tv Americas News Headquarters FOX News May 5, 2012 10:00am-11:00am PDT
10:00 am
the popular choices much rubio and condoleeza rice. the creative answers were chuck norris and bill cosby. and now a shout out to theresa after a semester of hard work, good luck, theresa. thank you! >> a fox news alert. after a delay of three years the biggest terror trial in american history is underway, now, at guantanamo bay, cuba. the five men suspected in the 9/11 attack appearing in military court. >> hello, everyone, great to have you. this is a brand new hour inside america's news headquarters and all eyes are on guantanamo bay today. because self-proclaimed 9/11 mastermind and four co-defendants are being arraigned at gitmo. they are facing nearly 3,000 counts of murder for the worst terror attack on american soil
10:01 am
after the failed effort to try the suspects in federal court which would have been blocks away from the site of the destroyed world trade center and after the president's failure to close the prison at the base in cuba, as he promised. our intelligence correspondent has been to guantanamo bay, probably more times than anyone i know, catherine, and, today, is the day so many of the 9/11 families have waited. what happened in court so far? >>reporter: well, that's right, thank you. i was here at guantanamo bay in 2008 when the 9/11 suspects were arraigned. at that hearing they tried to take control by acting as their own attorneys. this morning they tried to take control of the proceedings by refusing to cooperate and refusing to answer questions and refusing to wear the head phones so they could hear the translation and there were plenty of antics. one lived with 9/11 hijacker atta in germany stood up and
10:02 am
said "maybe they are going to kill us and say we are committing suicide." the suspects do not look like the pictures you see here. they have aimed in many ways, sheikh mohammed has a red and full beard and others looked withdrawn, and like they have lost a lot of weight. the other point i make is that there were contentious exchanges between the military lawyers and the judge in this case. one of the lawyers alleged in the year they have had to prepare for the case he never had access to a full time translator and he doesn't speak arabic. >> the suspects will do whatever they can, it seems to stall the proceedings or not allow them to actually accept a plea from them. what happens if they do not cooperate? >>reporter: well, right now to set the scene, we are in a recess and we are now going into our fourth hour of the hearing and waiting for the five men to see if they are going to enter
10:03 am
pleas. the men can now go into court and enter a plea of guilty but it is up to a jury to see if they get the death penalty. my sense from this morning is the men see the court proceedings like a day at mall, a change of scene and they may want to drag it out. >> i understand, catherine, that if they do not enter a plea, it is not a -- is an automatic not guilty and some of the family whose perished on hen lend were given the opportunity to be this. what was that like, what would you like to say? >> six of the we 9/11 families were there chosen by lottery. there is a long blue curtain separating them from the reporters so we cannot see their reactions but we did have a chance to speak to a man who lost his wife on american
10:04 am
airlines flight 11 and he said goodbye to her that morning in boston he never imagined he would never see her again. >> she said, well, keep me in your pocket, which is the thing she always used to say to me when she knew i was feeling anxious or stressed about something, just she all said that to let me know she was there. >> if there is one sentiment we hardy from the family members it is they felt they owed it to the person in the family who was killed on 9/11 just to physically it is in the courtroom and to look sheikh mohammed, the self-described architect, and the others straight in the eye. >> do you think the defendants are aware they are family members? >>reporter: well, the defendants are not living in a vacuum. they have access to the media. they have access to television.
