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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  May 6, 2013 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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factory in colorado not going as planned. the entire building was supposed to come down by parts were left standing with the water tower on top of it. the ugly, talk about leading a double life. police say this alleged member of ms-13 also runs a kids party rental business in florida. >> we're going to leave it right there. "fox & friends" starts now. >>gretchen: it is monday morning. good morning. i hope you had a great weekend. it is may 6 already. can you believe it? i'm gretchen carlson. the white house wouldn't listen to them but maybe america will. we know who the benghazi whistle-blowers are and what they want to say. >>steve: any takers? undertakers that is. cemeteries across the country refusing to bury the boston bomber. now the funeral home that took his body under fire and the owner defends himself straight ahead. >>brian: is may be
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monday. anna kooiman and 200 of herclosa workout that burns more calories than anything else in the history of workouts. 30 minutes. don't stand too close. "fox & friends" starts now. >>steve: it would make sense that we have that. if people overdid it yesterday at cinco de mayo. >>gretchen: if you do it on monday, it is easier to do it tuesday, wednesday and thursday. >>brian: anna has been talking about this turbo workout for years, decades. now she is out there doing it. >>steve: it is a little chilly. the tank tops are interesting. look at all these people.
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>>gretchen: i wonder if they still do it when we have the cameras go away. >>brian: do you want to put them in a box during your news update? >>steve: they're still there. >>gretchen: we'll check back in throughout the morning to see how many calories they are burning. in the meantime your headlines israel boosting rocket defenses as it bridges for possible retaliation from syria. syria warning all options are on the table after the latest airstrike on military targets. israel says it won't hesitate to stop weapons from getting into the hands of terrorists. this as president obama comes under fire for failing to act. >> the whole situation is becoming more and more expansive and unfortunately the red line the president has written was apparently written in disappearing ink. >>gretchen: he says the
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u.s. should give weapons to the right people. dicey situation. >> a sell pwraeug turns -- a celebration turns tragic. a bride-to-be and four friends killed in a limo accident. the trunk caught fire. three women managed to escape through the backdoor. five others trapped inside. all the women were nurses and died. >> it's unbelievable. [inaudible] nice nurses, really good workers. >>gretchen: all the survivors are in intensive care for smoke inhalation and other things. investigators still trying to figure out what caused that fire. >> candlelight vigil held on sunday for ricardo, the youth soccer referee who
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died after being punched by a player over a call. his brain had become swollen. he had been in a coma for a week. his daughter says she hopes his tragedy will help prevent something like this from happening again. >> they should think before they do something stupid. >> i don't want another family to suffer as we have been suffering. >>gretchen: the 17-year-old who punched the referee in juvenile detention on assault charges. investigators are considering adding steeper penalties since portillo's death. >> 18-year-old charlie gainy who was down's syndrome was announced prom king and was looking for the date. he was introduced to new minnesota. the two hit it off. they said they'll have dinner before the big date. those are your headlines. >>steve: a night to remember. fantastic. >>brian: let's talk about the latest in benghazi. beginning on wednesday you're going to have
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testimony and find out the identification and see the whistle-blowers being questioned in person, live on television if you choose to watch it. i'm sure we'll cover it here. we'll finally get to the bottom of one of the worst terror attacks we have suffered. certainly when you lose an ambassador and three other americans it should be investigated. though some are missed -- though some are miffed we continue to cover it. politics are out. we know their names. >>steve: greg hicks, the deputy chief mission at the u.s. embassy in libya at the time of the benghazi attacks. mr. hicks is the one who got the call from ambassador stevens early that night. everybody there, he says -- mr. hicks does -- knew from the get-go, it was terrorism. >>gretchen: mark thompson, former marine and deputy for the terrorism bureau. why is that important? these gentlemen allege they were intentionally left
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out, or their account of what happened that night was intentionally left out of that report. remember the former secretary of state hillary clinton ordered that report. now fox reported last week the inspector general actually looking into the truthfulness of that report. the third person is interesting because he doesn't really consider himself a whistle-blower because we've seen him before. you may recall this is eric nordstrom, diplomatic security officer in the months leading up to the attacks. we heard from him during the original testimony, and it was his testimony that really put the administration back on their heels initially because he came right out of the gate and said we knew all the time that this was terrorism. he was the first person to really say that. and i think he's extremely important as this investigation moves forward. >> the take-away from that, for me and my staff, it was abundantly clear we were not going to get resources until the aftermath of an
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incident. and the question that we would ask is, again, how thin does the ice have to get before someone falls through? for me, the taliban is on the inside of the building. >>steve: let's talk a little bit about mr. hicks, gregory hicks. here's something, a preview of his testimony. he says quote, i think everybody in the mission thought it was a terrorist attack from the beginning. i never reported a demonstration. although that's what the talking points were. i reported an attack on the consolate. chris's last report, if you want to say, his final report is, greg, we are under attack. >>brian: you know what's amazing? it comes out when susan rice came forward and says this was a demonstration, spontaneous attack and said it on several different talk shows, and she was either preceded or followed up by the libyan president saying the opposite. we knew it was terrorist attack. we warned the embassy about al qaeda's presence. they were looking to attack
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america and were ignored. they say the president was so insulted, he was positioned as a liar. but what he said was telling the truth. he prevented the investigation from moving forward almost as pun sh-fplt think about that. we can't investigate, the f.b.i. can't get off the ground. it is ambassador rice's statement against what the president of libya was saying because they thought we made him look bad to the rest of the world or american audience. >>gretchen: this was before the election, so it was paramount to this president that his talking point his campaign was giving out at the time still remain the same which was al qaeda was on the run. that was central to every single stump speech. if you have this attack and four americans die, maybe that doesn't gel. >>brian: it is amazing mitt romney didn't go after that for an investigation. if you want to be president and you think there's something here. he played a conservative, didn't pursue it. that proves one thing, big
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mistake on his part. number two is anyone who says this is politically driven or is against the president, that's out the window. if there is a nonpolitical season in this world in american politics, it's now. the mid terms aren't close and the president is not running. >>steve: mitt romney brought up the terrorism thing at one of those debates but candy crowley said sorry mr. romney you're wrong. mitt romney was right and the president was wrong. >>gretchen: everyone was shocked he never brought -- >>steve: he tried to make the best of it, and it blew up in his face, thanks to candy crowley's intervention. congressman jason chav i tz will be on the program later in the morning. here is yesterday talking about what we're finding now. >> mr. hicks became chief of mission. he has unique insight. when i went to libya about three and a half weeks after i was able to talk to him.
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he was not partisan. i think he was being suppressed a little bit and we need to hear from him exactly what happened and didn't happen that night. he was the chief of mission in libya when this went down. >>brian: sources close to the congressional investigation have been briefed on what thompson will say. on september 11 clinton and kennedy -- her assistant -- first tried to cut the counterterrorism bureau out of the loop as they and other obama administration officials weighed in on how to respond and characterize the benghazi attack. anyone who says she was hands off and not involved, this was counter to that. >>gretchen: in the meantime we have a democratic congressman captured yesterday giving this point of view. does this bring politics back into it? or is it like, well, we did this now because the republicans have done this in the past. listen to this. >> the talking points we had initially, the same thing that went to ambassador rice. ambassador rice, the comments she made were based on information she got and we got initially.
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things changed every day, every hour. it was no different than when colin powell was secretary of state and he had talking points about whether there were weapons of mass destruction in iraq. that was the information he had and he was embarrassed. >>brian: if you read steven hayes' column, the state department had a problem with the conclusion. the state department said why don't you change this. they wanted to change it again. victoria newland seemed to be behind that. >>steve: testimony will be wednesday on capitol hill. you'll see it on fox. if you were watching fox yesterday, we saw regarding the boston bombing there, of course, the dead bomber, his body is in a boston-area funeral home and his uncle who is from maryland -- >>brian: who called those guys losers and departed from his actions. >>steve: sadly for him, he is related to them. yesterday he prepared the body, washed and prepared the shroud in the muslim
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tradition. now he's trying to figure out where to bury the man because no funeral homes will touch him, aside from him, and no cemeteries will inter him. >>brian: can't we chuck him in the water. >>gretchen: i was thinking about cremation but i assume that's against muslim tradition. >>brian: why do we care? >>gretchen: be i don't know. the owner of graham put new hampshire, -- graham put new hampshire, the only funeral home that will take him, he said even though it was a horrible thing he did, he has to have mercy on a dead body. there were protesters outside the funeral home as well talking about the same message. here's that guy. >> why would you bury a terrorist? i'm here to bury a body that has to be buried. if i didn't know he was a terrorist, i've buried people who were murderers. >>steve: apparently the uncle is going to ask the
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city of cambridge to issue a burial permit. however the city manager of cambridge is saying to the family don't ask us. i do believe by state law if they are asked, they've got to give one. they simply don't want him in cambridge. >>gretchen: why won't he go back to russia? >>brian: it costs money. >>gretchen: guess how much money we're going to spend on this trial. >>brian: how much does it cost to put him in a body bag and throw him in the ocean? is there a discount on that? does anyone care about that >>gretchen: it's a tough situation. let us know what you think about that. in the meantime, a quick quiz for parents. the pacifier drops on the ground, so you wash it off in the sink; right? maybe you shouldn't. i'm laughing at all the things i did with pacifiers. new research in. >>brian: we added 165,000 jobs last month but stuart varney says the numbers don't add up. what that means to your bottom line. i do a lot of research on angie's list
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there's been a surge of part-time workers with nearly 280,000 americans now working fewer hours. >>gretchen: employers will be mandated to provide health insurance under obamacare. what will happen as a result of obamacare and jobs? stuart varney is here to weigh in. i know this is a topic of conversation across the country among small businesses because they're being faced with their health insurance people saying which choice do you want? consequently, they are doing what? >> they are moving people from full-time to part-time work, and they're not hiring the 50 -- the 51st employee because as soon as you've got 51 employees you've got to hire health insurance for all your employees. that was so obvious in friday's report. friday's job report pretty solid. nice number. >>steve: it looked good on the outside.
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>> it sent the dow to 15,000. if you dig, you see 278,000 people were pushed into part-time work which they did not want. that, i think, is a big negative. the average hours worked per week down. the average weekly income down. that's not positive stuff. >>steve: if you work more than 30 hours and you're in a company with more than 50 employees and they've got to provide it. we're going to start hearing more about job splitting. job splitting is where one person used to have a job. now they've got two people so they don't have to pay them full-time wages and health care. >> also worker sharing. you've got two restaurants close together. they want to get the average work week down below 30 hours. the employees don't want that. so they split the job with the other restaurant next door. work 15 hours here, 14 hours there. or just work less than 30 hours in any one place but split the job. that's how you keep your income up.
