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tv   Kennedy  FOX Business  June 23, 2015 12:00am-1:01am EDT

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>> thank you. >> and the questions last night, should we blow up the tax cut as rand paul says? and 92% of you said yes. that's it for us tonight, thank you for being with us, and good night from new york. ♪ ♪ >> indeed thank you, lou, and welcome to a new week. i'm watching the various reactions to the charleston murders, and along with greece and disbelief. now we're well into the political grasping, now, the usual condemnations politically for gun control, stricter background checks, and the always unanswerable question of why. now, instead of placing the blame on some racist wing nut with a bad haircut, hillary clinton called for a national conversation on race and prejudice. but then complained that group had grown to hot and negative.
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so somehow what this murderous mutant gobbled up online and tv is a greater cause for his horror spree than his own mental illness. but mrs. clinton wants to put the breaks on anything that might be setting off a patrol. she should they could be a trigger, now, by tossing typical red meat applause lines. the progressive had the nards to blame fox news. >> we can never know why someone snaps, but i do know where he got his news. i think the media is responsible. i don't think we should be saying we should be droning fox news, but he inspired people. >> what a cassism with that connection, and mat who was on the panel was quick on his feet and had this retort.
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>> i think he did a documentary that was antireligion. >> right. >> this guy goes into the church and shoots up the church. i would not accuse you of inspiring because of your antireligious. >> and the point is it's an easy game to play, which lands you in hard places, deem identifying free speech, it is also predictable, childish, and lazy, and it doesn't do any good. now, a man with better arguably attentions, and an equally offensive direction. and francis, who has become a one-man device, not only blamed weapons manufacturers for wards and genocide, he questioned the very faith of people who worked there and implied they weren't real christians. now, it's easy to blame society, gun makers, and loose lips for a whole host of kills skills, but to blame all of that to this tragedy is as
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crazy as the midget with the bull cut who deserves the condemnation. and judge napolitano is here to talk about the issues of whether the supreme court will deal that blow to obamacare, and do you remember how the president said he was only a minor player? not. and george w bush for the people who knew the former president, you're going to get the inside story on that. wait for it. >> while the stens of charleston, south carolina have had unspeakable tragedy, others have thought to politicize their tragedy with the lowest road attacking fox news friday on his show. well, let me welcome our awesome panel to discuss this
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and all the other issues is a fox news contributor and will one of the cohosts, michael malice is the all-star, and ambassador john, ambassador to the um, a fox contributor and a friend of forest and poultry everywhere. >> if you say-so. >> i always say-so, baby. i'm excited to get your take. i'm going to go to you first. >> yeah. >> let's talk about some of the fallacies that people like him are employing here. to not mention he's a total hypocrite when it comes to this stuff. but where is he wrong. >> well, there's a lot of ways he's wrong. first of all, you can't blame catcher in the rye for getting shot, andial blame marlin manson for columbine, and you don't have any of those readers acting in a violently ways. so i think this speaks to the fact that most conservatives don't understand that progressive say them religion, and you're one step away from being a murderer. so if you're not as antiracist
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from them from their perspective, you're a dangerous ticking time bomb. >> yeah. and obviously people are trying to figure out how this happened, how to keep it from happening again, who do you blame. >> well, i think it's clearly the individual who assimilated whatever he read from wherever he read it, but still drew the wrong cause of action. >> yeah. >> and whatever you think of arch americans, there's no justification to kill them. the notion that you can go from watching fox news to a decision to murder nine people in cold blood just ignores the reality. it's one persons twisted decision. so the statistics about the notch people who watch fox news even if this kid did and his act, is about as significant of the percentage of people who watch nbc, abc, and cbs and do the same thing. >> yeah. >> all right. so, you know, charles cook and natural review online took issue with what bill said and it's very easy to blame the left for some of these other similar
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homicide rampages, including christopher dorner. can you blame here mark atheism. >> i think you have to blame the psycho if it. >> yeah. >> a crazy, sick, twisted, evil person can look at anything. they can look at a left wing magazine, or a right wing television and they can get something psychotic about that because they're not in their right head. >> yeah. >> so what are we supposed to do? destroy a whole movement and label a whole movement as labeling them. that doesn't make any logical sense, and i think you're right. i think the left is -- they treat it like a religion and i think you're 100% right. when someone sways outside of that, they have to find some reason to make them responsible. >> yeah. >> for these horrific acts. >> yeah. and some form of excommunication. it's almost like a cult. >> yeah. >> you have to do and say and think exactly what we tell you, otherwise you are the other. >> collectivism at its best.
