tv FOX and Friends FOX News July 5, 2013 3:00am-6:01am PDT
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>> tom says the only thing better than fireworks on the 4th of july is the food. >> sammy writes it was destiny they would have a baby on independence day. thank you for your service. thanks to all of you for sending in your pictures. they will be posted on our website. >> "fox & friends" starts now. >>anna: good morning. it is friday, july 5, 2013. we start with a fox news alert. a 4th of july fireworks show goes terribly wrong. [screaming] >> oh my god! >> several people injured. so what happened? we've got the details coming up. >> muslim brotherhood promising a day of rejection. where does the u.s. stand? does the president even know? a surprising answer from
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someone who used to work inside the white house. >> clayton in for brian. meet bridezilla. her letter going viral. the cause -- 100 for a wedding guest wasn't enough. she wanted more. what is the right amount to give? we're going to analyze. "fox & friends" starts right now. >> it is "fox & friends" on this friday. that means one thing. our all-american summer concert continues this
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morning. dustin lynch will be performing. we'll be eating barbecue. steve, brian, and gretchen are off. >>anna: dustin lynch, i would imagine the fan base for this guy, twobl 20's and 30 -- probably 20's and 30's. good-looking man out there. can i do the interview with those guys. is that cool? >>clayton: did you guys have fun on 4th of july? >> i did. i think my finger still smells of fireworks. i love that smell. smells like america. >>anna: i guess you don't live in new york city. yesterday we went to jersey city so we could make sure we did our sparklers. >>clayton: you had to be outside of manhattan. fireworks all across america. this independence day,
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starting with our nation's capital. take a look in case you missed some of these. ♪ ♪ >>jesse: in new york, four barges carrying 40,000 shells on the hudson river unleashed a spectacular show of brilliant reds, whites and blues. ♪ we're beautiful ♪ like diamonds ♪ in the sky ♪ shine bright like ♪ a diamond shine bright ♪ ♪ like a diamond ♪ beautiful like diamonds ♪ in the sky ♪ shine bright like a diamond ♪
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>>anna: gorgeous. in boston thousands came out for the boston pops fireworks spectacular. the city hosting its largest gathering since the boston bombings in april. just a few of the incredible sights across the country last night. >>clayton: continue to send your pictures in this morning of your 4th of july celebration yesterday. we'll show a few of them throughout the show. we prefer cute kids. >>jesse: if your kids aren't that cute, send them any way. >>clayton: or if they have a hilarious outfit on. and your pets or anything you did. send them to friends@foxnews.com. now we want to get to a fox news alert. you're looking live at egypt. the country bracing for another day of possible violence there. supporters of ousted president mohamed morsi vowing to retaliate in a friday of rejection. connor powell live in cairo with the latest on this. pretty big crackdown, connor. >> the muslim brotherhood warned after this military
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coup it would put some of its members towards violence. we heard of clashes in egypt. there have been attacks on military check points, police stations and an airport used in the military in the sinai desert. we are expecting massive crowds in cairo and across the country. the muslim brotherhood is calling on all of its supporters to take to the streets. they are calling it a day of rejection. they were stunned initially. now they are angry and mobilizing. this is a huge group in egypt. they control the presidency and parliament and they are very serious about trying to get back into the political fray here. they are mobilizing. this is the beginning of a process. but they are angry. we have real concerns here in egypt that there will be violence. the military is trying to project an image of strength and control. they are taking to the streets. we've seen evidence of the military deploying troops and equipment. but whether or not the military can control the anger of the muslim
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brotherhood is still a very big question. >>clayton: we see these crackdowns moving further and further. connor powell live in cairo will be watching all of that as we watch back here at home to see what the white house response it. yesterday the white house releasing this photo of the president in the situation room. but a lot of fingers being pointed as to what the administration has or has not done here. did they let this thing descend into chaos. we know as this was unfolding the white house was calling on president morsi to have an inclusive government. they ignored it. didn't do it. of course he was overthrown. now we're seeing this big crackdown on members of the muslim brotherhood, hundreds of people being arrested. >>anna: quiet diplomacy from the obama administration. the reason they said they did this is they didn't want to add gas to the fire. but in the process have we alienated both sides? a former state department official who has been
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advising the obama white house said this: we have managed to alienate both sides in egypt. so of course people who support the muslim brotherhood, on the flip side, think that the united states backed this coup. >>jesse: we lost face in the middle east, the two interventions the president got involved in. we have libya with an ambassador being killed. now we have egypt where we're backing this guy, turns out to be hard core muslim brotherhood. then he cracks down on all the opposition. it looks like we've been giving these guys $1.3 billion. where's the leverage? these now protests have turned anti-obama. they are angry at the president for backing morsi because of his authoritarian moves. it looks like we're losing control of the situation. i don't know if a photo op might solve that. >>clayton: or we never had control of the situation to begin with. people are wondering where was secretary kerry during
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this? he just had a big trip to the middle east, 12-day tour. people are thinking secretary kerry has to be in washington dealing with the unraveling mess in egypt right now. some people then took to twitter, snapped photos of john kerry vacationing in nantucket. that didn't go so well. >>anna: flipping burgers with his family like everybody else is on the 4th of july holiday. when you're seen on your yacht when situations like this are exploding -- >>jesse: it reminds me of that windsurfing john kerry during the 2004 election. the guy can't catch a break. >>clayton: they ran those ads during the campaign saying is he out of touch? here's another situation where all hands should be on deck because egypt is so important to the middle east. the most populous country in that region, a u.s. ally. it is vital to the stability of the middle east. >>jesse: to the folks that want to know how is this going to affect us. if you see the suez canal
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shut down, gas prices are going to go through the roof. oil is going up big-time. you're seeing that right now in the futures. it looks like a lot of concerns out there. >>clayton: we'll talk to charles payne in a little bit and see what the oil prices will do as the day unfolds. >>anna: we need to get to the rest of the headlines. overnight thousands gathered for fireworks and one celebration turned to disaster as an explosion hurt 28 people. [screaming] >> oh my god! oh! oh! oh! >>anna: all this happening, cameras rolling in simi valley, california. you can hear the terrified crowd screaming as they run for their lives. amid the chaos, fire fighters set up a triage center at a park to treat victims. many hit by flying debris. police say the explosion appears to have been an accident. also this morning, seattle police are trying to figure
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out what a nevada man in a stolen truck was doing with guns, molotov cocktails and body armor near the university of washington campus. the night before he was arrested, 21-year-old justin miles parker was questioned by police when he was found sleeping inside his truck outside a dormitory. they later found out the truck was stolen. >> we have no idea what his intentions are. again, this is a very active investigation, and we're trying to rule out all -- everything at this point. >>anna: parker was booked in the king county jail on suspicion of possession of incendiary devices. >> police launching a new investigation into the disappearance of madeleine mccann. detectives say it is possible mccann who vanished six years ago from a portugese resort is alive. they have 38 persons of interest. 12 of them are british nationals believed to have been in portugal when the three-year-old little girl went missing. >> they thought they were
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spending the day at six flags with their father but three kids got the surprise of their lives when their military mom showed up. >> mommy! >>anna: army national guard sergeant ashley ericsson spent the last nine months in afghanistan. >> everything we do there is worth it because we have this here. i'm so happy to be home. >> ericsson said she's thrilled the surprise was such a success. she can't wait to spend holiday weekends together, like this one. >>clayton: welcome back. here's my favorite story of the day. how much money should you give during a wedding? you put it in a gift card or maybe you buy something off the registry. what is the appropriate amount? one bride got so mad that her friends, a boy and girl, gave each $50 in a gift card, in their wedding
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card, and took to facebook to say what was so wrong with my wedding that you thought it was -- that you thought it was so bad that you had to give us each $50. per person, that is $100 on a couple. >>jesse: a wedding is not a fund-raiser. you're trying to celebrate love. listen, if i was the groom, i would -- red flags going off everywhere. is she celebrating the wedding by lashing out on facebook about the gifts, hit the road. >>anna: this girl said she just got out of school with $40,000 of debt; right? $50 for her and for her boyfriend, they say was actually quite generous for them to even give. you know a wedding planner has gotten in on the action and says, you're right, it's not a fund-raiser. it's the bride and groom's responsibility t the wedding and the reception. not the guests. >>clayton: we went to the knot.com to find out exactly how much should you
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be giving on a wedding day. go to the wedding registry and buy something there. they say a co-worker and a distant family friend, about $50 to $75. they were right in that wheel house. a friend $75 to $100, still in that wheel house. a close friend $100 to $150. an urbanite, $150 to $200. they were in that proper space. >>jesse: i would have canceled the check. if someone lashed out on facebook about my check, i would cancel the check. >>anna: i remember going through this right out of college, a southern girl, everyone gets married when you're 22. it was so stressful because i was making $20,000 and all my friends why getting married. it was awful. >>clayton: e-mail us friends@foxnews.com. coming up, all eyes will be on wall street as the new jobs number will be released for june. charles payne will be here
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fed, interest rates and stimulus, how crucial is this report? what does it mean for your bottom line? >>clayton: keeping a close eye on wall street and your wallet -- watching my wallet -- charles payne is here. speaking of wallets, a lot of people spend a lot more money on gas before the 4th of july holiday and now egypt. how is that affecting our gas prices? >> gas prices have actually come down. we had 20 days in a row where they came out. oil shot through the roof because of instability and a lot of oil goes through the suez canal. gas prices are probably going to start to inch higher. people should come to realize that. we've got a lot gas in this country. it is a global commodity. oil is higher but our gas prices haven't been hit that hard. >>anna: let's get to jobs friday, the most important day of the month for economic data. what are we expecting?
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>> about 165,000 jobs. listen, guys, in the grand scheme of things, that is a pitiful number. typically our country generates a lot more jobs than that especially coming out of a recession. that has not been the case. this is the new normal, but it can also be what we call a goldilocks number, just enough growth that companies can sell products and make money, but the federal reserve can keep pumping money into the system. if we get a number like that, it might be viewed on wall street as a berate thing. right now equity futures were poised -- if we open up now the dow would be up 150 points. they would say we're going to keep printing money. what happens is they print all this money and it goes straight to the banks and doesn't make it to main street. hopefully at some point it will because it's a big gamble on their part to print all the money ultimately. >>jesse: we have this obamacare regulation mandate delay coming out. does that have any effect
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on the market? >> it has an effect on the economy, particularly smaller businesses. let's not forget this was forced by a lot of small businesses and retail and restaurant groups who said right off the bat, last year red lobster c.e.o. said i'm going to have to move people to 29 hours. you're telling me 30 hours is full employment and i've got to provide people with health insurance to take a $2,000 hit, i've got to redefine work. that means hundreds of thousands working 40 hours a week, they will take a hit. >>clayton: more of that passion. he's hosting varney and company at 9:15 time and he'll be keeping a close eye on those jobs numbers. >>anna: 19 minutes after the hour. a man says he tried the
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the prosecution is expected to rest its case today. overnight containment on the arizona wildfire that left 19 fire fighters dead nearly doubled. it is now 80% contained. little by little residents are getting the green light to go back to their homes finally. >>anna: transitioning from the battle field back to civilian life can be quite challenging for our service men and women. now an innovative new program is taking the military mind set and teaching returning troops how to apply it to improve their everyday lives. dr. sandy chapman chief director for the center for brain health developed the program known as smarts. she is the author of "make your brain smarter. " joining her is former marine and smart tpwrad watt jake chick. jake, i'll start with you. you lost an arm and a hand when a mine blew up under your hummer in iraq. it was the brain injuries that have hurt your transition back to civilian
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life. talk about the difficulties that you have had there. >> actually i lost my right leg and parts of my left hand and left arm. but you're right, the physical difficulties are not nearly as challenging as the mental difficulties. before i went through smart training, i never really focused on my brain health. now it's my number-one focus. >>anna: you were prepared to die for your country, you say. you were ready to be in military your whole life. but you weren't prepared to be a civilian again? >> you know, i really wasn't. as i told everyone at the center, i was mentally prepared to die. i wasn't mentally prepared to be severely wounded and live. it made for quite a difficult transition. >>anna: dr. chapman, it is the physicalty these men and women go through that makes them great at what they do, but it does make them have a hard time if they are transitioning.