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that's the contortions you have to move through because obamacare is coming down the pike. >>gretchen: it not only affects the employee but all the employers. that's why we saw those waivers come in saying do i have to be a part of this program? >> you look further down the road as we get closer to the implementation of obamacare -- january 1, 2014 -- you're going to see more people pushed to part-time work and they don't want it. they want full-time. >>steve: we're going to be watching you exactly three hours from now on fox business. >> warren buffett is on. >>steve: warren is in the house. >>gretchen: follow his twitter. they are the invisible wounds of war. >> if i could trade traumatic brain injury for a single leg amputation, i'd probably do that in a second. >>gretchen: you heard that right. he would rather lose a limb than deal with the after shocks of concussions he received in iraq.
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up next, a closer look at this serious problem for our nation's military. >>steve: justin bieber attacked on stage. that's his piano rolling that's his piano rolling over. with scottrade's smart text, i can quickly understand my charts, and spend more time trading. their quick trade bar lets my account follow me online so i can react in real-time. plus, my local scottrade office is there to help. because they know i don't trade like everybody. i trade like me. i'm with scottrade. (announcer) scottrade. voted "best investment services company." [ male announcer ] pain not sitting too well? burning to feel better?
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>>gretchen: 24 minutes after the top of the hour. if you're just waking up, quick headlines. arlington national cemetery planning on adding more than 27,000 burial sites. this cemetery will run out of space by 2025 in nothing is done, however some critics say expansion would damage a stream and destroy civil-war era trees. >> a crazed fan attacks justin bieber on stage. [screaming] >>gretchen: it happened during his conference in
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dubai. security guards swarmed the stage and grabbed the young man knocking bieber's piano over in the mayhem. the pop star managed to break free and continued performing as if nothing happened. how did he get up there? not sure. >>brian: we hear a lot about the dangers of head injuries from sports like football and lacrosse but in the military concussion is often neglected or misdiagnosed as ptsd. in the last decade nearly 250,000 members suffered from concussions and long-term effects can be much worse than injuries we can actually see. major ben richards described his personal experience last night on "60 minutes." >> if i could trade traumatic brain injury for a single-leg amputation, i'd probably do that in a second. everyone that was in the vehicle walked away with a pretty significant concussion. my head hurt for about a week. i was nauseated for a week.
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literally couldn't see straight. >> what do you do when you have symptoms like that? >> go out again and fight the next day. there is folks out there that just accuse soldiers of being malingers of faking symptoms. that's like calling us a coward and i'm not. >> joining us is bill white, you heard this. what do you think? >> it tears your heart out. you hear what's wrong with you? you're faking this mental injury. the second guy you saw is one of the most heroic men on the planet. he has a brain injury because a bomb went off and shattered his brain inside. you can't see it. the invisible wounds of these two wars, there's 600,000 of those people we have to help. it is a national crisis. the first guy said he'd rather give his leg than
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have something wrong with his brain. and if we as a country don't start paying attention to this, there isn't going to go -- to be a military to fight for us. >>brian: absolutely. there's others saying they wish they could take their life for not getting treatment. let's take a look at the brain. you look at a brain with a concussion. that's significant. then you look at severe traumatic brain injuries. and that darker area is? >> that darker area of the brain is almost very similar to what you see with someone who has been in a coma for weeks. that shading that's no longer on the right side there is the effect of a traumatic brain injury. when this bomb goes 0 offer, every brain is different, every bomb debt nation is different. when the bomb goes off, a concussive shock wave goes out and it hits your head like bob woodruff. this is not good morning television to talk about it. most of these kids, you
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look at them and they look fine but they're not fine inside. they are committing suicide a day, smacking their wives, drinking. they're on 16 pills a day. they are being overprescribed. >>brian: that sergeant that opened fire and killed 16 innocent afghans, he was on what? >> 16 pills a day. that's the rumor. i can't confirm that. he's in the investigation. the kid was deployed three times. part of his foot was blown off, his mortgage was under water, he's on all these pills. why are we sending him into a combat zone? it's criminal. we should be loving on this young man because he's suffering, and we're not. that's what the intrepid falling heroes is trying to do. here's the good news. >>brian: you're building facilities and the defense department is going to run it. they give you the land. you build the place. >> a great public private partnership. we're raising another $100
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million. 100% of every penny goes to pay for administrative costs. 100%. we raised 30 million already. there are going to be nine of these centers. the one we built in bethesda is working, so we want to bring them all to the bases where pts suicide is through the roof where all the big bases where our troops are deployed. if we add all the money -- that's why fox news, i love roger ailes, rupert murdoch -- we could build these in mine months. arnold fisher is the builder. he has three in the works. they're going to be up in no time helping these kids. >>brian: you've got $30 million. you need $100 million. a lot of people are saying i only got five bucks. >> we'll take a dollar. you can go to make it visible.org or falling
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heroes fund with a "d." >>brian: and you're linked to us too, friends@foxnews.com. coming up straight ahead, would you rather be paid for overtime or get extra time off instead? there's a new proposal in washington that could change your work week right away. and it's a turbo charged workout. anna kooiman is taking the challenge this morning with 200 of her closest friends. find out what it's all find out what it's all about next. [ dylan ] this is one way to keep your underwear clean.
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these tanks would be used against a ground attack that could possibly come from syria about five miles in the direction you are looking. the israelis brought their iron domed missile defense system. this would be used to counter missiles that would come from hezbollah or lebanon or from the syrians themselves. this was highly effective during the gaza war. that is the primary threat here for missiles. that is what these airstrikes over the weekend were about. convoys of missiles that would come from iran into syria and were headed over land into lebanon. that's what the israelis did overnight in precision attacks to try and prevent those missiles from coming into hezbollah. the israelis say those missiles would be -- quote -- "game changing." they said they are willing to hit again. they did it in january to try and prevent russian-made air defense systems from coming to
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hezbollah. locals say each one of these israeli strikes is like pulling the trigger in a high stakes game of russian roulette. at some point syria may decide to defend. the president of syria said the next one i will respond . >>brian: thank you very much. egypt and the arab league as well as iran condemn the attacks. they unite against israel. now what? let's go to the rest of the headlines. an air show ends in horror when a plane plummets to the ground. it happened in an air show in spain. the pilot killed on impact. there were no passengers on board. 12 people watching the show hurt. no word on what caused the crash. >>gretchen: it could be a new way to help families
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balance their work life and career. a plan is pushed to help private sectors get extra time off instead of overtime pay. the option exists in the public sector. it is a proworker plan at that gives extra flexibility. opponents say it is a way to reduce overtime pay. the house will vote on the plan this week. >>steve: despite being attacked by a shark, a florida teenager says he's ready to hit the waves again. michael adler was surfing when he felt a sharp pain in his foot. he realized it was a shark and made a mad dash for the shore. adler says a mystery man who was in the military jumped into action to help save his life. >> he helped me out of the water and he used my surf leash as a tourniquet and wrapped my foot in a towel and elevated it until the paramedics came. >>steve: adler had 20 buick -- 20 bite wounds on
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his foot. he's okay now and says he could be back in the water in two months. >>gretchen: question for parents this morning: sucking on your kids dirty pacifier a good idea or gross? a new study revealing it may be the one of the most beneficial ways to clean it. researchers found infants whose parents sucked on their pacifiers developed fewer allergies than parents who typically rinsed them off instead. they also had lower rates of eczema and fewer signs of asthma. of all the things i did with pacifiers, i never put them in my mouth before i put them back in my kids'. maybe i should have. >>brian: the big debate with parents is thumb or pacifier. what's harder to break the kids of? >>gretchen: thumb. you can't cut it off. as much trouble as i had getting rid of the pacifier with my daughter when she told me at three when i took it away, mommy, all
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you have to do is go back to the drug store and get another one. a thumb, i think is more difficult. >>brian: we'll debate that. a wild day at talladega speedway. huge wreck with four laps to go. kyle bush flips his car and lands on ryan newman's car. both were vying for the lead at the time of the crash which opened the door for david reagan to take the checkered flag. the hockey version of crashes. fistfight, canadian at the center. nine players were given game misconduct and the referees handed out 236 penalty minutes. coming up on radio later, nothing but hockey fights with bret baier. anna kooiman will join us for awhile and michael goodman on kilmeade and friends.com. >>steve: a massive wildfire in southern
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california. officials say it appears to have been started by accident on the side of a highway. 15 houses damaged. meanwhile, what's going to be happening out there in ventura county, california, let's find out. there's maria. >> good morning. i have good news as far as parts of the southwest and the weather expected there as far as wildfire-fighting efforts. we're actually expecting generally cooler temperatures, calmer winds. conditions much better to help fire fighters out there. otherwise as we head eastward across parts of the southeast we're expecting a storm system to produce more areas of heavy rain across parts of kentucky, tennessee and into georgia. temperatures because of the storm system will be a little bit below average. 62 degrees for your high temperature in atlanta. 66 in memphis. in dallas, texas, a beautiful day. 80 degrees for your high temperature. this storm system is a slow mover. we actually already received a lot of heavy rain across parts of kentucky and tennessee over
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the weekend. some picking up over four inches of rain. there is a flooding concern out here. today that storm system could be bringing in areas of rain to similar parts of kentucky, tennessee and into parts of the carolinas and virginia. some of those areas could be picking up significant rainfall with up to four inches or even more expected over the next couple of days. advisories are posted. the other big concern that has been ongoing is the river flooding along the mississippi river, parts of the midwest still looking at flooding conditions right now. >>steve: maria, tell those ladies behind you they're next. okay? >> got it. i'll let them know. >> you're next. you guys ready? >> yeah! >>brian: they are a fiery bunch. >>gretchen: they're going to get their workouts done before 7 a.m. coming up, the sequester hitting everyone hard, even those trying to do good in america. next how one group is paying out of their own
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pocket to make sure seniors get the meals they need despite getting snubbed by the government. >>steve: good news for wayne newton. he no longer has to hide that gray hair. the new cure without color or surgery. or surgery. coming up next. what makes your family smile? backflips and cartwheels. love, warmth. here, try this. backflips and camm, ok!s. ching! i like the fact that there's lots of different tastes going on. mmmm! breakfast i'm very impressed. this is a great cereal! honey bunches of oats. i hear you crunching.
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>>brian: quick headlines now. so long hair dye. a european study claims there could be a cure for going gray. researchers say the graying process can be cured with a topical sunlight activated compound which reverses graying, which is good news only for wayne newton. >> starting today drug maker pfizer letting bushful -- bashful buyers buy viagra on-line. they will have to face a pharmacist to get it filled. summer is on its way which means it is time to fight the flab. outside on the plaza with over 200 people is anna kooiman with the latest fitness trend. what is it called, anna? >> it feels great. i'm so happy to have 200 of my friends here with celine johnson, celebrity fitness instructor. pay attention to these moves because you guys will be doing them in the next
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hour. hip-hop dancing, athletic drills rolled into one. this is the one and only celine johnson. she is the skraert -- creator and author of a "new york times" best-selling book. what is it about turbo that keeps people coming back? >> people love it because it's an experience. you don't feel like you're exercising. you have a great time. positive, uplifting. people have great dance moves and burn a ton of calories. >> it is more of a party environment. tell me how people who are pregnant or out of shape can do it? >> it is for a lot of different fitness levels. you can self-regulate. people can modify as they need to. they can make it easier or the superfit can take it to the next level. >> talk about how you feel.
