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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  June 24, 2013 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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what's so wrong with that picture any way? shame on the school. thanks to everyone who responded. we appreciate it. "fox & friends" starts right now. >> have a great day and a great week. >> good morning. it's monday, june 24. i'm carol in for gretchen carlson. we begin with a fox news alert. n.s.a. leaker edward snowden may be on the move this morning after fleeing hong kong. we're tracking where he's going and if he can be stopped. >>steve: the journalist who leaked the snowden story goes off on an nbc reporter. >> i think it's pretty extraordinary that anyone who would call themselves a journalist would publicly talk about whether or not other journalists should be charged. >>brian: men are boycotting marriage, fatherhood and the american dream. why? ladies, they say it's your
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fault. "fox & friends" starts. ♪ ♪ >>steve: take a look here in the center square today. it's model, actress, author and friend of this program the great carol alt. >> and soon to be fox news person. we start a show. >>steve: just around the corner. and the show is going to be? >> saturday afternoons. we start in july. i'm so excited to be here with you guys. my colleagues. >>brian: great to see you at the christmas party. >> we'll be at the water cooler together. >>steve: talking about traffic. >>brian: what else do people talk about in? >>steve: she likes to talk about food. >> food, health, the latest
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gadgets. >>brian: you came on a busy day. this week is so intense with this guy on route to hong kong, then to russia, then over to cuba and maybe ecuador. >>steve: this morning n.s.a. leaker edward snowden remains on the loose and he's about to make his next move, we believe. live in washington with the latest. >> good morning to you. edward snowden is a man on the run and is considered to be to some extent a man now without a country. the state department annulled edward snowden's u.s. passport but that did not stop him from boarding a plane in hong kong and then flying to moscow and russia. snowden, who admits to leaking information about the n.s.a.'s surveillance program that collect data from e-mails and phone calls to thwart terror attacks, is charged with espionage. the united states wants him extradited to face justice. >> i want to get him caught
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and brought back for trial. i think we need to know exactly what he has. he could have a lot, lot more. it may really put people in jeopardy. i don't know, but i think the chase is on, and we'll have to see what happens. >> wikileaks says snowden will be on the move again today with plans to leave moscow for havana, cuba and then seek asylum in ecuador. >> i believe he hurt our nation. he compromised the national security program designed to find out what terrorists were up to. the freedom trail is not exactly china, russia, cuba, venezuela. i hope we'll chase him to the end of the earth, bring him to justice and let the russians know there will be consequences if they harbor this guy. >> the united states is
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working through diplomatic and law enforcement channels to advise foreign governments that snowden should be denied international travel other than returning here to the united states. >>brian: what about snowden? first, we were spiced to find out that over the -- we were surprised to find out that over the weekend the hong kong was asked to turn him over. didn't hear a word. a few days later hong kong says we need more information america. i don't like this paper work. on the 23rd they say by the way the paper work insufficient and he's gone. where is he going? russia, cuba, ecuador. what do they have in common? all enemies of the united states. >>steve: so far he's been able to travel with the help of wikileaks. a woman by the name of sarah harrison, who is part of the wikileaks legal defense team, apparently
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flew from hong kong to moscow. she's been staying with him at the moscow airport. he couldn't leave the property because he didn't have a visa. and his u.s. passport has been revoked. we understand, according to a couple of news sources, that haeb booked on aeroflot flight 150 leaving at 6:05 eastern time. since it's 6:05 eastern time right now, he could be on the run. is he going to go to cuba? is he going to go to venezuela? as soon as it was announced he was going to be on that particular flight, journalists bought every available seat so he could be on the plane with him. >> i don't understand how he's traveling without a pass port. you can't even get on a plane anymore without a passport. he's obviously being aided by somebody. he's getting a lot of help from a a lot of people who
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are probably not friend with the united states. >>brian: he has damaged the u.s. he has damaged the program. he may not like the n.s.a. program, but exposing our national secrets to china and russia and then fleeing to the countries, the one thing they have in common they are uncooperative with the u.s. shows you what kind of character he is and what kind of agenda he has. >>steve: on the cover of the new york post you've god comrades. putin and snowden. are they in cahoots. paul rand was on a talk show yesterday and made himself clear if this guy aligns with russia that wouldn't be as patriotic as he once thought. listen. >> i do think for mr. snowden if he cozies up with the russian government it will be bad for his name in history. if he goes to an independent third country like iceland and if he refuses to talk to any sort of formal government about this, i think there is a chance he'll be seen as an
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advocate of privacy. if he cozies up with the russian government, chinese government or any government perceived as enemies of ours i think that will be a problem for him in history. >>brian: we talked to him on thursday or friday of last week -- the days seem to blend especially when you have bring your dog to work day -- but he's on, he's the last one to say this guy is a traitor. for me, there's no doubt about it. the minute you start leaking information in china and russia and giving information to a chinese newspaper, i think that is pretty clear. when is the president going to show the same angst and anger toward the russians, towards the chinese, the hong kong government, that he shoets to mitt romney, that he -- that he shows to mitt romney, to republicans, people that don't vote for his gun legislation? where is that fire and brim stone? we don't hear from the president. we have to stand up and say i'm tired of being poked in the eye by these nations who seem to be doing it at
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a dizzying rate. >>steve: there is no doubt the guy broke the law. >> i want to know who paid him. who paid him? afterwards, please, if anybody writes a book with this guy, they should be prosecuted as traitors too. >>steve: i don't think they would be able to benefit from it because a law was broken. to a lot of people, okay, he broke the law but now we found out our government is it sound like exceeding what the patriot act was intended when first written. it's interesting, regarding the country of russia, they said what about putin? clearly putin has got to be in on it. putin's spokesperson commented about three hours ago, said we have nothing to do with this story. i am not in charge of tickets. i don't approve or disapprove of plane tickets. we're not the proper people to address the question to. >>brian: how did he get through without a passport? >>steve: apparently he presented his u.s. passport which had not been revoked until later, to aeroflot, and they allowed him
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passage. what's interesting, the guardian newspaper journalist who broke the story was called by "meet the press" yesterday. said since he left hong kong we'd like to talk to you. then extraordinarily and this has got everybody wondering what was david gregory thinking, david gregory asked him this question. listen to this. >> to the extent that you have aided and abetted snowden, even in his current movements, why shouldn't you, ph greenwald, be charged with a crime? >> i think it is extraordinary anybody who would call themselves a journalist would publicly muse about whether or not other journalists should be charged with felony. the smudges in your question is -- the assumption in your question is erroneous. the scandal that broke is about the fact that the obama administration is trying to criminalize investigative journalist by going through pha*epls of
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reporters, accusing the fox news journalists of being a coconspirator with felonies. if you want to embrace that theory it means every investigative journalist in the united states who works with those sources is a criminal. it is precisely those theories and climate that has become so menacing in the united states. >>steve: aided and abetted. that's extraordinary. suddenly david gregory sounds a lot like eric holder. >> i think it's the information that's printed in the newspaper articles that makes a difference. if you try to say somebody is leaking but you don't put the actual information. but i think with the amount of information they put out, it can almost be -- >>brian: but i differ with you on this, steve. if david gregory asked the question, didn't say you aided and abetted, i don't have a problem with it. what he's saying in the way in which you aided and abetted, you believe that
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you're a coconspirator? my answer would be i didn't do anything. i interviewed him in hong kong. why would i be aiding and abetting. to go after david gregory to that degree i think is almost a defensiveness. my sense is i have no idea what he's doing. about if you're saying they are so tight these two, they're moving on, i would think it is a reasonable question to ask. i'm just wondering is glenn greenwald picking up the phone calling julian assange, just say i have nothing to do with it. he confides with me and i write the story. why get so defensive? >>steve: "the washington post" broke the story the same time glenn greenwald. news busters said liberal media members totally opposed to george w. bush's
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domestic surveillance changed their tune now that a democratic president they helped get elected got help spying on americans to a new level. >>brian: he is one of the liberals out there is greenwald. >>steve: still a reporter. >>brian: he's a reporter but i am curious to see in the end if he's playing a more active role. >>steve: all right. time will tell. now a dozen minutes after the top of the hour. >> now to the rest of your headlines. while you were sleeping james gandolfini's body arrived home in new jersey. his casket was loaded on to a private plane yesterday in italy. funeral services are set for this thursday in manhattan. new jersey governor chris christie ordered all state flags to be lowered to half staff tuesday in his honor. an american executive is being held hostage by his own workers inside his own plant in beijing, china. chip starnes held captive for four days. his workers are demanding
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severance packages. however, these workers aren't being let go. starnes says local officials forced him to meet demands. workers are expected to get wire transfers tomorrow. a daredevil defies death by walking a tightrope 1,500 feet above the colorado river. we had nick walenda on this show hast year. >> that's a view there, buddy. praise god, this is awesome. >> it took wallenda 22 minutes to walk a mile on the cable over the colorado river gorge. he paused and squatted down twice because of the wind. >>brian: i wouldn't do that. >>steve: you don't have to. we got him to do it for us.
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>>brian: a closer look at our top story. ed snowden getting help from putin happens. we want to know have the wheels come off on u.s.-russia relations. we were going to reset it.st we were going to reset it.st remember? wow. it's the honey, it makes it taste so... well, would you look at the time... what's the rush? be happy. be healthy.
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>> why did n.s.a. leaker ed snowden choose to go through moscow as part of his escape route and how will the situation impact
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u.s.-russian relationship? matt, what are the russians trying to do here? >> brian, i think that this tracks perfectly with reset relationship which has fallen apart over the last couple of years. the russians get two big benefits. one, they get a guy who potentially has a huge treasure trove of national security information about the united states, about a major global power rival. you don't want to say enemy, that's fine. adversary. they can potentially brief him for that information. i would be shocked if they didn't spend the entire night when he was sitting in the airport with intelligence officers trying to get everything out of him. maybe get the data he's got on those electronic devices. he's in their country. if they say hand it over, he's got to hand it over. second, they may want a p.r. victory here. putin has been the guy who said to the world i am not a tool of the west. i'm not the lap dog of the
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americans. i'm going to stand up to them. this is his attempt to do that again. he may have tried to persuade snowden to stay in russia, said something to the effect that we can protect you. don't think the ecuador ecuadoreans can't. >>brian: president obama said as we get older we talk about how our athletic ability has waned. putin said he's trying to soften me up, not pretending to play the game. here o'senator schumer denouncing russia's role. listen. >> what's infuriating here is prime minister putin of russia aiding and abetting snowden's escape. the bottom line is very simple. allies are supposed to treat each other in decent ways and putin always seems almost eager to put a finger in the eye of the united states. >>brian: matt, are we allies are not? where should we go prosecute here? >> there are two really big errors in schumer's statement. the first one is no, we're
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not allies. the russians made that clear and to be honest, we made that pretty clear. the second is one of the reasons for that is putin isn't prime minister. he came back as president for what's effectively a fourth term. he's potentially going to be ruling russia until 2024. we're talking about basically an auto crat. we tend not to get along very well with autocratic countries and certainly those that stand themselves up as being the main adversary of the united states. >>brian: bring back yeltsin and gorbachev. those days are gone. matt, thanks for your time and your analysis. great stuff. straight ahead, coming up, it is a story saying we can believe in. police officers taking golden retrievers out of people's home. >> stuart varney keeping a close eye on wall street and your wallet. when he walks down the hall, the world seems safe again. he also will be talking about global warming, because the president is.
