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tv   Huckabee  FOX News  June 10, 2012 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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i'll have another didn't do it. the trainer for i'll have another, pulling him out of the race with only 24 hours ago, but affirmed, nosed his way to racing history 34 years ago today and i'm going to nose out of here. have a great week, huckabee is next. >> tonight on huckabee, classified information on national security, making headlines. >> and this has to stop. >> now, leaders from both sides of the aisle want accountability. >> there is a clear need for a formal investigation, you have, as i've said we've created 4.3 million jobs. >> what about jobs lost, and people who retired, and the jumped employed? fox business network's china gasperino and diane macedo break it down, the real jobs report. and plus, as a youngster, helped his mother take prayer out of school. >> there was pretty much a lot of animosity toward the family
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and toward me. >> atheist madeline murray o'hair's son. >> when she looked at me san said, i wish abortion would have been legal when i was carrying you, told me that to my face. >> ladies and gentlemen, governor mike huckabee. (cheers) >> thank you, thank you. thank you very, very much. and welcome to huckabee from the fox news studios in new york city. there's really no such thing as objectivity in politics, week strive for our observation, but i'm not going to be disingenuous and tell you that i am. and where have i heard that, great concept. detached from a point of view. not going to happen. this week when i heard that
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the democrats explained the crushing setback of governor scott walker winning against the attempts to recall him, well, i hear it was because the republicans had more out of state money. actually, if you add in the the national union money that tried to get him out, the money was pretty even. nowhere near the 7-1 nonaccepts put out by the democrats spin machine. now, i wondered if they had a little of that great wisconsin cheese with their wine because i haven't heard the democrats beat up on president obama for hitting his all time presidential record 150th fundraiser or for his having flip flopped in his promise in 2008 to follow the federal campaign limits and outspent john mccain 3-1. i must have missed that. and this week i had to laugh when mayor michael bloomberg declared he's for legalizing personal marijuana. now, all of this coming a few days after announcing a ban on
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larger than 16 ounce soft drinks, not milk shakes or dairy based coffee drinks or beer, mind you, all of which have more than a soda. no, just soda. the day after he issued a proclamation for donut day in new york. on my radio show, i've now dubbed the marrinany boy and his own theme song to the tune of danny boy. this is the mayor that wants to ban, smoking, soda, but making marijuana okay. what bad timing. a study release that had one marijuana cigarettes is 20 times more likely to cause cancer than one tobacco cigarettes, but whoever said liberals had to make sense? and now the democrats find any attempt to make photo i.d. laws for voters saying it will suppress the vote, and disenfranchise the voters, guess what the massachusetts
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democratic convention required to get into their convention? a photo i.d. but, the real head scratcher-- (applause) >> the real head scratcher is the announcement that if you want to attend a book signing for michelle obama's new children's book, you'll have to bring a photo i.d. and a social security number. that tears it, i think this is nothing more than reader suppression. we're suppressing the rights of people who read books and furthermore disenfranchising the leaders of children's books. well, they say illegals and people ought to vote and we don't need a photo i.d. for that. but if you want to have the first lady sign a children's book, better have a photo i.d. or expect to be disenfranchised and suppressed. you see, liberals just don't have to make any sense. [applause] >> and so, friday night, an
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appointed a couple of prosecutors to investigate the leaks of classified national security information to the media and this is coming after a bipartisan push by some in congress for an independent prosecutor to investigate. and they say the leaks have put american lives at risk, and compromised our relationship with allies, and senator john mccain went so far as to accuse the white house of leaking the information for political gain this november. and on friday, president obama reacted to criticism. and the notion that my white house would purposely release classified national security information is offensive. it's wrong, and you know, people, i think, need to have a the better sense of how i approach this office and how the people around me here approach this office.
