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tv   Huckabee  FOX News  April 29, 2012 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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on fox report. don't miss it. shepard smith, don't miss it. huckabee starts right now. hu. tonight on huckabee. when congress won't act, i will. president is looking for ways to use executive power. >> the prose, does he want to rule from the throne? taking a hot seat. >> i'm jack black and will arness, sochlt biggest names in show business with important messages for women. >> get your mammogram. make an appointment for your mammogram. they talk about the importance of early detection. >> plus, hey! >> he produced classics like happy days, laverne and shirley and odd couple and dozens of silver screen hits. gary marshal shares some of
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his favorite hollywood memories. >> and do that walk and i don't know what it means what it went on. >> ladies and gentlemen, governor mike huckabee. [applaus [applause] >> thank you, thank you very much and welcome to huckabee from fox news studios in new york city. >> the. >> do we want to subsidize big oil. >> to hear him talk about the oil companies, you'd think that they sit around in dark rooms plotting how to make our lives miserable and they enjoy wreaking havoc on our economy. i'm not sure who big oil is, maybe somewhere there's little oil as well. and the obama campaign accuses mitt romney of being in the tank for big oil. you know, i haven't seen the tank, but i guess it must be a
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tank of gasoline and frankly, i've been around mitt. i don't recall detecting the smell of gasoline or oil. now, to be clear, i don't own stock in an oil company and i'm not in the tank for them. but let me help president obama with some facts about his favorite devils big oil. oil companies keep less than seven cents on each dollar they earn he. president obama loves google, but they keep 22 cents out of each dollar they make, their profits are up 61% from last year, apple computer, one of my favorite companies, i love their product and their service and they keep about 22 cents out of each dollar as well. and their profits are up 50%. mr. president, are we going to hear you attack big search engines or big apple anytime soon? drug companies seen 22 cents of the dollar. does the president know that the federal government get more than double in taxes on a gallon of gas than the oil companies keep? look, i care less about how
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much oil companies make, and how much it's costing me to get their products that fuel my car, and make the plastics that i use every moment of the day. and bring all the products to me that i use. but this week, we found out that high prices aren't an accident. and epa administrator made a speech and didn't realize somebody was taping and he had this to say. >> and villages we go to the turkish find the first five guys and crucify them. it is it easy to manager. >> look, i know everybody has heard that little clip before. and now we have a better insiekt into how this government bureaucrat feels, his job is that of executioner
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to businesses that he doesn't like. i somehow miss that had in civic classes, i foolishly believed that the the government was supposed to work for the people. in fact i thought it was public servant. silly me. now on my first day of governor of arkansas i had a photo placed that had a caption underneath that said our boss, but my photo didn't if go in there that day and for ten and a half years my likeness was never in that frame. each week or two we'd put the photo after arkansas citizen in that frame and i reminded our staff that the people who came to our office weren't our interruption or intrusion, they were our bosses. and the only reason that we were where we were is because those folks were where they were. we work for them. they were our bosses. and seems like some folks have forgotten that and they think
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it's their job to finish us. and we do have one power, they could fire people who forget who they work for. come november, maybe it's 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. and the truth is, we can no longer wait for congress to do its job. the middle class families who have been struggling for years are tired of waiting. and they need help now. so, where congress won't pact, i will. >> you know, i love it when the president says we can't wait. he says, i can't wait, and sounds like a commercial to flow max for me, but it's supposed to be a shot at congress, but maybe just an excuse for the president to make decisions on his own. might just be time for me to take the hot seat.