10:05 am
they know it was a year ago that there was a navy seals raid and the killing of osama bin laden. so, i would anticipate they are aware. what i find interesting is they think with strategy to frustrate the system. we went to break they refused to answer questions for the judge, they freely talked with each other and laughed with each other and at one point sheikh mohammed who is in the front of the room leaned back and passed a message to another of the conspirators and then it was passed down the line, kind of like broken telephone. some of it is absurd, if you will. >> thank you, catherine, your take is critical as you have fold it from the beginning. we will check back. >> we will keep following the story. as catherine mentioned and of the victims' families are watching the arraignment at gitmo but some are watching through closed circuit tv at
10:06 am
military bases. take a listen. >> the human side of me still, i don't, i'm glad i don't know anything about the way thought or that way of life. and i will not be terrorized in any way or change my life in any way because of it. it has been changed and altered enough. >> i want to see the people who killed my sister face-to-face and that is what you do in america, you face your fight. and that is what we do. and we bring people to justice, like it or not. and it is our justice system. if we did not have our justice system, we don't have america. >> so much emotion and resolve. much more to come on the developing story including whether the newly designed military tribunal system is up to the challenge of trying the worst u.s. terrorist in united states history. the chairman of the house homeland security security
10:07 am
committee, peter king, gives us his take ahead. >> president obama launching his re-election bid under what some economists are calling "dark economic clouds," the president arriving just minutes ago at columbus, ohio. last month the unemployment rate dropped to 8.1 percent, in part because many people just gave up looking for work. employers added only 115,000 jobs in the month of april. that number way down from march. so how will president obama convince americans he has done a good job turning around the economy? we bring in our political columnist and former aide to senator schumer and fox news contributor. thank you for joining us for this important day when the president will be officially kicking off the campaign in ohio. chris, right now, it is a dark
10:08 am
economic cloud out there. what will the president have to do in terms of developing a strategy to move his campaign forward in hopes of winning re-election? >>guest: well, listen, we have to focus on the positives. we created 4.1 million private sector jobs under this president. and there are 700,000 fewer government workers working in government under this president. those are things that everyone should be proud of. the republicans have done nothing to help. the only number that really will matter to americans on election day is the unemployment rate. i have said this 100 times. if it is below 8 percent it is an automatic re-election for the president. if it is above 9 percent he cannot win. in the middle, that's where the battle will be. things are starting to look very good. we talk about the people leaving the workforce, and many of them, as you know, and as all republicans know, these are people who are baby boomers who reached retirement age and decided it is time to get out of
10:09 am
the workforce and that is not necessarily a bad thing. >> and that is not the case for all those who decided to leave the work forts, be clear. there are able bodied people who have not gone back because they are so displeased with the way the economy is going. angela, i heard you moaning waiting to jump in. what does president obama have to do to move forward the strategy to win re-election? >>guest: well, that number is 342,000 people that have become disillusioned and dropped out of the workforce. in november when people go to the ballot box they will have questions. who can i depend on? who can i trust? who can change my current circumstance to create a better future? folks will not vote for the change that obama offered in 2008. they will want a change in the white house. chris, you talk about the unemployment rate, but the facts of this, 17 million people on food stamps or some type of
10:10 am
public assistance and the family median income is down. not up. foreclosures have increased. people are not better off christopher than four years ago. >> chris, let me jump in. next week the president is going to congress to take the program and he wants to congress to support him and improve the economy. chris, given the rift that occurs between he and the republicans, what will he accomplish? >>guest: the republicans in congress will not do anything to make the economy better. they have not done anything to make the economy better. all of their actions have been made to make the economy worse. they care only about their own political power and moving their own conservative ideological agenda forward. they want us to go backwards to the bush policy that created the mess can they do not care. after the election they will do everything they can to create
10:11 am
jobs. but before then they will not. >> let's tell the american people the truth. look, reid has not passed any time of budget. and when the president took his budget before congress, the democrats in the senate voted against his jobs plan. his own democrats voted against his plan. you think this is rhetoric? just tell the truth. >>guest: i love angela she is using this republican budget talking point which is so misheeding. i worked in congress for many, many years. what happened with a budget, the president proposes it, it goes to committees in the house of representatives and the senate and is voted on. >>guest: and democrats voted against it. >> there was no markup so the democrats do not want to play the game. >> they do not want to go through the process, markup the bill --.