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>> mike: joining me is former special counsel to former president bill clinton lanny davis. [applause] >> we've had a development, frankly, just in the last several hours since friday evening when attorney general eric holder has now appointed two current u.s. attorneys to launch an investigation. are you comfortable that these prosecutors will be independent nuture, since they worked for the obama administration, to get to the bottom of the lease? >> look, governor, the issue of leaking national security information is serious. it's not a partisan issue, democrats and republicans are patriots and this information endangering live sources, is a very serious, but it's not a defense, but it's a fact that everybody does it. and nobody should do it. the bush administration leaked classified information to support their specious case for weapons of mass
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destruction, that's a fact. we have absolutely substantiated that scooter libby held a classified document and read it to judy miller of the new york times, she testified to that. over the years, leaks occur in the national security arena, classified information. it's indefensible, it doesn't have to be politically motivated. people have different agendas and it needs to be prosecuted. in this case the person identified as the prosecutor in maryland is not only a bush administration u.s. attorney, but a former associate, of fellow named condition starr. i would say that's pretty nonpartisan and u.s. district of columbia will be investigating if they find it leaked security information. >> mike: i think you've made a valid point particularly, there's a bipartisan call to get to the bottom of this, i want to say publicly, my deep
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appreciation for senator feinstein of california who has been, a bold voice in expressing her outrage and disapproval of any leak coming forward. and i think you're quite right, whether it's pat leahy, others as democrats have described how unacceptable it is, and i want to begin by being fair and go on further, this might surprise you. some have been very, maybe critical of the fact that one of the two prosecutors was a contributor to president obama's campaign back in 2008. i think that's frankly is an irrelevant piece of information, because at the time he was not a special -- i mean, he was not a u.s. attorney, he was an attorney in private practice, he certainly supported the candidate of his choice, that's no big deal. a lot of us support candidates and should not disqualify us from doing a job. having given on those points, which i think are important to establish, it still is very troubling, because the new york times says that there
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were three dozen, not one or two, but three dozen different people inside the administration, who were sources for their stories, that revealed issues about iran, and issues about the kill list, and issues about cyber technology that was being used, and those are serious issues and i think what we need to make sure is that whoever does the investigation that it takes it all the way to ground. >> look, we have people public record in the new york times story, president obama courageous decision to kill people that threaten our lives and quoted on the record the national security advisor. that wasn't classified information in that respect, but when you use the expression, governor, i know having used that expression to camouflage myself as a leaker. and when i was doing political placements for stories that i
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wanted to be sure were published before they were national televised hearings about the campaign finance allegations. i would call myself an administration official or a senior official, without reference to the white house. and so these people could be spread throughout the government and this is-- david sanger is one of the great reporters in the intelligence community in our time. sources all over the government and said he started working on these stories and on his book 18 months ago, way before there was political motivation for a presidential campaign. >> mike: lanny, thank you. and the president said that the job growth is strong and the private sector is fine. by the afternoon he decided the private sector is not all right at all. the records show that people are settling for part-time, and we'll have charlie
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gasperino and diane macedo from the fox business network. i'd love it hear from you, click on the feedback section or sign up for facebook, and follow me on twitter. that with a links and more on com mike huckabee.com. [ creaking ]
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(applause) >> to paraphrase oliver hardy. it's all started with the press conference about the economy earlier in the day. and we created 4.3 million jobs over the last two-- 27 months, and over 800,000 just this year alone. and the private sector is doing fine. >> oh, yeah, they're doing just great. well, then later in the the day after republicans, including presidential challenger mitt romney called the president out of touch with american people, president obama did a little backtracking.