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my challengers today, fox news contributor sally cohn and tara dowdell, former staffer for the governor of new jersey and the dowdell group. good to have you here today. [applause] >> i wanted to talk about how the president has a very different view about executive power than he did when he was senator barack obama. let's watch a little clip and this is senator barack obama. >> these last few years we've seen unacceptable abuse of power at home, but we've paid a heavy price for having a president whose priority is on top. >> four years ago the president thought then senator, that president bush was way out of line expanding the power of the presidency, now, he openly declares that he wants to expand the power of the presidency. and how, how can he justify that? tara, let me start with you. how can the president go out there with a straight face and
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tell the american people everything has changed now that he's in office. >> i don't think that the president is trying to change things now he's in office. the reality is we're in crisis and typically in crisis you have more corporation between the branches of government and the president historic chi given more deference to try to tackle that crisis, president obama has met with resistance from day one on every single policy that he's tried to enact, whether it be stuff that republicans have previously supported like infrastructure spending, one fourth of the long-term unemployed are construction workers, so don't you think there's a double standard when you have a president who is pushing some of the very policies that the republicans have previously started and that the chamber of commercial is called a no-brainer like infrastructure spending and the republicans are pushing back. >> mike: very good talking points from the dnc, tara. >> sometimes they're also true. >> mike: here is the problem with what you're saying. is that the president had both houses of congress his first two years and he shoved
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obamacare down the throats of the american people. he didn't listen to what republicans were saying, they tried it present things to him. they shut him out of the meeting locked the door and held them in the the middle-- you know that happened. >> those are excellent rnc talking points there. >> mike: but they're true. >> obamacare, the center point of obamacare, was a republican idea. and an idea that came out of the heritage foundation, came out of senator john mccain and also romney's idea. >> mike: one about to be stricken by the supreme court. >> we'll see what happens. but regardless, again, it was a republican idea. the republicans championed. >> mike: no. >> until president obama put it forward ab then not going to do it. >> mike: a good fair point, but i have to interrupt and say. >> i thought were you on the hot seat. a republican point. >> no, air on the hot seat. i'm building the fire. >> oh, oh, see, what's what, change it up. >> you know, and things are very different when the republicans proposed it for a state level because states are the laboratory of democracy. >> if you were president and
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in realistically were faced with one house of congress that for a very clearly partisan political reasons to try and gin up elections, to aim the election to their advantage. look, we're just not going to vote for anything this president can do. to make the economy better. we've got a struggling economy there are real americans out there hurting and we're not going to vote for anything. tax breaks for the middle class. >> what would you do? >> what would you as president, what are you in power. >> mike: a wonderful question, i'll tell yu it's a wonderful question. waist named governor when the democrat in front of me was convicted of crimes and stepped down i became governor from lt. governor. i had 11 out of 100 republicans in the house and 4 out of 35. there were 89 democrats to 11 republicans in my house. and in the senate, there were 4 republicans to 31 democrats. if anybody in the country understands lopsided legislature that doesn't want to work with you. i got a whole lot more lopsided than barack obama faced and it was not exactly a
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bunch that wanted to deal with me. >> did they vote-- what did they ever vote with you. >> mike: all the time and now why? because i sat down with the key leaders and asked them to sponsor pieces of legislation, i built relationships with them, i didn't shut them out of the corporation and i'll tell you something else, something that has got me in trouble. i ended up getting them some things that they really wanted because in governing, that's what you must do. >> but, did they ever sit across the table from you. >> mike: always. >> did they sit across the table were you and say that their goal was to break you? that was what was said about president obama. senator jim demint said my goal is to break this president. and when you're sitting across the table from someone expressing that sentiment that's a whole different dynamic. >> mike: there are those who never worked with me, out of 535. you're going to gets some. i'm getting the signal we've run out of time. >> just when the fire was smoking. >> mike: i say this president doesn't have the level of executive experience to know
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how to work with people that he doesn't agree with. [applause] >> i'm one who's been there and i can it he will you it can be done. we've got to go. say that one more time. and coming up. laverne, shirley, potsy, richie, of course the fonz. gary marshal brought them to our living room and made them a part of our lives. we're going to talk about the very happy days when gary marshall joins us next.