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>> you may remember mit economist jonathan gruber, the white house tried to downplay how closely he was with obamacare. >> huge political advantage and basically the stupidity of the american voter or whatever, but basically that was really critical to get the thing to pass. >> his voice is such -- well, now e-mails obtained by the wall street journal say that he had a much bigger role and did work closely with the white house. i don't think this is a huge surprise. but john bolton, can you blame the white house for downplaying the relationship? let's say he was the architect, let's say he was the guy who had the blueprints and got a ton of money, which he did, can you blame him from stepping away from it. >> well, i think they're scared to death both of the political consequences potentially and the consequences in the obamacare decision now pending, based on what he said. and i think this goes to another aspect of contrary
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liberalism. it's certainly in part of religion. but maybe even more significant for obama, for bill and hillary clinton. >> yeah. >> for gruber. they're just smarter than you are. they're a lot smarter than you are. you know, they would feel better and you would feel better, barack obama famously said he's better a researcher than his researchers. better speechwriter than his speechwriter, and you can fill in the blank. that's what drives them, they're just so much better than you are. >> but only if a better hero. >> but you think he's a hero. >> well, just because someone is a villain, doesn't mean they're a bad woman, and the $10 bill, i'm not going to stand it, but the constitution was founded in the same way that gruber did health care, and mainly they did not have the legal authority to throw out the confederation, they did so under secrecy in violation of the law, and
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luther snitched to the law. so this has been how the government has been made since creation. >> this guy called everybody an idiot. >> well, maybe if people -- >> talk about leadism though. >> yeah. >> i don't assume serve an idiot. >> it's not an assumption. it's based on facts. >> no. they shove the law down everybody's throat. if people had the facts on this law, they would have public support with it. >> the no consequences, so clearly they're doing something right. >> what are people supposed to do, people can't go up and say, you know, what? we're going to become congress today. >> they're supposed to get over the ardor idea that government is the solution to anything. >> well, i think many have. i think that's when you poll this law repeatedly. we see that people are saying "no." the people that have promised to us are not come to fruition, and that's why it's not polling very well but the bottom line is that he had to deceive in order to push this through, and the
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administration had to of course distance himself from this guy, what were we going to say? yeah, we thought upper i bunch of bum did you mean ease too. >> wouldn't that be great if they did, though,. >> i mean every politician constantly has to be, like, i'm fighting for you. >> fighting whom against whom? >> fighting washington machines. >> yeah. right. exactly. >> that's a great talking point. >> and we're going to be back with the panel and we have a lot to discuss, including brian williams and stephanie's robot. you will hear it from judge napolitano and the tension is building as the supreme court gets ready to rule on obamacare. will they deal a death blow to the health law? stay tuned for
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♪ . >> hello there. welcome back. all eyes are on the supreme court as they anticipate to release their rulings on same-sex marriage, and obamacare potentially cripping the health care law and making same-sex marriage legal nationwide. let's welcome judge napolitan napolitano. i haven't even started drinking yet, it's judge napolitano. welcome back. >> nice to be with you. >> what will they do? what should they believe of? what will they do on
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obamacare? >> my gut tells me that they will correct the obvious mistakes in obamacare. i say -- >> what do you mean by that? the wording or. >> yes. it is clear that the democrats who wrote it didn't intend this, even though they wrote it. >> yeah. >> and there's a principle of law that usually is embraced by the conservative wing, which says the court should do its best to salvage a law when there's a mistake in it, by the literal reading of the word. so the if the person who wrote the law put 20 instead of 2, it's a typo, here it's not a printers error, it's the drafters error, because the drafters did not anticipate when they said the irs can grant tax credits to poor people who utilize exchanges established by the state. they didn't contemplate that the states would not establish the exchanges because the supreme court would tell them that they didn't have to. >> yeah. so do you think they're going to fix the
