tv FOX and Friends FOX News April 10, 2012 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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>> absolutely. >> i know, we all do. >> going to be worse than ever this spring. right? >> the ragweed number is very high today. thank you very much. >> thank you. "fox & friends" starts right now. >> thank you for joining us today. bye! >> good morning, everyone. it's tuesday, it's april 10th. brian finally arrived. yea! thank you for sharing your time with us today. america's heartland hit again. check out this video, tornadoes tearing through oklahoma leaving behind a path of damage. we have the latest for you again, more storms. >> and president obama with a message for voters today. pass his buffet rule and make everybody pay their fair share. only problem is that message is falling flat and not just with republicans. we'll tell you who straight ahead. >> another g.s.a. music video paid by you the taxpayer. let's watch. >> ♪ oh yeah ♪ are you ready for a miracle >> they're a talented group, aren't they? this government party is nothing compared to another one just
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uncovered. what happens in istanbul does not stay in istanbul. i've always said that. >> that's no bull. >> let's hope it's not some bull. we have some video to prove it's not. "fox & friends" starts right now. >> the reason i said welcome to brian. i think that's the shortest period of time that he sat his you know what on the couch before we said good morning. >> i have a screen grab from probably 1998 that is very relevant for one of our guests today. >> really? >> so you went out to find it? >> there you go. what happened? >> you almost missed the show. >> well, that's not important but i could not find it yet. >> let's get -- >> preparing until the very last second. very admirable. >> thank you, steve. >> let's get to your headlines this morning. check out this new video. the storms keep coming, folks,
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for oklahoma now tearing across the state. state bracing for more destructive storms later today. at least two tornadoes touched down in woodward county in the northwestern part of the state. the storm brought hail sized golf balls hurting two people and causing damage to the county jail there. he's been silent over the fatal shooting of trayvon martin until now. george zimmerman asking for money on the new web site. he wrote about how the shooting affected his life. meantime, the special prosecutor says zimmerman will not face a grand jury for the shooting. it's not clear what, if any, charges he will face. two oklahoma men accused of going on a deadly rampage have confessed. police in tulsa say the 32-year-old admitted to shooting two people. while 19-year-old jake england said he shot three people. three of the victims eventually died. investigators believe there might be a link between the attack and the killing of england's father by a black man. friends have denied any claims
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they're racist. our friend and colleague, "fox news sunday" host chris wallace remembering his father mike wallace who passed away over the weekend. in a statement, chris says this "my dad was everything you saw on television, fascinating and funny, challenging and exacerbating and he was the best reporter i've ever known. while work came first for him, he work hard to make connections with family. he became my best friend. at the end, he was surrounded by children, grandchildren and even great grandchildren. i will miss him terribly." mike wallace, legendary host of "60 minutes" was 93 years old. those are your headlines this morning. >> all right. let's talk a little bit about this. let's start with politics. the president of the united states going down to florida, atlantic university in boca raton where he's going to be pushing that so-called buffet rule. of course, the buffet rule means that warren buffet, it's not fair that he pays less taxes than his secretary. oddly, right after the president gives that speech, he'll go to
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three fundraisers asking millionaires to actually pay for money to his campaign. >> what he should always have when he gives this speech is somebody holding up cue cards or placards. >> he has a teleprompter. >> he should have a running scroll coming across the screen if it's televised saying let's do an explanation of the difference between capital gains tax and tax on ordinary income. because what's the difference? everything. see, when you pay capital gains tax, you've invested money somewhere and then you're paying 15% on the investment income. you've already earned that money before you invested it where you paid if you're in the highest tax bracket maybe 38% on the original money. it's really not fair to only explain it as a comparison of warren buffet vs. his secretary. >> what's worse is it's all symbolism. if you look at the money, it doesn't add up. senator kyle spelled that out. he'll be retiring shortly and he's with greta last night. >> do the math. this year, 2012, it would raise
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about a billion dollars in revenue to the treasury. our deficit this year is projected under obama to be $1,300 billion. it would be $1,239 billion if this was collected. it would make things a whole lot worse because it directly hits the people we're expecting to create new jobs. >> when the president talks about fairness, you know, it's just not fair that warren buffet should pay less than his secretary. when he talks fair, it really motivates his base and there's a new poll out by a democrat moderate think tank called third way that shows that the president's message may be actually missing the mark. the swing state independents, what they're looking for is they don't want to hear about fairness because they think america is already fair enough. what they want to hear is they want to hear about opportunities out there, the chance to make it in this country.
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>> ok, we should call them swing state voter but opportunity voters but going back to that fair dialogue, it must be working with somebody because they keep doing it. i mean, even in this message that went out from jim mussina, one of the main campaign people for president obama. this is what it says, without the buffet rule, in an e-mail, many millionaires and billionaires will continue to pay a lower tax rate than middle-class families. is that actually true? how can they get away with saying it if it's not? it must be working somewhere to continue with that dialogue. >> we'll see if it stays in the dialogue. look at that poll, 61% say we're divided between haves and have notes. these are for swing state voters. of moderate income. they say they are strongly confident they'll be able to pay their bills over the next 12 months. now, those are people that are vital to either the romney campaign which looks like the nominee or the obama campaign. it doesn't mean that president obama is not playing to a
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portion of the country that feels things are stacked against them and maybe that number -- that figure in their internal polls is so great, we'll continue to pound this but it's not winning over the independents. >> no, the independents want to hear about opportunity. they don't want to hear about fairness. they think it's fair enough. interestingly enough right now, in this particular poll, the president is ahead of mitt romney by six points. they say they like the president of the united states. however, they feel closer on an ideological basis to mitt romney. >> you know, for the longest time, when we were talking about the g.s.a. and the wasting of our money, we've been focusing on las vegas. just that big trip in las vegas, how much they cost, why mind readers are invaluable. >> why they should be $4 a piece. >> why clowns should be at every party even if they're smoking. now it's time to turn our attention to turkey. >> delicious! >> in the meantime, another official at the general services administration, the g.s.a. has been terminated as a result of the scandals because there's a
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new video that's been released. this one has to do with some of the employees talking about wasting taxpayer money on going green. watch this. >> ♪ are you ready for a miracle ♪ ♪ oh, yeah ♪ are you ready for a miracle ♪ are you ready ♪ are you ready ♪ are you ready ♪ i'm ready for a miracle ♪ are you ready for a miracle >> the answer to that question, we're not ready! i don't know if you've seen any of the stats. but if you try to get a job at solyndra lately. >> there's new video coming out from the g.s.a. workers, one of the winners was asked is there anybody in that region that wasn't in the video, the person who picked up the award said well, if they were at work on friday, they were probably in
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it. darrell issa says wait a minute, if they were at work on friday, they were making a video. shouldn't they have been working for the united states of america? absolutely. >> there's going to be an investigation and we'll have the woman who had headed up the g.s.a. in the hot seat on april 16th. >> by the way, the clown is interrupting everybody that's actually working. get it. everybody that's doing work, the clown comes in and disturbs them. >> darn clown! >> very creative bunch. >> you thought that video was creative? >> i'm in awe! >> ok. if you thought it was going to end with the general services administration, why not? why just continue the government, why not continue the government waste, now we're going to the department of justice. two things uncovered there. one trip to istanbul and one to palm springs, california. now the istanbul trip was for three days. it costs twice as much as that las vegas convention for the g.s.a. and it was to learn about drug enforcement, apparently,
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368 attendees and that's $1,071 per person. >> i like the last hit. what were they doing? getting a massage? >> probably. they were supposed to be learning about drugs and stuff like that. i wonder what the booze cost wise. if you figure it was absolutely a lot. one of the taxpayer watchdog groups said come on, you guys can do better than that. can't believe you're spending that much money. >> this is what got people so upset, this is one of the reasons that the tea party came to light is that government waste, government spending and folks, this is all happening. this was 2008. but the 2010 situation where the clowns made the appearance for the g.s.a., this is 2010 when the midterm elections were happening and a lot of those tea party members were voted in. apparently, somebody wasn't getting the message that americans were upset about wasting taxpayer dollars. >> in 2004 for this particular western region's conference according to "business week" magazine in 2004, they only spent $93,000 and then in 2006,
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$300,000 and then in 2008, $650,000. >> it was a pattern. >> then they really went crazy in vegas this past year. >> ok. i can't wait to find out who the clown guy is. if he's ever -- if he got the pack. >> you're obsessed with the clown. if you're the clown, e-mail brian. >> walking through the motel smoking and knocking away people's -- >> you're looking to hire the clown for a birthday or mall opening. >> if his shoes explode, i will definitely hire him. coming up straight ahead, check this out. a driver ramming a police car and taking cops on a wild ride. whapdz when they catch up to the driver straight ahead. >> government money, just what we're talking about, come and get it. how much the government is spending on these pricey ads to encourage people who don't pay taxes to then cash in on a tax credit. >> stuart varney, come on in, stu, you're next. [ nadine ] buzzzz, bzzzz, bzzzz, bzzzz,
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>> just call them pennies from government heaven. at least if you make under $49,000 a year and there are a lot of people who do, your government, federal government, has taken out a full page ad costing taxpayers a quarter of a million dollars urging people to cash in on the earned income tax credit. what the heck is that? and how can you cash in on it? stuart varney joins us live. good morning to you, sir. >> good morning, steve. >> ok. you work, you don't pay much in tax, if anything. you don't earn much money. but bingo, you get into this program and you will get a check from the government early in the year, it's a refund of the tax that you didn't pay in the first place.
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26,800,000 got those checks last year averaging $2,240 each. the government shelled out a total of $59 1/2 billion to those 26 million people last year. it's free money. literally pennies from heaven and now you have the government saying hey, you may qualify. come on in. we got a check for you. >> right. you know, stuart, this is interesting. earlier, we were talking about how when it comes to the president's message with the buffet rule, it's all about fairness which appeals to his base. now we're talking about the federal government is advertising a program that has been on the books for decades! this is clearly aimed at, you know, energizing his base, reminding him, you know what? there's money waiting for me in my treasury. >> let's spell it out, shall we? this is buying votes and this is the government saying you are entitled to this. you don't earn very much money. you are entitled to other people's money in the form of a tax refund. that is buying votes. this is one of the most corrupt
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systems there is because, of course, if you earn cash income, tips, for example, drug dealing, for example, you're not going to declare that, are you? certainly not. >> not if you're smart. >> not if you're smart. why should you work harder or get a promotion or even get married, why should you do that if it puts you into an income range above the limit so you don't get your check. >> right. now, this is a program that has been, you know, people have taken advantage of it for a very long time. i think ever since 1975 or something like that so it's completely legal. >> oh, yes. >> but the fact that the government is at this point in time spending hundreds of thousands of dollars to remind people that their check is just waiting, that's really got you agitated today. >> you just don't get it, do you? these good people are entitled to other people's money. therefore, they are entitled to know about the program. and the government should be telling them hey, i've got money for you. especially if you vote for me. >> i got a feeling that you're going to be talking about this
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three hours from now over on the business channel, aren't you? >> oh, yeah. yeah. it will come up. >> all right. the great stuart varney joining us live in studio e. thank you very much, sir. we'll be watching. meanwhile, reverend wright is back! spewing even more hate but is this a coincidence just in time for the election? why in the world would the president want to be connected to that guy? we're going to report and you're going to decide coming up. and up next, usama bin laden training the next one right here on american soil. our next guest, the former navy seal says yes. and that's not all. right back. ♪ [ renee ] power. success. i feel healthier than i ever have.