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[applause] name one of >> name one of your favorite tv shows or movies and chances are my next guest either created or directed it. gary marshall has been entertaining us for five decades. he is the man behind the scenes of all of this. ♪ sunday monday happy days ♪ tuesday, wednesday, happy days ♪ ♪ thursday, friday, happy days ♪ ♪ the weekend's gone, we're ready to race for you ♪ ♪ 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8
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♪ give us any chance we'll take it, read us any rule we'll break it ♪ ♪ we're gonna make our dreams come true ♪ ♪ nanu, nanu >> can two divorced men share an apartment without driving each other crazy? ♪ >> well, gary had some great behind the scenes stories that he tells in his new book "my happy days in hollywood", but please welcome gary marshall? so nice to have you here. [applause] >> you know, just watching those scenes from those television series every last one of them, it just brings kind of a warmth, of great
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american television. you talk so fondly in the book the way the cast of happy days in particular, like a great big family. >> it's a nice bunch. >> mike: how do you create that atmosphere? typically you hear about television shows and movie sets, there's fighting and fussing yet, happy days was really kind of a happy day environment? >> yeah, it was an odd group of people that were so happy they were working, that they came and they-- >> sounds like americans today. [applaus [applause] >> but they -- and they enjoyed what they were doing. and we had a wonderful number one person in ron howard and then henry winkler, a delightful human being came to a very nice fellow, but he said, whoa, and hey for a couple of-- which was ease toy write, whoa and hey. i like the writing, but then we gave him more and he became--
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>> did you think that henry winkler in his role as the fonz would turn out to be such a national phenomena as he turned out to be? >> he was on everybody's clothing and mugs. >> mike: yeah. >> on your pajamas, and hello. >> mike: he wasn't on my pajamas so everybody knows. >> and the things you wear. but you know, he wasn't the type, really. and through the neighborhood and either you dress well, or you could hit somebody in the head. and, but they would talk and henry was from yale drama school and from long island, you know, in the bronx, we didn't talk long island, but he put on that jacket and he just acted the heck the out of it. >> mike: we've got a clip of one of those great scenes from happy days right here. >> fonzy, it's me, vivian! >> what was that? >> that's vivian here. >> well, i heard that.
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>> date tonight, fonz? >> a maybe date. >> fonzy, are you coming out? >> this is really embarrassing, huh? some people got no class, they just interrupt a great meal. don't you ever do that, short cake. >> fonzy, are you in there? >> hey, will you shut up? we're eating! >> great memories of these moments, gary. >> well, kind of a bit of a fantasy. i really wanted the audience to see a family eat together, actually sit there and have a meal together. >> you don't see that on television today. >> no, because everybody's texting, and you've got to recognize your kids from the top of their head and who is that kid? but they look up occasionally, and in those days, we wanted you to see a family that, you know, ate together and talked together and we made all the actors as they left the scenes and outdoors, they hugged each
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other, which my family didn't do that all the time, but in my head-- >> you know what you did with shows like happy days, you sort of reinforced the best of who we could be as americans and the best of who we could be as families and i don't see that on television today. where are the gary marshals giving us something that we can enjoy and entertaining and undergirds rather than undermines our basic values. >> some of the gary marshalls are taking a nap, we're a little older. >> but the word edgy came in, you know? we used it to, you know, cornery, sentimental and wholesome and the edgy came in and a lot of it is mean spirited and the fact that we had very talented people, very he talented kids. now, they like to, shows that kind of embarrass your neighbors, and people like to laugh and then they, you know, embarrassing situations, but i still think it's coming back,
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and since they're coming back and i'm coming back to television and show my sister opiniony, i hope is going to be in and we hope we'll bring back some of those. [applause]. [ male announcer ] this is corporate caterers, miami, florida. in here, great food demands a great presentation.
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you laverne and (applause) >> and laverne and shirley, i understand was different. you mentioned your sister penny marshall and my understanding there wasn't as much of the kind of comradedy. there was a little different atmosphere on that show? >> well, a lot of people who are successful feel they don't deserve it. you and i, we deserve it, and we're from a different generation, but there were insecure and usually i tell the cast, that's it for today and go home and i would go home and my sister penny would follow me home and my wife
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says penny is at the gate and climbing over and she would come over at supper and say let's fix the second act. i'd say i'm eating. my wife would say, is she going to the eat or write jokes, but we did this and a lot of stress and tension, but you know, family you've got to stick together. so we're still very close, penny and my sister lonnie and i, those eight years for laverne and shirley prepared me to work with any problem that comes up in the future, i can work with any. >> mike: and now that i've got you here, one of the questions, growing up in arkansas, i had no idea what the theme song meant. >> well, you don't. >> mike: shameal, shamile. >> you didn't have a lot of cement in arkansas. we had cement in the bronx. it was expression.