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wording? what do you think they should do. >> i think they should invalidate the statute because it's profoundly unconstitutional crafted by the last minute on the chief of justice, by the last minute never even made it to the court was wrong, and this should be a opportunity to correct it. >> yeah. >> but i don't think five of them agree with the motivate auto. >> yeah. i don't think roberts is going to take it because of the political organizations and the desertion on both sides. >> yes. >> i mean they're just get-together, democrats, republicans, i mean they're all getting together to try to figure out a plan. i mean very quickly if obamacare is essentially gutted by the law. >> i don't think that will pass the house of representatives. >> okay. >> there are too many republicans in the house who will only give the state's money to operate obamacare if the individual mandate is weak and end if people have the right to disregard the
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individual mandate, and i don't think the president will sign that into law. so i think there will be at loggerheads if the court does remove the irs's ability to grant these tax credits and the congress is left with a fix. now, that is also a conservative argument where the court doesn't fix it, but the court will say it's up to the congress to fix it. this is a profoundly different congress. both houses. >> yeah. >> from the congress that passed this in 2000. >> and also dysfunctional. so before we get to the raisins because i want to talk about them quickly. same-sex marriage. what will the court do. >> i think the court will find that under the following two principles, the states not only may, but must recognize same-sex marriages and permit them within their state. and those two principles are the equal protection clause, which says you do this for straight people, you must do this for gays. there's no functional difference between the two in terms of their ability to live together as marital partners.
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>> yes. and entering into relationships. >> and the great decision by now retired federal judge von walker in san francisco, a ronald reagan appointee, who basically said the decision to choose a may the is the most intimidate decision that the adult makes, it's not up to the government who you choose. >> amen. >> i think under those two principles if it's the liberals likely the equal protection one better than they like the leave me alone one, i think it will -- the court will side against the states that are challenging. >> i still like the leave me alone one. we've only got 30 seconds left, but tell me horne versus the department of agriculture. this farmer. >> the agricultural garment tried to sees 100 gallons of raisins on a basis of new deal statute by saying that the 5th amazement which means the the government takes your property
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only applies to real estate. once and for all by a vote of 8-1 when the supreme court says the government takes your property, you have to pay for it, whether it's real estate or personal property. shouldn't have taken us 230 years to get us there, but we're final there. it's a greatest decision. it's one of the finest after i rememberrations in the modern era. >> very last would can we because we're totally running out of time now. will this have any effect on civil -- >> no. i don't think it will have a -- it will have a political, but be the a constitutional one. it's totally out of control and needs to be changed. >> amen. thank you, judge, for being here. >> thank you. >> i can't wait to see what happens. >> on one of them you hope i'm right, and one of them you hope i'm wrong. >> well, i always love your talents. and coming up my friend matt welch is here, he says reason free speech is under attack. and then later we're going to
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call 800-501-6000 to switch today. perks are nice. but the best thing you can give your business is comcast business. comcast business. built for business. >> hi, there. how are you? wonderful for you to join us this evening, a subpoena demanding they give up information of about six people who left comments on a site, as well as a doing a order that until it was removed last friday, kept reason for even acknowledging the situation at all. the comments were in response to a story about ross, who was sentenced to life in prison for running what was described as the ebay of the drug trade. joining us now is reason magazine editor and chief matt welch, and i know you've been bursting to talk about this, your reason yesterday was fabulous, you can now remove the ball gag in the nuttiest