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>> it makes a difference. >> it's turbo time. here we go. [music] >> do squats. >>brian: is this like a series of boxing, working the speed bag? she just ignores me. >>brian: and one guy. >>gretchen: i don't think they can hear you.
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>>brian: no. they're ignoring me. >> left leg goes back! >>brian: all right ladies. >> behind you! >>brian: anna is so into the workout. >> good job everybody! gretchen, brian and steve i hope you were paying attention. we'll have you guys out next hour. >>brian: you're not even out of breath. >> yes, i am. this is a classy aoufrd -- this is a class i used to teach back home in north carolina. they are not only from new york city. they're from nebraska, texas, florida, you name it, including this lady right here. [cheering] >>gretchen: let us know what you want steve and brian to put on during that workout. tweet me and let them know what they should wear. the power of the people,
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some towns doing what the government can't. they're fighting back on the sequester and paying out of their own pockets to save programs like meals on wheels. >>steve: how much time do you spend in traffic? >>brian: not enough. >>steve: the new report with the alarming amount of hours spent sitting in your car not going anywhere.
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>>gretchen: 53 minutes after the top of the hour. talk about the hunger games. meals on wheels which helps feed the nation's elderly facing the chopping block but there is a new community push to make sure
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seniors are delivered meals on time. it is another example of how americans are doing what the government apparently cannot. joining me from tallahasee, florida is the president and c.e.o. good morning to you, sir. i know this issue has been near and dear to your heart, this issue of making sure seniors do not go hungry. tell me about how the sequester hit your program in florida. >> we anticipated at the end of the year that we were going to have a problem, so in january we prepared by taking a line of credit so that we had money in the bank when it happened. we had heard we were going to take a 5% hit. it actually turned out to be 6.6%, which translated into over 10,000 meals and 52 clients that we would have to stop serving. that's really not in our charter. so we prepared ourselves for that situation.
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>>gretchen: how did you do that? a lot of people said look at these inspiring stories across the country where people and communities are getting involved to make sure this doesn't happen. what did you do? >> we have an amazing community in tallahasee. people here always seem to deliver when there's a need. we have volunteers that have been with us since elder care started in 1972. we're still delivering meals. and these volunteers stepped up, provided checks on a daily basis. told us that if their routes were cut that they would personally fund them themselves. if you've never delivered a meal, i guess you don't know the impact on these people who are homebound, income, not to theird fault or to their detriment, though, they don't have money to support themselves. so this daily meal is both a health check and a socialization for a lot of these people who can't get
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out of their homes. it's kind of a heart wrenching thing to see how they live. these volunteers believe in what they do. i think they would go to any length to make sure that these clients of ours do not miss a meal. >>gretchen: it's interesting to point out in just one community what you're doing there to make sure the sequester did not stop those meals. as a volunteer for meals on wheels myself, i understand exactly what you're talking about and that one on one interaction with the person you're helping can stay with you for a lifetime. thanks so much. mark balancedino out of -- mark baldino. donald trump will join us with the new staples rewards program
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nothing runs like a deere. visit your dealer or johndeere.com/howwerun to see the new signature series and 1 family tractors. >> gretchen: good morning, everybody. it's monday, may 6. i hope you had a fantastic weekend. i'm gretchen carlson. we now know who the benghazi whistle blowers are and what they want to say, like hillary clinton tried to cut out her intel folks. that is one of the accusations. the live he can inclusive details straight ahead. >> brian: no rest for the wicked, not one single cemetery -- sorry about that. just take a second. no rest for the wicked. not one single cemetery in the entire country will go bury the boston bomber. the details ahead. >> steve: rush limbaugh threatening to call it quits. we'll tell you what is going on.
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hour two for monday starts as soon as brian puts his mike on. >> brian: it's on. go. >> brian, you're fired. >> steve: those microphones disappear sometimes. >> brian: they do, sometimes. i didn't want to disturb anybody on the set. it's kind of interesting we used donald trump's voice to fire me when he'll be on in a matter of moments to fire me again. >> gretchen: he'll decide who he would have fired in the benghazi situation as well, which will be -- that's a tough call fort donald. would it be secretary of state hillary clinton or susan rice or somebody else? >> brian: i was at the mike tyson show, undisputed truth last night. that was the whole donald trump era. >> gretchen: we got it get to the headlines. israel boost rocket defenses as it braces for possible retaliation from syria. serial warning all options are on the table after the latest air strike on military targets.
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israel says it won't hesitate to stop chemical and other weapons from getting in the hands of terrorists. this as president obama comes under fire for failing to act there. >> the whole situation is becoming more and more expansesive and unfortunately, the red line that the president of the united states written was apparently written in disappearing ink. >> gretchen: senator john mccain says the u.s. should establish a safe zone and give them the right people. celebration turns tragic. a bride to be and four of her friends killed when their limo go up in flames. the trunk caught fire. three women escaped, one climbed through the part attention and out the front. five others were trapped inside. all of the women were nurses and they all died. >> two of my co-workers. two nice nurses, they did good
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work. >> gretchen: all of the survivors are in intensive care. investigators still trying to figure out what caused the fire. there may be no place for tamerlan tsarnaev. cemeteries refuse to go bury him and the funeral home who took his body is under fire. the owner is defending himself. >> situations like this, i'm not burying a terrorist. i'm burying a dead body. i can't separate one from the other. and he's not a terrorist anymore. he's dead. but some people keep hanging on to that. i can't pick and choose. >> gretchen: he plans to ask city and state officials to provide a plot. we'll continue to update you on that story. could rush limbaugh be changing mike? the war of words between him and the ceo of the radio station. he made remark about sandra
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fluke. w abc said it lost advertisers following the comments. he said all of the advertisers have been replaced. and those are your headlines. >> steve: meanwhile, congress is bracing for some explosive testimony later this week as the whistle blowers, at least three in the benghazi attacks, testify. doug is live in washington with what we know this morning. >> good morning. it looks like at least some of the focus here is going to be on former secretary of state hillary clinton and the role she may have played in this. at the very least, we're likely to learn a lot more about what happened on the day of the attack in benghazi that killed four americans, including the awe ambassador, chris stevens. that's bass we're hearing from those who were actually on the ground in libya, including the deputy chief of mission there, gregory hicks. he says his jaw dropped when he saw then u.n. ambassador susan rice claim on five sunday morning talk shows that the assault was simply a protest that got out of control, not a coordinated terrorist attack. here is what hicks already told congressional investigators.
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quote, even on sunday morning, i could have been called and the phone call could have been hey, greg, ambassador rice is going so say, blah, blah, blah, and i could have said no, that's not the right thing. that phone call was never made. >> the real question is, how can the other statements be true and who changed them to something that nobody believes is true today? >> they certainly weren't accurate. i don't know what the process was there. but absolutely, they were false, they were wrong. there were no protests outside of the benghazi compound there. this was a deliberate and strategic attack on the consulate there. >> fox news learned that a state department whistle blower will testify that clinton and an aide tried to keep the department's own counterterrorism unit out of the loop in the aftermath of the attack. these hearings begin on wednesday. the administration has long
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maintained that there has already been a thorough investigation, but these hearings promise to cover new ground. steve, gretchen and brian. >> steve: thank you very much. let's dial in donald trump who joins us every monday morning. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> steve: doug there, that's pretty damning of hillary clinton where it sounds like she and a key aide tried to cut out the state department's counter did she intelligence unit and tried to characterize the attacks contrary to what they were being told on the ground. >> well, i think benghazi actually is becoming a much bigger deal now than before the election. they did their job in one sense, that's getting somebody elected because they didn't want to make this a big deal. they wanted to play it down. they wanted to play it down big league. we had hoped the so-called rebels, wonderful rebels that everybody talks about, they went in and they killed our ambassador and other of our people. it's disgraceful. what they have done very successfully is they've delayed
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this until after the election. so the election goes through. the president is elected. this would have been very, very embarrassing after all the help we gave and then they kill our people. this would have been very embarrassing before the election. so in a sense from a democratic sense, from a democratic party sense, from a getting the president-elected sense, you certainly have to say, they did their job. they got him elected. >> brian: the c.i.a. came to the conclusion, they said what the conclusion was and then the state department objected. are you disappointed that the c.i.a. would acquiesce like that? i'm wondering how many other reports have been sanitized for political gain. >> it sounds like everybody really did the same thing. it was a party line. it wasn't one person. it was a party line. and they were sort of saying it was a protest. it was just a protest, not a big deal. people then died and you know, the amazing thing, it really resonated -- it didn't resonate with the voters. it really didn't. i think part of that was mitt
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romney, who, as we all know and he's a wonderful man, but in that third debate, yes make a big deal out of it. >> gretchen: that was the most shocking thin of the entire election cycle. >> i almost fell out of my seat. i can tell you. >> gretchen: i did, too. >> this was a big deal to me and it was a big deal to some people. but he sort of almost acknowledged the president as doing the right thing. he's doing a good job. >> brian: he did not go down swinging. mitt romney did not swing at all in the final lap. >> gretchen: i think what happened in the preceding debate when it was brought up that the president never called it terror and candy crowley said, yes, he did, then i think mitt romney possibly got scared at how the media would react to him because remember, in that press conference right after benghazi happened, the media made the whole story about mitt romney and the way he responded. so maybe that was part of it. who would you fire over this, or do you have enough information yet? hillary clinton, susan rice, u.n. ambassador or president obama? >> it depends from which
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perspective. obama and i'm the democrats, you sort of say they did a good job, they got him elected. they played it down so much that it wasn't a big dealful i'd like to see what happens. i'll say it again, it's really a much bigger deal right now than it was a number of months ago before the election. that's both a good and bad thing. the bad thing is somebody got elected and this could have really had a huge impact on the election had it been brought up and had they made a bigger deal out of it. >> brian: especially because donald trump, the same policy in syria. add hoc, improv vagal, no mast -- of propheciesal. a red line that the president ad libbed at the microphone, that even his own advisors were shocked he put it down, when the line is crossed, we have no back up? now we look bad not as an administration, as a country. >> if you look at what's going on in iraq, if you look at what's going on anywhere that we're involved, we're a joke, we're a laughing stock. let's face it.
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>> steve: it looks like this could have lasting impact on the presidential candidate city of hillary. we'll find out more. the unemployment number on friday came out, was 7.5%. and that looks better from 7.6. but here is the interesting thing. the number of part-time workers increased to 278,000. now there are close to 8 million people who are working part-time who would rather be working full time. it looks to some like a lot of these people are getting fewer hours. they have a full tile job. they're -- full-time job. they're being told under 30 hours because of this crazy obamacare. >> i listened to stewart tutor who is terrific and i watched him on your show this morning and it was very interesting to me. but it's something that is absolutely taking effect. you want to be under 30, you want to do certain things. you want only a certain number of hours per employee. all of a sudden, you don't have the cost.