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how are you going to use your research over the last 30 years to help these people? >> we have very hard evidence now that when we take them to high performance training, it rewires the brain, build re -- builds resilience. they have been able to work out their bodies but didn't realize they can work out their brains. that is what we train them to do. >>anna: how does this program work? >> we teach them a bunch of strategies on how to think about everything. take, for example, being a filtered thinker. what happens is in this information downloading, so much information coming on us, our brain blocker doesn't work very well. in the battle field they have to pay attention to so much information, but in the workplace this may be actually toxic for their brain. so we teach them how to
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inhibit a lot of information. we also teach them how to be deep thinkers, to zoom in, zoom out and get better perspective on how they're thinking. this build their frontal lobe, their judgment, their decision-making. we see actually brain changes very quickly in a short period of time when you teach them to be tactical. >>anna: jake, you said you were a bit skeptical of the program at first, but you saw 86% participants had a drop in rate of depression. how have you been feeling since you graduated from smart? >> great question. i've been feeling great. definitely made me a better husband and better father, which is important. i've always tried to be a better person in everything i do but this has given me the tools to do that. men and women such as myself, we want to be empowered and not labeled. getting the tools to be the driver of your own brain has been a huge leap in my
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life. >>anna: jake, thank you so much. dr. chapman, thank you so much. we appreciate your service, jake, and everything you're doing dr. chapman for all these invisible wounds men and women are coming back with. 27 minutes after the hour now. don't mess with texas. a man turns the table on a burglar, hogties him up and then leaves him for police. the story you've got to see to believe. a dramatic rescue caught on camera after a man fall off a train platform. how good samaritans risked their lives to save a stranger. coming up next. ♪ ♪ ♪ so then the little tiny chipmunks go all the way up... ♪ [ female announcer ] when your swapportunity comes, take it. ♪ what? what? what? [ female announcer ] yoplait. it is so good.
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aren't always the most obvious. 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. ♪ ♪ >>jesse: it's your shot of the morning. an amazing tribute to the victims of the boston marathon bombing. that's officer dick donahue on crutches conducting the boston pops at its 4th of july concerts. they performed this epic rendition of "i'm shipping off to boston." donahue was seriously wounded after a shootout
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with the boston bombing suspect. >>clayton: welcome back to "fox & friends" on this post 4th of july day. we wanted to see how you celebrated your holiday. we asked you to send in pictures of the kids, dogs, parades, whatever it is. here is one that benny lagoy sent from neptune beach, florida. they spent the day performing patriotic tunes to raise money. >>anna: this is from sean haney, his daughter emma celebrating the fourth with an american flag. >> pic of the fireworks in san diego. great shot. >>anna: coming up, we have a soldier kissing a pregnant stomach. let's see that cute little picture. oh! i love it. >>jesse: beautiful. >>anna: happy 4th of july. happy 5th of july,
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everybody. >>clayton: she gave birth yesterday. >>anna: an independence day baby. >>clayton: we went to a neighbor's house, had a great day yesterday barbecuing with friends. my little girl who just started walking about a week ago, she grabbed a little lawn mower. she was walking across the yard yesterday in her festive fourthth -- 4th of july holiday. she's wearing high heels. >>anna: we love to see your pictures. why are you proud to be an american this independence day weekend. >>clayton: send them to friends at foxnews.com. >>anna: lets go to your headlines. france's interior minister lark out over edward snowden's latest allegation that the u.s. spies on its allies. he said this: in the name of our friendship, we owe each other honesty.
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we must say things clearly, directly, frankly. such practices if proven do not have their place between allies and partners. maybe france shouldn't be talking. a french newspaper is reporting the country's stores all e-mails and phone calls. we learned the e.u. and germany will hold tax about growing -- hold talks about growing concerns that the u.s. is spying on allies. >> this dollar -- burglar got more than he bargained for. the owner ambushed him and got him tied up. the homeowner's wife says she's impressed. >> that's my man. i'm really proud of him. >>anna: the man's wife says her husband worked with horses so he's always been pretty good with a rope. the crook is facing burglary charges. extreme or just
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excessive? >> if you want to look extraordinary, you're going to first have to go extreme. >>anna: p90x being accused of nearly killing a man. matt lombardi, 29 years old, said he nearly died of kidney failure after one workout session. no comment yet from the company. dramatic rescue caught on tape. surveillance video shows a man falling on the tracks in downtown atlanta during rush hour. bystanders rushed to help. some jumping into the path of an on coming train to lift him up. police say the man was drunk. he claims to have had a bad reaction to pain pills. >>jesse: that old line. if you missed a minute of "fox & friends" this week, you missed out on a lot of laughs. >>anna: here's a look back from all the fun on the curvy couch and a week
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with "fox & friends." >> okay, five, go! go! >> have you been off the air at all? [laughter] >>alisyn: i've been on 24 hours a day. >>brian: thanks to the neighbors who have been raising your family. >>alisyn: what makes a perfect man? this woman writes no such thing but eric comes pretty close. >>eric: i was hoping it would come from a woman, but thanks. >>brian: when you tell a girl i'm an old junior high jock -- >>gretchen: men say they don't like wedges. what's up with that? >>eric: they hate them. >>brian: the hraoet attractive -- the least attractive shoe. >>gretchen: men like stillettos. >> see if you like this. >> the last time i saw this, it had tequila in it.
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♪ >> i would like to re-create part of that video later. i will not be opening my shirt. let's look at the weather, shall we? >>brian: i'm very jealous. >> brian has a lot of friends. wonder how i do it? i have to pay them off. >> we can do better than that. >> what kind of money is that? >> we'll try to find out why in that photo you're wearing a stethoscope. >> i am a doctor. >> you ask all of your guests to call. >> she showed up in a string bikini and was asked right away by park staff to cover up. an obvious violation of the 27th amendment. >> the fuller figure amendment. >>gretchen: what was the legal ramification fee? >> they could be severe. >> made in america? i even have my own signature. i'm an all-star now.
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>>anna: that last segment, the louisville slugger, i used to play varsity softball. about five times they gave me the david wright size bat. i said give me a lighter one. >>jesse: we saw her on the air, she hits every single ball. >>clayton: creative editing. >>jesse: we also want to let everybody know when she did the spin game, you got killed by that eight-year-old boy. he smoked you. >>anna: when i came to my office, i passed you, and you were like anna, i'm disappointed in you. >>clayton: much more on the show this morning, including this. spell check anyone? another state sign with a major misspelling. look at that. i know where that is. >>anna: 3-d printing and what it did for a little duck named butter cup. can a new technology also
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>>anna: how are you feel? we hope you're doing well. quick headlines for you now. spell check anyone? we told you about a misspelled roadway sign in florida yesterday. we've got another one, this one in pennsylvania. anyone headed to the burrough of ephrada probably did a double take when they saw the sign. it's spelled epharta. if you have spheulgdz school humor -- if you have middle school humor you'll think this is funny. several airlines canceling dozens of flights in to and out of mexico city because of a volcano. the volcano is spewing ash, steam and glowing rocks. it affected flights to or from houston, dallas, chicago, denver, and l.a. clayton, over to you. >>clayton: we'll talk about one lucky duck. remember butter cup, he had
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a foot that had to be amputated. butter cup got a new foot thanks to the miracle of 3-d printing. could that type of technology be coming to humans. let's turn to dr. samadi. this is the future. folks watching at home, this could affect all of us in a profound way. >> this has potential to change the way we practice medicine. in the past what has happened is we used organ transplants. if the kidney fails, bladder, heart, whatever it is, there is a whole transplant and that's what we do with the organs. >>clayton: you get on a list? >> if you're lucky enough to get one of those organs, you go through the transplants, be on immunosuppression for life. what this is do is regenerating foot, arms, legs. a lot of this comes from wake forest -- one of my colleagues who happens to be a urologist has spent years on this. the way it works is we take
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living stem cells and we would basically put it on some sort of scaffold, plate. this 3-d printer has the potential that instead of the ink, we use the stem cells, instead of paper we use the scaffold. on the other side of the printer comes the organ. >>clayton: you can make a bladder? >> what happens is someone has bladder cancer, we will remove the entire bladder. we need to re-create. today what i do for this kind of patient, i use the small bowels to re-create the bladder. what the future is going to be is we will take a piece of bladder, get the stem cells, basically put it on this piece of scaffold to regenerate. that's what it is. it's regenerated medicine. we will create the bladder and put this new bladder back in. you can potentially create any organ. >>clayton: you think for years, growing up as a kid, learning about lizards, they can regenerate a tail. we were told in science
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class, humans, you can't do this. it is something that happens in the reptile world. now humans have figured out a way to do this regeneration. you gave me the example of a bone in the forearm. show our audience what you were describing to phaoefplt this is fascinating. >> let's say someone is in a car accident and missing a piece of bone. the way it works, now you have to use all the grafts. they have to adjust it. never 100% perfect. now with the camera and technology we have, we can take a picture of that piece of bone that is missing, give it to the computer, get all the appropriate measurements and then bring in this technology we spoke about. the 3-d printing, using the stem cell, regenerating the bone that is exactly the size of the piece missing. in the operating room we will bring that in and it will fit in perfectly. >>clayton: like a lego brick. it seems to me when you talk about the
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immunosuppression and you're creating a bone on a lab in a petri dish, do you have the same problems you would have with organ transplants? it's your own so you don't have a problem? >> excellent question. because it is your own stem cell, you don't have to be on these kind of medications for life. that is another big advantage. plus the fact, as you know, the shortage of organ transplants, we're going to have a lot of issues. whether it's heart or other organs, this will really change the way we practice medicine. they are doing it now with heart valves so they can create a valve, which you can see working really well. it is elastic enough. we've come a long way. we're doing it with bladder. there are computers that can regenerate fingers. can you imagine you can go in and let's say there are three fingers missing and they can measure the way it was and exactly replace them. we still have a few years to go but certainly the concept behind this is incredible and it will change the way we do surgery. it will cut down on the
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hours we'll be in the operating room. if you can ask for a new piece of bladder that will come in, that cuts down four, five hours of surgery. it's ongoing research. we've come a long way. and certainly the technology and signs are finally meeting each other and this is the production of it. >>clayton: unbelievable. dr. david samadi from our fox news medical a team, great to see you. coming up here on the show in the spirit of independence day, we're looking at how the u.s. has gone from the land of the free to the home of the regulated. kentucky is known for two things, horse racing and bourbon. a look at what makes it so special down there. did she bring in any? i hope so. ♪ ♪
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>> jesse: in 1968 declared bourbon to be a product of the usa. there is nothing better than to feature on our made in america series, right, anna? >> anna: absolutely. we get the hiccups sound effect real quick? there we go. that's right. to be called bourbon, it must be made in america. kentucky produced 95% of the world's supply. last year, 100,000 people visited the kentucky bourbon trail. there are seven dill citiesries
