tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News October 27, 2013 3:00am-7:01am PDT
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happy sunday. so nice to see you here at "fox & friends." i'm anna could i makooiman. the obama meltdown so bad he's losing help from his allies. >> millions of americans are visiting health care.gov, which is great news, unfortunately the site was only designed to handle six users at a time. >> more from "saturday night live" coming up. what will this mean for kathleen sebelius when she testifies this week. it was supposed to be a fun night at the fair, until a
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broken ride sends carnival goers to the hospital. >> again? >> yeah, again. this morning, a twist. the man responsible was the one who was supposed to be the one keeping them safe. those details ahead. did you see this last night? the bizarre ending of this world series game has everyone talking this morning. so, why is the cardinals' win causing so much controversy? are you mad in the midwest? are you happy? are you happy or sad in boston? "fox & friends" begins right now. oh, come on in. hey, look at our beautiful festive set this morning. >> festive. >> i think we're going to have a hard time not eating this candy corn all morning. >> i will. >> that's the breakfast food of choice. >> it's healthy. it's corn. >> hey, did you carve your pumpkins yet? >> i did not.
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>> i made one with a spider. >> did it turn out well? >> i had an expert. >> they had 5,000 on display. >> send us your jack owe lantern photos this morning. send them on instagram, use ##ffweekend. we'll see if we can pick the best one of our viewers. the best jack owe lantern out of our show. >> mine got all rotted and icky. >> the raccoons eat them. two minutes after the we do start this sunday with a fox news alert. at this hour, indiana university is on lockdown. police are searching the campus for suspects, one armed with a knife we're told. an alert going out via the campus twitter account just one hour ago. everyone on campus has been told to seek shelter and lock their doors. one person tweeting this photo of the scene. local media reporting the suspect attacked someone at an apartment complex near campus before fleeing the scene, but
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police just saying they are looking for more than one suspect in the case. no word on the victim's condition. we will keep you posted as the story unfolds. now to another alert. while you were sleeping, terror strikes in a rack. a wave of car bombs explode in iraq killing dozens and hurting thousands more. the bombs were detonated over a half hour period. it's the latest in a series of coordinated attacks in the area. new this morning, the operator of a ride that threw people to the ground at a north carolina state fair is under arrest and facing charges. timothy dwayne tutor roe is acuted of tampering with it. he was operating the vortex as it's called thursday night when witnesses say the ride started to move as people were getting off sending some of them falling 30 feet to the ground. >> this ride was tampered with after the inspection and that critical safety devices were tampered with and compromised.
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>> five people were injured and three of them remain in the hospital. all right. did you guys watch this? the world series last night. it was a wild finish to game three of the world series last night in st. louis. take a look at this finish, mike. >> grounds one to dwyer. makes the play. throw home. two out. over to third, it gets away. alan craig is going to come to the plate. here's the throw. he is -- the umpire making the call. they're going to say he's safe. >> what? what? >> watch. this watch his legs go up here. they stick up in midair. a rare obstruction calls. >> so he can't advance. >> it doesn't matter if he was intentionally doing it or not. he scored -- alan craig was able to score with two outs in the bottom of the ninth despite being tagged at the plate.
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under obstruction rules, whether or not he's obstructed, you get to advance one base. >> that left fielder doing backup with the perfect arm, too. you know he's disappointed. >> they win. >> oh, my goodness. >> 5-4. >> what a game. >> now they're up 2-1 now. >> st. louis up 2-1 over boston right now. they're crying up in boston, rick. >> were you awake to see that? >> part of it. i watched almost -- i watched up to the seventh inning. i can't believe i missed that. >> went to bed in the fifty. fifth -- >> i'm suffering now. >> you guys can all judge if he can do this job after you see his performance today. here's your temperatures waking up this morning. still cool down to the southeast but only cool, not as cold as it was yesterday morning. 10 to 15 degrees above where you were yesterday. you'll take it. much improved conditions. we have some really heavy rains over towards east texas, into dallas. that rain headed into houston. southeastern parts of texas, maybe towards bow month.
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be careful as you're headed out this morning. then these series of clippers continue to pull across parts of the great lakes into the northeast. another one moving through overnight and we'll see that next one begin to pull in today. it will move that same direction throughout the day today. at times a little bit of cloud cover, at times a little bit of showers. the west, you're looking good. the next system will be a big, powerful winter storm. montana, wyoming. we'll see some snow by tuesday into denver. higher elevations of arizona. that's our next weather maker. temperature wise, enjoy the nice temperatures in the high plains. 68 in denver. you'll cool down in the next couple of days. nicely done. >> let's talk about obama care this morning because if you've picked up the newspapers recently or watched any of the mainstream news coverages, god bless you. in areas where they have not been critical of this administration in the past. take a look at some of the headlines, the mainstream media finally catching on to what's
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been going on. >> "new york times"? >> yeah, surprisingly there, right? >> health site woes undermine obama's vow on government. >> from cbs news.com, health care.gov's problems technical and political run deep. >> abc news, what it takes to get fired from the obama administration. >> that's strong. did you see governor huckabee on our show yesterday? >> yeah. >> i was watching some of the show last night, ed henry. one of his jobs, he has to sit in the press briefings and talks and have a chat with jay carney about every other day. here were his comments on huckabee, then we'll discuss. >> i think there's a wide variety of reporters who are saying, wait a second, this is not how it was sold in terms of you can keep your doctor, you can keep your plan. there are a lot of reporters saying, wait a second, this rollout, who is responsible for it. the white house is saying no monday morning quarterbacking.
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don't look back. we have to demand answers about how much is that going to cost to make sure those millions have insurance. how the president sold it, is that all going to work out? you can challenge people in authority without being rude. >> david axlerod is saying, remember back in 2010 when the gulf coast oil spill was going on and everybody said that was going to really affect president obama in 2012? how often did we hear about that in the campaign? we didn't. think about benghazi, think about the irs scandal, doj scandal, everything seems to fadeaway. this will be different because it has implications for everybody. >> now when you have the mainstream media talking about this and you have mainstream media shows sending their reporters to the website to try to log on and they're doing it. not juks fox news channel but a lot of networks. >> i'm going to steal a line
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from howard kurtz. he's calling kathleen sebelius a human pinata. i wonder if she wants to go back as the governor of kansas. i wonder if she would take this position back. >> especially health and human services secretary. a quieter -- it'll be tamped down a little bit until you're flipping around the channels on a saturday night and you flip on "saturday night live" to see yourself being pummelled by snl. take a look. >> i'm kathleen sebelius, secretary of health under president obama. now a lot of folks have been talking about our new health care enrollment website, how it's been crashing and freezing and shutting down and stalling and not working and breaking and sucking, well, tonight i have a number of friendly tips to help you deal with those technical problems. for example, have you tried restarting your computer? if our website still isn't loading properly, we're probably
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just overloaded with traffic. millions of americans are visiting health care.gov, which is great news, unfortunately, the site was designed to only handle six users at time. so if you're in a rush, consider using our low res website with simpler fonts and graphics. and if our site keeps freezing, we've provided links to other help fl web sites, such as kayak.com, where you can purchase airline tickets to canada and buy cheaper prescription drugs. >> she's good. >> she's great. it's funny because it's true. >> yeah. >> because, you know, look, it's funny because those are the types of problems. we heard the other day it was only meant to handle 2,000 people at a time. i mean, come on. so, anyway, we'll show you more clips from "saturday night live" later on the show. also this morning we're talking about pakistan's prime minister starting to reconsider
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the case against the doctor who helped the cia to pin point osama bin laden. a congressman and private citizen are trying to get this guy free. >> for helping us out, he is in jail. >> he is in jail. he's serving some 33 years right now. the free alfridi campaign. >> pretty wealthy man. >> this is the first time we've had a congressional delegation able to get some movement from the pakistani government. let's listen to robert lorsh who describes his meeting. let's listen. >> i think the prime minister is in a situation where in our meeting and in front of the foreign relations committee he made the commitment to do it and then from what i understand there was a full committee
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hearing where he repledged th commitment. >> somebody should have a 24 hour job to get him out of jail. >> this doctor has become a symbol of the united states interfering in their domestic issues. >> you have the government with a populus who is not supportive of the united states. >> but at least the prime minister says he will look at the case. maybe we'll hear this case. before it was just nothing. the guy was just rotting in prison and he still is. >> yeah. more on that. >> and he helped take down the 9/11 master mind. where is the president in this? >> more on that coming up in the show. plus this, it's not a doctor, lawyer, or teacher. brand new numbers revealing the number one profession in america. one hint, you're paying for it with your tax dollars. >> then, mother nature on a spectacular show. the incredible moments coming up. ♪ snoitsz
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welcome back. 15 minutes now past the hour. according to a new census report, 2011, more than 49% of americans received some form of government assistance. this includes 108 million people on welfare. at the same time, only 101 people had full-time jobs. so do these numbers show our country replacing full-time work with welfare as its top occupation? jonathan hoenig is here to weigh in on this. nice to see you. >> thank you. >> this is troubling. first of all, can we declare welfare an occupation? >> it's frightening that we can. half the country is literally on the government dolls, some sort of entitlement program. it's so contrary to the american
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way of life. rugged individualism. the most prosperous years came before welfare state was originated. today we're dealing with 100 trillion dollar in entitlement, i don't think it helps the economy or beneficiaries. >> it doesn't mention it in the constitution. let's talk about some of these programs and where some of this money is being broken down and sent out to. medicaid, 82.4 million. food stamps, 49 million. social security income, 20.2. women infant and children and the hill report this week is saying we are heading towards a cliff as it relates to the food stamp program, a financial cliff. >> certainly the entitlement state in general is headed towards a financial cliff, we're becoming more and more like those european style socialist economies that we used to make fun of in this country.
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clayton, i don't think the danger is so much as difficult as cultural. it builds in them this looter mentality that continues to grow and continues to enlarge this redistribution of wet, which is immoral on its face. >> when you see the working sector as a person who deals with finances and asset management, do you see more people going back to work? do you see this number starting to shift at all back in the favorable column for people getting full-time work or will we continue this trend? >> that's the difficult pull that's occurring in the culture. i think the american sense of life is very much that of independence, that of self-sufficiency, but unfortunately over the last 100 years this entitlement state has continued to grow. when we talk about those in need, you know, charity at the point of a gun is really a contradiction in terms. we list off a lot of those needs
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and we say a lot of those people have very important needs. the fact that the needs are supposedly being met by private force and not government initiative is not a long-term solution. >> when people get certain pieces of welfare benefits, we don't want to break it up. when you saw these austerity measures taking place we saw riots. do you think we're on an unsustainable course where people have to pull back? >> that's the joke. the safety net. the so-called safety net, clayton, is not safe. you saw it all over europe and you continue to see where a lot of especially older people getting their benefits. we see that in the united states. the welfare state ingrash yats that entitlement mentality and keeps them from dealing with reality and bettering their lives on their own. >> jonathan hoenig is the leader, the founder. >> capitalist pig.com. >> great to see you. >> thanks, john. coming up on the show, the president says obama care is
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good for everyone. the truth is, young americans are footing the bulk of the bill. the staggering numbers coming up. it's the cutest video you'll see all day. take a look. >> my name is rebecca. >> that is a birthday message. how would you like to receive that? the rest of her pint-sized birthday message straight ahead. she works in some football references also. she's adorable. ♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] it is more than just a new car... more than a new interior lighting system. ♪ it is more than a hot stone massage. and more than your favorite scent infused into the cabin. and the highest expression of mercedes-benz. introducing the 2014 s-class. the best or nothing.
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a quick thinking manager and another man rush in to save the man's life. that man now recovering in the hospital thankfully. it's italy's mount aetna putting on quite a show. the eruption sending ash and lava high into the sicilian sky. fortunately no evacuations were necessary. etna is europe's most active volcano. >> how affordable is the affordable care act for young people? turns out not very much. for obama care to work, 2.7 million americans ages 18 to 35 must sign up. as for the costs, the premiums for a healthy 30-year-old man will rise 260% and a healthy young woman will see her costs rise 193%. with nearly half of our nation's unemployed under 34, how will young americans afford to get covered? joining us from the independent young women's forum, hadley heath is here.
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welcome to the program on sunday morning. >> good morning, mike. >> i had those numbers right. nearly 3 million people need to sign up if this health care act will be successful? >> that's right. you mentioned the name of the act, affordable care act. it seems less affordable for many people under the age of 30 who will face steep increases. that pool is growing as we see fewer young americans in the work force. >> get right into the penalties here. if i decide, okay, i'm 28 years old, whatever, fairly healthy, i don't sign up, what's the penalty going to be? >> some people have pointed out that it's only $95 in the first year, but that's not exactly true. >> look down the road. >> if you have a salary in the first year, it's 1% of your income, sektsd year 2% of your income and 2.5% of your income. >> for women, you have better, birth control pills, maternity care, it's going to be better. higher quality health care. >> right, but who decides? who is it who should be telling
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me what is better for me, you know, better health system within one where individuals make that decision rather than the federal government. i think it's in fact pretty paternalistic to tell young women and young women what's better for them. that should be my decision. >> if you're a young person, what is your advice? you have to decide what you're going to do. what's your advice? >> well, if you're under 26 you should explore going on your parents' plan. that's the white house idea of what's best for young people. there are other options for young adults. don't be scared into going into the obama care exchanges. you may be able to buy individual insurance outside of the exchanges. if you can get employer sponsored insurance, that's going to be your best bet. those benefits are tax free. also i'd encourage young people to be weary of going on medicaid since the pool of doctors a lot less. >> expand on that a little bit.
