tv FOX and Friends Saturday FOX News May 11, 2013 3:00am-7:01am PDT
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>> alisyn: good morning, everyone. today saturday, may 11th. i'm alisyn camerota. thanks for joining us early. not once, not twice but 12 times the benghazi talking points were changed. so who was behind that? the white house says not them. the cia began. the cia in this case deputy director of the cia. the cia. >> alisyn: well, this morning we will separate fact from fiction for you. >> and if the dead boston bomber was buried in your backyard, how would you feel about that? >> i'm a christian jesus says love your enemy. >> i'm disgusted. i think it's disrespectful.
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>> fierce debate taking place in a town near you. and targeting the tea party and conservatives. the irs admitting they did it and now they say they are sorry. but is the apology accepted? we report, you decide. "fox & friends" hour one starts right now. get the coffee. >> alisyn: good morning, everybody. good morning, guys. clayton morris, good morning. >> get the coffee this morning. probably glad at the white house that it's the weekend right now. no more white house press briefings that they have to deal with like whew, we get a few days off from the press grilling us over the latest benghazi news. >> it's not just fox. the story that this network almost alone has kept in the news for the past five months exploded into the rest of the media yesterday. benghazi gate you may have
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seen it if you had the television on yesterday. jay carney, the white house press secretary had a simple answer for every allegation the cia did it. >> alisyn: right, so when the cia first put out their talking points of what happened on the night of september 11th in benghazi. it was filled with references to al qaeda or al qaeda affiliates ansar al sharia. and then lo and behold, over the course of the next 24 to 48 hours all of those redemptions to al qaeda affiliates has been expunged. it's been the questions who did that. here are the original cia talking points. here is an excerpt we want to read to you. the assault on the u.s. facilities in benghazi was a terrorist attack conducted by large grouch islamic extremists, including some with ties to al qaeda. then, lo and behold when susan rice, ambassador to the u.n. was given it and she went on the five sunday talk shows, there was no mention by the time she got
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the talking points of an al sharia and al qaeda and she insisted it was because of the youtube video. >> it wasn't just susan rice it was the president, the white house press secretary. every surrogate who went on television that week had a single clear message. this is the result of a youtube video. by the way, just to be completely clear the man who made that youtube video is still in jail to this day. he was sentenced on election day and he remains in jail in california. who did redact some of those memos. blame the cia. listen. >> the cia began a process of developing points that could be used in public by members of process. that process as always the case, again, led by the cia. the cia in this case deputy director of the cia took
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that process and issued a talking points on that saturday morning those talking points were disseminate nateed. cia made changes to the edits and to the talking points and then produced the talking points. the white house, as i said, may one minor change to the talking points dropped it by and produced by the cia. >> minor change. that has been the word all along. one word that was changed. >> do you do you want to know t lying looks like you just saw it they are blaming everything on general petraeus. it's all general petraeus' fault who was head of the cia. just to be totally clear cia does not make policy, communication operations they present data to the executive branch. the executive branch takes that date and it makes policy and decides what to think about it. when we blame the cia when we know for a fact petraeus was uncomfortable with the changes the political operatives made. >> said as much in his testimony. he was uncomfortable with the changes.
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he was surprised al qaeda had been taken out of. he nigh knew day one it was a terrorist attack. >> alisyn: he was surprised that the reference to the cia sending warnings to the administration that, in fact, the situation in benghazi was worsening and that there had been several attacks based on american and western. that was also taken out. abc has begun reporting on this as have the other networks and jonathan karl asked jay carney about that. >> you said that the only changes that were made by the white house was stylistic and a single word. what we see here is a state department raised objections to the references that ansar al sharia. they raised objections to the fact that the cia had warned about terror threats were in benghazi prior to the attack. those subjects were taken
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out of the cia talking points at the direction of the white house based on the objection -- >> -- no, first of all they were not taken out at the direction of the white house. >> were specifically, you have got the state department looking at these memos seeing the references to, hey, we warned you a number of times. >> tucker: right. >> >> clayton: three, four, five different times to different attacks in benghazi leading up to the main benghazi attack on september 11th. even new england bombings. we should take these out because it looks as if. >> alisyn: we're not paying attention. >> clayton: we're not paying attention that our agency is being unfairly. >> tucker: republicans and conservatives will attack us. those conservatives by torianuland. it seems clear from the event that unfolded subsequent to this that there were people around secretary clinton who were concerned that she would be tarred by. this. >> alisyn: because we did ignore the warning.
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they did know the situation was deteriorating. and we did leave ambassador chris stevens and the other americans vulnerable. of course, her concerns, members of congress, if they know that there were warnings and they know this was al qaeda, they could really come back and criticize us, that was apt. she was on to something. >> tucker: entire lay political consideration. that is why you didn't see the secretary of state go out in public on this story. you saw instead susan rice it may be odd for me to defend susan rice but i will by saying the truth which is she was not directly responsible for these decisions. she was in effect a spokesman. she destroyed her career tomplet hillary clinton should have been out there explaining what the state department did and didn't do. >> clayton: great point. she was carrying the water for the administration. victoria nuland at the state department basically said in her defense of having removed these things or suggesting to remove these things from the memo that, hey, look, this really doesn't have anything to do with what
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unfolded on benghazi on september 11th. that he was not really the point of this investigation that those other discussions that were going to be attacked doesn't really have any relevance to the main attack. which i don't know how you could say that when you given the lack of security. >> it was a lie. and everyone knew it was a lie. and personnel on the ground new it was a lie. greg hicks is not some tea party activist. it was clear this was a coordinated attack by professionals it. it wasn't a mob who did this. they lied to the public. they should be held accountable to that. >> alisyn: as a result of fox and the investigative committees on the hill, this information came out this week. i mean, we didn't know who had been responsible for it and now we know it was victoria nuland at the state department that was one of the people who helped expunge some of the stuff. we do have news to get to. let me tell you what was happening because while you
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were sleeping taliban launched attack in pakistan during a land. the terror group detonated bombs near voting booths as millions were trying to cast their ballots. several booths shut down. today's historic one marking the first democratic transition of power. preliminary tests confirm that aerial as scro is the father of the girl rescued. amanda berry held for a decade in the captor's house along with deanna dejesus and michelle knight. did not recover human remains in the search of the home. investigators have now wrapped up their search for the property. we have also learned that the last victim michelle night has been released from the hospital. it is not exactly clear where she went. she has asked for her privacy. and, people in virginia are
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shocked and outraged to learn the suspected boston bomber tamerlan tsarnaev is buried there. he was buried in secret in a small islamic seminary caroline county thursday. a virginia woman helped organize the burial after hearing that the funeral home handling tsarnaev's remains could not find a cemetery to take his body. >> i'm a christian and jesus says love your enemy. >> i'm disgusted. i think it's disrespectful. >> send him back home to his mother. not here. if he has anti-american sentiment each as an american citizen then he should be returned to his family and his homeland. >> alisyn: caroline county officials infuriated they were not told about the burial and looking into whether any laws were broken. here is mysterious story. carnival cruise passenger who went overboard may have jumped to save his girlfriend. surveillance video appears to show he paul rotington leaping from the carnival spirit moments after
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27-year-old kristen schroeder jumped off. this happened wednesday night off the coast of australia. the search for the couple was called off last night and they are presumed dead. those are your headlines at this hour. >> all right. thanks so much ali. let's check in with rick reichmuth. is it going to be a dry or wet mother's day weekend. >> it's going to be a wet start to mother's day end. and drier end. mother's day. it will be better. temperaturewise today, especially across the east, looking pretty good at least starting out today. tolder air behind this rain that clayton is talking about you can see all this red here. the cold air will replace the wet situation that we have going on today. you can see these showers. might see severe weather right across the mid-atlantic, mostly a little bit of strong winds and some hail. not concerned about tornadoes today but this is that front that stretches all the way in down towards texas. we saw a lot of rain yesterday. some areas around beaumont 8 inches 24 hour period. incredible rain causing flooding. the worst of that rain.
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the flooding concern will be left today the flooding won't be as heavy. oral front right back there doesn't have a lot of moisture with it that's where the colder air is behind it. that will get in here by tomorrow afternoon and things will really cool back down. unfortunately, temps sunday night and monday night east very, very cold. hard freeze in effect. a lot of people. are going to have big crop concerns. out across the west looking good. see rain moving in towards the pacific northwest. looking great across the south. all right, guys. >> thanks, rick. >> thank you, rick. honoring terrorists? well known museum about recognize hamas operatives. those details next. >> the irs is sorry for targeting conservative groups. up next one of those targets a tea party member joins us to respond. >> well, actually the administration very concerned benghazi hearings are gaining momentum. like today at a press conference even a non-fox
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the irs is apologizing, believe it or not, for targeting the conservative groups during last year's elections. officials wrongly singled out organizations which used the word tea party or prited in their filings, flagging them for extra investigation. lear we are in no way criticizing the irs but so please, please, please, don't audit us. next guest a tea party group. americans for prosperity. long time tea party ax at this vista and apparently a victim of politically oriented bias from the internal revenue service. what happened? >> sure. when i started getting involved in politics a few years ago. i was a pregnant stay at home mom. we were organize would and we found out people were giving it you can't run it through your bank account. you have to file with the irs. but going to lawyers and trying to get this done. they just said it's going to cost you thousands of dollars and that if you make even the slightest mistakes because the codes are so complex and because stories coming in from
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other groups getting harassed you just can't do this. we had to shut everything down. we couldn't take any money for help it was really a big problem and really suppressed our voice in our community in pennsylvania. >> alisyn: what makes you think that you though as a tea party activist were targeted rather than just this just being bureaucracy? >> no, no, no. the stories were coming in from everywhere else in the country. we had people calling saying 25 page -- on the phone with the irs when i was trying to get the information they were holding it up. you were going to have to turn over all of your donors, all of your members. things you were doing on social media it felt very intrusive. invasion of privacy. i had little children. i'm a stay at home mom. i didn't have a lot of money it suppressed so many people's voices and their ability to just exercise their first amendment rights. >> tucker: that's right. one of the things the irs did apparently was slow walk these applications for 501 c 3 status. nonprofit status which you need in order to get donations. it strikes me as an attack
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not just on tea party groupings or conservative groups but on the rule of law itself. you can't enforce these laws selectsively. >> that's what the tea party stands for limited government. people wonder why do you want limited government? for this reason you? have unelected unaccountable rogue bureaucracy in the irs that is historically abusive towards people and political enemies that can literally shut down your life. this organization the irs can shut down your life. they can bankrupt you. they can take everything from you. this is not what america was founded on. and when you start to undermine the rule of law, you are no longer civil society. this is what we are fighting for. the very thing that's happening is what we are fighting for. no matter what your political point of view you should fight this. >> alisyn: the irs is now apologizing and admitting that in fact they did target tea party and conservative groups. here is what the statement says, it says we fully support the irs the treasury department expects
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all individuals to be treated fairly by the irs. anything else is inappropriate and unacceptable. are you satisfied with that? >> absolutely not. you have the president's political opposition being thugged up by the irs and we're apologizing? we're reviewing? no, no, no. hearings, resignations, firings, trials, i want it all taken care of. >> tucker: well, of course, if i get caught robbing a liquor store and say i'm sorry i still go to prison and nobody has been fired. thank you very much. >> alisyn: good to see you. warning to all ipad owners your tablet could be bad for your heart. details on this startling new discovery we will explain it straight ahead. >> cost taxpayers billions. feddy may and-fannie mae and freddie back. pay us back. is it just an accounting trick? we have the numbers. [ male announcer ] technology. it's pretty amazing.
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>> fox news alert for you right now. tense standoff underway in trenton, new jersey, police have surrounded a home where an armed man is reportedly some believed to be children. some are believed to be dead in the home. fbi negotiators are on the scene. new study finds that the magnets in the ipad 2 smart covers could accidently turn off your pacemaker. this discovery made by a 14-year-old coffee girl and her cardiologist father. though found that when people with pacemakers hold the ipad close to their chest the device switches off in 30% of patients. apple has no comment left. clayton? that explains it.
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>> clayton: need a kick start this morning get my ipad up to my chest. thank you, alli. they cost taxpayers nearly $200 billion in 2008. no small chunk of change. fannie mae and freddie mac about to repay money to the treasury. that sounds great. some are calling the move accounting gimmick. is this just the playing politics with your money? nice to see you this morning, welcome. >> good morning, clayton. basically it is a little bit of a a counting play. essentially freddie mac and fannie mae have made this 67 billion-dollar profit after not being solvent for so long and they want to pay treasury. >> it is a gimmick. they are using basically fake money to pretend that they're profitable so they can send money back? it's like monopoly money. in a sense they are switching from one pocket to the other. what we are seeing here is that when they receive $188 billion from the
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federal government, in exchange for that, they created these tax write offs and delayed options for the government to use later on thinking in the accounting world they would never have to exercise those options. now that technically fannie mae and freddie mac are closer to solvent they are having these kick. in money is money that they don't actually have that they are paying into this. it's a switching. >> clayton: viewers this morning sitting there saying wait a second didn't we bail them out. didn't we throw buildings of dollars on our backs it help these guys out? if they are using our money but it's fake? what does the taxpayer on the hook here? are they getting their money back or still out in the in ther and they are not getting any money back? >> i'm not sure any money will actually see the light of day in the taxpayer's pocket. here is the issue. basically the $67 billion that's going to the treasury effectively the point here the take home point here is that it is going to delay. the debt ceiling fight all the way to october. so basically it's a way for
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the government to delay this gridlock that's inevitably going to happen. >> clayton: it's also something in the future. they are pretending that hey, we are going to be profitable in the future. they have a flux compass compassitor back to the future. they have made so many mistakes. how can they on paper think they are going to be massively profitable moving this money around? >> i think it's a combination of things. because right now fannie mae and freddie mac are doing better technically. if you look at the housing market, the housing market is getting stronger over the last year oso. fannie mae and freddie mac are benefiting and doing better in the sense that they are making more money. but they still have all of this major debt from the government and also these dividends that they have been paying out. 10% a year of dividends of money that they don't really have. and so in a sense, you are paying but you are paying with money that isn't necessarily there. so, it's a little bit
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confusing. i know it's a bit in the weeds here. >> clayton: i'm like a 5-year-old when it comes to this kind of stuff. you explained it very well this morning. so, basically, he they're just moving money around that they don't actually have right now. >> it's an accounting, you could call it a gimmick. you could call it a strategy. it's based in the 2008 bailout and now we are seeing the effects of it play out. >> jolene kent from the fox business network. thanks for talking math this morning. >> my pleasure. >> clayton: former weather underground terrorist teaching at columbia university and students had no idea about it it? >> was she really? >> yeah. >> did i not know about that until just now. >> how do you feel about that? >> definitely pretty surprising. >> we will show you what happens when that teacher is confronted by fox. then we honor the brave men and women who stand in the front lines for us. what about those who are maintaining the home front? up next we will introduce you to the military spouse of the year. stay with us. the kyocera torque lets you hear and be heard
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>> clayton: i have so much more energy. >> tucker: truest thing i ever heard. >> clayton: my mom and dad went to it a vegan meeting in the 1970s, they were eating vegan for two weeks. they had no energy. my mom and dad said let's go get a cheese steak. one of the best cheese steaks they ever had. >> alisyn: let's talk about something that jesse watters who has been on our show obviously sent out by bill o'reilly to go and dig up trouble and spot mall fee advance when he was. find out why college campuses seem to be the last bastion bagsian of places where ex-cons can still be employed and become professors. >> only if those ex-cons have committed left wing political crimes, however. they are not hiring just your average rapist. hiring people who committed acts of terror against america, for example. >> clayton: for instance, kathy boudin who was -- spent 22 years in prison.
