tv Huckabee FOX News April 29, 2012 12:00am-1:00am PDT
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i'm jon scott. thanks for joining us. keep it right here. we'll see you back here next week. huckabee. tonight on huckabee. when congress won't act, i will. president is looking for ways to use executive power. the government takes the hot seat. meet jack black. >> and i am will arnet. biggest names in show business with an message. >> get your mammogram and join norine phraser to talk about importance of early protection. heap's produced tv classics like happy days and laverne and shirley and directed silver screen hits. gary marshall shares his
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favorite hollywood memories. >> and we'll do the walk through. i don't know what it means, but it is on. >> and ladies and gentlemen, governor mike huckabee. [applause] thank you. very much. and welcome to huckabee from the fox news studio necessary new york the president love to demonize big oil. >> do we want to keep subsidizing big oil or do we want to make sure we are investing in clean energy . >> talking about the oil company that they plot to make our lives miserable and wreaking havoc on our company. i am not sure big oil is. maybe there is it little oil as well the obama campaign accuses of mitt romney being in the tarching for bill oil. i haven't seen the tank, it must be a tank of gasoline,
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and frankly i have been arown mitt and i don't detect the smell of gasoline or oil. i don't own stock in a oil company and not in the tarching for him. but let me help president obama with facts about his favorite devils, big oil. >> oil companies keep less than 7 septs on each dollar they earn. google keeps 22 septs. and their profits are up 61 percent. apple computer. i love the prucks and service and they keep 22 cents out of each dollar as well mr. president will you attack big search engineers or big apple. drug companies keep 22 cents of the does the president know that the federal government gets more than double than the oil companies keep in it costs
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me to get the prucks and fuel my car and make plastics they use. and bring all of the products to me that i use. but this week, we found out high prices are not an accident. epa administrator made a peach and realized someone was taping and he had this to say. it is going and find the first five guys and crucify them. it is it easy to manager. i know everybody heard that clip before. and now we have a better insight of how the government burrcrat feels. that is a job of executioner to legal businesses he didn't
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like. i missed that in my class says. i thought the term was public service. and not public scourging and crucifixion. silly me. on my first day as governor of arkansas i had a picture with a caption underneath. our boss. my photodidn't go in there that day, and 10 and half years my likeness was not in the frame. we would put a photoof the arkansas citizen in that frame and i reminded our staff people who came to our office were not our interruption or intrusion, they were our bosses and the only reason we were where we were, because the folks were where they were. we we worked for them. they were our bosses. some folks have forgotten that and they think it is it their job to punish us.
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bosses can fire people who forget who they work for. come november maybe it is it time to fire some people. [applause] the obama administration is using the slogan we can't wait as a way to push for more executive power. >> the truth is, we can no longer wait for congress to do its job. middle class families who are struggling are tired of waiting and they need help now, and so when congress will not act, i will. >> i love it when the president said we can't wait. i can't wait. >> it sounded like a commercial for flomax to me. (laughing) >> it is a shot at congress. but maybe it is it an excuse for the president to make decisions on its own. might be time for me to take the hot seat . my challengers today, fox news
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contractor sally and tara. former staffer for the governor ofiers jers and founder of the tara group. >> good to have you guys here today. i want us to talk about how the president has a very different view of executive power than he did when he was senator barack obama. >> this is senator barack obama four and half years ago. >> these last years we have seen an unacceptable abuse of power. we paid a hefty price for a president who is expanding his own power. >> four years ago. senator thought president bush was out of line expanding the power of the presidency. now he openly declares he wants to expand the power of the presidency, how does he justify that. let me start wu. with a straight face how can he tell the american people
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that everything is change would. >> the reality is we are in a crisis and typically in crisis you have more cooperation between all of the branches of government and the president has given more deverence to tackle that crisis. president obama met from resistance on every policy that he's tried to enact whether it is tuv that republicans reported like infrastructure. one-fourth of the long-term employees are those. and don't you think it is a double standard when the president is pushing the policies and the chamber of commerce called a no brainer and the republicans are pushing back and trying to push back. >> very good talking points for the dnc. >> sometimes they are true. >> the problem with, the president had both houses of congress his first two years and he shoved obama care down the throats of the american