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>> quick headlines. we learned an american was among ten tourists killed by the taliban in pakistan. a dozen militants dressed as policemen attacked a mountain side. in a few hours opening statements begin in george zimmerman's trial. a jury of six women will decide the case. the judge ruled two audio experts cannot testify about a 911 call and who was screaming in the background. >>steve: now a fox business alert. what a week on wall street last week. the markets sent into a tailspin, stocks suffering their worst two-day sell
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off of the year after ben bernanke's comments on plans to perhaps taper down on their money printing program. what can we expect this week? stuart varney joins us live. at the end of last week, you did not want to look at your 401(k). >> i can tell you what's going to happen monday morning. stocks will be down again. the dow down maybe 80, 90 points and the price of gold is going to go down again, off about $10 an ounce. 1280 is the price there. the big news is interest rates are going up again. that means mortgage rates are soon going to spike. that's the big problem today. mortgage rates, interest rates up, so stocks down. that's what you're going to see this monday morning. >>steve: how many times in the last couple of months have we heard the housing market is starting to turn around. they're selling off the inventory. if mortgage rates go up, that means people will be less likely to buy a new house and that means things will slow down. >> there is a rush for
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people to lock in the old lower mortgage rates. they are just streaming in there to try to get that mortgage rate now as opposed to a couple of weeks in the future. you've got to ask why is this happening? number one, ben bernanke threatens to stop printing. number two, china has got trouble with its banks and that's not good news for anybody. number three, president obama tomorrow will outline his plans for climate change policies which are likely to raise the price of electricity. in other words, that's what he's going to do, that's going to come out tomorrow. and investors to not like that. >>steve: are you talking about another one of those kooky carbon taxes. i meant costly. >> he's going to insist that we lower the emissions of co2's in the future of our nation's power plants. investors to the extent like it. >>steve: as i look down the road i see you're going to be over at fox business
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at tph*upt -- 9:20 eastern time. >> wrong. 9:15 and we go till 12:00 noon. >>steve: fix the graphic. starts five minutes early. next up on the rundown, a big arrest involving "that 70's show" actress, just thrown in jail. love her. a new study tphaoeupbd -- finds more men are boycotting marriage. what's the deal? they blame women. what do you think? what do you think? coming up. [ male announcer ] erica had a rough day. there was this and this. she got a parking ticket...
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>>carol: and this is your shot of the morning of course. that's me trying my best to avoid a wardrobe malfunction on a recent red carpet in new york city. >>brian: what is the back story? >>carol: this is the madonna event for her mdma film documentary. i was walking up to the photographers when this big, giant gust of wind came along. my dress flew up 50 feet in the back. here's the thing.
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i always work on the set with all kinds of props. one of the props are fans. i'm kind of used to taking it. but thank goodness i was wearing underwear. all i can say. >>brian: there you go. have things like that ever happened to you before? a public event like that? >> i've had things happen before, of course. your sleeve falls down, shirt comes undone, a button pops open. most of the time you know it's happening. any time i see somebody on the carpet and something serious happens to them i feel they kind of knew, maybe they're looking for publicity. >>brian: can i ask you how the event was? >>carol: the event was a lot of fun. we went to a party and the next thing i know, i look over there and there's my boyfriend talking to ma donna. tete a tet. that dress flying up didn't
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matter. >>steve: i understand there was a slide show and it was mostly of you. >>carol: there was seven of me followed by madonna. i think that was weird since it was her event. i was very flattered. at this age any time somebody wants to show your legs. you go how do they look? >>brian: i think that's great. so does steve and joel. we are pro your legs right and left. >>steve: great to have carol alt, super model and future host. a sports star suffered a brain injury which changed his life. now for a second year in a row rich delgado at the hospital that saved him.
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anna kooiman with the story. >> good morning. it is a beautiful morning here at oheka castle. big daddy, this is your number two. are you excited about the celebrities coming out here? >> i'm ready to go. >> rich delgado but your friends call you big daddy or b.d. that's where the celebrity classic game comes from. tell us about what happened to you in 2008. >> i went in with earaches and i had an issue. i went to see a doctor and then all of a sudden i was recommended to both of these gentlemen and we found out i had an aneurysm. these guys saved my life. >> that's the way you greet these two? what's up, doc? thanks for saving my life this morning. it's a neat way for you to give back. that's exactly what this golf tournament is doing, is giving money to what? >> the north shore l.i.j. brain aneurysm center. again, both of these guys,
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they helped me so i'm going to give back, help them, support them. it got so good that we added another, you know, beneficiary, which is the long island children's museum. >> it's a great thing you're doing. we want folks at home to understand what a brain aneurysm is. doctor, what is a brain aneurysm? it's very serious. many people die from this. >> an aneurysm is a bubble on an artery at the base of the brain. if it ruptures the patient can have a form of a stroke and it is extremely dangerous. >> there are two ways to treat it. >> open brain surgery where we put a titaniumthe aneurysm. the other way is putting a coil through the groin. >> i'm sorry we have to leave it here, but good luck. we can't wait to be golfing. gary sheffield will be joining us later. we'll also be getting an amazing golf lesson. back to you on the curvy couch. >>steve: thank you, anna.
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>>carol: i hear you're going out. >>brian: last night about 5:00, 6:00, it was still packed. i might stray in. i saw mike tyson in the corner. you see a lot of celebrities hanging out. >>carol: i'm disappointed they didn't invite us. steve, were you invited? >>steve: i leave in new jersey. >>carol: now to your headlines. early this morning the texas house overwhelmingly approved legislation that would tighten restrictions on abortion. the final vote 97-33. the measure bans abortions after the 20th week of pregnancy. >> texas has become the big baby abortion mecca. we know babies at 20 weeks feel pain. we think we need to protect their lives. >>carol: the measure will go to the senate for a vote. it must pass before tuesday at midnight because that is when the legislative season ends. >>steve: a star from
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"that 70's show" arrested again. >> oh my goodness, i knew you'd come! >> are the phones broken in chicago? >> lisa robin kelly busted for drunk driving. she played lori foreman on the show. cops in california were called to move her car which was parked on the freeway blocking a lane. that's when they realized she was intoxicated. kelly has been arrested three other times since 2010. >>brian: so glad i don't have a sitcom. who doesn't love a golden retriever apparently folks in beijing are enforcing a ban on what they consider large and vicious dogs that includes golden retrievers, labradors and the always vicious dalmatian and any other dog taller than 15 inches. police have been raiding homes and taking away the dogs. chinese officials say big
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dogs should not be living in big cities. last year 13 people died of rabies. when you're arresting dogs you're out of things to do. >>carol: the itsy bitsy spider looked a lot bigger on television. take a look. >> that was creepy. focus it had to be right on my head. i don't like this. i've got to move. [screaming] >> i don't like spiders. >>carol: appearing over christie gordon's head during a live report. she said she realized it wasn't there in the studio but was still totally freaked out. >>brian: that is scary. 22 minutes before the top of the hour. wimbledon kicking off today in london. the drama starting earlier than usual. serena williams and maria sharapova exchanging words.
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one took a jab at another's boyfriend. sharapova hit back at a press conference saying this. >> if she wants to talk about something personally, maybe she should talk about her relationship and her boyfriend that was married and getting a divorced and has kids. >>brian: wow. your serve, certificate rei can't. we'll see -- your serve, serena. nascar crash before the race even started. first sprint cup race for pauly. he tried to swerve but went into alex kennedy's car. both were damaged but still raced. truman won his first race, first victory in 218 races. >>steve: stargazers treated to a show this
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weekend. the super moon made for stellar photographs. check out the statue of liberty in new york city at sundown. here is another one. a plane flying by the supermoon over miami. of course from miami is maria molina. she joins us now. she's out in long island as well. >> good morning. i'm out here in huntington, new york, for big daddy's golf classic. i'm here with anna kooiman as well. both of us will be getting a golf lesson. we'll see how that goes later on. as far as the weather in huntington, new york, absolutely beautiful. sunshine. it is a little on the humid side. that is why my hair is looking a little funky. we're looking at a slight chance for ao thunderstorm. but overall a beautiful day on long island. we're expecting warm conditions across areas in the eastern two-thirds of the country. chicago 87 degrees. 86 in minneapolis.
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91 kansas city. 94 in memphis. in tampa bay, 91 for your high temperatures. new york city, 91 as well. some of this hot air will be helping to field showers and thunderstorms. some of those storms could produce severe weather. we have a severe weather risk across sections of the midwest and also in the northern plains. the next graphic will show you that we have that risk for damaging winds, large hail and isolated tornadoes, including cities like bismarck, rapid city, omaha and just to the west of the city of chicago and illinois. the next graphic actually shows you we have an elevated risk for wildfires across sections of the four corners of the southwestern u.s. widespread warnings covering the state of utah, the western part of colorado, new mexico and california. let's head back to the studio. >>steve: out west in long island, where later today golf will be breaking out. >>carol: she still looks like a movie star even with
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her frizzy hair. new england patriots star aaron hernandez is the latest profootball player in trouble with the law. what makes these athletes get caught up in crime? >>brian: redskins quarterback curt cousins is here live to weigh in after a sensational rookie year. he is here to talk about his brand-new book. >>steve: no wonder there are so many single women. new research finding more men are boycotting marriage and they blame the ladies. >>brian: we have to talk about this. >>carol: we certainly do.
