i guarantee they'll be the most comfortable slippers you'll ever own and now you can get them for the best savings ever. only forty nine ninety four to mypillow cover. call the number on your screen to get your very own. my slippers for only forty nine ninety. that's ninety dollars off. we have extremely low quantities. once they're gone they're gone. so order now for the red white over hundreds went down in flames. the time has done too much when they got back . the most talented home cooks return for a second chance every season and you can watch them of a little bit. we'll go out with a shot at redemption. no mistakes that we made. we just will step up to the plate and be named masterchef finale worthy masterchef to wish all new wednesdays and watch any time on fox now or hulu. >> hi. this is mike huckabee. isn't it amazing how so much that president trump said still rings true , but schools in the media don't want our kids to hear anything positive and that's why my team created a kid's guide to president trump . it'll teach our kids all about president trump's accomplishments and his vision for america and i want you to have it for free to order your free tip guide to president trump gift fundo. just visit three trump dove .com. that's free trump guide .com. this bakery needs new equipment fast to keep up with demand. so they're going to end the online lender that makes it easy to choose your loan and if approved, get funds as soon as the same day your loan is on deck. i live in manchester strohmeyer in new york, new york lawmakers approving a sweeping overhaul to the state's handgun licensing rules. governor kathy hochul signed the measure, which will put more restrictions on who can carry guns and where they can be carried. law will take effect september 1st. democrats and allied parties have raised more than 80 million dollars since the supreme court overturns roe v. wade. party officials say donors are giving much of the money to national campaigns and causes instead of races for state office. and an ex-boyfriend has been arrested in the shooting death of a new york city mother. the 20 year old was shot in the head while pushing her baby in a stroller earlier this week. twenty two year old suspect who is the father of the child has been charged with murder. i'm ashley strohmeyer. now back to you. tucker carlson tonight for all of your headlines, log on to fox news.com. the game has changed tremendously and how they protect players and i think that's good. but i knew what i was getting into. that was my style of play. i fed all the toughness and relish, the opportunity to play hurt. notsh t that i wanted to be hur. don't get me wrong. but like i broke my phone when my throwing hand in play the next week. no, if you'd have asked memy prior to my career of these injuries, which one would you think would keep you out the following thornlie knee ligament, sprained ankle, separated shoulderam, broken thumb when you throw in and i said broken thumb on the one hand hand that you can't throw . >> but yet i chose to try because that was that was kind of my i thought i was my dna and i ended up playing the best of the best nine game stretch of my career with a split i'm throwing fromm an again, i just kind of fed off of that . and the more i did, the better i i played in it. not that much just stuck out, but i just felt like the team never had to worry aboutbe that position because i was always going to be there. i was always going to be reliable, durable, tough and a good leader. and there is a lot to be saidth for that . and i, i live for that persona now at 52 , i go, you know, taking a break. it's funny because you think of i'm no expert, but you think of' quarterbackst is like the most protected man on the field. can't what the quarterback get hurted p now? >> you're right. yeah, absolutely. whether you want to play that way or not, the game does not allow you to play that way. the following flags, even if you tried to run to get tackled, guys are going to shy away from you so you can't even you can you still get hit hard. don't get me wrong. but you have to try real hard to get hurt. and when i played not that i tried to get hurt, but whene you would hit me or hit me hard and i would feel it, it was to me it was a challenge to see ift i could get up quicker than the padding on my and tellim him, hey, that was a good hit. that kind of add insult to injury. and now at fifty two , i'm saying you -- you maybe should have showed a little restraint. so but you said you did iter in part because you were the leader that you're the quarterback here thatm a you're the leader of the team.t how important is itfo for the fr the leader to show physical courage or abilityer to play hurt? > well, i think the quarterback position is so important. >> some i say it's more important than anyny position on the field. >> i don't know p. i necessarily agreesa with that. you know, kicker. this is a field goal at the end of the game, you tend to thinkha that he is the most important person. so it's a matter of circumstances. ,the quarterback is the one position that you really can't afford to not have someone good enough to play that position with play week in and week outnd in the leadership obviously goes hand in hand with that . ifersh you're out there during practice every day, you're showing up for games, you got a torn hamstring or you've got bruised shoulder. we know that . but a lot is expected of you , brett. we expect that you your best w even when you feel your worst effort. that goes back for me. with the way i was raised, there was much, much more emphasis in our household. not much feeling sorry for each other. we i wanted some compassion every once in a while, but very little of it came our way paying for it some . but dad would not and translate it over to w my professional career that a lot of people expecting you to be your best week in and weekk out. ut >> so live up to that . >> well, that was a good chunkbr of our conversation with brett favre. hope you enjoyed it. interesting guy. up next , a discussion with legendary hollywood actor jon voight. >> straight ahead, now someone could be listed as the owner of your stealing thousands of dollars of your hard earned equity. anybody who owns property or that home 10%. there's no other crime that is so easy and so quick to kill this your home, your equity, your peace of mind, your place is stolen in one fell swoop by home. it things like matthew, nobody thinks that i can take their house. nobody thinks believe it or not, a single page document is all it takes to transfer proof of ownership out of your name. people think, well, there's a whole huge process. but the truth is it's a one page document, but it's still must get through one final barrier. the county 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