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here is a photo of her for 1981 armored car robbery that killed two cops and a brinks security guard back in new york city. well, that brinks security guard's son michael page has written a letter basically pointing out that she is now an adjunct professor at columbia university. our jesse watters went there to find out if the students knew about this. >> you have heard of a professor called kathy boudin? she was just hired here. she is a convicted cop killer. >> was she really? >> yeah. >> i did not know about that until just now. >> how do you feel about that? >> definitely pretty surprising. >> i feel fantastic. >> i think it's a positive thing for someone to come and go through a situation like she has been through make something positive out of it. >> i think it's a scary trend that here with bill ayers and bernadette born pleasant qualified professionals and to be teaching the next generation of teachers in this country. >> i wanted to know if you
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have said anything to the victim's families professor. >> news reporter. >> you have considered donating any of the salaries to any of the victim's families? >> what's your location? >> school of social work. >> i actually have a letter here from michael page. >> 10-4. >> i have nothing regret. attempted to lead a life that would express that remorse and that regret. >> you know the disgusting thing is that she wasn't hired in spite of the fact that she is a cop killer. she was hired because of it. they are not hiring other cop killers. they are hiring those, again, who have a very specific political orientation. they are not hiring former chancemen, right? clans men, it's not like columbia is in the business
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of rehabilitating felons at all. >> alisyn: important point she has paid her debt to society. she was in prison for 22 years. they need doo need to be employed. people who get out of prison in this country can't just become indigent and homeless. they do need to be employed. he was saying she has turned her life around. there is something to redemption if that's what she is teaching. >> she can work at wendy's like most ex-cons or do landscaping. the idea that she would get a job at an ivy league college with massive amounts of federal grants by the way pretty over the top. because, when they hire some, you know, former chanceman and say well, this is part of our rehabilitation. >> alisyn: equal opportunity employer. >> tucker: exactly creeps on both sides. >> alisyn: criminal investigation launched into fertilizer plant explosion in west, exit. largely treated as an accident.
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officials say they are investigating it from every angle. the news comes as paramedic first responder brice reid has been arrested for possession of bomb making teerms. officials say there is no connection between his arrest and the april 17th explosion which killed 15 people. news museum set to honor terrorists in an annual ceremony honoring journalists killed while reporting the museum will recognize two accused hamas operatives. the men worked for hamas funded middle eastern tv network which has been designated a terrorist organization by our government. he they were killed in israeli air strike in 2010. prince harry is in colorado today for the warrior games. but last night the british royal mingled at a cocktail reception with v.i.p.es, including olympic gold medalist missy franklin and sang happy birthday to the swimming star. ♪ happy birthday to you. >> he wasn't singing very
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loudly there earlier friday the prince paid his respects at arlington national cemetery in d.c. the troops killed in the wars of iraq and afghanistan are buried. he placed a wreath of flowers and handwritten note on a head stone. the prince then stopped by walter reid medical center to meet warriors and cutting edge technology being used to rehabilitate them. those are your headlines. is rick outside in the yucky rain? >> a little bit. >> it's sprinkling a little bit. we have some rain today across the east coast. it's going to be kind of a nuisance. a few showers, a few thunderstorms spotty. it won't be raining all day long. take a look at the weather maps. see your temperatures for today's highs. you will notice the 70s all across the eastern section. a in buffalo a little bit cooler. by team cold front moves through. buffalo 48. pittsburgh 55 across the coastal areas. there you go monday back into the 50s. we keep on thinking that maybe we are done with at least that cold air.
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another shot of it overnight low sunday night and monday night across the interior sections see some temps in the low 20's and i think that means we're going to be talking about some big damage to some crops out there. that is going to be needing some precautions over the next couple days. here you go your first alert forecast for today, thunderstorms all across the northeast. down to the southeast, some spotty showers and thunderstorms. especially along the coast in towards the northern plains, that cool day today. see a few snow flurries around parts of the up. michigan. out across the west it is hot. 97 in neengs. 98 in fresno. send it back to you inside. >> thanks, rick. >> there are men and women who maintain the home front while our troops defend the great nation. we are talking about the more than 1 million military spouses. >> today we are joined by aleash hinsz ward being recognized by military spouse magazine as military spouse of the year. she joins us this morning. congratulations, alicia. >> thank you so much. good morning, how are you? >> we are doing great. thank you so much for getting up early with us in
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d.c. how important or how critical do you think it is for us to recognize the spouses back home of the brave men and women who are serving overseas? the rocks of the community and of the household that are back home? >> it's very important to actually recognize the 1.1 million of us to actual toil tirelessly to make sure that we support our mental and women in uniform and support our military community. >> >> tucker: tell us a little bit about your own experience as the wife of a national guards man, what you have given up? you have moved your family repeatedly? what have the deployments been like? tell us a little bit about it? >> as a spouse of an international guardsman, it's a little bit different than active duty. we tend to be entrenched in our community so we are gee graphically separated based on where we live. as a result, it's very difficult to build a cam rad der delay most of our military communities experience when living on a military installation. as a result, it's a bit of
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a challenge for us to have that same support network. >> alisyn: more than 900 spouses were nominated this year. had you to advance through different rounds of voting and judges and panels. why do you think they chose you? >> i think they chose me as the 2013 armed forces insurance military spouse of the year because of the attention that we placed now on our national guard troops. we are the ones who actually man the mommy front. we take care of home. in the recent tragedies, such as the boston tragedy, hurricane sandy, we were the first ones on the ground to make sure that our citizens were taken care of. while most of the attention has been placed to our fighting troops overseas. the home front tends to not get the same recognition. and i believe that was part of the reason why i was selected it this year. >> one of the things you are going to be focusing on as an advocate is better
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spouse options and special needs resources both great things that need more attention. thank you so much, aleash sexual harassment congratulations on the award. thank you for your service. >> you are certainly welcome and thanks to all of our troops for their service. thanks so much. have a great day. >> alisyn: great meeting you. >> the media is finally coverings the benghazi story. where have they been all along? now? a report on media bias up next. >> tucker: you have heard this before. what goes up in fact must come down. a draw bridge sends a car flying how it all went down. coming up. anything's possible, if you have the right tools. ryobi has over 50 products that work off of one 18 volt battery. and with new improved lithium and lithium plus batteries, you'll get a whole lot more done in less time. plus, they'll improve the performance of every 18 volt tool we've ever made.
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subjects were taken out of the cia talking points at the direction of the white house. >> is the president satisfied with the way the administration has handled it? >> seems clear there was. >> involved in mischaracterization. >> tucker: wait a minute, where have reporters been from the very beginning? has there been a benghazi bias going on.
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managing editor of town hall magazine, she joins us this morning. thanks a lot for coming on. i want to throw up on the screen data points from the day of the benghazi hearings. three major cable news channels. here is the amount of time they devoted to those hearings. msnbc zero minutes. cnn pro-he portedly a news network 17 minutes. and the fox news channel 108 minutes. what is going on here? >> shocked by those numbers. no, just kidding. i think the question is where is the media even as of wednesday of this week. the day of these explosive hearings. the media research center came out and said that all three nightly news broadcast chose to lead that evening with the cleveland kidnapping story and i think we can all agree while that story is important and deserves coverage the hearings did not trump that news wise. the hearings should have been top billing on those days. even as of wednesday reporters were still lagging behind and the story wasn't getting the attention it deserved.
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>> tucker: at this point though, it's impossible to pretend that the benghazi story is just some sort of witch-hunt conducted by the political right. this is just a tea party getting revenge on obama. there is enough evidence that there was lying going on in the administration. hard to ignore it do you think the press will continue to follow up on this? >> well, i hope. so i do think the story took a turn with abc, you know, getting all of those revisions of the talking points this week. you know, it's funny. there has been this narrative of trying to marginalize benghazi. the "the washington post" tweeted out oh, you know, it's only rich, middle aged men and chick-fil-a lovers tweeting about benghazi. rasmussen came out with a poll that said at least 78% of likely u.s. voters think it's at least somewhat important to figure out what exactly happened for the event surrounding the death of ambassador stevens. so, i think that the media would be wise to pay attention to that kind of polling and really try to stop this marginalization of the story. you noticed that with the press conference yesterday.
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yesterday was not one of jay carney's better days. >> tucker: no. it was awful awful. i should point out that the "the washington post" is dying as a newspaper. cnn son the bad ratings. maybe there is a reason. maybe they should cover the news rather than mocking other people who do. elizabeth meineke from washington. thank you for joining us i appreciate it? >> thank you. >> tucker: coming up, a minnesota new town new mayor hasn't started school yet. meet the 4-year-old in charge. that's coming up. do you have problem finding the right sneakers? look no further than this show. helping you pick out the perfect pair here on "fox & friends." that's coming up. why are twice as many people choosing verizon over any other carrier? many choose us because we have the largest 4glte network.
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>> clayton: weather is warming up spending more time outside. top shoes for men and women of any sport. joining us now is the editor of men's health clint carter good to he sigh. >> i'm thrilled to be here. this is smog gas boring of sneakers. >> really contact point with earth. stay with whatever sport you are trying to get into this summer. want to start off with the minimus. >> the gym. let's pretend we are going toll gym. >> you want to have a good gym shoe. this is the most verse tile new balance leading the way in a thin sole. what you really in the a gym shoe. you want that ankle support when you are lifting a weight. you don't want as much cushion as you would want with a running shoe. >> running and getting out there and enjoying. >> alisyn: is this for men and women.
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>> this is the men's shoe here. they make women's shoe too. >> alisyn: what should women be wearing to the gym same light shoe. >> a lot of ankle supreme court and something comfortable. if you have that thin sole you have something help you cut and really transfer energy into whatever weights you are lifting or anything like that. >> got it. >> clayton: next up for running ultra insync. >> what you are looking for in a running show more mid sole cushion help with that repetitive motion. you are running for a long time. really wide foot bed so your toes can spla out. heel and forefront same distance natural foot fall. >> alisyn: that's new fangled. heavy shoes because getting cushion. now we are getting back to funny shoes they look like gorilla feet that people are wearing? >> bare foot running and things like that.
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>> still have the cushion so it's still good for long distance running. >> clayton: they call me gore riffle la feet when i'm running so they know i shouldn't be doing it gyro train. for getting out on a bike and enjoying your bike. >> yeah, what you will see about the cycling shoe exact opposite of running shoe. rigid sole transfer as much power as you can carbon fiber bottom really light weight. that's the whole goal. make sure you have a specialized shoe for what you are doing. run long distance and running shoe not get that good transfer of energy and give it up quickly. >> alisyn: you accidently brought one of your dress shoes here. these don't belong here's. >> that's what are a is great about these shoes. old school top looks like a dress shoe but contemporary bottom with the spike lifts, rubber sole so you can actually -- not tearing up a golf course. you look nice. what you want is something to be comfortable for hours and great shoe for that
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looks good in the clubhouse too. >> nice looking. >> getting out and sort of hiking, whatever. getting out on an adventure. you can sort of mixed bag of power drain is an awesome shoe because it's seamless, comfortable to wear without a sock and drains from the inside. those ducts on the outside will drain water out. whatever water gets in your shoe is going to go out the side. if you are going to be hiking through river bred lining that. >> hiking through creek beds. all of these shoes will be on foxandfriends.com if you missed any of this information. >> you are on twitter as well. >> right. clint dot carter: coming up on the show. they handle your tax dollars and they are about to head up obama care. irs can't do simple math. we have the tape to prove it. >> alisyn: what goes up must go down.
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>> alisyn: good morning, everyone. this is saturday, may 11th. i'm alisyn camerota. thanks for joining us today. benghazi gate exposed now. we know the talking points were changed 12 times. and the white house was struggling to defend themselves. >> the the white house as i said made one minor change to the talking points, dropped it by and produced by the cia -- drafted it by and produced by the cia. >> alisyn: one minor change? is it because they are not telling the truth? we will tell you what was really changed. >> irs targeting americans for political ideology and singling out groups who use the term prited or tea party in their name. long suspected now confirmed. shocking details ahead.