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>> this is absolutely clearly that the economy is not doing fine, that's the reason i had the press conference and the reason why i spent yesterday, the day before yesterday, this past week, this past month, and this past year, talking about how we can make the economy stronger. the economy's not doing fine. >> mike: hmmm, that's very different. but the president still takes credit for 4.3 million jobs he says his administration has created. here to sort it out. fox business network's charlie gasperino, and diane macedo, it's good to have you guys here. let's work through the numbers, because that's real confusing to most people when they hear the numbers, the fact is 8.2 is the unemployment number, but the unemployment plus underemployment is 14.8 and involuntary part-time workers are another 8 million people. so when we talk about the whole idea of the numbers, diane, let me just begin with you. what can we really interpret
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about 4.3 million jobs? that's not a net increase of jobs, is it? >> well, that's the thing, this 4.3 million number comes only if you look as far back as the 2010. when the market bottomed out. that's not actually the president's full term. it ignores the job losses of 2009. if you look full term created 55,000 jobs which is not a big number which is why he doesn't use it. and also why the unemployment rate is actually higher now than it was when he took office and the other part of this, people have to keep in mind is most economists agree you need at the least 125,000 jobs a month just to keep up with population growth. that's more than 1 1/2 million jobs a year, when he's touting the numbers they're not as big as they sound. >> mike: charlie, is that fair. >> i think that part of what you said is not fair, you can't blame some of the jobs in 2009. >> not his fault, ju jobs he's created. >> those jobs that were lost in 2009 is the responsible,
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responsibility of the financial crisis, which he had nothing to do with, i'm not defending him. just telling him. he walked into an extremely bad situation. >> everybody jost that. >> and charlie, go ahead and say that. >> he inherited the worst economy since the great depression: (laughter) >> he did, he did. >> mike: that's not, the worst economy was 1979. >> i lived through that, too. i remember my dad being out of work. he made the mess worse, a clear case, and some of the other things, american businesses are doing pretty good. now, this is the sort of anomaly that's going on. american businesses are making money, they are, they are not they are not hiring, that's the scary part. why are they not hiring because of the post 2009 policies of this administration, when you scare businesses with taxes, regulation and obamacare, guess what? they're going to hoard cash, yes, they're making money and diversified, the stock market
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is up, great, but they're not hiring anybody. >> mike: if they're doing well, how come he walked his remarks back just a few hours afterwards, you know, let's-- diane, what was the point of that, did he stick with that and say, they are doing well and dig in? i mean, he reversed himself just about as quick as turning a switch on a fan blade from summer to winter. >> well, what he was trying to say in his speech is that the private sector is doing fine because he was trying to emphasize government jobs and that's the point of his speech earlier in the day, i don't think it's a coincidence that came after the wisconsin recall. we haven't heard him talk about a jobs proposal in months and all of a sudden a recall election doesn't go the way that his party wants to, i think he knows he needs the union votes and wisconsin didn't show up and he's trying to rein in the union votes and supports come november. this is politics, not about the economy at all. >> i think we're on shaky ground trying to get inside
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barack obama's head when this comes to the economy, this is a president who is woefully unqualified when it comes to the economy. he's done so many bad things, i would say silly things. [applause] >> here is the problem and i say this, i mean, i say this because i don't think he knew what he was really saying and here is why i don't think he knew. because if you're a policy maker, and it's mid 2009 okay, yes, you did inherit a horrible situation and you spent 800 billion dollars, nearly a trillion dollars on stimulus, and you know for a fact that your stimulus plan was not working, forget about the number created jobs or whatever, it wasn't working as well and you turn around and sell health care in the teeth of that? man, you don't know anything about the economy. >> mike: we've got to take a break and when we come back we'll talk more and it's interesting, you brought up the point about him saying, welcome, you know, i think it's going great we just need more government jobs and the stimulus panel hadn't work, his answer let's have more
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stimulus, i mean, come on. more with charlie and diane when we come back. stay with us. [applause]. 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!
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(applause) >> charlie gasperino, diane macedo. we are talking about the job numbers this week, and all the things that the president has kind of gotten himself embroiled into. not a good week between wisconsin and this gaffe that made joe biden actually look eloquent with what he said the the other day. (laughter) . [applause] >> it really was not the best week for the president. but i want to go back to the numbers because i do think it's important. if the primary reason he is putting forth that he should be reelected is 4.3 million jobs created and that does seem to be the mantra of this
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administration, this campaign so far, why isn't the unemployment number lower? because it's actually higher and it's higher not just since he took office, but it's higher-- it's higher since last month and if you're creating all of these jobs. >> well, remember the unemployment numbers are tricky. sometimes they go up when things are getting better, why is that? because people are coming into the work force and looking for jobs and show up in the unemployment numbers. and unemployment rise sometimes, there's more than a little science here, what i think we have to look at is underemployment and the number of people who had jobs dropped out of the work force and about better rational for judging someone's economic performance and on that level he has failed pretty miserably. like i said he inherited a lot of bad stuff what's scary about this president in particular, the things he's done have failed so, so bad that-- so obviously, and yet, he keeps going back to it and i think that's a little scary.