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why would you support that? >> if you can't afford regular insurance, the pool of doctors is a lot lower quality for medicaid patients. it's not -- that's not even a good deal even if the insurance is so-called free. >> not to pry into your personal life, what are you going to do? >> i got a letter from my health insurance company know that my private plan is being canceled so i'm in that process right now exploring my options, looking at what can i do, if i can go into some kind of family coverage, that's what i'll do. >> yeah. >> oh, wise, i may seek employer sponsored insurance. if i can strike that bargain with my boss. >> happy anniversary. thank you for being with us. >> thank you. you've probably seen this or maybe you're guilty of doing this. reading a magazine while walking on a treadmill. well, anythinicky, our fitness says put it away. she's here with a workout and
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all of the things you should do. if you can read working on a treadmill, you're not, working out. are you a selfie obsessed person? see what people are doing. ♪ ♪ ♪ ng a business. century link provides reliable it services like multi-layered security solution to keep your information safe & secure. century link. your link with what's next. bounce keeps my clothes fresh for weeks, even when they've been sitting in the drawer a long time. like those jeans you can't fit into anymore. uh...by that, i mean... [ male announcer ] how do you get your bounce? long-lasting freshness. he was a matted messiley in a small cage. ng day. [ male announcer ] how do you get your bounce?
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♪ happy birthday, dear bobby. happy birthday, dear bobby ♪ i love her. >> so it's your shot of the morning. this little girl, it's her birthday message to her father, it's going viral. it's making a whole lot of people smile. her dad has watched it at least 500 times herself. >> she makes some references to football. she says touchdown for her favorite team at one point. >> she is adorable. >> then the kiss at the end. >> so sweet. i have a question. >> go ahead, mike. >> have you been taking selfies? have you been taking -- there you go, clayton's doing it right there. >> i work with a woman named casey mcdonald. >> she does a lot of selfies.
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>> every day, five or six. one good thing is i don't mind looking at them because she's beautiful. >> she's beautiful. >> she's constantly obsessed with taking selfies nonstop. >> she knows how to do it and she's giving classes in philadelphia on how to take the perfect selfie. >> if you hold it up higher. >> above. >> little skinnier. >> above eye level. >> now there's a new app which is helping you air brush -- >> there's casey. >> she's gorgeous. >> look at her hair. >> is that she how she goes on the air? >> no. 1970s hair. >> she's beautiful. >> so -- >> it's called face tune. essentially it air brushes the things that you want smooth, the wrinkles on your skin maybe. you want your teeth to be a little bit whiter. it's the instagram filters taken up a notch. she doesn't need anything. >> the key is it'll get rid of the clarity so it'll smooth out things. >> there's the difference there. the before on the left, right, and then the -- >> i kind of like the first one.
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>> do you? >> are you obsessed with selfies? whenever i take mine i end up -- because the kids, it's easier for them to look at the camera. all of myself physician have like a child in my lap at some point. >> i always end up taking about 400. oh. >> look at that one. >> watching the eagles game last weekend, my little girl. >> so cute. >> here's the soft touch. now i look like a corpse. >> i think it's cool because she is looking right at the camera. she's having a good time. >> right. was yours touched up? >> well, let's see. mine was at the beach. this was on a shoot in florida. >> that looks good there. >> shiny. now you took all the shine off the forehead. >> oh, yeah. >> way overexposed. >> now dull like. >> you can do the reverse on the camera where you can see yourself. >> yeah. >> back in the day you couldn't find yourself. >> the front facing camera is the reason we now do selfies. rick is obsessed with selfies. >> rick, yours is the funniest
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one. >> this is rick. >> russian mafia. >> he just woke up. do i really have to do this today? >> why do i hear you laughing so hard in the studio? >> because they know you. >> look at this. i love how they -- this is the before and after. i can't tell the difference. >> one's worse than the other. >> so true. >> that's a lesson to us all. don't take a selfie at 4:00 in the morning in an elevator. >> we'll get to you in a second. a tennessee man busted at jfk airport with a loaded rifle in his checked bag along with other guns and ammunition. tsa rules only allow unloaded weapons in checked luggage. the 23-year-old was carrying high capacity magazines in new york. the man faces six counts of criminal possession of a weapon and up to 7 years in prison if convicted. thousands of people marching
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on washington to protest the nsa. protesters are demanding they reform the agency, demanding lawmakers be held responsible for surveillance abuse. more than a hundred advocacy groups forming a group called stop watching us. we're now less than a month away from the 50th anniversary of jfk's assassination. now the family of mobster sam giancana is claiming that they have proof he was responsible for kennedy's death. and his nephew, nicholas -- >> gianca. >> shalazi explaining it all to geraldo. >> if you look at oswald, we know that his uncle was a bookie that worked for marchalo. we know that sam rube worked for sam giancala. >> he's not the first one coming forward with this, the mob being
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responsible. >> he says that his mob family first helped jfk get elected but when jfk had the mobsters investigated by the fbi, they organized the assassination. 36 minutes after the hour. another actor being cast for the highly anticipated 50 shades of gray movie, he will play elliott, the brother of christian grey. 50 shades is expected in theaters in august of next year. >> maybe appropriately, his last name is grimes. >> dirty hot. get it. >> >> yeah. >> here's rick. i think the moral of the selfie story is at a certain age you can't take them unless your arms grow significantly longer. >> or unless there's a lot of tequila involved. >> yeah, because it should never be taken that long up. >> anna and mike you don't have to worry about that. >> up high, the crane shot, when you get it down low, you have eight chins when you have it
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taken. >> i know. exactly. all right, guys. let's take a look at your weather map. we have a storm that's on its way across the inner mountain west across the rockies. winter storm warnings and watches. this is the next weather maker for this week. it's going to be snowy monday, tuesday, into wednesday across central parts of the country. by thursday evening into friday getting very close towards the east coast. thursday evening, halloween, so possibly a little bit of rain across a lot of these cities you see right now. here's what your day will look like. we'll continue to see the wind whip across the lakes. see a few scattered showers. temps remaining a a little bit below average across the northeast. down towards the southeast you'll see a little bit of rain showers moving across parts of the united states. are you spending hours at the gym but you're not seeing the results you want. your bad exercise routine may be to explain. nicki is here with five habits we need to drop from our
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routine a sap. >> sometimes people are reading newspapers. >> if you can sit there and read the small print of a magazine while you're supposedly getting a workout, you're not working out hard enough. if you really want to listen to a book, get an audio book, if you need to take your mind off of it. otherwise, get pumped up music. work better, stronger, faster. that's my favorite strong. >> that's mine, too. slow and steady doesn't win the race. >> exactly, if you're trudging away on the treadmill for an hour, you could be working harder if you cut your workout time in half. that's crazy. if you do intervals, you can get more of a calorie burn, get more fat burned off your body and see better results by cutting your workout time in half. >> want to work more efficiently and smarter. getting off the weight machines is a good idea for a lot of us. why is that? >> weight machines are good if you're brand new or you have a
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broken foot, but if you're sitting down or laying down doing hamstring curls, you're not working out that hard again. once you've gotten past that beginner stage, can you stand up and multi-task. all of my fitness classes and dvds are multi-tasks. a squad with a biceps curl, a twisting crunching situp. >> functional fitness, that's why cross fit, insant any at this dvd. >> get off the bikes? >> i love my soul cycles. >> if you're doing that six days a week, you're getting hunched over and would your' not working your bum. go for a jog, do cardiointervals with ply owe metrics. do some upper back strengtheners. you can fix the posture on the bike. >> we don't want to get soft around the middle. you say don't go at it alone. it's nice to have people around to support you. >> it is. if you are with a partner, a friend, your spouse, someone you live with, if you don't feel like working out on a sunday
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morning, maybe they do. i'm going to go to the gym anyway. i'm going to put in this fitness dvd or go for a run. you don't want to be the one to put down the biceps curl workout. you don't want to be like i can't finish. you push yourself harder. the instructor pushes you. if you are at home, you might say, i'll turn it on for five minutes. >> accountability is key. it's nice to see how we get there. nicki fitness. >> i have tips on my twitter nicki fitness. 41 minutes after the hour. you may have gotten the brand new iphone 5. it could be outdated. these famous faces have one thing in common. they're all the oldest child, and a new study says that makes them smarter than their siblings. is that true? what your birth order says about you. i'm the baby. what does that mean? ♪ ♪ ♪
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mr. clean's handy grip -- the newest member of the magic eraser family. in all purpose and bath. [ engine revs ] quarter till the hour now. quick headlines. a major recall to tell you about this morning. taylor farms recalling more than 5,000 pounds of its broccoli salad kits due to a possible listeria contamination. this affects 6 and 12 pound boxes sold on the east coast. and that didn't take long. apple just launched its latest iphone 5s. they're expected to release a new iphone 6 this summer in an effort to boost sales. other rumored items, a watch and a television. >> yeah. a watch. well, according to a new study, clayton, first born children are smarter than their younger siblings. >> true in my house.
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sorry, nicole. >> first born. >> is this true though? what else does our birth order say about us? here to weigh in is dr. kevin lehman. he's the order of "the birth order book." hey, doc. good morning. >> good morning. >> let's talk about first born children at trib puts and see if this holds up for someone like myself and other world leaders. what do we have inherent in us? >> well, first borns are the lab rat of the family to begin with. parents practice on them. >> that's right. >> kids look up. their models are adults so school is the first proving ground in life. they tend to be achievers. they're early readers. one of the reasons why first borns end up smarter on such studies that we just saw again is that the parents have time to read to the child,nd mo and mor attention goes to the first borns. they're presidents, ceos,
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architects, engineers. >> well, i'm the fifth out of six so my parents didn't even know my name. the first born was my brother, tom. he's a nuclear physicist. then there's me, fifth down the line. dr. lehman, i need help. let's go look at some famous people who were first born. look at this list. they become presidents, a lot of them. >> oh, yes, more than 53% of our presidents are first born or on only born. >> what about someone like mike? >> fifth out of six. >> when you're second born, does the same thing carry over, second, third, fourth, fifth? does it role down the line that way? >> most people look at birth order as order didnal. it's not, it's functional. you could have four daughters and a son and the son could be in the middle. he's a functional first born. to help mike, let me say something that mike has never heard in his entire life.
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mike, what do you think we should do? >> i don't know how to answer that. i've never heard it. >> yeah, you never heard it. middle children sort of get left out of things, but in the business world, your entrepreneurs, they're great mediators, negotiators, and people like donald trump, he's done pretty well in life for a middle child. >> donald trump, very socially adept. mike is very socially adept. he excels in relationships. people love being around you. >> i love you. >> babies of the family, youngest children, jim carrey, martin shore, jon stewart, jimmy fallen, ellen degeneres, whoopie goldberg, babies in the family never met a stranger, affable, president ronald regan, one of five babies. he married the only child, nancy davis. birth order is interesting. it gets into what relationship is best. >> doctor, help me out here.
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give me some horrible trait of a first born. >> they're perfectionistic. many of them become flaw pickers. what makes you a good dentist or statistician or math teacher is the same thing that works against you in relationships. you're a man. you're lucky enough to have a wife that cooks dinner. they're getting hard to find, by the way. you come home to dinner and you find the flaw and you say, hey, what's with the carrots? i've got news to you. the question is, will you be wearing carrots shortly? it's not to be rewarded. the critical eye gets the first born in trouble sometimes. >> i'm going to stop being such a perfectionist. >> please. >> i'll just eat my carrots. dr. kevin lehman, great to see you here. the book is called "first order book" go out and buy it and taunt your relatives. thank you. >> you're welcome. they were quick to throw support behind obama care, so where's hollywood now that the rollout
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has turned into a mess? >> and colder weather means more driving risks, such as black ice. how can you keep your new teen driver safe behind the wheel? oh, no. we put anna in a car? >> oh, no. >> that's her driving in this morning. >> she's going to help us out. >> oh, brother. ♪ ♪ ♪ farmer: hello, i'm an idaho potato farmer. and our giant idaho potato truck is still missing. so my dog and i we're going to go find it. it's out there somewhere spreading the good word about idaho potatoes and raising money for meals on wheels. but we'd really like our truck back, so if you see it, let us know, would you? thanks. what?
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skills with flood waters, black ice and a few other things. >> reporter: >> mik motor vehicle accidents are the leading cause of deaths. even when you take away cell phones, alcohol, teenagers are more likely to under estimate dangerous situations and not now who he how to react. maxwell driving school is trying to impact this epidemic. what have we got here? >> what we have is a skid car? >> it has training wheels? >> i can raise the front of the car, i can raise the rear of the car to create different conditions like snow, ice, water, dry pavement. >> in 2011 car accidents claimed the lives of 3,023 teenagers but hopefully with classes like maxes, that will drop. >> say you hit black ice and all of a sudden you start going to the right as you're go to run off the road.
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what do you do? >> you're going to turn to the right. >> you turn into the direction that you're going even though your initial reaction is to go to the opposite? >> right. correct. >> the scenario is if i get caught on black ice, flood waters and my car is skidding, right? >> that, or you miss judge the speed of the corner and that rear end comes around. keep going straight. speed a little bit more speed. make a left-hand turn, make a nice, tight turn. it happens fast. >> it does happen fast. >> okay. back to the right. you can go straight. >> so what do i need to do? i need to hurry into it? >> a little bit quicker. >> we'll try that again. >> take two. if you feel your tires start to skid, don't panic. continue to steer in the direction of the skid but look in the direction you wish to go and don't oversteer. >> now turn. there you go. look where you're going over there. >> yeah! >> that's t. that's all you've
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got to do. >> trying to stay safe there. tips for a rear wheel skid. stay calm as much as possible and turn your wheel in the direction of kskid. never look over here. >> do you remember the first time you drove and you were free and clear? do you remember your first afternoon? >> 16. >> you had to bring that up. >> yes. my very first day with my license at 16. i accidentally left the parking brake up. i'm at a stop light after speeding around town at charlotte, north carolina, the guy is going, what are you doing? there's a huge cloud of smoke behind me. >> car is on fire. >> what was with the glasses? >> my elvis glasses? >> i was doing another story for stunt driving. >> the lady gaga stunt glasses. coming up on the show, chilling new details about the attack in benghazi from a man who saw it all firsthand. >> they said we're here to kill americans, not libyans, so they
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gave him a good beating. >> "60 minutes" tonight. will justice ever be served for the death of our ambassador and three other americans. >> which country cutie just got asked th of her life? will you kiss me? ♪ book it. and i got a great deal without bidding. and where's your furry friend? oh, i don't have a cat. priceline savings without bidding. i need a newn't investment pn. i need to rethink the core of my portfolio. ishares core etfs are low-cost funds. so you can keep more of what you earn. get started with the new ishares core builder. design a personalized plan that can help you achieve your investment goals.