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of nutshells. what happened? >> put a blog post about the judge having a even longer than what properties wanted sentence. six comments on it. one was, you know, same the judge should be taken out and shot. another one said maybe we should feed her to the wood chipper instead. other people said i hope she rots in hell. absolutely not a threat. >> but the rot and hell person was also targeted. >> so they came to us three days later and said we need all the information about these six comments and please don't tell anybody. but if you do, let us know first. so we read that language and said okay. we'll tell the commenters. our customers, they didn't do anything wrong, they just left comments on a website. >> did you want to eat a bag of sticks. >> yes. except that all of the court cases are not on our side. >> oh. >> it's not about a conviction. it's about what a federal
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grand jury can do to have you cough up this information. you have this pen, they want that pen, they can have the funny. they can tell you to cough up the information. if we fought, we would have lost. >> so you easily could have lost. >> yes. >> so we told the commenters if you're going to fight to quash this -- >> there's your opportunity to defend yourself. >> and they didn't. >> so on the given day, we coughed up the information as outrageous as all that is, but meanwhile, once we told the u.s. attorney we are going to do this, they got super mad and issued a gag aorder. so we haven't been able to talk about this case depo two weeks. it's been -- >> and i tried, i needled you, i poked you, came from the side, and nothing. >> i told you no comment on the telephone. >> i was, like, what? are we being recorded? hello? so the case has been dropped, what happened? >> well, the gag order. >> the gag order. >> the realtimer. >> most likely -- these people
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weren't plotting to go to a judge's house and do violence, they just left patrollish comments on the internet, but we don't know what's going to happen to them. but we've found out in investigating this that this is really common. this happens to facebook and twitter all the time. any place where you leave a comment, like, exgovernment official can rot in hell, now you stand to be investigated by an aggressive. >> well, will this case have a chilling on other websites. >> i'm scared to talk to you right now on some level, i mean that's normal, but leave that aside for a second, but of course it does. if we started a website right now talking about government overreach, would you have a comment section? because at some point you're d going to have -- >> well, i would. >> well, you're married to a lawyer. same thing. you of course are shielded from talking about this. do you think about twice about it if you have to cough up the information about the customers and most of the time that people do this they don't even tell the commenters. it's a really bad case of law,
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u.s. attorneys can do whatever they want and almost never receive any kind of legal seining just bad publicity. >> we're giving them bad publicity right here right now, matt welch. it's so nice to see you again. you look fantastic. and i have to tell you go to reason.com right now if you want and read matt's great piece. come coming up skywalker gets arrested after a wild police chase. we'll celebrate mug shot monday in a moment, but first 66 get together and set a record. it's one of the most amazing things we build and it doesn't even fly. we build it in classrooms and exhibit halls, mentoring tomorrow's innovators. we build it raising roofs, preserving habitats and serving america's veterans. every day, thousands of boeing volunteers help make their communities the best they can be. building something better for all of us.
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>> ain't snow nor rain nor heat away nor canadians can keep this away from the tropical storm. number one, sheriffs deputies went on a very wild car chase through several south carolina counts, this weekend there was
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a reckless evil driver, he had his way with double yellow lines nearly missing other cars and when was this vehicle villain? it was none other than darth vader. for this mug shot monday, take a look at. does he look familiar? that's jake lloyd. you may remember an kin skywalker. yeah, sure he looks a little bit different without the helmet, but make no mistake. this led foot wants to pump some led into the galaxy. he was charged with failure to stop, reckless driving, and driving without a license. jake made the police force be with you. and the philadelphia phillies were hosting the cardinals, and the losing team wasn't given the hometown fans much to get excited about when suddenly -- look. squirrel. >> we have a squirrel crawling up the net behind home plate.