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on the trail. we spent time at jim beam's american still house. take a look. jim beam is producing more than 20 different kinds of bourbon, but the original kentucky bourbon started right here in claremont in 1795. let's see how it's done. bourbon is made of corn, rye and malt barley. they produce it right here in the usa. even the ingredients driving those hot summers of ken condition. once the main ingredients are milled down, it's time for bourbon. >> you ready? >> anna: ready. it smells like fresh baked bread in here. bourbon by law must be produced in the united states. last year over 16.8 million cases of bourbon were sold in the sus and 38.5 million gallons were exported around the world. the bourbon industry is
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certainly booming. >> most of it's made in kentucky, we think that's best. >> anna: this may look like tap water, but it's 125 proof. moon shine, mama. jim beam is one of the top sellers of bourbon with over 700 million cases shipped last year alone. and it ain't easy to get that whiskey made right. the bourbon making process takes years, but beam has to practice. the 218-year-old company has passed through seven generations. after nine years of aging, this bourbon is ready to come play. yeah. the moment of truth. beam has over 3,000 employees world wide and 875 of them mill, stir and fill millions of bottles of that amber liquor for men and women to enjoy. >> two years ago, bourbon was your grandfather's drink. these days, though, it's hip and
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cool. a lot of folks found bourbon. >> anna: i knew i couldn't go all the way to kentucky without bringing a little something something back. you're going to let me make my own special bottle? >> yeah. anna, here is your bottle. push it down on the spindle. >> anna: we're just rinsing this out, right? >> yes, rinsing it with bourbon. let's fill your bottle. >> anna: fill er up. now this baby, dip. final part of the process. made in america by me for "fox & friends." and i brought it back for you guys. >> jesse: thank you. >> anna: there is a lot more, too. >> jesse: like college days. >> anna: you must have had a different budget in college than i did. >> clayton: we've seen stories recently, mad men, you can thank the show "mad men" wanting refined cocktails again. >> anna: i'll have bourbon on the rocks. and you heard the rep from jim beep saying it's not your
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grandfather's drink anymore. this one right here on the end, i'll be taking that one home. red stag is marketed for women and it has black cherry flavors. >> jesse: i wanted the woman one. >> clayton: jesse, you'll have to fight her. >> jesse: i'm all over that one. what's the proof here? this looks like it could put hair on your chest here. what is this. >> clayton: we got 90 proof over here. let me see what this one is. 86 proof. this will start your morning off right. >> jesse: that's right. i'll see you guys later. >> anna: made in america, jim beam. >> clayton: thanks, that's great. >> jesse: up, up and away. hate those airline fees? wait until you hear how much you're really paying. we've got the brand-new report. >> clayton: and our all american summer concert series is about to begin with country superstar dustin lynch. he's outside warming up, getting ready to play for you
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that's me... i made you something. ♪ i made you something, too. ♪ see you next summer. ♪ [ male announcer ] get exceptional values on the highest quality cars at the summer of audi sales event. ♪ ...and a great deal. . audi thanks to dad. s event. nope eeeeh... oh, guys let's leave the deals to hotels.com. ooh that one! nice. got it! oh my gosh this is so cool... awesome!
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perfect! yep, and no angry bears. the perfect place is on sale now. up to 40% off. only at hotels.com vietnam in 1972. [ all ] fort benning, georgia in 1999. [ male announcer ] usaa auto insurance is often handed down from generation to generation. because it offers a superior level of protection and because usaa's commitment to serve military members, veterans, and their families is without equal. begin your legacy, get an auto insurance quote. usaa. we know what it means to serve. >> anna: it's friday, july 5, 2013. i'm anna kooiman in for gretchen carlson. we begin with a fox news alert. a fourth of july fireworks show goes terribly wrong.
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>> oh, my god! oh! >> anna: over a dozen people injured. we have the details of what went wrong. >> jesse: chaos in cairo. adoral egypts -- radical egypts promise a day of chaos. >> clayton: anna, clayton in for brian this morning. using america to sell beer? >> i named a beer after samuel adams because he signed the declaration of independence. he believed there was a better way to live, all men are created equal. >> clayton: the story behind samuel adams' controversial new commercial. we will talk about it. "fox & friends" hour two starts right now.
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♪ i'll never be the same ♪ ♪ that's the thing about a hurricane ♪ ♪ . >> clayton: dustin lynch is part of our summer concert series this morning. he will be performing live for us after warming up. anna will be out there talking to him. >> anna: i'm doing the interview, darn it. he's a cutie. >> clayton: plus famous dave's is here cooking up great barbecue this morning of the look at that. ribs are on the grill already. >> jesse: we just got to get the bourbon, we got the ribs. i love it until good day. >> anna: almost feels like today is independence day. >> clayton: i'm clayton morris in for brian kilmeade and anna and jesse. we start with this. fireworks across the country last night, in case you missed any of it. starting in our nation's capitol
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where the big celebration was. ♪ >> jesse: in new york, four barges carrying 40,000 shells on the hudson unleashed a spectacular show, brilliants, reds, whites and blues. ♪ o beautiful for hero's prove in liberateing strife ♪ >> anna: breath taking. in philadelphia, hundreds of thousands packed the parkway for philadelphia's fourth of july celebration to jam the night away.
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♪ >> clayton: right there along the parkway, that is the art museum where rocky ran up the steps. i would like to say where america started. >> jesse: that's right. city of brotherly love right there. now fox news alert, you're looking at live pictures out of cairo. bracing for another day of violence after morsi was ousted. the muslim brotherhood calling for a day of rejection to retaliate. conner powell live in cairo with the very latest. >> egypt is bracing for a day of protests, potentially maybe violent day of protest. tahrir square starting to fill up, the sight of anti-morsi protests. we think there could be pro-morsi people there coming today that muslim brotherhood and the pro-morsi supporters are going to take to the streets today. we're expecting large crowds after the traditional muslim prayers end later this afternoon. the muslim brotherhood has
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called on all of its supporters to take to the streets today. several leaders of the muslim brotherhood have been arrested. so there is a lot of anger among the morsi supporters. there is also clashes between police and the military between morsi supporters, at least 16 people have been killed. hundreds more injured. there have been attacks on military and police checkpoints around the country. so egypt is bracing for a day of violence today. this will be a big test of this new military-backed government, only 24 hours old now. but they have a crucial test facing them in the next four or five hours. back to you. >> clayton: conner powell looking at a very chaotic situation this morning in cairo, egypt. thank you. >> anna: we do have fox news alert to let you know about. it has finally happened. the vatican announcing moments ago that the late pope john paul ii will be made a saint. the decision coming after the holy father was given credit for a second miracle last month. church officials say a costa
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rican woman was cured of brain cancer after she prayed to the memory of the late pontiff. two miracles need to be proven for a church official to be eligible for sainthood. another fox news alert. overnight thousands gathered for a fourth of july fireworks celebration and it turned to a disaster. an explosion hurt 28 people. >> oh, my gosh! oh! >> anna: terrible. it happened in simi valley, california. you can hear the terrified crowd screaming as they ran. firefighters set up a triage center. many victims hit by flying debris. police say the explosion appears to have been an accident. police have a lot of questions for a man arrested near the university of washington campus with a truck full of guns. molatov cocktails and body armor.
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ironically, he was questioned by police the night before his arrest when he was found sleeping inside the truck outside a dormitory. cops ran his plates and found out the next day the truck was stolen. 21-year-old justin parker was booked on suspicion of possession of incendiary devices. >> no idea what his intentions are. again, this is a very active investigation and we're trying to rule out all -- everything at this point. >> anna: cops say parker is not cooperating, but there does not appear to be a threat to the campus. fire crews rescuing this dog trapped under the hood of a couple's pt cruiser in florida. they had been driving for five miles before they realized the pup was stuck inside. the animal did make it out without a single scratch. we still don't know how the dog got there or if the animal has an owner. and those are your headlines. i bet it will have an owner after we broadcast the story. >> clayton: right. probably trying to seek shelter. thank you. now to this, because during the
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holiday week in washington, politics time or right before a big holiday, if you got bad news or something you want to get out there where you don't think people will pay much attention, why not put that out on like a friday afternoon when people are hitting the roads, going to the beach? that's the criticism this morning being heaped upon president obama. greta van susteren writing an opinion piece saying, when did the administration know about the small businessmandate, that is the 50-person threshold with which they would be forced to pay a penalty if they didn't give and provide health care for their employees? when did the administration know they were going to roll back this and put it on delay? >> jesse: you don't delay something if it's working well. they've had almost four years in order to figure this out. remember, this is the cornerstone of president obama's domestic policy agenda. let's recall how this happened in the first place. first there was a waiver for the states in order to get the senate on board. then they had waivers for restaurants. nancy pelosi's district had a lot.
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waivers for unions. it looks like it's off to a very bad and embarrassing start. >> anna: right. they've had three years to try to figure this thing out. why is it just now coming to fruition? is that what happens when you pass something without reading it and it's like 2400 pages wrong or something like that? >> jesse: right. >> anna: we're hearing from the obama administration saying that we've got a quote from valerie jarrett in the delayed mandate will help business. she says this allows employers the time to test the new reporting system and make any necessary adaptations to their healths, while staying the course toward making health coverage more affordable and accessible. >> clayton: charles payne earlier on the show, we were asking him, because of the criticism, this is going to cut jobs. right? if this mandate goes into place, companies will be forced to lay people off. that's why there was this delay. we asked charles payne. >> let's not forget this was forced by a lot of small businesses and retailers and
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restaurant groups who said right off the bat, late last year, the ceo of carden restaurants, red lobster, olive garden, a big obama backer, said i'm going to have to move people to 29 hours. you're telling me 30 hours of small employment and i have to provide people with health care insurance to take a $2,000 hit, i got to lay people off or got to redefine the definition of work. >> anna: so how does this affect if you you're out looking for work? there are plenty of small business owners going, i'm not going to make this decision just yet. i'm not going to hire anybody else because it's going to hurt my bottom line potentially. >> jesse: right. one of the other big issues here, if they keep delaying this man it is date, so you don't have fines when you have employees over 50 people, there is really no incentive to keep people on your insurance. so they're going to dump people into these government-run exchanges and there is no way to fund it now because you don't have the fines that create the billions of dollars to finance the system. so it looks like we may be headed towards single payer if, in fact, this is continued to be
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delayed. >> clayton: how many of these things will be rolled back? it's smart that they put this out on a holiday weekend. >> anna: damage control. >> clayton: exactly. 8 minutes after the hour. you probably had a few beers and sam adams beers yesterday, one of the great brewers in america, of course. maybe you saw their new television commercial talking about sam adams and patriotism. see if you notice something odd about this commercial. watch. >> i named a beer after samuel adams? because he signed the declaration of independence. he believed there was a better way to live. all men are created equal. they are endowed with certain unalienable rights. life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. smooth. flavorful. we bow to no kings. samuel adams. >> anna: did you figure it out? the removal of endowed by their creator. to me, this is an insult to our founding fathers.