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at midnight late at night shooting the pilot and i didn't know what to do. penny, teach cindy do that that walk, i don't know what it means, but, it put them on. >> mike: the song was popular as the happy days theme. >> making our dreams come true is a great message. >> mike: and it's still one of the most recognizable theme songs that we probably have in america. there was one scene in the happy days series that probably gets more attention than any other, and it has, it's coined a phrase, i'm not sure you know which one i'm talking about, jumping the shark has now been sort of, i guess, phrased as, when you stretch something to its limits. did you have any idea that it would become one frt most memorable television scenes in history. that wasn't henry in the air, that was a stuntman weeks' both afraid of heights, and we
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had him jump on his motorcycle over garbage cans and it was a hit and we needed him to jump over something and i said, why not a shark, you know, and in the the water. and after i saw that, not bad, but it was not our finest hour, i've got to be honest with you, i've come up with better ideas, but i love the first part of the vernacular, jumping the shark and describes pretty good how the show is-- reran for four more things and we jumped other things besides the shark. >> mike: well, your shows have touched america and by the way, something i admire so much about you, in a world where so many people in the entertainment business, find family hard to keep together you and your wife barbara married over 50 years, is that right? >> well, yes. >> mike: barbara is here with us today. >> my wife is here, but we're 49 years and-- >> all right. you're getting very close and your granddaughter charlotte
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is with you as well. >> yes, we have six grandchildren and i believe that we can rely on your family and that's why i made nepotism an art form. (laughter) (applause) >> oh, gary, i tell you what, i hope people will have as much fun reading your book as they have matching magnificent television you've brought to this country. my happy days in hollywood by gary marshall. [applause] >> and you've been fighting cancer over a decade and now have some of hollywood's biggest names helping her spread an important message to women everywhere, breast cancer survivor noreen frazier is next. to remember ♪ [ female announcer ] fresh milk and real cream makes philadelphia and the moment a little richer.
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and that's after the driver lost control of his honda pilot s.u.v. it bounced off the median in the road and officials looking at the safety of the highway and the height of the guardrail not yet clear what caused that s.u.v. to lose control. new details coming in about that deadly collapse in st. louis, missouri and it passed inspection and were supposed to with stands winds up to 90 miles per hour. but the straight line wind that knocked down a beer tent was for 70 miles per hour and should have held. questioning whether the tent was properly set up. the collapse left one person dead and a hundred hurt. i'm harris falkner, now, back to huckabee. >> if you'd like to comment on tonight's show, e-mail at huckmail.com. >> mike: my next guest was diagnosed with breast cancer in 2001 and living with stage four breast cancer and successful round of chemotherapy. here is the last picture that she took before her most
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recent treatment. she's the founder of the noreen frazier foundation and raises money and awareness for women's cancer research. please welcome noreen frazier. so nice to have you here. >> thank you, governor, a pleasure to be here. [applause]. >> . >> mike: and already starting an oral chemotherapy this point when the photo was taken place and you yoet in a blog something i felt was very, very powerful statement. you said the unknown is a scary place. what did you find in the unknown? >> well, the oral chemo is a less toxic chemo, so, you'll have side effects that you won't lose your hair, so, i think every woman is concerned about that and every day i try to think, i am not vain, i don't care if my lose my hair, everything is fine. i just want to live and when the hair comes out and brushing it, it's like huge hunks, like, oh, my god. and then, then finally.