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>> and do not tell the star of duck dynasty he can't talk about god and guns because he will walk. how one of america's most popular shows almost went away. "fox & friends" hour two starts right now. good morning, everyone. thanks forever joining us. what a week of news. every day one revelation after another so many stories particularly benghazi. once the whistle blowers came forward this story has been broken wide open and now every network is covering it. >> what a vindication too if i can say. got to be honest for fox and for the handful of online news organizations that have been covering this from the beginning. it was a real story. a real story and now it has become a real scandal. >> now that we know that these memos have been released and that large
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chunks of it, not just the single word as the white house had purportedly had mentioned before was removed from. this large chunks. i mean, can you see multiple paragraphs removed from these memos, references to al qaeda. terrorism, previous mentions of previous attacks in benghazi. and in the u.k. all removed. jay carney on the hot seat yesterday at the white house press briefing room. i'm sure he is looking forward to this weekend. >> the white house as i said made one minor change to the talking points drafted by and produced by the cia and even prior to that had very few inputs on it. the talking points that have gotten so much attention and let's remember that these are talking points, not policy, it's talking points. to this day have been shown to be wrong in only one instance. and that was the exist tense of demonstrations preceding the attack. everything else about them was true. >> alisyn: what is he talking about. >> tucker: other than that
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mrs. lincoln how was the play? the whole point was they changed the basic fact. they took a case where an organized terrorist group murdered four americans and made it into a spontaneous demonstration and reaction to a youtube video it was totally false. >> clayton: no, tucker, it's still -- what we put forth was truthful we withheld a lot of the truth. >> alisyn: that is what they are trying to say even that's not true when susan rice went out to the sunday shows as you remember she said unquiferrably we know this to be the result of horrible youtube video. she said it over and over again. >> why then a few days later was susan rice going out further. >> by the way so did the people in benghazi. number two guy in the gheams libya testified later this was ridiculous. i watched as my jaw dropped open by the way. we have news about greg hicks. is he one of the pivotal players in this story because he had firsthand knowledge of what happened. he was demoted for revealing that knowledge in
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person it. it turns out greg hicks is not some sort of right wing activist he is a democrat who voted for hillary clinton in the primary in 2008 and wept on to vote for barack obama. the first time and by the way voted for barack obama the second time. he remains a registered democrat. greg hicks. so is he hardly some sort of political operative trying to hurt obama. he is he telling the truth. you watch. he will be written off by professional apologists probably the press secretary and some sort of activist not a democrat. >> that's fascinating context on him. is he significant because he is the person on the phone with ambassador chris stevens while the attack was happening. he is the one who heard christie saying we are under attack. answered was trying to help things there. so greg hicks' testimony was emotional and is he also the person who said that when he heard the talking points come out, that sunday, out of susan rice's mouth he used the word he was stunned. so different from what he knew to be the truth. >> >> charles krauthammer talking about this as well. saying, look, the idea, the
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notion that just one word was removed by the white house, this thing was vetted top to bottom by the white house. listen to charles. >> the untruth is and they all said this, the secretary of state said it, that the intelligence community had concluded what you heard on the sunday talk shows. it was their product uncontaminated by any politics. we know now that it was a document completely rammed through by the white house and the state department reflecting all their objections and the bottom line is that in the end, they redacted the truth. held back more context and information. the state department specifically pointing out they would have been hindered and hurt by the notion and all of the information in there about having been previous attacks in benghazi. that information was kept out. >> tucker: you know who did it was toria nuland long
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time. worked for republicans. very bad reputation in washington revealed herself to be primarily interested in cia and political ramifications and by the way still employed. >> she is the one who took out the references to al qaeda and the references to the threats beforehand that there would be more attacks. but we don't know yet at least i don't unless you guys can clarify this what the white house did. we don't know what the white house took out of the. now the state department changed it there is still questions whether the white house changed one minor word. >> victoria nuland acting as political operative on behalf of hillary clinton and the white house. >> clayton: meanwhile talk about the irs. a bit of an apology coming out. ever hear of that going after people? they have flitted that they were wrong when they specifically went after those individuals who were working towards tax exempt
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status with the words tea party and patriot in their titles during the 2012 run-up to the election. >> alisyn: basically what happened is if you were a tea party group and you were trying to apply for 301 -- 501 c status, they made it so onerous that you either had to quit just quit trying to become an organization or go broke trying. they made you have to lawyer up. they had application much more and complicated for other 501 c 3 and we had a guest on if you asp political inform the president. i always here people fashionable to do that i think back to the fact that nixon did this. ' he used the irs to go after political enemy. wrong, it was indefensible then and indefinite cybil
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now. you can't do this jennifer stephan know was on the show earlier and she knows it well. she has gone through this. >> that's what the tea party goes through limited government. why do you want limited government? this reason. unelected, unaccountable rogue bureaucracy in the irs. historically abusive towards people and political enemies that can literally shut down your life. this is not what america was founded on. and when you start to undermine the rule of law, you are no longer civil society. this is what we are fighting for the very thing that's happening is what we are fighting for. >> it sounds like something out of a brad thor novel. the government using the irs to go after political action. sounds like something made up. i cannot believe this was actually happening. >> tucker: you hear people say this i don't want to speak against them they might audit me. i'm against the president politically i will get audited. that doesn't happen. it's america. can't do that it's
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impartial. turns out it does happen. it did happen and they admitted it happened. >> alisyn: they apologized and jennifer said that's not good enough for the tea party organizations. they want to see people prosecuted. he they want to see resignations over this. meanwhile, if there is one thing you think the irs might be able to get right is a calculator and to be able to do some simple math, but you will see in this exchange with an nbc reporter that even that was confusing to the irs. just to confirm one point this is tom with. a quarter of the 300 were associated with tea party or republican issues, correct? >> no. i said that about a quarter of the cases that were selected for full development had either tea party or patriot in their name. >> okay. so just -- sorry, are thank you for the clarification that would be a quarter of the 300 then, so we're talking 75 or so? >> um, that's correct.
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is that a quarter? that's correct. thank you, i'm not good at math. >> that's correct. >> you are with the irs. thank you. >> i'm a lawyer. i'm not an accountant. sorry. >> alisyn: uh-hur. >> tom costello. they don't know math too well at the irs. twitter ff weekend. >> get to the other headlines and tell you what else is happening. preliminary test confirm that aerial castro is the father of that 6-year-old girl rescued from that cleveland house of horrors earlier this week. the mother amanda bury was held for a decade along with two other women gina dejesus and michelle knight. the fbi says its did not recover human remains in its search of the home. investigators are done, they say, processing the property. we have also learned that the last victim, michelle knight has been released from hospital. it is not exactly clear where she has gone. but she has asked for privacy during this very
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tough time. police say a fight between neighbors led toe a man terrorizing a suburb on a bulldozer. took the massive machine and aimed it right at a home pushing it 50 feet off its foundation into another house rubbing over a pickup truck in the process. a power line was also snapped in half cutting electricity to homes as far as 20 miles away. fortunately no one was injured in this rampage. here is some advice. don't ever park on a draw bridge. >> stop. >> well, a dutch cameraman left his car there while shooting a documentary nearby i know how that works, when you see a good shot you get out of your car and park it. when the bridge began to rise there was nothing he could do but watch as his car crashed down. fortunately, no one was those are your headlines. >> you can slam on the brake or speed up and go up
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the hill? >> alisyn: he wasn't in the car. >> clayton: he should have been. >> tucker: i can't get past the bulldozer rampage? what was that? what's with the context of that alli, can you find out? >> alisyn: eye going to go with anger management class that book. >> i can see rick reichmuth doing that. >> good thing he wasn't in the car. either way wasn't good. here is are your temps as you are waking up. cold air out across parts of the plains. freezing in rapid city and getted in the mid 90's. heat coming back. triple digits in some of the plains. rain across the east coast. might see a few thunderstorms in the mid-atlantic. northeast just scattered. a few thunderstorms from time to time. that all clears out tomb for mom much better day but cooler day. out across the west. tons of sunshine again. we see rain moving towards the seattle area by tomorrow. but today looking pretty good. temp wise, 77 today in seattle.
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that's that colder air. you see that blue around the great lakes. by tomorrow that slides in toward the northeast. we will be talking much cooler temps only getting to 51 tomorrow in cleveland. unfortunately. all right, guys, back to you. >> clayton: coming up here on the show don't tell the star of duck dynasty can't talk about guns. how one of america's popular shows could have vanished from airways. justin beacher. wait until you hear how he is bridging the partisan divide. coming up. i'm so glad you called. thank you.
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i'my body doesn't work tthe way it used to. past mprime? i'm a victim of a slowing metabolism? i don't think so. new great grains protein blend. protein from natural ingredients like seeds and nuts. it helps support a healthy metabolism. new great grains protein blend. >> tucker: so who is lt. colonel gibson and what does he know about the stand down orders given the night of the benghazi attack. those are a few of the questions being asked after this testimony on capitol hill. >> when the order to stand down was given, who issued that order? were you told that lt. colonel begin is sob told you who was ultimately responsible for issuing that order? >> he did not identify the person. >> you don't know if it was the combatant commander? >> i do not know. >> or whether it was the secretary of defense or the president, correct? >> i have no idea. joining us is the
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congressman who asked those questions of the whistleblower gregory hicks. congressman, thank you for joining us. >> good morning. >> tucker: what do we know at this point? who did give the stand down order that prevented personnel from potentially rescuing these four americans before they were murdered? >> we don't know who gave the stand down order. and we really know very little about what went on in the highest levels of our government during this attack. glen doherty and ty woods were killed at 5:15 in the morning the night after september 11th but it doesn't appear that any assets were marshalled and support of them. i think it's a question of why wasn't that the case and who was the one who determined that our forces who were in tripoli who may have been able to make it over there stand down. we don't know when the bin laden mission happened we had all kinds of pictures what the president was doing and all of this. we don't know that we don't know what the president was
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doing at all that night. the next day he went out to vegas for campaigning. these are questions that we need to have answered. the pentagon has said well, most of the assets we had wouldn't have ended up making it there in time anyways. but here is the thing. at the time you are making these decisions, we didn't know how long this was going to last. and so i think as americans, we don't want to leave people behind. the families of those who were killed our government did all it could do under the circumstances to help safe lives. >> it seems like they have a right to know. i would love to hear counter argument to find out why these men were left to die in benghazi. why don't we have a special prosecutor getting to the bottom of this. how can that happen? are you pushing for that? >> well, what we have done, so i'm on the oversight committee and we handled the hearing last week. and we'll probably do more hearings. i have also endorsed legislation to create a special house committee a select committee that could investigate this. and that would be their
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sole focus. i don't think that a special prosecutor appointed by the attorney general would work because, quite frankly i don't trust the attorney general to aappoint someone who would do a good job. we have seen what the state department, the arb report was woefully deficient. that was within the administration. i think congress has to do it. either on the oversight committee or a special select committee and i would be fine doing either one. >> tucker: i hope you will thin until at least we can find out what happened. thank you very much for joining us. >> any time. >> tucker: graduated fourth from the bottom of the high school class. next guest had a mother who believed in him any way and it paid off. amazing advice for parents out there. why can't this cat stay on his feet? the story behind the video coming up. why are twice as many people choosing verizon
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[ laughter ] >> he needs like a montel. >> tucker: this weekend we celebrate our mothers and all they do for us. a lot. our next guest says they are the center piece of the american family and he knows an awful lot about family. he, being dr. kevin layman a psychologist and dad and author of the book "what a difference a mom makes. doc, nice to see you. welcome back always good to be here, thank you. >> happy mother's day to you. >> thank you. >> you have spoken to us before about how much your mom meant to you but you say what a difference a mom makes to the home in what way? >> well, they are the centerpiece. watch women juggle. notice the five oranges. now watch us men juggle. women tend to be multitaskers. one of the picture in this book hey ladies you represent all of this woman hood to this little son. that's why you never take any mouth from little tucker or his little
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brother buford. >> did i have a little brother whose first named started with b. how did you know that? >> i'm psychic. >> tucker: i'm impressed. >> alisyn: the mother is the most important person in home. >> is. only thing about male leadership. i remember the day my mother appointed me leader of the home. >> tucker: that's why it is said if the father sun happy it's bad but if mom is unhappy that's it. everything grinds to a halt. >> mommies today are way too permissive. there are times you have got to get in your kid's face. say i'm very unhappy with just went down here. turn your back. you coals over those little suckers, tucker. suckers, tuck iters. they don't like it when momma bear is upset with them. here is the guarantee from this book. with any kid stop asking questions and put away the why word.
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that goes for every wife listening. don't ask your husband questions. we hate questions you turn us off why word. >> why do you this? why did you do that? >> alisyn: we're not supposed to ask questions? what are we supposed to do. >> your son or daughter says something that's having, tell me more about that. tell me more about that is a command. it doesn't put the defenses up. it shows interest. so you have to move towards your kids or they become slam and clickers. you know, they come home from work and they slam a door, he they click it, and my youngest daughter, i mean, she can text like a woodpecker that's got adhd. that's the world these kids live in. >> clayton: you say in the book every kid needs vitamin e but also vitamin n. you have got to get in their face and tough or is that something different. >> you have got to encourage, that's the e. encourage your kid. i graduated fourth and bottom of my class in high school. i was sent home in fourth grade and thrown out of
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college. former dean and professor of arizona. how did your mom help you turn that around? >> she believed in me anyway. that's part of the point. my high school put me on their hall of fame which is really funny. i pick up my mother she lived to be 95. she saw some things her youngest son did in life. mom we fueled a people fee. didn't we. >> i'm so proud of you. >> remember of the night the cops brought me home? >> oh i do. but you were such a good boy. >> remember the time i got caught driving golf balls through the new york state thoroughway? >> i do but you were such a good boy. >> like god's love for us. no matter how imperkt they believed. >> my mother believed in me anyway. my high school counselor said lehman with your grades and records. 0 percentile he said i couldn't get you admitted to reform school. i dedicated my first book to him by the way. >> tucker: it worked out in
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the end that's for sure. thanks a lot. >> mother's day is worth celebrating. thank you, mom. >> the book is called what a difference a mom makes. doc, thanks again. >> you are welcome. don't met with the duck. why one of the stars of duck dynasty threatened to walk away from the hit show. >> plus, still haven't gotten mom a gift? stick around, i have got last minute gift guide. buy all of these today or tomorrow morning if you that are lazy. >> alisyn: what are you getting me? that. >> one right there. that camera. all business purchases. so you can capture your receipts, and manage them online with jot, the latest app from ink. so you can spend less time doing paperwork.