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while truly engaging with your aging loved ones so they can stay happy at home. comfort keepers. keeping the comforts of home. ll comfort keepers now to arn more. there you are. it is sunday the 27th of october, 2013. i'm anna kooiman. the obama care rollout, a huge debacle. one congressman says, you may know why. >> there was a change order, a major change order that went in literally at the 11th hour before this thing was switched on and it rendered it absolutely unworkable. >> why he says that change was made will shock you. >> and it's been over two years since the terror attack on a u.s. consulate in benghazi and now chilling new details about the attack in benghazi from a man who saw it firsthand. >> they said, we're here to kill americans, not libyans, so they
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gave him a good beating. pistol whipped him, beat him with their rifle and let them go. >> more of what he had to say straight ahead. and listen up, parents, a new trend could keep you more connected to your kids' cell phone contracts. i'll get you a phone if you abide by these rules. is this a good idea? it's a new world. "fox & friends" hour two starts right now. welcome in to "fox & friends" on this sunday morning. we hope you are enjoying your weekend. we hope you're getting ready for maybe some pumpkin carving today. today's the day where the raccoons won't tear it apart. >> it won't get moldy. >> we're asking you to send us some of your pictures. if you happened to do it yesterday, if you want to get up early with us and do it while you're drinking your coffee. send pictures. >> #ffweekend.
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we have a few to show you. these already came in. they're on fire. >> oh, my goodness. >> hello! >> that's a pretty good one. that looks like a batman logo. >> i'm digging that one, whoever sent us that one. here's our friend jock maclemore. doing gone good. >> that's incredible. >> i wish we had an award to give you. we have nothing. >> i like the one -- keep sending them to us. we'll show them throughout the show. we need to get to some of your headlines. a fox news alert. at this hour, indiana university is on lockdown. police are searching the campus for two men, one armed with a knife. an alert going out via the campus twitter account telling everyone to stay inside and lock their doors. one person tweeting this photo. university officials confirming a fight broke out near campus. one person pulled out a knife and stabbed the person involved.
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the two injuries are not life threatening. they're ensuring them the incident stems from a fight. they're not roaming campus to hurt people. terror strikes in iraq. a wave of car bombs explode in baghdad killing more than 40 people and injuring dozens more. police on the ground say the bombs were detonated over a half hour period targeting commercial areas and parking lots. this as officials say they hit a group of soldiers guarding a street in northern iraq killing at least another 12 people. it's the latest in a series of coordinated attacks in the area. new this morning, the operator of the ride that threw people to the ground at a north carolina state fair is under arrest and facing charges. timothy dwayne tuttero is accused of tampering it. the ride started to move as they were getting off sending some falling 30 feet to the ground.
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>> this ride was tampered with after the inspections and that critical safety devices were tampered with and compromised. >> five people were injured and three of them remain in the hospital. all right. you want some high drama, guys? >> yes. >> world series. did you fall asleep before this happened? watch this crazy ending, probably the craziest ending in world series history to a game. watch this. >> jay grounds one. pedroia makes the play. throw home. two outs. over to third. it gets away. alan craig is going to come to the plate. here's the throw. he is -- the umpire making the call. they're going to say he's safe. >> so what happens? now watch this. he dives and falls down, right? he puts his legs up. that's obstruction. he sticks his legs high up in the air.
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he cannot advance to home plate. he's safe. alan craig is safe with two outs in the bottom of the ninth despite being tagged at the plate. it doesn't matter if he intentionally put his legs up or not, it's obstruction. trips and then he should automatically get the next base. legally whatever base you were previously on, you get to advance one base. that base happened to be home plate. they won the game. >> even though he's thrown out at the plate, the obstruction made him safe. >> the left fielder did a great job, the catcher did a great job. >> why was he even throwing it to third base in the first place? why throw it there? he threw it ball away. they're sad in boston this morning. anyway. >> can you imagine being a fan? >> no. >> now the red sox are down 2-1 to the cardinals. >> yeah. >> oh, boy. let's talk some obama care this morning. some congressmen making the news this morning because you've been hearing about, the president said this repeatedly on the campaign trail. >> if you like your health care plan, you can keep it. >> right.
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>> if you like your doctor, you can keep it. >> that's not true. if you dive into the numbers, large insurance plans are dumping customers. large companies are getting rid of spousal coverage as well. if you like your own doctor, you happen to be a spouse of someone, you might lose your coverage. now one congressman, senator ron johnson is proposing a bill to make sure you can actually keep your doctor. >> what's the name of the bill? >> the if you like your health plan you can keep it act. what's interesting about this is how many times did we hear the president say this, i mean, he's on the record for, i mean, dozens of times, i would say, so what is this going to mean for his legacy? we'll be talking about that. >> he says in quote, ron johnson, one of the most important promises made by president obama and the democratic congressional leadership to promote the affordable care act, if americans were satisfied with their plan, they could keep it. he said, that promise has been broken. that's why he's hoping to get some bipartisan support for this ak. it will be interesting to see, you have this massive
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legislation with obama care. how do you try to pass a supplemental piece of legislation and get funding for it, make sure -- it's a monstrosity. good luck for him. we're all behind it. good luck. that's a mess. >> already the mainstream media is starting to have some inkling, some rumblings starting to pay attention to this. you simply can't ignore it. the product that's being pushed upon us that we're seeing with this debacle of a rollout from the website, this is not the product that was sold to us. it's false advertisement. >> you're talking about it's impossible to ignore, that's why every media outlet is finally covering it. did you see the shocking allegations from one congress person in the country. he seems to think he knows why the rollout of this website has been, you know, such a mess. listen to this. >> there was a change order, a major change order that went in literally at the 11th hour before this thing was switched on and it rendered it absolutely unworkable. and what that change order
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amounted to was there was no browsable function left in the website. you couldn't go and see what the cost of the plans were without putting in a lot of personal data. it wasn't supposed to work like that. the contractors had to go in and make this change, presumably at the request of secretary sebelius, but why did you not want people to see what the actual cost was going to be without the subsidy? i've got to believe that the rate shock was something that they truly feared. >> what he's saying is maybe we should try to hide the higher cost to this. >> right. >> try to implement that in the last couple of weeks. >> and so we spoke to an expert yesterday on exactly how the website should be structured. he said it should have been built in reverse. that is, when you go there you can shop and browse as you would on amazon and then at the end of it you put in your credit card information, you get the pricing. >> instead of front loading that. >> front loading all of that user information. that change order at the last minute he says was the problem. i don't know if i buy that because you had three years of
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testing. a small change order like that may have thrown things for a loop. i think that's giving them a pass. there were all sorts of signs for months that this thing wasn't ready. i don't know that that one change order was enough. >> they certainly don't want you to see the sticker shock. we had our brain room koom up with statistics that a 30-year-old healthy guy nonsmoker would see his cost rates go up 260%. ridiculous. it's everywhere you turn. you can't get away from the obama care debacle. even "saturday night live." look at last night. >> tonight i have a number of friendly tips to help you deal with those technical problems. if the regular english site isn't working, try signing up in a different language, like, say, icelandic. and then choose one of four simple plans. now that's fun. >> i've got to find out more
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about this actress. >> new cast of -- rick, do you know who that is? kathleen sebelius? >> i think she's the one that did ellen. i think she's the new big thing. miley cyrus, too? >> yes. yes. yes. >> she did play the miley cyrus. >> she can do a good impression. >> kathleen sebelius on snl. hey, rick, how are you doing? >> i'm doing well. i told you this week was going to get cold. it did. now we'll warm things up. this is where you're waking up across the country. definitely cool over the northern plains. we're pushing halloween. we're going to feel this colder weather get in here. east coast, southeast will be a beautiful day. down here across parts of eastern texas, southeastern texas into louisiana we'll see the rain showers spread off to the east, louisiana, arkansas, mississippi. we'll continue to see the scattered showers and few snow flurries. another clipper system is moving in. the west, you're looking good at least for now. to see the storm up here across
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parts of the far northern rockies, that is going to be our next storm. it will pull in through the next couple of days. we might even see some rain into southern california, snow throughout the sierra nevadas, snow into the rockies and by the time we get to wednesday, parts across the deep south will have more rain. thursday and friday storm across the east coast. everybody getting in on it eventually. i think our halloween here might be a little bit wet. bring rain coats with your costume. >> that ruins it. >> get a clear poncho, then you can see the costume. >> that ruins it. >> i have my costume on now. >> you're going as a news man? >> yeah. >> glad you're not wearing your birthday suit. chilling new details, you've got to watch this tonight, because that benghazi attack, the man who saw it all firsthand will be on "60 minutes" tonight. he said the attackers came in saying, we're here to kill americans so will justice ever be served? do you want a cell phone? well, sign the dotted line.
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many parents now making their children agree to their terms of use. a contract with your kids. is this a good idea or an incompetent be vags invasion of their privacy? e-mail us, tweet us. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] even ragu users a. chose prego homestyle alfredo over ragu classic alfredo. prego alfredo?!
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americans, not libyans, so they give him a good beating. pistol whipped them, beat them with their rifles, and let them go. >> could this interview inspire others to speak out? fred burden is co-author of "under fire, the untold story of the attack on benghazi" and vice president of intelligence at stratfor. thank you for coming in. this man says these guys attacking the consulate said we're not here to kill libyans, we're here to kill americans. this was a terrorist attack. >> this was. the interview should be very enlightening and help the pieces of the puzzle be put together as to what took place, although we do chronicle exactly what occurred in our book "under fire." >> real quickly here, why doesn't they offer a major big
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award -- reward, some money, for people to come forward with what they know? we've done it in the past and it seems to work. >> yes. the rewards for justice program is managed by the diplomatic security service inside the state department. it's a program that i'm very familiar with. we use the program to capture ramsay osif, the mastermind of the first world trade center bombing. the fact that it's been better than a year and a reward has not been offered clearly is infuriorating to the agents involved and not only the counter terrorism investigation of what took place in benghazi but just basically makes little sense to me. >> well, it doesn't make sense to me either because it seems like the administration would like this whole thing to go away, one way to make it go away is offer a huge reward and get the culprits and then it would go away. >> and it's also a program
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that's used to collect information, not necessarily just leading to the capture of the individuals that may be involved but you literally don't know what you don't know at times so by offering a reward you, in essence, are going to have individuals come forward that may provide new details that were not known. >> why do you think there hasn't been a reward offered? >> i think there's a tremendous amount of politics behind the scenes. there's a committee that looks at these rewards that has grown like all government bureaucracies at times. back in my day it was a fairly straightforward process where you would make that recommendation and just implement the system. >> all right, fred. i'll be watching "60 minutes" with you again tonight. chilling interview. thank you, fred. >> thank you. >> check out his book, too. up next, a big surprise at
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the grand ole onpry. which country cutie just got asked the question of her life and what did she say? and they were quick to throw support behind obama care. where's hollywood now that the rollout has been such a mess? we explore hypocrisy ahead. ♪ ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] staying warmnd dry has never been our priority. our priority is, was and always will be serving you, the american people. so we improved priority mail flat rate to give you a more reliable way to ship. now with tracking up to eleven scans, specified delivery dates, and free insurance up to $50 all for the same low rate. [ woman ] we are the united states postal service. [ man ] we are the united states postal service. [ male announcer ] and our priority is you. go to usps.com® and try it today. why let erectile dysfunction get in your way?
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next, $343,000, that's how much samsung has to pay since they found out they paid people to write bad reviews about other people's products. finally, 124 miles per hour, that's how fast the world's first flying car can go in the air. the car prototype just making its first test flight. just like 30 years after "back to the future" anna. >> now we need a did he lorian. from oprah to scarlet johansson, some of the biggest supporters have been from hollywood heavy weights. now that the problems have surfaced, his famous fan base is dwindling. many celebrities are backing away from obama care. joining us is research associate of the heritage foundation, ayline singer.
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we remember #getcovered, lady gaga, they were promoting this to their fans and now they're silent. why is that? >> now that it's becoming reality, it's a whole different story. the proms the president made is a whole different kind. millions more getting coverage while the millions who have coverage are fine. you can keep your plan and your doctor, we can all support that. as the reality is coming to light, that's a whole different story. >> do you think any feel embarrassed? >> i think so. as consumers try to sign up and likely fail because of the website, would you want to support a law that has that much anger and negativity? health care is a very personal issue. >> it's become tough to ignore even for hollywood. do you think that we will see them come back if the website is, indeed, fixed at the end of november as being promised to us? >> i don't think so. i think there's more with obama
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care than you can fit into a tweet. it's more than #getcovered. the product is a debacle. when consumers can see a plan, they'll see increased premiums in 43 states. there will be huge premium increases, especially young adults who follow these celebrities so religiously. on top of that, $5,000 and $6,000 deductibles, that's not a good product you would want to stand behind. >> it's almost cool for a hollywood starlet to take to the podium and talk about how much they love the president and it's something that can work in their favor. do you think they would ever, ever, ever consider backing somebody like a ted cruz? is it too unpopular? >> we can hope so. hopefully one day when there's good conservative laws that are producing good results for american people, hopefully we can get celebrities behind us. until then -- >> thank you so much for your time today. >> thank you. >> even hollywood can't ignore
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it. 25 minutes after the hour. coming up on "fox & friends." a woman is pick pocketed, instead of calling the cops on the thief, she turned to god what to figure out what to do with him. her amazing act of compassion is up next. plus, hope you have a big appetite because we are about to see the best southern food on wheels. stick around for food truck food coming up next. noets ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ hey america, even though she doesn't need them, cheryl burke is cha-cha-ing in depend silhouette briefs ♪ th sof the best protection looks, fits, and feels just like underwear. get a free sample and try for yourself. and better is so easy withrning you cabenefiber.o something better for yourself. fiber that's taste-free, grit-free and dissolves completely. so you can feel free to add it to anything. and feel better about doing it. better it with benefiber. and our giant idaho potato truck is still missing.