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aren't always the most obvious. real relief. take the humble stevia plant, with a surprising secret to share: sweetness. truvia sweetener. zero-calorie sweetness, born from the stevia leaf. from nature, for sweetness. >>steve: as it turns out, there may be some red flags for new england patriots aaron hernandez past the most recent being the investigation and possible connection to semi profootball player odin lloyd's shooting death. >>carol: what causes nfl players to get caught in crime? joining us is redskins backup quarterback curt cousins. >>brian: your book goes against what the news story led with but when you say aaron hernandez 23 years old, what are your thoughts? >> what i take away is the fact that as a professional athlete we're on a
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platform. we have an opportunity to be a voice. that's why i wrote a book like this because i have an opportunity to be a voice and a positive impact on young people. if you're on a platform and you make a mistake -- and we don't know if aaron did or not -- if you make a mistake it will be put out there more than your average person. >>steve: this book was born after you gave a speech in chicago. tell us what the speech was about. the reaction was incredible. >> playing the big ten conference we have big ten media days in july before the season kicks off at michigan state. i had the opportunity to be the keynote speaker at the luncheon and did not realize at the time how far that speech would go. it was only about a seven and a half minute speech but i received a standing ovation that day. that message in that talk was what gave me the opportunity. >>steve: the message was? >> a privilege as a big ten athlete we are privileged. many of us are privileged in this country. and privilege most often leads to entitlement but instead i believe privilege need to lead to responsibility. it's that principle that
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this book was built upon. it started to lead to our principles i want to share with young people. >>carol: you believe that is because your father was a minister and instilled different things about god and country in your brain. you wrote this book to go ahead? tell other people? >> no doubt that my dad being a minister, obviously raised me on the truth in the bible and morals and principles in that book. they have been a foundational truth for my life. >>brian: you told us some people that were interviewing you and now you're a member of the washington redskins, you had to show people you're going to compete. just because you're a nice guy with values, you can still be tough. >> no doubt. someone who wants to take academics seriously, be a right person and show their christian faith, i think as a christian i can be one of the toughest guys out there. >>carol: i think people are agreeing with you. >> when you start talking
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about truth and principles of life it is hard not to agree. >>steve: he's got a new book out. it's called "game changer." it comes with a poster inside. kirk cousins. "faith, football and finding your way." >>brian: you might be starting for washington this year. we'll see what happens. >>steve: men on strike putting marriage and success on the back burner. research says it's happening but why. the experts who discovered the trend coming up next. >>carol: is the fame of "fox & friends" going to brian's head? simon cowell thinks so. brian spent the weekend with the x factor judge. you don't want to miss what you don't want to miss what happened. i'm doing my own sleep study.
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>> brian: ladies, look for mr. right? listen up. if it looks like men are boycotting marriage, among other things, because they are. >> carol: yes, they are. according to a study, the were importance of marriage for years has gone up for women to 37% and down for men to 29%. here to explain why is author of "men on strike," dr. helen smith. good morning. thank you for joining us. >> thank you for having me on. actually it's 37% of all women want -- that is the most im life. they want to get married and men have fallen. the amount of men who want to get married has fallen to 29%. there is a discrepancy between
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those men who don't want to get married and women who do. so there is fewer men available. >> carol: i have to look at the laws that happen in marriage. do you think that has a lot to do with why men don't want to get married? >> that's why there is a marriage strike. i talk to men throughout the united states on my blog, i run a men's rights blog and worked with men over 20 years and found men say it's the legal ramification. they don't have any legal rights in marriage. there is it used, men held all the cards in marriage. now women do. men, when they get divorced, they only get custody of children 10% of the time. >> brian: even if the woman is cheating? >> and if that's not their child, most states say you still have to pay. >> carol: it makes you wonder if there is a change in the law, if this would change men's attitudes or if they just like the freedom. >> brian: that's where the man cave is where they're regulated
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to. >> exactly. there is an interesting article on the blog at that talks about how men don't have any space anymore. you go out in the public severe, we've said men only areas are off limits. that's not legal and we don't like it. men are put in the dirtiest old part of the house, the basement, the garage. some men, sure, they like it. but sometimes they go to get peace and pie yet. the -- quiet. the way they portray men and husbands even in commercials, it always looks like they're stupid or idiots and it's terrible. >> carol: it is terrible. >> they found 69% -- jim mcin mcnamara found 69% men are found in a negative light. buffoons, perverts. what kind of message is this sending? >> brian: you give tips about what men can do to stop back. for example, stop letting women control the dialogue. >> women now -- here i am a woman, at least you're a man and
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two women are talking about it. but women control the dialogue. most women are writing articles. men need to say i'm going to write about it. >> brian: stop laughing when men are shown as bumbling idiots. >> carol: what about prenuptial? could this be worked out? >> sometimes that does work. but unfortunately, that doesn't always work. >> brian: my preup is no one can watch "everybody loves raymond." >> a lot of men are afraid of conflict. men don't do well with conflict. you need to speak up and be calm because you love this person. you want to do right. but you need to set boundaries and talk to the person about what you will and won't accept. >> brian: dr. helen smith, your book will do great. thanks for the research and vote of confidence.
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meanwhile, stick around. donald trump here to weigh in on the nsa leaker and so much more. carol alt is filling in for dia gretchen. he knows you. >> oh, many years, yes 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. once i started taking the lyrica the pain started subsiding. [ male announcer ] it's known that diabetes damages nerves. lyrica is fda approved to treat diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is not for everyone. it may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, changes in eyesight including blurry vision, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling, or skin sores from diabetes. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don'drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery
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mommy's having a french fry. yes she is, yes she is. [ bop ] [ male announcer ] could've had a v8. 100% vegetable juice, with three of your daily vegetable servings in every little bottle.
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>> carol: good morning. it's monday, june 24. i'm carol alt in for gretchen carlson. we begin with a fox news alert. where in the world is edward snowden? the nsa leaker was supposed to leave moscow this morning for cuba, but there was no sign of him on the plane. we're live with the new developments. >> brian: wow. has fame gone to my head? simon cowell thinks so. >> i'm worried about you. are you okay dealing with all this pressure and fame? >> brian: you mean being close to you. >> you've changed. >> brian: in what respect? >> you were quite humble. >> brian: we had it out. we'll show you highlights. >> steve: meanwhile, no beach balls at the beach. that even american? it's just one of the waves of
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regulation taking over this nation. and it's not even the most outrageous one of the day. we're going to share that with you and so much more. "fox & friends" for this monday continues right now live from new york city. >> steve: she's back today here on studio e, the curvy couch, our old buddy, carol alt, who is going to have a show on fox. you know, about health and nutrition in addition to being a super model. >> carol: thank you. yes. we start in september. look for us on as a result afternoon. >> brian: we'll haul you in on fridays and talk to you every week. let's get to a fox news alert. edward snowden's whereabouts anybody's guess. he was expected to be on a flight that just left moscow for cuba. but witnesses say he was not on board. kelly wright live in washington with the latest.
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my first guest last hour said he would not be surprised if moscow was trying to push him to stay and not go to ecuador. >> there are quite a few people that would agree with that assess: let's face it, this has given putin the opportunity to poke the finger in the eye of president obama. those two have had some frosty relationships of late. the bottom line here, though, is where is edward snowden? we believe that he's still in moscow because wikileaks says edward snowden was planning to fly from moscow to cuba. he was being accompanied by legal advisors from wikileaks, but there was no indication he was on board that flight. there are reporters on that plane who said he was not on the flight. so snowden is a man still believed to be on the move flying from hong kong to moscow over the weekend. now reportedly planning to fly to cuba and ecuador to seek asylum.
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ecuador's foreign minister says the country is analyzing snowden's request. >> there are some governments that act more upon their own interests, but we do not. we act upon our principles and we take care of the human rights of people. >> snowden is essentially a man without a country. the state department annulled his u.s. passport, but that did not stop him from being able to fly from hong kong to moscow. snowden, who admits to leaking information about the nsa's surveillance programs that collect data from e-mails and phone calls to thwart terrorist attacks are charged with espionage. the u.s. wants him extradited to face justice. >> i want to get him caught and brought back for trial and i think we need to know exactly what he has. he could have a lot, lot more. may really put people in jeopardy. i don't know, but i think the
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chase is on and we'll have to see what happens. >> i believe he hurt our nation. he compromised the national security program designed to find out what terrorists were up to. i hope we'll chase him to the ends of the earth, bring him to justice and let the russians know there will be consequences if they harbor this guy. >> the united states is work through diplomatic and law enforcement channels to advise these foreign governments that snowden should be denied any international travel, other than returning him here to the united states. brian, carol and steve. >> steve: we thank you very much. we're going to continue the conversation about mr. snowden in a couple of minutes with our old buddy, donald trump live from new york. >> carol: live from new york. now to the rest of your headlines. while you were sleeping, james gandolfini's body arrived home in new jersey. his casket was loaded onto a private plane yesterday in italy. funeral services are set for
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this thursday in manhattan. new jersey governor chris christie ordered allstate flags to be lowered to half-staff today in his honor. an american executive is being held hostage by his own workers inside his own plant in beijing, china. he has been held captive for four days. his workers are demanding severance packages like those given to 30 other employees who were laid off. however, these workers aren't being let go, he says. local officials forced him to meet their demands. workers are expected to get wire transfers tomorrow. in a couple of hours, opening statements begin in the trial of george zimmerman. he's charged with second degree murder for the death of a 17-year-old, trayvon martin. a jury of six women will decide the case. they are already sequestered and will remain that way through the rest of the trial. it could last up to four weeks. the judge ruled two audio experts cannot testify about a 911 call in which they believe trayvon martin is heard
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screaming in the background. he did it. >> that's a view there, buddy. praise god. this is awesome. >> carol: it took my friend, nick wallenda, 22 minutes to walk a quarter mile on a cable over the little colorado river gorge. brian, can you look at that view, how scary is that? he was 1500 feet above the ground. he paused and crouched down twice because the winds were make the cable sway. then he thanked god and -- for calming the cable and moved on. >> steve: there you go. you call it your friend, nick wallenda, because when you were here last time, he was on the program. >> carol: that's right, he taught me to walk the tight rope. only a few inches off the ground. >> steve: someone else who is an old friend, donald trump. you have known airline calculate for many decade -- carol alt for many decades.
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>> i wouldn't go that far. she was on the aparenesis test and she -- apprentice and she did fantastically well. >> carol: congratulations this year. it did very well. >> you were great and you look great on the show. >> thank you. >> i hear you're having the show on saturday. >> the couch suits me. >> i'll have to watch that one. >> brian: donald, let's talk about edward snowden. he was the one who dominated coverage over the weekend. hong kong says thumb in your eye, u.s., he's gone. china let's him go. he lands in russia. they say no problem. it looks like he might even think about staying there. everyone seems so empowered to stick it to us these days. >> first of all, he's a terrible guy. i said it right from the beginning. so many people are trying to defend him, look at what he revealed and isn't it wonderful. and yet people marching in his favor. he's a terrible guy who really set our country back. china is now looking at us like -- we were hitting them hard on what they were doing in terms of what they were taking from us and now they are really
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going at it. they're saying we're far worse than they ever were. he's really hurt us in terms of relationship and it really shows how weak our country has been and has become when you can not get this guy back. you think you tell these country, hey, folks, we're not doing any deals until this guy is on a plane. and that includes russia, that includes everybody because we really have become a very different nation than we were. >> steve: it's interesting, the front page of the "new york times" this morning, mr. trump, legal experts say the administration appeared to flub the case. why didn't they revoke his passport after the charges were filed, because they essentially had the chance to freeze him in plays and they didn't do it. they dropped the ball on this. >> well, maybe they thought it wasn't politically correct. spies in the old days used to be executed. this guy is becoming a hero in some circles. i will say with the passage of time, even people that were sort of liking him and maybe trying to go on his side are maybe
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dropping out. but you look at where he goes. now nobody knows where he is. but we have to get him back. we have to get him back fast. they're talking about it could take years, it could take months, but maybe years. that would be pathetic. >> carol: i grew up in the american military, mr. trump, and i totally agree with you. i think anybody that does anybody against this country should be taken to task for that. don't you think the things we're doing here, other countries are doing, too? mine, all of the spying or quote, unquote, spying, is just to protect this country. what do you teal? >> well, they are. and the other countries are definitely doing it. we used to hit them pretty hard for doing it and now they just look at us and smile because what he's revealed is incredible. he's revealing things that nobody thought possible. i think he's probably got stuff that's maybe why he's staying in russia. they're very smart and getting every possible thing out of him. they say, wait a minute. let's not send him to ecuador. let's immediately talk to him for a couple more days. this is pretty good stuff.