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>> mike: diane, he does not account for or maybe it's not being discussed. i mean, 10,000 people every day retire, they drop out of the work force, so, when you say jobs created, is it considered created a job when somebody walks into a job that somebody just retired from? >> well, the numbers are very blurry as charlie pointed out the whole labor work force, the work participation rate is a big factor in the unemployment rate why we look at u-6 number not only counts for people looking for work and can't find a job and count the people who gave up and stopped looking altogether and a lot of people working part-time jobs when they want to be working full-time jobs and can't find full-time jobs, so that u-6 number is a little more accurate, and a lot of people call the real unemployment rate and that's at 14% right now. >> and wages a good gauge and they're going down and that's not good. people are underemployed are not going to better jobs.
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>> mike: speaking of wages, jesse jackson, jr. weighed in on legislation, to increase minimum wage to $10 an hour and even some democrats like tom harkin are falling back and saying that's not a good thing. will that stimulate the economy as he indicates or a disaster for the economy. >> if it did stimulate the economy it wouldn't be enough. it's like the bumper tax, and want to tax these, and a drop in the bucket when it comes down to it. same thing with this. i don't believe that minimum wage hikes actually work, i think they're bad it causes employers to cut back. now, hire less people and by the way, these are kids, people that are working in college, that generally are stuck in minimum wage jobs and i think it's net-net bad. >> a lot of times you see the organizations that lobby for minimum wage increase and ask for an exemption so they can pay their employees below minimum wage and it's good for other people and not for them. and i don't understand how it doesn't apply across the board. >> there's been a big sort of blowup in the congress this
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week, congressional democrats wanting to have a pay equity issue, thinking that women should be paid equally. but, of a survey group found that democratic senators pay their female staffers substantially less than they pay their male staffers, this is what makes, i think, americans crazy. >> the hipocracy of it all. >> and murray pays female staff numbers, $26,000 less than male staffers, if you look. >> is the issue a real issue? that's scary about some of the stuff, the war on women, is that a real issue? is mitt romney engaging a war on-- are women being held back not paid enough. or statistic, women go on maternity leave. does that factor in, and i think that's what the press-- >> i tried to go on maternity leave and told i couldn't pass the physical. charlie gasperino and diane macedo. >> great to see you. >> and let me remind you diane
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is joining us at the end of the show, she does more than crunch numbers, she crunches a mean rock and roll song and she'll be joining the little rockers later in the program. do not miss that. coming up, what's it like growing up as a child, in the most hated family m america. william murray, the son of atheist founder madalyn murray o'hair joins us when we come back. now, tre's gentle, dependable constipation relief fore... and me and me. new dulcolax laxative tablets for women are comfort-coated... so they're gentle on sensitive stomachs. new dulcolax laxative for women the overnight relief you're looking for.