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>> just getting up. want some headlines? we got them. forget cutting costs, president obama's health care initiative will actually add more than $340 billion to the nation's deficit. it's supposed to go the other way, wasn't it? that is according to a new study by a member of the board that oversees medicare financing. we don't know who won the record mega millions jackpot in maryland but we now know who it definitely is not. lottery officials confirming the winner is not the haitian woman who said she won or anyone associated with her. remember her from that mcdonald's? the winner is choosing to remain anonymous. rich but very anonymous. gretch, brian? >> could the next usama bin laden be trained right here on american soil? >> there are new reports, members of the iranian terrorist
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group were trained by the u.s. military at a base in nevada still on the terrorist watch list. >> joining now is brand an webb, former navy seal sniper and author of the new book "the red circle" and author of the new column that makes the allegation that we might be training the next usama bin laden right here in nevada. how? >> you know, i think it's -- the piece that i did was more philosophical and you look at the fact that the u.s. is supporting designated terrorist organizations using our taxpayer dollars to train them on u.s. soil, we look at the last time we did something like this and we're supporting the mujahideen in afghanistan and supporting bin laden and that didn't turn out too well for us. >> the positive is they hate the iranian regime as much as we do and they are iranian and they were part of the revolution but they broke when they saw the ayatollahs were taking over and that wasn't something to be part of. you could argue they were the
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ones helping to assassinate the scientists over there. >> what happens when that cause we're supporting now and like it did in afghanistan with the soviet occupation, then you have a -- you know, they're looking for the next cause and in that case, that was when bin laden declared war in america. >> so this past week, what happened was is that this new yorker article came out saying that this training of the m.e.k., of this iranian special ops force is going on in nevada. so do you -- do you believe that -- first of all, do you believe it's happened? >> yeah, i mean, i believe it's happening. the seymour at the new yorker had some credible sources and the piece that we did was more of a -- you know, it's fact based that it was an opinion piece on -- >> so you've been in the areas of fighting. so from your perspective, then, you think it could backfire. why? is it because of what you know, you've been there? >> i mean, any time you get
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behind an extremist organization, there's tremendous risk. so, you know, i think that's the main issue there. >> there's risk but we have to find a way to get inside somehow and they have the same objectives right now so that is the risk. let's talk a little bit about two things. you say afghanistan and iraq worth our effort. why? >> you know, i wish that we could pretend there's not dangerous people out there that wish us harm and, you know, iraq had weapons of mass destruction. we found that out in the gulf one. in afghanistan, you had a large network of training camps that were operating pretty much ad hoc and without consequence so -- >> in the end, of course, you fight these guys and you train people to fight these guys and that's chronicled in your book but it's how these end that will be key to whether they're worth our time and our sacrifice. >> absolutely. >> right. so in the end in 2001, you write in your book, everything changed. it used to be gary comden, people worried about stem cells
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in 2001. how did it change for you in particular? >> for me, i was over in the middle east when the u.s.s. cole got hit and my platoon was on the sniper overwatch. being on that ship and talking to the crew members and seeing how unprepared they were, you know, the security posture, they just had no idea these guys were standing guard on ship with unloaded weapons that they didn't know how to use and, you know, and there were reports that there was a thwarted attempt at a suicide pact several that -- i think earlier that year but what was done about it? they still pulled in and got hit. >> and yeah, they didn't even know that yemen was actually an al-qaida hotbed according to the commander on board. everything changed quickly and ended up being -- the navy ended up being the tip of the spear in many cases led by guys like you. >> yep. >> brandon is a former navy seal, sniper, author of the new book "the red circle." good luck with the book. check out this video, gives a
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whole new meaning to being blown away. how a jet blue arrival led to this woman's departure. oh, my goodness. i think they do this on purpose, though. i think. we'll explain. coming up. >> it looks like so much fun. and the larry -- the larry bird, magic johnson story goes to broadway and by the way, so do i. what magic told me about his show, his scandal, and my son straight ahead. >> and happy birthday to singer mandy moore. she's a young 28. enjoy it while you can. wake up!
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big in your own words, with respect to selection, what would you say? big okay, let's talk rebates mike, they're big they're big get $100 rebate, plus the low price tire guarantee during the big tire event. so, in other words, we can agree that ford's tire event is a good size? big big >> time for the shot of the morning. you think after you saw this warning sign, you would want to steer clear. that didn't stop one woman in st. marten from getting real close to an airplane at takeoff. >> watch as she's blasted away by strong winds right into the wall, the jersey bump. she goes bang.
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maho beach is famously known for its proximity to the airport. it's unclear what injuries were sustained. also clear that she needed a lot of ice. >> unclear whether or not she knew that was going to happen, too. do people go there because they know about this? or they just want to try to get a picture or what? but my goodness. >> you got to figure it was kind of a stunt because somebody was taking a picture of her. oh, man! something to do, don't. hope she's ok. >> wonder if she's on vacation. don't people go there for vacation? >> you're asking a lot of probing questions that i can't answer today. i could go to the beach or stay at the airport. who wants to go to the airport? windy behind that plane. got some headlines for you on this tuesday morning. in a couple of hours, the federal government will offer new rules that will help homeowners avoid foreclosure.
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mortgage lenders would be required to make good faith efforts and give them options so they can avoid losing their houses. mortgage lenders will also have to warn about interest rate adjustments or insurance changes. the rules should become finalized by next january. >> major questions this morning about how objective the democratic district attorney's office is in milwaukee, wisconsin. dozens of employees there signed recalln wisconsin governor scott walker. media trackers identified 43 staffers including a deputy district attorney and 19 assistant district attorneys claims signing the petition is their legal right but one of the units is handling a corruption investigation involving several former staffers to governor walk so it could be a conflict of interest. >> jury selection resuming this morning in the murder trial of jennifer hudson's family members. 14 perspective jurors were picked yesterday in chicago. the suspect is accused of killing hudson's mom, brother
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and nephew in 2008 and faces a maximum life sentence if convicted. hudson who is on the witness list is expected to attend the trial. it starts later this month. >> a wrong way driver leads police on a wild chase in michigan ending up on a school lawn and it didn't stop there. check out what he did next. >> throwing the car into reverse, he hits a cop car and tries to drive off. he practically ran over a police officer in the process driving into the playground and slamming into a tree. cops say the 43-year-old was treated and released into custody. he faces, whoa,he faces several charges of assault and fleeing police. he looks like he wasn't feeling quite right. during that time. >> he had a busy night. >> beard grew in during the drive. >> probably. >> let's take a look at your drive as you head out the door on this tuesday to school or to work or wherever you're heading and you have a whole bunch of rain as you can see from the rio
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grande valley. that's true. there are some people who do that. also, some widely scattered showers in portions of the northeast and a pacific storm all the way from puget sound right down through the central california. current readings as you head out, look at that. we have almost 50 degrees here in new york city. almost 30 in caribou, maine, a little more than 30 at rapid city at this hour. from the mid atlantic, temperatures in the mid to upper 40's and things warm up across dixie sf land. -- dixieland. later today, a nice warm day across much of texas. temperatures in the 80's and into florida. in raleigh-durham, looks like 73 will be the daytime high. >> beautiful day in the mid atlantic. >> you know, time goes by so quickly it seems like we were just sitting on the couch here in 2008 and talking about the election between john mccain and president obama. back then, one of the central figures on the obama side of things was reverend jeremiah wright. remember in chicago, this was
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the then candidate obama's minister for maybe 15 years or so. >> baptized his children. >> baptized his children. he attended that church on a regular basis and then it came to light that reverend wright had said some things about the united states and god in general. he kind of went away after that. >> and the president severed ties. >> severed ties and actually, reverend wright then came out and since has criticized the president pretty heavily but is he back now? >> he is back. at least he was back for three sermons last week in charleston, west virginia. he spoke at the metropolitan baptist church and have what some have described as three hate-filled sermons. if you missed it, here's some of the reverend in action last week. >> there are politicians who are making decisions about you, about your life, about your future, about your family, about your children, and the real tragedy is they live in a different world from your world all together.
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there are people in power right now who have opinions about you based on their privilege of skin color. >> some of the other things that he said during his sermon, he said that supreme court justice clarence thomas worships some other god. thomas jefferson, he referred to him as a pedophile and he said white supremacy is driving world politics. >> now, is this planned? dick morris says -- i'm talking about the re-emergence of reverend wright. dick morris says believe it or not, yes. >> i do not believe that it is a total coincidence that reverend wright has now surfaced after four years in absentia and i think what may be happening here is there may be a deliberate orchestrated effort by the obama white house to promote the racial division that gives them the basis for stoking an african-american turnout in the election. >> i don't know about that. it's up to you about what you think.
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let us know via e-mail or by twitter. i mean, i don't know what the relationship is between those two men anymore but all i do know is reverend wright has criticized president obama in the past so if they're getting together to re-emerge together, i don't know. let us know what you think about it. >> all right. 22 minutes now before the top of the hour. magic johnson is a hall of fame basketball player. and closing in on becoming a billionaire businessman. but he's also known for his rivalry and relationship with boston celtic larry bird. now the story of their rivalry on the court and their friendship off comes to broadway officially tomorrow night. but has been rolling already all week. i got a chance to sit down with magic before opening night. >> you were in high school, magic johnson, i have been following you. ever since you won the state championship in michigan which larry never did. >> thanks, ma. >> magic-bird on broadway. what was it like sitting in the audience watching your life and your buddy being portrayed? >> i still can't believe it.
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i mean, i don't know how you can explain it because it's like what, out of body experience. i don't know what it is. it's like you're sitting here watching kevin play me and i said that's me. and you can't believe that that's actually you up on stage and it just blows you away. >> on my behalf, can i say thank you for not singing? because not only that, i don't want your character to sing. i was so afraid. i wanted to see a play without singing. is that -- and you made it possible. >> well, you know, we go 90 minutes, no singing. and we go straight through and people really have enjoyed it. 20 shows. 20 standing ovations. standing sellouts. it's been amazing. >> so i know how you're not alike but i was shocked to see how you are alike. number one, your parents. your dad never took a day off his entire day or missed work and larry's dad played on -- went to work on whatever it took, including a broken ankle. >> exactly.