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sam adams i can't imagine would want anything brewed, especially that. here is what sam adams says. beer advertising and marketing materials should not clow religion or religious themes. we agree with that and tried to adhere to these guidelines. while we do understand your objection to the omission of the phrase, they occur in the declaration of independence, which samuel adams signed and helped author. we believe it would be outside our industry guidelines to invoke those religious words in a beer commercial. >> clayton: i love that the beer institute advertising code holds more weight than our declaration of independence. >> jesse: right. and we also have these guidelines. you can have women mud wrestling in bikinis, that's okay, but don't say god. >> anna: you complaining about that? >> jesse: no, no. what i'm saying is the whole standard about that. >> clayton: we can't use endowed by their creator, sam a-- these are the standards. there is all sorts of strict guidelines with where they can advertise on television and certain hours of the day, in
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magazines. we can't have liquor advertising on television. all of these different things at certain times of the day. it's amazing to me that the beer institute advertising code holds more weight than does our declaration of independence. >> jesse: is bill maher writing the code? do atheists really drink beer anyway? what do they drink? i think beer is a red-blooded american -- >> anna: come on, everybody. >> jesse: are atheists going to be offend fundamental they say creator? >> clayton: ben franks lynn said, and if i get this wrong, forgive me. beer is proof, beer and wine is proof that god loves us. >> jesse: that's right. and god created beer. so what are you talking about. >> clayton: one of our founding fathers. let us know what you think about that. you can find us on twitter as well. >> anna: it's just one more thing that we're here talking about, just like taking the one nation under god out of the pledge of allegiance. one more thing. don't show your cross necklace while working or whatever. one more thing. we'd love to hear from you. 11 minutes after the hour.
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>> jesse: disability claims are piling up in veterans affairs offices like this one in north carolina. what is causing the back log and how do we fix it? we are taking an inside look at the backlog with scott, a former deputy assistant secretary of public affairs at the department of veteran affairs. how are you doing this morning? >> i'm well. hope you are, too. >> jesse: i am, thank you. so take us through something. give me an example. if you have a veteran who has a severe knee injury, what does it take for him or her to go about filing this claim and getting this disability? how hard is it? >> the best way for any veteran to file a claim is what's called a fully developed claim. that means you have a specific problem, a specific complaint and specific pieces of information from your military and military health records. when you submit all of that at once, you have a fully developed claim. however, most veterans don't really know all of the technical
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medical information that they need to have to file a fully developed claim. and that's a big part of what's taking so long for these claims to get processed. >> jesse: it seems like the back log, at least we've been hearing p it until just recently, has this been going on for a long time? >> there has been a backlog of varying degrees for quite a few years. it's only been in the past four or five years where the backlog has increased almost to the tune of 100, 125%. right now there are roughly 650,000 claims from disabled veterans that have been baglogged for more than 125 days. that means that all of these men and women are waiting to receive their disability benefits that they earned through the military by being disabled through an illness or injury or wound in combat. >> jesse: do you sense any urgency coming out of the department, or even president obama? is he concerned about the
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backlog? it seems like a crisis, and what are some specific recommendations you could advise in order to slow this jam up? >> right now the v.a. secretary ordered that the people at v.a. who process disability claims work mandatory overtime for the next couple of months. >> jesse: wait, wait. that's the only thing. they get mandatory overtime? >> yes. well, that's one of the big things right now. and it's actually the most visible thing that's going on. they also have to do some work with the implementation of additional computer technology and ways to automate the process, but i don't know that's going to work out as well as a lot of people think. the word from the department of veterans affairs and the administration is that these problems will work themselves out by 2015. but earlier this morning, i went to the v.a..gov web site to see what the latest disability figures were.
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they were supposed to have been published july 1, but there was a notice saying that because of a problem with their data maintenance warehouse, that it was under repair and the data were not available. so if you can't even get the information on the progress that v.a. is making filing and processing these claims, with all due respect, it kind of begins to look like keystone cops. >> jesse: yeah. it's a shame. it should not be happening in america. this should be priority number one. thank you for keeping us abreast of the situation and have a great 5th. thank you very much. >> thank you. pleasure is mine. >> jesse: all right. up, up and away. hate those airline fees? wait until you hear how much you're really paying. we've got the report, brand-new next. ♪ all american summer concert series is about to begin with country superstar dustin lynch. we'll talk to the nashville crooner when we come back.
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>> jesse: time for news by the numbers. first, 70% and 30%. according to the department of transportation, actual airline ticket prices account for just 70% of revenue generated by major airlines. down 84% in 2000. the other 30% comes from fees. next, 70 years. that's how long this arizona couple has been married. they tied the knot july 4, 1943. they say they hope for many more happy years together. finally, 69. that's how many hot dogs seven-time hot dog eating
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champion joey chestnut downed in ten minutes. he's setting a new world record for hot dogs in a competitive eating contest. that's a lot of dogs. all right. ♪ ♪ . >> anna: good morning, our summer concert series continues and we've got dustin lynch with us. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> anna: i love filling in on fridays. this is always so much fun. you're a sing -- your single went platinum in may. "wild for your smile," he'll be doing that at the end of the show. i want to talk a little bit about you, a little bit about dustin, something that your fans don't know. why did you start maying the guitar? >> 'cause i had no game with the ladies. >> anna: i find that very hard to believe. we can take a look at this crowd. we've got a lot of young ladies that i think are quite interested. you said you didn't have any game. you know what i think is really different about you compared o other country music singers, you
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write your own songs. you've written about 200? >> yeah. that was the first couple years i started writing. >> anna: just in the first couple of years. what are the positive aspects of writing your own music? >> you know, i get to write songs about what i'm experiencing in life and so i think it comes from a more special place every night i get to sing. and also it's just fun to do. it's fun to walk into a room with a guitar and air and come out and song. >> anna: a guitar and air. i love that. you're from lynchburg, tennessee. >> yes, just outside. >> anna: i'm enjoying the accent. while you're in new york, can you say you're watching "fox & friends" in a new yorker accent? >> anna: new yorker. >> new yorker. [ laughter ] >> anna: i love it. i love it. tell us a little bit more about your style of music. country music has really evolved so much. not about your dog and your truck. it's almost pop music.
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but you really have a great fusion between the two. >> i grew up listening to this. my heros heros are garth brooksd alan jackson. i'll always have a little of that in my music. i listen to top 40 hip-hop stuff, rock music. one of my favorites is incubis. >> anna: i think you're doing pretty great with your cowboy hat on. i don't think we need to trade it for a do rag. >> thank you. i'm one of the few now. isn't that weird? >> anna: absolutely. i know your fans are crazy about you and your body and your biceps and all that. we've got crazy pictures we want to show. i want you to teach me how to do this, the bicep chug. we're going to do diet coke -- >> are weto try and do this? >> anna: i can't risk ruining my outfit. i'll hold your microphone. >> so this is something that me and the guys came up with on the bus because we're bored and we have to travel.
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>> anna: i think you just want to show off the guns. >> we'll do it this way. you kind of put it here. this is -- make sure you tweet me a picture. or hit me on facebook with it. and go like this. >> anna: oh! what do you guys think? >> pretty amazing. >> now it's a party, right? >> anna: we'll be testing this out and singing "wild for your smile" in just a bit. >> jesse: imagine coming home to a stranger using your shower. >> he yelled, whoever is in here, you better come out. and he had to yell it four times. the man finally come out wrapping a towel around him. >> jesse: the barely believable encounter next. >> clayton: while most of us spent the holiday enjoying hamburgers and hot dog, one person found something with a
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little heat at the food show. we're going to try it. ♪ the first time i saw a sony 4k tv, it was like opening my eyes. it's four times the detail of hd. colors become richer. details become clearer. which for a filmmaker, changes everything. because now there are no more barriers between the world that i see and the ones i can show you. the sony 4k ultra hd tv.
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the twilight's last gleaming ♪ >> clayton: it's a shot of the morning. he's a general and he can sing. general martin dempsey singing the national anthem on independence day, the joint chiefs chairman was joined by the army chorus. it took place before the national game against the brewers. he's known for his sinatra-like singing voice. his favorite song to sing is "new york, new york." >> anna: maybe that will be his next song. >> jesse: even if he sings terribly, you have to tell the general, amazing job. yes, sir! beautiful voice. >> clayton: we want to ask you how you celebrated your independence day yesterday by sending us some pictures and some videos. jill captured the patriotic babies yesterday. parker, thompson and friends and their fourth of july parade at chattanooga, tennessee. they had them in a crib in the parade? >> jesse: that's a little dangerous. >> clayton: good way to tote them around. >> anna: kimberly cannon snap
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add picture of her mother celebrating the 4th right here. very nice. >> clayton: maybe they boardwalk. >> anna: nice weather. >> jesse: viewer jay captures fireworks over cedar point amusement point in sandusky, ohio. >> clayton: is this the first amusement park in the country at cedar point, i think? >> anna: i know it's iconic. i know that much. >> clayton: shannon milan's daughter, celebrating her first fourth of july in florida. very cute. very adorable. >> anna: love the hairdo. and our viewer steven schroeder captures fireworks in georgia. the sequestration may not have moved the show there, but it will be much shorter. my home state of north carolina, fort brag wasn't able to have the fireworks show. >> jesse: viewer melissa, taking her patriotic daughter, jenna.
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>> clayton: and viewer patricia caught a picture of the cross. >> anna: oh, wow! look at that. >> jesse: that is beautiful. >> clayton: flag on the fourth of july. >> jesse: that's a keeper. >> anna: viewer steve stag snapped a picture of a pate i can't tellic tractor driver -- patriotic tractor driver. we'll get that one to you later. our viewer paul gets a picture of patriotic pooches protecting their daughter. >> clayton: send us a few pictures. we love adorable babies or babies doing something funny. that's my call. >> anna: or dogs and beer. >> clayton: that works, too. >> jesse: or embarrassing dad photos. we love those. >> clayton: there is plenty of those. our in box would explode. >> anna: we have to get to your headlines. 32 minutes after the hour, france's interior minister lashing out after edward
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snowden's allegation that the united states spies. he said we owe each other honesty, we must say things clearly. maybe france shouldn't be talking. a french newspaper is reporting that the country stores all e-mails and phone calls and has been doing so for years. we've learned the u.s. and germany will be holding talks as soon as monday about growing european concerns. that the u.s. is spying on its allies. a real life twist of fate. (bleep). >> holy (bleep)! >> anna: a tornado ripped through a connecticut town. check out this shocking cell phone video. the owner of the stadium says he never worried about the sports world dome because tornadoes never hit connecticut. never say never there. and talk about an uninvited house guest.