10:12 am
>> let me jump in, in the heat of the battle, the american people who have given up hope, those are the people we have to bring back, the bottom line, as you mentioned yourself, the economy has to get better, the unemployment rate has to drop in order for the president to ever hope of getting in to the oval office. angela, to that point, romney is attacking, on the attack of president obama, saying, yes, it is true he inherited this mess but it is time to move it forward taking a phrase from the president, time to move it forward to do the right thing for the economy. romney is saying he can do that. why? >>guest: well, it is about message. and, he has proven himself. president obama was a grass roots organizer. community organizer. and we gave him the chance to be president, and the economy is not that much better but as for elections, quickly, it is messaging. it is messaging, it is also about advocacy and getting out
10:13 am
the vote and fundraiser so whoever does that best, will win. >> president has just arrived and we want to get to that. thank you both. >> we are monitoring the president would will speak shortly and we will bring that but, first, more than a decade after the worcesterror attack on american soil, suspected 9/11 conspirators are being arraigned in cuba today. but is this newly designed tribunal system so different from the civil trial that was going to take place up to the task? new york congressman peter king weighs in.
10:14 am
c'mon dad! i'm here to unleash my inner cowboy. instead i g heartburn. [ horse neighs ] hold up partner. prilos isn't for fast relief. try alka-seltzer. it kills heartburn fast. yeehaw! of how a shipping giant can befriend a forest may seem like the stuff of fairy tales. but if you take away the faces on the trees... take away the pixie dust. take away the singing animals, and the storybook narrator... [ man ] you're left with more electric trucks. more recycled shipping materials... and a growing number of lower emissions planes... which still makes for a pretty enchanted tale. ♪ la la la [ man ] whoops, forgot one... [ male announcer ] sustainable solutions. fedex. solutions that matter.
10:18 am
>> a big break from a story we brought that spark add major public outcry. spirit airlines taking heat for refusing to refund the air fare of a dying veteran, a vietnam vet saying he asked for a refund on $200 ticket after his doctors advised him not to fly. now, after mounting public pressure, the airline is apparently having a change of heart. and now live from new york city with more details. >> what a difference a few days make. spirit airlines c.e.o. is now personally refunding his ticket, in full, and, the airline will donate $5,000 to the vet's favorite charity after refusing to reimburse him just a now days ago. the marine asked for a refund after the doctor told him the cancer spread and he could not fly. the swirl airlines c.e.o. said he should have bought $14 travel insurance they offer and that
10:19 am
repaying him would be cheating other customers. here he is in an interview with fox news. >> i feel badly for the gentleman. however, this is a country and a society where we play by the rules and he did not, he wanted this. he wanted to not do that and it is not fair to the ten million other spirit customers. >> this is him now releasing a statement that reads in part "in my statements regarding his request for a refund i failed to explain why our policy on refunds makes spirit airlines the only affordable choice for so many travelers and i did not demonstrate the respect or the compassion i should have given his medical condition and his service to our country. all of us have spirit airlines extend our prayers prayers and , best wishes to him." when he got the call from the c.e.o. he first thought it was a rank, and he asked while he
10:20 am
appreciated the donation he hopes they will review special circumstances like his on a case-by-case basis rather than applying the blanket "no reguns allowed," policy. so the story moves on. >> we are watching the top story today. this is the day, folks, the suspected 9/11 terrorists are in court at guantanamo bay in a newly reformed military system. is it up to the challenge of delivering justice for all the families of loved ones who were lost? house homeland security committee chairman congressman peter king will be here, live, with his take. plus, a grizzly new evidence of mexico's deadly gang wars, more than a dozen bodies miles from the border. is the violence under control or escalating? we will look. wake up!
10:21 am
that's good morning, veggie style. hmmm. fohalf the calories plus vgie nutrition. could've had a v8. how math and science kind of makes the world work. in high school, i had a physics teacher by the name of mr. davies. he made physics more than theoretical, he made it real for me. we built a guitar, we did thingwith electronics and mother boards.