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because -- and they instilled that same work ethic into both of us. and so our dads played a big part in our lives and who we were as men and basketball players. >> i'm in los angeles at the time, only there a few months, and you make the announcement which just stunned everybody. >> because of the h.i.v. virus that i have attained, i will have to retire from the lakers. >> afterwards, the reaction. i'm wondering even today if you're still a little resentful. in the play, you say some guys aren't returning my calls, larry. how does magic today deal with the magic that you were dealing with in your 30's? >> i think that, you know, you brought up a great point. i think that, you know, you really know who your friends are when something bad happens. and when that happened to me, i found out who my real friends were. a lot of guys stepped away. you know, and that was ok. that was up to them. it hurt me emotionally, you know, because i thought they
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were my friends. but at the same time, it helped me grow as a man, too, at the same time. the one guy that came to my rescue and supported me was larry bird. and i love him. and i thank him for that every single day. >> 32, you make the announcement. did you think you'd be here at 52 on stage talking about a broadway play of your life? >> that's a great question. if you asked me that when i first got diagnosed, i probably would say no. but a couple of years later, after i was doing well, my t-cell count stayed strong, the medicine was doing a good job, i would say yes. >> there's going to be a lot of people in the audience here watching you. thank you for welcome you go us on stage and congratulations to everything. your career in basketball and beyond. >> tell your son i said hello, too. >> i will. got him out of kindergarten. >> exactly. >> that's right. so here's the real quick story on my son. he came in and my son was crazy
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like your son especially crazy into sports and he knew about magic januaohnson. he's 5 years old. big debate at my house, can he miss kindergarten to meet magic johnson? go write him a note. i told magic that, will you sign on the bottom. brian kilmeade came to meet me. he rewrites the letter and he says please excuse brian from class. i wanted to meet him and asked him to come in. tomorrow, i have the picture. i left it at home today because him and his friend -- >> couple of years ago. >> it was -- shows you how long we've been doing the show. he's now 15, about 5'5" and his friend is 6'5" and they're about 3'5" meeting magic johnson back then. he employs 50,000 people. just bought the dodgers. coming up later in the show, you'll hear what his advice is because he talks to president obama a lot about small businesses and what small businesses need to be successful. 50,000 people. >> and for people who are coming to broadway or new york city
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this summer, should they check out "magic-bird"? >> i think so. between broadway and eighth and it's 90 minutes and it's some -- it's a broadway play that guys will like and women will like. >> and no music. fox news alert, brian kilmeade likes broadway. >> make yourself lombardi. >> you like that one, too. coming up next on the rundown, is the white house trying to get one over on the supreme court spending millions to put obamacare in place before the justices can rule? that would be an interesting story. the judge will tackle that one. >> and two presidents better than one? that's a crazy idea, right? but it could actually put an end to gridlock. a former congressman pushing the idea coming up shortly. you're watching "fox & friends" live from the heart of broadway. we love gardening...
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>> all right. we won't know the supreme court's decision on the president's health care law until probably late june but that's not stopping the administration from going forward and trying to implement obamacare. >> they're diverting 1/2 billion dollars to the u.s. to set up a bureaucracy that will oversee the law's individual mandate. the public says wait a second, can we find out the verdict please? andrew napolitano is here. judge, is everything on the up and up as far as the law goes? >> well, i mean, technically the president does have the authority to do this. the evil geniuses that created obamacare, remember the statute that nobody had read inserted him there, the authority of the president to transfer funds to the various entities that will come into existence if the court finds obamacare constitutional. so, for example, the state governments have to set up individual state exchanges
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basically insurance companies owned by the state that the state will pay for. some states like our home state of new jersey have refused to do it. they don't want to spend the money and they think the statute will be overturned. guess what, the government has been spending the money for them and use that as a credit against money that it owes the state for other purposes. guess how much has already been spent. a billion and a half dollars. this half billion dollars that's going to the i.r. s. will now make it a total of $2 billion. now, why would the obama administration do this? to say to the court, if part of this is dismantled but look at all the money we've spent. and look at the people who are relying on that money. >> it's already in action. you can't pull the rug out from underneath them. >> that would be a theory which was not argued the other day but would be argued again if the supreme court dismantles part of it. >> where do they argue it? >> they would argue it before a federal judge who might be charged with implementing the supreme court's invalidation of parts of it. >> judge, republicans say this is just a slush fund. that's all it is.
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>> well, the i.r.s. can use it however it wants. it's supposed to hire agents. here's another scary thing. if obamacare is invalidated, what are they going to do with another 16,000 i.r.s. agents? >> they'll figure something out. >> i'll tell you, they should have that conference in istanbul with the g.s.a. >> they got clowns. >> did you find the clown yet? >> no, they did not find the clown. we dispatched geraldo! >> oh! >> looking for that dastardly clown. judge andrew napolitano, it's a pleasure. thank you very much for talking about the slush fund. coming up, think your doctor tells you everything. think again. turns out your doctor sometimes keeps secrets from you. >> probably for the better. and are two presidents better than one? would that actually work? our next guest says yes, it would.
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>> this is kind of a loaded question but here it goes. is two really better than one? our next guest says yep, when it comes to commander in chief, he thinks two american co-presidents could get a lot more done. david is the author of "two presidents are better than one, the case for a bipartisan executive branch." actually, the book doesn't come out for another year but it's getting traction right now. good morning to you, david. >> good morning. >> so here's what you would speculate about having two presidents. if john mccain and barack obama had both been elected 2009 would be a pivotal year in american politics. they'd pass a jobs bill, close guantanamo and end the recession. ok, that didn't happen. you think it would have been better for this country to have both of them serving. why? >> well, i served in the
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indiana house of representatives and like others, i pledged to work in a bipartisan fashion but what you find when you get into the system is that it fosters conflict. you find that you benefit with the voters if you can draw sharp contrasts and what we need to do is come up with a system that encourages cooperation instead of conflict and that's why i proposed my bipartisan executive. if you say to the two presidents, you've got to work with each other for four years and no matter what you do, you have to cooperate, they want to leave a legacy. that's their chief goal once they've reached the presidency. >> it's interesting because you say that -- take, for example again, obama and mccain that they would agree on about 80% of the issues. it's the 20% where you find those sharp divides. so you believe they can get 80% of stuff done. >> that's exactly right. look, health care is a great example. mitt romney and barack obama came to the same health care plan as a republican and a democrat. so you can see how much they
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really do agree on the core issues and if you put them in a situation where they have to work together, then they will come to agreement on the things that really matter to the united states and they won't get diverted by the issues that really aren't important but are hot button issues. >> yeah. like trying to get re-elected the minute you take office that also bugs americans. i got to bring you to this, though, because david cameron who is the prime minister right now of england, they made a pledge with each other there that they would have sort of a coalition government as well. well, now, cameron says clegg is "slowing him down". so should we look at that as a model that maybe isn't working? >> that's a good question. and the important thing there is first, they didn't accomplish a lot in their first year when they formed the coalition and they realized it was in the interest of both of them to work together, they did, and things are working better than they are here for sure. but they also have incentives
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not to cooperate because they're starting to think now about the next election. and if you had a kind of bipartisan system that i'm proposing, they would understand that in four years, the system wouldn't change. they couldn't by starting to maneuver and obstruct each other, they could gain the upper hand the next elections. it would be 50/50 election after election so you wouldn't have the disincentives that cameron and clegg are starting to face. >> i see. very fascinating topic. david will be the author of "two presidents are better than one." thanks for sharing your early thoughts with us bright and early this morning. >> thank you very much for having me. >> karl rove is standing by for this one. everyone knows what obama's campaign slogan was in 2008. no one seems to know what it will be for 2012 because are none of them working? the architect weighing in on why everything appears to be falling flat. they're telling a lot of folks there. and you don't want to miss this. a mama dog taking matters into her own hands to save her pups.
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no...we're not. ♪ the allstate value plan. dollar for dollar, nobody protects you like allstate. >> top of the morning to you. it's tuesday, april 10th. hope you'll have a great day today. i'm gretchen carlson. thanks for sharing your time. president obama back to pushing his fair share agenda today. but hold on a second. his message, is it falling flat now? at least with the independents? we'll explain more to you. >> all right. more government workers clowning around. and you paid for it. >> ♪ oh, yeah >> ♪ are you ready for a miracle ♪ >> we're not, ok? and we don't like smoking clowns either. you'll see them in a little while. they got a music video. just the tip of the iceberg. if i wait long enough, we'll see the smoking clown, i'm sure. >> did you mention they're going green? plus talk about puppy love. a mother dog, golden retriever
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jumping into action to save her pup on the verge of drowning in the family pool. what she did next you'll be talking about all day long. look at that. "fox & friends" and fido for a tuesday starts right now. >> obviously, though, somebody videotaping that dog jumping in would have come to the puppy's safety had her mom not able to secure her safety. i hope. somebody has to be videotaping that. >> i bet that's something that dog has done for a while because -- and i bet that usually the dog pushes him up and that would have been spectacular but plan b, ok, i'll go around this way and pull him up. >> get him by the scruff of the neck. >> that's it. >> explain that a little bit later. in the meantime, we have to go back to politics which some people are going to the dogs. >> it's dog eat dog. >> president obama now pushing a
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populist message again that seems to be working with some groups. is it working with every group? it's called the buffet rule. this goes back to warren buffet, the billionaire and the argument he should pay the same tax rate as his secretary. the problem is that you need to tell all the details in this explanation of the buffet rule to get a full understanding. i think what the obama administration is banking on is that the average american will not do the research and dig a little deeper to find out what the true tax rates really are. >> senator kyle says, look, when you do the numbers, wouldn't even work. here's the senator with greta last night. >> do the math. this year, 2012, it would raise about a billion dollars in revenue to the treasury. our deficit this year is projected under obama to be $1,300 billion, well it would be $1 trillion $329 billion if this tax revenue is collected so it doesn't do anything to help the real problems that america faces
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and, in fact, it would make things a whole lot worse because it directly hits people who we're expecting to create new jobs. >> ultimate theory is if you believe in the buffet tax, people who are paying 15% of their taxes aren't giving money to charity. if you start taking that money, you redirected money into the charity as opposed to charity or the theory they put under their mattress or put in their pillow or the theory is they start other businesses and invest in something or expand their house and hire some people on top of that. other thing to keep in mind, too, we're not talking about paying 15% on ordinary income. warren buffet pays 15% on his dividends, capital gains and that's the key. i like this when kevin hasett says, a senior fellow at the american enterprise institute into the free market, he said this should be called a stupid tax, back door way to hide taxes on capital. >> it goes back to my original theory that a lot of the messages that you're hearing from this administration as they move towards the campaign and towards the election, well, maybe negative but also simplistic.