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an oregon family comes home to find a stranger in their shower. the homeowner says she called police and rushed to her grandkids -- rushed her grandkids out of the house while her husband took care of the intruder. >> he yelled, whoever is in here, you better come out. and he had to yell it four times. the man finally come out wrapping a towel around him. >> anna: oh, my gosh. she said her husband restrained the near naked man until police arrested him. shockingly, the guy admitted he had been staying in the backyard tent for days. wow. all right. a reporter covering football is getting quite the surprise. >> he's out there with a kid like robinson -- >> anna: that's got to hurt. amy campbell was interview ago football scout during a recruitment competition for oregon high school players. that's when a wide receiver catches a pass and can't stop his momentum in time. he ends up slamming into campbell, knocking her over.
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>> jesse: did you see the size of the football coach? he could have stopped this guy. >> anna: he didn't do anything. >> jesse: he sees it and says oops. >> clayton: i always worry about those moments 'cause what would i do, right? he kind of tried to help her. >> jesse: he kind of, a little. >> clayton: you don't know. you hope you will be chivalrus. i have a feeling we'll be on camera knocking people out of the way to get the ball. thanks. here it's been another fun filled week here on the curvy couch. don't worry if you missed a minute of it. >> anna: because we put all the best moments together and here is a look back at week with "fox & friends". >> okay, five, go! go! >> good! >> have you been off the air at all? >> no. i've been on 24 hours a day.
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>> what makes the perfect man? this is eddie in florida e-mailed, no such thing as a perfect man, but eric comes pretty close. oh, my goodness. >> you're the perfect co-host. >> right. i was hoping it would come from a woman, but thanks, eric. when you tell a girl i'm an old junior high clarinet player, they just flock. >> anna: men say they don't like wedges. what's up with that? >> clayton: that's the least attractive show. >> why do men like stillettos? >> whole other reason. >> see if you like it. when we're done, i'll get your opinion. >> last time i saw this, there was tequila in it. smells like worm. ♪ ♪ . >> i would like to recreate part of that video later on if we could. >> clayton: you want a hang glider. >> i will not be opening my shirt. let's take a look at the weather. >> i'm very jealous of the spa treatment they're getting.
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>> brian has a lot of friends. he wonders how i do it. i have to pay them off. >> i'm not coming out next week unless we can do better than that. >> euros? what kind of money is that? i painted my bathroom wall with that. >> clayton: we'll try to find out why in that photo you're wearing a stethoscope. >> i am a doctor. >> clayton: you ask all of your guests to cough. >> she showed up in a string bikini and asked right away by park staff to cover up. obvious violation of the 27th amendment. >> clayton: that's the fuller figure amendment z would the legal ramifications be? >> they could be severe. >> anna: made in america? i even have my own signature. i'm an all star now. >> clayton: there is a look back at the week of "fox & friends." anna was in like 40 locations somewhere in kentucky. >> anna: at least i brought you guys back some bourbon. >> jesse: i think she drank the bourbon and then played baseball. you actually managed to make
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some contact. >> anna: are you saying i was hungover? >> jesse: i didn't breathize you. i'm just saying. >> clayton: what am i going to say? e-mail us your pictures. we'll show you more of those coming up throughout the show. plus this, a fight for faith. a college student forced to remove her cross necklace so she wouldn't offend anyone. really? the student and the attorney are here next to talk about it. >> anna: while most of us spent the holiday enjoying home burgers -- hamburgers and hot dog, heather -- heather childers found spicy ice cream at the food show. we're going to try it to see what we think about it, too. ♪ ♪
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i'm in my work van, having lunch, next minute i'm in the back of an ambulance having a heart attack. the emts gave me bayer aspirin. it helped save my life. i was in shape, fit. i did not see it coming. my doctor recommends i take bayer aspirin to help prevent another heart attack. [ male announcer ] aspirin is not appropriate for everyone so be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. i've lived through a massive heart attack. i don't take life for granted. see your doctor and get checked out. ♪ i got my mom wrapped around my little finger. do you? yeah, i do. huh. i said i want honey nut cheerios uh huh. and she just totally caved. it's all about psychology buzz. psychology? as long as i don't tell him the cereal is healthy -- he can't get enough. sad, really. i kind of feel bad that i tricked him. but...it was easy. surprise... uh, ha ha ha. ♪
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bounce is great because the freshness lasts for weeks in the drawer. why can't everything stay fresh that long? [ male announcer ] how do you get your bounce? [ man ] lasting freshness. [ male announcer ] how do you get your bounce? yes. with nature made vitamelts. can vitamins melt into mouth-watering flavor? melt-in-your-mouth vitamin supplements. in flavors like creamy vanilla... ...and juicy orange irresistibly melty nature made vitamelts
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get a sample on our facebook page >> clayton: most of us ate tons of hamburgers and hot dogs yesterday and the holiday week continues with all kinds of good food. >> anna: it does. heather childers decided to get us full of ice cream. >> we're going to talk about ice cream in a moment. we went to the 59th annual summer fancy food show here in new york city. i decided to go off the beaten path and try unusual foods.
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take a look. so if hot is what you're after, we have the spice meister with us here, dave. you claim to have the hottest hot sauce in the entire universe, right? >> yes. we have the scorpion pepper sauce, which is based on the new hottest pepper in the world, the scorpion pepper. you're going to try it and we'll be entertained. >> that's hot. i can't talk! you can lose your voice. wow. oh, my goodness. we've all seen a lemon or lime, but you probably have never seen this, finger limes. james here is the first to grow these trees in the united states. so tell us about this. >> finger limes were found growing in the wild in australia. goes great on fish, seafood, sushi, salads, cocktails. >> so they have the consistency, if you remember when you were a
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kid, of pop rocks. kind of tastes like that. you squeeze it between your fingers and there you see it looks just like caviar or pop rocks. i happen to like a tart sour, sweet taste. that's exactly what these taste like. who knew there is a fifth flavor and it's called umami. tell me exactly what this product is. >> this is taste number five. it's the world's first umami taste. out of alt basic tastes, this is the sexy flavor. i call it the stunning taste in a tube. anything you squeeze it into, it's going to taste a delicious. >> i'm going to taste this right here. mmm. very good description. >> anna: you don't want to show us -- >> these guys! i do it.
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>> clayton: save us some ice cream. >> this is one of my favorites. this is a little bit weird because it's ice cream, which is sweet, but with a spicy kick. so taste it and tell me what you think. >> jesse: which one is it? >> they're all kind of the same. different flavors. jumping jack apple flash was my favorite. i promise you, it hits the back of your throat afterward. what do you think? >> jesse: it's good. is it going to make my throat close up? >> no. no. i wouldn't do that. >> jesse: it's very good. >> very good. >> clayton: really, really spicy. >> anna: oh, yes, it is! >> jesse: delayed reaction, really. >> come on. that wasn't the hot sauce i did. >> clayton: a heat wave. this really tastes like eat ago hot wing. >> yeah, it's really good. i love this. i had never seen anything like it. >> clayton: that's the food show. when i eat one, i'm going to pound the whole gallon of this. now maybe this will make me keep it around for a couple of weeks. >> anna: there are new flavors of ice cream out. like strawberry basil. >> these are sweet and they use
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fruit juices with the spicy hit. >> clayton: is that out on the market yet? >> it is out on the market. >> jesse: it is really healthy, right? >> it is. of course. >> clayton: everything we are doing is healthy. we have barbecue coming up in a moment. plus more singing from dustin lynch. first, girls wearing a cross, she was told to remove it and now we're wondering if she can fight back. we're going to meet her and her lawyer next, find out why she was told to remove the cross. >> jesse: then a bridezilla complaining about the cash gifts she got for her wedding. >> clayton: it wasn't enough money. >> jesse: no. >> anna: it's $100! come on! >> i'm just going to eat the ice cream. >> jesse: knock it back. >> clayton: it's all melting already. >> jesse: i know. ♪
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>> clayton: 49 minutes past the hour. quick headlines. police are on the hunt for a real life spider man. he rappeled down the side of the brooklyn bridge yesterday and then onto the roof of a new york city police building. police say he appears to be just a thrill seeker with no ties to terrorism. we hope not. it's just been revealed one of the best ways to relieve stress. new research finds walking can calm you down by sparking nerve cells in the brain that relax. >> anna: 49 minutes after the hour now. college student audra was work at student orientation in california when her supervisor ordered her to remove or hide her cross necklace so she
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wouldn't offend anyone. joining us is audrey jarvis and the director of litigation at liberty institute. good morning to both of you. >> hi. thank you so much for having us on. >> anna: audrey, first tell us exactly what happened and when your supervisor said you might offend somebody by having your necklace on, say hey, you're offending me by telling me to cover it up. >> right. i was working at a new student orientation. i work for an on campus organization and i was told to remove my necklace so that i wouldn't offend somebody and i was -- as a christian person, it's something that's very important to me and something i hold really dear to my heart. so i felt as though i had to be ashamed of my faith and that's not something i'm comfortable with at all. it was very shocking to me and, you know, it was a rough day. >> anna: audrey, we noticed the beautiful cross around your neck right now. is that the one you were wearing when you were asked to remove it? >> yes. this is the same one that i was
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wearing that day. it's rather large. >> anna: does it have a special meaning to you? >> it was given to me by my best friend actually, so when i wear it, i think of her and my faith, two things that are very, very important to me. >> anna: i want to bring you into this, what does the law have to say about this? isn't her right to be able to express her faith the way she wants to? >> that's why the situation was so shocking and bizarre, because the law has been so clear for the past 25 years that employees on college campuses and, in fact, in lots of other government institutions have a right to wear crosses and have other religious gash such as a yamika or something of that nature. we were surprised to see that situation rise in this day and age. >> anna: a you hadry, i know your faith requires you to give forgiveness and you said you have given that. what is it you're looking for from the university? >> really all i'm looking for is
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to foster really healthy conversation about what tolerance means in a very politically correct day and age and i hope that other college christians will stand up with me and see their faith as something that deserves to be defended because that's really the reason why we're here is to witness and to live as an example to others. that's really all i'm hoping to come from this. >> anna: we have a response from sonoma state university. our student audrey jarvis was tabling during summer orientation last week and an employee inappropriately asked her to remove or tuck away her cross. he was absolutely wrong to make this request. when she returns, there will be no issues with her wearing her cross or any other type of religious or cultural items. and we know you have a meeting on monday with the school at 2:00 o'clock. good luck with that. audrey, are you planning to wear your necklace? >> i will absolutely be wearing my necklace, definitely. >> anna: you guys have a great day and hope you had a great
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independence day. have a great weekend. >> all right. thank you. you, too. >> anna: 52 minutes after the hour. you're watching "fox & friends" and a fox news alert, a state of emergency declared in parts of egypt amid the ousting of former president morsi. a live report from cairo at the top of the hour. and dustin lynch takes the stage for our all american summer concert series. you don't want to miss a minute. ♪ ♪ ready?