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people that had wonderful, full tile jobs and went to work at one place for years are working part-time jobs and you saw that in the numbers that came out last week. >> gretchen: how is it affecting you, donald? you run a huge corporation with a lot of employees. are you hands on with it? >> i'm very hands on with it. it depends on the size of the company. if you have a company and you start getting less than 30 people or less than 50 people, all of a sudden people are look, how many people do we have in the company? they have never looked at things like this before. i think it's a very, very negative thing. the big problem with obamacare, that's one of the problems, one of the very big problems is the complexity. nobody even knows, even really intelligent well-run companies, they don't know what they're doing. they don't know what they're looking at or what it means. the regulations are so stifling. as you reported a few weeks ago, thousands of people have been hired by the government just to interpret what's going on. so it's a mess. it could fall because it's too complicated. people don't know what they're doing. >> brian: thank goodness the
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country is distracted with "celebrity apprentice" and not focused on obamacare. >> that's very good news. >> brian: last night, it's getting down to the wire. the final four. mary lou henner's team lost, and she paid the price, as fox casino sponsored the remake of a suite at barclay center. here is how it sounded. >> as project manager, don't you think you're at tremendous risk? >> i think people are trying to get rid of me because they think how strong i am because there am hasn't been one task -- >> i know how strong you are and i think you're great and i'm ultimately the one. they didn't like certain things and they really liked their team much better. you're the project manager. mary lou, you're fired. >> brian: she is not happy with you or her co-workers. >> i'm going to take mary lou down to atlantic city or maybe las vegas and she's going to be a card counter. >> gretchen: no doubt. she's got that -- >> she's got one of the great memories of the world.
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she's also, by the way, a terrific person. she did a great job. >> steve: they're trying to portray foxwood in a great like and she was trying to portray nothing says party like chess. >> i actually spoke to her about that. i said, are you into the world of cards with your great ability and your great memory? and she actually told me it was a different kind of a memory. so i don't know. maybe it wouldn't work. who knows. >> brian: she accused trace adkins of being the new gary busey. >> i don't think trace is into that. we love gary, but i don't think trace was happy with that. >> gretchen: have a great week. we'll talk to you next week. >> thank you very much. >> steve: 13 minutes after the top of the hour. the the -- brand-new hope for this hero doctor who helped take he osama bin laden. >> gretchen: and the video you'll see all day. a little goat's desperate a big fat pig.
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>> steve: get off my back. >> brian: we're out of cute people and now have cute animals , and i have a massive heart attack right in my driveway. the doctor put me on a bayer aspirin regimen. [ male announcer ] be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. go talk to your doctor. you're not indestructible anymore.
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>> brian: it's been over two years since the raid that brought down osama bin laden and without this man's help, he would still be alive and plotting against america at the very moment. pakinstani doctor worked with the c.i.a. to help track him down. his reward? a 33-year prison sentence for treason against pakistan and some hard punishment in the
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interim. but this morning, there may be new hope for this hero doctor. joining us now is the couple who have never met him, but continue to push for his release because they're great americans with their campaign. welcome back to the show. >> good morning. >> brian: first off, robert, where do we get the new hope from? >> i've been having regular conversations with sources in pakistan, particularly in conjunction with the doctor's legal office. and despite the setback of what we thought was going to be a hearing for prosecution to put on their case on may 2, being postponed to june 13, the attorneys say that the mood and the attitude is good. the attorneys are saying that they really like a new judge that was brought in and apparently the meeting that secretary kerry had with pakinstani leadership in brussels right around the first or second of may really did focus on the concern about the
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doctor that all americans are currently expressing and pretty aggressive talk about setting him free. >> brian: i i don't last time we spoke you were heading to the oscars with "zero dark thirty," being the hot movie. do you sense people across the aisle feel the way you feel? >> what was great about our oscar campaign is that everyone in hollywood saw it and, in fact, jessica chastain and jason clark of the movie, "zero dark thirty," that portrayed a character that was a compilation of the character, that pinpointed osama bin laden, they were all over the red carpet talking about him. so we got a lot of people in hollywood talking and now we have a new campaign out that's aimed toward the military and the military time. >> brian: the military time is responding how? >> the whole concept here is who are the people that are most in harm's way looking out for the welfare and the best interest of our country? and that's the men and women
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that are in our military. so we took a full page ad out similar to what we did in the reporter. but in military times and all editions, army, navy, air force action marine, coast guard, every single edition, which will reach 275,000 enlisted men or women and their families today that basically asks them if they were captured, what would they rather be? would they rather be captured and tortured or freed and released? and this poll is available on free afriti.com. it's available in all of the times editions and there has been tremendous amount of coverage. >> brian: the whole country should be united in support of you guys, democrats, republicans and all around the world. thanks so much for what you're doing and thank you for your time this morning. >> thanks for having us. >> brian: straight ahead, it's a stunning new way to fight crime. treating gangs like insurgents
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>> gretchen: 24 minutes after the top of the hour. time for news by the numbers. 150 million. that's how much a new bill gives organizations so they can help illegal immigrants become citizens. it's scheduled to run through 2018. next, 38. that's how many hours the average american wasted last year stuck in traffic. a new study revealing people who live in congested los angeles, california, of course, have it the worst. finally, 175.3 million. that's how much irene made at the -- ironman 3 made this weekend, making it the number one movie in america.
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steve? >> steve: have you ever gotten a phone call like this? debt collector stopping at nothing to bug you. >> only thing i can do is warn you to call me or face legal action. or face legal action. >> steve: okay. so when should you react to a call like that and when should you simply hang up? joining us is the director of consumer education for credit.com, jerry. good morning to you. with a name like debtwhiler, you're an expert at debt. >> yes. i heard from a collector, too, myself. so this is something that can happen to anyone, whether you pay your bills, you're responsible or not, you may hear from a debt collector. >> steve: absolutely. i've gotten those phone calls. they're a little scary. here is an e-mail from a woman. today i received a letter in the mail from a collection agency
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stating that a dvd i rented five years ago has gone to collection. the total that i owe? about 9 bucks. am i going to get a bad credit score for an unpaid bill of 8.97? help. help her. >> yeah, that's a consumer -- the problem with these little collection accounts, they can hurt your credit just adds much as a -- as much as a large one. eight dollars, $800, it's all very negative. it stays on your credit report for seven years. >> steve: oh, man. so you better address it immediately. you've got some tips. first of all, never ignore, address the issue as soon as you find out about it. right? >> exactly. so for example, medical bills slips through the crack, a co-pay. sometimes they will let you pay it and not report it to the credit reporting agency. make sure you ask them, will you report it. if they report it, it's negative. it doesn't matter whether you pay it or not. >> steve: also, pick your battles. if you can't resolve something with a credit agency, they're
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going to come after you, aren't they? >> yeah. you get in a fight with your cell phone company over a bill that you don't think you should have to pay or some newsance fee on an account and say i'm not going to pay it, and they say fine, we'll send it to collections and guess what? they win 'cause they have the power to destroy your credit for seven years. sometimes it makes sense to pay the bill and then you can try to pursue them and get a refund. but try to keep it off your credit if you can. >> steve: and that leads us to the final point and that is monitor your money, or your credit. stay on top of your account history and check to see whether or not an agency has reported you. >> exactly. 'cause one of the things we hear a lot are consumers who find out about a collection account when they go to refinance their mortgage. they go to get a loan and they discover it's on there. you get your free credit report. we give consumer has free credit score at credit.com. you need to stay on top of this because if it's on there, you want to address it as quickly as possible. >> steve: we refinanced a couple of years ago and my wife found
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out there was a credit card still open from 20 years earlier that wasn't even being sent to our house! >> yeah. those kinds of mistakes we see them all the time. that's why it's important to both monitor your credit as well as talk to these guys. if you get the letter in the mail, even if you're not sure if it's yours, ask for a documentation of the debt. >> steve: you got to deal with it. thank you very much for helping us today. >> thank you. >> steve: all right. 28 minutes after the top of the hour. it's a new way to fight crime. treating gangs in america like insurgents are treated in afghanistan. meet the guy behind it, a green beret turned state trooper coming up. and one in five americans will develop skin cancer in their lifetime. are you at risk? this machine will show you in 40 seconds arigato!
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>> gretchen: what a bummer for the -- those are big deals. people come from all over to watch them and people like to watch them on tv as well. didn't work that time. >> brian: i just hope everyone is out of the building. >> steve: they probably were. but now it might be too dangerous to send somebody back in to rig the place again. >> gretchen: did you happen to catch "60 minutes" last night? these two guys were feature examined they are former people who served in our military and in iraq, afghanistan, et cetera, and they are coming home and using the tactics they learned to fight insurgency there back here on the home front with regard to gangs. it was a fascinating look into how they're trying to make their neighborhoods a better and safer place for their kids as they walk to school with them and try to put themselves into the society so that they can be trusted members, that the people who live there will trust them to tell them what's going on. >> steve: take a look. >> gang members won't want to operate in a failed area, a
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failed community or failed state. they know they can live off the passive support of the community, where the community is not going to call or engage the local police. we had this concept of what we would call a pilot team where you would hand pick select troopers, give them specific training and embed them in the community. it's about winning over the community. they become our eyes and ears and the flood gates have opened for criminal information that we can go after now. my phone is ringing constantly every day either text messages, they'll send me pictures of where they located guns. they'll send me e-mails of who is selling drugs. we drive off. we've given them a template on how to control the town independently. >> brian: steve, i want you to finish. >> steve: here is a sound bite. >> brian: no, but it's good because we're not leaving that area. we're at war. everybody knew we were leaving, so it was a bit of a risk. these law enforcement officials who have a military background, they live there.
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so the people know if i turn somebody in, they're not eventually going to be leaving. >> steve: so what they're doing is using these military tactics that we have refined in afghanistan there in springfield, massachusetts and it's working. violent crime is down 25%. drug arrests are down, something like 50%. and as for the bad guys and in the beginning of the segment they told the story about how in front of one housing project, a guy would just pull up on a motorcycle with an ak-47 slung over his shoulder, but that was in springfield, massachusetts. the bad guys either wound up going to jail or leaving, or getting jobs. here is a fellow at a town hall meeting talking about how things have changed from his point of view because he has looked down the barrel of a gun more than once. >> i've been robbed 55 times that the police know about. but not lately. this concept does work. it sort of flushes them out. i don't know where they go.