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simplistic sort of populist talk, millionaires, billionaires, pay your fair share. warren buffet rule. it's not really getting and digging deep beneath the surface to really explain. foreign policy took out usama bin laden but ok, what about iran, israel, iraq, afghanistan. it's sort of the simplistic surface message, will it work with the american voter or will they dig deeper? >> well, it appears to be working with the president's base. democrats love -- when the president talks about fairness, democrats love that. they say yep, everything has got to be fair. there's a new poll out by a moderate democratic thinktank called third way and what that shows is, you know, the republicans they don't buy the fairness thing. they believe things are fair enough but take a look at this new poll. 61% of america divided between the haves and have notes. 62% say the american system is fair and the deck is not stacked against them. in other words, a majority of americans of the swing voters, the independents say things are
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fine the way they are. what this particular poll says is rather than, you know, talk about fairness, talk about, mr. president, opportunity. how there's opportunity waiting for you rather than ok, we're going to make everything fair for everybody and those people who are very successful, we're going to have them pay for stuff for all of you. >> and part of that opportunity is what is going to be left for the children and the grandchildren of these voters, the next generation and that's the message they want to hear more about. in the meantime, we're hearing and seeing more video and messages that maybe we don't want to see. and those are coming -- >> we want to see it! >> out of the general services -- maybe they don't want to see. these are more from the g.s.a., the general services administration, it's a federal agency and remember -- >> look at all that money. >> remember the vegas trip where they spent more than $800,000. now, now more of these videos are coming out that apparently if they're doing this on work time, that's somewhat
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problematic. >> right. >> yeah, unless that's their job to dress as gumby and break dance. that could have been why they were hired! >> we have snippets of a new one where thank goodness the g.s.a. is going green. cue the gospel choir. >> ♪ are you ready for a miracle ♪ ♪ oh yeah ♪ are you ready for a miracle ♪ are you ready ♪ are you ready ♪ are you ready ♪ ready >> ♪ are you ready for a miracle ♪ >> ♪ are you ready for a miracle ♪ >> thankfully that one doesn't have a clown in it. he's offended by the smoking clown. >> by the smoking clown who stopped people from doing work. >> there's the smoking clown. there he is! >> that's the only clown i know of that needs the patch. >> absolutely. >> guess what? g.s.a., the las vegas trip, that's being topped by now the department of justice? really? apparently, they had two boondoggles. one to istanbul and one to palm
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springs, california. where they actually racked up double the money that the las vegas one did. 368 attendees for a three day trip to istanbul supposed to be learning about drug enforcement but they were spending a lot of dough. >> why do you have to go to turkey to learn about drug enforcement i'm not sure but look at how much per person and look at how much per day and this is staggering, too. two coffee breaks costing us $52 per person. >> yeah, that's just a lot of dough. you know what? it's going to be very uncomfortable up on capitol hill on april -- >> from both sides. democrats are going to be saying this happened in 2005. >> right, but it's going to be very uncomfortable for the woman who got fired in the last week or two because she's been called to sit in front of darrell issa and offer some tough questions. will she? >> they actually had this on their web site. >> they're blaming george bush. look, we started running up the bill with george bush and he never put the kybosh on it. >> i think it speaks to the
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culture maybe of corruption, somebody wrote that book title of government spending. come on. this is what people are upset about in america and it's sort of this free pass that if it's taxpayer dollars, we'll waste them. well, at some point. it's got to end. it's got to end when you have a $1 trillion debt. >> some people say look, if you want to keep good employees on the payroll, you got to take care of them. so let's have a big party! where's gumby? i know he can break dance. >> that's why. i rented a mind reader for the crew before the show because it makes them happy. >> what am i thinking right now? >> no, he left. >> i know. i talked to the mind reader and he wants to do the headlines. >> that's fantastic. >> let's do them. we begin with the fox news alert and we've learned moments ago, a confessed killer in the norway massacre last july not criminally insane. the psychiatric exam contradicts an earlier assessment. the ruling comes six days before he actually goes on trial for the bombing and shooting rampage that left 77 people dead. the norweigian extremist admits carrying out the attack but
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makes the outrageous claim that it was necessary in his civil war against islam in europe. an out of control brushfire raging right now in manorville, new york, these are live pictures you're about to see. the fire is destroying two homes, one building and leaving three firefighters hurt. crews have been working throughout the night to get the fire under control. many people forced from their homes. and let's move to new jersey where another brushfire spread to 1,000 acres. firefighters battling back the flames by ground and by air. homes have been spared for now and no one has been injured. >> pine barrens. >> republican presidential candidate rick santorum returns to the campaign trail today because his daughter bela was released from the hospital late last night. 3-year-old has a rare genetic disease. santorum took four days after to be with his family. he'll attend two events later on this afternoon in pennsylvania. and take a look at this. mothers will do anything for their babes!
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so, of course, when this mama golden retriever saw her pup in trouble, she jumped into action and the puppy is struggling in a backyard pool. the mom dove in. that didn't quite work to push her out. so she jumped out of the pool and grabbed the pup by the scruff of the neck pulling the pup to safety. got to love that. >> that's awesome. >> so those are your headlines this morning. >> very nice. >> it is now 10 minutes after the top of the hour on this tuesday. forget hope and change, president obama might need your help in his search for a new campaign slogan. why are all the old ideas falling flat so far? well, karl rove is coming towards studio e and he's talking to vito of our studio crew. he's just prepping him for his appearance. look at that. they're now friends forever. and vito is coming on with him? >> why not? >> set an extra place at the table. >> i didn't know. >> take a look at this video a 13-year-old taking the wheel after his bus driver has a heart attack. his actions are incredible and they're all caught on camera.
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>> let's talk politics back in 2008, then candidate barack obama rode his message of hope and change all the way to the white house as we all know but this time around, president obama seems to be having trouble finding a message, a motto that resonates with voters. in fact, he's tried at least five. take a look. they've tried "winning the future." "we can't wait" and "an america built to last." "an economy built to last." so far, none have stuck. let's talk to karl rove. you know him. he worked for president george w. bush and now he's fox news contributor. >> one of those is a very popular slogan but it's for the republicans. "we can't wait". >> why hasn't any of those stuck? >> because they're goofy. what do they have to do with -- you know, this represents the challenge facing the obama
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campaign. they can't run on the basis of, you know, the stimulus and the affordable care act. and he has yet to put forward a comprehensive vision for the future. and so he's stuck trying to win on the basis of, you know, a slogan that allows him to contrast himself from the perspective republican nominee and thus far, they -- whoever the geniuses are in chicago working on it, they better send in some more caffeine. >> let's be fair, though, they came up with hope and change and that may be one of the most memorable campaign slogans ever. so do you think that that same brain trust will be able to come up with something as catchy? >> sure. eventually they'll stumble on to something better than they got but it won't be connected with hope and change. that one got worn out. that raised expectations. this is one of the big challenges facing the president is, you know, he created such a sense that there's going to be change. we're going to be different. it's going to be above politics. i don't want to be the president, red states, blue states, but united states and instead, we've had the last three years. >> here's the thing. the very simple term we saw ken
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conrad pull up on the sunday show over the weekend, things might be going great now. you don't want to go back to mitt romney, they put together the economic policies that got us into this mess in the first place, i've not heard a retort to that. >> what are those economic policies? are they the bush tax cuts? that's what they seem to allude to. if they were so bad, why did president obama keep him in place in 2009 and 2010 when he had 60 democrats in the senate and 255 democrats in the house. you notice the democrats aren't very specific about what the so-called policies got us into. i think one of the policies they got us into it is the absence of regulations in fannie and freddie and on this issue, they opposed this regulation and republicans were in favor. >> what about today he'll be pushing the buffet rule and we cited the third way the moderate democratic thinktank, they say the independents in the next election don't buy the fairness argument. >> don't buy the class warfare argument.
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the question is going to be -- they don't buy it in the abstract. the question is going to be whether the republican candidate which i think is likely to be mitt romney goes out there and contests the president on this issue. >> exactly. >> does he go out there and make the case? does he say, you know what? you're talking about taxing more heavily capital gains and dividends? that sets the precedent that we ought to tax them more heavily. that's what a lot of retired people depend upon, their dividend income, what a lot of foundations and charitable foundations depend upon, their capital gains and dividends and job creation. there's a reason why we have lower tax rates on capital gains because we want to encourage the creation of capital that can be invested in creation of jobs. >> i don't know if you heard the top of our hour when we were talking about -- >> i hung on every word. >> did you? >> vito and i were out there. >> see the dog rescue the other dog? >> they did. i love how she pulled the puppy all the way out of the pool. >> i was talking about the political side of our discussion which is it's my feeling that this simplistic populist message from obama's campaign, it must
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be working somewhere and first of all, do you agree with that strategy, that they're trying to keep everything on the surface? and it will go to your point that then it's up to the republicans to dig deeper and let the republican public know what's going on. >> let's be clear, the swing vote is keeping two ideas clear in their mind. 61% said basically the system is unfair and 62% said the system is fair. we're capable depending on how you frame the argument to say i sort of believe that so that's why a presidential campaign matters so much. the candidates have got to go out and make the argument and each side will offer their argument and we'll see how it comes out. >> well, in -- governor romney come forward and take on president obama, you know, they kid around and say etch-a-sketch, that was a mistake. in reality, what does he have to do different come june as opposed to come february? >> well, he's got to keep the focus on obama and make the argument against obama with the idea of the swing voter firmly in mind. the kind of things that sort of
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energize republicans in primaries are not necessarily the things that will energize independents. you can't run a different message but you got to have a message tailored towards those people. >> why are you in new york city today? >> i'm in town today, the bush institute is sponsoring a seminar with a bunch of economists and paul ryan and chris christie to talk about how would the country benefit from having higher rates of growth? say 4% growth on a sustained basis? and so i'm going to be hosting a panel. you can go check it out at 4% growth.org and it's got the agenda. >> president will be on the panel. >> president bush is going to kick off the conference this morning. and we have a bunch of economists representing -- my particular panel that i'm hosting is a group of economists that have widely different viewpoints across the political spectrum and we'll be looking at the impact of tax policy from the 1920's through to today. >> very good. that's his prologue. >> 4percentgrowth.org.
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>> thank you. >> see you soon. >> coming up on "fox & friends", large amount of doctors admits honesty isn't always the best policy. what they're keeping from you and how you can get them from stop doing that. >> girls can't add. unfair bias from teachers that could be hurting your kids. >> really? with the capital one cash rewards card you get a 50% annual bonus. and everyone likes 50% more cash -- well, except her. no! but, i'm about to change that. ♪ every little baby wants 50% more cash... ♪ phhht! fine, you try. [ strings breaking, wood splintering ] ha ha. [ male announcer ] the capital one cash rewards card. the card for people who want 50% more cash. ♪ what's in your wallet? ♪ what's in your...your...
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[ male announcer ] want your weeds to hit the road? hit 'em, with roundup extended control. one application kills weeds, and stops new ones for up to four months. roundup extended control. fiona here was just telling me that ford dealers sell a new tire like...every five seconds, how's that possible? well, we purchase 3 million a year. you just sold one right now didn't you? that's correct. major brands. 11 major brands. oop,there goes another one. well we'll beat anybody's advertised price. and you just did it right there, what's that called? the low price tire guarantee. wait for it, there goes another one. get a $100 rebate, plus the low price tire guarantee during the big tire event. look at that. it's happening right there every five seconds. your not going to run out are you? no.
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next, $853,846,062, that's how much money "the lion king" has made at the box office since 1997. it's now the greatest and all time highest grossing broadway show bypassing "phantom of the opera" where the guy had half a face and finally $2 million. that's how much you'll have to pay for a luxury doomsday condo in kansas built in an abandoned missile silo. the buyers preparing for the end of the world. gretch, bri? >> this is going to be eye opening for you. a significant number of american doctors admit honesty isn't always the best policy. >> according to a new survey, not only do many of them sugar coat the truth, some of them just flat out lie to you. joining us right now, a member of the fox news medical a team, dr. david sumadi. doctor, this is a disturbing study.
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first off for you personally, in theory, you made the mistake, do you lay it out to the person knowing that malpractice looms in the background? >> every one of us as physicians we have a different bedside manner. we are all under hippocratic oath and you want to do the best for your patients. the truth is as you go through your medical training, we have our own style of dealing with the patients. my style has always been if there is any medical error and occasionally that can happen, it's really to be honest with the patient. talk to the family. that open communication is everything because, you know, when the patient comes to you as a physician and they want the best care, they're vulnerable so it's my job to make sure they get all the truth and if there is an issue, stay with them and make sure you carry them through and that's how it always works. >> but wait, let's look at the study because apparently not all doctors are like you. they talked to 2,000 physicians across the country. 34% didn't see a need to disclose serious medical errors so people in white coats are telling white lies. what's going on? >> look, i think this is a study that came out from harvard
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medical school about like 2,000 doctors out there. it's only serves a very small sample of physicians out there and it is true that the medical malpractice can put some of these doctors under pressure to sort of hold back some of the facts. that's not the example of what's going on in this country. i have to truly believe in that. i think a lot of doctors truly and sincerely are doing the best they can to take care of their patients but look, you always have a few bad apples in every field. you have it in media. you have it in medical practice and other things but overall, this is a very small sample. and there are ways to really fix this. >> right. >> ok, for one thing, to go through it a little bit more, 20% didn't disclose an error because they fear of malpractice insurance which is huge. your rates go up and your prices go up and it affects everybody. 10% lied to patients flat out and 55% exaggerate positive news. >> some of this might not be a lie. positive news, if you have a family going into your office and they are diagnosed with prostate cancer which is what i
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do and they're losing hope and they're all in tears. the first thing is not to give them a false hope but try to bring them and hold it together and say look, there is a solution. we're going to fight together. we're going to save you. is it a lie? no, it's basically bringing it together to make sure we save them from this. and get through this. there are ways to fix this. and i think patients have a big role to really bring someone to that consultation. educate yourself. read about your disease. come in with the questions. if you don't understand something, bring your wife or spouse that's also going to listen to you. yeah. >> that's the first tip. bring a buddy. you say create your own medical record and don't be intimidated. >> i think it's extremely important to keep a record of everything going on. ask for those medical records. can i have my labs? i want to keep the record of this. that's extremely important. and doctors, we tend to speak this foreign language that nobody can understand. this terminology that can confuse you. if you don't understand it, ask them again. if there's no harm in really finding out what's going on and that open communication is
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always very, very helpful and prevents any of these kinds of issues. >> all right. >> thanks so much. >> not that bad. >> i know. thank you. >> all right. by the way, i would admit when i make a mistake but it just hasn't happened yet. >> moment by moment. >> yeah. >> coming up next on the rundown, an important warning for ladies of toxins known to cause birth defects found in nail polish now. what you need to know straight ahead. >> and a 13-year-old's quick thinking will blow you away. take a look at this video. he literally takes the wheel when a bus driver has a heart attack. whole thing caught on camera. that's a future navy seal. carfirmation.