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>> brian: i got to ask you, donald, first off, the president was so angry when gun control failed. he was so angry and determined against mitt romney, where is that anger against china? where is that anger against russia and against all these countries that are defying us and making this president, our administration, our country look pathetic? >> well, china has been on my mind for years and you know it better than anybody because i do your show every monday and we have a little thing going on china. it amazes me when i see what goes on of the for him to be ensconced in china and then all of a sudden, he gets out because they say, i'm sorry, you sent the wrong documents and we would have done it but you sent the wrong documents, and they got a lot of information out of this guy. this guy is a bad guy. you know, there is still a thing called execution. you really have to take a strong -- you have thousands of people with access to material like this. we're not going to have a country anymore.
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>> brian: the country is talking about global warming! >> the great global warming debate. in the 1920s, magazine covers had a very, very scary phenomenon. it was called global cooling. the planet was cooling. but the planet was severely cooling and everybody was worried about global cooling. now it's global warming. no, we have bigger problems, believe me. >> carol: i have a quick question. how do you feel about the newspapers that printed what snowden gave them? what do you think? >> i think it's disgraceful. that's what they do. >> steve: it's a story. >> yeah. they have information. wouldn't it be wonderful if you could say, couldn't you -- folks, come on, give us a break. but how does he get this information? here is a guy, didn't even graduate from high school. he was a high school dropout. how did he get the job in the first place? where did he come from? now he's traveling the world and everybody is protecting him. it really is a shame. our country is in very sad shape. look, we have to do something. you have thousands of snowdens
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out there. i would imagine most of them at least have a high education. but you have thousands of people with this kind of access and who is going to be the next snowden? >> carol: how do we protect ourselves in the future. >> unless the retribution is swift, rule you'll is more people coming out with more information. >> brian: wikileaks is their greatest allies. they are escorting them around the country, providing free legal service. >> well, it's very, very sad. i just wonder whether or not perhaps the president is concerned that records from -- the only thing we don't seem to get are the records from the president. isn't that a thing. >> brian: nobody leaks that. >> steve: it's always a pleasure. thank you very much. >> good luck, carol. >> carol: thank you, donald. >> steve: it's 12 minutes after the top of the hour. on this monday morning, a blizzard of restrictions now freezing the fun at the beach. oh, boy. say good-bye to beach balls and bon fires. the new regulations ruining the
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nation and summer perhaps, coming up next. >> carol: if she posted this facebook on facebook, now this teen is suing for $2 million because the school used it without her permission. ♪
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asas a kid, i madede a list of all t the placess i wawanted to vivisit. i'm m still not t going to make e it to marsrs, i cacan affd to crossss more t thins off my lisi. thisis year alonone, we wenent to the t top of t the statuee of libiberty... and ststill sasaved enoughgh to go o to texas to a a real dude ranchch. hotwirire checks the compmpetition's s rates everery day so t they can guguarantee their r low priceses. so we got our four-s-star hotels for hahalf price.. next up p -- hollywowood. -o-t-w-w-i-r-e... . ♪ ♪ hotwire.c.com sasave big on n 5 a daday. >> steve: a wave of new
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regulations taking over your summer. nicky neily is here. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> steve: when you think of summer, you think of the beach. there are a whole bunch of beach regulations out there, aren't there, right down to the kind of air you can put in your beach ball. >> yes. so we'll start in california. california, the south coast air management quality agency tried to ban fire pits, which you think beach blanket, bingo, you think california summer, clambakes and this is on the chopping block because of air pollution obviously. and interestingly, california, being notoriously liberal state, southern californians were up in arms, protested and complained. so they scaled it back a little bit, but funny how that works when it actually affects you. >> steve: and in miami, i understand you can only have beach balls that are air inflated, right? >> yes. only air inflated beach balls. you can not engage in rough or otherwise dangerous play. so fortunately, that means you can still use an air inflated
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football, the university of miami can still practice. >> steve: whoa! >> they're not going to get hurt there. i'm a big fan. >> steve: i can tell. all right. as you drive down 95 through baltimore, you see there is a cruise terminal there. as it turns out, there are new restrictions on cruise ships that leave from maryland, right? >> well, the epa has implemented new fuel restrictions because they want to clean up air pollution in coastal waters. unfortunately and also unsurprisingly, this fuel is a lot more expensive. some of the cruise lines esmated 15 to 40% more expensive. to offset that cost, they said we're going to scale back some of our voyages that we've been sending out. baltimore is a city that's going to be particularly hard hit because you have to travel 700 miles up and down the chesapeake to get there. so because of this restriction, that's just economics. interestingly, democratic
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governor martin o'malley asked the epa for a waiver from this because of how it's going to affect the maryland economy. maryland gets about $90 million, 250, 220 jobs from the cruise industry. so this is the kind of regulation that actually has a real impact on the economy. >> steve: i bet it gets the labor. you watch the let's talk about burial at sea for anybody considering that. a lot of regulations. a lot of red tape. >> lot of red tape. it's not just as easy as pulling a boat out and dumping it in the water. you actually need to have -- fly a u.s. flag and go at least three miles offshore. if the body is not cremated, you have to be in at least 600 feet of water, unless you're in a couple areas. if it is cremated, you still have to be three nautical miles offshore. >> steve: and you got to -- then you got to let people know what you did, just so they've got a paper trailer. >> of course. you have to register. >> steve: nicky neily joins us on mondays to tell us about regulation nation and she did
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that today from washington. thank you. >> thank you. >> steve: all right. next up, 19 minutes after the top of the hour. why this fourth of july may cost you more than any in the last decade. we'll explain that. and brian is always talking about his famous pals. up next, we finally meet one. he spent the weekend with "x factor" judge, simon cowell [ male announcer ] this is george. the day building a play set begins with a surprise twinge of back pain...
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>> steve: 23 minutes after the top of the hour. 25% and 6%, that's how much more you're going to be paying for chicken and ground beef this summer. chicken is at its highest cost
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since 2004. next, $2 million. that's how much a college student in georgia is suing a school district for. she says the school administrators used her photo from her facebook account without permission for a presentation on what not to do on social media. and finally, $82 million. that's how much "monster's university" took in this weekend, making it the number one movie in all the usa. >> brian: the "x factor" just started another round of audition attention. i had a chance to sit down with everyone's favorite judge, the one who is most famous, simon cowell, this weekend, because i didn't want to be alone before anyone even has seen any of the performances or performers, what can we expect? he told us that and so much more. last time we saw you on television, you're in the states, as you call them.
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there was a woman throwing eggs at you. >> i knew you were going to start with this. >> brian: why wouldn't i? >> look at your face. the story was on "america's got talent in the u.k.." there was this act, and they're singing this song, and then at the corner of my eye, i see this girl come out from the orchestra and start throwing things. >> brian: while the act was going on? >> we got the ratings the following day. the highest point was when she was throwing eggs at me. >> brian: here you are back, new season of "x factor." you were part of the audition process. from the footage i've seen, because you're in my hometown, there seems to be a frenzy, as you walk in as the judges come in. >> some things changed this year. i don't know what it is. i think the first two years we were learning how to make the show, but we never really made the show i wanted to make. then this year -- >> brian: yet, you're in charge.
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>> i take the responsibility. but this year something clicked, something changed. so i'm -- i'm definitely not going to predict any numbers. but i've got a good feeling. >> i'd like to introduce you to am so of the most beautiful women. simon cowell. >> brian: saying if you were famous when you were young, you'd be dead by now. >> i would. >> brian: why? what's so hard about being famous to the degree in which you're used to making people stars? >> i'm guessing i would be dead. i was lucky that i went on tv when i was much, much older. so i worked for a record company 'til 20, 30 years or whatever at that point. so i understood the problems you could have and i had really cooled people around. >> brian: justin bieber, does that worry you? one of the top stars in the world, 19 years old. do you understand what he's going through? >> i think there comes a point, and i was thinking about this
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the other day, if i ever thought one of our actors was being overworked or overpromoted, you have to say you made enough money, to take a year off. you have to be sensible about it. >> brian: okay. that's key. and for you personally, what's harder? -- >> i'm worried about you, are you okay dealing with all this pressure and fame? >> brian: you mean being next to you? >> you've changed. >> brian: in what respect? >> you were quite humble when i first met you. >> brian: i feel -- >> let's stay on this for a moment. just remain grounded. okay? like me. >> brian: right. and i just feel as our relationship is in trouble, there was a time when you said come to my house and do an interview. >> now you brought me the worth bath products that i had in my life. >> brian: this is for your next bath and this is to make sure your skin stays soft. there you go. >> that's disgusting.
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>> brian: i read you like to take bath. >> i love taking baths with the right thing in it. >> brian: i have a small budget in the news. it's not like the entertainment budget. >> it's obviously very small. >> brian: do you think we're better off in long island city? >> you're welcome to my house any time. >> brian: really? >> of course. >> brian: what time tomorrow? >> i'll be in london tomorrow. [ laughter ] >> steve: i had forgotten you had taken mr. cowell the bath products. how about some bubble bath. >> brian: i looked at his favorite things. that was saturday at 5. alice gillespie and others have been working to get this for months. and finally they get this on friday, can you come on saturday? so i appreciate their hustle. he is a -- it's a big year for "x factor." they had 10 million. they were supposed to get 20. so far, everything from idol on down is going in the right direction. >> steve: he sounds optimistic about this year. >> brian: so far this year looks good.
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>> carol: he likes you. >> steve: oh, yeah. >> brian: he views me as a threat. >> carol: he didn't seem that threatened. your e-mails are pouring in on this topic. more and more men are boycotting marriage and they blame the ladies. are women really to blame? >> steve: there is some stats to back that up. plus, star from that '70s show busted by the cops again. we're going to told you who from that pick next. ♪ ♪ as your life changes, fidelity is there r your personal economy, helping you readjust along the way, refocus as careers change and kids head off to college, and revisit your investments as retirement gets closer. wherever you are today,
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♪ ♪ . >> carol: time for your shot of the morning. producer laurie ruben welcomed zachary cooper ruben into the "fox & friends" family last week. his onesy is still a little big, but he'll grow into it. he doesn't like it either. he's like fashion isn't important, mom. >> steve: laura has been with use very long time and is the best in the business. congratulations. >> carol: what a great name. zachary cooper ruben. now your headlines. >> brian: we think laura is watching? >> steve: know what? she's got her hands full. she's only got the one onesy. >> carol: now to your headlines.