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♪ god bless america, my home sweet home ♪ ♪ god bless america, my home sweet home ♪ >> got some good bumps there. that's an incredible rendition. "god bless america" announcer joe buck only had one word for the retired navy petit officer. he just said -- >> wow. >> -- wow. >> let's bring him back. >> on this show. >> we need to try to book him. >> get on it, mike.
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>> i'll call him. >> facebook him. >> already on it. follow-up on that. what would you do? i'm just entering into the era now, the kids with the cell phones. when they got their first phone, did you give them a contract saying here are the ground rules? >> we had a verbal -- we had a talk. we had the talk. we didn't write anything down about how you should use this, don't get on this website, don't, you know, text and sext and all of this stuff. we talked about it. >> when you got a new phone you go into the at&t store, you have a contract. it has your rules, stipulations, how much you're going to pay. now more and more parents are deciding to write up their own personal contracts between the parents and the teenagers. with contracts like this, we will always know the password. no contact allowed of people we don't know. >> see, that one, what's a person going to do? these kids are going to put somebody else's name in there. there are ways to get around this.
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kids are sneaky. anyway, the phone bill will show every call and text you make and then the phone will not be allowed in your room after bedtime. >> if it is damaged, you're responsible for the replacement costs and repairs. keep your eyes up and see the world happening around you. >> i like that last one the most, keep your eyes up and see the world happening around you. that also means driving. no texting while driving. you know, teens, they're not even -- there's new research showing that many, many teenagers now and young kids, they're not going out and socially interacting face to face anymore. >> that's right. >> it's really changing the way that we're -- that our kids are interacting with each other. so they're not so concerned with going out in the backyards and playing anymore because they're texting their friends in their rooms. >> i never had a problem spying on my kids. >> okay. so you were the dad who would read the diary or the journal? you think that's okay? it's not an invasion of privacy. >> i hope they're not watching. if it was laying there, i admit, i opened and looked. >> but is it an invasion of
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privacy or is it good parenting. >> i wanted to protect them. >> you hear these horrible stories about these old -- not old radio freak in new york city that was trying to text young girls. >> right. >> and you don't know. young teenagers who are impressionable, they don't know some guy telling them they want to meet up. some random person's name shows up in the phone. >> one thing with my daughters, they had a friend, she was in ninth grade. she started texting somebody up in minnesota, in lawrence kansas. she ended up flying to see him. she's a ninth grader. >> what? >> oh, my gosh. >> i do like that thing about keep looking you ever seen peop streets, they're texting. >> yeah. it's dangerous everywhere. they run into you. >> it's particularly dangerous in new york city. cars will not stop for you. those cabbies. >> no. no. >> you notice when you're crossing a crosswalk in manhattan that people will be doing the stickers, waiting for the thing to change. like mike, you're running into
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each other. you're both texting at the same time. >> if they're coming at me and they have their head down, i'll go -- bark. >> throw an elbow. >> what do you think, parents at home? what would you put on your child's cell phone contract? do you have one with your kids? you can go to our facebook page, we are ffweekend on facebook. that is our question of the day. we'll read your responses on the show. >> can't wait to hear from you. now on to some of your sunday morning headlines. four teenagers under arrest accused of murdering a world war ii veteran. 87-year-old lawrence shine thornton died two days after being violently attacked and mugged. all of the teenagers are charged with murder, robbery and conspiracy to commit robbery. move over vicodin. there's a new pill on the block now. the fda is approving a stronger medication. it's called zohydro. the agency says it's for people
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who need daily around the clock treatment that can't be helped by other drugs. this approval coming just a day after the fda tightened its restrictions on painkillers. an oklahoma mother is pick pocketed at her local grocery store, but rather than calling police, she appeals to god instead. jessica eaves knew who the thief was since only one person had passed her by. so she offered to pay for her groceries if he returned her wallet and a deal was made. this mom of four said it was the christian thing to do. a big surprise at the grand ole opry in nashville. up and coming country music artist mall ri hope gets ingauged. >> holy crap! are you serious? >> just like a woman and about our makeup. hope's boyfriend dropped to his knees on the opry stage last night.
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mallory has performed next to darius rucker, blake shelton. mallory will be with us on the 14th of november. >> did she say yes? >> he got a big ole kiss. >> i guess that was a yes. >> hey, rick. >> good for them. hey, guys. i'll tell you what. a really nice morning across a lot of the country. not a big rainfall that will be impeding any big plans. there are some changes with winter along the way. look at this incredible picture coming in from gordon, nebraska. take a look at this sunrise. this is from yesterday morning. scott sent this in. 38 degrees right before your sunrise today. getting up to about 63. enjoy it because tomorrow you're going to have a little bit of wintery mix, temps in the 30s and some snow by the time you get into tomorrow night. big changes across high plains. keep sending me your pictures. tell me what's going on in your area. here's your forecast across the northeast today. temps cool, 40s and 50s for much of the area. down towards the southeast we'll
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see some rain in and across parts of the deep south and out towards the east of that, places like atlanta and greensboro. you'll see plenty of sunshine. northern plains, we're talking about some cool weather again. you'll warm up a little bit tomorrow and the next day. >> let's warm up, rick. >> let's do it. it's food trucks. >> rick eats at a food truck four times a day. >> a lot of food trucks. >> heather donoughe is here. she's done something fantastic. it's the southern food truck cookbook. you met with over 100 different food trucks. >> i did. >> figured out what were the best? >> absolutely. i dialed it up and tried to find out who in the southeast was doing the best in the truck. the result is the "southern food truck cookbook." >> this is the goburger. if you've ever had a blt burger in lower manhattan. thank you for getting these burgers for us. >> we appreciate it.
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>> let's turn these into a southern style -- >> i'm not supposed to eat it yet? >> you can. it's all right. >> this burger is great. you'll take this and see what you can do to make this southern. talk to us about stuff you found in the southeast food trucks. >> absolutely. so let's start with southernizing these burgers. great burger. big name in burger trucks. here we have some fried dill pickles which is a staple of southern cuisine. >> delicious. >> add those to a burger. blamo, you have a southern burger. >> another option, we have vidalia onion sauce. anyone knows the vidalia onion sauce. >> you have to be from vidalia, georgia. >> just like champaign has to be from the champaign region. >> finally we have pimento cheese.
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>> can't eat it? >> no, we are done. >> every southern family has a pimento cheese recipe and foot tru food trucks are doing this. >> you have something else. >> i do. this is a deep fried deviled egg. this is from a truck in charlotte, north carolina. these sell out every time the owner has them on the truck. a little honey mustard dipping sauce. >> what truck? >> roaming fork in charlotte, north carolina. >> i love that. >> anna would love that. >> this is corn bread salad. this is another southern staple. you've got buttery corn bread, you have a dressing that you make with relish and sweet onions, miracle whip, dijon onion, bacon. toss it altogether. that is from a truck in louisville, kentucky, called get it on a bun. here we have some southwestern
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chicken rollups, lime juice, roasted pablamo peppers, little bit of cream cheese, serve it with cilantro and guacamole. >> what about a food truck that makes them so great? the connection to the community, they can rome around and tweet where they are next? >> tweet where they are next. through social media they're able to form great relationships with their customers. their customers follow them on facebook and twitter. they're able to find out where they will be next. >> they know where to be. >> they know where to be for lunch. it's a great bond. >> they've taken food to another level. >> they're getting incredible food. thank you so much. this is your book. what's it called? >> "the southern food truck cookbook." >> you're fantastic. anna, are you jealous about the deep fried deviled eggs. >> i would mary that woman.
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>> she has a ring. faith under fire. atheists doubling down on their attempt to have clergy members providing grieve counseling. should they back off? and many tennis players guilty of this. grunting on the court, but how much is too much? it's what the women's tennis association wants to do about grunting. ♪ american woman, stay away from me ♪ ♪ american woman, momma, let me see ♪ [ female announcer ] who are we?
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and the school board says teachers should have that same right. and is grunting necessary in women's tennis? >> do that again. >> the women's tennis association now looking into a ban against excessive grunting from the players. the association will use an on court measuring device to monitor audio levels from players during tournaments to determine what is acceptable. if your grunt is too loud, they may take some points away. don't ever do that again. >> sorry. >> quarter till the hour. montgomery, alabama, allows pastors at crime scenes to comfort victims as part of a program to help reduce crime, but now a group of atheists doesn't believe the town's intentions and they want proof.
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american atheists will be requesting that city officials provide the studies or other factual evidence they are using to support this claim. >> so should religious leaders be allowed to join police at the crime scene. joining us is father john morris. >> getting over the grunts. >> don't let that throw you. >> mike was too into it. >> i never heard of this where pastors, priests would be -- come down to this crime scene or a horrible traffic accident or something like that and counsel. >> well, usually it's not invited by the police, but if i see a terrible crime scene or an accident, for example, i see somebody is hurt, i will go, of course -- >> you will? >> of course i will. >> the american atheists are saying, look, we just simply want proof because they say this is unconstitutional. they say we want proof that this helps to reduce crime. >> okay. >> because that's what the argument is. first >> first of all, do i want the city to be encouraging forced conversion?
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absolutely not. what we're talking about here is actually grief counseling, okay? so this is not usually at the scene of a crime or at the scene of an accident but, rather, going into prisons, going into police stations and working with people who are absolutely probable candidates for this, put it this way, recisicity recidivism. >> i can say, father, no thank you. >> you can say get the hell out of here. >> operation good shepherd is for christian pastors to be coming in. do you think it would be any consulation if they had leaders from other religions? >> our american system is so clear in this. we do not want the government to be forcing or even encouraging one religion over another. should there be an option for a rabbi, should there be an option for an emom, absolutely, of
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course. but what we don't want is these very small activist groups to try to wipe off from the face of our country and from the public square the name and the voice of god and that's what they're trying to do. >> this atheist group, doubling down, they had threatened to sue. they want proof. they want proof that recidivism isn't going up or is moving down as a result of these counseling. >> have you seen it personally? >> these are tactics. have i seen personally in -- for example, in a prison -- >> right. >> -- the best way to avoid repeated crimes is a conversion of heart, okay? conversion of heart away from evil towards good. >> sure. >> how does that usually happen? in my experience, it's an encounter with god, a living god. now is now is it possible to convert away from crime and into a better behavior without god? of course. should we be making sure that nobody has a chance to convert
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away from a life of crime into a way of good living through god? of course we shouldn't get rid of that. >> the city -- >> the city of montgomery sticking by the program. they are defending it. >> that's what they should do. >> thank you. >> thanks, guys. great seeing you. 11 minutes before the top of the hour. and a shocking announcement from fleetwood mac. the band calling off its tur. that coming up. plus, johnny knoxville, the latest from its movie "bad grampa." how did he come up with all of these pranks. kevin mccarthy sat down with him. >> it's clint eastwide. >> clint eastwood. kevin mccarthy will be here. why in the world is he dressed like this? >> the good, the bad -- >> gotta be. >> and the -- well, you know. >> coming up. ooh, homemade soup! yeah...
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oh, god. >> nothing. >> oh! >> it's the latest prank movie to sweep the box office. the success of johnny knoxville's "bad grandpa" is proving no matter what your age, some things will be funny. >> how does johnny knoxville come up with all of these weird pranks? >> joining us is fox news contributor and the founder of nerd gears.com, kevin mccarthy dressed up as? >> the man with no name. a lot of people think i'm woody from "toy story." this is the good, bad, the ugly. every year on halloween i watch
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"the nightmare before christmas" and i dress up as a character. >> where do you find, what is that, a sirape. >> i have boots on. you can't see my boots. i have them on. i have everything. i have a gun holster. everything. >> you are like bowoody. it does say andy on his boot. >> "bad grampa" when i first saw the preview, i thought all of the good gags are in the previews, but you gave it 3 1/2 out of 5 stars. tell us about it. >> not at all. the trailers don't give you anything. this movie will be throwing "gravity." they're predicting this $15 million film to make between 27 and $32 million. you have the plot mayor rative here. you're dealing with an 86-year-old grampa who's taking his 8-year-old grandson on a cross-country road trip and the pranks in between. for people who don't know how this works, they shoot the pranks first and then they go in afterwards and tell people they've been shot for a movie
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and if they don't sign the release, they blur their faces out. i sat down with mr. knoxville and his young co-star to talk about how they set up some of the most elaborate pranks, including pranking a funeral. check this out. >> oh, how do you prank a funeral? what we decided on is we would hire people to work the funeral, like a baptist choir to sing, some kate jererkaterers. this guy is here, he's outlived his friends. can you sit in attendance? >> once it's done do you walk in and say you were just in a movie and then they all say -- >> yeah. that was a scary one. what they saw was pretty horrible and we were -- we were not only worried about them signing, but we didn't want anyone to have a heart attack. >> like when you were in the bed. the lady almost did have a heart attack. >> yes. she was really shaken.
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>> so funny. tell me that's not funny. there are three scenes in this film. i was literally in tears and in pain laughing. if you were to -- if you would have told me in january that i'd giving a better review to "bad gram grampa" than to "the counselor" i wouldn't have believed you. >> by, woody. >> there's a snake in my boot. >> thanks, woody. >> 56 minutes after the hour. coming up, americans not happy with washington, especially with the messy roleout of obama care. how will this affect the parties? chris wallace at the top of the hour. do you have a selfie obsession? check out rick's pick and wait and see -- >> he looks super happy for shooting a selfy. >> the extreme lengths that some people are going to look picture perfect with new apps we show you. >> he needs the app. >> wake up. >> seems like a soft focus.