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>> differences here. people still hunted for eggs but then they threw them at the price sign at neighborhood gas stations. >> if you remember back to the days of jimmy carter when he was president of the united states, there was gas rationing, there were gas lines, all sorts of stuff. >> mortgages with 20% interest. that doesn't help this story. >> no, it doesn't. it goes to show you how much stuff was back then. well, you know what? the president of the united states, the current one has now bypassed jimmy carter with the growing cost of gas. under this president, the cost
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of gas has gone up 103.79. under jimmy carter, 103.77. >> and the thing is it's happening at a bad time considering history of gas prices because they usually go up in the summer because people are on so-called vacation so if prices go up, he would surpass that. it's going to be -- staycation. a lot of people will adjust what they're doing. >> keep in mind, there's that strategic reserve so if there was ever a need to try to bring prices down in instant second, the president and congress can do that. in the meantime, let's take a look at this new poll because here's the question this morning, do we blame presidents differently depending on who happens to be president about rising gas prices. it turns out apparently we do. let's take a look at this response right here. first of all, let's look at whether or not we approve or disapprove of the way that president obama has been handling the gas prices. that would be 62% disapprove. 28% approve and then you go on
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to the report that i was talking about which was do we blame presidents differently? right now, 21% of people blame president obama for the rising gas prices. but back when president bush had rising gas prices, march 2005, 34% blamed president bush. >> and over here, basically the financial hardship, has it really paid a price in your life? abc/"washington post" poll, in june they said are facing hardship. in june, 2008, it was 77%. >> we were talking yesterday on catalina island off the coast of los angeles, gas is $7 a gallon. it would be a short ride. >> i don't think they're allowed -- this is odd. i don't think they're allowed cars in catalina island. >> that's how much the gas is then. i don't know what they're selling it for. but the point is is $4 the breaking point? where if it goes above $4, are people suddenly going to be
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saying, wait a minute. this is a hardship for my family. >> a lot of places across the country it really is. anywhere on the east coast it's over $4. i know in my community it's $4.30 something, maybe even higher than that. certainly in california and the west coast, it's well over $4 a gallon. so there's a big part of the population that's already facing that. it's $5, then, for those people going to be the breaking point? >> as we just went over to review again with the full screen, president obama is really getting an easier time amongst the media than in turn amongst the masses compared to president bush. prices were actually a little lower then. if you look at the stats, it actually shows he's getting a pass where president bush was blamed more than president obama for those high prices. >> because back in 2008, the democrats with the assistance of the mainstream media, they had a field day with the cost of gas and george w. bush. now, the republicans would like to make some hay but they can't get many members of the mainstream media to talk about it, hence the dilemma where the president actually is getting a
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bit of a pass with the high cost of gas. that rhymes. >> 25 minutes before the top of the hour. the headlines now. check out these new videos of tornadoes tearing across oklahoma. at least two tornadoes touched down in woodward county. i feel like i'm there in the northwestern part of the state. the storm brought the hail the size of golf balls injuring two people and damaging several buildings, the state could see more of this destructive weather today. >> meanwhile, he's been silent over the fatal shooting of trayvon martin until now. george zimmerman is asking for money on a new web site. he writes how the shooting forced him to leave his entire life and includes a link for people to help pay his legal fees and living expenses via paypal. another new development, zimmerman will not face a grand jury for the shooting. that means only one person who decides whether or not to bring charges in the case, the special prosecutor. >> high levels of dangerous chemicals known to cause birth defects now turning up in some bottles of nail polish.
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the department of toxic substances control, didn't know there was such a department, says the chemicals were found in 25 different brands stocked mostly by california nail salons and get this, 10 out of the 12 bottles that tested positive were advertised as toxin free. the agency says women who work in salons are most at risk. >> high school girls may not be at the head of the class for math because of teacher bias. according to researchers at the university of texas at austin, teachers rate the math skill of girls as being lower than boys. even if that isn't true, it might not be something that the teachers are consciously aware of. they were brought up in a household where the men did the math. i don't know. >> it's interesting how the bias can be very, very subtle and subconscious. anyway, take a look at this. a bus driver has a heart attack behind the wheel and the bus is packed with kids and what happens next is incredible. a 13-year-old on the bus jumps into action and steers the bus out of harm's way and even yanks
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the keys out of the ignition. ainsley earhardt has been following the story for us and joins us with more details. good morning. >> pretty scary. imagine if your children were on the bus, you see the children grabbing the seats in front of them. that bus driver having a heart attack while driving. the school bus full of students but a quick thinking teenager sprang into action and it is all caught on tape. >> what started as a routine morning bus ride quickly turned into a terrorizing trip for several milton, washington, middle schoolers. >> the bus driver is coming up to this turn near the school and he starts acting all funny, his eyes are bulging and he's twitching in his chair. >> surveillance video shows the driver having a seizure. the bus suddenly veers off the road. within seconds, 13-year-old jeremy wutschick jumped out of his seat. >> i steered it to the right side of the road and take the
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keys out of the ignition. >> by the time the bus stopped, jeremy opened the door and he and other students used their cell phones to call 911. a school administrator was driving by when he noticed the bus on the side of the road. >> obviously, crossed the street and got to the front of the bus and kids had opened up the door and the bus driver was unconscious. >> he attempted c.p.r. on the driver. eventually, the man had to be carried away by paramedics. the is school district did not know the man's condition but he was breathing. >> everybody was asking questions. what happened? there's a bus out there? what did you do, jeremy? i'm like oh, well, i just drove the bus to the side and everybody was so excited about that. >> but not 13-year-old jeremy. he remained calm throughout the whole ordeal. while his quick thinking actions quite possibly saved the driver and the bus riders, jeremy wishes he could have done more. >> if something major happens, i look back to see what i could have done better. >> jeremy, that teenager says he plans on taking a c.p.r. course now and we're told the bus driver was a substitute driver
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and hasn't been with that school district for very long. his condition is still unknown this morning. >> that's really something. i wonder if jeremy had actually ever driven something before. >> right. >> if it's from a driving game, a video game. >> that's true. i didn't think about that. hard enough for a kid that age drive a car much yet a school bus full of all of his friends. these children are fearless. to a lot of us it might be very dangerous. we'd be very scared to do it but this kid just jumps into action. >> good job. >> we're hoping that bus driver is ok. >> thanks, ainsley. great report. >> coming up on "fox & friends", we'll get you hired. top companies that are hiring right now. >> imagine leaving your christian upbringing behind for a so-called godless college. >> we haven't had a christian club -- >> what kind of administration? this is reed college, hello! >> the christian movie not sitting well with hollywood or christians. but first, the pfizer trivia
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in here, great food demands a great presentation. so at&t showed corporate caterers how to beer collaborate by using a mobile solution, in a whole new way. using real-time photo sharing abilities, they can create and maintain high standards, from kitchen to table. this technology allows us to collaborate with r drivers to make a better experience for our customers. [ male announcer ] it's a network of possibilities -- helping you do what you do... even better. ♪ >> hi, everybody. time for some headlines. orthodox christian worshippers lining up in macedonia to visit the so-called miracle church. priests say several paintings of saints are appearing brighter in color without any explanation. they've been dirty for years because of candle smoke. now, they're bright. and a survey finds when it comes to low prices, amazon has wal-mart beat! low to moderate income on-line
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shoppers say the place for cheaper prices is the on-line store. this comes as wal-mart's value score has been declining significantly over the last two years. gretch? >> a new face based film raising eyebrows and stirring controversy. the main character is a young man who leaves his christian upbringing and goes off to a very secular college where he's forced to figure out what his faith really means. >> look, your private religious wacko believes are none of my business but if you plan sticking around long enough to unpack your secret underwear or whatever, you probably want to keep that quiet around here. >> you're kidding, right? >> i had a mormon my freshman year, she lasted two days. >> we haven't had a christian club since -- >> what kind of administration is this? this is reed college, hello! >> so marshall allman stars in the movie "blue like jazz" his character based on dennis miller ace semiautobiography book.
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you were raised where? >> i was raised in texas and grew up in a southern baptist church and then went off to portland, oregon and discovered this college called reed college and never heard of it. it had the distinction at the time of being the most godless campus in the country. it's my christian upbringing meeting secularism. there were some struggles. >> people were interested in your book. it was a bestseller. >> i wrote a book about it. it took off and did well and some guys wanted to make a movie about it so they came out to portland and we spent a year writing a screenplay and then tried to raise money during a recession to make the film and it didn't work out but fans of the book actually donated $10 and $25, thousands and thousands of them to get the movie made. >> that's the fascinating part of this story. marshall, you come into the picture and you're playing donald in this film. what was it like? do you have to act a lot or were you kind of like he was growing
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up? >> we took a lot of liberties. from the book, he was himself, you know, observing this campus and everything. but they changed it to a 19-year-old kid who went to college. there was a lot of liberties taken in the character. i tried to emerge myself in his writings and see him speak and give a revival of who he was. >> what has been the reaction from hollywood and then from the christian community? >> well, in the last five years, christian movies have been critiqued by hollywood and they can be a bit sentimental and a bit low budget and the acting isn't great. we wanted to make a movie that was different that kind of competed at the box office on an entertainment level. we feel like this movie does it but we took a lot of liberties. it's not your average christian film. >> what do you mean? >> you know, it takes place in the most godless campus in the country. in order to do that, we had to show a little bit of godlessness. we earned our pg-13 rating,
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there's some profanity and drug use but we hope it didn't get gratuitous and we hope we showed reality as it was. it's not a family friendly film which is not normal christianity. >> i see. this is why some christian groups might not love the movie, then, before they go see it. >> yeah, it kind of presents -- it kind of presents, i guess, it in a way that doesn't -- it's not as neat, you know. it's more a little bit true to life and not all the answers are wrapped in a bow and it's funny, too. >> we hope it's funny. >> it's right around the corner. it comes out "blue like jazz" in theaters april 13th. marshall and donald thanks so much. good luck with film. >> thanks for having us. >> the government admits employers haven't been hiring as much as they'd like. coming up next, the top five companies are filling jobs. get out your pen and paper. on this day in history 100 years ago, the titanic set sail from southhampton, england and in 1989, "she drives me crazy" by the fine young cannibals, remember that one, it was the
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number one song back then. wake up! that's good morning, veggie style. hmmm. fohalf the calories plus vgie nutrition. could've had a v8. ♪ one, two, three, four ♪ ♪ you say ♪ flip it over and replay ♪ we'll make everything okay ♪ walk together the right way ♪ do, do, do, do we could eat whatever we wanted and still lose weight. weight watchers online was so easy. you look up a food, you eat the food, you track the food. weight -- comes right off. you have lipstick on your teeth. ok. got it. using the recipe builder, i'm making 2 point enchiladas that will blow your mind.