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>> from america's news headquarters, i'm harris falkner, the hunt is on in alabama at this hour for a killer, a become took out three people and wounded three others at a pool party near the campus of auburn university. witnesses say it was a massacre. auburn police say a fight involving several guys broke out over a woman. among the dead two former auburn football players. the suspect faces three count of capital murder when they get them. and a fire burning in northern colorado growing to 22 square
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miles in just 48 hours, weather conditions blamed for spreading the flames in different directions. a wildfire that started in southern new mexico friday night has grown to 40 square miles and no containment lines have been built in either state. i'm harris falkner, for the headlines when you want them, foxnews.c foxnews.com. [applause] >> shes was the most hated woman in america, a title she took great pleasure in, talking about madeline murray o'hair. >> you're going to live your whole life preparing to meet the-- crazy as hell. >> in the early 60's, she once tried to defect to the soviet union was looking for a reason to start trouble. she found it in the classroom of her teenage son william. >> i'm an atheist and i wish to be an atheist and i don't
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feel it would be appropriate for me to stand up to say the lord's prayer. >> she took her battle against school prayer all the way to the supreme court and won. >> and there will be no more religious ceremonies in the public schools. >> and murray can't stop there. she founded american atheists and sued the city of baltimore, demanding the city collect taxes from the tax exempt catholic church. she sued nasa, saying public prayer ought to be banned by government employees in outer space. she challenged the words "under god" in the pledge of allegiance and the motto "in god we trust" on currency. >> it's full of rape and slaughter and-- >> in 1995, o'hair, and her granddaughter and daughter were kidnapped and murdered by david waters. >> a young man told the reporter that he's an atheist and fought tore school prayer with his mother and he says he
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now denounced atheist and joung me the author of that book, the chairman of the religious freedom coalition, bill murray. great having you here. >> when i see some of the pictures i remember when your mother was sort of in her heyday and she was a reviled woman because she he offended the sensitivities and senseabilities of so many god firing americans. did you grow up feeling that hey, people hate my mother and hate me. did you wear it as a badge of courage at the time? >> our family was definitely dinner. >> mike: that's putting it mildly. >> and we did, we were different. i mean, as you said, my mother attempted to defect to the soviet union, she was a marxist leader in the community and our neighborhood was for the most part immigrants from many of those communist countries, from poland, from hungary, from
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east germany and to have somebody in their neighborhood to make this country like that one, yeah, there was pretty much a lot of animosity toward the family and toward me. >> mike: and you grew up an atheist, grew up believing that your mother was right, but came a moment in which your life changed. how did you become a christian believer? >> well, i was raised, governor, in that atheist and marxist existence primarily because our family was dysfunctional and nobody could hold down a job, but i didn't have that problem and wound up successful in business, unfortunately, although i got rid of the marxism, that eig atheistism of stayed with me, instead of an atheist markist, a libertarian atheist and lived that libertarian life style thinking the only thing important is me and anybody that can't make it should just starve to death. and the problem with that, now it well from your experiences, that that life style is destructive and nearly destroyed me.
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and when you get down to the point of disruption in your life, there is one willing to lift you up out, and that one is jesus christ. >> and you became a christian. how did you become introduced to the lord. someone taught you, watch a billy graham film? what was the turning point? >> oddly enough going back to the horrible life style thinking that you're the center of the universe and the only thing important to you is booze and food and sex, that led to nearly self-destruction and finally i turned to a 12 step program in order to get out of it and i was getting out of it and there was this mysterious god that was getting me out testify and i wanted to know who that god was and i literally went on a search for him and of course, that internal resistance, it can't be that, that god that my mother hated so badly. but the reality was, that that is, that is who that god was, and that is who that god is, and it was he that was willing to reach down and grasp me up. >> mike: when you became a
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christian, your mother wasn't exactly happy about it, wasn't like i want to come to your baptism. and a statement put it on the screen it's shocking. and it's got to be hurtful, but, this statement that she made about you, let's get it on the screen because i want our audience to see, one could call this, this is when she disowned you, could call this a postnatal abortion on the part of a mother. i repudiate him, speaking of you, i repudiate him entirely and completely for now and all times. he is beyond human forgiveness. >> mike: that had to hurt coming from your mother. >> that didn't hurt that much. the dysfunctional home i was raised in and number of times i had done something perhaps wrong in her eyes as a child when she had looked at me and said, i wished abortion would have been legal when i was carrying. >> mike: she told you that. >> told that to my face when i
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was younger and this was nothing, but a continuation of that. and that's a home, only thing important material things or philosophies or government or statism, whatever, when only those things are important to you, the feelings of people, of individuals aren't that important. >> you know, a remarkable story and bill, the fact that you're able to come out with love and forgiveness and a life of peace and joy, is as great a testament to god's grace and your ability to receive t your pook book is remarkable. "my life without god". stay with us. from around the world...
