tv FOX and Friends FOX News November 8, 2013 3:00am-6:01am PST
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>> before we go, we want to remind you that monday of course is veterans' day, and i had the opportunity to travel with the southeast florida honor flight to the wao*ld -- world war ii memorial in d.c. and on monday we will show you this emotional trip. very moving. >> "fox & friends" starts now. bye. good morning. it is friday, november 8, 2013. sorry. not sorry. the president issues an apology to the american but doesn't quite go all the way. he says he regrets that some aren't happy. but what about those broken promises? >>sam: so was it really an apology or was it insulting? >> i believe that was more of an insult to me and to other people who have been canceled. >> that is a terminal cancer patient. get this. he voted for president obama. now he's not so happy about that. >> we play it at the start
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of every single day here on fox news channel. it's "the star-spangled banner." turns out it is not patriotic. it is a war anthem and it should be banned. those comments from an espn columnist. we'll determine what planet he's from when we return and start "fox & friends." >> it's "fox & friends." ♪ ♪ ♪ i'm sorry ♪ so sorry ♪ >> did you hear the news? the president says he's sorry that he got caught lying to the american people. dozens of times. i'm just collapsing. >> giving the short court. >> i'm giving people the message. he's sorry he got caught. did you see him with chuck
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todd yesterday? >> even though he didn't intentionally do it at this point they feel misled and you've seen the anger that's out there. >> i regret very much that what we intended to do, which is to make sure that everybody is moving into better plans because they want them as opposed to because they're forced into it that, you know, we weren't as clear as we needed to be in terms of the changes that were taking place. i want to do everything we can to make sure that people are finding themselves in a good position, a better position than they were before this law happened. and i am sorry that they are finding themselves in this situation based on assurances they got from me. >> i'm sorry that you're finding yourself in a situation seems to sound like a distant form of apology. i'm not sorry that the regulations that i put in place put you in that situation is what many want
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to hear. i think keeping a promise is so important to so many of those, particularly those, steve, you alluded to bill elliott, a kelly file fan who wrote into her show on facebook, voted for president obama. i'm not sure that apology is enough without the promise to actually keep that promise. take a listen to this. >> i believe that was more of an insult to me and to other people who have been canceled than him saying 41 times, period. you'll keep your doctor, keep your insurance, period. to me now he's saying like a doctor comes into your operating room and says, look, i cut out your wrong kidney but i'm sorry about that. he misled me. in fact, i voted for him because that fact, you know. governor romney come out with his facts. but when the president come out and said that, you know, you can keep your doctor, keep your
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insurance. i like my doctor, i loved my insurance. >> there is a real-life story of an obama voter that feels burned. listen to what the president calls an apology. >> terminal cancer. >> where he's going to come back now that he tkphots have insurance. you have to wonder if the president really wanted to back up his words, whatever you think he is, parsing his words or being direct, you make the call at your kitchen table. he has the opportunity to change it. mitch mcconnell knows there is something on the docket that will get everybody with the insurance reinstated with their plan. john boehner says there is another one coming from the house. if you have insurance you can keep your insurance. even if you got a rejection letter, we'll pass a law that says you get to keep it. joe manchin has something similar where you can keep it if you want it. if the president really feels bad about being burned, those people out there, the 3.75 -- as of now, 3.75 million lost their insurance. if he wants to change it,
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he could change it and he could get all back on the right side with those people. >> brian kilmeade, you are absolutely right. if the president was serious about -- in fact, ted cruz on his facebook wrote, mr. president, if you're really sorry, we need a hash tag full repeal. you're right. however, according to the "wall street journal," white house officials say when he's talking about fixes, he's talking about administration fixes. no new laws. >> he keeps changing his law which is unconstitutional. he's going into a law that barely passed and changing it on the fly. >> most times when people say they're sorry, there is nothing they can do. you can't put it back together. there is an opportunity here to go back, press a reset button and do it properly for the american people especially since you're feeling the burn now. the president said this. >> having said that, given that i've been burned already with a website --
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more importantly the american people have been burned by a website that's been dysfunctional. >> so he got burned? he still has his health insurance. it's extraordinary. chuck todd also asked the president if he had confidence in kathleen sebelius and the president had an answer, but he did not answer mr. tood's question. >> i think he said i think she would be the first to admit if we had to do it all over again she would be the first one to ask how things are working. >> he did not answer whether he has confidence for kathleen sebelius who has taken responsibility for the stinkin' website but with this particular catastrophe, with the computers -- >> if i thought my signature plan was rolling out, i wouldn't be golfing the sunday before. i would just sit there and go can we run through a test run here before i get on my polo shirt and go outside.