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people. he didn't listen to republicans. they shut them out of the meetings and you know that happened. >> now governor that is excellent rnt poigns. >> they are true. >> obama care, was a republican idea. it came out of the heritage foundation and john mccane and also romney's idea. >> and one that is about to be striken by the supreme court. it was a republican idea and that republicans championed until president obama put it forward. >> that is a fair point. i have to interrupt to say. you are on the hot seat. >> i am building the fire. >> oh. oh. that's what it is. changed tup. >> and it is it very different when the republicans proposed it for a state level. states are the labratory. >> if you were president and
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realistically changed with a house of congress that was for political reasons to gain the selection to their advantage, we are not going to vote for anything that this president can do to make the economy better. there are real americans hurting. we'll don't have tax breakings. what would you do? >> that is a wonderful question. i was named governor when the demdemic in front of me had to tep down because of crimes and i was governor. i had 11 out of the hundred republicans in the house. and there were 89 demdems to 11 republicans in my house in the senate, there were four republicans and 31 demdems if anybody in the country understands lopsided legislature. look, i had more than barack obama ever faced and it was not exactly a bunch that wanted to do it >> did they
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ever vote for you? >> all of the time. i sat down with the key leaders and anded them to sponsor and i built relations and i didn't shut them out of the conversation something that got me in trouble. i gave them thicks that they wanted because that is what you do. >> did they sit across the table. always. >> and say their goal is to break you. that is it what happened to bark obama. jim demint said my goal is to break you. that is it a different dynamic. >> there were those that never worked for me. out of 535, you will get. >> i am getting the signal we run out of the time. >> the fire is stoked. >> i say this president doesn't have the level of
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[applause] name one of your favorite tv shows and movies and chances are. my next guest created it or directed it garmarshall has been entertaining us for five decades. he's the man behind the scenes of all of this. ♪ happy days. wednesday, friday. heap days. the weekend comes just like old fans ready to race for. ♪ one, tworks three, four, five, six, sen, 8.
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♪ ♪ give us any chance we'll take it ♪ leave us any room we'll take it ♪ we'll make our dream come true. nano, nano. ♪ ♪ [applause] ♪ gary had great behind the scenes stories that he tells. my happy days in hollywood. would you please welcome gary marshall. just watching those scenes from the television series, every last one of them, it brings a warm and great american television, you talk
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so fondly in the book about the cast of happy days in particular. it was like a great big family. >> it was a nice bunch. >> how do you create that atmosphere. typically you hear about television shows and movie sets and where there is it fight fussing and happy days was a happy day kind of environment. >> it was a large group of people and they were so happy they were working that they came. >> it felt like americans today. >> and then they enjoyed what they were doing and we had a number one person in ron howard and henry winkler very nice player and he said woah and hey. i like to write it and then we gave him more and he was a big star. >> did you think that henry
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winkler as his role in the fonz was a national phenom nan . >> he was on everybody's clothing and mugs. and on the pajamas. look. >> he was not on my paiamas. >> you wonder what kind of things you wear. but you know, he was the type. and i come from a neighborhood you dress well or you could hit somebody in the head, but most dangerous was the guys who didn't talk. henry was from a long island and in the brox we didn't talk. but he could act and put on the act and he acted the heck. >> we have a clip of one of those great scenes from happy day. >> fonzy. it is me vivian. >> what was that? >> vivian here . >> i heard that.
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>> fonz. i may be late. >> fonzy, are you coming out. >> this is buyersing. some people have no class and interrupt a great meal. don't do that short cake. >> will you shut up, we're eating . >> great memories of these moments there. and kind of a bit of a fantasy d. and you want to see a family eat together and actually sit there and have a meal together. >> you don't see that on television. >> no, because ther texting and you have to recognize your kids from the top of their hids. they look up occasionally and in those days we wanted to see a family, you know, that ate together and talked together we made all of the actors as they left outdoors, they hugged each other. my family didn't do that.