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i hope they get help. some of them are going to work and some are going to jail and some leave. >> that's right. >> brian: 55 times. how much stuff does he have on him? >> gretchen: this is an amazing story because so much of the time we're telling you about people coming back from serving in iraq or afghanistan and can't find jobs. the unemployment rate for members of military are high, or much higher than the average rate here in this country. you think about the skills and the discipline and the organization and the commitment and perseverance, i could go on and on with words that describe members of our military and now they're coming home and bringing what they learned on the battlefield to help our own communities. i found it fascinating. >> brian: as i said, the next stop should be brownsville. postmen refuse to go to brownsville and deliver the mail. brooklyn, because it's so bad and so dangerous. so let's try it there. what the heck. >> steve: why not? >> gretchen: let's check out your headlines now.
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candlelight vigil for the referee who died after being punched by a player over a call. his brain became swollen. he fell into a coma for a week. his daughter says she hopes the tragedy will prevent something like this from happening again. >> they should think before they do something stupid. i just don't want another family to suffer as we have been suffering. >> gretchen: 17-year-old who punched him is in juvenile detention on assault charges. investigators now considering upping those charges since portillo, unfortunately, passed away. >> steve: air show ends in horror when a plane suddenly plummets to the ground and watch this. it explodes in -- look at that fire ball. it slammed into a building. it happened during an air show in spain. the pilot killed on impact. there were no passengers on board. 12 people watching the show were hurt. no word on what caused the
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crash. a family begging for help after their 83-year-old grandmother disappeared from reagan national airport in washington. >> she's by herself. she's hungry. she's cold. she doesn't know where she is. i'm concerned she doesn't know how to call us, how to reach us or find us. i'm concerned she doesn't know we're look for her. >> steve: she was supposed to be taken off her flight in a wheelchair and brought to relatives at a meeting point. she was seen coming off the flight and at the taxi line on a surveillance tape. no response yet from the airline. >> brian: let's be friends. it's play time for a baby goat and a giant pig. the goat leaping on and off the pig resting in the hay. even though the goat keeps sliding off, he doesn't give up. what are the rubber ants?
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they never gave up either. just keeps on hopping back o. we're going to be covering this story as the pig wakes up this morning and checks his spine. >> steve: meanwhile, we've got extreme weather, part of the lone in georgia washed away. some areas got up to six inches of rain yesterday. will it be raining today? maria molina on the streets of new york city where currently it is a little breezy, but dry. >> yeah. it's dry, breezy and very chilly right now. you're talking current temperature in new york city at 50 degrees. you factor in the breeze and i have to say, it feels like the 40s out here. very unusual for the month of may. still continuing to feel like winter out here a little bit across new york city and the rest of the northeast. that storm system bringing in areas of heavy rain across kentucky, tennessee. more than four inches of rain like you mentioned. the storm system continuing to bring the rain. right now it's a slow mover and now we'll head to gretchen.
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>> gretchen: all right. here we are outside. did you know that one person dies every hour of melanoma in the united states? now it's not only skin cancer awareness month for may, but today is melanoma monday. dermatologist doctor is here to help us out this morning. >> good morning. even on a cloudy day, we still have to be aware. >> gretchen: i was just going to say, i'm freezing out here. i'm not sure we have to worry about the sun today, but i'm wrong, right? >> every day, all yearlong. melanoma is one of the highest cancer killers in women and actually everyone, 25 to 29 years old. one person dies in this country every hour of malignant melanoma. this is something on the skin that we can see and help prehave not. now we have a new device that can help me as a dermatologist identify and diagnose a skin cancer like melanoma early when it's 98 plus% curable. this is really important. >> gretchen: when we go to the dermatologist, if you have a body scan for moles, maybe once a year, typically you use that
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device. >> yes nonresponsive this takes it -- >> this takes one step more. you should have that every year. we'll identify lesions that look suspicion to our eye and then mark those and then scan them. now, this is painless. it doesn't cut into the skin and in less than a minute, it can give me more information that i can't see with my naked eye. >> gretchen: earlier you did one of the moles on my arm. i think they want to try and see this live. it takes 40 seconds. >> yes. what i would do is do the screening, i'd identify a spot and i found one on you that would be interesting to get more information about. and what we'll do is we just spray it with a little alcohol, just wet the area. then the scan will go on the skin. and it will go right on the skin. i'll hold it while you do that. just like this. and in 40 seconds, you'll see
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the images come up on the screen that will show how deep it goes into the skin, the parameters of it, and gives me extra information and then a score of high or low. yours came back low, which is what i would hope. that's really great news. even if it comes back high, that grade will give me more information about how deep it goes, whether or not it needs to be removed, and even how much of a margin i should take. so with this, i have been able to prioritize around the lesions that i decide to remove to either remove them or not remove them. >> gretchen: there was my mole right there. >> exactly. low disorganization. that means it's more of a typical benign lesion that we can continue to watch. if i have a level of suspicion, i'll still remove it. it's giving me more information, not deciding for me. the sad news is nearly 40% of people don't even think they're at risk of skin cancer. three out of four people don't get skin cancer screenings.
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so just a simple screen that's over the body, no poke, no prodding. just a good light and it can save a life. >> gretchen: it's tough to get guys to the doctor, but taupe get a body scan. here are things people can do to prevent sun damage. use spf 30 or higher. reapply. you say there is no such thing as waterproof. >> it's water resistant. reapply every two hours. more often if swimming or sweating. the sun doesn't really care what you're doing. if you're outdoors, even incidental exposure is cumulative. five sunburns will increase and double your risk for melanoma. no indoor tanning. >> gretchen: thank you so much. >> thank you. >> gretchen: coming up, a car company has come up with a revolutionary new way that headlights work, but the government is putting the brakes on it. more proof you're living in a regulation nation coming up. first, born on this day in 1960, this actress starred in "the
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bible." who is she? she's been on the show. be the first to e-mail us with the correct answer and we'll send you steve and brian -- see steve and brian in a leotard. that's coming up on don't misswi it he can focus o. he doesn't have to worry so much about his mortgage, groceries, or even gas bills. kick! kick... feel it! feel it! feel it! nice work! ♪ you got it! you got it! yes! aflac's gonna help take care of his expenses. and us...we're gonna get him back in fighting shape. ♪ [ male announcer ] see what's happening behind the scenes at ducktherapy.com.
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angie's liat angie's list, i autyou'll find reviews. and checout our risk-free guarantee. on everything from home repair to healthcare written by people just like you. if you want to save yourself time and avoid a hassle, go to angie's list. at angie's list, you'll find the right person to do the job you need. and you'll find the right person quickly and easily. i'm busy, busy, busy, busy. thank goodness for angie's list. from roofers to plumbers to dentists and more, angie's list -- reviews you can trust. oh, angie? i have her on speed dial. >> steve: the makers of the audi car said let there be light with the release of their front headlights that can light around corners can help people see when driving. the national highway and
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transportation safety administration is saying not so fast, audi. sit down. here to explain the regulation blocking that and more of this week's most ridiculous red tape regulations, strategist nicky neily. good morning to you. >> good morning. thanks for having me. >> steve: so audi has come up with a great way so when you're driving, the lights light up around the corner without causing people who are oncoming to get the glare and yet our government says no, you can't use these innovative headlights because why? >> because a 1968 law governing headlights actually was put in place before the national highway and transportation board was even formed says you must have a high beam and a low beam. i'm sorry, we're discouraging the innovation. >> steve: no kidding. so because -- this is a particular kind of light bulb that is available on the a 8, a crazy car, we're not gog have
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that here. >> no, only in europe. european car manufacturers banded together to try and lobby the nhtsa and they said this is really not a priority for us. so sorry. >> steve: yeah, sorry. meanwhile, you can ship red licorice to california, but only if there ises a -- this might kill you with cancer label on it, right? >> yes. because of prop 65, which is a toxic substance control act, you have to label everything that california deems a toxin. but as it turns out, this is a substance, red dye number 40, that is f.d.a. has said over and over again, this is one of the most widely studied coloring agents is completely fine and safe. so this is something that california in its i if i nate wisdom -- infinite wisdom knows more than the f.d.a. >> steve: it's now safe to get meat prosecute italy. who knew in the '60s there was a disease problem and next thing you know, they put the kabash on it, didn't they?
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>> yeah, a small victory for regulation nation. one tiny regulation being rolled back. we haven't been able to access the majority of italian cold cuts, salamis for many years because of this regulation. there have been a couple meats that have been able to get in or other large italian manufacturers who have paid for a agent to be on site full time inspecting their facility. >> steve: wouldn't that be great to be department of agriculture inspector in italy. my next life, that's what i want. thank you very much for joining us today. >> thank you. >> steve: straight ahead, cemeteries refusing to bury the boston bomber. but the funeral home that took his body says it's just a body. is it fair to criticize him? the head of massachusetts funeral director is coming up next. first, on this date in 1976,
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>> gretchen: answer to the aflac question of the day, roma downey >> brian: accused boston bomber, tamerlan tsarnaev, quickly went from america's most wanted to least wanted. only one funeral homeowner was willing to keep his body, now no cemetery is willing to bury him. >> gretchen: the funeral homeowner says it's not fair to criticize him. >> when you say help to bury, why would you help to bury a terrorist? i'm helping to bury a body. nothing to do with a terrorist. if i didn't know he was a terrorist, i bury people here that were murderers. >> gretchen: joining us now is the spokesman for massachusetts funeral directors, former
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massachusetts funeral director himself. good morning, david. where do you find yourself on this side of the equation, 'cause it's such a tough call. nobody wants to take the body. nobody wants to bury this guy. i guess this gentleman is the one guy who stood up and said, i'll take him. >> i think it's a very tough situation. it's something that whenever there is a murder or mass incident like this and there is a body involved, usually when it comes time to take care of that person, everything becomes pretty quiet and things are taken care of undercover and quietly and no one really talks about it. i think this is a very, very unique case and i think, unfortunately, the body was removed from the medical examiner's office maybe prematurely before all the logistics of what need to be done were put in place. i think the funeral director now finds himself in a very difficult situation. >> brian: you think this guy was naive in taking the body, thinking he could do this quietly? >> i don't know whether he was
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naive or he didn't quite completely understand the media scrutiny this case had. again, it's very unique. this never happened before. this is usually something that when a death occurs -- >> brian: because he's a muslim? there has been horrible people that died. >> i don't think it has anything to do with the fact that he's a muslim. i think it has to do with the fact that the media has been on top of this and has not let it go. it's remained an ongoing story. people want to know the cause of death. they want to know what is going to happen to his body. if you look at past cases, that's not what's happened. what's happened is when the person has deceased, the media will follow the story and say that the family has taken charge of the body and all that's being done privately. this is very, very unique. >> gretchen: it's a tough situation. now nobody knows where he will be buried, if anywhere. that's the next chapter. thanks so much for your time, thank you.