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>> tucker: i quit drinking and i can still speak english. >> you are now the host of "fox & friends" in the morning you couldn't do that if you were drinking. >> tucker: that's correct. we had -- they were fantastic. it was cinco de mayo burrito rolling contest. [ laughter ] >> greg: that's amazing, great stuff. >> tucker: it was great stuff. i'm not -- in the slightest. it was great television. >> alisyn: what's so funny about that that's accurate. >> tucker: that was the highlight of my weekend last week. >> alisyn: why is greg gutfeld laughing like a little girl like that's the funniest thing he has ever heard. chihuahua races.
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he has done worse. >> clayton: red eye is on saturday night. saturday night edition of red eye now at 11:00 p.m. >> alisyn: you were on last night. that's great. what time do you get done with that before our show? >> tucker: about 9:30. it's worth it. hilarious show. now at a time when normal adults can watch. 11:00 p.m. >> alisyn: best written show on the network. >> on any cable. >> alisyn: on any network. >> clayton: one of the most popular shows on a and e is duck dynasty. one of the most popular shows on cable. almost got canned as a result of one of the stars on that show basically saying he was receiving push back from individuals about him talking about gods and guns on the show on a regular basis. and apparently it bothered him so much it took to facebook to talk about it. >> alisyn: we don't know he if the show was almost cancelled. all we know is that phil robertson, one of the duck dynasty patriarch said i am
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not going to stop. here is exactly what he said. if we can't pray to god on the show, we will not do the show. god and guns are a part of our every day lives. to remove either of them from the show is unacceptable. he said this to a local radio station. we don't know if it was emails into the show. we don't know who was suggesting to cut down on the gods and guns. >> tucker: all i know is i have never seen the show but after watching this tape right here that you are looking at and reading mr. robertson's quotes. i'm going to make an appointment to watch duck dynasty. >> tucker: i love to duck hunt especially when it's warm. it's pretty difficult because it's freezing on the east coast. they are hunting where it looks temperate and nice. that's the way to duck hunt. >> alisyn: do you wear. >> i sit in a blind with a cigar shivering. >> clayton: can you do duck calls? there is no chance i'm going to do it on the air. [quacking] >> you blow a duck call.
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>> clayton: draw the line at chihuahua races. >> tucker: it's wonderful. >> clayton: let us know what you think of duck dynasty and whether or not that show might have been pulled off the air and he might have walked away. there we are on twitter ff weekend. time for headlines right now. tell you what other news is happening. the fda's request to delay the ruling on plan b contraception has been denied. judge edwin korman telling the government he will not delay his make the plan b pill available to women without a prescription. he did agree to put off his original ruling until monday to give the government a chance to appeal that decision. and defending their faith. oklahoma high school students 10 commandments plaque in their school. the plaques have come under fire from atheist group who say the christian symbols should not be allowed. they have started social media pay tuitions to keep the plaques up. the school board will make a decision on the plaques on monday.
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republicans and democrats don't agree on much now adays. one thing they do agree on is neither of them like justin bieber. ♪ i was like baby, baby, baby, oh ♪ like, baby, baby, no ♪ like, baby, baby. >> alisyn: don't hate on the biebs. but in a new poll about music tastes, justin bieber was the only singer to get bad rating on both republicans and democrats scored lower than chris brown and lady go ga. only 8 percent said they would elect him president. clay display i don't think a low approval rating. >> tucker: he is more than 10 years younger than the constitutionally required age for president. >> alisyn: can you read the next one? >> tucker: a cat owner gets furry feline a thunder shirt that is supposed to keep your stress calm during stressful situations.
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anyway, you are doing something wrong if you do. it looks like it's working for this cat. the cat is so relaxed he can't even stand. the owner tries at least 10 times to get him up but no luck. the video posted last year but picking up steam now in the way that brilliant youtube videos often do. take off the thunder shirt. that looks mean. >> clayton: i want a thunder shirt. >> tucker: compresses your breathing sowg are not get enough oxygen. >> clayton: can't be anything cruel and humane. >> alisyn: paralyzed. >> clayton: where is peta in all of that if it is cutting up the breathing. >> rick: loosen up the. i know people that use it on dogs. if you are passed out, you are not going to complain or bark. >> clayton: all cats do lay around anyway. what is he stressed from? >> rick: good point. if you are in the middle of the country waking up very
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very cold. take a look what's about to happen on monday. quick look ahead. rapid city about 32-degree right now. get ready by monday you will be up to 93. nebraska 94. a few spots flirting with the 100-degree mark. big warm up there. go to the eastern side of your picture though. chicago 63 by monday and detroit 657. cold air off to the east. central plains, high plains are going to be warming up a lot. today however, thunderstorms across much of the northeast. it will be scattered in nature. and a few times there will be a little bit more severe. i think the city seeing some of those thunderstorms later on this afternoon. maybe with some pretty gusty winds. down to the southeast, we'll see some scattered showers. and maybe a few thunderstorms as well. mostly though, along the coastal areas in that central gulf and florida seeing storms. today. out across the west looking spectacular but warm. 102 in yuma. all right, clayton and alli, send it back to you inside. >> thank you very much. if you are still deciding what to get your mom or
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maybe your wife for mother's day. you only have one shopping day left. luckily for you our resident tech geek clayton has some gadget gift ideas. >> you can buy all of these today or wait until toll morning you can buy them tomorrow morning. >> let me start off with amazon. hd out now. $20 off today. if you go to the web site and use the coupon code fire for mom you will get $20 off their kindle fire for the book lover mom who wants to read the books. they also have the kindle paper white. this is a beautiful device to take to the beach. >> so teeny. >> tiny. doesn't have internet access like the kindle fire hd does. browsing but not the same. can you watch videos here. plus different. kate spade bags as well. take a look at these. >> very fashionable. all the different cases for the kindle fire and kindle paper white as well. what's your next suggestion. >> mom who hates clutter. who doesn't? power mat is out with brand
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new duracell power mat with brand new cases for the iphone 5 and of course the other smart phones. a mat you plug into the wall. come home from a busy day. throw it right here on the mat and it begins to charge using induckive charging. no plugging in. don't have to cink -- sync. >> different cases for blackberries new iphone case just out from during sell power mat. for the mom who loves to cook in the kitchen. this is great little device. it's the compass stand. look at this. it will just pop right in your drawer with your other utensils. folds down like a little evil. if you love to cook put down ipad here open up your epi curious app. don't have to worry about it getting splashed with food stuffs. compass pic that up at an apple store. >> for the mom who hates clutter michael coarse has
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i foam 5 credit card. cash, smart phone inside the bag. throw it over your shoulder and don't have to worry about losing your cell phone and purse. i love michael kors do i have to have an iphone. >> put it there and put your other smart phone. >> that's when i'm going to do. how about for the mom who loses her keys like do you. >> alisyn: what? >> clayton: the hip key. one of the coolest new gadgets to come out. pop it on your buckeyes or pop it on your kid even though it on book bag busy airport and it pares with smart phone. let you know however away your child or keys is getting from you. sefnedz out a signal if you have lost your keys or anything like that, you can actually just press a little button and find it. >> alisyn: i think this could change my life. also. is that it? >> know want to hear. >>. fit bit flex for the mom who's to lose some weight and get in shape.
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fit bit flex. wear it on your arm and pairs with your smart phone and count every step you take to help you lose weight. it tracks all different colors. red, different arm bands. pairs with your smart phone can you see i have walked over 11,000. >> be dom ter on your wrist. >> tracks sleep patterns. want to wake up at 5:00 a.m. give gentle vibration i have lost 28 pounds wearing this device in tracking this. >> have you? i should start paying attention to you more. these are great suggestions. thank you. i look forward to seeing what you are going to wrap for me. let's go over to tucker what's coming up. >> thank you, alli. benghazi gate exposed. we now know the talking points were changed 12 times so what exactly did we know and when? our catherine herridge has been following this story right from the beginning unlike so many others. joins us with a realtime line after the break. hi i'm terry, and i have diabetic nerve pain.
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i worked a patrol unit for 17 years in the city of baltimore. when i first started experiencing the pain, it's hard to describe because you have a numbness but yet you have the pain like thousands of needles sticking in your foot. it was progressively getting worse, and at that point, i knew i had to do something. when i went back to my health care professional, that's when she suggested the lyrica. once i started taking the lyrica, the pain started subsiding. [ male announcer ] it's known that diabetes damages nerves.
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are you okay? 'cause you look a little banged up. you look pretty jacked up, man. yeah. that's my face. oh. [ male announcer ] see "star trek into darkness" in theatres may 17th. go to esurance's facebook page for a chance at free movie tickets. puck tuck more breakthroughs in the botched handling of the terror attack. string of emails point to 12 different versions of those benghazi talking points and those talking points were changed to remove all references to terror and radical islam for the administration's political gain. catherine herridge fox news chief correspondent.
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>> we reported here on fox that it was not spontaneous, coordinated premeditated and nothing to do with the andy islam video as the obama white house claimed. >> i don't think the movie had anything twhat happened in. and you remember, even when the car tunes about mohammed came out, it was months before between the publication and an actual act of violence. i have no doubt about it. it was a coordinated military styled commando type rain that had both direct fire and indirect fire. >> significantly, congressman rogers was receiving regular briefings on benghazi and getting the same information available to the white house. and within the intelligence community so it was clear to the congressman one day after the attack that it was not related to the video. yet, the white house continues to claim that it took weeks to figure that out and those positions, of course, cannot be
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reconciled, tucker. >> tucker: that's annual amazing tape. i hadn't seen that before, tucker. he is the chairman of the intel committee. just had privy awful lot of classified data. >> that's correct. >> tucker: what about the rest of the intelligence community? how long did it take for them to know al qaeda was involved? >> we reported here on fox on september 17th, one day after susan rice's appearance on the sunday talk shows based on intelligence source that there was no demonstration at the con salute when the attack unfolded. and it took the state department 22 days to confirm that fact. as for the cia director, we reported on november 16th the that david petraeus told lawmakers that he too knew within 24 hours of the attack that it was terrorism and that al qaeda and islamist group ansar al al cherie are a were most likely behind it. he also claimed he had no idea who was behind the changes to the talking points. this week's he addition of the weekly stashed reports that on september 15th, one day before rice's controversial sunday show appearances, petraeus emailed the cia point
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person on capitol hill, expressing his frustration at the obama administration's removal of all of these references to islamic terrorists as well as as al qaeda. tucker. >> tucker: do we have any clue why given the fact from your reporting this was known? it was known that the video was likely not the cause of what happened in benghazi. how did susan rice wind up carrying that message on the sunday shows to the rest of the country? >> well, what seems clear, based on these vary yus editions of the talking points, we now know at least 12 revisions, the state department was very concerned that excerpts were taken out that lead up to benghazi, there had been warnings from the intelligence community and specific attacks on western targets in libya. what we know based on our reporting is that there was an emergency meeting. hillary clinton's office was notified in washington that benghazi consulate
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could not sustain coordinated attack. they were there for ignoring those warnings,. >> catherine herridge. i have to say you have from the very start done fact based sobering report and you deserve more credit. >> thank you. >> tucker: more "fox & friends," two minutes. i love the lebanese. i... i'm not sure. enough of the formalities... lets get started shall we? jimmy how happy are folks who save hundreds of dollars switching to geico? happier than dracula volunteering at a blood drive. we have cookies... get happy. get geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. over any other carrier? many choose us because we have the largest 4glte network. others, because of our reputation for reliability.
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anybody can make it and the kids can help. >> you will be making avocado bacon and toe made toe toast. it sounds delicious. >> it is may i say. walk us through how you do this. bag get. >> french bag get you cut into slices toast it super easy. pieces of tomato and avocado smashed up. start and put the alva of a voyeur cadieux on the bag got. no cooking at all. a half slice of tomato and then top it with a piece of bacon or two, depending on what you are in the mood for. >> alisyn: i say two. >> there you go. >> alisyn: every note to all dads out there. every breakfast should have bacon for mother's day. >> bacon makes everything better. >> umbrella drink too. you don't typically think of that as a breakfast in bed accompaniment, what is it.
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>> it's a mom mows is a. desert. champagne glass, orange and champagne flavored it's a desert you can enjoy, right? the comfort of your own bed. raw frosting. >> mini cupcakes in it as well. you could do raw frosting if you wanted. >> tucker: that is so over the top. >> clayton: dads will wake up in the morning we don't have any flowers in the house. what do we have laying around here we can make a flaw out of. coffee coffee filter flowers? can you make this from coffee filters. bouquet from coffee filters. >> clayton: how do you could that? >> they smell beautiful. can you paint them watercolor. >> i hate to break this i just want to present this. >> wow, tucker. thank you. >> so sweet. >> tucker: will you be my valentine? >> alisyn: it's mother's day but sure: this survey
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shows 36% of people find this awkward i don't know why. >> 42% of people have never had breakfast in bed. >> tucker: we can change it. >> clayton: temper pee dick great. thank you. in addition to us monitoring your accounts for unusual activity, you could also set up free account alerts. okay. [ female announcer ] at wells fargo we're working around the clock to help protect your money and financial information. here's your temporary card. welcome back. how was london? [ female announcer ] when people talk, great things happen.