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but in my head that is it what a family was. >> shows like happy days, you reenforced the best we could be of americans and families i don't see that on television today. where are the marshalls that are giving us something that is entertaining and undergirds than undermines our basic values. >> i think the gary marshalls are taking a nap. (laughing) >> the word edgy came n. we used to do corny wholesome and now they are edgy came in and a lot of it is mean spirited and the fact that we used to have talented kids, now they like to shows that embarrass your neighbors and you know embarrassing situations and i still think it is coming back . sit coms are coming back.
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you laverne and shirley was you mentioned sister penny marshall . >> yes. >> my understanding that there was not as much of a camaraderie and atmosphere on the show. >> a lot of people who are successful feel they don't deserve it. you and i feel we deserve it . we are from a different generation. they were insecure tell the cast that is it for a day my sister penny would follow me home penny is at the gate and
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climbing over again. and let's -- i am eating and is she going to eat or write jokes on the table for her. and we had a lot of stress and tension. but family, you stick together we are still close. my those eight years will get us ready for any problem in the future. >> now that i have you here. growing nup arkansas, i had no idea what the theme song meant. >> you have. shamill, shamyselfle. >> i don't know. >> i feel better i don't have to know. >> we didn't have a lot of cement. we just had cement and we made up walks. and it was late at midnight, we were shooting the pilot. and i didn't know that to do
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for titlings. penny teach cindy to do the walk. i don't know behait means it caught o. >> the song itself was pop pop as did happy. >> making our dreams is a good message. >> it is a great message. it is one of the most recognizable theme songs we have in america. there was one scene in the happy days series that gets more attention than any other and coined a phrase. >> yeah. >> you know what we are talking about. jumping the shard is phrased as when you stretch something to its limits. did you have any idea it would be a memorable television scenes in history. >> i was pretty sure. he was afraid of heights . and we i woo had him jump over a bunch of garbage cans.
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and we needed him to jump over something and why not a shark in the market . not there and then, it was not our finest hour. i got to be honest with you. i come up with better ideas. it shows how a show is going down hill. we went four more years. so we did going. >> and by the way, something i admire in a world so many people in the taken tain business finds hard to keep family together. you and your wife have been married over 50 years, is that right? >> well, yes. >> my wife is here somewhere. 49 years and still missing . >> getting close. >> grand daughter char lot is with you as well.
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>> stix grand children. >> and we can rely on your family. why i made depatism an art form. >> gary, i tell you what, i hope people have as much fun reading your book as they have watching the magnificent. >> my happy days in hollywood by gary marshall . she's fought cancer for over a decade and have hollywood's biggest names spreading the 5-hour energy?
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the norrein phraser foundation and raises money for women's breast cancer research. >> so nice to have you here. network thank you, governor. >> [applause] >> already tarted chemo therapy at this point when the photowas taken place and you wrote something in a blog that was powerful. >> the unknown is a scary place. what did you find in the unknown. >> the oral chemo is a less toxic chemo and you will have side affects and you will not lose your hair. every woman is concerned about that and every day i try to say i am not vain, i don't care filose my hair. everything is fine i want to live and when the hair comes out. huge hunks and then everything falls out and you are bald, it
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is disturbing and when i am around the housine after it is gone for six months and i walk by the mirror in the bathroom and it is startling. you just look like you are -- >> you have enough going through already just with feeling terrible with the chemo therapy treatments and the zoy zy and dealing with the cancer. you get horrible or great news, nothing in between. how do you cope with the zy zies and the day-to-day worries and every thing you feel, you think oh, no. >> and you cope with it like first of all. anyone who tells you they are not scared and they don't cry and buck up is lying. there are days when i think i am not going to make it. and i have my husband and my children are off to college.