10:22 am
10:25 am
>> the campaign is in full swing. and, today, it is in ohio. columbus, at he state university, president obama addressing the crowd after an introduction from the first lady. >> manufacturing is investing again adding the jobs for the first time since the 1990's and businesses are back to the basics. exports surged. and over four million jobs were created the last two years. more than a million in the last six months alone. are we satisfied? of course not. too many of our friends and family are still out there looking for work. the housing mark is still weak.
10:26 am
people are still laying off teachers and first responders. the crisis took years to develop and the economy is facing head winds and it will take sustained, persistent effort, yours and mine, for america to fully recover. that's the truth. we all know it. but we are making progress. and, now, we face a choice. now we face a choice, ohio. for the last few years the republicans who run this congress have init ised we go
10:27 am
right back to the policies that created this mess. but, to borrow a line from our friend, bill clinton, now their ayen -- agenda is on steroids this time they want even bigger tax cuts for the wealthiest americans. this time they want even deeper cuts to things like education and medicare and research and technology. this time they want to give banks and insurance companies even more power to do as they please. and, now, after a long and spirited primary, republicans in congress have found a nominee for president who has promised to rubber stamp this agenda if he gets the chance.
10:28 am
ohio, i tell you what --. >> rebound is in ohio today beginning the official re-election bid talking about romney's plan for the economy but admitting the economy is facing head winds. that's his description. let's ask the former deputy assistant to president george w. bush. great to have you hear, brad from what you have heard so far, and the president's explanation of what the economy needs and what is left to be done, how is he doing? >>guest: his new slogan should be "it could be worse." he ticked off a long list of things he was not able to accomplish and when he ran in 2008 he promised the american people if i'm not able to deliver on the economy, i deserve a first term. you deserve a first time you have not delivered. we have the highest unemployment rate of any time in our nation's history at this time in a re-election campaign. remember, in our history we have
10:29 am
never elected, or re-elected a president with unemployment rate over 7.25 percent and now we are still over 8 percent if you take into account underemployment and those people who have given up, it is probably double. and those who supported him the most it is probably 18 percent to 20 percent in urban cities. the president said that americans are not better off today than four years ago, over 70 percent of americans believe this country is headed down the wrong track and the president can talk in his rally today, about a revisionist history, but the american people know the facts to suffering of the high unemployment and suffer at gas pump, at kitchen table, educating their children, and it will be up to romney not only to attack this president on his failures but, also, offer hope for the future. >> president has been honest about the fact he is after the youth vote today. how do you think he will do? they came out in force last time. >> they d but i teach at
10:30 am
georgetown university and around kids all the time and the enthusiasm i witnessed in 2008 i am not seeing on campus in 2012 because kids are not only faced with a high burden if they are taking loans but they are also are their parents' burden at home. this is in the youth we use in 2008 because the jobs are not there. so they are frustrated. and the hope and change they hoped for, has not been delivered. >> the numbers suggest what you are saying is true, student loans are more than credit card debt. but, does mitt romney have a plan mirroring what was done previously? or something else? >>guest: romney's land is just what the doctor ordered and that is this: reduce the cost of government. operate government as they do in a business. can you not spend more than you take in. unleash the power of the individual and restrict government. and you will see money take off.