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>> each weekday hear my commentary. and details at mike huckabee.com. you might describe my next guest as somebody who goes to extremes and once read an entire volume of an encyclopedia because he want today get smarter. then for answer tire year lived his life according to everything he could find in the baseball to improve the spiritual life. the latest mission a two-year quest to become the healthiest person in the world. aj jacobs want today lose weight instead of choosing one health regimen, he decide today try them all. over two years, he would test as many healthy life style
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theories as he could. like bear crawling through central park, running errands, literally. squatting instead of sitting where he could. working from a treadmill rather than from a desk. stroller sizing, taking posture lessons, pull back a little more, now bull the belly in just a little bit. and there seems to be a health study on just about everything. >> and lower your blood pressure, and it's a dangerous thought. to be ult the matly healthy you want to have a healthy sex life and according to one study, the believe it or not is cucumbers, mixed with good and plenty. >> this is 100% raw, unsweetened chocolate. very bitter. >> over the two years, aj
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tested nearly 100 studies, in the search for ultimate health. health. >> he's written a book about it called "drop dead healthy" one man's quest for bodily perfection. thank you for joining me. >> thank you, governor. >> mike: let's talk about, what was the crazyiest thing you probably attempted. >> certainly, something called the caveman workout, which is a little bizarre, because, i-- . sounds bizarre. >> i tried different workouts from going to the gym or pole dancing, i guess that was a little weird. >> mike: pretty weird for a guy. >> i gained a lot of respect and takes a lot of upper body strength. the caveman workout, they believe we should work out like cavemen, and went to central park and tossed boulders around in my bare feet. >> mike: the caveman workout, what was one of the most
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helpful things in the course of your attempt to get healthy. >> one thing, there were surprises that little things make a huge difference, one thing is just sitting, i never realized how bad it is for your health. sitting at your desk all day. even getting up once now or walking around for a couple of minutes. i took it to the extreme and i bought a treadmill. put my computer on the treadmill and i walked while writing the book and took me about 1200 miles to write the book and i loved it and i'm a lazy person, if nick do it anyone can. another helpful thing realizing you've got to have smaller portions, your mom was right. chewing your food is very healthy. because, if you chew, you eat more slowly and if you eat more slowly you eat less and ran across a group on the internet called, they call themselves chewedyism, they are he' passionate about chewing and i was inspired to become a member of the
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chewies. >> mike: were there any times that what you attempted to do to be healthy, did it ever make you sick. >> it's interesting you point it out, but sometimes being so obsessed with health is not healthy, because it stresses you out. if you're so busy going to the gym and looking for the perfect health food you don't have time to go out with friends and friends, having a strong social network, hugely important to your health. i say go out to dinner with your friends, have a glass of wine, if you drink wine, one glass per day, very good for you, and coffee, by the way, also good for you, one cup a day. >> mike: just one? >> well, yeah. >> mike: we need a couple more than that, most of us do. and you have done some pretty strange projects, i mean, you lived this entire year, every time you found something in the bible, you did it. and this health routine you did for nearly two years, that's next in your life to do something utterly bizarre and write about it? >> well, i haven't settled on it yet. my kids are lobbying very hard for me to do a year of eating
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nothing, but candy. they think that would be wonderful. and they could come along with me, but i don't know if the publisher is going for that. >> mike: great to have you here. >> great to be here. >> mike: all the crazy ways to try to be healthy and "drop dead healthy", we have books for all of our audience members today so we expect them to get as healthy. thank you very much, aj. we'll be right back, stay with us. ddle of nowhere, is always headed somewhere. to give it a sense of direction, at&t created a mobile asset solution to protect and track everything. so every piece of equipment nows where it is, how it's doing or where it goes next. ♪ this is the bell on the cat. [ male announcer ] it's a network of possibilities -- helping you do what you do... even better. ♪