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i have my sister and girl friends. and there is it a lot of pain. just in 12 weeks, and the pain in my legs, every day i could not get out of birth. it was like child birth. i get every side affect all the way down the list. only two percent get i have neurop pathy and it is still gone and in my feet the only way i could handle the leg pain was with morphine. after two days, you feel so creepy and yucky from the morphine and you decide i will not take that anymore and then the pain comes and it is a vicious cycle f. machine was there to rub my legs that is hard you need a team of people who take over and help you. >> you mentioned your husband. he is our executive producer of the show. woody phraser and i hope he was part of that, we want him
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to be healthy. >> he took a lot of time off from work. >> we appreciated it, too. thank you very much. (laughing) >> we are all better for it. and you said something that i thought was powerful and we are going to read it today, i think i am going down in a new road. my cancer has spread to my liver and i began chemo and had two days to digest the news. i had a couple of cries with family and friends. i will handle the challenge the only way i know, stare it it down and beat it back. and fight it like hell. >> you have fought how do you get the will to keep fighting when you could say i give up. >> my children. mother would tul that. it should be my husband.
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i am not leaving. i was diagnosed 10 years ago when they were 8 and 10 they told me i would be lucky if i live five years, i said that is it unacceptable. i am not letting woody raise my children. now they are fresh man and sophmore in college. and i am making a new deal with god. you just have to do it i think everybody has to do it >> your great sense of humor and will is a part of that. and we'll take a break. when we come back, you have done more than just fight. you have turned it into an amazing movement that changed the research and giving people hope they never had before. and how with the help of dozens of celebrities.
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[applause] >> we are back. with norine. and tell me about a call that you got from your doctor. >> yes, after 12 weeks of not being able to get out of bed and go anywhere, you know while you are doing, you don't know if it is working. after 12 weeks i had a scan and my estatic. your tumor has decreased 75 percent. and it was just an amazing thing . to hear. and doctors are not always full of personality. >> really, i never noticed. >> they deliver the information. but my doctor said i jumped out of my chair and i started
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creaming yeah. how wonderful to have a doctor that loves you like that. >> let's talk about something that was your dream and idea and now it is it a standard medical practice it is call would share research. >> when i first got cancer i looked up everything. how is it there is no cure and i am in such a bad situation here? and what i found stunning was that no one, none of the research in the hospitals were sharing their research and information. they were all like this trying to get the nobel prize. if you get it and do the research we'll get more money and bla, bla. and so at that time u.c.l.a. was only one of three institutions that shared information. and so one thing they found that they thought would work
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in breast cancer and did not work in the trials and gave it to the colin doctors, and it is now the state of the art treatment. we'll get no where if you don't share. and in a model that i created to get money, if you want our money or from the norine phraser foundation you have to share and work with other institutions and transparent and combackitous in a year and tell us what you have done with your money and if it is not working, give us the money back and we'll give it to someone else. once we get everybody on the train, there will be more discoveries. >> it sounds so simple, you wonder why others haven't done it it is saving people's lives. >> one. things you have done is give people hope and help in ways they are supportive of the people in their lives you
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assembled an amazing cast of stars ecards. no cost to send them. tell us about that program. >> it started out i felt no one out there was engaging men and bringing men in. the walks we talk. the avon and whatever, they are all women walking with women. and i felt men needed a chance to get involved and it proved true they want to. and i went out to my comedian friends to do funny skits or direct psa's to and pem it to make the appointments for the mammograms. >> mother after mother day and official men day we are getting off and making appointments for our loavely ladies to meet with this bad boy.
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mammogram. or the boob saver 5 k. early detection of breast cancer is close as you can get to the cure. dr. black to sturgery. duty calls guys join me men for women.com. pledge to mach a mammogram appointment for your mom, wife, daughter or sister. and make an appointment for the pap smear. that's right. dudes get them, too. pretty sure. no big deal and nothing to be afraid of. oh, my jack back is one of the funniest people i have ever met. he is funny on. >> he lives it it is part of who he is. >> he has great respect for you and he's done it because he understands the women in his life.