10:31 am
we believe in the theory of the speed of money. when a dollar changes hands among the individual, us, that is moving up the economy and we are hiring and buying equipment and it is not the government taking from us, and spending it on themselves. >> years of starts and stops, and 9/11 suspects facing judges, five of them, including shamed mohammed and his four co-defendants, passing notes in the courtroom according to catherine who is there. and, now, they are before the military tribunal at gitmo, three years after a former failed effort to try the men in federal court in manhattan which is what the attorney general
10:32 am
holder and the president wanted. but is this military tribunal system up to the task of bringing the men to justice? especially for the family would lost loved ones? the chairman of the house homeland security of the house of representatives knows those families well. why are we here right now? sheikh mohammed was willing to plead guilty and accept death and now we starting from square one. why? >>guest: because president obama stopped the tribunals in january or february of 2009. trial was set to go. he was going to plead guilty and would have been executed and president obama stepped in and tried to revamp the system and now we back to where we were three years ago and families had to go through the torment and finally, finally, we will see justice. >> a you are confident. and of the evidence that was obligated by interrogation techniques, congress has changed the rules, the president has made clear his feel insurance --
10:33 am
feeling on that. will so much evidence be squashed they will not be able to get the trial the families want and sheikh mohammed claiming he cannot get a fair trial? >>guest: not against these five. almost all the evidence is before they got to gitmo, battlefield evidence, admission they made and miranda does not apply, you do not need to give miranda on the battlefield. there is more than enough evidence. the trials are more than they are entitled to but they get the trial, and the evidence is going to get in and we will have a jury of military experts and they are more able, i believe, to sort out intelligence reports than the average jury. for this type of case this is the type of tribunal, jury, and judge. >> i asked two national security speakers i interviewed on fox news this week: what do you think, do we still derive valuable intelligence from those who are held at gitmo bay? and if these suspected
10:34 am
terrorists are executed, and not here to provide us with any answers, is we lost something? >>guest: we have gotten all we can out of these and, quite frankly, most of the intelligence we are getting is from the preobama days, and it is hard to carry out the type of interrogation that is meaning will. most of the intelligence we got from the characters what before the obama administration. and that intelligence is still helping us as we saw last year, when they got bin laden because that evidence, the genesis of it, started with the intelligences in gitmo. >> this week we had a suspected bomb plot trial in new york, and not at gitmo bay. which system is better for not only rooting out the terrorists, but, also, sending a clear message in the war on terror if you try something like this, you will pay the price? >>guest: i would say that the trial on the subway bomber was
10:35 am
appropriate for civilian court. it was carried out here. and attempted to be carried out here. but when we talk about sheikh mohammed they were captured on the battlefield and evidence is not available, you cannot see his eye in the battlefield so you have to adjust and adapt. the military court can do that more readily. >> this was a lottery and some families got to go and look shake mold and others in the eye. they lost loved ones and still in anguish. some are at military bases today across the northeast and elsewhere, watching this. how painful do they tell you it is, how important do they tell you it is? >>guest: it is both important but brutal at the same time. it brings back all memories that time and in some ways you get over the memories but they realize they can't so they want to end this by seeing justice and justice in this case means the death penalty for sheikh mohammed and the others. >> will we win the war on terror?
10:36 am
>> we are winning. we have to keep going. the president said it began in afghanistan and will end in afghanistan but it is not, it is spreading all over the world and we have to fight it everywhere. >> a gruesome discovery near the united states and mexico bother. 23 bodies found scattered in the city of laredo, the first of five bodies found hanging from a bridge and hours later police scoffed 14 others outside the mayor's office. and now, casey is following this like from los angeles and joins with more details on the bizarre and yet gruesome story. >>casey: the latest violence as to the skyrocketing death toll in mexico related to this drug cartel violence we have been reporting on, now, for years. over the last five years, more than 50,000 people have been
10:37 am
killed in that country as it pertains to this kind of violence. yesterday the bodies of 14 people, hanging, from a bridge overpass is just across from the texas border in mexico, 2 1/2 miles south of laredo, next telling, looking at bigger picture, 140 miles east of corpus christi and 160 miles south of san antonio part of the growing turf war between three powerful we drug cartels. one group will claim responsibility and a rival gain will retaliate and so on and so on. a car bomb was set out outside police headquarters there and we can tell you the situation in mexico is dangerous for residents but journalists, especially. to week the bodies of three journalists and one of their girlfriends discovered wrapped
10:38 am
in plastic bags in a coastal spot right on the gulf of mexico that has seen a wave of violence because it is home to one of that country's largest ports, so the cartels are fighting over trafficking control there. mexico's president calderon as we have been reporting on, has tried launching a crackdown in mexico on the gang violence since he took office in 2006 but it has been a futile effort in many ways, even after the deployment of tens of thousands of federal police and soldiers, boots on the ground, a very dangerous situation. also, the united states state department has issued travel alerts for u.s. citizens headed to mexico. a terrible situation. all the way around. >> this story underscores the fact that the crackdown, there, is very difficult to achieve.