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but you can help protect yourself with the fast alarm response of ad, with 24/7 monitoring against burglary, fire, and high levels of carbon monoxide starting at just over $1 a day. this is the computer that didn't get stolen, keeping priceless photos and financial records safe. this is the reason why. take advantage of adt's summer savings. starting at $49 installed. hurry. offer ends july 8th. adt. always there. >> anna: it's friday, july 5, 2013. i'm anna kooiman in for gretchen carlson. a fox news alert. a fourth of july fireworks show goes terribly wrong. >> oh! oh, my god! oh! >> anna: more than a dozen people injured. so what happened?
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the details straight ahead. >> jesse: and egypt's muslim brotherhood promising a day of rejection as chaos rages on. a state of emergency just declared in parts of the region. so where does the u.s. stand? does the president even know? the surprising answer from someone who used to work inside the white house. >> clayton: and talk about a bridezilla. a flu noily wed expressing her ingrate feud who gave her $100 as a cash gift on her wedding day. she said the amount was insufficient. she took to facebook to let everyone know about it. is that over the line? i think you can answer that one on your own. "fox & friends" begins right now ♪
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♪ i got through ♪ ♪ she got away ♪ i'm hell on wheels and she's telling me ♪ ♪ i'd die for her and she lives for me ♪ ♪ cowboys and engines we ride side by side ♪ ♪ i look at her temptations ♪ her kiss is my salvation ♪ she's sweet, i'm wild and dangerous ♪ ♪ cowboys and engines >> anna: memories this "fox & friends" independence day weekend. the song is "cowboys and
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angels." dustin lynch continuing our summer concert series. we've got barbecue outside. if you're in manhattan, come on down and join us. >> clayton: you get free barbecue and we hope you're enjoying your little time off if you have some days free because of the holiday. jesse is in this morning. anna is in, i'm clayton and steve, brian and gretchen are enjoying their holiday. they got to see fireworks hopefully yesterday, as did most americans across the country. we want to do put together a montage of some of the best of these. let's start with the capitol 'cause barry manilow, the sweet sultry sound. ♪ let freedom ring ♪ . >> jesse: in new york, four barges carrying 40,000 shells on the hudson river unleashed a spectacular show of brilliant reds, whites and blues.
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♪ o beautiful for heros prove ♪ in liberateing strife ♪ . >> anna: in philadelphia, hundreds of thousands parked the parkway for the fourth of july celebration to jam the night away. ♪ >> anna: they were jamming there. philadelphia, you've seen the fireworks how many times there? >> clayton: quite a few times. that's near the art museum, of course where rocky ran up the steps right there, the statue of rocky around the corner there. >> jesse: traditionally in philadelphia, they shoot guns in the air, but tonight, just fireworks. >> clayton: the mayor put a stop to that. >> jesse: i'm from philly. >> clayton: we can get away with making fun of it. >> anna: because of all of the families getting together for one reason and because of the
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heat and just -- did you know crime rates go up on the fourth of july? >> jesse: yes, they do. >> anna: always really bad. >> jesse: that's right. >> clayton: is this also -- my wife and i were talking about this yesterday, because the fireworks, dogs get so scared, this is when the most dogs leave the house and jump the fence. >> anna: or jump on the bed or into the bathtub. >> jesse: that's right. and children wake up. okay? i know that from personal experience. >> clayton: last night -- we turned up white noise in each their rooms really loudly 'cause at 6:30, 7:00 o'clock they go to sleep. >> jesse: you're a better parent than i am. >> anna: we have other headlines. fox news alert, the vatican announcing moments ago that pope john paul ii will be made a saint. the decision coming after the holy father was given credit for a second miracle last month. church officials say a costa rican woman was cured of brain cancer after she prayed to the memory of the late pontiff. two miracles need to be proven in order for a church official to be eligible for sainthood.
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and another fox news alert overnight. thousands gathered for a fourth of july fireworks celebration and saw it turn it disaster >> oh! oh, my god! oh! run! >> anna: you can hear the terrified crowd in california screaming as they run away from the explosion. many as 28 people were hurt. >> the second it was a fireworks, it was almost as if one of the craters tipped over and it just set off a chain reaction. there were things going into the crowd. they were shooting up into the air. smoke started filling up. >> anna: amid the chaos, firefighters set up a triage center at a park to treat the victims. many of them hit by flying debris. police say the explosion appears to have been an accident. it could be a major breakthrough in solving the mystery behind madeline
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mccann's disappearance. she disappeared four years ago from a resort. now scotland yard reopening the case after uncovering new evidence, decks say it's possible madeline is still alive. they want to talk to 38 persons of interest, 12 of them are british nationals. and they thought they were spending a day at six flags with their dad, but three kids got the surprise of their lifetime when their military mom showed up. >> mommy! >> anna: army national guard sergeant ashley ericcson spent the last nine months in afghanistan. >> it's amazing. everything we do over there is worth it because we have this here. i'm so happy to be home. >> anna: ericcson said she's thrilled that the surprise was such a success and can't wait to spend a weekend together as a family. those are your headlines. >> jesse: welcome back.
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>> clayton: thanks so much. and now for the latest on the unrest in egypt. the big story we're following, moments ago, the gunmen have attacked an airport in the egyptian -- on a state of alert. supports of ousted mohammed morsi have vowed to retaliate today in a day of rejection. meanwhile, conner powell is live in cairo with the very latest on these developments. conner? >> egypt is bracing for conflict, if not all-out violence today across the country. we're hearing reports that the egyptian military is beginning to move its troops and equipment into some areas that are traditionally muslim brotherhood strongholds. the mosques here are beginning to let out. this is a traditional day of prayer here in egypt and the pro-muslim brotherhood supporters are beginning to take to the streets. the muslim brotherhood has called on all of its supporters to have a peaceful day of protests, but they've also warned that because of this military coup, it could push
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some of their support force violence. that's the big concern. the military is deploying its equipment and its troops to try to cordon off these protesters, to try to keep some sense of calm. but there is a lot of anger on the part of the muslim brotherhood, members of the muslim brotherhood are angry at this military coup. they support mohammed morsi and believe he's the elected president here and think the military coup is undemocratic. so we are waiting to see what will happen over the course of the next sort of hour or so. but we are expecting some violence, maybe here in cairo. other parts of the country. we are hearing reports that the military is bracing for violence in south suez and also in the sinai. there were attacks on military checkpoints last night and on the military airport. needless to say, things are intensifying here and there is a real fear that things could get out of hand here very quickly. >> clayton: conner powell live, monitoring the changes. thanks. we want to turn back home and the white house response and you've seen so many signs of
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protests there in egypt blaming president obama and the relationship between the obama administration and what many of these protesters see a too cozy relationship with mohammed morsi who is has aligned himself with the muslim brotherhood. the white house releasing this photo, the president in the situation room, looks like on the fourth of july, meeting with advisors wanting the country to say that the president is involved in this. but a lot wondering if the administration was too distant in all of this and letting this unfold and wasn't there pressuring the government to do something. >> anna: right. a former state department official, advised the president, the obama white house says, we have managed now to alienate both sides in egypt. so a lot of people are saying this quiet diplomacy that president obama has had has really upset both sides. one side thinking that he didn't realize that president morsi was governing in an authoritarian manner that was going to leave us with an economy that was in
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even worse shape than it was when he took that position. and then the other side, the islamists think that washington is actually backing this coup by not having done anything about it. >> jesse: we remember when president obama began the administration went to cairo and gave a big speech about how relations between the u.s. and the muslim world were going to be much more improved and you're not seeing that right now. a lot of these protests turned against the president and the president hasn't made great bets in the middle east. you remember as a candidate he was against the surge, was successful. he's had very icy relations with netanyahu. in the iranian situation when the students came up and protests ahmadinejab, didn't do enough there. he's now, i think, financing and arming the rebels in syria, which are al-qaeda affiliated. so i'm not really sure how his policy is working out. >> clayton: then in egypt. remember under mubarak, we heard from hillary clinton at the time, he's an alie. we need to step back. the united states shouldn't be involved in this. then you saw the toppling of that government and the united
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states was late to that game. ambassador john bolton says america has played weak -- has played a weak hand during the entire arab spring. listen. >> i would think the advice from the state department would have been to do just that, to cozy up to the muslim brotherhood. in any event, that's what the president did. that's why the demonstrators in the streets thought that he and our ambassador in cairo were trying to defend the brotherhood's administration under mohammed morsi. i think this has been a reflection of the administration's aimlessness and lack of understanding of the arab spring from the get-go 2 1/2 years ago and in particular, it's a lack of understanding of the situation in egypt. the u.s. has huge interests here, preserving the camp david peace accord with israel, keeping the suez canal open. yet we played a weak and indecisive hand here during the entire period of the arab spring. >> clayton: i'm sorry.
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>> anna: secretary of state john kerry has been -- pictures of him are in unanimous conduct and on -- nantucket and on his yacht in the let us know what you think about that. we will continue to monitor that. plus obamacare, right before the holiday, it was a good time to get out bad news. if you're in politic, you know the friday afternoon document dump is a good move. people heading home, not paying attention. also before a big holiday. that is the criticism being leveled by our own greta van susteren. she has written an opinion piece on fox nation.com where she says why did the administration wait 'til now right before the holiday weekend to release this information? what did they know? why did they know that this 50-person mandate would be a problem? why did they wait the last minute? >> anna: they had three years to figure this out. certainly there has been some sort of conversation going on about this. now are they in the middle of damage control? are they trying to figure out how are we going to spin this rather than what is best for america? >> jesse: they basically gave themselves their own waiver.