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and he's going to try. i don't think -- now he's on the dugout, and players have scattered. well -- oh, my. >> he by the several of the players. look at that. that's not pretty. that guy right there had 51 rabies shots right in the belly, he landed on second baseman before scurrying off and living to see another game. but actually it could have gone a lot worse as you know. >> you guys want these fried? >> fried. >> all right. topic number three. will do just about anything to scare people, and of course a couple of passengers in a open glider were almost eaten alive by a farrell beastly cat, and
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little could their fried end eyes believe a cat was clinging to the wing of the craft. look at that. the pilot had her -- had her eyes gauged out and her face eaten by this savage, but the copilot was able to land the vessel and the cat lived. its got eight lives left and will probably spend the rest of themter rising the human being. >> who doesn't love a fun filled day at the beach? surfing can be so solitary, so lonely. if only those pesky boards could accommodate a few dozen of your friends. 66 hopped on the 42-foot long surfboard that had to be craned into the water, and they managed to catch a wave for 12 seconds, and look at that. you're going the wrong way. they beat out the old
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australia record, 47 people on board and they look extra dorky with those. i like you, though. surf city. topic number five. you may recall the story of king solomon who was asked to settle a dispute between two mothers claiming custody of a baby. he wisely ordered the child cut in half to the immediate protest of the real mother. but this is not that story. this is what happened when doug julie -- i don't even know, he was jolted by his long time mother the best way to split up their possessions was right down the middle. from everything an iphone to a chair, even the television right there. oh, yeah, and he's offering many of the items on ebay, half a teddy bear is a creepy reminder of what must have been happy times. and there's a fitting place with a man with a broken heart. i love you so much because
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you're crazy. all right. if you have any weird stories, german or otherwise it that you would like to see in the topical storm, show me your flying squirrel on twitter and instagram. coming up the panel, they return. have you ever wanted to see a gay spider-man on the big screen? or a black gay spider-man? well, we have news that might crush that.
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>> oh, hi. welcome back. according to new documents there wiki links, a 2011 between marvel includes mandatory traits for peter parker and spider-man. spidey cannot torture, he
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cannot kill, but more interestingly, he has to be white and straight, like my panel. they're back, and ambassador john. michael, i'm a fan of comics as you know, and i know that you are, but i'm quite sad i will never -- at least in film, see a gay, black spider-man. what does this all mean. >> well, i mean i think when you're reading a book, you want the book to look like the movie. when we were kids, they would just go off on a total tangent, and it would drive me crazy, so it's perfectly understandable that they're putting it out the same time the movie, it should have some kind of visual resembles, that's not weird. >> aren't you also looking for a caucasian heterosexual? >> spider-man is straight, and i can tell you that because i'm dating him. he's very much into the ladies, he's very nerdy, he's a going to the boy, he's not supposed to be like wolverine,
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peter parker is supposed to be the good guy, he loves his aunt may. >> so what you're saying is black gay people aren't good. >> i'm not saying that. >> wow. >> shame. >> if you make him gay, he's not going to go out with women name. >> make him gay? >> no, transform him. >> you can create a way, jedediah. >> all right. now, ambassador, we know that your mustache has superpowers of its own, can you say those for us, please. >> no. i can't. >> well, i guess it's a well kept secret. >> it wouldn't be a secret if you knew. >> i know but i'm trying for years. >> good luck. >> tell me what that whiter boomerang accountable of. now, tell me about peter parker. do you think that there's any fire to this smoke. >> well, i'm not going to go see a movie with spider-man is white and straight. of course i'm not going to go see this movie if he's gay and black.