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♪ >> some of the regular features and my part parts of the show is music. so we've started the show almost four years ago and i wanted to have a house band, but you know, instead of
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professional musicians, get a band with people who work at fox news, people who have all kinds of job responsibilities and yet, share a passion for music. now, it's been a while since we featured the little rockers on the show and we often hear from our viewers and they say they miss the band. so, the little rockers are back. and tonight, we welcome a new member, diane macedo. [applause] >> and with us earlier on the show talking about jobs and you can see diane giving business news updates on the fox business network. diane, it's great to have you here. >> thank you, great to be here. >> what were your music influences and get into sing. i've been singing, my mother tells me since i popped out of the room and it school and college, and now i sing in a wedding band. >> what do you in fox business when you don't get to sing. >> i do the news cut-ins, for the imus in the morning show, 5 a.m. eastern 5 to 9 on the
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fox business network everybody and do whatever they tell me to do. sometimes radio updates and sometimes hits on the fox news channel or more times on the fox business network, i'm here to work. >> i get the whole thing whatever they tell us to do. i understand that. >> pretty much. >> and also on keys, christian from video acquisitions department. all right, what is video acquisitions? sounds serious. >> video acquisitions pretty much just acquiring the material going to air and quality control and it's being recorded, audio is good, video is good. >> also adrian sharky on guitar, a lighting technician, sharky, what do you do here? >> i do lighting here. and the units, program the shows, during the day. >> you have a different accent. i don't think that's boston. that's irish to me. >> yeah, from ireland. >> we're delighted you're here. >> thank you very much. >> a great job. >> and then on drums, josh hatch. a camera man on our show, and
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you've got to wonder, josh, if you're able to play the drums, why do we need you to pay you to run a camera. >> i don't know, it's a -- a good family here to help us out switch on and off and dave lets me play the other camera guy and fun. >> you notice we put you behind the plexiglas, there's reason for that, we throw a sandwich back there every now and then, it's for acoustical purposes, that's what we tell josh, it's to protect the audience from him. let's play this, what are we going to do, diane. >> the version of the white snake version of "here i go again", everybody should recognize it, but probably a different version than what you're used to. ♪ ♪ no i don't know where i'm going ♪ ♪ but i sure know where i've been ♪ ♪ hanging on the promises of
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the songs of yesterday ♪ ♪ and i've made up my mind ♪ not spending more time, here i go ♪ ♪ you know i'm looking for an answer ♪ ♪ but i never seem to find what i'm looking for and oh, lord, i pray you give me strength to carry on ♪ ♪ 'cause i know what it means ♪ ♪ to walk along a lonely street of dreams ♪ ♪ hey, hey, here i go again on my own ♪ ♪ going down the only road i've ever known ♪ ♪ like a drifter i was born to walk alone ♪ ♪ and i've made up my mind
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♪ i'm not wasting no more time, here i go again ♪ ♪ i'm just another heart in need of rescue ♪ ♪ waiting on love, sweet, sweet charity ♪ ♪ i'm gonna hold on for the rest of my days, you know, 'cause i know what it means ♪ ♪ to walk along a lonely street, lonely street of all my dreams. ♪ here i go again on my own going down the only road i've ever known ♪ ♪ like a drifter i was born to walk alone ♪ ♪ and i've made up my mind ♪ oh, i'm not wasting, one more minute of my time, yeah, here i go ♪
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♪ once again, here i go ♪ here i go again on my own ♪ going down the only road, i, i ever known ♪ ♪ like a drifter i was born to walk alone ♪ ♪ here i go, here i go, here i go again ♪ (applause) >> great job. [applause]. [applause]. >> . >> mike: give it up for the little rockers. and diane macedo (applause) >> thanks for watching tonight. hope you had a great time. good to have you with us until next week from new york, good night and god bless. >> 1, 2, 3, 4... >> 1, 2, 3, 4... ♪ here i go again on my own captioned by closed captioning services, inc.
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♪ ♪ like a drifter i was born to walk alone ♪ ♪ and i made up my mind ♪ here i go again a cup of joe is a sedan.
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