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everything falls out and you're bald and it's disturbing, and when i'm around the house even today after it's been gone now for six months, but i'll walk around and i'll walk by the mirror in the bathroom and i'm like, it's very startling, very startling and you look like you're very sick and you say you're not. >> mike: you've got enough going through already, just with feeling terrible from the chemotherapy treatments and the anxiety about dealing with the cancer itself. you either get horrible news or great news. nothing in between. so, how do you cope with just the anxiety, the day-to-day worries that every pain, every little thing that you feel you haven't felt before, you think, oh, no? >> you know, you cope with it like-- first of all, anyone who tells you they're the not scared and they don't cry and they just buck up is lying because there are days when i think i'm not going to make it and luckily, i have my husband and my children are off to college,
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but i've got my sisters and i've got a wonderful group of the friends and i do cry a lot and there's a lot of pain and i just did 12 weeks, and the pain in my legs every day, i could not get out of bed. it was like childbirth. like, are you kidding me? and i get every side effect that's, you know, all the way down the list, what did they say? only 2% is this. well, i have in yoneuropathy an lost the feeling in my fingers and the leg pain, i can only handle that, morphine. i feel so creepy and yucky for the morphine and i'm the not going to take that anymore, but the pain comes and it's a vicious cycle. i thought if i could rub my legs hard. that would alleviate my legs. you need a team of people who come in. >> mike: you've mentioned our husband and he's the produce
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irv our show, woody frazier, and we hope he's part of that team. >> he took time off and came home. >> mike: we appreciated it, too, and we were better for it. (laughter) >> you said something in your blog noreen and i want to put up a screen, and a new road in my journey, my later revealed that my cancer spread to my liver, in comb me twoed i've had two days to digest the news, a couple of good cries with close family and friends and i'll handle this challenge anyway i know how, that is to stare it town, beat it back and fight like hell. and you have fought. and you fought hard. how did you get the will to just keep fighting when, it could be so easy just to say i give up? >> my children. and any mother would tell you that. and i mean, it should be my husband, since i had--
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>> and little is probably good for him. >> i'm not leaving, you know, i was diagnosed ten years ago when my children were eight and ten, and they told me that i would be lucky if i lived five years, and i just said to myself. that is unacceptable because i am not letting woody raise my children. (laughter) >> and that's not happening. so i said, at least i have to be here until they get out of high school and now they're both freshmen and sophomore in college and i'm now making a new deal with god. so, you know, you just -- you just have to do it. i mean, i think everybody just has to do it. >> mike: but i think your great sense of humor and your will, such a big part of that. and we've got to take a break. wh he we come back, you've done more than just fight. you've turned this into an amazing movement that is changing the world of research and giving people hope they never had before. and when we come back, we're also going to talk about how, with the help of dozens of
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celebrities, noreen's foundation is encouraging women just to make a simple doctor's appointment that could save their lives. we're going to be talking about that campaign and we'll take a look at some very special e-cards that you can send like this. what's up, it's me, jack black, i'd like to say happy mother's day, first do something for me, take an appointment for your mom gram and pap smear, will you do that for me? okay, i trust you, happy mother's day. [ male announcer ] you are a business pro. monarch of marketing analysis.
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could see what i see. that over time, having high cholesterol, plus diabetes or high blood pressure or family history of early heart disease, can put them at increased risk for plaque buildup. and they'd see that it's more important to get their cholesterol where their doctor wants. and why for these patients, when diet and exercise alone aren't enough, i prescribe crestor. adding crestor lowers bad cholesterol by up to 52%. and is also proven to slow plaque buildup. >> announcer: crestor is not right for everyone. like people with liver disease or women who are nursing, pregnant or may become pregnant. simple blood tests will check for liver problems. tell your doctor about other medicines you're taking or if you have muscle pain or weakness. that could be a sign of a rare but serious side effect. >> is your cholesterol where your doctor wants? ask your doctor if crestor is right for you. >> announcer: if you can't afford your medication, astra zeneca may be able to help.
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[applause] >> we are back. (applause) >> we're back, and noreen, i want to you tell me about a call that you got from your doctor at one of your treatments. >> yes, after 12 weeks of not being able it to get out of bed or go anywhere, you know, when you're doing it, you don't know if it's working and i went in and had, after 12 weeks i had the scan and my doctor told me and he was ecstatic and told your tumor in your liver decreased 75% and it was just such an amazing thing. [applause] >> it was such an amazing thing to hear and my doctor -- you know, doctors aren't always full of personality and all that. >> mike: really, never noticed. >> they deliver the information and that's it.