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>> the question of the day, john madden. the question was who's john madden? the winner is mike gaspar from marquette, michigan. let's talk jobs. yesterday, the dow jones industrials hitting its lowest point in almost a month. economists blaming disappointing job numbers from friday. but we're here to help and cheryl casone has the top five companies hiring right now. cheryl, welcome back. let's start with whole foods. >> rough jobs number. there's actually some good numbers coming out of whole foods. looking to add about 1,000 positions across the u.s. and canada. look, you can make between $10
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and $14 an hour. they do offer benefits. you may have to pay into your health care benefits initially in the first one to two years that you're at the company and you can get stock options at this company depending how long you work there. and again, fortune has rated them one of the better companies to work for and their plan, their goal, they want to open 1,000 stores eventually. they wouldn't get me a time frame. right now they only have 319. there's a big movement in organic food, healthy food and healthy living and we're seeing that kind of industry overall build and whole foods is one of the names and also the co-founder still takes a dollar a year for his salary. >> fantastic. qualcomm, american global telecommunications company. >> wireless technology, all the move into wireless everything so they are expanding. they make the guts of a lot of the mobile devices that you're probably using right now. 1400 part and full time positions but 800 are here in the united states. they're based in san diego. mostly looking for engineers but there are some jobs i found in
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legal. there are some jobs in finance but most of this will be i.t. jobs. the big theme right now. >> with 150 locations, it's not all about california. >> san diego, right. >> the boston consulting group, a global management consulting firm. >> 2,000 jobs are available here. number two on fortune's 100 companies to work for of the best companies to work for. also, they got a little bit of a mention in "working mother" mac sdmreen. being a consultant means a little bit of a flexible schedule. you're going out and consulting for company a, y or z. you're trying to help them out but at the same time, you can have a work-life balance. you have to have the skills set to be a consultant. that will vary on your resume. >> amazon.com. >> they have been expanding like crazy. look, this is the nation's number one on-line retailer. >> they do vreverything. >> you can get a tractor-trailer on amazon, i'm sure. they're opening up a plant in jefferson, indiana. thousands of hoosiers, they're looking for they told me.
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but they're looking for people that can basically work in that new facility and hoping to open that up by the fall. they need 1,329 people right now. specific. >> if you have a surge of ants or flies that won't go away, good news, terminex is hiring. >> by the way, the warm weather -- this could be the worst spring on record for pests. for bugs. i mean, that's for the home owners but terminex needs people. if you're full time here, you actually get health benefits which is, you got to consider that part of your salary. terminex operate in 45 states. you get benefits. it will be a really rough spring, though, for homeowners, i mean, whether it's termites. whether it's roaches. whether it's ants. just overall, people need to be aware of that. >> right. we should have something to look forward to. if you haven't seen the roaches and ants yet, they're coming according to cheryl. >> they will help you out when you get them in your home. >> you have the slogans and the motto. hey, cheryl casone, we'll watch
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you today at 12:00 on the fox business network. is that ok? >> that's ok. listen, if you're a company that's hiring or gotten a job from this segment, e-mail the show. >> we'll show your picture on the air or a sketch. >> coming up straight ahead, cheryl has to go to her other job, free government money. you won't believe how much the government is spending on pricey ads to encourage people who don't pay their taxes to cash in on a tax credit. laura ingraham will unwind that for us and we're about to find out who the mega millions winner is. the news conference starting at the top of the hour. ♪
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is to take you from where you are... to where you need to be. and we're not just talking about points on a map. with a more intuitive delta website and mobile app... and the most wifi equipped planes. we let you be everywhere at once. innovations like these are extending our reach so you can extend yours. and now, even at 30,000 feet you can still touch the ground. >> gretchen: good morning, everyone. today is tuesday, april 10.
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i'm gretchen carlson. thanks for sharing part of your day with us. more government workers caught clowning around. thinking about that clown, screwing up the words. guess what? you're paying for it. ♪ are you ready for a miracle >> gretchen: it's new video, the tip of the iceberg. >> steve: speak of green, is the white house trying to get one over on the supreme court, spending millions of dollars to put obamacare in place just before the justices could rule on it? can they do that? laura ingraham live from washington promptly. >> brian: watch this video. a woman nearly blown away, but the exhaust from the jet engine does this to her. whoa! look how she lands! >> steve: that's going to be a headache. >> brian: i'll give you a hint, it's not the wall. "fox & friends" now.
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>> steve: this is a fox news alert. brian asked for a podium with a bunch of microphones and there it is. maryland lottery director hosting a press conference to provide details about the winning ticket. >> i'm martino, director of the maryland lottery. this morning the maryland lottery is pleased to announce that the winning mega millions jackpot ticket that was sold in maryland on march 30 for the world record setting $656 million jackpot was claimed yesterday. the ticket was claimed by three winners who have chosen to remain anonymous, but they have given us permission to give a little information about them and the circumstances for them getting the ticket, purchasing the ticket, and claiming it and
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how they came to understand they were the winners. all three winners, a woman in her 20s, a man in his 40s, and a woman in her 50s, have worked together for many years in the public school system of the state of maryland. it is the first time that the three friends had pooled their money together. one described themselves as a frequent numbers player of the maryland lottery. another one described themselves as an occasional scratch ticket player. and the third was essentially nonplayer of the lottery, except when the jackpots got really high, and she thought the $656 million was sufficiently high to play in this jackpot. the trio each contributed $20 to the pool. they purchased 60 tickets total.
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one of the members purchased all of the tickets at three different locations. at a retailer, or in baltimore city, at a retailer in another county, and then at a third retailer that sold the winning ticket in baltimore county. a little color for what happened that night, that night the woman who had purchased the tickets laid all the tickets out on her floor, watched the numbers be drawn and then after seeing that one of their winning tickets had the winning numbers, and after i think collecting herself from a state of disbelief, contacted one of the other participants in the group. they then called and had to wake up the third participant, told
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this individual that they were coming over. the third participant thought they were playing an early april fool's joke on her, but in fact, they arrived at her home sometime midnight, 1:00 o'clock in the morning. they all kind of collected themselves, looked over the ticket. they made a copy of the ticket and they each signed a copy of the ticket. from there, the woman who purchased the ticket took it to a relative's house where it was placed in a safe. the next day or actually -- >> gretchen: they sound like they it it the right way. got to love them for being anonymous. >> brian: one purchases all the tickets at three different locations and there is no problem sharing, which makes me think it wasn't the haitian woman who works at mcdonald's. >> steve: they said it's definitely not her. but apparently this do work. they're co-workers, part of an office pool. they work in a public school in the great state of maryland.
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but the rules are, they don't have to identify themselves. so we're not going to see them in front of a great big cardboard check today. however, if three people don't show up for work over the next couple of days, you might be able to connect some dots. >> gretchen: maybe they'll continue to work. >> brian: o'reilly is not in, maybe he's one of the winners. laura ingraham filled in for him last night. >> and tonight. >> brian: did bill o'reilly win the lottery? >> bill is look under the fry machine in baltimore county. remember the mcdonald's or the one in brooklyn? nothing turned up yet. but we're thinking this whole thing is a hoax. >> steve: right. >> this guy seemed too comfortable reading that statement. >> gretchen: you're a lawyer, right? >> yeah. >> gretchen: so it sounds like these folks did it the right way, after they won and collected their thoughts, they made a copy of it, they all signed it. it sounds like they put it in a safe -- from a legal point of view, they did the right thing.
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>> i want those public school teach force teach my kids. i like the whole thing. they go to the safe, they don't identify themselves. they sign it examine copy it and just looking at the floor, how many times do you think she read those number over? >> brian: let's talk about $500 million and let's talk about that's the amount of money the president is allocating for the irs to get ready for obamacare. republicans are up in arms about this. they say, can we wait until june 'til we find out if there is an obamacare? where do you stand? >> of course, doesn't surprise us, right, because if washington has access to money, washington will spend money. this is why when people say, well, we're going to raise taxes on the rich. we're going to push that buffet rule through as the president will try to do in this florida swing, people think it will not be used to pay down the deficit. it will be spent. that's what's happening here. and i should say it's really -- even for an election year even for a democrat, even for president obama, it's really
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kind of low rent. it looks like the supreme court is going to overturn this. i think it smacks of politics, of the worst type of behavior for an elected official to go ahead and push the spending of that money before the supreme court rules. >> gretchen: it's even more than that. it's more than just putting the money over to the irs, $500 million. it's that it's kind of an end around congress. hasn't congress stated they really are trying to put a hold on spending any money on obamacare 'til we find out what the supreme court says? >> yeah. but again, the administration has no problem, right, calling out other branches of congress or trying to do an end run around rules or regulations. i would say even federal law. i mean, whether it's dealing with immigration, with back door amnesty or any of these other things we've talked about over the years, i think barak obama thinks, look, i'm president and i'm going to use the full force of this office and stop me. try to stop me from doing this. i think it's a dare.
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try and stop me. >> steve: they had that $2 billion slush fund and it will be gone. >> brian: by the way, there is that turn money. >> steve: laura, i watched you fill in for bill last night. you started with the segment on the war on women and you -- i completely agree, it's phony. the democrats are trying to portray the republicans as waging a war on women and you talked a little bit about how they didn't, they weren't, it's bogus made up by the democrats and the main stream media. in the last week or so, the muslim brotherhood has been invited to the white house. when you think about a war on women, the people who follow sharia law, who has got a bigger war on women than the people who stone them? >> when i think women's rights, i think islamism. i think the rise of the muslim brotherhood. they're going to be at the forefront of protecting women's rights throughout the middle east. this is more, of course, hypocrisy on the part of the administration on this issue. as i pointed out last night, the fact of the matter is, if the
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white house is going to be talking about a war on anything, it should be a war on our general prosperity and breaking down by gender, men are doing worse than women on a whole host of measures, including women getting more advanced degrees, law schools, mba's, graduating from universities at a higher rate, women in their 20s paid the same rate or more than men, women who are child unless their 20s. the next generation are going to outpace the earnings of their male counterparts across all income levels and across all data points for employment, the atlanta did a great piece on this a couple of weeks ago. >> brian: of course, the man show was canceled -- the men had to roll with the punch. >> you're still very disappointd about that. >> gretchen: before let you go, let's get into this last topic because the government is taking out advertisements in magazines,
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full page ads, to encourage people to file for the earned income tax credit. if we have a picture of this ad, it's important -- here it is. it's like raining money down. who wouldn't want to sign up for this thing? you're only eligible if you make under $49,000 a year, but is this correct for taxpayer money to go for advertisements in magazines? >> no. this is free money democrats. this is -- if you look closely on the ad, it says obama-biden-2012 at the bottom. the taxpayers are paying for this. gretchen, you are hit the nail on the head, this is money that's going to people who -- they didn't earn this money. this is just redistribution his policies through had earned income tax credit. we should have a conversation about this in this election. but it's a lot like the stimulus signs for the american recovery reinvestment act. remember how much those cost? those were bulletin boards of the obama administration across the country and here we have it again. a different issue, but it's a campaign poster for obama-biden.