10:39 am
thank you, casey, great los angeles. president obama officially kicking off his re-election bid today and the big issue not lead up to november: jobs, jobs, jobs. ronald reagan face add similar challenge in his fight for a second term so is president obama taking a page from recent history? >> lost folks are out of work so we have to do more. if we are going to recover all the jobs that were lost during the recession, and if we are going to build a secure economy that strengthens the that strengthens the middle-class we have to do more. 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.
10:40 am
the card for people who want 50% more cash. ♪ what's in your wallet? ♪ what's in your...your... to help protect your eye health as you age... would you take it? well, there is. [ male announcer ] it's called ocuvite. a vitamin totally dedicated to your eyes, from the eye-care experts at bausch + lomb. as you age, eyes can lose vital nutrients. ocuvite helps replenish key eye nutrients. [ male announcer ] ocuvite has a unique formula not found in your multivitamin to help protect your eye health. now, that's a pill worth taking. [ male announcer ] ocuvite. help protect your eye health.
10:43 am
10:44 am
economy added more than 360,000 jobs compared to president obama's april job numbers at 115,000. so, what did reagan do to turn the recession around? does president obama need to embrace the strategy, as well? join me is managing partner of investment company. good to you have, sir. what do you think the president needs to do to duplicate what president reagan achieved in the april leading up to his november election? >>guest: well, it is so difficult to even compare the two. that was 30 years ago. and the economy today is 3.5 times larger than it was then so it would be even easier to create a number of jobs today. you would think. but the numbers do not tell us what kind of jobs are being created today. many of them are minimum wage service jobs and they are not long-term career jobs like were
10:45 am
created in 1984. reagan used the tax code to get people to invest in the economy and by doing so, he re-created the manufacturing sector. that created high-paying jobs, and, yes, it made some people very rich, but, here is a news flash: it is the rich people that employ the rest of us. so it is very important we have that incentive, that rewards success and not try to punish people because they are successful. >> association reagan had, then, according to what you are saying, reagan had the ability to see that there was manage to be said for the trickle down theory, that perhaps, the rich could go out there and create the jobs. what other tools did he have that perhaps president obama does not or has not used? >>guest: well it is just the policy where reagan embraced capitalism and personal accountability today we embrace something else that is very near
10:46 am
socialism and entitlement. one way to get the unemployment rate down is assembly stopping the insane proliferation of unemployment benefits that proliferate forever. my heart goes out to people that lose their jobs, but after six months if you still unemployed you have to look in the mirror and get retrained and get out and find a job that is available or create your own job. so many successful people are people who are able to realize their potential simply because they lost a job, could not find a job and had to create their own. >> that raises an important point. you are talking about restructuring one's personal life and getting retrain that that would motivate you to be available for the kind of technical jobs that are now on the scene in terms of the mobile economy. so, has the president done enough, has president obama done enough to get people retrained
10:47 am
and refocused on technology and able to go out there and meet the demands and accept the jobs available? >>guest: i would say no, in that area, and probably the most important thing, there is no end game for the unemployment insurance. it just continues to pay and like i say this has to be a point where you stop drawing benefits and you have to get out and retrain. at one time making buggy whips was the big industry in the united states and even the best buggy whip maker lost his job because of technology. and the same thing is happening today. we do not have as many manufacturing jobs. we need software engineers. people are going to have to rerain and accept that, perhaps, their area they want to work, may not be where they can work. >> that would be moving it forward as the president says he wants to do. mr. cargyle thank you.