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early this morning, the texas house overwhelmingly approved legislation that would tighten restrictions on abortion. the final vote, 97-33. the measure bans abortions after the 20th week of pregnancy. >> texas has become the big baby abortion mecca and we know babies at 20 weeks feel pain. we need to protect their lives. >> steve: the measure will now go to the senate for a vote. it must pass before tuesday at midnight because that's when the legislative session ends. >> brian: allall right. a star from "the '70s show" arrested again. she played laurie foreman on the show, but it didn't help her here. they were called to -- she was called to move her car parked on the freeway, blocking a lane. that's when they realized she was wasted. kelly has been arrested three other times since 2010. >> steve: that's her mug shot. meanwhile a couple defending their pets from bobcats got the
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surprise of a lifetime. the animal they shot and killed was not a bobcat. it was a leopard. >> it is frightening when you have young children running around and they like to go outside and play. >> steve: authorities believe the leopard was being kept as a pet. >> brian: i would think so. it's going to be hot and humid in the northeast. how can we tell? well, a lot of people use the barometer. >> you guys are so mean. >> brian: other people use maria molina's hair. this is what she looked like at 5:00 a.m this morning. then here we are at 7:30 eastern time! what has happened? has humidity set in? >> carol: i think you look beautiful in both pictures. >> brian: i do, too. but we have noticed you have more body. >> there has been somewhat of a transformation. more volume now.
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>> brian: yes. >> what do y'all think? >> carol: i like it. it has the wind swept look. >> steve: now she's going to put a hat on it? >> yes, i asked them please help me out today. i'm having big-time hair issues. i'm going to put my hair on and try to cover up the problem. >> carol: leave your hair down. it looks beautiful. it really does. >> thanks. >> carol: i have the same hair actually. [ laughter ] when i'm out in the wind -- i do. >> brian: maria, normally you could ignore me and steve. but if carol alt tells you it looks good, i'd go with it. >> carol: i give you two thumbs up. >> that means a lot, thank you so much. it's a very nice compliment coming from you. we actually have a very humid day in the northeast. that's really why my hair is so frizzy and many people have that issue throughout the day today. so not a good hair day. we're talking 91% humanity right now -- humidity in huntington, new york, early this morning before temperatures started rising up, we had even higher
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humidity. 95%. a very humid day. it does mean that we do have the possibility to be seeing showers and storms in the northeast, a very isolated threat. overall, a beautiful day out here across northeast, including the new york city area. lot of sunshine of the temperatures making it into the low 90s. 90s across parts of kansas, parts of oklahoma and the state of texas. we do have a severe weather risk in place across sections of the plains and also in the midwest. that's shown on the graphic with that yellow area that you can see, damaging winds, large hail and isolated tornadoes being a concern there. otherwise an elevated fire danger in place as well across parts of the southwest, including the four corners region which are the states of new mexico, arizona, colorado, and also utah. we do have those red flag warnings in effect out there due to the hot temperatures, low humidity and gusty winds. i'll put my hat on now. let's head back into the studio. anna and i are coming up. they have me outfitted in golf
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shoes, a nice shirt, a hat, because we're going to be getting a golf lesson. so we'll have that coming up. >> brian: big daddy golf classic for aneurysm and the children he's museum. >> steve: if the golf doesn't turn out well, you can blame your hair. thank you very much. >> brian: 22 minutes before the top of the hour. let's talk about men in their role in society. it's all about this author that just joined us. she wrote this book called "men on strike." it's tapping a nerve. okay with me. >> steve: one of the things she found is that the number of women who want to get married is only in the 30s these days, whereas opposed to the men, it's in the 20s. it's because as this dr. helen smith said, it looks as if the deck is stacked against guys. >> carol: actually what she said was that the number of women who want to get married has increased and the number of men who want to get married has decreased and she feels that part of the reason is that the laws are uneven and that men lose not only their freedom, but their rights to children. >> brian: not only that, carol,
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i think that society, it's tilted too much toward women. it's an overcompensation. men are saying okay, fine. women want control. they used to be king of the castle. now they're lucky to get a man cave in the basement. men are saying, the heck with it. you earn the money, you raise the kids and i'll sit out here and watch cable. >> carol: what i thought was crazy was that a lot of men are being abused by their wives. once they get married, the women let their hair down, let's say, and abuse their husbands. i wonder what kind of laws are in place to protect men against spousal abuse. >> steve: after she made her case, we asked you to e and tweet us what you think. charles says, divorce when kids are involved, brings men near to poverty because of child support and alimony. marriage is not a good deal for men. i see most men get married without considering the consequences of divorce with kids. >> carol: i see that a lot. tom says, society in general has
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put men in this position, from education to employment, men are left in the dust. feminist educated women do it all and this eliminated the need for men as husbands and fathers. >> brian: wow. a strong woman is an asset to a marriage. only a sissy would see it otherwise. >> steve: sports' greatest stars and more are coming up for a great cause. anna kooiman is live in long island, new york, learning some of the skills at the big daddy golf classic. good morning to you. >> brian: with gary sheaf she have field. >> good morning. let's see what the chef has cook. >> we got a -- >> you got to make sure you got the interlock grip. >> i thought you said the anna lock grip. >> we can call it that.
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extend it. then just come around. >> look out! look out! here we go. >> there you go. >> wooo! four! yeah! >> that's it. we got to look the part. we got the shoes, the hat. you've been in the cigar business these days, right? >> absolutely. >> we'll take out one of these. we got a little competition going on. a little friendly competition. maria molina. >> he brought us out to the toughest putt. so much potential in us as golfers that he decided we were up for -- >> big-time coach, mickleson, maria molina is at the top of the list. >> he was telling me feet, shoulder width apart. put your weight on your toes on the balls of your feet and the grip is something like this. i don't quite understand it.
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>> but you look good. >> and keep the right hand on light. you aim with the left and here we go. >> oh! >> that went fartherrer than anna's drive. >> one more time. >> maria we're impressed. we'll take you to putt putt. >> what's the name of the worst shot? not a birdie? >> the worst number you could get? >> a five. >> a bogey. >> very nice. >> steve: what was maria aiming at exactly? [ laughter ] >> brian: it's a lot of pressure. >> brian: thanks a lot. we'll talk with you again. new details on the irs scandal. did the agency specifically
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target people who could not afford a lawyer? senator ron johnson is here. he's all over this story. and. >> steve: he was a man of science who didn't buy into the whole spirituality thing until he died and went to heaven and came back. author of the best selling book "proof of heaven" is here live again. good morning to you, doctor sheffield
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>> brian: apparently when it comes to irs scrutiny, it helps to have a lawyer. not only were conservative groups targeted, but reportedly without an attorney, they faced a harsher, more inappropriate set of questioning. it's causing lawmakers to accuse the irs of bullying smaller groups. joining us now to weigh in, senator ron johnson. if you had a legal team, you you weren't as susceptible? >> as a business guy, lawyers aren't my favorite class of people. >> brian: but you need them. >> and when you go up against the powerful bureaucracy, the most feared civil agency in the government, you better have representation or they will run rough shod over you. >> brian: how did you know about this iniquity here when it came to targeting not only tea partiers, but for the ones that didn't have legal representation? >> actually good reporting. these things started coming out on news reports and you start finding out about it. brian, this is just the tip of the iceberg. you're talking earlier, the irs paid out $46 million in refunds
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to one address, about 24,000 refund claims. there is 24,000 taxpayers at that one address. that's just one -- that's the biggest abuse. this is all over the place. plus you talk about the nsa. the irs is data mining in terms of your facebook, possible -- taking a look at on-line purchases, credit card. >> brian: where are you getting this information that the irs is getting this information? >> these are news reports. these are whistle blowers coming forward and congress has to st these things. quite honestly, the administration ought to be look at this. >> brian: where is the irs on the investigation? nowhere in the senate -- >> director muller, who is an honorable guy, when questioned about the irs investigation from the f.b.i., didn't know who the lead investigator is, which tells you they're not taking it particularly seriously. not this administration. >> brian: also on top of that, he did not talk to anybody that's been targeted. >> right. when you take a look at the fact that the former irs commissioner was visiting the white house more than 150 times, sarah hall
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ingram, the in charge of tax exempt unit, now will be in charge of the irs' compliance of obamacare, she was at the white house more than 150 times. that tells us there is definitely involvement, certainly within the white house in terms of what this irs is doing to americans. >> brian: we have enough information, as far as i'm concerned. >> not even close. >> not even close. this is just the tip of the iceberg. we've lot of information to uncover. >> brian: we always love having you in. you're all over this. you left the business world to help out in washington and every time i see you, you seem more aghast at what you're finding. >> it's amazing. the government is out of control and it's up to congress to get the answers for the american people, the truth. >> brian: senator ron johnson, thanks so much. up ahead, avenues man of science who didn't buy into the whole spirituality thing until he actually died and went to heaven and came back. the world has embraced his book called "proof of heaven." he's here live. first on this date in 1989, "satisfy" by richard marks,
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>> carol: more and more people are saying it happened and this week we want to hear their stories. today a renowned neurosurgeon only believed in scientific facts until he was driven into a coma where he spent seven days in heaven before coming back. his amazing story has captivated the world. good morning, doctor, how are you? >> doing well. >> carol: doing better i hear. >> yes, much better. >> carol: so you were a neurosurgeon. you worked on the brain and you were very scientific and then something happened in your life that changed everything. why don't you take us through
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it? >> i had a severe sudden bacterial meningitis. it was a very rare type, less than one in 10 million. and even when i got to the emergency room, my chances of surviving, because i was already in coma, my survival chance was under 10%. through the week that even got worse. and before my coma, i would have told you that patient with this illness shouldn't have survived. but should have had no experience what whatsoever because of what this did to my brain, yet i had this rich odyssey. >> carol: you had this experience. you said that you didn't remember anything of your life as you had lived it, but you went into this other realm. can you describe it to us in a few words? >> yes. it had several elements, the first place was very coarse, primitive, probably the best consciousness my brain could muster, my physical brain. then rescued into an idyllic valley, absolutely ultrareal
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beyond description, beauty, flowers, butterflies, beautiful girl who was my guardian angel. many angels swirling above. then outside of this entire universe, outside of all the space and time -- the origin. >> carol: do you think it sounds far fetched to some people maybe? had you had any controversy about this? >> well, i think i was my own worst skeptic for the longest time and i was trying to explain this as brain based. in fact, a lot of my previous life memories and all took up to six weeks to come back. that includes a lot of my knowledge as a knew i don't scientist. when the doctors told me the dying brain can't do in this case, i took them at their word. but it was way too real. i was trying to explain it as some bizarre quality of the brain trying to die. but the part that makes us human
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on the brain was wiped out on day one. that's why i went into such detail trying to explain it was brain based and concluded with colleagues that it did not happen in my brain at all. >> carol: do you think maybe now adays that this was something -- 'cause you said after you came out of this, your son told to you write this all down. you were not going to do that before? >> no, i was going to write it down, but what i wanted to do was read everything i could about near death experiences. and the wisdom of my older son was don't read anything. write everything down. and for six weeks, that's all i did was write it down, 20,000 words of everything i could remember, which is very fresh in my mind when i first came back. >> carol: i think we have a lot to thank your son for. this has been a number one book since october on the "new york times" best seller list. thank you so much for being here and sharing your experience with us. >> thanks for having me. >> carol: we're following a fox news alert. the nsa leaker was supposed to be on a plane to cuba, but wasn't. what happened? the chairman of the house
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homeland security committee here live top of the hour. and this mom ignite add fire storm by saying she regrets staying home with the kids instead of work. she'll explain her comments my name is mike and i quit smoking. chantix... it's a non-nicotine pill. i didn't want nicotine to give up nicotine. [ male announcer ] along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. [ mike ] when i was taking the chantix, it reduced the urge to smoke. [ malennouncer ] some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation,
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>> carol: good morning. it's monday, june 24. i'm carol alt with brian and steve in for gretchen carlson. wake up, you guys. it's a game of cat and mouse. moments ago, this picture was snapped. it's the empty seat where edward snowden was supposed to be sitting. so where is he? the journalist -- >> steve: that's the question of the day. meanwhile, the journalist who told snowden's story not mincing words with david gregory. >> i think it's pretty extraordinary that anybody who would call themselves a journalist would publicly muse about whether or not other journalists should be charged with felonies. >> steve: does david gregory call himself a journalist?