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i'm sure she is. [ ethereal music plays ] [ motorcycle revving ] getting you back on a brand-new bike. now, that's progressive. >> alisyn: good morning, everyone. today is saturday, may 11th. i'm alisyn camerota. not once, not twice but 12 times talking points changed. we now know who was behind most of this. the white house says not us. governor huckabee has some thoughts straight ahead. >> yes, he does. the internal revenue service targeting americans for political ideology and singling out groups who oppose the president's agenda. feared this for years. turns out it actually happened. we have details. >> clayton: he was just three months old when he was found on the side of the road tossed from a car and wadly injured. vets didn't think he would
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survive. he is here to celebrate his first birthday. happy birthday joey. that's governor huckabee in case you are wondering. "fox & friends" hour three starts right now. >> we begin this hour with a fox news alert because we have just received word that the west wing of the white house has been evacuated for a report of smoke coming from a mechanical closet. there are fire trucks parked at 1600 pennsylvania avenue we're told. abundance of caution. there has been no actual fire or flames reported. we wanted to be clear the president is not in any danger. at this point but there is some sort of smoke and we believe it's an electrical fire at the white house. the west wing has been evacuated we, of course,
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will keep an eye on this as we move through our next two hours. but thanks so much for joining us. let me tell you what else is happening in your news at this hour. because preliminary tests confirm that aerial castro is the father of that 6-year-old girl rescued from cleveland house of horrors earlier this week. the mother is amanda berry. she was held about a decade in castro's house along with two other women gina dejesus and michelle knight. they did not recover any human remains in its search of the home. investigators say they are done processing this property. we have also learned that the last victim, michelle knight has been released from the hospital. she has asked for her privacy. we are not exactly sure where she is today. and a carnival crews passenger who went overboard may have jumped to save his girlfriend. according to new reports surveillance video appears to show paul rotington leaping from the carnival spirit moments after 27-year-old kristen schroeder jumped off. this happened wednesday night off the coast of australia. the search for the couple
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was called off last night and they are presumed dead. prince harry is in colorado today for the warrior games. last night the british royal mingled at cocktail reception with v.i.p.es including olympic gold medalist missy franklin and even singing happy birthday to the olympic star ♪ happy birthday to you. erm jerry friday the prince paid his respect at arlington national cemetery in d.c. he walked through graves where the troops killed in the wars in afghanistan and iraq are buried. flowers and note on the head stone. stopped by walter reid medical center wounded warrior and cutting edge technology being used to rehabilitate them. those are your headlines. >> clayton: let's bring in governor mike huckabee this morning who is joining us. good to see you, governor. >> thank you. you come and join us on a saturday morning when there has been quite a bit of news this week of course. latest news on benghazi
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unfolding on friday afternoon jay carney white house secretary taking to the podium to defend the white house saying that we made minimal changes. at most, perhaps a word had been redacted from these memos. we learned now that there were large chunks of these memos that were redacted. what's your take as you were watching this unfold yesterday? >> i think it's going to be the death of a thousand cuts. not any one great big bombshell that says this is whole story. this is going to eke out. that's the most dangerous thing for the white house. it would be better if -- if would be better if they had done this a long time ago and got continue over with. what they have attempted to do and what they seem to be committed to doing is just holding back and everyone is going to have to extract information like extracting a wisdom tooth. and every week there is going to be a little bit more that comes out here is what i think will happen. the honor of the cia has been questioned. i think the cia people are some of the most under appreciated people in public service today. they put their lives on the
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line. they get some of the worst jobs in the world and they do it and they can't even tell anybody what they're doing. >> they have to be quiet about it? >> they have to shut up about it they do live by a code of honor and standing. they are doing what they are doing because they love their country. they are being made the scapegoat for. this they are being accused of doctors these documents. this isn't going to last forever. their code of honor at some point will cause them to say we are not going to just sit here and be made the scapegoat for these incredible blunders. >> it's so striking too the treatment of david petraeus who, you know, whatever, you know, pit falls have occurred in his career lately a hero by any measure. and here the government spied on him. read his email. humiliated him and now the white house is implying it's all his fault on the basis of no evidence it seems to me. >> once again is he a shoulder -- soldier, soldier. honorable career as a military leader.
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this is not a situation that is going to fit well down in the ranks of soldiers and cia operatives. and what's happened is, instead of this being more about the cia, it's more about the cya. and more and more of the people within the white house and the state department are attempting to distance themselves from it. but keep in mind, there are hundreds if not thousands of people with with access to at least pieces of this story. >> we're going to start seeing those people come out and give pieces of that story because there is a sense in which up to a point people will protect those abo them. then it becomes where they realize nobody is going to protect them and they start singing. >> alisyn: one major piece that came out yesterday thanks to abc's reporting on this is that victoria nuland is the person who took out the references to al qaeda or any al qaeda affiliate and she felt her justification at the time was well we don't want members of congress. we don't want to give them
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any ammunition. we don't want them to be able to say the cia had warned us that the situation in benghazi was deteriorating. do you think and not as a republican what you think but as somebody who knows how government works, does the public have the attention span where this ends up hurting hillary clinton should she run in three years? >> probably so. but, again, this is not going to play out over the next two or three weeks or even two or three months. probably going to play out over the next two or three years. the question is does the committees of congress, do the committees of congress have the guts, the courage, the stamina to stay with this and unwind it, you know, spool it off and if they do, then we are going to get to the bottom of it. if they don't, then it may be up to the press. there is a little bit of ray of hope here. up until really the last week or so, most of the press with the exception of fox news had just not been interested in this story at all. in fact, ignored it and rolled their eyes and thought oh gosh here is a republican conspiracy theory. they can't do that anymore.
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there are too many facts staring them in the face. when the press starts breaking and when it stops being the lap dog for this administration and starts being the watchdog that it is supposed to be in a free society, then i think it's going to be a totally different world. >> tucker: speaking of so-called republican conspiracy theories you often hear people say almost jokingly maybe the irs doesn't approve of my politics. maybe they are giving me extra scrutiny. it turns out that's real. the irs admitted as much this week that they were coming down hard on political opponents of the president of the united states. this strikes me as a massive scandal, yet, no one has been fired at all and no one has been charged with a crime. why? >> i think because right now they are going to probably play the same game. let's cover it up and dismiss it and a minor presidents stake somebody made. it may have been. let me be fair. at this point it could be some bone head deep in the agency thought they were doing the president, democrats and god a favor by going after tea party groups that they thought
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were so horrible. >> why isn't that person in handcuffs? >> they should be. it's a crime. this is criminal activity and there should be prosecution. if this just sits there and no one gets exposed and then we need to run it ground. high high up did this go? >> clayton: that's the question i had. did some political operative for -- because we know it happened during the re-election campaign and was that the point of this, right? >> sure. >> clayton: happening 2012 in the run-up to the election. did someone at the dnc. did some political operative make the phone call to the irs? did someone put pressure on someone to say let's check into these tea party and conservative groups to make sure that money is going where it should be going. >> that's going to be the important question. if there is some low level staff who made the decision but did it because someone told him. just remember, there is going to come a point that person isn't going to go to prison over it without blowing the whistle on somebody above them. that's when we will start finding out. the question is will we
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pursue it? the answer is yes, mitch in mcconnell says is he going to pursue it it members of the house saying is he going to pursue it they have to. too much here at stake in terms of really protecting the integrity of the repuck biblical of the united states. this is not about the politics of last year's election. this is about whether or not we can fundamentally trust our government to be honest. and that's what benghazi is about. it's not about the politics of last year or the politics of 2016. it's whether or not our government has integrity and whether we have people in high places who either have or who lack the character to have the ability to serve. >> alisyn: if it turns out in benghazi that really the white house or the state department was just worried that republicans would have caught them flat food footed because they weren't heeding the warnings that the situation deteriorating, is that it? do we move on. >> no, it's not had. it who ordered the standdown of the military. who said that those assets couldn't be deployed when
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you had military members who were ready. not just ready, they were anxious. they wanted to go in and help. they heard americans scream and they wanted to answer those screams. god help us as a country if we don't respond to the screams of a american being murdered. until we know that this is not over. >> clayton: help on the way. help on the way. >> we have always said we will never leave you behind. in this case what we said was you are on your own. good luck. >> clayton: governor huckabee 8:00 p.m. on the huckabee show. >> one of the guest is general jerry general force commander led those forces 700 former military members have signed a letter with general boykin raised some of the questions i just raised. talk to some of the state officials. informative show about why what -- why we didn't respond and then also what could we have done?
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>> boykin is one of the most amazing gleem he is incredible human being. >> alisyn: governor, thanks so much. coming up, you are not going want to to miss this. why three cleveland women held hostage of course that's not always the case. what lessons can be learned from this ordeal? our next guest is a man who has helped find missing people and children for 15 years. he was my boss at america's most wanted and his own sister went missing. we will talk to fill learnman in a few minutes. >> tucker: think chef has short fuse with adults. what will he do with kids? next challenge in the kitchen. that's coming up in a moment. she knows you like no one else.
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thousands are still missing in this country what lessons can other families learn from this cleveland ordeal? phil is the former co-executive producer of america's most wanted and his own stepsister jacque went missing years ago and has never been found. hi, phil, nice to see you. >> alisyn, good to see you, how are you doing? >> alisyn: i'm doing well. you were my boss at america's most wanted for five of the 15 years that you worked there dr. was no time ever america's most wanted we were more joyous than when we would find a missing child. what did you think when you heard this cleveland story? this was amazing moment as you know alisyn these stories became very personal to us. the media would jump on a missing kids story for a couple days and move on to the next thing. we would live with these stories year in and year out and talk to the families and get close to the families. i'm sure you are still talking to some of the victims you helped. i'm still talking to some of them. when this story broken credible. i heard from everybody on
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the staff. first thing this has happened in the facebook edge. found each other within minutes it. it was incredible feeling. miracles don't happen very often. that's why they are called a miracle. so when they did happen and we sometimes got to make them happen, it was incredible, incredible feeling. this with s. a very joyous week. >> alisyn: absolutely. and yet, the sad truth is that most missing children are not found alive. i went back and read the articles from the week that amanda beary went missing all those years ago, 10 years ago, her mother was quoted in the paper as saying i think somebody is holding her. i think she is being held. of and often the parents have hunches like that. county police really go on that? >> well, you have to never give up as you and i learned every person didn't give up. i know this kid has been missing for six months. i know this kid has been missing for a year but i believe we can bring this child home and they would
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congeal us go on shows and bring these pictures around and every once in a while we find out what do you know that parent's hunch is correct. have to never give up hope and give up pressing. it's the parents who keep pushing, keep pushing, keep hoping those are the ones whose kids come home. >> alisyn: this story is particularly powerful for you your stepsister jackie vanished. she went missing when she was did 3 years old what do you think happened to jackie. >> we know what happens to a girl who jumps on a train and winds up in manhattan 3:00 in the morning in the middle of winter. i can't myself say i know what happened to jackie. we never did find the answer to that story. all i knew as with we came to america's most wanted knowing i can't solve my case but can i help other parents. everybody at that show, many parents we spoke with had tragedies in heir own lives we use that show as a
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chance to try to help other families. and that's what we did on the show. that's what i take from it is that at least i was able to bring other missing kids home. the first story i worked on at most america's most wanted was a 5-year-old girl from boston. we managed to bring her home. until i had a son of my own that was the most important thing i ever did in my whole life. >> that's so beautiful, phil. did you great work on that show. >> as did you. >> alisyn: thank you. it's wonderful to see you as always. thanks so much for coming on with your steer. >> great to see you. >> alisyn: coming up next on the rundown, they usually honor journalists and historic events. why is one museum in d.c. now honoring terrorists? we will explain that back story. he was tossed from a car and left to die. but miraculously joey the dog survived. this morning, joey celebrates a special milestone with us. his first birthday. ( woman ) hold on, this might get bumpy.
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jay also like it when mother nature helps him wash his car. mother nature's cool like that. citibank mobile check deposit. easier banking. standard at citibank. >> clayton: welcome back to "fox & friends." quick headlines for you. looking at new pictures. the international space station where moments ago two crew members were sent into space to fix an ammonia leak. nasa officials say the leak is spreading five pounds of chemicals each day into orbit. the space walk is expected to take almost seven hours. celebrity chef gordon ramsey has a short fuse with adults? what will he do with kids? we will soon find out in his new show junior master clef on fox. the spinoff will be aing comper kids ages 8 to 13. ali? >> all right. [dogs barking] >> alisyn: if you have been
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following this story you will be happy update. joey rescued pit bull pup who last year was thrown out of a car plastic bag at just four months old. so badly injured that vets did not know then if he would survive. >> tucker: he did and not only survived but thrived and is he here celebrating his first birthday today with his owner and the person who saved him. dr. lou denial al hi, doctor great to see you. >> great to see you. >> alisyn: how do we know it's his birthday. >> 8 months from the day we found him we know this month about this time he would be a year old. >> our viewers not familiar with this story. how did you find joey and what was the recovery process like. >> he was brought to us from animal control shelter. they were alerted to a puppy that was found screaming and they found him in a plastic bag. they brought him in and he was in really bad shape. he was paralyzed our four limbs because of a fractured neck.