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>> you're welcome. >> brian: the referee punch bid a teen soccer player has died. what happens to that kid now? >> gretchen: plus, he's been trying to get answers on what happened in benghazi from the very beginning. senator jason chaffetz top of the hour. don't miss it ♪ [ lighter flicking ] [ male announcer ] you've reached the age where giving up isn't who you are. ♪ this is the age of knowing how to make things happen. 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
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>> gretchen: good morning, everybody. today is monday, may 6. hope you're gonna have a great day. i'm gretchen carlson. thanks for sharing your time. the white house wouldn't listen to them, but maybe america will now. the benghazi whistle blowers about to make their stories public claiming hillary clinton, former secretary of state, tried to cut out the intel folks in the state department. >> steve: meanwhile, no rest for the wicked. not one single cemetery in the entire country is willing to bury the boston bomber. details straight ahead. >> brian: and it could be math knew mcconaghey's toughest challenge yet. the actor who has a hard time putting a shared on, has a hard time getting dressed. "fox & friends" starts now
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♪ >> brian: that's not exactly the friendliest surface you could be bouncing up and down on these days. that's the turbo workout that anna kooiman is introducing to everybody around the world watching "fox & friends" today. >> steve: i just saw an e-mail from somebody that said it looks like a scene from the movie "fame," all that's missing is anna has to climb up on the top of a new york city cab and wave her arms around, which could be coming up this hour. >> gretchen: those burpees, if you ever had to do them, they're not fun. they never get easier no matter how many times you have done them. >> steve: hats off to the 200 people who simmibled early this morning to show us this new fitness craze and brian and i
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are -- gretch, are you going out as well? >> i think burpees in this dress with these heels could be fascinating and deadly. so we'll see. >> steve: okay. >> brian: they are better off wearing skates. >> gretchen: no doubt. let's do some news for you. israel now boosting rocket defenses as it braces for possible retaliation from syria. syria warning all options are on the table after the latest air strike on military targets. israel says it won't hesitate to stop chemical and other weapons from getting in the hands of terrorists. this as president obama now coming under fire from senator john mccain for failing to act. >> the whole situation is becoming more and more expansesive and unfortunately, the red line that the president of the united states written was written in disappearing ink. >> gretchen: senator mccain said the u.s. should establish a safe zone and give weapons to,
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quote, the right people. who they are, tough to find. night of celebration turns tragic. a bride to be and four of her friends killed when their limo goes up in flames. nine women were headed to a bachelorette party near san francisco when the trunk caught fire. three women escaped through the back door. one climbed through the partition and out the front door. five others trapped inside, killed. all of the women were nurses. >> two of my co-workers. two nice nurses. they did good work. >> gretchen: all of the survivors are in intensive care. investigators still trying it figure out what caused the fire. a florida teen says he's ready to hit the waves again. he was surfing when he felt a sharp pain on his foot. it was a shark. he made a mad dash for shore. he said a mystery man in the military jumped into action to help him.
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>> he helped me out of the water and he used my surf leash as a tourniquet and wrapped my foot up in a towel and elevated it until the paramedics came. >> gretchen: he had 20 bites on his foot. one went all the way to the bone. he's okay now and should be back in the water in eight weeks. you know this celebrity for being half naked all the time. here he is in the movie "magic mike". >> one, two, three four. >> gretchen: looks like matthew mcconaghey found motivation to keep his shirt on. the actor seen here modeling his new line of men's clothing called jkl, a portion of the sales will benefit a charity. it supports after school fitness and wellness programs at inner city schools. he still looks good with his shirt on, too. >> brian: wonder what he's thinking about. >> steve: yeah. nice clothing to slouch.
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coming up on wednesday on capitol hill, we're going to hear more testimony about benghazi, this time a couple of people who were designated by the government as whistle blowers. we'll tell what you we know about them so far. first up, gregory hicks is going to be testifying. deputy chief of mission at the u.s. embassy in libya at the time of the benghazi terrorist attack, he is the highest ranking official after the ambassador was killed over there. he also made it very clear that it was terrorism from the get go. >> brian: may have been one of the last people to talk to the ambassador. we also have a former marine, deputy coordinator for operations, mark thompson. he's at the counterterrorism bureau. it's interesting because he was not solicited, according to the report, from hillary clinton about his input on the after action report. >> gretchen: eric nordstrom who is calling himself not a whistle blower, because you saw him testify. he said look, we called and called for more security and it
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simply never came. somebody who has not let this story go away is representative jason chaffetz, congressman from utah. he's been trying to get answers from the very beginning, member of the house oversight committee and he's our guest this morning. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> gretchen: so now we're going to have these hearings coming up on wednesday. so what are we going to hear that is new information and do you believe this was a cover-up? >> well, we were certainly misled at every step of the way. to hear it from the administration, there is nothing wrong here, the accountability review board looked at this and there is nothing wrong and and what you're doing is political. what we have established is despite 4 1/2 months after the tragic thing, secretary clinton still came to the united states congress and testified that the people on the ground made the decisions about security. that never happened. we heard yesterday when darrell issa was able to release some information from the chief of mission there, mr. gregory hicks, that there were serious ramifications for us not releasing -- or for those sunday
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talk shows, that there was a reason why the f.b.i. took three weeks to get there. the president of libya had actually gone to benghazi and he made statements that he believed that there was a coordinated, well-planned attack, yet susan rice went throughout and totally tore that apart. that caused a huge delay in our ability to bring the terrorists to justice. and then the other thing that i would anticipate that we hear is we have consistently heard from the white house itself, from the secretary of defense, from others, the accountability review board, have all said that there were no military outfits could have have been brought to bear in 25 hours and we're going to find there were military outfits, there was military personnel. they were told to stand down. >> brian: are you saying that admiral pickerring and muller are complicit because they did the review board? are you saying that the c.i.a. is complicit because they allowed their talking points to be edited? >> it seems to me that the intelligence community actually did a fairly good job in this, from what we've been able to seem this is not the last
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hearing that i think the united states congress will hear. these are two or three very brave people who are stepping up at great personal risk to tell the world what they saw in their own firsthand account. these are not political appointees. these are career foreign service people and i think that's what makes -- >> brian: what about admiral muller and pickerring? why would they sacrifice their reputation for a report that isn't accurate? >> the media has to accurate. the media by and large has really dropped the ball on this. they have not asked tough questions. this is a panel that was appointed by secretary clinton, yet she wasn't even int this re. so i think what you're going to find over the course of time, that there are a lot of holes in what they reported because they said the communication worked perfectly. they said there was no military. i think we're gog hear from people who were on the ground there in libya who will testify as to their perspective on what really happened. >> steve: let's take a look. here is a preview of what mr. gregory hicks is going to be talking about.
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he says, quote, i think everybody in the mission thought it was a terrorist attack from the beginning. i never reported a demonstration. i reported on an attack on the consulate. chris' last report, if you want to say, his final report is, greg, we are under attack. so that's something from him. also at fox news, we've got a story this morning regarding hillary clinton. clinton and a key aide tried to cut the state department's counterterrorism bureau out of the chain of reporting, a decision making and how to characterize the attack as well. she's made it sound like she really had very little to do with it. sounds like she was doing her best to get around that, right? >> well, we have in the state department, a counterterrorism unit. there is a unit called the foreign emergency support team. if you look up on the web site, this is the one and only group that we have that is the inner agency coordinator for disasters like this. if there is a hostage situation, if we're in peril in one of our embassies, they take great pride
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in that they have trained and prepared and have personnel in order to engage in this. one of the questions that i think the congress has is, why is it that secretary clinton never turned that button on? they weren't invited to the meetings. they weren't stood up. when the uss cole was bombed, when the nairobi incident happened, they were the ones put into action. but they're part of the counterterrorism, so you just wonder if there was a political decision rather than -- >> steve: congressman, it sounds like what you've described, it sounds like there has been a cover-up, but what were they trying to cover up? >> well, again, this is why we're fighting for the truth. none of this would have come out if the oversight committee, if darrell issa, if our committee didn't continue to pursue this, we would have been told, the rest of the world by the obama administration, go on. there is nothing wrong here. it was just a video gone awry. so i don't know what else we're going to -- >> gretchen: congressman -- >> steve: the reelection of the president? >> i think it was political rather than security. but what boggles my mind is 4
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1/2 months after the fact, secretary clinton still had the gall to come here and perpetuate things that we know is common knowledge are simply not true. >> gretchen: it's an interesting question because it does involve so many high level people. you had the former secretary of defense, leon panetta, revered by both sides of the fence coming out and saying, hey. we couldn't have gotten anybody there. so you have him on the line. you have former secretary of state hillary clinton, susan rice, president obama, admiral mullen. would all of these people go to bat just to get president obama reelected? >> brian: what about david petraeus? >> again, i think the intelligence community is the best i can tell, has probably done a better job throughout this than the others. >> brian: they allowed the report to be scrubbed. >> again, we're going to have to -- we're going to ask the number two person, the person who, when the ambassador wasn't there, he was the head, he was the person that was on the phone. let's ask him. he's a wonderful patriotic person. when i went to libya the first
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week of october, i met with him. i felt that he was being suppressed in his ability to share information with me then. but now he's taken a very difficult personal step and he'll share it in his own words. not some republican from utah. we'll hear it from the guy who was there. >> steve: so we're going to hear from three career officials, from the department of state. what about the contractors, the special operators, i think there were seven there that night. two were killed, were murdered. what about the other five? >> well, there are a lot of people on the ground that we would like to talk to. as i talked to several times over the last several months, these whistle blowers have had a very difficult time. they're afraid of what would happen to them at the department of state. we think we're working part of that out, but i'm telling you, you can talk to the attorneys, they will tell you they are very difficult time getting the security clearances they need from state in order to talk to their client. >> brian: i watched you yesterday. massachusetts congressman said why didn't you let some democrats into this process?
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why didn't you? >> we totally did. we're in the same boat. first of all, i went over to libya. no democrats decided or elected to go with me. state department sent a minor to go with me. we have been asking for documents from the state department. we've been given eight that we can only review in camera. that is we have to go into a room where the state department can watch and take notes about what i can look at. even nonclassified documents. that is so wrong. >> gretchen: interesting. >> i can tell you in those months, not a single democrat has ever come down to join us. some of their staff did, but none of the members did. >> gretchen: that could change now because it seemed in that interview that more democrats may be coming on board to say oops, what actually happened here? congressman, thank you so much for joining us this morning to bring more details about the whys of this story. thank you. >> thank you. >> brian: next up, a referee punched bay teen soccer player has died. what happens to that teen? will he face murder charges? the brand-new details next.
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>> steve: then justin bieber attacked on stage while playing the piano and boom, there goes the piano the kyocera torque lets you hear and be heard even in stupid loud places. to prove it, we set up our call center right here... [ chirp ] all good? [ chirp ] getty up. seriously, this is really happening!