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the question that set him off moments away. >> brian: he was just crowned the ugliest dog in the world. is he really that ugly? we report. you decide. when wally stops by. "fox & friends" starts now. >> steve: thank you for joining us on this monday. look who is here, carol alt! >> carol: i'm here. >> brian: are we wearing you out yet? >> carol: you guys have a tough job. i must say. >> steve: come o we sit around on a couch and drink coffee. carol alt, you know her as a super model, actress, author. and she's got a great new show coming to fox in the fall. >> carol: when we get a title for it, we will get you know what that is. >> brian: it will be on weekends. joining us right now is a man, few better people we could talk to in washington then chairman
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michael mccall of the impact of edward snowden and his escape from hong kong. and now possibly in moscow and heading to ecuador via cue b. how much damage has already been done, in your mind, by snowden? >> significant damage. he's leaked the most highly sensitive classified program probably within the united states government and every day that goes by without his capture presents more of a danger. we don't know what he's saying to the chinese and russians. one thing is clear, brian, is that the face of this man, mr. snowden, who self-proclaimed hero and defender of freedom has now gone to countries that deny freedom and are in the cyber space world. china is one of the biggest perpetrators of espionage. russia, cyber warfare. yet now he's seek ago safe harbor inside these countries. we don't know what he's telling them. now planning a trip to even more
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adversaries like cuba, venezuela and possibly ecuador. this man is no longer a hero or defender of freedom in any way. he's aligned himself with wikileaks, has has done tremendous damage to our military. i consider him to be a traitor. >> steve: the very latest news is he was apparently booked on a flight that left at 6:05 this morning eastern time, but according to a couple of ap reporters on board the flight, that's the particular seat, congressman, that he was booked for, and he did not sit in it and they looked throughout the plane and he wasn't there. you touched on just a moment ago, this is people as they come on and he was not amongst them. you mentioned wikileaks. apparently a member of wikileaks' legal defense team, sarah harrison, has been traveling with him. traveled from hong kong it moscow. that's the troubling part, right
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there. we don't know if he's sided with the chinese or russians. but with wikileaks, he could actually do some substantial damage. >> exactly right. wikileaks has already done substantial damage to the united states, to our u.s. military. these are his allies as friends. these are not friends of the united states. he took an oath of loyalty to the united states of america and now he's violating that trust that the american government placed in him and again, i'm very uncomfortable with him being in china and russia who do not seem to be particularly cooperative at this juncture. i hope that the russian give him the diplomatic and legal pressures being placed on them will reconsider his departure out of moscow. >> brian: we're not putting pressure on russia. how are we doing it? >> we should be. we absolutely should be. the president that can talk more did diplomacy and maybe flex
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muscle should. this is one of the most important espionage cases in the history of the united states. there have only been nine of them. this would be number ten. this comes on the heels of the president's trip to china and russia and look at the amount of respect that these countries are paying to this president. >> brian: we found out that the secretary of state, kerry, has said it's deeply troubling, russia's role in this. >> it is deeply troubling because they're hiding -- >> brian: is that strong enough? >> i think we could be a lot stronger. this guy is with the enemy and the enemy camp and we're letting him go. >> carol: how do we stop this guy? what do we do to stop him and how do we stop this from happening in the future? that's the two biggest questions on my mind right now. i didn't mean to cut you off, steve. >> steve: good question. >> i have a real issue with some of these defense contractors and the amount of screening and clearances that we give them and the amount of access that we
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give them. i think we got to be real careful in the future, particularly a guy like this who wasn't terribly well educated and now he has access to all these top level programs. we need to do a better job screening. what can we do about him over there? obviously he's in a foreign country, so the more pressure we can apply on russia to extradite him, fine. but we can use a lot of legal pressure, a lot of economic, trade pressures. i think the only thing other than that that we could possibly do would be some sort of rendition which i think would be very controversial. >> steve: there is no doubt this guy did break the law in what he did and he's going to have to face the music at some point. but what he did do for a lot of people is he opened a lot of people's eyes,security apparatus country apparently is keeping an eye on all of us in various measures. one of your colleagues said that what the intelligence agencies are doing right now exceeds the original patriot act that he
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helped author. do you see why some people are worried about that? >> oh, sure. congress is providing the oversight to look at these programs and see what we can do to possibly make them better. i've always said it's a lawful program approved by the courts. however, i think your point is well taken on the heels of the irs targeting scandal, on the heels of the associated press being under surveillance and fox news reporters, this overreach of this administration and this kind of power in this administration gives a lot of people pause out there. again, the irony is this guy being the so-called defender of freedom, aligning himself with these countries who are just the opposite, who deny freedom daily to their citizens, is a little bit ironic. >> steve: yeah. >> brian: i just can't believe that 3.5 million private contractors have this top secret clearance. 1 million government workers, and we couldn't even pick up that he was taking all our intelligence out on a thumb drive in may to display it to
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the guardian post in june. that has to change yesterday. >> yeah. i think again, maybe we give these contractors too much authority within the nsa. but again, congress is taking a look at how we do these programs. i was a federal prosecutor, counterterrorism. in the old days we'd take that number, run it through the phone carriers, the isp's, we wouldn't take a big data dump from all these -- out of the private sector and put it in the public sector under the warehouse of the nsa. i think that's the issue that gives most people a little bit of heartburn to think about the fact that they have all their phone records. >> steve: yeah. speaking of heartburn, wait until snowden finds out they don't have wi-fi in ecuador. congressman, republican from texas, thank you for joining us today. >> thanks for having me. >> brian: he'll be faxing his leaks. >> steve: yeah. smoke signals. yesterday on "meet the press," david gregory invited on the
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journalist who broke the story along with the "washington post," glenn greenwald, this guy of the guardian in the united kingdom. and it's really interesting what david gregory asked greenwald and after gregory asked the question, the twittersphere lit up. here it is. >> to the ex tents you have aided and abetted snowden, even in his current movements, why shouldn't you, mr. greenwald, be charged with a crime? >> i think it's pretty extraordinary that anybody would who would call themselves a journalist who publicly muse whether or not other journalists should be charged charged charg. the assumption in your question is completely without evidence, the idea i've aided and abetted him in any way. the scandal that arose in washington before our story began was about the fact that the obama administration is trying to criminalize investigative journalism by going through the e-mails and phone records of a.p. reporters, accusing fox news journalist of the theory that you just embraced, being a co-conspirator
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with felonies for working with sources. if you want to embrace that, it means every investigative journalist in the united states who works with their sources, who receives classified information is a criminal and it's precisely those theories and precisely that climate that has become so menacing in the united states. >> steve: afterwards, mr. greenwald went on twitter and said who needs the government to criminalize journalists when you have gregory. jeff eliasoph advice said if there ever was a moment when the press showed itself too close to government, it was the attack on greenwald. the huffington post said we still can't believe what david gregory asked greenwald just now. >> brian: if he had information that he was helping this guy get out of hong kong to russia and possibly south america, that will be different. if he actually had information he was helping rather than just reporting, i think that would be going over the line. >> carol: now the rest of your headlines.
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while you were sleeping, james gandolfini's body arrived home in new jersey. his casket was loaded onto a private plane in italy yesterday. funeral services are set for this thursday in manhattan. new jersey governor chris christie ordered allstate flags to be lowered to half-staff in his honor. american executive is being held hostage inside his own plant in beijing, china. he's been held for four days now. his workers are demanding severance packages like those given to 30 other employees laid off. however, these workers aren't being let go. he said local officials just forced him to meet their demands. the workers are expected to get wire transfers tomorrow. in less than one hour, opening statements begin in the trial of george zimmerman. he's charged with murder for the death of 17-year-old trayvon martin. a jury of six women will decide the case. they are already sequestered and stay sequestered through the trial. the trial expected to take between two and four weeks.