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he was in shock and had multiple other injuries. we didn't know if he would survive. ner mind walk again. >> did you ever find out who did that? >> no. >> i hope -- why do you think it happened? >> i think he was part of a pit bull ring probably. they were probably using him for bait and they discarded him when they didn't need him anymore. >> pit bulls have this reputation for aggression and for being incompatible with children, for example, this dog's temperament is so sweet. >> oh, yeah. it's all in the person that raises the dog. you know, we make them into the fighters, if that's what we -- because they are so loyal they will do whatever we ask them to do. but, you know, if they are raised in a healthy environment and trained, they are a wonderful family pet. >> alisyn: how is he doing physically? >> great, great. he runs with me. he still has an off gate. and is he a little stiff when he gets up in the morning. but he stretches out. he stretches, he does a whole yoga class on the way to the back door every
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morning. >> alisyn: doggy yoga. >> we have something special for joey on his first birthday. >> awe. >> happy birthday, joey. it's a dog cake which i didn't know you could get but apparently this is not edible for humans. we should be. >> alisyn: says you. >> delightful for humans but the point is it's for dogs not to eat chocolate. >> this is not chocolate. >> see if he likes it joey likes it there you go, joey. i had a piece earlier and can i vouch for it chicken live is delicious. >> does a good segment. we want to mention healing haven animal fund.org. obviously there are sadly lots of animals that end up in joey's condition, not quite as bad but who are abused and people who want to know more i will tweet that out. >> i could be here all day. >> tucker: you really are doing god's work. >> thank you. >> tucker: thank you. >> clayton: thanks doctor and joey enjoy your
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birthday. >> alisyn: how is your arm feeling? >> clayton: it's getting a little tired. >> tucker: if a dead boston bomber was buried in your backyard, how would you feel about it. >> i'm disgusted. i think it's disrespectful. >> tucker: fierce debate taking place in a town near you. >> clayton: fire up the grill. barbecue season about to swing. grilling tips that won't break the bank. enjoy, joey. >> alisyn: happy birthday. [ male announcer ] with free package pickup from the united states postal service a budding artist can ship like a big business. just go online to pay, print and have your packages picked up for free. we'll do the rest. ♪
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>> clayton: welcome back to "fox & friends" on this saturday morning. thanks for waking up with us. this morning we are learning more about where the boston bomber is getting buried. turns out there was much controversy as it unfolded in boston all the mortuaries and cemeteries in boston said not here. we don't want it anywhere in the state of massachusetts and some residents saying look, they need to be buried somewhere. where are they going to be buried? turns out virginia we are learning. >> secret burial in central virginia. one woman who was a stranger to him you just heard this story and felt that he had to be buried somewhere. she stepped in and acted as intermediary. residents in the town where he is buried including an
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islamic center are not happy about this. about having his body in their backyard. here is what some say. >> i'm disgusted are i think it's disrespectful. >> send him back home to his mother. not here. >> if he has such anti-american sentiments even as an american citizen and connection to his homeland, he should be returned to his family and his homeland. >> it's possible that it might not be an option to send him back to his mother. >> alisyn: why didn't he? >> he is not from there. actually. he didn't grow up -- oh i guess in dagestan. >> alisyn: why not send the body back? the parents want his body. i'm confused as. >> the corpse back to the former soviet union? that's a good question. >> clayton: who pays for the burial? >> tucker: you know the earn, we do. always, if you are ever wondering who pays for something you don't like in the answer is you. >> clayton: that happens a lot. yeah, tore fly a body back to dagestan.
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how many thousands of dollars. >> that's right. this man's mother. this terrorist's mother is in trouble. not only is she obviously a convicted shoplifter but she is being looked at very closely of course by federal investigators. looking into her role in these murders the uncle laid claim to the body toe mortuary in boston there and claim the family members claimed his body there so why didn't they then foot the bill for this? find some other means of burial. but now in virginia. saying we don't want this body here. >> alisyn: right. by the way, the uncle was the disgusted. vociferous. called them loser, shameful obviously. tamerlan's wife is an american citizen and she why isn't she responsible for the body? >> looks like she is in trouble to. >> why don't they bury the guy the same way they did usama bin laden, dump him in the ocean. i said that would be
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disrespectful to the fish. don't that guy down there with the fish either. >> there you go. let us know what you think about all of this. here are your headlines a criminal investigation has now been launched into last month wants fertilizer plant explosion in west, texas. largely treated as an accident. they are investigating it from every angle. the news comes as paramedic first responder brice reid has been arrested for possession of bomb making materials. no connection between his arrest and the april 17th explosion which killed 14 people. washington, d.c. d.c. news smiewsm set to honor terrorists in an annual ceremony honoring journalists while reporting the museum. hamas operatives. tv network designated as terrorist organization by the u.s. government. killed in israeli air strike in 2010. this year's bike-to-work day take as wrong turn for one san francisco commuter. take a look at the men in the gray jacket chasing
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after a bike thief who stole his ride. the victim stopped at an energizer station which gives away free refreshments to cheer fellow riders on that's when the brazen bandit took off with his $1,300 bike. >> he was on his bike -- he was on my bike. and i was on foot. i imagined myself in this situation so many times but i couldn't -- i couldn't catch up to him. >> alisyn: san francisco police will r. still on the lookout for that thief. if you know anything, call 911. all right. those are your headlines. >> rick reichmuth is standing by to tell us what it is like outside the confines of this studio. what is it? >> right outside. the umbrella came out. it's raining right here. scattered showers today out here. take a look at the maps. talk about what's going on out across areas of the west. of the heat is back. cooler days. seeing back to the triple digits. take a look what happens over the next few days. las vegas typically you see your first 100-degree day
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on may 25th. monday is going to be your day. i think you are going to hit 102. tuesday stay in that same range. couple of weeks early for you. that's usually the kind of thing you don't want that kind of a streak to start too early. out across the northeast today though. we have got these thunderstorms we are going to have. severe maybe throughout the afternoon. especially across areas of the carolinas and in towards virginia. could be mostly talking about some hail and some strong winds. there will be some scattered showers and thunderstorms throughout the day today. behind this, get ready, much colder air moves. in temps back in the 50s by monday for almost everybody. down to the southeast showers across the central gulf coast and going to be plaguing areas of. georgia and carolinas as well. things drying out across most of texas though after a very rainy couple of days and the severe weather we saw there and some localized flooding. into the local plains here is where the cool weather is and even snow flying
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across the up of michigan today. out across the west, we are going to see a ton of sunshine and warm temperatures continuing. all right. i think we are going over to you clayton. >> clayton: throwing a summer bash and menu doesn't mean you have to break the bank and even in the middle of a monsoon out here in midtown, manhattan, we won't stop making and grilling up meat. great tips how to save some money. nice to be here. >> clayton: rainy day. grill out and doesn't matter, right? >> we grill all weather long regardless of rain or snow so barbecue season is underway. ways for people to barbecue. >> show me some of these ideas here that you have. how can we save some money? because when you go and you are bringing over 30 people and 20 people to the house for a big barbecue it really adds up. >> it does add up. here are great alternative ways to keep the costs down and still have a great time. >> okay. here we have some lakeover
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leftovers. barbecue sandwich. great cheese. each bread enormous amount of cheese. >> throwing that on the grill. >> put that directly on the grill and great caramelization. bring out flavors and make a basic sandwich fantastic. >> clayton: wonderful. what do you have cooking over there right now. you throw it on there with the bread, right? >> absolutely. caramelization provide great flavor. make sure we are preheating the grill. about 400 to 400 degrees. with a burger and sandwiches not putting on high heat like a steak. >> steak high heat for minute or two to caramelize and turn it down. if the heat was too high it will overcoocket outside and undercook the inside. we want it to be even on and off as quick as possible. >> clayton: another thing you created to save little bit of money is inside out cheeseburger. why do and this how are you going to save money. >> fun way of people to get
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a different idea to do a burger. burgers are engrained in our culture. how we do inside cheeseburger. two patties here. take our cheese loaded up. put both patties together. we are using craft singles here. a nice mild cheese. ooze out of when we bite into it. it will be great. >> clayton: great way to save on the bread and carbs or you are gluten intolerant and gluten problem. any other tips and tricks where can people go to find out more information? >> go to crab grilling.com, weber.com and check out my facebook page kevin's backyard. >> kevin thank you for joining news this rainstorm. are you doing all right back there? >> clayton: we have the best viewers in the world. >> grilling in the rain. >> clayton: they just want some burgers. >> tucker: one thing we have here is food. coming up, warning for all ipad owners. tablet heart risk? startling details ahead. >> alisyn: plus, first
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smart covers could accidently turn off a pacemaker. this discovery made by a 14-year-old california girl and her cardiologist father. though found when people with pacemakers hold an ipad close to their chest, the device switches off in 30% of patients. apple had no comment on that we could be saying good by to stitches. scientists tested a way to use gold to close wounds. procedure use as gold based sodder that act like elastic bending with the body so the wound doesn't reopen. also lessons scarring and accelerators healing time. no word when it can be used by doctors, something to look forward to. for more information go to foxnews.com/weekend. clayton? >> clayton: money issues can ruin relationships but what if you are a newlywed and honeymoon is over. what conversations should you be having with your new spouse? >> alisyn: ceo and founder of better investment. hi john. >> good morning. how are you?
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>> alisyn: stunned to read 43% of the general population did not talk about money before marriage. >> it's incredible, isn't it? number one cause of divorce in america. financial issues and a third of all couples say it's the most sensitive issue in their marriage. >> joint bank accounts is always a sore point. so much so that it just crashed our computer as you saw on the screen there. joint bank accounts problem you have that first conversation should we do it, should we not do it? should we keep our money separate? >> our belief at betterment we have four steps joint accounts someone of them. kind of a no brainer these days there is a popular system called the three pot system a joint account that both partners use. and then you have individual accounts and you can transfer regular amounts into those. and that happens with budgeting as well. >> alisyn: that's what you recommend having your own pot. women want to have a little bit of their own money. you don't always like your husband to be scrutinizing everything that you are doing. lay clay all the shoes? >> he doesn't have to know.
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>> alisyn: joint one and then two separate ones. >> have the conversation in advance around the budget and set that up transfer so then it's your money to spend as you would like. >> alisyn: okay, next. budget planning. what does that mean? >> budgeting is just about communication. that's the most important part and having this joint account system helps to you auto mate it and automation is great when you are planning budgets. there is great tools online like mint as well. >> savings plan. people thinking about the immediate future. they have got to think long term. part of that budgetary process needs to be the savings plan what do you recommend? >> absolutely. important thing about savings is setting goals. having conversations with around goals. there is going to come a time in life when you have to put your kids through college. you want to take a vacation. maybe you are changing jobs and putting a down payment on a house all at the same time. you don't want to have to dip into retirement savings to do that have that conversation and auto mate savings towards your goals. a service like betterment can be great for doing that. >> clayton: are we smart enough as people who don't have financial expert in our back pocket to make
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those -- to answer those questions? because we might not even know the questions to ask. is it wise to go to someone we can ask those questions. >> some people choose to go to someone there are services like betterment help do you this onlibrary walk you through that conversation. >> alisyn: you also suggest about talking about retirement planning which of course is very unusual for newlyweds particularly if you are young to start thinking about retirement. what age is the right age to have this conversation. >> earlier the better. the other important thing is fees you are paying for your retirement. if you have a plan at work, go ahead and max that out. if if you have a 401(k) max out that plan. there was a great front line piece a couple weeks ago about all the fees that are hidden in retirement plans. so, everyone should watch that to learn more. >> clayton: john stein, founder and ceo of betterment. we appreciate you joining us this morning. thanks so much. >> thanks and happy mother's day speaking starting early. >> alisyn: thanks, john.
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for venus and serene into williams their career path was clear. >> what do you want to be when you grow up? >> tennis player. >> i would like to be a tennis player. >> alisyn: wait until you see this new documentary getting us up close and personal with the sisters. co-producer and director are here next. >> clayton: don't tell the star of duck tiny nasty he can't talk about gun and god he will walk away from the show. why are twice as many people choosing verizon over any other carrier? many choose us because we have the largest 4glte network. others, because of our reputation for reliability.
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>> tucker: they are bitter rivals on the tennis court yet they remain best friends in real life. a new film taking a closer look at venomous and serene into. dominance. >> what do you want to be when you grow up? >> tennis player. >> i would like to be a tennis player. >> girls from compton were not supposed to play tennis let alone be good at it? >> my dad revolutionary ideas in terms of changing the game. >> both of them to become number one in the world. >> my parents told me to be number one in the world. i was brain washed. >> alisyn: joining us now is michelle major co-producer and director of the new documentary venus and serena. venus great to have you here. >> thank you very much. bill. >> alisyn: their father is dominant presence in their lives. when can you just decide what your kids are going to be and actually achieve it. >> it's really miraculous. one of the reasons we wanted to make this film. did he he really have this plan before they were born?
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he swears he wrote a 78 page manifesto about how he was going it make venus into the number one player in the world before she was born. and then they happened to have serene into, too. >> >> we see this with other child athletes. tiger woods, wanted to play golf and this relationship with his father. of course, growing up. such an important component to their life. saying at such a young age this is what they want to be. did it surprise to you see this sort of evolution as you got to go back and look at all these pieces of film and the early childhood tape to see where they had come? >> it didn't surprise me because their father really had this vision and so did their mother, actually. and the whole family sort of surrounded them and decided that they were going to help them to become the greatest tennis players in the world. and they did. so, no, it didn't surprise me at all. >> they are obviously fierce competitors. i wouldn't want to play them, that's for sure. you say they get along in real life. are they close. >> they absolutely are so
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close. that was surprising. is this true? are they sort of -- fake friends? we spent 400 hours filming them and they actually love -- >> tucker: you would know at that point. >> we would know at that point. they cook together, they eat together. they do everything together. hang out at the pool. >> tucker: so cool. >> alisyn: andrew agassi had this burning fire for to be number one tennis player he hated it. it was a cage for him. are they happy with their lives. >> they are very happy with their father. this is one thing we would go in and find out there was a tense relationship or he had been a tennis dad sort ofarsh with them and driven them so hard that they didn't have a relationship. we found the absolute opposite. he would come on the practice court every day still in their 30's and sown that practice court every morning at 9:00 and greeting themmenned they greet him with big open arms and high dad and a kiss. high daddy. >> tucker: i love girls who love their dad. that's one of the great qualities a woman can have.