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happy sunday. it's the 27th of october, 2013. i'm anna kooiman. the obama care meltdown the president is losing support from his biggest allies, main street media and the celebrities. >> obama care's website is only designed to handle six users at a time. >> what will this mean for kathleen sebelius when she testifies this week. and it is a parent's worth nightmare. their child seconds away from death after choking on food. it's the amazing highway rescue everybody is talking about. two state troopers who saved this boy's life are with us
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today and the young man is here with his mother. remarkable story. >> wow. all right. hey, "fox & friends" begins right now. a few words, that clayton morris. >> we ad lib a lot on this show. when there's nothing to ad lib, i have nowhere to go. >> anna, he's on his fourth cup of coffee. >> i know. >> line them up. line them up. if you are yo' up this morning, we want to show you some great jack owe lanterns. i'm going to carve mine today. here's some photos. put up the first one. >> pumpkin carving music. >> send them to ff weekend. #ffweekend. >> village. >> the first one was from ryan. here's a photo from amy.
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look at all of those. >> this one from a viewer in canada. raff ralph in canada. >> is that the one on fire? we'll have to show you in a little while. >> caught on fire. #ffweekend. >> it burst into flames. >> you should see, go through i was looking through my twitter stream of all of your jack-o-lanterns. dracula. i don't know how you do it. >> used to be you take a butcher knife and selfer an arm trying to cut it up. now they have these little carving knives you can buy. >> yeah. you put the tracing paper on top. thumb tack pins around. >> photos, send them to us, ff weekend, use that hashtag. >> first we have headlines, right? >> we do. fox news alert moments ago. indiana university giving the all clear after the campus has been on lockdown for all night.
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the police searched for someone with a knife. according to the campus twitter account, they said that the iu pd says two suspects are at large but do not pose a danger to students. one student tweeting this photo early this morning. a fight broke out at an apartment complex near campus. one suspect pulled a knife and stabbed another person involved. the two men then took off. the victim's injuries are not life threatening. new this morning, the operator of the ride that threw people to the ground at the north carolina state fair is under arrest and facing charges this morning. timothy dwayne tuttero is accused of tampering with it. he was operating the vortex ride and he's accused of tampering with it as it moved while they were getting off sending them 30 feet to the ground. >> the ride was tampered with and that critical safety devices were tampered with and compromised. >> five people were injured and three of them remain in the
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hospital. super group fleetwood mac has called off their upcoming australian tour. the founding member of the group, the bassist john mcvee, he has cancer and he needs to undergo treatment for that. >> oh, no. >> that's so unfortunate. they released a statement saying we hope our australian and new zealand fans as well as fleetwood mac fans everywhere will join us in wishing john and his family all the best. from johnny mcvee to this. did you watch last night's game of the world series, the third game of the series? this was probably the wildest finish to any world series game in history. take a look at what happened. >> jay, grounds one. pedroia makes the play. throw home. two out. over to third. it gets away. alan craig is going to come to the plate. here's the throw. he is -- the umpire making the
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call. they're going to say he's safe. >> okay. he looked like he was out, right, at home plate, right? >> of course. >> it turns out he was safe because of what happened here on third base. watch as alan craig tries to go home. he gets obstructed by his legs being in the air. so it doesn't matter if you intentionally try to trip someone or you're in the way just unintentionally, that's an obstruction call. the third base umpire saying he couldn't take an extra base. whatever base you were last on you legally get to take the next base for free. the next base was home plate. >> gosh, he was so out. >> he was so out. >> a good throw by the left fielder. good out by the catcher. >> yeah. and the third base -- why they threw to third base in the first place i don't understand. >> third base would have been the third out. >> he got him at home but he was leaning over. it was a bad throw to third and that's why they lost the game on that throw to third. i wonder, was there an error to the throw to third. >> he almost had it. you say it was the right call?
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>> it was the right call. >> seems like it. >> doesn't matter if you're intentionally in someone's way for an obstruction call or, you know, you stick your leg up on purpose or unintentionally, you get an extra base. >> how do you think the boston people feel? >> i'm sure they're not happy. >> do you agree with clayton? clayton morris on twitter. >> you can let us know. >> i'm being fair. >> here you go. guys, there's no candy corns in my dishes. >> that's because mike ate them all. >> i'm not kidding. >> two can play at that game. i want you to get these. >> i want you to eat these during your weather cast. >> here's your weather as you're waking up. cooler temperatures. you'll warm up. there's a storm moving in towards the inner mountain west, into montana and wyoming. we have winter storm watches. this is going to be a big weather maker for us this week. take a look at what the future radar does. throughout the afternoon this starts to dive in towards the
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pacific northwest. we'll see some snow across the coastal ranges. by tonight into tomorrow it moves across the sierra nevadas. then begins to eject into the four corners. there will be a rainy side out and some snow across the high plains as well. get ready, there is a big storm on the way. temperature wise, looking pretty good. in fact, a nice warmup across parts of the high plains. thanks. >> do you want this back now? >> i'm going to get this back. >> we have one of the stars of the show "ghost hunters" coming up. >> i love that show. >> you should see our twitter stream lighting up, and i'm excited as well. 7 minutes after the hour. we're starting to hear even from the mainstream media. it's becoming tough to ignore. we're talking about the obama care website rollout and what a debacle it's become. how much of this is really going to affect the president's legacy. even the mainstream media is mentioned, "new york times,"
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headline from them. health site woes. we heard from cbs news? >> yeah, healthcare.gov's problems, technical and political run deep. >> look at abc news, they have a headline on their page as well, what it takes to get fired from the obama administration. >> that's strong. >> taking a swipe at what has happened with kathleen sebelius. a number of people calling for her ouster there. governor huckabee on the show as an example, she probably won't be fired, she'll be promoted. >> that will be must-see tv on wednesday when she goes in front of congress and has to testify. >> right. the key to this is, we heard some finger pointing last week from the structural designers behind the website. they were pointing their beginni fingers at the obama administration, we were being told to do x, y, z, so we did it. we were told to do this and therefore we did it. it's interesting. these questions have not been answered from the podium. ed henry, our white house reporter, is trying to get
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answers from jay carney on a repeated basis. >> nice try line. >> nice try. i know you're trying to play politics here. ed's like, no, we need these questions answered. he was on huckabee talking about what exactly it's like for a reporter to ask those questions of the press secretary. listen. >> a wide variety of reporters saying, wait a second. this is not how it was sold in terms of you can keep your doctor, you can keep your plan. i think there are a lot of reporters now saying wait a second. this rollout. who is responsible for it. the white house continues to say, look, no monday morning quarterbacking. they don't want to look back. maybe they don't want us to find some of those answers. look, we have to demand answers how much is that going to cost to make sure millions have insurance. how the president sold it, is that all going to work out? look, i athink you can challeng authority. >> millions of americans are frustrated with the website and they're starting to realize they may not be able to keep their doctor and plans. what do you turn to? how about some comic relief?
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we'll let you listen to "saturday night live" last night. >> tonight i have a number of friendly tips to help you deal with those technical problems. if the regular english site isn't working, try signing up in a different language, like, say, icelandic. and then choose one of four simple plans, fjordflug, trolish or high five. that's fun. >> high five. much more on the obama care rolloff in a while. >> we're getting a lot of reaction, clayton, from the segment we're doing. there's a new survey that says if you're the first born in your family you're smarter than the rest of your siblings. >> absolutely. mike was fifth in that line. >> i'm fifth out of six kids. >> i was first. what about you? >> i'm the baby. i have an older brother. so you were not the smartest. >> so i'm dumber than my brother. >> here's why. take a look at these attributes. the first born, if you're first
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born like me. you're a perfectionist. >> aren't you special? >> achievers, we're structured. >> sure you are. >> if you see the laundry on my floor, i don't know if that holds up. career choices, u.s. presidents, ceos, architects, engineers. where did i go? tv. >> how about some famous first borns, george w. bush, jimmy carter. >> look at the presidents. >> oprah winfrey. >> she's president of her own network. >> president of the world. >> hillary clinton. >> we are socially adept, excel in relationships. second born. >> go back to the relationships. >> hey. >> how's that working out for you? >> they didn't say romantic relationships. >> curious. >> he's killing on me because i'm an old maid. career choices, entrepreneurs, salespeople and comedians. >> comedians. >> that's you. that's like you. >> well, you know, when you're fifth out of six you get lost in the family. >> you have to stand out.
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>> my brother tommy is a nuclear physicist, first born. >> right. >> my dad, he'd get mad at me and call me tom. susan, mike. whatever the -- >> the right one. >> so i think i got into television to say, hey, i'm here. hey, everybody, look. dr. kevin lehman, guy that we've been interviewing for 30 years, wrote another book about birth order. he was on the show earlier and this is what he had to say. >> one of the reasons why first borns end up smarter on such studies that we just saw again is that the parents have time to read to the child and more attention goes to the first born. they're our natural leaders. they're our u.s. presidents, our architects, engineers. anywhere where math and science is they're the first born. the middle child gets left out. they're entrepreneurs, great mediators, negotiators. babies of the family never met a
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stranger. they're affable, outgoing. >> my little girl, she's the second one in the line. chatty one. she's fearless. my first boy, we probably spent more time with him. >> sure you do. >> you feel guilty. >> another thing you'll find out, i have two daughters. i have a bunch of jessica, the first born and not many of the second born. >> you have no choice. send us in if you agree with this, are first borns more likely to be successful. >> while you're at it, tell us who your favorite kid is. americans not happy with washington, especially with the messy rollout of obama care. will this have a lasting impact on both parties in 2014 selections? chris wallace next. plus, do you have a selfie obsession? taking pictures of yourself like clayton. the extremes people are taking to make yourself look texture perfect. >> look at the cute person in the app. >> who's the cadaver? >> that's me. ♪ ♪
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♪ [ male announcer ] prilosec otc. one pill each morning. 24 hours. zero heartburn. the white house under fire this week as the obama care glitches continue. will kathleen sebelius be able to keep her job? what political fallout can we expect? we have a lot of questions for chris wallace, the host of "fox news sunday" joining us next. >> can i say something from the start? i'm a second born child. >> you read my mind. >> rebellious. >> are you the rebellious one constantly calling out for attention like mike? >> and me. >> not as much as mike but perhaps. >> thanks. >> but you do have your own show right now. hey, chris, so on your show
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you're going to be discussing obama care, of course. this is a really interesting political question this week because republicans -- you look at both parties. when the other party is imploding, having their issues, it's sort of like political textbook, sort of step back and let them deal with it. it's an interesting time for republicans to either jump on this bandwagon attacking what's been going on with obama care or sit back and watch this thing unfold as 2014 approaches. >> i think they can attack, and i think the best way they're doing it is a legitimate congressional function, which is oversight. instead of talking about let's delay, defund, all of that which didn't work so well in the government shutdown, have these hearings. you heard from a lot of the contractors this last week that didn't go particularly well. you know, we found out that there had been no real testing until the final week or so before the launch and it should have been months in advance, and be then this week we're going to get kathleen sebelius, the head
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of health and human services, who at least so far has not covered herself in glory with her various explanations that she doesn't work for the people that are calling for her resignation, her appearance on the jon stewart show. i think don't prejudge, don't make demands, just ask questions because at this point the answers aren't very good. >> what can she say on wednesday? does she have to come out there and say, you know what, it is my fault? >> well, yeah. i mean, she can certainly take responsibility, you know, in the washington way of saying mistakes were made but i didn't make them, and then she's got to just talk about how it's -- look, in the end, none of this matters except is it going to work or is it not going to work? and, you know, if it works, then a lot of the concerns about the website will go away. >> sure. >> we're going to get into what happens even after the website is fixed, however, which it eventually will be. >> right. >> there are still a lot of problems. hundreds of thousands of people are being dropped from their coverage because their existing
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coverage doesn't meet the coverage mandates and a lot of those people may find that they can't keep their doctor, they can't keep their plan as the president promised and the premium is going to be higher. there are a lot of problems even beyond the website. >> big picture, is this going to be affecting the president's legacy? we talked about this at the top of the hour. some of his advisors, former senior advisor has said, you remember the gulf coast oil spill in 2010. everybody said that will be affecting him in 2012. we didn't hear anything about it in the election. what about benghazi, irs, doj. those didn't affect everybody. this does. will this make the difference? >> you know, it's an interesting thing because obviously the republicans took a real hit for the shutdown. i think if this continues to be a problem, people will forget all about the shutdown and this will be a much bigger issue, one, because it's continuing and, secondly, because exactly as you say, anna, it affects people's lives in a way that the shutdown didn't for the vast majority of us. this could be a very big deal.
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remember, it's called obama care. if obama care is a failure, sure it affects the president's legacy. it is his singular accomplishments. >> chris, got to go. we'll be watching. fox news sunday, governor bobby jind yby jindal, who else have? >> a jam packed news fox sunday. great to see you. more "fox & friends" in two minutes. you can always do something better for yourself. and better is so easy with benefiber. fiber that's taste-free, grit-free and dissolves completely. so you can feel free to add it to anything. and feel better about doing it. better it with benefiber. chose prego homestyle alfredo over ragu classic alfredo. prego alfredo?! [ thinking ] why can't all new things be this great? ha ha! whoa! [ monkey squeals ] [ sighs ] [ male announcer ] choose taste. choose prego.