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over the weekend, the judge ruled two audio experts cannot testify about a 911 call and who was heard screaming for help in the background. he did it. >> that's a view there, buddy. praise god. this is awesome. >> carol: it took nick with wala just 22 minutes to walk a quarter of a mile. but where he walked that quarter of a mile is what's the big deal here. it's on a cable over the little colorado river gorge, near the grand canyon. he was 1500 feet -- steve, i think i would have fainted, to be 1500 feet above the ground. he paused, he crouched down twice because the winds were making the cable sway. then he thanked god for calming the cable. look at what we found from my last visit to "fox & friends". >> wait a minute, you're telling me a two-year-old could walk this? >> i got three kids and all of
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them can walk it. but unfortunately, i didn't have a choice 'cause my partner wanted know wear it. >> steve: not exactly the same height, carol. >> carol: not the same view for sure. i think he was also holding my hand. >> he was. >> brian: no one was holing his hand, but still care, that's not easy. >> carol: but it was a lot of fun, i have to say. it's a little wider than i thought, but not as wide as what i would want. catwalks. >> brian: i know. it defies -- redefines -- >> steve: we're all on cable right now. >> brian: very good. straight ahead, new details about the new england patriots tight end aaron hernandez and his connection to murder. is he about to be arrested? new developments next. >> steve: then looking for a way to work? the five simple words that will guarantee you get it. stick around for that so... [ gasps ]
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on any new volkswagen. if yand you're talking toevere rheuyour rheumatologistike me, about trying or adding a biologic. this is humira, adalimumab. this is humira working to help relieve my pain. this is humira helping me through the twists and turns. this is humira helping to protect my joints from further damage. doctors have been prescribing humira for over ten years. humira works by targeting and helping to block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to ra symptoms. for many adults, humira is proven to help relieve pain and stop further joint damage. humira can lower your ability to fight infections,
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including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma, or other types of cancer, have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure have occurd. before starting humira , your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you live in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever, fatigue, cough, or sores. you should not start humira if you have any kind of infection. ask your doctor if humira can work for you. this is humira at work. >> brian: new developments over the weekend surrounding aaron hernandez. there is evidence he could be arrested at any moment in connection with the murder. with us right now is detective rod wheeler. they were crawling all overt house this weekend. three times on saturday alone. what do you think this means for
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hernandez? for me as a nonprofessional, it means they haven't gotten enough yet. >> actually let me tell you exactly what it meant. that was huge development over the weekend. tell me tell you why. last week on monday, as a matter of fact, remember there was initial reports that said this guy, lloyd, was probably killed at the spot in which his body was found. well, according to some of the neighbors of hernandez, they heard gun shots at hernandez' house between 3:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. last monday night. why is that significant? because that tells me as a homicide investigator that we probably have two crime scenes here. it's a chance, just a possibility, that lloyd was initially shot, brian, at the home of hernandez and maybe his body was taken to the other location. so that's why they went back to his house this weekend to try to gather more evidence that i think will be very credible today when they start putting together the arrest warrant. >> brian: when you see a guy visibly wreck his surveillance camera, have cleaning people come in and scrub his house,
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destroy his cell phone, does this show you a savvy person or a desperate person? >> no. you know what? it shows me a stupid person, brian. let me tell you why, because we all know that homicide investigators, medical examiners, we know how to conduct these types of investigations and any time we arrive on a scene and somebody has intentionally destroyed critical evidence like that, that's actually becoming evidence itself. so the fact that this guy, hernandez, called in a professional cleaning crew last monday morning and told them to come over to his house right now and clean, that's very significant. now, those individuals are going to be interviewed by the police as well. the police want to know what did they, in fact, clean. >> brian: you brought up a point. you dealt with carmelo anthony in the past. he was carjacked, he said don't worry about it, i can handle it. this is hernandez coming from a difficult background, too. they go from two to $2 million quickly. >> you're exactly right.
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they can't handle it sometimes, brian. i always like to say this, you can give a leopard as much water as you want, he will never change its spots. >> brian: hopefully in this case it did, but doesn't look like it did. rod wheeler, thanks for the analysis. >> thank you. >> brian: straight ahead, a mystery at the museum. a statue spinning in perfect circles on its own. what is going on? steve has the answer. and have you heard this story? a woman says the decision to stay home and raise her children was the worst decision she ever made. that debate is coming up the great outdoors... ...and a great deal. thanks to dad. (gasp) nope. aw! guys! grrrr let's leave the deals to hotels.com.
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>> brian: quick headlines. sweet return, hostess announcing that twinkies will be back in store shelves july 15. can i hear it, control room? a loud of applause -- sound of applause. it's running under new ownership. the twinkies will stay the same. and call scooby doo. this 1,000-year-old statue has just started rotating on its own. scooby doo is the detective. you can see the egyptian statue slowly turning 180-degrees over the course of a few days all by itself. the museum cuoator -- curator says they're spooked because it only moves during the day. >> steve: she's under attack for saying she regrets quitting her job to be a stay at home mom. now she's firing back. >> carol: we are joined by that mother and theinceton mom and human resources specialist.
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good morning, ladies. >> good morning. >> steve: you regret being a stay at home mom for the last 20 years or so? >> well, i don't regret bag mom or being with my children. but i regret walking out of my career and really not leaving what i like to say a leaving a pilot light lit under my professional life. >> carol: you're thinking women should always look forward and say okay, there is going to be a point where i may want to go back into the work force and keep up with the technology? >> absolutely. husbands lose jobs. there is divorce, there is death. there is just the fact that soon you'll be an empty nester. it comes very quickly. i think women need to keep that pilot light lit, keep some sort of toe hold in their profession for when that day comes. >> steve: you know what? i bet if she asked her kids, the kids would say, we loved having you at home. >> yeah, thanks a lot for staying home with us, mom. hope you loved it as much as we loved having you home. i think what's important here is understanding that your difficulty in reentering the job force at this point is not the
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fact that you've stayed home for 20 years not working, but the fact that there is a middle aged job force now that is virtually unemployable. a bad economy as we're living with now, there are very few jobs. those jobs are being taken by younger, more affordable employees. >> and technologically advanced. >> exactly. every business is looking to put a youthful face on their work force. soy think the re-- so i think the regret is not so much i stayed home with hi kids because i can't believe that any mother will regret having stayed home with their kids. i simply don't believe that. i stayed at home with my kids. i think the regret is, oh, my god, we're middle aged women now. that's the regret. but honey, you have to see that coming. you had to see that coming. if you did your job well, your children will grow up to be independent adults who move on to their own lives and you will be in your 50s. so we as smart women, we have to think about how we're going to
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creatively, profitably reinvent ourselves and move forward. >> carol: it sounds as though you have a would-be and stay home with your kids. >> i did. >> carol: i think one of the things i read in your statement was that your kids don't look at what you did as a job. >> exactly. >> carol: i think that could make you feel very underappreciated and -- am i wrong about that? it seems like you're doing so much, taking them everywhere, volunteering, charity work and they don't look at that as a job. >> there is partly that. when the people around you don't look at what you're doing as a job, even if it's volunteer work that has a lot of responsibility, you kind of lose confidence. >> you feel degraded. >> you lower your sights and lower your ambitious and lower your sights of what you think you were capable of at 25. part of the danger is that we lower our own bar and what we think we can do even if the outside world can accept us as soup is suggesting that issue. >> carol: what susan is she kept her foot -- one in each -- >> i created a business at home. i created a business at home,
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which interestingly, my -- it was invisible to my children and always makes me laugh that when i developed a human resources consultancy and executive coaching practice, my children had no idea that i worked. i laugh now about when my young one was in first or second grade and i hear him talk about, what does your mom do? my mom works in a hospital. my mom works in a library. i overhear my young son saying, my mom, doesn't do anything. she sits on a couch and talks on the phone. meanwhile, i'm spinning off 300,000, $400,000 a year. good that it was invisible to him. i wanted my children, as i'm sure all parents want their children to feel that parenting you, my darling baby, job one. job one. so i think we have to be creative in how we plan for our own middle age, how we plan for our own empty nesthood because it's absolutely coming. there is no doubt about that. >> carol: where do you go from here? >> i'm not sure that you want
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your job to be invisible to your kids. one of the things we need to do is set an example to our kids, particularly to our daughters. i think you want to set an example to your daughter. so you don't want to make it so invisible. >> steve: i'm curious what the reaction from your children has been. >> they understand i don't regret being with them. there was a wonderful woman who wrote in to us this week and she said, no mom has any regrets about being with their kids. but we have regrets about what we did ourselves. >> steve: all right. >> carol: that certainly tells you as women, we should keep one foot in each camp. >> steve: great debate. thank you very much. >> carol: thank you. >> steve: any regrets coming on? >> oh, my gosh. [ laughter ] >> this is her job! >> steve: thank you very much. >> carol: new developments this morning, lawmakers in texas passed some of the strictest abortion rules. now we're hearing they might not stick. the details next.
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>> steve: and he was crowned the ugliest dog in the world. but a lot of people say he's not ugly enough. we're going to report. you're going to decide when wally joins us live. he's out in the hally (girl) what does that say? (guy) dive shop. (girl) diving lessons. (guy) we should totally do that. (girl ) yeah, right. (guy) i wannna catch a falcon! (girl) we should do that. (guy) i caught a falcon. (guy) you could eat a bug. let's do that. (guy) you know you're eating a bug. (girl) because of the legs. (guy vo) we got a subaru to take us new places. (girl) yeah, it's a hot spring. (guy) we should do that. (guy vo) it did. (man) how's that feel? (guy) fine. (girl) we shouldn't have done that. (guy) no. (announcer) love. it's what makes a subaru, a subaru.
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♪ right. but the most important feature of all is... the capital one purchase eraser. i can redeem the double miles i earned with my venture card to erase recent travel purchases. d with a few clicks, this mission never happened. uh, what's this button do? [ electricity zaps ] ♪ you requested backup? yes. yes i did. what's in your wallet? here to take your lettuce from drab to fab with new lean cuisine salad additions. just byol. first, thaw your dressing. next, steam your grilled chicken and veggies. then, dress it. add your crunchy toppings. and voila. enjoy. >> steve: it's your shot of the morning. a fox "friends" friends -- i've
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seen a lot of leggos, but this is the best presentation. say hello to nathan. you have an interesting story. once upon a time you were a big lawyer here in new york city over on park avenue. >> it's true. it's true. >> steve: what did you do? >> i left it all behind to play with toys. >> steve: are you kidding me? >> it's worked out. now i have art exhibitions all overt world. >> steve: this is fantastic. ted, come and look at this. this is beautiful. how long did a work of art like that take? >> this took several weeks. i wanted to do something special 'cause i'm having this exhibition here in new york city. i wanted to do something special for the city. so i came up with this piece that pays homage to the statue of liberty. >> steve: the next one is? >> a terra cotta warrior. part of the exhibition is looking at art forms owl around the world -- all around the world. this is from art history. >> steve: attention, we got a thinker own here.
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>> right. again, paying homage to art history, we do rodain, so it's something kids can get interested in art history. >> steve: i hope moms and dads are watching with their kids and saying look what you can do if you apply yourself, get away from the television, put down the wii for a minute and look at that. >> exactly. the whole point of the exhibition at discovery times square is really to inspire folks and really get them create a little art on their own because if you create a little art, maybe out of leggo bricks, you'll have a better day, i promise. >> steve: v he very -- very, very nice. folks here, how about a round of applause for nathan? [ applause ] >> steve: very nice to meet you. you're good. can we keep that one? >> it's pretty fun, right? >> steve: it's going on the wall. thank you very much. back inside. >> brian: thanks a lot. you're going to want to hear this. 25 minutes before the top of the how many we've fox news alert.