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>> clayton: this documentary follow as 2011 season. suffering from all kinds of injuries. what can viewers expect to see when they see this film? it opens on may 10th, right? >> when we were filming, triumphant film about tennis players and following them through the season and seeing them win. what actually ended up happening is serena almost died in the first month of filming. venus was out in the third round retired with a hip injury. we were biting our nails what is this film going to become? are they ever going to play tennis again and they end up sort of slowly working their way back. you get to know them more close and personal because we got to spend a lot of time off the court with them. >> alisyn: fascinating the film is venus and serena. thank you for the insight in it. >> clayton: coming up here on the show looked like a tornado tore through but really the dealings of a man on a rampage. details on this crazy story next. >> tucker: why can't this pet stay on his feet in the story behind a remarkably
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♪ good morning everyone. today is saturday, may 11th. i'm alisyn camerota. benghazi-gate exposed. we now know the talking points from the cia were changed 12 times. now the white house is struggling to defend themselves. >> the white house, as i said made one minor change to the talking points. drafted by and produced by the cia. >> one minor change? we'll get to the truth this morning. >> and targeting the tea party and conservatives. the irs admits they actually did that. you worried about it and it turned out to be real. we've got details coming up. >> move over leo, we're taking the great gatsby to a whole new
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level. we're getting fit speakeasy style. are they doing the charleston? >> they are. >> i spot that dance from a mile away. our own anna coy man is here. fox and friends hour 4 starts right now flappers. remember the roaring '20s? >> like it was yesterday. >> it was only 90 years ago. every hour, when i first started this, i thought how can you do a four hour show. every hour gets better. it builds upon the hour before. i feel sorry who don't watch the show from start to finish. most people do. if you're just tuning in -- >> it's possible that you've been on the air you're delirious. >> that's good. >> last week we ended the show with chihuahua races. >> you're welcome, america. benghazi, we're learning
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much more about what unfolded on that day, september 11th and what led up to that day. of course, the memos and briefing memos that came out in the days after this. yesterday, jay carney and the white house struggling to really answer questions as to why certain things were redacted from those memos. after all, the white house says it was one word we changed. we now know that's completely false. take a listen to the white house. >> the white house, as i said, made one minor change to the talking points drafted by and produced by the cia. even prior to that, had very few inputs on it. the talking points that have gotten so much attention and let's remember that these are talking points. it's not policy, it's talking points. to this day, have been shown to be wrong in only one instance. and that was the existence of demonstrations preceding the attack. everything else about them was true. >> it's just unbelievable. i mean, one change, one change
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that changed the basic message of what happened at benghazi. by the way, talking points aren't policy? i beg it differ. they are exactly that. they are absolutely policy. the administration articulates its points in public and it's held to that. when you make this -- you make your case, that's policy. >> what is he talking about, there was only one thing proving not to be true? first after you will, it wasn't a you-tube video, it was a demonstration, it was pre-planned. the cia had warned that there were attacks on the rise. they were worried about something happening on september 11th. as the ambassador was. furthermore, one of the things that's mind blowing, they took out the references to al qaeda. we know that. there were 100 references to that. they changed the phrase attacks in benghazi to demonstrations. why? why sanitize it? it was an attack. >> i know why, it was an election coming up in two months. part of the president's pitch to the public was, we have killed osama bin laden and we have al qaeda on the run.
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here was actual dem on strabl evidence that it was untrue and they went into campaign mode beginning with the spokesman at the state department, a hillary partisan and they were doing the bidding of the obama campaign when they lied about this. that's what they did, they lied. >> in a report last night, said the white house redacted the truth. >> the untruth is, the secretary of state said it, that the intelligence community had concluded what you heard on the talk shows, it was their production uncontaminated by any pol six. we kn -- politics. it was a document rammed through by the white house and the state department reflecting all their objections and the bottom line is that the -- in the end, they redacted the truth. >> by the way, where has the press been on all of this? if you recall in the wake of the iraq war and the weapons of mass destruction and the bungled intelligence and who knew what
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when and why did we go to this war in the first place if it wasn't for weapons of mass destruction, the press was all over it every day, berating the white house -- the press corps was berating them. you saw men's of the press corps diving in and questioning to get answers. >> you can thank the whistle blowers for that. they came forward and forced everybody to pay attention. when these guys came forward and testified this week, then suddenly everybody had to stop what they were doing and take notice. because these were very esteemed, respected public service diplomats and they came forward and talked about how different the official narrative was from their experience. >> the man in the middle, greg hicks, by the way none of them are political appointees, they are career state department employees. he's the one who was the highest ranking american diplomat in
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libya after the ambassador was killed, stevens. and he said that the explanation was ludicrous, that it was not the results of this video. that what he said something to the contrary, he was demoted and attacked. to be clear, we have learned this morning that he is not any kind of conservative agitator. he's a registered democrat in his state, he voted for hillary clinton in the primary in 2008. he voted for obama twice and so it's going to be very hard to discredit this man. you can't write him off as a crank. he's an obama vett voter and ca out the administration for lying. let's move on where there's smoke there's fire with the irs. as tucker brought up earlier, you thought it ended with the nixon administration, the president using the irs for political motivations. we thought we cleansed ourself of that. it turns out the irs has admitted now to specifically targeting political organizations that had included the words tea party or patriot
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as their title. one of their nonprofit titles as they were trying to tax exempt status. all of this came to be revealed with the lead up to the 2012 election. the question this morning is, who knew what when? who told the irs? was it a lone wolf at the irs who had a political stick and said i'm going to check these guys out? >> people have been fired, right, and arrested for doing this, subverting the rule of law, using the power of the government to crush the president's political enemies? people have gotten in trouble, right? >> you would think. >> you -- no, didn't happen. we had a guest on jennifer stefano, she was the state director in pennsylvania for americans for prosperity and tea party activist. she says that the irs made it so onerous for her that the documents that they had to fill out well beyond what any other 501 c 3 would have to fill out, the amount of paper, the lawyers they had to hire. the money to lawyering up, it
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became impossible for them to establish this charitable organization. listen to what she had to say. >> that's what the tea party stands for, right? limited government. people wonder, well, why do you want limited government? for this reason. you have an unelected, unaccountable rogue bureaucracy that's historically abusive towards people and political enemies that can literally shut down your life. this is not what america was founded on. when you start to undermine the rule of law, you are no longer a civil society. this is what we're fighting for. the very thing that's happening is what we're fighting for. >> it's scary. the irs is not just a tax agency, it's a law enforcement agency with armed agents, lots of people go to prison every year because of irs violations and the idea that they are -- by the way, the irs is a huge component of obama care. they're going to be one of the key government agencies administering obama care. if they're proven to be abusing
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their power in the service of the president's political aims, does that give you any faith they're going to do that even handedly? >> no. >> what they apparently are not are mathematicians. >> a conference call, the irs was on a conference call and news organizations will often get on conference calls, sort of question and answer period with this particular irs individual, and asking him some questions about money, finance and how this all unfolded and he can't answer a simple math question. listen. >> just to confirm one point, tom costello with nbc news. a quarter of the 300 were associated with tea party or republican issues, correct? >> no. i said that about a quarter of the cases that were selected for full development had either tea party or patriot in their name. >> okay. so just -- sorry. thank you for the clarification. that would be a quarter of the 300 then? we're talking 75%? >> correct. >> is that a quarter?
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>> thank you. i'm not good at math. >> you're with the irs. thank you. >> but i'm a lawyer. not an accountant. sorry. >> when you write that check to the irs for your taxes, you can -- simply say, i don't know how to do math. >> i'm sure they'll undercount what you owe. oh, wait, no. >> you guys are so being -- irs we love you. think you do a great job. e-mail us and find us on twitter. preliminary tests confirm that ariel castro is the father of a 6-year-old girl rescued from the house of horrors. amanda berry was held for ten years along with gina dejesus and michelle knight. the fbi did not recover remains in the search of the home. they say they're done processing the property. we've also learned that the last victim, michelle knight has been released from the hospital. she's asked for her privacy. it's unclear exactly where she
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is this morning. police say a fight between neighbors led to a man terrorizing a seattle suburb on a bulldozer. the suspect took the massive machine and aimed it right at a home pushing it 50 feet off its foundation and into another house, running over a pickup truck in the process. a power line was also snapped in half cutting electricity to homes as far as 20 miles away. fortunately, no one was injured. the star of a pop ar a and e show ready to walk if he couldn't talk about guns and god. duck dynasty star phil robertson received backlash from critics for his use of guns and prayer on the show. prompting him to say this. >> if we can't pray to gd on the show, we will not do the show. god and guns are a part of our everyday lives. to remove either from the show is unacceptable. robertson got his wish. a and e was on board. the network renewed duck dynasty for a fourth season. >> for good reason. apparently one of the great shows. >> one of the most popular shows on cable.
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let's check in with rick reichmuth now. >> when i was at the daytona 500, those guys were guests at it. they were mobbed. they were mobbed as much as danica patrick was at that place. >> they were guests at the white house correspondent's dinner also. for t to sit next to them? most of the afternoon. down across the south, the rain moving off shore but a few showers continue across parts of, say. the central gulf. would you hit the button for me there. across parts of the west, we're look good. plenty of sunshine, the rain moves in tomorrow. take a look at what happens next as you move over the next couple of hours and into tomorrow. you see the rain showers move this forward and you see niece showers by this afternoon and into the evening exit most of the east coast. but then go forward one more and take a look at what happens here. snow tomorrow night into monday morning flying across parts of upstate new york. the cold air back and snow back, unfortunately, for may in and
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across parts of new york. >> shocking. make it stop. >> hopefully this is the last one. i said that a month ago. >> you keep saying that. the technical wizardry of your staff. you're like can you hit the button? >> hey mike. >> nick is the best. >> minimum yoe graph machine. should teenagers be getting sex education from a phone app? it's all right at their fingertips and it costs nothing. parents are fired up. we're going to hear from one of them, next. justin bieber, the one getting democrats and republicans to agree. bipartisan consensus on justin bieber. details coming up. anything's possible, if you have the right tools. ryobi has over 50 products that work off of one 18 volt battery. and with new improved lithium and lithium plus batteries, you'll get a whole lot more done in less time.
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♪ protect your mouth, with fixodent. the adhesive helps create a food seal defense for a clean mouth and kills bacteria for fresh breath. ♪ fixodent, and forget it. well, they say there's an app for everything. how about getting sex education from an app? called the teens in new york city protection app. it provides various information about sex and where to get birth control and anyone can download it for free. is this how our kids should be getting that information? joining us now is a member of the new york city parents association. sam pierzola. >> thanks for having me. >> i have read accounts that the
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app directs children to abortion clinics. >> today is my daughter's 13th birthday. i would like to wish her a happy birthday. i love you very much. >> speaking of families, a men. why should the city of new york direct children to abortion clinics? >> the new york city parents union doesn't have a problem with sex education, we do not take a stand on abortion, a woman's right to choose or anything like that. yes, they are going to clinics -- >> wait, you don't have a problem with kids being directed to abortion clinics by the city of new york with no supervision from their parents? >> that's exactly what the problem is. it's very bad in new york city. the subversion and collusion between the mayors office, the department of education and the department of health. there are clinics and high schools right now and a federal judge ruled that any child who is of age get a plan b bill and plan b is the morning after pill that you take after having unprotected sex which will prevent you from becoming
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pregnant. there are possibilities of allergic reactions, possibility of an ectopic pregnancy. our problem is that parents are left out of equation completely. we do not have to be notified. >> dr. thomas farley, the new york city's health commissioner is responding to this reaction to this app. he says that most parents are overwhelmingly supportive. we used to provide basic information in a tiny pamphlet. these days the language of kids is the mobile phone. others would say, look, knowledge is power. what's wrong? he cites statistics that say there's a decline in teenage pregnancy partly because they're openly discussing the risks. what's the harm in information on a cell phone. >> i'm not opposed to education on the cell phone. i downloaded the app myself. the problem is it's more than education. it's directing children it to go to clinics to get plan b contraceptive without a parent's consent. in new york or in this country, you have to be 18 years old or
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21 years of age to drink. as a parent, if i were to give my child alcohol, i can be arrested if. give my child tobacco, i can't do that. we regulate the video games that our children play because of fear of too much violence would possibly make a child go out and do -- >> why doesn't the city back off and let parents raise their kids? how do you put up with all this stuff here? >> it's very difficult. you talked about this morning the cover-up in benghazi. there's a cover up here too. what's going on in benghazi is horrible and horrific, but so is this. >> the department of health says they provide an opportunity to come into our building. >> thanks for coming on and joining us and filling that out. at home, you may be the apple of your mom's eye. guess what? the real world does not care about you. college kids will get a reality check as they head into the workforce. >> a town with a new mayor. you'll meet the 4-year-old in charge. e. the new mayor of a town in
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minnesota. my mantra? always go the extra mile. to treat my low testosterone, i did my research. my doctor and i went with axiron, the only underarm low t treatment. axiron can restore t levels to normal in about 2 weeks in most men. axiron is not for use in women or anyone younger than 18 or men with prostate or breast cancer. women, especially those who are or who may become pregnant and children should avoid contact where axiron is applied
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as uneected signs of puberty in children or changes in body hair or increased acne in women may occur. report these symptoms to your doctor. tell your doctor about all medical conditions and meditions. serious side effects could include increased risk of prostate cancer; worsening prostate symptoms; decreased sperm count; ankle, feet or body swelling; enlarg or painful breasts; problems breathing while sleeping; and blood clots in the legs. common side effects include skin redness or irritation where applied, increased red blood cell count, headache, diarrhea, vomiting, and increase in psa. ask your doctor about e only underarm low t treatment, axiron.
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handout time as thousands of grads get ready to take on the real world, a lot of growing up they have to do. it's not going to be easy. we can attest to that. >> pew is reporting that 25% of people under the age of 25 are still living with their parents. nearly two-thirds more than in 2001. >> here to help us grow up is the author of adulting, how to become a grownup in 468 easy-ish steps. kelly williams joins us. i love -- great to see you. >> thanks for having me. great to be here.
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>> you wrote this book when you were 26. >> yes. >> did you have a lot of experience being an adult? >> i wouldn't say i was capable at it. which was part of my reason for writing the book. there's just all these little things that you feel you should know and you don't. how bleach works or how to cook chicken or what to say in a condolence note. i was a reporter at a newspaper for years and years. maybe i can treat this as a reporting project. >> went to the source. >> we have those friends who is homes are beautiful or they know just what to say to someone going through a hard time. when to ask for a raise. >> your number one suggestion is prove yourself. what does that mean? >> exactly. there's always a kind of shock when you graduate college. up until then, you know, your parents hopefully have loved and supported you. maybe your professors think you're great. you get out into the real world and you realize that it doesn't care about you at all. right? it's a shock. the thing about it is -- >> i know. >> maybe it hurts your feelings a little bit.
