Top of the Ticker: Rachel Maddow will conduct a live interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris on Monday, Sept. 22, at 9 p.m. ET. The MSNBC host will have a discussion with Harris about her new book, “107 Days,” which focuses on the shortest presidential campaign bid in modern history. This will be the former vice president’s first news interview since leaving office, with Maddow expected to ask Harris about the current state of American democracy and her future in or out of politics.
Memorial coverage: Fox News and NewsNation will be offering special coverage on Sunday of Charlie Kirk’s memorial taking place in Glendale, Arizona. Kayleigh McEnany and Lawrence Jones will be on hand to lead coverage of the memorial’s proceedings from 2 to 6 p.m. ET. FNC’s senior White House correspondent Jacqui Heinrich will be reporting live inside the State Farm Stadium with FNC correspondents Matt Finn, Alexis McAdams, Bill Melugin, and Jeff Paul also reporting from Glendale.
Over at NewsNation, anchor Leland Vittert will lead coverage from 1 to 5 p.m. ET. He will be joined by White House correspondent Kellie Meyer, along with national correspondents Ali Bradley and Jessica Kartalija, all reporting from Glendale, Arizona.
Meanwhile, MSNBC will cover the memorial, with an additional live hour of MSNBC Reports at 4 p.m. ET, anchored by Antonia Hylton. The network notes its correspondents and reporters will join throughout the day to provide key insights and reporting.
On-air apology: This past Sunday, Fox News’ Brian Kilmeade issued an on-air apology for expressing that people who are experiencing homelessness and mental illnesses should be executed. The comments happened during a Wednesday, Sept. 10, edition of Fox & Friends. His comments were born out of a discussion about the death of Iryna Zarutska in North Carolina, which drew broad condemnation. Kilmeade appeared on Sunday’s edition of Fox & Friends, where he apologized for his comments: “I apologize for that extremely callous remark,” Kilmeade said, adding that “so many homeless people deserve our empathy and compassion.”
My apology pic.twitter.com/VeoLkpDyPq
— Brian Kilmeade (@kilmeade) September 14, 2025