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brand-new video just in, the moscow to cuba flight we expected the nsa leaker to be on, but he was nowhere to be found. and this photo shows his empty seat on that flight. there was speculation he would head from cuba to ecuador for asylum and possibly ultimately to venezuela. the foreign minister in ecuador is speaking right now. he says his country will put human rights principles above any interest in allowing snowden to hide there. by the way, their press is almost no freedom at all. also speaking out, secretary of state john kerry. he says russia should not have let snowden leave. but we just spoke to the head of the house intelligence committee who is concerned we're not being strong enough. >> i wonder if mr. snowden chose china and russia as assistance in his flight from justice because they're such powerful
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bastions of internet freedom and i wonder if while he was in either of those countries he raised the questions of internet freedoms since that seems to be what he champions. but evidently he places himself above the law, having betrayed his country. >> troubling because they're -- >> brian: is that strong enough? >> i think we can be a lot stronger. this guy is with the enemy in the enemy camp and we're letting him go. >> brian: over the weekend, the u.s. revoked snowden's passport. but that has not stopped him from moving around wherever he seems to want to go. >> carol: early this morning the texas house overwhelmingly approved legislation that would tighten restrictions on abortion. the final vote, 97-33. the measure bans abortions after the 20th week of pregnancy. >> texas has become the big baby abortion mecca and we know babies at 20 weeks feel pain. we think we need to protect
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their lives. >> carol: the measure will now go to the senate for a vote. it must pass before tuesday at midnight because that's when the legislative season ends. >> brian: let's move to this story. a star from "the '70s show" arrested again. she played laurie foreman on the show. police say she was called to move her car which was parked on the freeway and blocking a lane. that's when they realized she was drunk. kelly has been arrested three other times since 2010. >> carol: want to know the secret to getting your boss to give you a raise? it's as easy as saying these five words. >> they are yeah, give, menu, start, and meeting. huh? a new study finds people who august them are more likely to have their ideas accepted by their boss. so what's the most persuasive word on the list? yeah. it makes your idea come across. like it's in the line with
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previous thoughts by others, so the suggestion has a higher chance of being accepted. what do you think about that? >> brian: on the surface that seems like the worst study i've ever heard of. >> carol: yeah! >> brian: yeah. [ laughter ] >> steve: talk about adding insult to injury, a dad tries to catch a foul ball at the giants game in san fran last night, but the ball slips through his fingers and to make matters worse, his son then throws -- daddy, i can't believe it. a temper tantrum. meanwhile, wally is a four-year-old beagle boxer basset mixed just crowned, ladies and gentlemen, the world's ugliest dog in california. >> the world's ugliest dog, give it up for wally! [ cheers and applause ] >> steve: very nice. >> brian: he's not ugly. >> carol: joining us now, wally and his owner and the organizer
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of the event, vicky. good morning, ladies. welcome. >> good morning. >> carol: i heard that there was a lot of controversy over poor wally winning because he's not so ugly. >> yeah. i think they like the way he was different. the shape, rather than his face being ugly. >> brian: does it hurt your feelings when people say your dog is not ugly? >> no. >> steve: you want an ugly dog, well, especially for this. >> unusual and ugly, you know. >> carol: he's so ugly, he's cute. >> at the world's ugliest dog contest, we celebrate. wally is one of those. >> brian: can we pick him up so we can get a good look at him? he's got a huge upper body. he's got a big head. >> and kind of looks like bubble gum. a chewed piece of bubble gum. >> we did this at the fair and the judges went wild. so did the audience. >> steve: for that trick? >> for that trick. >> steve: that's it? >> yeah. that was it. put him over the top. >> brian: can we see it one more
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time? >> carol: i think he's exhausted, the poor thing. >> steve: i heard people describe your dog as he looks like he's been photo shopped with parts of different dogs on one dog. >> yes. >> carol: and a little duck. [ laughter ] >> brian: he looks like the dog electric "toy story." >> big personality dog. >> carol: you said he falls over when he walks. >> uh-huh. he always had a big head ever since he was a little publicky. -- puppy. so it was hard for him to walk. we had to put boots on his feet to teach him how to walk. in order to do that, he had to walk like this. >> carol: how is wally handling all the attention? >> we were walking through new york yesterday and everybody was his fans. he was on the ferry talking to people. >> carol: he has such a cute face. how could they call him ugly? >> steve: the head is normal, but when you put it with the rest of the body. >> brian: how did you get him?
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>> steve: born in a lab? >> my friend's bassette-beagle got pregnant. he was the run of the litter. i saw a dot on his head and i said, that's the one i want. >> steve: you have a book that celebrates the world's ugliest dog. >> yeah. we authored this book which has all the pictures and celebrates the contest. so if you missed the contest, you can get the belly chuckle and a laugh year round with this book. >> carol: 45 years worth of ugly dogs. >> a lot of good work done for the rescue dog movement because of it. >> steve: all right. tammy and vicky and wally, thank you very much. >> brian: for the record, there is nog lea o dog. >> never. >> they're all beautiful. we love them. >> brian: fox news alert. edward snowden, a no show on his flight to cuba. peter johnson, jr. says he may have just showed his hand. and. >> steve: no need to turn on the air conditioner. just eat this. the foods that can actually cool you down.
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♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] if you can't stand the heat, get off the test track. get the mercedes-benz you've been burning for at the summer event, going on now at your authorized mercedes-benz dealer. hurry, before this opportunity cools off.
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>> steve: nsa whistle blower ed snowden is on the run. we're learning this morning he never got on that flight. he bought that seat, but it went empty to havana. right now the foreign minister of ecuador is speak out and says
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his country will potato human rights -- put human rights principles above anything that allows snowed ton hide in ecuador if such is the case. if snowden were a true patriot, wouldn't he be standing up for himself here in the united states? let's talk to peter johnson, jr. >> he's not a patriot and he's not -- >> steve: he thinks he is because he's exposing -- >> he's not a whistle blower. he's a fugitive. he's arguably a traitor. he's been charged with a criminal complaint under the espionage act and now in my view, he's giving aid and comfort to china, to russia, to cuba, to ecuador, to venezuela, wherever he decides to go on this magical mystery tour of america bashing. and so we say a lot of us, unfortunately in this country, well, yeah. we're confused. maybe he's a patriot. maybe he's fighting for the constitution. i think rosenberg thought they were fighting for world peace.
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they were executed. i think a lot of misguided people think that they're fighting for something. so if you're going to use constitutional principle, then come within the american framework. let's have a trial. go to a jury of your peers and say, i didn't do a thing wrong. testify for five days, and then the jury of the peers will either decide innocent or guilty. >> steve: rand paul had this to say not long ago. >> i do think that when history looks at this, they're going to contrast the behavior of james clapper, our national intelligence director, with edward snowden. mr. clapper lied in congress in defiance of the law in the name of security. mr. snowden told the truth in the name of privacy. moral and legal relativism, meaning a little this, a little of that, we're going to compare the two, we're not going to be comparing the two at all. we're going to look at snowden's
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acts uniquely, individually. perhaps we all decide as americans that the president really wants to have the debate that we don't want this kind of surveillance. but at the same time, if someone is charged with classified, top secret information and they pledge an oath and they pledge loyalty as americans to our country and to our way of life, don't go to china or russia, don't plan on going to cuba. don't go to venezuela or ecuador. don't trash our country and if you're going to go russia, china or any of those countries, trash them because this is the freest place in the world. we may be a little screwed up at this point, we can correct it. but he can be tried in this country and he should be tried. and if he wasn't a coward, he'd come home and face the charges. >> steve: where is he? we'll find out soon enough. >> not a patriot, snowden. >> steve: peter johnson, jr. thank you. >> steve: straight ahead, no need to turn on the air conditioner. just eat some of that stuff. the foods that they say can actually cool you down. bill hemmer is standing by for a
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preview of what happens on his cool show in 11 minute. >> i see carol is carrying you and brian this morning. >> steve: as per usual. >> thank you. good morning to you. big morning of news here. the trial of the summer opens in minutes. live to the courthouse in florida for the george zimmerman case. where is snowden? how much has he embarrassed this administration? we're watching the supreme court for possible landmark decisions at 10:00 a.m. eastern time. we'll see new about ten minutes when martha and i join you on this monday morning hey! did you know that honey nut cheerios has oats that can help lower cholesterol? and it tastes good? sure does! wow. it's the honey, it makes it taste so... well, would you look at the time... what's the rush? be happy. be healthy.
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>> carol: what to eat to beat the heat. we have jacqueline banks, certified health nutrition counselor here this morning showing us what to eat to keep cool this summer. good morning.
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>> good morning. >> carol: i know you like what's happening here. we got some food! >> brian: right. another morning with octopus. >> steve: you got -- hot foods make you hot. >> right. >> steve: so don't eat them in the summer. you got great ideas. let's start down there in that big empty bowl. >> these are great dishes on the menu. peach and strawberry gazpacho. >> carol: what's in the broth. >> peach, cantaloupe and a little bit of tomato juice. >> carol: you blend it? >> you blend it in the blender. >> carol: it's a raw meal. >> that's right. that's a kind of meal for the summer time. raw and light ask seasonal. >> brian: let's say that is not my thing, what else do we have? >> we have the watermelon salad. you want watermelon, cucumber and it's a great food because it's got so much water content.
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it will help keep you hydrateed. octopus, seafood is a much better choice during the summer time action, because it has a cooling effect on the body. >> brian: are the suction cups chewy? >> yes, they are. they're delicious. [ laughter ] >> steve: summer is a great time to have a lobster roll. this is a nice version of lobster, not roll, but kind of in -- >> deconstructed lobster roll. we have the avocado base, caviar. the lobster, which is a seafood that will be more cooling than the red meat or chicken. and the lettuce is foods that have a lot of potassium. that cools your body down, too. then the creme fresh is one of the dairy foods that actually helps cool as well. >> carol: one of the things i noticed about summer time foods is it's all about the seasoning.
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>> it is. there is a lot of good seasonings that can help us cool down. cilantro, fresh ginger. be careful with it. you have to have fresh ginger to help. >> steve: if you don't have that, popcals will -- popsicles. >> the ice coffee, those are create a warming effect in the long run. >> steve: now we know. >> they'll even constrict your blood vessels and digestive system will lock up and create a problem. go with this. >> carol: now you know how to keep cool in the summer. thank you so much. >> thank you. >> brian: great job. we're back to wrap things up in just a moment. >> steve: who wants octopus? >> we have gazpacho. >> steve: you'll love it when i first felt the diabetic nerve pain,
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>> steve: very, very nice job, carol alt filling in today. >> carol: thank you! thank you. couldn't have done it without you guys. >> brian: have a great day, everyone. bill: welcome to fox. welcome to monday morning. a fox news alert inside the courtroom now. george zimmerman just walking into that courtroom as opening statement in his second degree murder trial are about to begin. i'm bill hemmer. welcome to america's newsroom. martha: over the weekend it was a minor victory for the defense team because the judge ruled audio experts cannot testify in court about how it was heard screaming for help in the background of the 911

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