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wife and mom and people could be saved if they took the simple themselves. >> you would be surprised how many women woman don't make appointments for the mammogram and also for the pap smear and it is no cure and only chance you have is get it in stage one. there are so many advancements and treatments you could know you will live for it >> you are fighting hard for your kids and you are still in the battle. all of us who watch and love you and appreciate, not just your battle but fighting for all of those millions of women who don't know what you are doing through the foundation and millions that you are raising and turbing -- turning that in useful research. there will be women who will see their kids grow up because of you. that's why. [applause] >> thank you for that.
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and so if anyone wants to send a message. it is it important to get your mammogram and pap smear. go to the foundation and it is it free. send in as many as you want. there are 30 different celebrities to choose from. they are cute and funny and to the point and will make a difference. >> they will. >> thank you very much. >> it is it an honor to have you here. thank you so much. >> coming up. >> they make music and movies together as a family. >> clint black and lisa hartman black nex
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and napes and faces . and gets a star along side his wife. flicka, country pride. i appreciate you being here. running cherry creek is one thing. i am in charge when it comes to my daughter. i don't know that horse of yours and i will be sick until they come back. >> flicka is a good horse and will not let anything happen to that girl. >> did i step in something. >> yeah, the ma'am thing. i am not your mother. >> no, ma'am. no. certainly not. >> ladies and gentlemen, please welcome clint black and lisa hartman black. first of all. i am you are a guy who has an incredible career in music and
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now doing movies. is there anything you can't do? >> government work. >> that's easiest work of all. maybe i should and lisa what can he not do? >> house work and electrical things. he does enough good stuff. i am trying think of stuff. hoe is not dancing. >> not on dancing with the stars. >> she thought they would make me do it and make everybody laugh. >> in our movie he dances and off by himself and i walk in and catch him and the ipod goes flying. he is ac ward fun i dance. >> and flicka country pride. so refreshing to see movies that the family can go. it is funny and wholesome and funny. what drove you to be part of doing something that the whole family could be part in film. >> i did flicka, two and we
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talked about flicka 3 and getting the whole familied and lo and behold. now we are joking about flicka 4. it was one of those things that it is it easy to decide why wouldn't we want to do it of course. when it comes to family stuff. we are so hungry for it having a 10 year old . we watched for anything coming to town and television and always be ready for it it was a double plus. >> and we are going to talk more about the movie in a minute. i didn't bring you here to have you look good with the guitar. >> you do look good. >> i love it. one of the songs you are part of is when i said i do. i never played it with you today and after today probably never play with you again. >> remember the confidence
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builder it goes exactly how we play it >> let's see how you play it ♪ times of trouble. ♪ and these times are good. ♪ they're always going to be rise and they fall. ♪ hear by year sides a million miles away. ♪ nothing is ever going to change the way i feel and the way it is. ♪ the way that it was. ♪ when i said i do. ♪ i meant it. ♪ until the end of all time. ♪ and be faithful and true . ♪ devoted to you. ♪ that's what i had in mind.
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♪ when i said i do. buy the record and heart rest. >> [applause] she is also in the film. flicka country pride and first time acting? >> yes, it was. and shee been about two years ago. she and lisa were in la, and lily just looked up out of the blue and said can i get a agent. and we made all of the agent jokes. have you ever seen an agent. and have you seen my agent. my agent doesn't like those jokes. >> lily, do you have, and think you have all of the right stuff to maybe make a career and go beyond mom and dad. >> i hope. i mean. i really want to.
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but if i can, i will. so i hope. >> if your grades are great. >> ah. >> clean up your room. >> wow, you stound like parents. >> that's the real trick is having a well rounded life and earning those privileges it is a privilege when you have a kid who wants to work and do a job after school or in the summer, they have to earn that, right. >> that's the way it is posed to work. if parents raised their kids like that it might be a better place to live. clint black and lisa hart man black. and we want to thank all of you for joining us on this week's edition of the huckabee shoy. from new york. good night and good bless.
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