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[ goodall ] i think the most amazing thing is how like us these chimpanzees are. [ laughing ] [ woman ] can you hear me? and you hear your voice? oh, it's exciting! [ man ] touchdown confirmed. we're safe on mars. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ hi. [ baby fussing ] ♪ thto fight chronic. osteoarthritis pain. [ baby fussing ] to fight chronic low back pain. to take action. to take the next step. today, y will know you did something for your pain. cymbalta can help. cymbalta is a pain reliever fda-approved to manage chronic musculoskeletal pain. one non-narcotic pill a day, every day, can helpeduce this pain. tell your doctor right away if your mood worsens, you have unusual changes in mood or behavior or thoughts of suicide. anti-depressants can increase these in children, teens, and young adults.
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cymbalta inot for children under 18. people taking maois, linezolid or thioridazine or with uncontrolled glaucoma should not take cymbalta. taking it with nsaid pain relievers, aspirin, or blood thinners may increase bleeding risk. severe liver problems, some fatal, were reported. signs include abdominal pain and yellowing skin or eyes. tell your doctor about all your medicines, including those for migraine and while on cymbalta, call right away if you have high fever, confusion and stiff muscles or serious allergic skin reactions like blisters, peeling rash, hives, or mouth sores to address possible life-threatening conditions. talk about your alcohol use, lir disease and before you reduce or stop cymbalta. dizziness or fainting may occur upon standing. take the next step. talk to your doctor. cymbalta can help. >> brian: sad news this morning. the referee punched by a player has died. the teenage player is in juvenile detention at this hour. now there is talk that charges against him could be upped. >> gretchen: joining us now live with the new details from salt
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lake is reporter figueroa. tell us the latest. the gentleman died. what's going to happen to the teen who allegedly punched him? >> that is what everyone would like to know at this point. we spoke with former assistant district attorney who told us he doesn't think felony murder charges are likely, however, there are a few different ways this could play out legally. assistant district attorney for eight years before going into private defense practice, he says if the teen is charged as an adult, there are most likely two different charges he could face. he says the d.a. will have to first choose whether to charge the 17-year-old as a juvenile or as an adult. he tells us the decision may be influenced by the wishes of the victim's family. >> the consequences and the difference between going into juvenile system and the adult system are huge because an adult conviction, especially one like
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this, a crime of violence, would stay with the young man for life >> he sees two potential charges playing out. one is third degree felony homicide by assault. this would be easier to prove in a case like this. it only requires proof that an intentional assault resulted in death. in this case prosecutors would need to prove the teen committed assault and that the assault is what killed portillo. the second more serious charge would be a second degree felony manslaughter. in that case, prosecutors would need to prove wrecklessness, that the teen knew what he was doing and it was dangerous and he knew that it was dangerous. he said proving wrecklessness, that's more complex, but not outside the realm of possibility for the d.a.'s office. so a few different ways that this could play out and we will learn exactly how this will play out in the coming days. it's all on the desk of the district attorney for now. back to you. >> brian: quick question, is
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this league known for being out of control? is it known for being aggressive? is it a tough place for refs to referee? >> you know, surprisingly, we haven't really learned very much about this teen at all. they have not released his identity yet because he is a minor. so we haven't been able to look into the past of this teen-ager, whether or not he had anger issues or whether or not he has a past for acting out physically against authority figures in this case. so we're hoping to learn more about this teen-ager. but we can't until his identity is released. >> brian: thanks so much. >> steve: all because he got a yellow card. happens all the time. >> brian: right. 46-year-old, grandfather and a father and dead at 46. >> gretchen: horrible story. coming up, not one single cemetery in the country will bury the boston bomber. the brand-new details. what should happen to his body, straight ahead. >> brian: and they're the visible wounds of war. the invisible wounds of war, military members who would
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rather lose a limb than deal with the aftershocks of concussion. a closer look at the very serious problem for our nation's military and how you can help the projects will be done in a timely fashion and within budget. angie's list members can tell you which provider is the best in town. you'll find reviews on everything from home repair to healthcare. now that we're expecting, i like the fact that i can go onto angie's list and look for pediatricians. the service providers that i've found on angie's list actually have blown me away. join today and find out why over 1 million members count on angie's list. angie's list -- reviews you can trust.
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bacon?! bacon? bacon! who wants a begginstrip? meee! i'd get it myself but i don't have thumbs! yum, yum, yum, yum, yum... it's bacon!!! mmmmm...i love you. i love bacon. i love you. [ male announcer ] there's no time like beggin' time.
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>> gretchen: 24 minutes after the top of the morning. it could be a new way to help parents balance family life and career. republicans push ago plan to let private workers get extra paid time off instead of overtime pay. the house will vote on the plan this week. could rush limbaugh be changing mikes? a war of words between him and the ceo of the station. he made a remarks about sandra fluke. w abc says it lost advertisers following the comments. but rush says all of the advertisers have been replaced.
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here is brian. >> brian: we hear a lot about the dangers of head injuries when it comes to sports, especially in football. in the military, a concussion is often misdiagnosed as ptsd. in the last decade, 250,000 members suffered from concussions because of explosions. the long-term effects can be worse than injuries you actually see. joining us is the former president of the intrepid fallen heros funds and is focusing on building nine facilities for those who have suffered injuries at war. why is there a need for specific facilities, bill? >> brian, thank you again for fox and for your interest in this story because it wasn't for you guys, it wouldn't be getting this time. there are 600,000 troops that have come back from iraq and afghanistan who have some form of a brain injury where a bomb goes off and this shock wave rattles their brain. they might look fine and might not have part of their head scraped or no visible injuries, but they are really brain
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damaged. >> brian: they keep fighting oftentimes, right? >> oh, yeah. they're sent back for multiple deployments. sergeant bales who did this horrible thing, killing 16 afghans. he was deployed three times, part of his foot was blown off. he was on some amount of medication and not well. and we have found that the facility that we raise $65 million for at bethesda is doing miracles. so now we want to go build nine treatment centers. the intrepid fallen heros fund, so 100% of every penny is donated to build these centers today. >> brian: i was shocked at, it's different from a concussion. we have written scans here of somebody who suffered a concussion. you can see the dark in one. concussion on screen left. on the right is severe brain injury. the difference is it seems much
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more pervasive. >> if you go back to that diagram there, you can see that the image on the right actually is very similar to what bob woodruff from abc had when the bomb went off. >> brian: he lost part of his skull. >> but a lot of guys and gals have that same exact injury. look at that normal one. that's before you play football, before you fall off your motorcycle, before a bomb goes off, before you get rolled over in your humvee and you've got a coma. look at the coma. looks almost the same. anyway, this is a national crisis. when you have 600,000 troops and no one is doing a damn thing about this. >> brian: they need specific treatment. they need doctors that are trained. the defense department says here is the land, build the building, i'll help you with the doctors. the v.a. cannot handle this. so unless you get this money, these guys and these women are not going to get the treatment. you are going to see more can't hold a job. more will take their lives and
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more, unfortunately, will be involved in some form of violence with their spouse. >> spot on. all those things are what we're dealing with right now. the v.a. is doing what it can. d.o.d. is doing a great job. this is a great public-private partnership. we build these centers on the basis and then turn it back over to them and they will run it perfectly. it's a hand in glove thing. >> brian: you're building two more. you need nine. you have one done. two more built how much you got? >> we raised almost $30 million. go to fallenherosfund.com. please, we know if you are watching this, you're going to donate. we'll get this done. a dollar, $10, a million dollars. >> brian: we have a link to your site. thanks. two minutes before the bottom of the hour. quick quiz for all parents. the pacifier drops on the ground. then, justin bieber attacked on
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stage. his piano knocked over. who is the nut job that rushed the stage and is he okay the recent increase in cafeteria prices is not cool. when you vote for flo, we'll have discounts. ice-cream discounts. multi-cookie discounts. pizza loyalty discounts! [ kids chanting "flo!" ] i also have some great ideas on car insurance. [ silence ] er
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♪ bad to the bone ♪ bad to the bone ♪ . >> brian: it's your shot of the morning. he's bad to the bone when it comes to pool.
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this video going viral. the chihuahua working the pool table with all 15 balls. one by one, he targets each ball and sinks them into the pocket. you can't teach that. you have to be born with it. that is 8 ball. if he does it, he loses. >> gretchen: i liked your reference to minnesota thin. he leaves the white for the last. no, it's a penalty if you put that in. >> steve: corner pocket. come on. down goes the ball. >> brian: i got in trouble, if i even put the stick on the cloth 'cause it was so expensive. but you allow the dog on the cloth? >> steve: times have changed, brian. >> brian: i guess so. >> gretchen: let's do some headlines. an air show has ended in horror. have you seen this video? a plane suddenly plummets toward the ground. it exploded into a fire ball after slamming into a building. it happened during an air show in spain. the pilot killed on impact.
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there were no passengers on board. 12 people watching the show were hurt. no word on what caused that crash. >> steve: meanwhile, a terrifying moment for justin bieber. the 19-year-old attacked on stage by a crazed fan and then this happened. it happened during his concert in dubai. security guards grabbed a young guy who wanted to hug the bieber. the piano got knocked over. bieber continued singing as if nothing had happened. lucky, the piano didn't roll over on somebody. >> brian: his good friend would have been happy. question for parents, sucking on your kids dirty pacifier a good idea or gross? a new study revealing it may be one of the most beneficial ways to clean it. yes. your saliva, very clean. children whose parents did it
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had fewer allergyies. >> gretchen: we told you about this cool creation on friday, sonic's new peanut butter and bacon milk shake. all mixd into a thick and creamy shake. the large version, though, packs 1720 calories. are they worth it? we have some flavors. they have chocolate covered banana and the coconut would be my choice. >> steve: the bacon is the key, though. it's fantastic. because it's the saltiness of the bacon with the peanut butter. >> gretchen: it's the sweet-salty thing. this is the first time i've whenever bacon through straw. i like it. >> brian: cross ago sufficient your bucket list. >> gretchen: all part of their summer kind of series to give
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you some new flavors out there. check it out at sonic and maybe they'll bring it to you with roller skates on. >> brian: maria, with your girlish figure, are you somebody to drink bacon through a straw? >> why not. i have peanut butter bacon here this one has 1200 calories. so i now know why we booked turbo fire today. we'll have a milk shake and then go work out to burn off the calories. i'll try mine. >> steve: salty bacon, delicious. >> my straw is not working. >> brian: keep going. >> it tastes very much like peanut butter. do they have bacon chunks in this? >> brian: peanut butter is overwhelming the bacon. >> i agree. >> gretchen: sonic people, are you listening to the recipe? maybe we need to change it up, add a little bit more saltiness. maybe it was just the way it was made. >> are there bacon bits in this?