10:48 am
10:52 am
>> if you like to eat as much as i do, you may want to eat the right food because there are certain foods that could help lower your risk of alzheimer's disease. and the chief of the division of robotics at mount sinai in new york city, and a member of our fox news esteemed medical "a" team. what could be more important for folks would like food, to learn there are certain foods that could help us with memory problems. >>guest: do you like eating fish? >> three times a week. >>guest: salmon. about 1,200 participants and they want dead see different types of fatty acid, and all the
10:53 am
vitamins e, c, and d to see which would help as far as alzheimer's disease is concerned. they draw blood and they looked at the level of the connection of the nerves in the brain because when it slows you get alzheimer's disease. out of all the vitamins the only one that lowered the level of this was omega three fatty acid and we talked about that in the past. fish oil. >> what if you not a salmon fan. >> you can take the vitamin. and we can talk about that. you can take supplements, tuna, salmon, nuts, tofu they all have a great amount. >> should you give your kids the
10:54 am
foods to start fighting memory problems early? >>guest: it is actually very helpful in pregnant women. that is very interesting. because early on when the children are actually getting brain developed this helps them. >> so is it too late for us to start fighting memory problems? >> it is not. look, i take 600 milligram as day. in the past we also have talked about how helpful the fatty acids are with heart disease, lowering cholesterol, and although it is an observational study, can we have more to figure out i want dead see imaging studies as a result of this if you take the fatty acids does that change anything on the m.r.i. >> what is key is talking about people eating more fish particularly salmon which i happen to love. that is, really, filled with
10:55 am
tons of omega three and you also mention tofu. >> flax, fish oil, nuts, snow are all good but you have to watch out if you take too much, it can cause blood thinning and bleeding. so if you take any kind of blood thinner, talk to your doctor and make sure you are not overdoing it because it can cause bleeding. over all, it is a great observational study and good to know that taking the minimum amounts each day as a supplement is a good way to go and if you have great diet, obviously, you do not need it but it is great for health. >> and other vitamins? which ones help? >>guest: i personally take vitamin d and calcium and the fatty acid and exercise three time as week and i know you do a lot more but because of my time
10:56 am
limit i do monday, wednesday, friday, for half an hour. be well hydrated and always get seven hours of sleep. >> get your vitamin d, walk in the sun. all if you can find the time. >> and we will see you tomorrow at 10:30 a.m. >> a lot of great topics tomorrow. >> hope everyone will join us then. thank you, doctor. information to keep you and make you family. most life insurance companies look at you and just see a policy. at aviva, we do things differently. we're bringing humanity back to life insurance.
10:57 am
that's why only aviva rewards you with savings for getting a check-up. it's our wellness for life program, with online access to mayo clinic. see the difference at avivausa.com. [ clang ] my house is where plants came to die. ♪ but, it turns out all i was missing was miracle-gro potting mix. it's got what a plant needs. even plant food that feeds them for up to 6 months. you get bigger, more beautiful plants. guaranteed. who's got two green thumbs thanks to miracle-gro? uh, this g. boo everyone rows with micle-gro.
10:58 am
[ male announcer ] you're at the age where you don't get thrown by curveballs. ♪ this is the age of knowing how to get things done. so, why let erectile dysfunction get in your way? talk to your doctor about viagra. 20 million men already have. ask your doctor if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain; it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. side effects include headache, flushing, upset stomach, and abnormal vision. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. stop taking viagra and call your doctor right away if you experience a sudden decrease or loss in vision or hearing. this is the age of taking action. viagra. talk to your doctor.
10:59 am
uh, nope. just, uh, checking out my ad. nice. but, y'know, with every door direct mail from the postal service, you'll find the customers that matter most: the ones in your neighborhood. print it yourself or find a local partner. and postage is under 15 cents. i wish i would have known that cause i really don't think i chose the best location. it's not so bad... i mean you got a deal... right? [ bird cries ] go online to reach every home, every address, every time with every door direct mail.
242 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on