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>> oh. >> and did this. wam. well, speaking of brian williams, he's come to a agreement with nbc and will the former stay with the company or move over to shack known as msnbc, and has been suspended for numerous accurate statements, he spoke with matt today. >> came from clearly a bad place, a bad urge inside me. this was clearly ego driven, the desire to better my role in a story i was already in. >> i don't even know what to make of it. i mean as you know i'm not a licensed psychiatrist, but i have a pretty good grasp on the human, and i think this guy is kind of full of nonsense. i think that nbc has beaten
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him into the ground. i really do, they beat him into the ground and made him feel so bad about going over this tape for so many decades, he took a demotion and pay cut. what do you think. >> well, this is like saying the first prize in a contest is this week philadelphia, and the second priors contest is two weeks in philadelphia. the idea that they're sending him to msnbc, why not just sent him to a assault nine and get it over with. >> they really should have. now, why can't he just say he lied. >> well, i mean giving this boosting of his résume and all this history with i'm starting to wonder anything about him. was he the former first lady? good evening to read his books with a fine-tooth comb. >> the third person. >> he identifies as being the third person on the moon, if you can be black by identifying one, brian williams. >> i know that there's a mental in this world, people
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feel like brian williams. sometimes i feel like a sandwich. >> i did not have that illness. >> so jedediah, i know that you're warm hearted, kind person, don't you feel bad for him. >> i mean i doful a little bit empathy, but i want to know everything he lied about. >> i do too, you're going to be an anchor, people need to have some sense of confidence in you, and i want -- i feel like transparency is key. now, is everything revealed that this guy lied about? it would be over for him. there would be no coming back . >> but do you buy the ego excuse? i mean i think that's such a weird thing, well, i just got so wrapped up in the network news. >> no. >> why? >> he -- >> am i just lost myself. >> he seems like a compulsive liar,. >> in a good way? >> no. not in a good way, i'm not going to sit on national television and make up stories, that's disgusting and unacceptable. >> it would make great television though.
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>> the robot who can detect and react human emotions for around 1,600 dollars, and body language, and words. now, pepper offering sale saturday. only 1,000 units were sold, and they sold out in less than one minute. this is pretty incredible, i have to say. becausan robots are obviously taking over the world, and, jedediah, i want to know. i mean this is a given, they're coming for us, what do you want from your robot. >> well, i feel it's sad because we're very needy, we need constant reinforcement. if you can do this, where's my tea
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. >> wait hold on.
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three times. >> okay. >> and three more for good measure. >> and the number four in the five point plan was the creation of synthetic moum commands, so this is what the pope needs to be fighting. >> yeah. or gun manufacturing. >> or anything else frankly. >> yeah. or global climate change. >> yeah. i mean maybe this is where the real -- >> well, capitalism. >> capitalism. oh, capitalism. do you love capitalism. >> of course. let me go back to the pope. do you think he's going to disarm the guards who have laid down their lives for pope over the years, all that's -- >> no. >> do you think the people who are protecting and defending him, do you really think that they're got an christian. >> they're all muslims. >> i didn't realize that. >> they may be swiss, but it's all muslim. >> i normally don't like to racially scare you, but the swiss muslim are the ones you have to look out for. >> i just wonder why the robot looks like the pills bury doll boy. they should have made it look
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like a hot robot. >> they have those here. they have them here. >> brian williams. [laughter] >> okay. thank you so much. it's so great to see you all. >> thank you. >> this night has been one of the best of my life. coming up two filmmakers talk to the 41
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>> hello. just say it's a go, president gorge hw bush rang in his 91st birthday, he was celebrating the 9-1-1 last week, but he's got another treason celebrate,
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the release of a documentary highlighting the many facets of his life. >> it's just the sort of person that you like being around. >> he just has an extraordinary sense of humor, and sometimes it catches you off gourd. >> i keep hearing that president bush is doing it. did you see he did it on tv. he could do it again. >> he could pound his chest and look at all i've done, but instead he would always say this is what i believe in. >> the film 41 on 41 features you guessed it -- 41 interviews from the people who have known the 41st president best. and the producer and directing twin sisters behind the documentary, which is now available on itunes and amazon. ladies, welcome. >> thank you. >> you guys really do look a lot alike. that's pretty incredible. so what are the prevailing themes of the documentary.