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>> steve: so many of the people who qualify for it don't even pay federal taxes. >> right. again -- >> steve: wait a minute. we got a way to energize our base. >> right. take it right from mitt romney. he has at that car elevator in la joya. take it from him. i'm not surprised that is not in the ad. >> gretchen: looks like you're going tore o'rylely tonight. thanks v a great week. >> take care. >> brian: i think it's classy, the romney campaign to pull all the ads out of pennsylvania because rick santorum's daughter is sick. he's been in the hospital and not been able to campaign. that was pretty nice. >> steve: 11 minutes after the hour. connecticut school worker got fired after making an appearance alongside michelle ree. so did a teacher's union force her out? we're going to give you all the facts and you are going to
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decide. >> gretchen: ever wonder what happened to lost luggage? i love this story. it becomes someone else's treasure at auction. we're going inside the battles for your baggage. we're going to tell you what's inside the baggages worth the most. you might be surprised. >> brian: is that allowed? >> steve: after 30 days hey, did you ever finish last month's invoices? sadly, no. oh. but i did pick up your dry cleaning and had your shoes shined. well, i made you a reservation at the sushi place around the corner. well, in that case, i better get bk to these invoices... whh i'll do right after making your favorite pancakes. you know what? i'm going to tidy up your side of the office. i can't hear you because i'm also making you a smoothie. [ male announcer ] marriott hotels & resorts knows it's better for xerox to automate their global invoice process so they can focus on serving their customers. with xerox, you're ready for real business.
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>> steve: this connecticut school work got fired after making an appearance alongside former dc school chancellor michelle ree. she has always garnered headlines for being antiunion, anti-tenure, things like that, dating back to her days as washington's school chancellor. but did appearing next to ree on personal time cost that connecticut woman her job? let's talk o kyle olson, the
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publisher of the education action group. he joins us live from grand rapid, michigan. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> steve: so gwen samuel heads up the parents union there in new haven, connecticut. the day after michelle ree shows up, she gets fired. coincidence? >> absolutely not in our judgment. what is happening is there is a huge fight going on in the legislature over education reform linking tenure to student performance, some very relatively bold initiatives going on in connecticut. so gwen samuel and her parent union has been at the forefront of pushing these reform, pushing the parent trigger, reforming tenure, those sorts of things. she brought michelle ree into the state capitol for a rally and literally the next day, she was fired from her school district where she was involved in the head start program. and so what we are doing is looking into this, bringing attention to this.
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we submitted an open records request to the school district requesting any e. make communications -- e-mail communications regarding this case because we think the union is involved in her firing. >> steve: okay. in fact, we've got an excerpt from the letter of termination. it says, we have been informed by new haven public schools that your involvement with head start parents on a personal advocacy level is considered a conflict of interest and have been asked to remove you from the parent-teacher connection program. first of all, kyle, they knew that she was involved in this even before she was hired. you would think a if it was coming from the teachers union, they would be okay with the existence of a parents' union, but clearly they don't want a parents union because they think that's going to be a problem for them. >> that's right. so in early 2011, she started the parents union. ten months later she was hired by the school district to work in the head start program. and for head start she was
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working with prekindergarten parents encouraging them to read to their children, play with their children, be a parent. so she was advocating for parents and yet that was too much and they fired her. citing this conflict of interest. so my question is, where is the conflict of interest when you are advocating for parents? >> steve: right. exactly right. that's why she was fired. well, anyway. here is a quote from her response to her termination. she says, quote, this was meant to intimidate parents from going across the -- going against the school agenda sent as a message to parents that if you try to help yourself and each other, we will get you. when you take away my bread and butter, you attack my family. i'm working to the 10th power, but you're not going to bully me. i understand she's filing a complaint. this is not over, is it? >> it is not over.
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we need more people like gwen samuel who are willing to stand up, advocate for parents, advocate for children and face the consequences which she unfortunately has faced. >> steve: no kidding. all right. kyle olson, we thank you for joining us today from grand rapids. we did reach out to the giselle institute of child development on this story. they have no comment on the case. the new haven school district declined to comment in time for today's broadcast. kyle, good work. >> thank you very much. >> steve: read all about it on his web site, eagnews.org. 19 minutes after the top of the hour. our next guest traveled the world looking to snatch up your lost luggage and turn it into a huge profit. what's inside your suitcase that is worth the most? we're going to tell you and it might surprise you. another gsa music video paid for by you, the taxpayer. but this government party is nothing compared to another one just uncovered, what happens in istanbul doesn't stay in
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istanbul. that's lot of turkey. to roll over my old 401(k) into a fidelity ira. man: okay, no problem. it's easy to get started; i can help you with the paperwork. um...this green line just appeared on my floor. yeah, that's fidelity helping you reach your financial goals. could you hold on a second? it's your money. roll over your old 401(k) into a fidelity ira and take control of your personal economy. this is going to be helpful. call or come in today. fidelity investments. turn here. fiona here was just telling me that ford dealers sell a new tire like...every five seconds, how's that possible? well, we purchase 3 million a year. you just sold one right now didn't you? that's correct. major brands. 11 major brands. oop,there goes another one. well we'll beat anybody's advertised price. and you just did it right there, what's that called? the low price tire guarantee. wait for it, there goes another one. get a $100 rebate, plus the low price tire guarantee during the big tire event.
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>> gretchen: quick headlines. fox news alert. extremist who admits killing 77 people in norway last july is not criminally insane. the psychiatric exam contradicts an earlier assessment for anders behring breivik. the ruling comes six days now before he goes on trial for that horrible massacre. new video of tornadoes tearing across oklahoma. at least two tornadoes touching down in the northwestern part of the state. the storm brought hail the size of golf balls injuring two people and damaging several buildings. the state could see more of this destructive weather today. hang on. >> brian: talk about cash and carry, turns out outrageous fortune might be a suitcase
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away. >> every day millions of people travel and 70,000 bags are lost in airports around the world. when this property goes unclaimed, it's put up for public auction and sold to the highest bidder. >> brian: that's why our next guest come in. billy lee roy and mark mire, two of the stars from the new show called "baggage battles. good morning. >> great to be here. >> steve: so the deal is if people don't claim their baggage after six months, what happens to it? >> it goes up for auction. >> steve: that's where you guys come in. we just saw a wide shot there. a lot of people interested in buying people's baggage because you don't know what's inside. right? >> exactly. there is about 1,000 people at the auction, of regular people, the general public, which is a giant wild card. >> then i got to compete with guys like this. >> gretchen: so you have an antique shop and store. >> yes. >> gretchen: and you have a thrifty store in new york. you're contestants on this show going up against each other. how do you know which bag to go for and try to buy?
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>> those are little secrets we keep to ourselves. >> gretchen: come on. >> we get to pick up the bag, take a whiff. sometimes, you never know. >> gretchen: take a whiff? >> steve: there's a bag right there. >> ready? you ready? >> gretchen: what are you smelling for? >> yes, you smell it. it's the smell test. like it smells horrible, you got to hide it because they're hiding the jewels inside the dirty underwear. >> gretchen: oh, come on? seriously? >> sometimes i go by weight, by the brand name of the bag. you really never know and then i always say the more you buy, the luckier you become. >> steve: so you do what our kids do before marks you shake it and you listen? >> absolutely. taas lot like christmas because we can not open the bags. they're sealed. so we bid on it and it can go up to $1,200 on one bag without looking inside. >> brian: mark, one thing you would do if it's a nicer bag, there is a better chance of valuables being inside. tell me what you gleaned from this hit or miss thing?
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>> i've gotten everything from high end designer shoes and bags down to like really old oatmeal cookies. >> gretchen: gross. what about you? >> dirty laundry from hell. >> gretchen: what's your best thing? >> it's actually a piece i didn't get. it was a london auction. 17th century painting of an english gentleman and i missed it. i didn't go high enough. >> steve: it was in somebody's luggage? >> it was in the auction. it was a police seized item, but it was also with the luggage. >> brian: isn't this your best get, the charlie chaplain? >> yeah. >> brian: tell me about that. >> i bought it in a police auction, in a mystery box. i paid $100 for a box full of junk and i got that. >> brian: charlie chaplin. >> 1976 mesh purse. $1,100 for it. a picture of charlie chaplin on it. >> steve: are you ahead of the game? let's say you buy a bag for 200 bucks. on average, do you wind up making money on what's in there? >> there is a 30% success rate.
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>> steve: that's not good. >> but what you don't understand, when it's success, it only takes one good bag to make a good week. it really is like christmas. look at the stuff. all this came out of the bag. >> gretchen: i want to get this question in. what would people be surprised at that's valuable that you might not think is valuable? >> you want to answer that? >> designer sunglasses, old jewelry, old diamonds, stuff like that, that people leave if their bags. there is all kinds of stuff. when you travel, it's generally how you lose stuff because you're off your game. i'm sure you guys travel a lot. going through the airport with three screaming kids is not generally when you're on your game. >> brian: ever feel compelled to find the people whose name is on the tag and give it back to them? >> i have. i got a class ring. >> did you find the tag? >> no, there is never a tag. >> i've got a class ring that i actually returned to the woman who owned it. that was easy to look up.
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>> steve: it's great show called "baggage battles" premieres april 11 on the travel show. thank you for sharing your secrets with us. >> thanks for having us. >> gretchen: coming up, are two presidents better than one? the idea sounds crazy. could it put an end to partisan gridlock? >> brian: and come it your tv. watch this. a woman blown away by the exhaust from a jet engine. did she do this on purpose? should she have worn a helmet? did she lose her bag only $79.99 for a lucid by lg ?