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it's a splash of cold water to the face. on the other hand, it, a, makes you appreciate those who care about you, you suddenly realize how great your parents are and b, it gives you a reason to get out in the world and give it a reason to care about you. >> right. >> i want to get to the other three tips. keep your head down and cook you say in the book. >> yes. absolutely. i have a friend, he has a great work ethic, used to be a cook, worked up until he owned a couple restaurants and he still does. and he -- his favorite employees, he always says the same thing. he keeps his head down and cooks or she keeps her head down and cooks. what that means, it's not just about cooking, obviously. if you show up on time, if you're not causing fights with your co-workers, if you're not rallying against workplace regulations that maybe you don't care for or office culture, whatever. you show up and do the job you're paid to do, your bosses are always going to love you. >> no drama. do your job. >> avoid the shame boomerang. too many young adults feel guilty. >> you'll do something stupid,
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right? you'll feel bad about it and then you'll forget about it but the same boomerang hits you in the head again. my strategy for that is when you've made a mistake, own up to it, apologize, do whatever you can do to make it better. that's step one. step two, decide why you're not going to do this again and how you're not going to do this again. step three, when you're still coping with that shame, be like, you know what, i did it, it's done, now i'm going to do something fun like look at pictures of baby otters on the internet. >> in two seconds, which is what we have left, your final piece of advice, self-explanatory, make older friends. >> they know so much more than that we don't. >> adulting, how to become a grownup in 468-ish easy steps. coming up, do you want fries with that? >> yes. >> there's more. from spicy to sweet, french
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welcome back. here's a live look at the international space station right now. they have a two-man crew performing a rare spacewalk there. they're trying to fix an ammonia leak spewing chemicals into orbit every day. >> that can't be good. >> yeah. steve hair began joins us with the latest on this mission. steve, how serious is the mission? we thought nasa was done, they couldn't launch any more people, done. how did they get this off? >> actually, we're watching remarkable video from the helmet cam of astronaut chris cassidy. we're seeing two astronauts outside the international space station. they're basically performing
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some plumbing work 250 miles above the surface of the work. the two astronauts are trying to hunt down and locate the source of an ammonia leak and repair it if they possibly can. we're about one hour into what could be a six-hour spacewalk today, an emergency spacewalk and quick turn around for the two astronauts. >> steve, how did they know something was wrong? >> the crew on board, the six-person crew saw white flakes floating away from the station. looked like snowflakes. it was frozen bits of ammonia floating away. they've had problems in the area before with ammonia leaks. they thought it was the same thing. that's what it was. the attempt to repair and tha and remarkable attitude by the astronauts. the commander tweeted this is what we trained for r, for years. it's a fun day. >> just a little astronaut fun. that's interesting to see the white flakes, right? it does look like snow. but that doesn't make sense.
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>> plumbing in space. the suits on, so there's no plumber's crack. >> wow, thank you for that. steve harrgan. thanks so much for the update. they practice underwater. the giant gloves on. i can't even hardly do it with a normal tool. giant gloves on. >> lobster hands. >> all right. meanwhile, let's get to your headlines, tell you what else is happening. people in virginia were shocked and outraged to learn that the suspected boston bomb rer tamerlan tsarnaev is buried there. he was buried in secret in caroline county on thursday. i a virginia woman helped to organize the burial after hearing the funeral home could not find a cemetery to take his body. >> i'm a christian. jesus says love your enemies. >> i'm disgusted. i think it's disrespectful. send him back home to his mother. not here. >> if he has anti-american
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sentiments and such a connection to his homeland, he should be returned to his family and homeland. >> caroline county officials infuriated that they were not told about the burial and are now looking into whether any laws were broken zienlts republicans and democrats do not agree on much. but one they do agree on is justin bieber. ♪ ♪ in a new poll about music taste, justin bieber was the only singer to get bad ratings from both republicans and democrats. bieber even scored lower than chris brown and lady gaga. only 8% said they would elect him president. i'm not sure why that question was in there. meanwhile, meet the youngest mayor ever. >> howdy partner!
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>> that is 4-year-old bobby tough, the new mayor of dorset, minnesota. only 20 people endorse it. each year they pick a name out of a hat and that person becomes the mayor even if they are a child. bobby is an avid fisherman and enjoys spending time with his girlfriend sophia. he's advanced. he's using a walking stick. >> sophia not the chief of staff or deputy mayor. >> stay on that. let's go outside. >> i wonder if sophia knows? >> i'm not sure. >> trust me, she doesn't. >> not yet. she does now. sophia, there you go. call the mayor. take a look at the weather maps, guys. changes across areas of the mid-atlantic and the northeast today. we've got rain but temps are a little better. tomorrow, look at this. buffalo 48 degrees for a high on mother's day, unfortunately. monday, temps all along the coast just into the 50s up
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towards boston, bangor, 50. 58 richmond. 65. we've got cold air moving in for a few days. today, we've got the showers that we're going to be dealing with and thunderstorms. could be a little severe across parts of eastern virginia and out across the outer banks and maybe down towards south carolina. and those storms that we could be seeing severe, not looking at tornadoes today. just some wind and a little bit of hail. scattered showers continuing across florida and the central gulf. into the northern plains, it's just cool. we're going to see a few snow flurries in the u.p. of michigan today. across the west, tons of sunshine. the snow across the midwest but temps remaining warm. clayton, over to you. >> thanks so much, rick. i know rick was hovering around the french fry stand over here. there he is. for a reason. because these spuds are no duds from spicy to savory sweet. we have fries full of flavor. you might call them heavenly. scott is the founder of french
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fry heaven. is today national french friday? >> no. doesn't really matter, right. >> every day for us is national french friday. we're ready here. we brought out for you, 50-plus different kinds of flavors of the french fry. >> when you go into a french fry heaven. >> first of all, where are you in the country? >> we're in florida, we'll be in new york, new jersey. we have our new york and new jersey franchises here and our boston folks over here. we'll be opening up in boston and philadelphia. all over texas. >> why are french fries the perfect snack? i feel like no meal is complete if i go to get a hamburger, i need the fries. i can't just have the hamburger. >> that's a side item, filler fry. ours are different. this is a gourmet fry. >> oh. >> you're going to see toppings and salts and infused spices all throughout so that they're a stand alone meal unto themselves. >> what kind -- when you go into
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a french fry heaven, what kind of spices can you throw on them? >> right in here, we've got a garlic parmesan. we're going to top that off with black truffle salt, which is a -- give that a smell real quick. >> wow. >> over 50 flavors? >> over 50 flavors. we're going to have 21 on each menu, then we'll rotate through special flavors. >> they don't have a lot of nutrients. it's sort of filler food. that's not the case at all. >> sweet potato fries are extremely healthy for you. lots of nutrition to them. one thing we do to ensure they're as healthy as possible. we use zero transfat oil. they're allergen-free for sweet potatoes fries in particular, that's unusual. no msg, no gmo. tried to make it as healthy as humanly possible. >> it's going to be a st. mix. a brown sugar cinnamon sort of flavor and top that off with a couple different flavors.
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we've got the st. valentines. we've got the thanksgiving. which is going to taste like pumpkin pie. we've got the st. smooth, which is a caramel flavor. what's neat about the flavors, you can mix and match. >> can you order the flavors online? >> not yet, no. all these are in the store and for retail in the store as well. >> put it up on the website. i'm telling you what, people will buy them all over the country. little business tip. >> thank you. appreciate that. >> thank you for feeding us this morning. you want any fries, ali? >> yeah, we do. >> you want pumpkin pie? >> this is going to be loaded baked potato. >> loaded baked potato. ali, i'm bringing that in. >> i thought you couldn't perfect the french fry. >> i'm skeptical. we'll find out in a minute. not once, but 12 times the benghazi talking points were changed. who is behind that? the white house blames the cia. we're joined with the general next. first, let's check in with neil cavuto on what's coming up on the cost of freedom business
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block. good morning. is the president's new job -- the happening in texas. should the president take a cue from texas? >> plus we bailed him out to keep the jobs in america. gm opening a new plant in china? apparently, it's not just the law of the land. democratic lawmakers insisting health care is a constitutional right. but taxpayers funding it, no matter the escalating cost of it? is that right? the cost of freedom at the top of the hour. we'll see you then. [ male announcer ] with free package pickup
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benghazi-gate exposed. we now know the talking points, the famous talking points were changed 12 times when after they came from the cia over to the state department. the white house is now struggling to defend apparent lies told to the public. watch this. >> the cia was the agency that made changes to the edits -- i mean, to the talking points and then produced the talking points. >> that was press secretary jay carney making it very clear who the villain in this is according to the white house. the cia. but new e-mails show there was white house and state department involvement. so what are we missing here? joining us now is fox news military analyst, general jack keen. general, thanks a lot for joining us. >> good morning. >> am i wrong to see a concerted effort by the white house so place the cia and former general
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david petraeus at the center of this? they're basically laying it all on the intel community and petraeus, aren't they? >> i think they're walking away from the cia and the state department in terms of trying to assess what happened here. i mean, five days, 12 interpretations of the talking points. i mean, something clearly was going on and trying to manage information. it shouldn't be that hard to produce talking points. a congressman asked for it as a result of general petraeus' briefing to him following the consulate attack. that's how it got started. he wanted something that he could talk with with representatives of the american people. they should have much of the facts that they could possibly provide them. >> the notion that the cia is in control of our foreign policy or a policy making organization is ludicrous. yet, you get that sense listening to jay carney spin this fantastic tale about how they didn't really make these changes. now we know that an official, a
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spokesman at the state department had political qualms with these talking points. you've been in and around government for many decades. this strikes me as remarkable. does it strike you that way? >> oh, yeah, absolutely. you know there's a high level of frustration with the cia over this. they had laid out for over a year the attacks that had taken place and the security concerns surrounding the situation in benghazi and tripoli. they had identified aas, ans ral sharia in the past as the culprits of those attacks. within 24 hours, they identified the organization that conducts the attack. they're doing good intelligence work and then the information begins to get managed by others in the different parts of our government. principally in the state department. >> here's a simple question, general, to which i don't have the answer. we know aas was behind this. why are no a.a.s. members in
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custody as a result or dead? >> this is outrageous. what's happened to us, after this attack, we've gone back to what we did about prior to 9/11, treat terrorism as a heinous criminal act where people should be brought to justice. post 9/11/01. you respond in kind. the cia should have been charged with the mission to kill and capture a.a.s. they know who the leaders are, they know that organization. by this time, eight months after the consulate was burned, the ambassadors killed, three others are killed and the cia base is evacuated. unprecedented in my understanding of our history. it should be decimated and destroyed by now. we don't have one single person arrested that is outrageous. >> despite the contrast to the original 9/11. we have their images on video. finally, general, do you think
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we will hear the full story from general petraeus who presumably has something to say about this? will we hear it? >> i think general petraeus has told that story in the follow-up testimony that he provided. i'm certain, i mean, he volunteered to come in and provide it. if someone wanted to talk to him again, he'd come in and do it. >> it will be interesting to see how it unfolds. it will unfold for many months to come. general keane, thanks for joining us. >> good talking to you, tucker. >> in honor of the great gatsby, a workout fit for the 1920s. it's happening right outside the studio. we'll bring it to you in just a second. ♪ ♪ [ man ] on december 17, 1903, the wright brothers became the first in flight. [ goodall ] i think the most amazing thing
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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 ] ♪ over any other carrier? many choose us because we have the largest 4glte network. others, because of our reputation for reliability. or maybe it's because we've received jd power and associates' customer service award 4x in a row. in the end, there are countless reasons. but one choi.
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"the great gatsby" now in theaters. if you're looking for another way to get in the speakeasy spirit, you can head to the gym. with us on the plaza is johanna chase, a fitness instructor in new york city who runs a speakeasy exercise class. you didn't know they existed. >> great to see you. >> how are you? >> doing the charleston can get us into shape? >> absolutely. you're not going to know you're working out because you have fun. you're burning the calories and getting in shape. working everything, abs, legs, arms. >> our own anna, if you can't recognize her in costume. have you been doing some of these moves? >> i learned this morning. there are a few different, you got to do the jazz hands. i learned that. >> what's this move called? >> basic charleston.
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>> basic charleston. she's got it. >> out. >> why is there this revival in the 1920s movement? >> "the great gatsby" is coming out. we're trying to bring the spirit into the gym. >> is there drinking too? >> save the drinking for after. >> it was sold out all over new york city. >> you don't think of the '20s as a fitness-based era. >> probably not. but we can make it 2013. >> you can bring it, but you can't light it. >> does everybody come to class in flapper wear. >> you can. but you don't have to. you can come however you want. you can wear your normal sneakers, that's fine. show off some of the charleston steps. >> we're going to get out of the way. >> here we go. >> come on, boys. >> no one wants to see us.
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>> ready? >> yep. >> there you go! come on! come on! >> a good look for you. >> let's see it. >> thanks everyone for watching "fox & friends". >> you are so good! i can't stand it! >> this matches your tie. >> thank you. >> tomorrow morning on the show, chris wallace. who else is here tomorrow? >> i hope flappers. >> you're not going to believe what we have for you tomorrow. leonardo dicaprio from "the
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great gatsby" will be here. >> we'll see you tomorrow. >> the tax man in trouble. growing calls to investigate the irs after the agency, which is supposed to remain neutral, admits to targeting conservative groups right before the 2012 election. organization using the names patriots or tea party in their application for tax exempt status were flagged for further review. the irs now apologizing, but the bigger issue developing. this is the same agency set to enforce the new health care law. someone here says watch out. folks opposing obamacare could be the next target. hi, everyone. i'm brenda buttner. this is "bulls and bears." here they are. gary, tobin,
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