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>> the past isn't looking good for anybody, including the president. i >>heather: at this point for the benefit of those -- >> i hope for the benefit of those like bill elliott and those in danger of losing their policy something is done. still on the site as of this morning, i'm not sure if this was put on there again to say we are keeping it. this type we -- this time we are going to keep our promise. if you like your plan, you can keep it. >> it's still up there. >> the period is there again. >> the commander in chief, our president, said that he's sorry that people are losing their insurance because of his policy and yet it's still right there. by the way, the great state of delaware, which is joe biden's home state when he's not living at the naval observatory in washington, d.c., they have spent $4 million signing up people for the affordable care act. four million. they have signed up four people. so far that's $1 million a
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person. we did the math earlier, and we think this is right. the goal is to sign -- there are 30 million americans who are not covered. if they were to sign up every one of those, 30 million, a million a person, isn't that $30 trillion? >> at the rate they're going, that's scary math right now. >> it was me and brian tully sitting in the pod. and he looks over and he goes, brian, do the math. like i'm not capable of doing the math. you never ask me anything to do the math. >> when was the last time i asked you to do my taxes? >> long time ago. >> how did that turn out? >> not good. >> any way, the president said he is sorry, but after he -- many people feel he lied to us for close to three times or more than that, a lot of people don't believe him. do you believe him? is he really sorry? please e-mail us, or go on
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our facebook "fox & friends" or twitter us at "fox & friends." >> here's news for you. heather nauert, you have headlines for us. >> brian, i know why he didn't ask you to do the math. he knew how tired you were. you were here working all night long. >> i promised to clean the offices. i had a chance to do lou dobbs' show last night. >> and the book. busy with that. awesome. got headlines to bring you. we begin right now with an extreme weather alert. one of the most powerful storms ever recorded is slamming the philippines at this hour. forecasters are warning of potential catastrophic damage. pacific storm haiyan is classified as a super typhoon. winds approaching -- listen to this -- 200 miles per hour. at least four people are dead that we know of and 720,000 of them had to be
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evacuated. some of them are already living in makeshift shelters because there was a massive earthquake there last month. trees are down, power's out and there's widespread flooding in the hardest hit areas. we will keep watching this throughout morning. >> a couple in new jersey lucky to be alive this morning after their home exploded. take a look at this video. their house was completely blown to pieces. neighbors heard a blast and rushed in to save that family. >> the only thi do, i tossed a couple boards out the way, pulled out some insulation and then black smoke got really intense. i can sneeze it out right now. and just pulled her out. >> that couple suffering serious burns. no one else was hurt. gas lines were recently installed in that neighborhood but utility crews are saying as of now there is no sign of a gas leak. food stamp recipients
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went on a shopping frenzy at a wal-mart and other stores across louisiana could lose benefits altogether. there was a glitch in the system and allowed people to spend more than their balance on their card. the governor is saying anyone who spent money they didn't have will lose their food stamp benefits. no word on how many people that will affect or for how long. a heart warming rue union in utah. a navy commander spraoeugs four of his children -- a navy commander surprising four of his children at school. >> i'm home. >> tony ericsson had been serving in the navy since 1988, deployed in afghanistan for the past seven months. after this emotional reunion, the two went on to surprise his daughter. that wasn't captured on camera. after that ericsson headed to the high school to see his older kids. it's great to see a teenager embrace their parents like that. you don't always see that.