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>> sign the bill to prevent members of congress from profiting from any no edge they gained on the job. really? do they look like these people have gained any knowledge? you see anybody getting smarter? no. >> gretchen: that's why the approval rating of members of congress at a paltry 13% approval rating. >> brian: finally it's here. >> steve: it is. >> brian: an idea has finally come to fruition that could possibly work. >> steve: we've been talking about how in november, people will vote between barak obama
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and probably mitt romney. what if after the november election it was declared, you know what, they both win. we're going to have two presidents? this is an idea that's been floated by a professor at indiana university. >> gretchen: he was a form state representative, so he has a little political experience. he's writing a book, it's not going to come out for another year, but he released one chapter and it created a fire storm. he points to other countries that have done things similar, france currently england is doing something like this. david cameron the conservative leader, the prime minister. but he decided to form a coalition with nick clegg, representative of the more liberal party in great britain. seemed to be working at the big, this plural presidency, but now there is a quote from david cameron saying that clegg is, quote, slowing him down. >> brian: no kidding. >> gretchen: but it's interesting because this goo i's contention is that 80% of the
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issues in america, the two parties would be in agreement on, about 80% of them. but it's those sharply divide issues that make up the rest of the 20% and could they ever come together? is this what we need right now as we're looking at a more -- >> brian: remember when america first started, you run for president, the guy who companies in second is vice president. >> steve: that's the way it used to be, but it all changed. this would require constitutional amendment. obviously. it's not like you can just vote on it. the idea is it would end gridlock. >> brian: to me it won't. it will -- >> steve: what if you are get two presidents and one says a and the other says b? you got gridlock right there? >> brian: how about this, i'm not doing the easter egg roll, i did it last year. i'm not doing it again. >> gretchen: how about pardoning the turkey. >> brian: i'm not going to do it again. i did that last year. i'll balance the budget, you carve the turkey or partner it, big -- pardon it. >> gretchen: when they look at barak obama and john mccain,
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here is what they speculate what would have happened. it would have been a pivotal year in american politics. democrats and republicans work together to pass a jobs bill, close guantanamo bay and end the recession. >> steve: i think that picture we just showed of the two of them together was right after the president said hey, john, sit down. you lost. remember that? >> brian: yeah, you lost. the campaign is over. now headlines inasmuch we have to begin with a new video emerging showing employees from the general services administration, gsa, laughing it up on your taxpayer dime. ♪ are you ready for a miracle this comes on the heels of one that shows employees clowning around smoking. >> steve: there he is. >> gretchen: former head of the gsa says the obama administration needs to start accepting some responsibility and stop trying to shift the blame. now we're learning about other government conferences with mind boggling costs. the d.e.a. held a three-day
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conference in istanbul in 2008. the cost, over $1 million. the house oversight committee hold ago hearing on the gsa's use of taxpayer money. >> steve: republican presidential candidate rick santorum returns to the campaign trail later today. that's because his daughter, bella, was released from the hospital late last night. she has a rare genetic disease. he took four days off to be with his family. he will attend two events today in his home state of pennsylvania. >> brian: after seeing this time, most people would steer clear of the jet engines. not this woman. she got way too close. when the -- by the way, look at the sign. it says don't get too close. watch. >> steve: maybe the danger sign. >> brian: did she do it on purpose? >> steve: i don't know. it would be nice to have the video. >> brian: the video is overrated
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. i guess the goal was to go over the wall. that was the first guy. she was blasted right through by the engine exhaust, carried through the air and smacked her head into the wall. we're waiting to find out how she's doing and what she remembers. the beach where this happened is known for how close it is to the airport. >> gretchen: people have been e-mailing in saying this actually has a term that -- i can't remember what -- something about holding on. but the people do this on purpose. i'm sorry, i can't even look at that video anymore. i don't really know what her condition might be after that. >> brian: wilson philips wrote a song called "hold on." >> steve: i think that's the idea, you hold op to the fence so you look like you're flying in the air. >> gretchen: we've got to tell you about this. the mega millions mystery over in maryland. we have brand-new information on who actually won. >> all three winners, a woman in her 20s, a man in his 40s, and a woman in her 50s have worked
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together for many years in the public school system of the state of maryland. >> gretchen: the ticket bought just hours before the drawing at a 7-11 in baltimore. lottery director says the winning trio put $20 towards the pool, but they wish to remain anonymous. this means wilson was lying about having the winning ticket. you may remember she claims she hid the ticket at the mcdonald's she works at and she claims that she had bought them with a pool of employees and this one she bought for sheriff. >> brian: now, i believed her and you were the ones who were skeptical. so congratulations. >> steve: the part about where she says, i've got the winning ticket and i left it at the store -- >> brian: maybe she was telling the truth. you are street smart, you two. >> steve: there you go. we are. >> brian: the nfl sacking saints coach -- the league found the saints had a pay for pain bounty
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pool under payton's watch. commissioner also upheld the suspensions for mickey lumas and joe vi it, t which plows the ground better bill parcells to come back. there was tapes. i think he's done for the nfl. he's suspended indefinitely. he may have just won the 2012 masters, but new dad bubba watson taking part in the daily rituals of being a dad. he tweeted about changing his first diapers and being in tears while too long it. i guess it was one of those diapers that should have been changed earlier. they just adopted a son. he says his son and his faith are more important than the game of golf. the word is he never took a formal lesson. i have taken 5,000. that's my problem. magic johnson is a hall of fame basketball player and close not guilty on becoming a billionaire businessman. he sat down on the stage of his broadway play. "magic bird" opens wednesday night and he thought he'd express to me some of his
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business knowledge and acumen. it's the same thing he told the president 'cause they are in constant contact. here is what he said about the failing economy to president obama. >> what we have to do is put money back into these great small business owners and into these communities because the small businesses make america go and the banks have to loosen up for these small businesses as well so that they can have capital to either start or grow -- >> brian: we keep hearing that, but they don't. >> so the pressure has to come from the white house and we have to make sure we put pressure on the financial institutions. i don't know why they're not doing it because, look, i can i understand when it was 08, 09, you didn't want to get loans. i understood that then. but now i don't understand that. >> brian: and by the way, he employs 50,000 people and just bought the los angeles dodgers, along with a group of investors for $2 billion. magic johnson enterprises, pretty impresssive and the magic
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bird play opens tomorrow night. >> steve: you say it's great. a dangerous brush fire continues to burn right now on long island, new york. crews battling the flames throughout the night. joining us with the latest from manorville is wnyw reporter robert moses. how is it? >> good morning to you and good morning everyone. we're being kept away from the fire. you can see this police car just behind me. so far we're told as of this morning, about 2,000-acres have burned. this is the worst brush fire in this county since 1995. we know of two homes destroyed so far, another business also destroyed. there have been other homes that have suffered some damage. three firefighters were injured. two of them have already been treated and released. a third is being treated and released. good news, this fire did not advance at all overnight and we're in a very rural part of suffolk county, long island. so the fire is away from most homes. however, according to the fire
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executive we heard from, this is still a very tough fight. >> this fire is not under control. we're utilizing every resource we can. wind died down this morning, which is good. we're hoping to get ahead of it this morning, but it's unclear whether we're going to be able to get it under control this morning. >> give you an idea of the terrain, it's a very marshy area and to that end, six pieces of fire apparatus got stuck overnight. fortunately, no firefighters were injured. that is the latest live from manorville, long island, robert moses, fox news. back to you. >> steve: thank you very much. not only burning on long island, but new jersey as well. >> brian: really? >> steve: yep. >> gretchen: get ready to sing along. look at the funniest songs ever made, coming up. >> steve: and public support for the supreme court souring. so is obama, the president, losing the war with the justices? peter johnson, jr. here next [ male announcer ] imagine facing the day
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so who's in control now, mayans? >> brian: since the start of the supreme court health care proceedings, support for the court has actually soared. according to -- not souring. according to a rasmussen poll, 41% of the likely u.s. voters now rate the high court's performance as good or excellent. that's a double digit jump since last month of march. the supreme court now seen as the last best hope for upholding the constitution? that's one of the theories. i want to ask that to fox news legal analyst, peter johnson, jr. >> that's my theory and i'm sticking with it. people saw the arguments with regard to obamacare and i think they were emboldened by it. they said, this is a dispassionate, reasonable conversation on real issues and we have nine responsible people that are going to make a determination. so they're saying, listen, yeah,
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there is hope for the constitution. and they saw there was hope for the constitution back in january. the hosannaer decision where the supreme court smacked the obama white house and said listen, obama white house, don't you be deciding who is a minister in the lutheran church. don't be deciding who our ministers are, who your religious personnel are in our churches. that's up to the churches to decide. so they struck a great ruling and gave a lot of americans on the left and on the right great hope that the supreme court was going to help close the divide in america and bring constitutionalism back to the front. >> brian: i think it's all because of the recordings. now that we heard the questions, and then have -- didn't have to read them, are you of the belief the supreme court approval would go up higher if they put cameras in? >> yes. and they should have cameras in those courtrooms so people can see instantly what's going on.
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we have the arizona immigration law argument. that will be coming up this month. people are concerned about that. what is the role of the states? what is the role of the federal government? there is a lot of optimism and hope in the supreme court as the last best hope for constitutional government in the united states. >> brian: peter johnson, jr., thanks so much. one block left, heard this one? ♪ hey ♪ ♪ he's free as a breeze ♪ he's always at ease ♪ he lives in the jungle ♪ and -- >> brian: ray stevens here live with the funniest songs ever recorded. first let's check in with the very humorous martha mccallum. he's always talk being serious stuff. >> but you do, every thursday in radio. good morning, everybody. so how much will obamacare pump up the debt? that's one of the big questions this morning. a shocking study says it will
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add $530 billion. we're going to see if those numbers really add up. a new 2012 poll shows gender gap in the presidential election. but it is not what you may think. fast and furious, why won't the white house let kevin o'reilly speak? bill and i join you right here at the top of the hour. we'll see you then ♪ what started as a whisper every day, millions of people choose to do the right thing. there's an insurance company that does that, too. liberty mutual insurance. responsibility. what's your policy?
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selling incyclo pedias. since the last couple of years, compiling are the 108 most memorable songs in the history of recorded comedy music. i must admit, i'm on a mission here to save the endangered comedy song because you don't hear too many on the radio. >> brian: some of the rap songs make you giggle. >> steve: how about if we get out of your way and you do the medley for us? >> i'd be happy to. ♪ well in north carolina way back in the hills ♪ ♪ lived my old pappy and he had still ♪ ♪ he proved white ling night 'til the sun went down and he filled him a jug and pass it around ♪ ♪ mighty mighty pleasing ♪ pappy is going squeezing ♪ white lightning
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♪ the team and the revenue is two ♪ ♪ searching for the place where he made his brew ♪ ♪ they were looking trying to book him but my pappy kept on booking ♪ ♪ white lightning ♪ fee, fee, phi, phi, fo item ♪ i smell smoke in the auditorium ♪ ♪ charlie brown ♪ charlie brown ♪ he's a clown, that charlie brown ♪ ♪ he's gonna get caught ♪ just you wait and see ♪ why is everybody always picking on me ♪ ♪ chugalug, chugalug ♪ make you want to holler heidi
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ho ♪ ♪ turns your tummy, don't you know ♪ ♪ chugalug, chugalug ♪ great wine in a mason jar ♪ home made and brought to school ♪ ♪ bro a friend in after class ♪ me and him after this ask this fool decided we'd drink up what's left ♪ ♪ chugalug so helped ourselves ♪ first time for everything ♪ my ears still rings ♪ chugalug, chugalug ♪ make you want to holler heidi ho ♪ ♪ burns your tummy don't you know ♪ ♪ chugalug, chugalug ♪ oh, me oh, my oh, you ♪ whatever shall i do ♪ hallelujah the question is peculiar ♪ ♪ i'd give a lot of dough ♪ if only i could know ♪ the answer to my question ♪ is it yes or is it no
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♪ if your mother says don't chew it ♪ ♪ do you swallow it in spite ♪ can you catch it on your tonsils ♪ ♪ can you heave it left and right ♪ ♪ does the chewing gum lose its flavor on the bed post overnight ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> steve: he just bell -- belched three times. >> steve: if you would like more information on the cd, go to our web site. very nice. >> thank you. ♪ ♪ schenecty. des moines. ok. ok. ok. i can't always be there to weed my petunias. so now we use miracle-gro shake 'n feed plus weed prevente it feeds plants and preven weeds for up to three months.
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so my plants grow bigger, more beautiful, without all thweeds. guaranteed. [ cellphone rings ] with miracle-gro shake 'n feed, anyone can have a green thumb. [ cellphone rings ] everyonews with miracle-gr is this where we're at now? we just eat whatever tastes good? like these sweet honey clusters... actually there's a half a day's worth of fiber in every ... why stop at cereal? bring on the pork chops and the hot fudge. fantastic. are you done sweetie? yea [ male announcer ] fiber one. let's see what you got. rv -- covered. why would you pay for a hotel? i never do. motorcycles -- check. atv. i ride those. do you? no. boat. house.
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