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okay? remember how this whole thing started with waivers. in order to jam this through the senate, we had the nebraska compromise, states got waivers. restaurants got waivers. now nancy pelosi's district got a waiver. now unions get waivers. so is this thing that's being implemented, it's not being executed effectively. and the president's great at giving the big speech, but when it came down to the nitty-gritty of actually going through the policy and hatching this thing, he kind of let nancy pelosi write this bill. remember what she said, you have to pass it to see what's in it. well, we passed it. now what's in it? obviously they don't want the american people to know what's in it 'cause they keep delaying it. >> clayton: valerie jarrett, one of the president's advisors, says the delay will actually help businesses. she says this allows employers time to test the new reporting systems and make any necessary adaptations to their health benefits while staying the course of making health care more accessible. charles payne earlier on the show, we asked him is this having an effect on the economy
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as it is now small businesses unable to hire. are they waiting and putting off hiring or going full board with hiring. here is what he had to say. >> let's not forget that this was forced by a lot of small businesses and retailers and restaurant groups who said right off the bat, late last year, the ceo of carden restaurants, red lobster, olive garden, a big obama backer, by the way, he said, i'm going to have to move people to 29 hours. you're telling me 30 hours is full employment and i've got to provide people with health care insurance or take a $2,000 hit, i'm going to lay people off or redefine the definition of work. >> anna: we'll see how this shakes out. i want to move on to something and we want you to weigh in on this. a bride zilla, slipped out on a guest who gave her $100 for a wedding gift. >> clayton: a guy and a girl, came as a couple to the wedding. they're kind of distant friends. they weren't even really that close. but they offered, each of them
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put up $50 and that was their wedding present. one hundred dollars. and she flips out on facebook and says, this is ridiculous. what did our wedding do to offends you. one hundred dollars is a lot! that's more than some gifts on registries. >> jesse: that is a loft money. i remember my wedding day, i'm very, very nervous and it's like two hours before i get to the ceremony and i get a phone call and it's bill o'reilly's executive assistant and she says, jesse, bill would like to speak with you. >> clayton: oh, gosh. >> jesse: and i said, okay. so then the phone rings again and it's bill. he's like, how are you doing? i'm fine, bill. what can i do for you? he goes, waters, not going to make it to the ceremony. some chaos here with the kids, but i will make it to the reception. so you'll see me there. okay, bill. thanks for checking in. glad you called. >> clayton: you don't have anything else on your mind. and you said, bill, by the way, did you go on my wedding registry and by me something? >> jesse: he got me a great gift, so i'm not going to complain about that.
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>> clayton: one hundred dollars seems like a smart gift. >> anna: yeah. and for bill o'reilly, i imagine he probably got you a pretty nice gift. this girl, the guest, $40,000 in college debt she was carrying around. she said $50 for me and for my boyfriend to give you was quite generous of us. not to mention the shoes and the dress and the transportation to get there. >> clayton: right. let us know what you think about this. coming up on the show, using america to sell beer? >> all men are created equal. they are endowed with certain unalienable rights: life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. >> clayton: the story behind sam adams' controversial new beer commercial. >> anna: a hang glider has less than a minute to save his life by pulling a parachute. wait until you hear how old he is. [ male announcer ] at hebrew national,
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♪ the middle of this special moment and i need to run off to the bathroom. ♪ i'm fed up with always having to put my bladder's needs ahead of my daughter. ♪ so today, i'm finally talking to my doctor about overactive bladder symptoms. [ female announcer ] know that gotta go feeling? ask your doctor about prescription toviaz. one toviaz pill a day significantly reduces
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sudden urges and accidents, for 24 hours. if you have certain stomach problems or glaoma, or can not empty your bladd, you should not take toviaz. get emergency medical help right away if your face, lips, throat or tongue swells. toviaz can cause blurred vision, dizziness, drowsiness and decreased sweating. do not drive,perate machinery or do unsafe tasks until you ow how toviaz affects you. the most common side effects are dry mouth and constipation. talk to your doctor about toviaz. >> clayton: welcome back. reports into the fox news room moments ago that islamist gunmen attacked the airport in egypt. the egyptian army now on a state of alert and supporters have ousted morsi vowed to retaliate today in a day of what they're calling rejection. with egypt swearing in an interim president and military cracking down on the muslim brotherhood, will we see any change in this country?
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let's ask the president of the american islamic forum for democracy and the author of the book "a battle for the soul of islam." nice to see you. always great having you here on the show. what do you make of these latest reports we just reported here at fox news? >> well, i think the islamist movement not only egypt, but across the whole region, is seeing itself possibly in the throes of the dust bin of history. you'll see some not only acting out with terror throats, but the party -- threats, but the party is calling it a day to speak out because their lead president was taken down. this is -- i think what's most important is that the world is seeing that it's not going to exchange the arab spring for islamist winter. this battle between arab dictators and islamist movement is people versus both of them. both of their thoecrats are starting to see that the voice of the people is against them. it's not in the dna of muslims
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to be run by theocaats. and that we want freedom and liberty. we just need the right environment to move forward and morsi failed that. the islamists see that if the brotherhood in egypt created almost every radical group in the world came out of the brotherhood f they fail, the whole cancer will go away and may die. >> clayton: let's talk about the united states and their hand. president obama had been urging mohammed morsi to be more open, allow maybe a change of government and allow more inclusiveness. that didn't happen. they ignored that request, of course. now we see this military coup. then the obama administration urging restraint of the military in the new regime to not crack down on individuals and shears. they ignored that request from the united states. it seems they're ignoring the u.s. here. we see this roundup of hundreds of muslim brotherhood islamists behind bars at this hour. what do you make of this? ignoring the united states, should they have cracked down on these individuals? >> it's very easy to ignore the united states because we've
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really played very little substantive role if taking sides in really what's been happening in egypt since the revolution. there were posters in the demonstration saying we supported terrorists. a lot of what broke this demonstration. they were putting terrorists to run governorships in tourist areas and that broke into having them do the demonstration. so the united states of america has been absent in this. it's wrong -- i really am against them having the military response. this is about democracy. it's about failed muslim brotherhood, failed slammism and that's what we need to emphasize to be on the side of liberty. >> clayton: on the side of liberty, we'll see if that takes hold any time soon in egypt. thank you for joining us. enjoy your weekend. >> thank you. >> clayton: coming up, an eight-year-old boy being hailed as a hero this morning for saving his father's life when the car they were driving in
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went off a bridge, fell into the river below. the father in big trouble. why? and kentucky is known for two things, horse racing and bourbon. anna hit the road to find out what makes whiskey so special. but first, dustin lynch is performing "hurricane" out on our plaza. ♪ ♪ and opening the capital one purchase eraser? i need to redeem some venture miles before my demise.
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♪ your ticket to a better night's sleep ♪ >> clayton: welcome back. quick headlines. police arresting a man near the university of washington campus whose truck was full of guns and molatov cocktails and body armor. the man was booked on suspicion of possession of incendiary devices. he's not cooperating. several airlines canceling dozens of flights in and out of mexico city because of a volcano. that's not a delay you see on the board too often. the volcano is spewing ash, steam and glowing rocks. it affected flights to or from houston, dallas, chicago, denver and l.a. >> jesse: in 1968, congress declared bourbon product of the usa. there is nothing better to feature on our made in america series, anna kooiman has more. >> anna: that's right. in order for it to be called
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bourbon, it must be made in america. and kentucky produces 95% of the entire world's supply. last year more than 500,000 people visited the kentucky bourbon trail. there are seven distilleries on the trail and we spent time on the first stop, jim beam's american still house. take a look. jim beam is now producing more than 20 different kinds of bourbon. but the original kentucky bourbon started right here in claremont in 1795. let's see how it's done. bourbon is made of corn, rye, and malty barley. from start to finish, jim beam produces its bourbon right here in the usa. even the ingredients thrive in those hot summers of kentucky. once the main ingredients are milled down, it's time for bourbon. >> now we pour it in. you ready? >> anna: ready. it honestly smells like fresh baked bread in here.
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bourbon, by law, must be produced in the united states. last year over 16.8 million cases of bourbon were sold in the u.s. and 38.5 million gallons were exported around the world. the bourbon industry is certainly booming. >> most of it's made in kentucky. we think that's best. >> anna: this may look like tap water, but it's 125 proof. moonshine, mama. jim beam is one of the top sellers of bourbon with over 700 million cases shipped last year alone. it ain't easy to get ha whiskey made right. the bourbon making process takes years. but beam has some practice. the 218-year-old company has passed through seven generations. after nine years of aging, this bourbon is ready to come play. yeah. the moment of truth. beam has over 3,000 employees world wide.
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875 of them mill, stir and fill millions of bottles of that amber liquor for men and women to enjoy. >> two years ago, bourbon was your grandfather's drink. these days, it's hip and cool. lot of folks, they found bourbon. >> anna: i knew i couldn't go all the way to kentucky without bringing a little something something back. you're going to let me make my own special bottle? >> yeah. push it down on that spindle right there. >> anna: we're just rinsing this out, right? >> yeah. you're rinsing it with bourbon. let's fill your bottle. >> anna: fill er up. now, dip, baby, dip. final part of the process. made in america by me for "fox & friends." if you go to the jim beam still house there outside of louisville, you can actually do exactly what we did. they probably won't make you your own "fox & friends" logo, but you can do the whole seal. >> clayton: this is the one you
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made? >> anna: yes. i'm going to give that to gavin, our senior producer today. >> clayton: he needs it. >> jesse: gutfeld is trying to break into the studio right now to swipe the booze. we have to lock the doors. gutfeld, sorry. we're not going to serve you right now. >> anna: what's so interesting is they're marketing has had to change, this made in america brand, because it used to be known as an old man's drink but it's not anymore. they have more than 20 different flavors and that red stag you're holding there is actually geared for women and it has black cherry flavors. >> clayton: that explains why i'm holding it. [ laughter ] >> anna: you like the ladies. >> clayton: ladies. [ laughter ] thanks. a lot of fun. go down there and visit if you get a chance to. coming up here on the show from bourbon to beer, next on the rundown, sam adams under fire for removing god from the declaration of independence in a new beer commercial. >> all men are created equal. they are endowed with certain unalienable rights. life, liberty and the pursuit of
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happiness. >> clayton: story behind that controversial new commercial. >> jesse: and don't mess with texas. a man turns the tables on a burglar tying him up and leaving him for police. the story you got to see to believe. >> anna: hog tied in the backyard. but first justin lynch is performing "sitting pretty." ♪ ♪ ♪ you know throughout history,
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>> clayton: welcome back. we got some numbers. >> jesse: this is a fox business alert. new monthly jobless numbers just released. 195,000 jobs added in june. >> anna: that is more than expected. we'll check in with nicole petallides coming up in just a bit. >> clayton: a bit more than expected. good news there. well, let's talk about beer this morning. one of my favorite beers in the country is sam adams. when this new commercial rolled out yesterday, during the fourth of july holiday, it's been
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raising a few eyebrows for something that's left out of their commercial. see if you can spot it at home. you have to watch the whole thing, 28 seconds long. see if you can spot what is missing. >> why name a beer after samuel adams? because samuel adams signed the declaration of independence. he believed there was a better way to live, all men are created equal. they are endowed with certain unalienable rights. life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness. smooth. flavorful. we bow to no kings. samuel adams boston lager. >> anna: did you figure out what it is. >> clayton: that's a give away. god. endowed by their creator was removed from the beginning of the declaration of independence in the speech there. but samuel adams says look, we have a set of beer guidelines that we have to follow. this is regulation. we have to do it.