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amy doctor, i never heard him do this, i jumped out of my chair and charted streaming, yea! >> and how wonderful to have a doctor that loves you like that, it's beautiful. >> mike: let's talk about something that's really your dream, your idea and now, it's become a standard medical practice, called share research. >> that's right, when i first got cancer, i went to the the internet and i looked up everything, and how, there is no, there is no cure and then i'm in such a bad, in such a bad situation mere and i found, what i found stunning, was that no one, none of the research at these hospitals were sharing any research information. because they were all like this, trying to get the nobel prize because they had been told by their institution, you get the nobel prize and do the research and we'll get more money, more notoriety, blah, blah. so, at that time ucla was one of really only three
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institutions really sharing the information so they would, one thing that they found they thought would work with breast cancer did not work in the trials so they gave the drug to the colon cancer doctors and it's now the state of the art treatment for colon cancer, so if you don't share the information we're going to get nowhere. so, in a model that i created, get money for-- if you want money or money from the noreen foundation information you have to share the information and work with the same institutions and transparent and come back to us in a year and tell us what you've done with your money, if it's not working, give us the money back and we'll give it to somebody else. once we got everybody on that train. they're going to be a lot more discoveries. and it's an amazing process and it sounds so simple, you wonder why others haven't done it, but it's saving people's lives. now, one of the things you've done with the foundation, the noreen frazier foundation, is to give people hope and help in ways that they can be supportive of the women and their lives and you have
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assembled an amazing cast of stars to help you with e-cards where people can send at no cost to themselves, cards to mothers, mother's day, tell us about that program? >> well, it started out, really, what i call men for women now, because i really felt na no one out there was engaging men or bringing men in. the walks, all the walks we take, the avon, whatever, this they're all women walking with women and i felt that men needed a chance to get involved and it's proved true that they want to get involved. so i went out to my comedian friends and i asked them to do funny skits or direct psa's to ask women to please make their appointments for mammograms. >> let's look at a couple of them. here we go. >> okay. >> the monday after mother's day is officially meant for women now day and all of us guys and dudes and getting off our butts for our beloved ladies to meet with in bad
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boy, mammogram machine or as i like to call her the boob saver 5-k. because early detection of breast cancer is as close as you can get to a cure. paging dr. black, dr. black to surgery. duty calls. but guys, remember to join me at men for women now.com. the pledge to make a mammogram apartment for your mom, wife, daughter or sister and while you're at it make an appointment for your pap smear, that's right, dudes them too, pretty sure. give them a speculum. nothing to be afraid of. >> oh, my gosh. now, jack black is one of the most funny people onscreen, but funny off screen, what a great guy. >> yes, just, he lives it. he is part of who he is. >> mike: he did that and he loves you and great respect for what he's done and does it because he understands the
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women in his life, wife, mom, all of those people could be saved if they just took a few simple steps themselves. >> yeah, you'd be surprised how many women do not make their appointments for their mammograms. it's stunning, and then, also for the pap smear and right now, there isn't a cure and the only chance you have is by catching this disease early. and you can get it in stage one, there have been so many advancements and treatments that you can pretty much know that you're going to live with it. >> you're fighting hard for your kids and you're he still in that battle and it's a great inspiration. to all of us who watch and who love you and who appreciate it, not just your battle, but your fight for all of the billions of women who never know what you're doing at the foundation and when i think of the millions of dollars, and the noreen fraser foundation is giving back to useful research. i realize there are women who will see their kids grow up because of you, that's why.
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because-- (applause) >> well, thank you for that. so, if someone wants to send a message to, or messages, about getting your mammogram and your pap smear, you go go to the naur reason fraser foundation.org and it's free. send as many as you want. there are about, 30, 30 different celebrities you can choose from. they're cute and funny and they're to the point and they will make a difference in someone as life, i hope. >> they will. thank you very much, noreen, what an honor to have you here. thank you very much. [applause]. coming up, they make music and movies together as a family. clint black and lisa hartman black are next. stay with us. (applause). hartman black nex [ male announcer ] sweet. tangy. creamy. you don't often find these things in one place. maybe in vegas, if you know where to look. and us. so come on, give us a whirl. ♪