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>> i think what you can have us most that we did not know is what a good man and human being the president was and is to this day. >> yeah. >> and also his sense of humor. i think everybody who we spoke with, whether it was president obama to his fishing buddy, they spoke about those two things, and he's just so likable. >> yeah. and is he more likable than his son, 43? from people who you've heard. >> i don't know they would say he's more likable than 43, but he has a human side to him. >> yeah. >> that's very relatable, and touchable almost. he -- he sticks to who earlier is, he's very honest, very fourth coming -- has a lot of humidity, he has compassion, he's brave, courageous, and all of that comes through in the film after you hear from 41 people who really really know him. and the stories that we've heard along the way were
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really, really remarkable. >> and the relationship that he has with former president clinton. >> uh-huh. >> it's something that americans look on with great curiosity because it seems like they are genuine friends, what dunk of that? >> that is totally true. they both admire each other. >> yeah. >> which is very rare these days with the way politics is happening in this country now. and it's admirable. >> yeah. >> and they do dual truly love each other i think. >> yeah. i can't see president obama and the younger getting away that these guys have. but a lot of the film emanating from a poem that was in a bible that barbara bush gave to -- it was actually president bush's mother. >> yeah. >> who gave me it to 41 on the confirmation, and she inscribed a poem in the bible that is really true in his life. it talks about encourage, it talks about bravery, it talks
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about honesty, friendship, leadership, and that's how we melted the film together. we talked about the themes, and they told us stories about it and about him, and we used the poem to make the story line come to life. >> what are some of his flaws? i mean you guys speak so glowingly of the former president, and i know you all are so objective documentarians. >> if anything i think he is too giving, to a extent where maybe that hurt him in a way. >> yeah. >> but he -- at first when marry kate carry who was the executive producer approached us with the project, we weren't 100% sure that it was something that we were inclined to do. and then the more we researched and the more people we spoke with and the more we learned about him as a man, as a father, as a grandfather, i hope i -- as a mother, i can
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portray some of the relationships with my own son that he has with his children. >> yeah. >> and what was interesting, david, one of the four most historianians of our time, he had one of the more interesting quotes in the film, if you take a road trip from boston to st. louis, he would want to be in a car with president 41. >> wow. >> could you imagine being in a car with anyone that long. >> no. but, man. i want to sit down and chat with the guy. thank you so much for being here. >> thank you. >> coming up everyone is talking about jordan spieth big u.s. open win. well, people aren't talking about is the courage that wayne daughter and her affect on the ♪ i built my business with passion. but i keep it growing by making every dollar count. that's why i have the spark cash card from capital one.
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>> adorable golf seen on jordan spieth became only the 6th golfer in thrift win both the masters and the u.s. open in the same year. he did it yesterday, not only with his dreamy eyes, but also with the help of dustin johnson, who had an epic medal melt down after being in a lead, and his favorite piece of jewelry would be his choker. and now that describes his habit of majors. you might remember dustin had a little trouble with the booger should goer. should go sugar. the guy tested positive for cocaine and had to be to rehab, and not tiger wood's rehab, totally different rehab. now, johnson has emerged a golfer, but his fortitude after missing a 12-foot put, which has him asking what? here's some video of dustin trying to coax the little
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bugger into the hole. >> why don't you just go home? that's your home? are you too good for your home? answer me! >> that ball was too good for its home. what you may also if know is johnson wasn't just snorting nose groceries, he's also addicted to a hot piece of human crypt night, dustin's love for his fiancé a, known as paullina gretzky, maybe his undoing. if things don't start going -- his way rather, one of the two things will happen. one she will switch loyalties to a proven winner, jordan spieth, and efforts spit him out a baby, or dustin will have to take up the remnants of tiger's discarded roster, but any way, golf has gotten interesting again. fore. and on facebook, it's kennedy
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fbn, and you can also e-mail the e-mail golf course, it's kennedy fbn at foxbusiness.com, and may this be the historic week for you, i'll see you tomorrow night at i'll see you tomorrow night at 8:00 p.m. (narrator) the following is a paid advertisement for time life's music collection. (soft music) (jim reeves) ♪ welcome to my world (narrator) these are songs we'll always remember. ♪ won't you come on in? (narrator) songs we grew up with, songs we fell in love to. (charlie rich) ♪ and when we get behind closed doors ♪ ♪ then she lets her hair... (narrator) words and music that always touched us. ♪ together again ♪ ♪ my tears have stopped falling ♪ (narrator) presenting country music of your life,

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