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american islamic forum for democracy and the author for "a battle for the soul of islam." doctor, nice to see you this morning. welcome to the show. why do you think no one is talking about this and how widespread is this? >> thank you, clayton. nice to be with you. i can't tell you how important this is. i think nobody is talking about it because nobody is willing to have the courage to realize that the plight of christians in egypt has disappeared. we've seen over 100 churches in egypt destroyed. christians are caught in the middle. now the christians caught in the middle are being targeted. in kenya, the act at west gate was basically targeting christians. in pakistan, a church was bombed and over 78 were killed. this is the canary in the coal mine. it's the biggest foreign policy issue facing us today is religious freedom and where religious freedom is lost so, too, is lost the freedom for the
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majority p and the islamists are filling in a vacuum in everyone of these countries. where we went to liberate iraqis, christians have disappeared from iraq. unless america wakes up, at best, clayton, we're either asleep at what's going on. at worst i fear we're actually if a silly tarting the ascension of islamists in all of these countries. >> i'm standing here with my mouth open because what you said is frightening. put up a map. this is how widespread this is around the world. you have kenya. you have other examples around the world. all over, iraq, iran, afghanistan, north korea, mali. has the united states responded the way it needs to? has any country stood up and said, enough is enough, and grab the bull by the horns and taken the lead on this? >> well, we've had a few leaders like congressman frank wolf who has put through hr 301 that passed in the house that looked at creating a special envoy and it's still waiting to go through the senate.
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these are the first steps. we have to get the right person appointed, and, remember, the plight of christians as minorities is only one symptom of an underlying ascension of a i global ideology that affects a quarter of the population. if we don't advocate for religious freedom, which is that canary in the coal mine, you'll see this replacement of the asia wakening being lost to the ascension of islamist regimes like iran, saudi arabia where christians can't build a church. now you have underground house churches where they're persecuted. unless we have a president and a state department with the courage to recognize and take sides within the house of islam, that we need to find the muslims that agree with us and make them build coalitions with christians looking for freedom, we'll lose the next century to the ascension of radical islamist. >> powerful words. we appreciate you joining us and putting this in perspective.
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startling new claims this morning about the assassination of jfk. a mobster's family now saying they have direct evidence that he was responsible for the president's death. and this isn't the first time we've heard these claims. then, have you ever felt like your house was d? stick around. steve from "ghost hunters" is here. he's going to show off some of the latest tools to show if your house is haunted. steve from "ghost hunters" coming up. ♪ ♪ ♪
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your shot of the morning. the annual marine corps marathon. 30,000 runners. >> wow. >> pounding the pavement in the nation's capital. it is the third largest marathon in the united states. if i were not here, i would be running. >> you would be doing it, all 26.2 miles. >> yeah, right. i'm sure. mike would be doing it and taking some selfie photos while he's doing it. >> he's selfie obsessed. >> at the starting line and then at the end he'd drive the other 26 miles. >> rosie ruiz pick. >> the selfie. you no he what a selfie is, right? you take your cell phone, do that reverse camera thing, take a picture of yourself. so i work on the show called
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"good day philadelphia" monday through friday. we have a traffic reporter. casey mcdonald. we call her the selfie queen. she's very good at it. we have a picture of her. now i don't mind looking at hersehe her selfies because she's one good looking woman. >> this is her from the 1970s. >> she's going to kill me. >> rather than doing a selfie of himself. >> she's a beautiful woman. she does selfies. she aus using a new app called face tune. this will smooth away wrinkles and give you a softer, warmer glow. all of these selfie tools to make you look better than before. >> the before is on the left. after the air brushing of this app on the right. >> yeah. whenever i take a selfie it's always with one of my kids. actually, i just took one with steve from "ghost hunters" but here's my little girl. they look right at the camera. here's the before shot, scruffy, after a show sunday afternoon watching football.
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now i kind of look like a cadaver. >> it's a cadaver app. >> right. >> look at that. >> you like the first one better, huh? >> she has more glow in her cheeks. >> but yours is a pretty good example how this thing works. you took a picture at the beach and your forehead was shiny. >> and now it was gone. >> this is a selfie you took where? >> somewhere in florida. >> she was wandering around. >> one of the many shoots i've done in florida. that's the before and here's the after. >> so the shiny face is gone. >> you know what, i think my teeth are a little bit whiter in the second one. >> is that possible? >> oh, that's nice. >> looking at the sun? >> on both of you. >> hey, do you -- i just tweeted one out of steve and i from "ghost hunters." >> the problem is you need what's her name. you have to hold it up high. >> above eye level. >> so i did that with steve. you can take a look at it again on twitter. then you don't get the double
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chin. >> yeah. >> you do it down below and you look like you have 30 extra chins. >> i only have two and i don't need them amplified. >> 34 minutes after the hour. hit us up on facebook and twitter. we need to get to some headlines. while you were sleeping, terror attacks in iraq. more than 40 people killed and dozens more injured. bombs were detonated over a half hour period targeting commercial areas, parking lots. this as officials say a suicide bomber also hit a group of soldiers guarding a street in northern iraq killing another 12 people. it's the latest in a series of coordinated attacks in the area. we are now less than a month away from the 50th anniversary of jfk. the family of mobster sam giancana is claiming they have proof he was responsible for kennedy's death. here's giancana's death. here's his nephew explaining to
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geraldo. >> if you look at oswald, we know for a fact that his uncle was a bookie that worked for carlos marcello. we know that for a fact. we know that jack ruby worked for sam giancana. we can connect the two. >> he says that his mob family first helped jfk get elected but when he had the mobsters investigated by the fbi, they organized the assassination then. she made us laugh for decades as a wise cracking school teacher on "the simpsons." >> we have to stay for two extra hours to make up for the time we lost. >> attention, teachers -- long-time tv actress marsha wallace has passed away. she worked on shows like "bob newhart" and "murphy brown" and she was 70 years old. here's one i'd be counting. only ten words make up 25% of
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the english language. that means that one out of every four words you say is probably one of these, the, be, to, of, at, and, a, in, that, have, and i. >> that was great. >> thank you. a new project at oxford university is mapping the entire english language looking for patterns on how we use the language and going a little bit further. the top 100 words make up 50% of our language. >> i think i need a way, the be, to be, have, have not, yogo. >> that was good. >> outside to rick now. see him outside. >> very nice. i've been trying to get everybody out here to do selfies. we got one to do a selfie. she did a selfie with us. you swear you haven't done a selfie but i don't believe you. >> maybe once or twice. >> see, finally. she's admitting here. take a look at your weather maps as you're waking up. shiprock, new mexico. take a look. this is on the navajo
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reservation. that one tree there changing. a little bit of fall all the way down across the high desert into the four corners area. 38 degrees. waiting for the sun to rise. getting down to 68. thank you for that picture, cory. it's awesome. love to see that. the forecast for the northeast. a little bit of lake effect snow and showers starting this morning. it will taper off throughout the day but we'll continue to see cloud cover. temps looking pretty cool. you start to warm up by the time we get to tuesday and wednesday. down to the southeast, we have some heavier rain showers this morning across parts of the deep south. it will taper off. >> send it back to you. >> thanks, rick. the moment i've been waiting for all day. >> yeah. what better way to get into the spirit of halloween than by doing a little ghost hunting. boo. >> nobody! >> i just heard doors open and people walking up the stairs and coming on to this level.
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>> there's nobody friggen here. >> you heard it too. >> i know i did. >> what's going on in this place? >> oh, boy. tv's top pair a normal investigative team "ghost hunters" is in their ninth season. >> here is steve, one of the lead investigators. i've been watching your show since season one. >> that's cool. >> how did you first know that you wanted to be involved in paranormal investigating back in the day? >> i remember being a small child and watching a movie through my mother's fingers because she didn't want me to see it. it scared me quite a bit, but she would say, it's make believe for movies. then at the end it said, based on true events. it kind of scared me, but i quickly realized i needed to figure out exactly what it was. >> are there ghosts? >> i think so, yeah. >> do you believe? >> oh, absolutely. i think you see in the show some remarkable stuff that you guys have uncovered with some -- not only -- i mean, what you've uncovered personally standing there but with some of the
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gadgets. as the tech manager for the show, some cool stuff. >> ten years ago it was hard to get your hands on equipment. people didn't want to open up to. nowadays we have people with ph.d.s, all of these people building equipment for us. it's pretty cool. >> we're a little bit worried that clayton will leave "fox & friends" and join your show. you've brought along a couple of gadgets. i'm shocked how inexpensive they are. >> this is a laser grid. let me try this. >> put it on mike's jacket there. >> there it is. what that does, laser stands for light amplification by stimulated emission of radiation. it's using a little radiation in the atmosphere to pro pole that beam. if anything with mass moves in front of it, it will brighten the beams. >> you have a seismograph. you can see the tapping. >> don't put that in someone's eyes. >> sorry. >> that thing can take a plane down. >> be careful.
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>> yeah. just like a seismograph but in a compact unit for us. >> what will this show us? >> if there's a -- people will claim doors open and close, that people are walking downstairs and if you set that up on the staircase and you can, you know, see it bump up in a walking cadence -- >> there's been a lot of ripoff shows that have come along after you guys. you guys are the best. >> thank you. >> what do you think of the popularity? jason and grant but jason very skeptical. what do you think it is about the popularity of your show versus others and nine seasons? >> yeah. i mean, a few things, i think, helped us. one, sort of being the first show of its kind, you know, sort of helped us propel our field into the public eye. >> yeah. >> and just our methods of investigating, you know, disproving, debunking, using pseudo science. we're not scientists but we try to use a controlled environment and scientific gadgets. >> for the halloween show what
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are you doing? >> cooperstown, new york. investigating a place called hyde hall. it's awesome. i can judge it sort of if things are happening within, you know, the first ten minutes. >> have you sensed anything in the studio here? >> no. >> in the first ten minutes you were here -- >> right around here. >> mike accosted you. that was weird. >> i know. i got attacked. >> steve, thank you so much. we have some surprises for halloween coming up in our 9:00 hour. >> steve, great to meet you. >> thank you. >> say hi to the rest of the team. >> i want to join you on an investigation. >> any time. >> i will. >> please. >> that will be cool. 43 minutes after the hour. this claim is about feminism and women sparking a nationwide debate. >> they're miserable. study after study has shown feminism has made women less happy. they're not happy in the work force. >> feminists are miserable. do you agree? we have two people here to debate that next. and it's the amazing highway rescue everyone talking about. two highway workers save a
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welcome back. now some quick headlines and some sports headlines this morning. the nfl could be expanding pond. commissioner roger goodell is working on putting a team together in all places, london. until then the nfl will have two games in the city this year and three next year. he also wants a team in l.a., too. nascar truck driver darrell wallace jr. makes history as only the second african-american driver to win on nascar's national level. the first in 50 years. he led a race high 59 laps
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saturday in martinsville. this is a story that everybody has been talking about this week. two state troopers save a special needs teen choking on the side of the highway. and you can see it was captured by the troopers' dash cam here. we're joined by the two new jersey troopers here. benevetez. >> did i get close? >> not very close. >> the estrada family. take us back. you're driving around the trenton, new jersey, city. your 13-year-old, julian, has food allergies. i think we'll pull over to mcdonald's and get some nuggets. what happens? >> we decided to pull over to get some nuggets for him before going to a friend's house. we was driving and he is starving so we decide -- i'm going to start feeding him. normally we do this and we have no problems. so anyway, i see him making a
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different noise and i look at him and i tell my husband, try to looking for your right side. i see he's in trouble. >> he has a nugget down his throat and here you jump out of your suv because you don't want to do it in the car. you look like you're panicking there. >> of course. of course. >> why wouldn't you be? >> i was screaming, crying, praying because my husband was trying for i don't know for how long. for me it was a year, trying to help him and nothing happened. >> and then some angels show up in a police car. >> exactly. that's exactly what you see in your right. that's what i see in them. >> you see guardian angels. >> okay. who's doing the heimlich here. >> i am. >> that's you. you're getting on your walkie-talkie to get extra help. >> you knew how to do the heimlich? >> yes, sir. we're trained in first aid, cpr. pretty much instincts came out. >> had you ever done it before? >> no. this was my first time.
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>> whew! so, dad, what are you doing at this point? >> actually, i -- >> right now? >> right now i'm so happy and grateful to have the troopers on the force that, actually, for me, they are a sample or model for every area to follow. >> guardian angels. do you feel that way? >> they are the best thing that we can ever have. >> i don't feel like we're guardian angels or anything, just doing our job out there. happened to be in the right place at the right time. >> do you feel that way, rubin? >> i think any trooper would have done that. any person part of the new jersey state police would have done the same thing, had the same outcome. >> how many times did you have to do the maneuver? >> several times. after the first few times food started coming out and a couple more and a big piece. >> and then out comes the nugget. are you ever going to go get more chicken nuggets.
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>> sit in front of him. >> yes. don't eat in the car. >> no, of course, that's the first -- >> first rule. >> yeah. that's the thing that we really learned. even water. not in a car. thank you so much. >> thanks for your service, too. >> thank you. >> great job. a shocking new claim about feminism and women. they're not happy in the work force. >> do you agree with this? let's talk to these two lovely ladies. feminism, workplace, women. she's always been able to brighten your day. it's just her way. but your erectile dysfunction - that could be a question of blood flow. cialis tadalafil for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment's right. you can be more confident in your ability to be ready. and the same cialis is the only daily ed tablet approved to treat ed and symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently or urgently.
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under fire for making this claim about women and feminism. >> pretend to be men, they're miserable, study after study has shown feminism has made women less happy. they're not happy in the workforce for the most part. 7%, i would guess 7% like not having kids, they want to be ceos. they like staying at the office all night working on a proposal. but by enforcing that as the norm, you're pulling them away from what they naturally want to do and it's making them miserable. >> so does he have a valid point or did he cross the line? here for a fair debate is fox news contributor jedadi bela and kristin haglin. good morning, ladies. >> good morning. >> he's been called the godfather of hipsterdom. at least he was saying there's a real importance of child rearing. i know he's a friend of yours.