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without the stuff that we make here, you wouldn't be able to walk in your house and flip on your lights. they go into power plants which take some form of energy, harness it, and turn it into more efficient electricity. [ ron ] when i was a kid i wanted to work with my hands, that was my thing. i really enjoy building turbines. it's nice to know that what you're building is gonna do something for the world. when people think of ge, they typically don't think about beer. a lot of people may not realize that the power needed to keep their budweiser cold and even to make their beer comes from turbines made right here. wait, so you guys make the beer? no, we make the power that makes the beer. so without you there'd be no bud? that's right. well, we like you. [ laughter ] ♪
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>> he's won
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>> owes' one of the most recognizable names and faces and also done some acting and alongside t alongside his wife in flicka, country pride. >> listen, i appreciate you being here. running cherry creek is one thing. i need you to understand i'm in charge when it comes to my daughter. i don't know at that horse of yours and i'm going to be worried six until they come back. >> and the school says she can ride her, flicka is a good horse, she won't let anything and to her, i promise you, man. >> whoa. step in something? >> yeah, the man thing, i'm not your mother. >> no, ma'am -- no. certainly not. >> mike: ladies and gentlemen, please welcome clint black and his wife, lisa hartman black. [applause] >> great to have you here. first of all, i'm a little bit-- you're a guy not only high school an incredible career in
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music, now you're doing movies, is there anything you can't do? >> government work. (laughter) >> that's the easiest work of all. maybe i should ask lisa what can he not do? >>. >> housework. >> housework, electrical things, but that's okay. he does a-- cook some. he doesn't dance it. >> mike:'s not doing dancing with the stars. >> you were claiming i was a good dancer they thought they would make me do it. >> and there's a funny scene in our movie where he dances off by himself and it's quiet and he goes into his thing and ipod goes flying and quite funny like an awkward funny dancer. >> the movie that you've done, flicka country pride, a family movie. so refreshing to see a movie that the whole family go, it's wholesome, entertaining and what drove you to want to be part of something that the whole family can be part of it and film? >> well, i did flicka 2, and i
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loved working with the director and we were joking then about doing flicka 3 and getting the whole family involved and low and behold now we're joking about flicka 4, but it was, it was one of those, i think it's one of those things where it's easy to decide. you just, why wouldn't we want to do it of course? but when it comes to family stuff we're so hungry for it having a ten-year-old that we would watch for anything coming to town and anything on investigation that fit our mold and always be ready for it. so it was a plus, double plus. >> mike: you know, one of the, we're going to talk more about the movie i didn't bring you here and having the guitars in our hands so we could look good. and-- >> you look very good. >> mike: thank you, lisa. [applause] >> one of the hit songs that both of you guys have been part of. is "when i said i do" you're going to let me play it with you, and i've never played it with you before and after
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today maybe never again. >> a real confident builder, the song goes exactly how we play it. >> mike: oh, okay. well, let's see how we play. it ♪ these times of trouble and these times are good ♪ ♪ they're always gonna be, they rise and they fall ♪ ♪ and here by your side, we're millions away ♪ ♪ nothing's ever gonna change the way i feel ♪ the ♪ the way it is, the way that it was ♪ ♪ when i said i do ♪ i meant that i will ♪ till 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 >> wbuy the record, hear the rest. [applause] >> your daughter, is here today and getting the film, flicka, country pride. is this her first time acting? >> yes, it was. and she's been about two years ago, she and lisa were in l.a., and lili just looked up out of the blue and said, can i get pa agent? and-- >> did she get one. >> no, we made the requisite agent jokes, have you ever seen an agent, my agent? my agent doesn't like those jokes, by the way. >> mike: so, lili, you know, do you have-- you think you've got the right stuff to maybe take a career and go well beyond mom and dad and all of this stuff.
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>> i hope. i mean, i really want-- (applause) >> could act, but, if i can i will. so hopefully. >> if your grades are great and-- >> oh. >> clean up your room and-- >> you sound like parents, wow. >> and that's the real trick is it having a well-rounded life and earning those privileges and i think that it is a privilege when, you know, if you have a kid that wants to work, do a job after school or work during the summer, they have to, they have to earn that right. >> mike: that's the way it's suppose today work and i think if more parents raised their kids like that, it might be a better world to live. a lot better out there. [applause] >> clint black and lisa hartman black, all here and thank you for joining us here on this week of the huckabee show from this time in new york, good night and good
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bless. [applause]. ♪ ♪ just killing time is killing me ♪ ♪ drinking myself blind, maybe ♪ drinking myself blind, maybe i won't see ♪ captioned by closed captioning services, inc. don't wait. go to afibstroke.com for a free discussion guide to help you talk to your doctor about reducing your risk. that's afibstroke.com. metamucil uses super hard working psyllium fiber, which gels to remove unsexy waste and reduce cholesterol. taking psyllium fiber won't make you a model but you should feel a little more super. metamucil. down with cholesterol.
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