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we can't mention god in our advertising. >> anna: yeah. that's what they say. putting it off on red tape. they say the beer advertising code says marketing materials should not include religion or religious themes. we agree with that and tried to adhere to these guidelines. while we do understand your objection to the omission of the phrase, by our creator, in other circumstances, after all, they occur in the declaration of independence with samuel adams signed and helped author. we believe it would be outside our industry guidelines to invoke those religious words in a beer commercial. >> jesse: when political correctness takes over the beer advertising industry, the terrorists have won. i mean, this is absolutely outrageous. maybe 'cause sam adams was the tea party guy, maybe the tea party is being targeted here, guys. >> clayton: yeah. a new conspiracy theory. i do love the company and it's weird to think that the beer
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code ethics guideline, whatever bogus organization that is has more authority than our declaration of independence? if the beer code comes calling and says, by the way, you put god in your advertise, we're not having it. why don't you pull out the declaration of independence and say i have this document here, does this trump yours? >> jesse: right. you can have a bikini cat fight in the pool, but don't put god -- i'm just saying, a little bit of double standard there. >> clayton: curtis says this, i bought my last sam adams beer yesterday. >> jesse: oh, wow. >> anna: tara says, i think it would be tasteless to use god in the beer commercial. the bartender is using a few phrases from the declaration. >> jesse: and would sam adams approve the omission of those words? i think not. >> anna: using america to sell beer, but can't use god apparently. >> clayton: write to us and you can also find us on twitter as well at "fox & friends." more on that coming up.
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>> jesse: happening right now, the george zimmerman trial resumes after a one-day recess for independence day. trayvon martin's mother is expected to take the stand today. >> anna: phil keating is live in sanford, florida with the very latest. good morning, phil. >> good morning. this is the ninth day of testimony and the prosecution is expected to rest its case in an hour or two, just a couple or maybe only one witness left to testify on behalf of the prosecution. is a brie in fulton, the mother of trayvon martin, will take the stand. they hope that seals the case with that all-woman jury when they play that 911 case with the screams in the background and the mother of trayvon martin identifies that as absolutely belonging to her son. however, it's going to be interesting to see how the defense handles the father of trayvon martin once it begins its case because tracy martin, the first time that sanford police played him those screams
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in the background, he said he didn't think it was his son trayvon. the courtroom has just now begun. 32 witnesses have taken the stand so far over eight days of testimony. we are expecting perhaps the medical examiner who did the autopsy on trayvon martin to take the stand, but certainly sabrina fulton, who is sitting next to her ex-husband, as well as her mother, the grandmother of 17-year-old trayvon martin. the defense will likely
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sails were shredded. it said it was traveling at 4 knots. investigators believe the ship sank that same day in a storm. >> clayton: little joshua was driving with his father in the middle of the night when his dad crashed the car, ending up in a river. the brave boy swam to shore and got help for the father who was trapped inside the car. >> if he was brave just to come out of that bridge, you know, climb -- i don't know what he climbed, you know, but i'm really happy that he's an angel. i know god was there. >> clayton: the boy's father facing charges stemming from incident. massachusetts police say they believe the man may have been speeding. >> jesse: this burglar gets more than he bargained for. after breaking into a home in tulsa, oklahoma, the homeowner waited for the guy to leave his garage and then he ambushed him. the homeowner's wife says she's impressed.
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>> my man. [ laughter ] i feel really proud of him. >> jesse: the man's wife says her husband works with horses, so he's always been pretty good with a rope. the crook, meanwhile, is facing burglary charges. >> anna: wow. a 71-year-old hang glider goes through a terrifying ordeal. check it out. so lynn lions was taking a hang glider training course at 71 years old, mind you. his glider was being dragged by a car below. when he incorrectly attached his tow line, he started falling from the sky and he frantically reached for his parachute. after struggling for a moment, you saw he finally released it. thankfully he landed safely and not hurt. he says the incident won't stop him from hang gliding. he's a bad mamajama. >> clayton: coming up, strange formations found in the woods of
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one town, making residents think something sinister may be to blame. the real reason, though, we'll tell you about it next. imagine driving down the road and seeing this, the wild weather in a state that doesn't normally see violent storms. >> anna: first, let's check in with ali for what's coming up this weekend. >> hey, guys. great to see you. as you all know, scooping ice cream is a classic summer job. i did it myself every summer. but now one girl is putting herself through college that way and we're going to meet the owner of college creamery and eat some of the ice cream. also he's got a badge and he's got a great voice. so we put them together and we're going to meet the guy known as the singing trooper, sergeant daniel clark is going to join us. are you ready for dustin lynch? >> i'm ready! >> i think i hear him cranking my tractor!
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to take a centrum silver multivitamin every day. i told him, sure. can't hurt, right? and now today, i see this in the news. once again, centrum silver was chosen by researchers for another landmark study. this time looking at eye health. my doctor! he knows his stuff. [ male announcer ] centrum. the most studied. the most recommended. and the most preferred multivitamin brand. the choice is clear.
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>> anna: up and at them, rise and shine. 8:44 is the time. quick headlines. beginning with a real life twist of fate. >> holy (bleep)! >> anna: wow. a tornado ripped through a connecticut town, yanking the dome of a sports stadium right off. check out the shocking cell phone video. the owner of the stadium says he never worried about the sports
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world dome because tornadoes never hit connecticut. never say never there. these mysterious designs had missouri residents thinking of aliens. but they're man made, part of a 2,000-acre outdoor eco system lab. researchers are studying plants and animals native to the show me state. >> clayton: this is a fox business alert. now monthly jobless numbers just released. nicole petallides from the "fox business" network is live on the floor of the new york stock exchange with the reaction there. what can you tell us this morning? >> good morning. ultimately the numbers that have been coming in have been slightly better each month, big picture. the u.s. stock index futures are point to go a higher open. when you break down the numbers, there is still trouble spots that i really hawk out. let's start out, the number that came in here, 195,000 jobs added. that was more than the 165,000 expected. prior two months were revised higher. that's good news. the labor force participation
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rate improved slightly, though near a 4-year low, which means that not that many people are working ultimately. and the other part that is most troublesome is the real unemployment rate. that went up to 14.3% from 13.8%. that's really the people that are either taking part-time jobs, so they really want a full-time job. so a lot of people that somehow are working 'cause they got to put food on the table, but not really where they want to be ultimately. >> jesse: talk about putting food on the table, i went to the supermarket the other day to stock up for my barbecue over the weekend and i shelled out a lot of jack. what's with the prices of all this stuff? >> i'm sorry i missed your barbecue, but ultimately there is inflation here. let's talk about barbecue for 12 people. they did an average. they said about 70.66. so that shows inflation.
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up 2.7% year over year. that outpaces hourly earnings, which has risen 2%. you can see ultimately if you're shopping, you probably are paying more than you did last year. you probably noticed that. >> jesse: i did. thank you. >> clayton: it's stale holiday there. they're back open today, but a lot of folks rolling in a little too late today, i imagine, after all the beer yesterday. >> i think yeah, right. we'll talk about what costs more, beer was actually one that went up and you had to pay more for that one. but ultimately when you talk about the booth and who is here, every booth has people here. but i notice a few less. let's get to some of the numbers of what cost more. shall we? >> clayton: yeah, please. >> so beef was up 10%. chicken breasts up 10%. tomatoes also to the upside. you can see beer up 4.7%. >> clayton: it's getting more expensive to enjoy your barbecue. i'm just going to go to jesse's house from now on. >> jesse: that's right. everybody is invited. even you, nicole.
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>> thanks. wait. here is what sold off. so chips, cheaper. if you you wanted to make money, serve a lot of chips. >> clayton: oh, good. >> worst party ever. don't invite me. >> clayton: just a bag of chips. chips and water. come on over to my house. thanks, nicole. >> thanks. >> clayton: coming up next, dustin lynch will be performing "wild in your smile." >> anna: first let's check in with gregg jarrett for what's coming up at the top of the hour. >> prosecutors about to rest their case against george zimmerman, but not before calling to the stand the mother of trayvon martin, or so we hear. could be a dramatic end before the defense began. in egypt, they're calling it friday of rage. cairo bracing for violence and bloodshed. we'll is a live report. it's official. pope john paul ii will become a saint. all that at the top of the hour to make their money do more.
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>> clayton: welcome back to "fox & friends." it's time once again for our all american summer concert series. >> anna: that's right. we have dustin lynch's hit song "cowboys and angels" hit platinum. right now he's about to perform "wild in your smile." let's hear it, dustin. ♪ hey girl, what's up ♪ looks like you're good to go ♪ hop in, let's ride ♪ take it down this road ♪ you couldn't look any hotter ♪ reach on back and grab a
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bottle ♪ ♪ girl, let's get this party started ♪ ♪ you look just like a little angel baby ♪ ♪ but i know you love a little danger, baby ♪ ♪ everything about you girl is just my style ♪ ♪ you got some wild in your smile ♪ ♪ this crowd don't rock, we'll take it somewhere else ♪ ♪ i won't complain if i get you to myself ♪ ♪ something tells me you don't care ♪ ♪ you're up for going anywhere ♪ as long as that wind's blowing through your hair ♪ ♪ you look just like a little angel baby ♪ ♪ but i know you love a little danger, baby ♪ ♪ everything about you girl is just my style ♪ ♪ you got some wild in your
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smile ♪ ♪ . ♪ you might have your mom and daddy fooled ♪ ♪ you know just how, just how to play it cool ♪ ♪ i know something that they don't ♪ ♪ girl, i know just what you want ♪ ♪ what we're gonna find it down this road we're on ♪ ♪ . ♪ you look just like a little angel baby ♪ ♪ but i know you love a little danger, baby ♪ ♪ everything about you, girl, is just my style ♪ ♪ you got some wild in your smile ♪ ♪ i know you love a little danger baby ♪
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♪ everything about you girl is just my style ♪ ♪ yeah you got some wild in your smile ♪ ♪ wild in your smile ♪ look at all these beautiful smiles ♪ [ cheers and applause ] and the brand most recommended by... my doctor. my gynecologist. my pharmacist. citracal. citracal. [ female announcer ] you trust your doctor. doctors trust citracal.
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>> clayton: welcome back. anna made a prediction that there would be a lot of young ladies here for dustin lynch this morning. because of dustin lynch, our thanks to you so much for performing. did you have a great fourth of july? >> i did. i rode in a bus all the way here for 28 hours. >> anna: but this made it worth it, right? >> heck yeah. >> jesse: while you were in the bus, you were doing the bicep chug. >> that's right. >> anna: you got to check this out. all these pictures of his fans doing this with the drink of choice. today you just have water in yuri ba mcentire cup. let's see you do it, the beer bicep cool. or the water bicep curl.
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>> anna: can i do it? >> clayton: give anna a shot here. the bicep. not the crook of your elbow. >> anna: anna's got it! >> jesse: there is bourbon in that truck, right? see you in the after the show show. >> this is like a jar of moonshine. >> i'm going to bring out the real guns. let's see what you got. >> clayton: hold it like that? >> training wheels. >> jesse: i'm not going to try it. >> anna: oh, man. you have written 200 of your own songs, which is pretty incredible. and you said the reason you picked up a guitar is to get the ladies and you think you've been successful? >> i think so. yeah. look at everybody. they're looking pretty today. and the guys. >> jesse: that's right. >> anna: "cowboys and angels went platinum in may.
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log on for even more. >> jesse: good luck on the tour, by the way. when is that? >> starts july 18 and runs through the end of the year. y'all come out and see it. >> clayton: we are streaming live on foxnews.com gregg: crucial testimony underway in the trial of george zimmerman. i'm gregg jarrett in for bill hemmer. heather: fulton providing crucial testimony about those 911 calls saying it is her son's
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