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>> i have to help you out, gavin. give me a call next time about strategy. he talks about toughness being inherently male character. i don't like people who say, well, all women are nurturing and all men are tough and this is what you're supposed to be. there is no supposed to be because what that ideology leaves behind is the fact that we're all individuals. we're all people. t so our lifestyle choices, the decisions we make about whether or not we have kids b how we act, i have a very nurturing mom and dad that has nothing to do with the fact that they're nurturing male or female, but they're nurturing people. i think whether women want to be in the works force or not, what role they should play, i don't think that does women a service. treat them as individuals and don't generalize. >> there are miserable people who stay at home and miserable people that are in the works force. >> and i think there's undue expectations like women
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nowadays. i think that's where women have fallen short. equality under the law, yes. vote for women? yes. that was where the feminism movement started. but we need to celebrate the feminism movement and all women need to support one another, whatever a woman's choice is. and i think that's the problem. and he did make a good point and said that society tends to trivialize women that choose to stay at home with children and that is an incredible role for a woman, too, if she wants, to shea shape a life, educate that child, instill that value and carry on forever. that should be celebrated, as well. >> i'll give you the last words quickly. can we have it all? >> i think you can have it all, but you're one person. you can't be in multiple places at the same time. so i think everything at some point, you have to give-and-take. if you want to go to work all day, you have to realize you can't be with your kids all day. maybe we can have it all, but not at the same time is the answer. >> thank you very much. my bill o'reiley interview about killing jesus, that's next.
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hey there, good morning. it is sunday, october 27th, 2013. shocking new allegations about the obama carolout debacle. one congressman says he knows why it was such a mess. >> there was a change order, a major change order that went in literally at the 11th hour before this thing was switched on. and it rendered it absolutely unworkable. >> so what was that change? >> and chilling new details about the attack in benghazi from a man who says he saw it fir firsthand. >> they said why do you have to kill americans, not libyans, so they gave them a good beating. >> so will justice ever be served for the death of our
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ambassador and three other americans? and it's a rendition of the national anthem at the world series that will give you chills. >> god bless america. take a listen to this. ♪ god bless america my home sweet home ♪ >> wow. well, this plus the game changing call at the world series based on a rule you've probably never heard of and the craziest ending to a world series game n perhaps in history. we'll show it to you. fox & friends hour four starts right now. we have a cuteness alert. i was just out in the hall in the green room. we have a halloween parade. these kids are cool. >> oh, i thought you were referring to our last two guests who were on, miss america -- >> oh, gosh.
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>> hey, hey! >> ahh, ahh, hey. >> god bless america. >> we have some cute pumpkin photos, too. >> gosh. >> don't even try it. >> so we've been asking all morning long for everybody having to send in their jack-o-lantern photos. >> i need some help. you don't want to carve them too early because the raccoons will carve them apart. ryan from canada. look at that. that's beautiful. >> it's a maple leaf from canada. >> that's adorabldorable. >> and this came in from dawn. >> nice job. >> i know it's a sunny day out. next time, turn on the light for us. >> oh, hey, abby, those are really nice. see what abby did here? she did a prelit and post lit. really nice job. >> beautifully done. >> i know i've been painting pumpkins lately. >> what year? >> and why? >> i think it was the truman
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administration. you paint right on the guard itself instead of carving it out. >> yesterday we told you some things we didn't know about halloween. but turn yips were the first things they carved back in the day. turn yips. >> turn yips are the only food substance i will not eat. >> that's odd because i've seen you eat everything. >> i know. >> send them here and we'll post them up on our facebook page, as well. new this morning, the operator of the ride that threw people to the ground in a north carolina state fair is under arrest and facing charges this morning. timothy dwayne tutterow is accused of tampering with it. he was operating the vortex ride when witnesses say that ride started to move as people were getting off, sending some of them falling 30 feet to the ground. >> this ride was tampered with after the inspection and that critical safety devices were tampered with and compromised. >> five people were injured and
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three of them remain in the hospital. it's been over a year since the terror attack on the u.s. consulate in benghazi, but survivors present on that day, on the deadly day, have largely remained silent until now. in a new 60 minutes interview set to air tonight, an eyewitness of the attack came forward with some chilly details. >> they said we're here to kill americans, not libyans, so they gave them a good beating. pistol whipped them, beat them with their rifle, and let them go. >> wow, so could this interview inspire others to speak out? brent burton, author of "under fire," the untolory in benghazi. >> the
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inning stretch. >> so that's preceding what was just about to happen. >> i thought that might be the highlight of the whole game, the singing, but then this happened. >> this happened. here you go, allen craig trying to run home, trying to score with two outs in the bottom of the ninth despite being tagged at the plate. but you see what happened there? the third baseman's legs go up. that caused him to be obstructed from running home. watch this. >> come up. >> speed pop up. he tripped. that's an obstruction call. under the rules, if you are obstructed from running to the next base, whatever base you were last on legally you get to advance to the next base for free. they won the game on that. >> had he not tripped, he would have scored. >> perhaps, yeah, presumably he would have scored. also, that weird throw to first -- or third base seemed odd and off place, as well. but that's the rule and i didn't see a lot of people arguing with that. it seemed controversial, but it
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seemed like it was such a great call, upon the replay, it's pretty obvious that it happened. rick, did you stay up and watch that? >> no. i was asleep by like the fifth inning. but now we got to see it this morning. and my twitter did not explode saying people were angry with you. >> they seemed to agree with the call. >> a little bit of rain showers cutting across the boston area this morning. a series of clippers moving across in the northeast, but anywhere from pennsylvania down throughout much of the southeast is looking spectacular. another sunny day. this right here is a disturbance that's moved across texas overnight. brought heavy rain in a few spots up to 4 inches of rain. now heading down through the houston area, in towards beaumont. we'll see these showers spread off towards the east this afternoon. but it could weaken in its intensity throughout the day. no real heavy showers as we go on. the west, you're looking good. that's the next storm on its way to dive down across much of the west coast. we're going to watch some big
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troubles over the next few days. winter storm warnings posted across series of montana. some spots seeing about a foot of snow from there. it will be windy, as well. but most of the snow is going to be across the mountainous areas. not a cold storm, so the snow will be across the higher elevations. great news for the ski areas. temperaturewise for today, looking good across areas of the high plains. tomorrow, those temps drop denver back into the 40s by tomorrow. all right, guys, thanks, rick. >> let's talk about obama care this morning. you heard the words from the president of the united states out on the campaign trail. we heard it repeatedly when he was answering critics. he said look, i know there's a lot of fear out there about whether or not you'll be able to keep your own doctor. i'm here to tell you you can keep your own doctor. it turns out that might not be true and now one senator is proposing a remedy to fix all this. >> that relates to the phrase we awl always hear, if you like your health care plan, you can keep it. if you like your doctor, you can keep it. in fact, that's the name of the
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bill, the act that he's proposing. >> we're talking about ron johnson from wisconsin. and he says he knows this is a product that was made to, you know, more than 300 million americans and almost a million are starting to see this is not the case for them and even more will start to see that. another shocking bit of information, though, that just came out. a congressman is saying that some of these websites problems that we've seen during this rollout of the obama care website with all the hype, sticker shock. listen. >> there was a change order, a major change order that went in literally at the 11th hour before this thing was switched on. and it rendered it absolutely unworkable. and what that change order amounted to was there was no browseble function left in the website. you couldn't go and see what the cost of the plans were without putting in a lot of personal data. it wasn't supposed to work like that and the contractors had to go in and make this change, presumably at the request of secretary sebelius. but why did you not want people
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to see what the actual cost wag was going to be without the subsidy? i have to believe that the rate shock was something that they truly feared. >> so let's pars this a little bit. kathleen sebelius will testify before congress this week and she'll have to answer that question. when a change order goes through, it's not a verbal phone call, hey, let's change this. there has to be a paper trail for this type of manipulation of data. we're going to completely scrap, rework the entire website so people cannot see the rate quotes because they're going to get sticker shock? >> and the contractor can present that data that you're talking about. you see this about two woox brit was rolled out, they have to make this change. >> here is the piece of paper with that change order on it. i have to imagine, if that is true, that question is going to come up during that congressional hearing this week. and that will be shocking. >> i think on wednesday she's going to be testifying. >> i've known kathleen sebelius for a long time. she used to be the governor of the state of kansas.
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i don't think a lot of people knew who she was up until a year ago. but now, she's famous. and you know somebody is famous if they're spoofing you on saturday night live. >> still need gotten? consult healthcare.gov's frequently asked questions for topics like what the hell? how have i been on the same page for three hours? does obama care cover mental health issues caused by using this website? or contact us by mail. just send a postcard with the word help to the u.s. government, attention internet problems, washington, d.c. and in six to eight weeks, you'll receive an informational brochure along with a trial version of encarta encyclopedia, plus 1,000 free hours of aol. just don't install any of these programs while our website is
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running or it will cause an actual fire. >> you're just waiting for the dial up. >> it does sound like something out of the 90s. encarta, aol, dial up service. that is very funny, by the way. you can watch that whole episode on hulu, by the way. and we'll have more on that, coming up. but first, the mastermind behind the 9/11 attacks, pictures of the twin towers burning. now he wants a laptop. why hasn't he been punished yet? and a big surprise at the grand ole opry. which one cutie just got asked one of the bigger questions of her life. and did she say yes? [ male announcer ] even ragu users a.
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united states government to give him a laptop government computer with editing capabilities, this just days after he taunted guards with pictures of the twin towers burning. so why is a terrorist still waiting to pay for his crimes? joining us now to discuss this issue is former u.s. attorney general michael mulcasey. thanks for being here. >> good to be here. >> do we have to give him a laptop? >> there's nothing in the rules that says we have to give him a laptop. the question is whether this is something that will help speed up the trial process or not. a lap stop, frankly, is the least of it. this has been going on for a long time. >> he says he needs it to put together information for the trial. >> he has a lawyer. in fact, he has a team of lawyers. so i suppose he can help them if he wants. but as i say, the laptop is the least of it. >> what is the delay? he has been at gitmo since 2006.
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>> right. >> well, that process started back in '07, '08. and then if you remember, they gave the current attorney general the ball and allowed him to decide to bring him here for trial. he was going to bring him to new york. >> so who had their hands on this, the cia? >> well, the cia initially had their hands on him. in '06, he went to the guantanamo, which is run by the defense department. at that point, after a change in administration, the authority was given to -- for a while, to the attorney general, who said i want to bring him to new york for trial. so they stopped everything at gitmo and they were going to bring him to new york for trial. there was a big uproar. and that ridiculous idea, in my view, was ended and they resumed the gitmo process. >> how should it have been handled? >> it should have been handled at gitmo from the get-go. and without that interruption, it would have been a lot further
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along than it is now. >> do you know anything about these -- some of these other prisoners down there have been given ee readers and video equipment to document how they're being treated. >> that's kind of ridiculous. >> yes. i think that part of the problem is that the -- this is a job that we've given to the military. the military is not cut out for doing this. they do have courts marshalled for military people, but that's not their prime mission. their prime mission is to blow things up. that's not what they're supposed to do. they're not supposed to run a parallel justice system. they are leaning over backwards in order to be fair to these people. >> 2013, 9/11 was in 2001. . >> it's long overdue. >> and how do you explain that? >> well, as i said, the process is ongoing and if the prosecution gets their way, then the jury selection process will
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begin in september of 2014. that's if the prosecution gets their way. >> good to see you. >> good to be here. >> you know our next guest. his new book, already a best seller, bill o'reiley on his book, "killing jesus." that's next. then parents making their children sign a contract in order to get their first cell phone. is this a good idea? is it invasion of the child's privacy? the facebook question of the day, your response is coming up. heart healthy, huh?! ugh! actually progresso's soup has pretty bold flavor. i love bold flavors! i'd love it if you'd open the chute! [ male announcer ] progresso. surprisingly bold flavor for a heart healthy soup.
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a favorite sports team here, $330 million. can you name it? you're looking at it. good and plenty made its first appearance in 1893. anna? >> good & plenty. 23 minutes after the hour this sunday morning, bill o'reiley has been praised and criticized over his best seller, killing jesus. and i got to ask him how he responds to the critics. >> congratulations. we're a month in. how are you feeling about it? >> it's a good book. we're happy this people are
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responding positively. some people don't like it. it's not a holy book so some evangelistic people are mad at me because i don't use the word christ in the book because that connotes messiah. most people like it and they think it's a worthy read. >> 2.2 billion people around the world believe jesus was the christ and the son of god. why do you leave out the words son of god? >> i'm not qualified to write a religious book. i'm just not. we wanted to keep it why jesus was killed, how he was killed and what he accomplished in the last few years of his life. we didn't want to get into the theology about it. i think that was a smart decision. >> i noticed in chapter five when mary and joseph lost track of jesus and that was the first time we hear jesus call himself the son of god is essentially, you decide to leave it out. do you feel like that was the right thing to do? >> well, we didn't leave out that he proclaimed himself to be
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of the father. we put that in. but he's -- >> you go into great detail about how -- >> but he's 12. and under jewish law, he couldn't about the be held accountab accountable. had he been 13, then he would have been tried as an adult for quote/unquote blasphemy. but jesus, at 12, was heavily hinting that he wasn't just here to be a carpenter, that he had other things to do. so, you know, we play it down the line of what we know, what we believe happened, and we back it up. we don't stray into areas might have, could have, should have, no, we don't do that. >> 70% of americans believe jesus is the son of god and they try to follow his teachingses. >> some of them do. not all of them. yeah, you know -- >> but what do you think this book is going to do for that? is it going to test their faith? strengthening their faith this holiday season? >> it depends on your point of
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view. i think that the book is notable for two things. number one, here is a carpenter. a guy who went to work with his father, joseph, on public works. that's how they made their living, who becomes the most famous man in the world. in the world ever in the history of -- >> no pr guy. >> nothing. no infrastructure, no money. how does that happen? how does that happen? and then in the last year of his life, thousands of people were following him around and we know that because rome and the jewish temple authorities had spies that were in the crowds and they reported back. thousands of people were following this carpenter around. why? what was he doing that would drag people away from their daily activities that because they had to work to eat. it wasn't like they had a refrigerator. but thousands of people followed him. so those two questions are so compelling, that you know something extraordinary was happening. and i think that for people of faith, those are two powerful
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points. >> for the 23% of americans, then, who don't believe, is this a book for them, too? >> sure. it's a history book. it ties in julius cesar, cleopatra, the roman occupation, what the rome message was compared to what jesus's message was. you don't have to be a believer to read history, to learn about the times. they were fascinating times. and these people have transcended thousands of years and they're still very well known. so you should know about them. and for nonbelievers, i mean, i think that they should understand how judaea christian traditional formed the united states of america. our constitution is based on it. so all of this -- there's something in this book for everyone, i believe. >> bill o'reiley has been the king of cable news for more than a decade. will you ever quinn one or the other and which one do you like more? >> it depends on the day. being here with anna, this is a good day now for me. >> thank you. >> right. i just don't look ahead that far. i just do my job. i get up, i come to work, do my
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job, i go home. i like both jobs. i like writing and i like broadcasting. we'll see what happens. you never know. >> the book is "killing jesus." bill o'reiley, that you can very much. >> thank you. >> "killing jesus" is expected to be a national geographic special airing next year. he says his next book will be about world war ii. he says be prepared, it's going to be gruesome. thanks for doing that interview with me, bill. coming up, a woman is pick pocketed, but instead of calling the cops on the thief, sher turns to god for what to do. and don't throw those pumpkins out after halloween. use them to cook a meal. some special recipes, straight ahead. twins. i didn't see them cing. i need a new investment pn. i need to rethink the core of my portfolio. ishares core etfs are low-cost funds.