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>> steve: yeah. chewy. >> yeah, i just had one. >> steve: he said it was peanut butter and bacon. >> i'm glad they're supposed to be in there. tastes great. amazing. >> gretchen: are we doing weather with you now? let's do a little weather. >> sounds good. if you're headed outside new york city to work out or as you head to work this morning, we're talk being a chilly start to the day. temperature of 50 degrees. also a breeze. that does make it feel a lot cooler out here. you have to bundle up. put the light spring jacket on. it will be a relatively cool day in alabama, mississippi, georgia. all right may and we're only in the 60s. low 60s in atlanta. seattle, washington, a little unusual, 85 degrees for your high temperature out there. we do have a storm system across parts of the southeast. expected to dump more heavy rain today. locally, up to four inches expected in sections of georgia. parts of tennessee. you know what? we already saw a lot of heavy rain over the weekend.
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so, unfortunately, expecting more rain. steve, gretchen, brian, i'll finish my shake now. >> steve: all right. >> gretchen: thank you very much. >> brian: maria, a wild day at talladega speedway a. huge wreck with four laps to go. kyle bush, who is having a great season, lands on ryan newman's car. both were vying for the lead at the time of the crash. but they could not keep it up. left open the door for unknown david reagan to take the checkered flag. hockey version of crashes. fistfight, tensions exploded as the canadians and senators battled it out. nine players giving game misconduct. ref handed out 246 minutes of penalty. the senators won 6-1. there was one tooth losed. hopefully it was a molar. by the way, the senators lead. no surprise here, lebron james with his fourth mvp in the last five years. he's been unbelievable of late,
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receiving 120 of 121 first place votes. he did not lead the league in any of the categories, but together he was better than most. they face the chicago bulls in game 1 in the eastern conference semifinals in their quest to go back to back with titles. we all know the knicks are going to win it all, but it's nice lebron james can get this little trophy in his trophy case. it's a fact. >> gretchen: let's talk about this very controversial issue, which is regards to tamerlan tsarnaev. the boston bomber who was killed three weeks ago. where should they bury the body, number one? and should the funeral home have even taken the body? remember, there was one funeral home in worcester that decided they would take him. here is that owner of that funeral home trying to explain the dilemma he found himself in. >> when you say help to bury, why would you help a bury a terrorist? i'm helping to bury a body. if i didn't know he was a terrorist, i bury people here that were murderers.
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>> steve: well, people there in that neighborhood are referring to that funeral home operator as unamerican. that's tasty. look, they got to do something with the body, right? some people have suggested cremation. but islamic law says you can't really do that. others suggested ship him back to russia with the mother. here is the spokesman for the massachusetts funeral directors association, says that part of the problem is it's a really big news story. >> whenever there is a murder or mass incident like this and there is a body involved, usually when it comes time to take care of that person, everything becomes pretty quiet and things are taken care of very quietly, very much under cover and no one really talks about it. i think this is a very, very unique case and i think, unfortunately, the body was removed from the medical examiner's office prematurely before all the logistics of what
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need to be done were put in place. and i think the funeral director now finds himself in a very difficult situation. >> brian: i wonder what happened to timothy mcveigh's body? >> gretchen: that's interesting because there was never any media following that whole thing after he was put to death. sorry, i have a frog. >> steve: here, have some bacon. >> gretchen: no, water might help that more. but yeah, i think there is something to be said about what that gentleman just said with regard to the coverage of this. now we know about it. so now people want to know what's going to happen. >> brian: i find it unbelievable. you can not fly him back to chechnya. it will cost too much money. he's already cost us too much. what was good enough for bin laden to toss him overboard, we can't toss him overboard? >> steve: a lot of people suggest just that. i just saw another one, hang him from a flag pole at fenway park. a lot of people are saying, why? why? >> brian: why ruin a good thing. >> gretchen: he's not an american citizen. send him back to his country. we're already paying enough for public defenders. that would be a drop in the
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bucket. you use them every day, but are you paying too much, from batteries to ink cartridges. the things with the highest markups. >> brian: good news for wayne newton. he no longer has to hide that gray hair. >> steve: what gray hair? >> brian: good point. that hair color, it's coming your way [ male announcer ] it's simple physics... a body at rest tends to stay at rest... while a body in motion tends to stay in motion. staying active can actually ease arthritis symptoms. but if you have arthritis, staying active can be difficult. prescription celebrex can help relieve arthritis pain so your body can stay in motion. because just one 200mg celebrex a day
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>> brian: starting today, pfizer letting bashful buyers get viagra on-line. men will still need a prescription to buy the pill, but they won't have to face a pharmacist and is giggling when you get it filled. and so long, hair dye. a brand-new european study claims there could be a cure for going gray. they say the graying process could be cured with a topical sunlight activated compound which reverses graying. we'll look into that. meanwhile, gretch. >> gretchen: thanks so much. think you're getting ripped off when you're shopping for electronics? guess what? you're probably right. consumer savings expert andrea warwick is here with the products notorious for major
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markups. i found this mass nateing. good morning. >> good morning. >> gretchen: so the first thing is the telephone land line. you can actually get this totally free? >> the average consumer is paying $40 a month for having a land line service. and you can switch to get that for free with internet telephone service like umat. free calls. you pay a few dollars for appliable taxes and you're saving nearly $500 a year by switching that way. so there is a huge markup. >> gretchen: would that be for long distance and local calls? >> local calls in the u.s. i know they're doing a special promotion for mother's day when they do free international calls. they have the promotions throughout the year. >> gretchen: one of the most egregious ones, according to you, is ink we use for printer. >> it is crazy. printer manufacturers hook you in to buy with really low cost printers. but then they make you buy their ink which could be marked up as much as 1,000%. in fact, when they calculated
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the cost of ink, it would cost over $3,000 for a gallon of ink. so what i recommend is using a site like inkjet where you can compare prices on ink across tons of retailers. you could buy original equipment manufacturer ink, which is the brand ink, or even remanufacturerred ink. >> batteries, we know you need them when you need them. >> exactly. you go to the grocery store. i recommend when you're at the warehouse store, that is the best price for batteries. you're saving 70% or more compared to the grocery store. so stock up. there is no shelf life. >> gretchen: hlmi cables. >> you need them to hook up flat screen tv or laptop and computers. and sometimes you'll get the really great price on that television, but you'll never find a deal on the hdmi cables. that's why i always recommend shopping on-line for those. when i compared a price, i saved
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85% on those hdmi cables. head home first to find it cheaper. >> gretchen: extended warrantees. this is always a question. i just bought a washer and drier. what if it breaks? you feel like you should buy it. >> 'cause you'll want to get the most value. but extended warrantees are never a good purchase. they're not as effective. they're rife with exclusions and they're just not what you think. usually the manufacturer warranty will cover any needed repairs. and if you buy it with a credit card, that credit card usually doubles the manufacturer warranty. so you'll get it for two years and that usually covers it. >> gretchen: smart phone accessories, look elsewhere to buy? >> exactly. the you might get a great deal on the smart phone when you sign up for a plan, but you need a case, screen protector, vehicle charger. i found those to be 30 to 40% less when i was shopping on-line. amazon, obviously has lots of third party retailers that sell them for much less. and also ebay is a great place to look for those.
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>> gretchen: some great tips to save you some cash. thank you. >> thank you. >> gretchen: coming up, our producers must be mad at us. they're make us go outside and learn the turbo workout. but first let's check in with martha for what's coming up at the top of the hour. they're not going to make you go down. >> i'm exhausted just watching. >> gretchen: i know. >> good morning. we've got a big story coming up this morning. jim demint will be here with us to reveal a new study that he says shows that the immigration bill that is in congress right now would cost taxpayers trillions of dollars paid for by those who came here legally. he's fired up. he'll be with us. bill and i will see you right here at the top of the hour look what mommy is having.
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mommy's having a french fry. yes she is, yes she is. [ bop ] [ male announcer ] could've had a v8. 100% vegetable juice, with three of your daily vegetable servings in every little bottle. that everyone should have access to good nutrition. so they're donating two meals to feeding america for every purchase of one a day women's multivitamins. help families across america get nutrition they need. buy one a day women's, make a difference.
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>> steve: summer is on the way and that means millions of you are going to be looking for ways to get into shape. >> brian: like putting on a suit. >> gretchen: the turbo workout, anna kooiman had gathered up more than 100 people here in front of our world headquarters. but i think some of them, brian, think you were trying to run away? >> brian: maybe a little. i don't know. >> they heard you guys were coming out to learn, brian in particular apparently, and some had to go to work. there is some amazing stories. kick boxing and other things, you can burn 1,000-calories in an hour class. this is the creator. [ cheers and applause ] this has changed so many people's lives. is this thank is one of those people. if you can get a close-up of this shot. this is jennifer, 120 pounds heavier. >> steve: oh, my goodness. came all the way from california.
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[ cheers and applause ] >> look at that. what keeps you coming back? >> this lady right here. you're inspiring and i never believed in myself until i started doing your class. i love you and thank you. [ applause ] >> i know that you want to motivate all of us. even the anchors. >> absolutely. >> here we go, guys. >> i love the head bands. that's going to help! >> knees up! we got it! ready, let's go to the right! one, two, three, four.
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now jab, jab, speed. jab, jab speed. jab, jab speed. right, right! jab, jab speed! >> brian: how do you know when to woo? >> steve: i don't know. >> now take it front, right. again! front! punch! we're going to the left! right side! again! >> steve: we're going to take a quick time out and roll on live from new york. >> brian: when we come back and within budget. angie's list members can tell you which provider is the best in town.
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you'll find reviews on everything from home repair to healthcare. now that we're expecting, i like the fact that i can go onto angie's list and look for pediatricians. the service providers that i've found on angie's list actually have blown me away. join today and find out why over 1 million members count on angie's list. angie's list -- reviews you can trust. gotta get that bacon! bacon?! bacooon! smokey bacon, meaty bacon, tasty bacon! bacon? ohh la laa. i say, is that bacon? oh! good heavens! bacon! bacon! who wants a beggin' strip?? me! i'd get it myself but i don't have thumbs!! mmm mmm mmm mmm mmmm it's beggin! mmm i love you... (announcer) beggin' strips...made with real bacon. there's no time like beggin' time!
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the right way. times change. our principles don't. you don't just have our word on it. you've got our name on it. that's how we run. nothing runs like a deere. discover the full line of riding lawn equipment at johndeere.com/howwerun or your local dealer. at johndjoin us atowwerun projectluna.com >> brian: coming up tomorrow, somebody you are really going to love. laura ingraham and cara
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dioguardi from "american idol." >> steve: good job, everybody! >> gretchen: have a great day, everyone! [ cheers and applause ] bill: great way to start a new week. good morning, everybody. fox news alert on bombshell new details in the expected testimony in the benghazi terror attacks. there are witnesses set to tell lawmakers on the night of the attacks, september 11th, then secretary of state, hillary clinton tried to cut the department's own counterterrorism bureau out of the loop. the question there is why if true. good morning, everybody, i'm bill hemmer the as we start here fresh on "america's newsroom." good morning, martha. martha: good morning, everybody. i'm martha maccallum. expected in this week's hearing allegations that senior officials purposely removed references from al qaeda in the administration's talking points. listen to this. >> we know one thing t

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