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okay. >> that is my granddaughter, she has the fire person. >> awww. >> and that's her friend, kyle. >> you knis that what they're gt this year? >> i think that's a practice run. not sure what she's going to do thursday night. >> i didn't want to reveal my child's costumes. my son is going to go as clark kent. my little girl is going to go as
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a witch. here is my little girl, ava, out playing with the -- she calls them pemppies. >> and you're going to carve them later today, right? >> yeah. >> today is the big day and i've got a picture from 1989 or something. that's me in the front, holding on to that trick or treat pumpkin for dear life there. >> what are you, a cat? >> i was a cat and that costume was one my grandmother made for my dad. >> by the way, we're going to have a fox & friends parade. this one little kid is going as a baby. >> how creative. >> on the right there, we've got a whole slew, we've got a parade of costume cutis coming up in just a bit. speaking of kids, they're small now, but soon they're going to be wanting the cell phones, right? and every kid has a cell phone now, it seems like. and now a new movement by
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parents to provide contracts, parental contracts to their children when they give them that phone. >> so you lay out a piece of paper to go over the rules of this contract. >> right. >> and then you both sign it. >> it's the same way when you're getting your verizon or your at&t contract and you sign it, i'm going to do this for three years. >> and some people are saying, too, it's an invasion of the kids' privacy. let's take a look at some of them. we will always know the password. >> so the parents will always have the password and access to your phone. >> if you don't, you take the phone away. >> how about this, no contacts of people we do not know. >> i like that one. there's a lot of creepy people out there that try to get kids to meet up with them. a phone bill will show every call and text you make. we know that. the phone will not be allowed in your room after bedtime. >> this is a good one. if it's damaged, you are responsible for the replacement cost for repairs. getting pricey. >> and keep your eyes up and see
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the world happening around you. in other words, don't bury your face in your brain into the phone for most of your life. >> here are some of our great facebook responses that you wrote in this morning. is it an invasion of privacy? kyle writes this. he wants more in the contract. i am the master of your cell phone. >> shawn says this, i would add my parents' calls will be answered and to find my iphone app will always be on. >> that's another good point, use the find my friend feature so you know exactly where they are so if they tell you they're at their friends house and they're not. >> what do you think of karen's response? if you are raising your kids to be responsible adults, you don't need a contract. these conditions should be given. >> john writes, my kids all have the same contracts. cell phones were for high honor roll only. if you dropped off the owner roll, you had to give up your cell phone. >> that's a good one. nan says this.
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the parents pay all the cell phone bills, there is no privacy. let the aclu chomp on that. >> what's the youngest you'd allow your child to have a phone? >> my son is 3. he has one now. my daughter is one. she says pad, pad, and she grabs it out of my wife's hand. she goes, hello? hello? no. i agree. they don't deserve a phone. if they want to get one, they can earn one. >> at least when they start to drive, right? >> i'm going to put a gps tag on their backpack. and i'm a tech guy. they don't need a phone. >> he's not overprotective at all. now to sunday headlines, four teenagers are now under arrest accused of murdersing a world war ii veteran. shawn thorton died two days after being violently attacked and mugged on his mississippi driveway last week. all teenagers are charged with
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murder, conspiracy to commit robbe robbery. a woman was pick pocketed at her local grocery story. jessica eaves knew who the thief was. instead, she offered to pay for his groceries if he would give the wallet back and a deal was made. the mother of four says it it was christian thing to do. tomorrow, she'll join us live to share more of her story. a big surprise at the grand ole opry. mallory hope gets engaged. >> oh, my god. are you serious? you're going to mess my makeup up. >> well, hope said yes after her boyfriend dropped to his knees in the middle of the circle there on the opry stage last night to propose. mallory has performed alongside some big names like cheryl crow, darius rucker. everybody at home, mark your calendar because mallory will be on fox & friends next month.
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>> i want to ask her about that. let's get to rick cruise standing by with the halloween forecast. hi, rick. >> when we think about fall colors, don't you think everybody thinks about the northeast. that's traditional, we have that fall kind of color aura, right? yes? do you agree? >> i agree. >> take a look at this picture from albuquerque. last hour, i showed you a picture from the navajo nation in arizona. take a look at that. that's just to the south of albuquerque, new mexico. spectacular. >> breaking bad country, huh? >> try to erase your memory of breaking bad in albuquerque if that's what your thought of albuquerque is. it also is this, a much nicer, beautiful and serene version of it. 45 degrees as you're wake up, today getting to about 69. today across the northeast, another nice cool fall-like day. temperatures in the 40s and 50s. down to the southeast, the southeast, georgia, carolinas, you're going to be beautiful. we'll see a little bit of rain across louisiana and arkansas.
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into the northern plains, another cool one. but in the high plains, warming up. 70 degrees in north platen. everything changes tomorrow with a big winter storm moving in. it's going to impact us all for halloween. >> that's right. halloween. >> what do you do with your on pumpkins when you're done with it? >> we don't do -- we make those and eat them. but you can do other stuff with your pumpkin. nutritioni nutritionist nicola pace. >> thank you. >> we're going to make some recipes with it. >> thairt. over 208 million pumpkins are thrown away each year. that's at least a pound per person. >> that's a lot of guard nutrition. >> what are these? >> these are pumpkin chips pup you basically take the pumpkin, you have it, you start slicing the flesh. bake it in the oven about 200 degrees for one to two hours and you get these amazing, trendy, healthy snap chips. >> how thick are these sliced?
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about 1/16 of an inch. >> very good. >> next we take the pumpkin flesh, cube it, put it in the oven and you'll get this roasted. these are about 3 1/2 cups of pumpkin flesh and cubes. roasted, it comes out to this amount. >> this seems like butternut squash. >> all in the same family, but certainly different tastes. very, very healthy and indigenous to the u.s. >> i was going to eat some, but after mike put his fingers in there i don't want to -- >> these sores from cleared pup. >> we're going to make this lovely cool weather salad. pumpkin, roasted pumpkin, gore gone zoel la, a big favorite, seasonal cranberries, and the pumpkin seeds roasted, throw it on in there. >> what kind of oil or depression would you use? >> pomegranate vinaigrette that i've made. this is great. this is the gold label stuff. you can use it on meats or fish
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if you want. absolutely delicious. >> that's looking healthy. but maybe more tasty. tell me what you've got here. >> pumpkin cheesecake in a bowl. in other words, it k will keep you down on the portion side while you're at it, you can mix it here. take it, incorporate some vanilla, some honey. >> okay, honey. >> then slowly mix this in with a fork until you incorporate it. so all that energy you're using will help you to expend some of the gallery when he is you're eating that. >> and it turns into this? >> that is it. >> thank you very much. these recipes will be on fox and friends.com. >> those pimp kin chips look amazing. is the main street changing its tune on obama care and its flawed website? >> i mean, they're lying about it now. they're lying about it. they're not even depriving us of
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indiana university says one person is under arrest in connection with an early morning lockdown. university officials confirm ago fight broke out near campus. one suspect pulled a knife .stabbed another person involved. the victim's injuries are not life threatening. italy's mt. etna putting on quite a show.
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the eruption sending ash and lava high into the sky. vrlt no evacuations were necessary. mt. etna is europe's most active volcano. the question this morning, has the mainstream media finally turned on obama care? >> i mean, they're lying about it now. they're lying about it. they're not even depriving us of information. they are outright lying about what's going on. >> because it's been far worse than a glitch. and the problem here is that the administration could get into sort of a credibility death spiral. >> joining us now to discuss this new stance in the media is the host of media buzz here on the fox news channel, howard kurtz and fox news contributor lauren. what took so long? why now? >> well, it's hard to report on a program that hasn't been rolled out yet, although there have been some health beat reporters who have been raising questions about the obama health care law all along.
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but the dramatic news this week, i think stems from two things. one is i think reporters felt misled by some of the rosy scenario comments and second, the inability to get answers to basic questions creates a lot of frustration that drives the media narrative. >> and lauren, it seems to me, and maybe this is me the tech guy thinking it's just like a tangible thing. you can go to a website. it's not just peeg playing politics back and forth. reporters can go to a website and log on and see for themselves. >> and it's a first person's story, which is easy to do. you only have one source and it's yourself. you can go, write about your experiences or even write about the expenses of one reader. and, again, it's one source. you don't have to go to people and talk about statistics, you don't have to go and get a government report to actually tell what the problems are. >> yeah. and it's pretty obvious when you see a reporter sitting there doing it that it's not working. howard, why do you think the media keeps prolonging this story?
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>> well, it's a fiasco of huge dimension. and it is, after all, the president's signature domestic achievement. and i think also it's more now than just a website that doesn't function correctly. the "new york times," washington post and others reporting on how some of the prices are not coming down in rural areas, for example, which had been promised and how people are losing their coverage in some states which goes against the president's promise. so i think those things plus the pop culture when you have comedians knocking it, i think that adds to it, as well. >> we saw last night on "saturday night live" kathleen sa booeg bealus being used. do you think the media has zeroed in on this target here? >> she's a very easy target. someone needs to be held accountable and the media has focused in on her because republicans and even some democrats have said, we need someone to take the fall for this. and my problem with all of this is i think that the
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administration needs to either fire her or support her. and a "new york times" article, she had -- she interviewed her brother and her sister and there was nobody from the administration, really, coming out and supporting her, which tells you a lot. >> it tells you a lot, too. she had to have gotten those orders from somewhere. howard curtz, lauren ashburn, we appreciate you joining us this morning. check out media buzz here on the fox news challenge. coming up here on the show, it's halloween time. you've been waiting for it all morning. live on the plaza, our halloween parade. that's how we end fox & friends this morning. stay with us. ♪ you know, from our 4,000 television commercials. yep, there i am with flo. hoo-hoo! watch it! [chuckles] anyhoo, 3 million people switched to me last year,
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oh, man. well, well, well. as you can see, we have changed. tinman. >> we're not in kansas anymore. >> howdy. clayton's still doing the quick change. >> you've lost your head. >> the scareycrow, but with halloween just around the corner, if you're still in need of costume ideas, fear not. there he is. wide shot. if i only had a brain. >> halloween can be frightening. >> this is supposed to be how it looks? >> okay, joining us now is rosy pope. good morning to you. you look great in your mouse ears. we have a fantastic parade of little kids. mario and luigi. >> this is a great one for twins, siblings who want to look alike, and it's not too involved. >> super mario brothers.
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keep your hat on. >> walk this way. we'll give you candy corn if you walk this way. >> you don't want your hat, luigi? >> start the fire. >> i need a fireman. >> you are the mother guru. >> i was going to say, like, all my kids never want to put their costumes on. they get excited about buying it, and i tell parents not to worry about it. if they don't wear the costume, it doesn't matter. just go out, this is great. i love people, they choose what they want to be when they grow up and wear a local hero. a fun outfit, and fireman is also very popular. >> yeah, your head tilted by the tinman. >> a lovely princess. >> we do. and we're transformed there. often, kids can be timid about actually wearing their halloween costume. a great thing to do is read the
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movie or watch the cartoon before you go out to get them into character. >> let them know who it is. >> yes. watch the movie, read the book, and they get excited. if they come home from school, put on the costume, they don't want to go out. >> who doesn't love disney characters? >> and princes are back. for prinsesses went away, but they're back in full force, and even dogs can be princesses. >> we have tinkerbell. >> come here, optimus prime. hi, buddy. >> next we have captain america. it's sgat to have family outfits for little ones and bigger ones. i tell parents to try to choose warm outfits because it's cold, and outfits like that are great because you can wear a full set of clothes underneath. >> in the middle of the chaos, you're giving good tips.
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i'm impressed with this. >> i put my kids in these outfits and they're so cute, and then it's freezing. >> they come with hats. you can wear clothes underneath, and who doesn't want to be a superhero. >> that's adorable. >> next, we have spidergirl. this is awesome and empowering for women. we're seeing a really big trend in girls dressing as the male characters. putting a girl spin on it. spidergirl is great. >> we have one last one. >> so this is great. this is a full fashion yankees, dogs, baby, and dad. this is a really easy outfit. every dad has some kind of sports jersey in their closet. >> we're going to do more when you come back. right now, "fox & friends" will be right back. ♪ ♪
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they're fantastic for decorating the set. dp did such a great job, and for all our costumes as well. >> and the disney store, too. logon for more of the aftershow show. >> i need to be oiled. the budget battle, government shutdown, and the troubles obama care roll out, all keeping the spotlight on the president's domestic agenda, and now new problems popping up on the foreign policy front with growing concerns among world leaders like germany's angela merkel about reports the u.s. wire tapped her cell phone. now, germany's interior minister is demanding answers. a good sunday morning to you. welcome to america's news headquarters. >> the new fallout from the nsa fine
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