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>> thank you, heather. >> come take a look at this. a propane tank explodes on the driver of that -- >> my goodness. >> what happens next? look closely. incredibly, he walks away. look at this. he walks right away. >> oh man, he's smoking. we have more on his story coming up. the gold rush is over. shocking new stats on the nation's two biggest states. california sinking. texas thriving. what's the difference? find out next. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] you'll only find advil,
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and even stay on the line until help arrives. 1 out of every 3 people over 65 will fall this year. adt helps you maintain your independence starting at just over $1 a day. call now to receive free activation and a free guide to living alone. i'm glad adt could call for help. so am i. [ male announcer ] protect your independence. call today for more information and ask about special discounts for aarp members. adt. always there. they're printing money again this morning. the census bureau's new measure of poverty in the united states has just been released and what the numbers say for the two biggest states is shocking.
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>> especially how they're different. california has the highest poverty rate at 23.8% while texas rate declined to 16%. what does that mean? what can we take from those stats? >> let's talk to somebody who's lived in both states. the vice president for the policy -- rather for policy at the texas public policy foundation. he is also a former california lawmakers and author of "the texas model book." thank you for joining us today. >> thank you for having me. >> we're going to put up another graphic that shows folks the highest taxes in america at the state level. california is fourth. texas is 45th. the conventional wisdom would be if you're paying higher taxes, you would have lower poverty in that state but it's exactly the opposite. >> it is exactly the opposite. in fact, what we're seeing with this new poverty measure that looks into both the cost of living and the value of government services as well as taxes is we're seeing
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proportionately california has 45% more people in poverty than does texas and at the same time they tax 42% more of their state's income than does texas. >> chuck, the obvious conclusion would be when the taxes get high, the taxpayers go somewhere else? the achievers decide i worked hard for my money. i'd like to keep it and give it to the people i want and buy the things i need. >> absolutely. it's not just the taxes. it's the red tape. it's the regulation. what we see in california, california is kind of the blueprint for the future course of america. if you look at where america is heading now, it's epitomized by california. texas offers an alternative model, a model of freedom and liberty. and i think this is pointed out by the fact that other interesting statistics that in 2011 for the first time in history the per capita output of texans surpass that of california and it
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grew in 2012. in other words, texans are now more productive in producing goods and services than california, and california has hollywood and silicon valley. i mean, something isn't working in california, and it's big government. >> well, they may have silicon valley and they may have hollywood but they've got higher taxes and they've got higher poverty. no wonder so many people are going to texas, including you. >> exactly. the number-one destination state for california to leave is texas. >> why would they hire and elect governor brown? he's not as liberal as he once was but he's a liberal guy. >> well, the sad thing for california is that relative to the folks in the legislature, governor brown is somewhat of a moderate. but california really needs to change its direction. in fact, governor brown was commenting on this poverty report and said just yesterday that, well, we have high poverty because california is so attractive and so many people want to move here.
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we're a magnet state. if you look at the census date it's the opposite. california is losing hundreds of thousands of people who are moving out of california and moving to places like texas where you have lower taxes, less red tape and more liberty. >> california should be taking that money and helping those people get jobs and it's not working. chuck devore, thank you. he's at the texas public policy foundation. thank you, sir. >> the reason why all these multimillion-dollar athletes go to florida or go to texas. they want to keep their money. 19 after the hour. the cure for cancer could be hiding inside your body. the breakthrough of that scene that might mean miracles for millions of people out there. that story next. >> more trouble for the mayor of toronto. this guy is crazy. caught on camera going completely nuts. his excuse? drunk again.
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got quick friday morning headlines. mike wave popcorn, fried chicken and ready-bake cookies could be on the chopping block as the f.d.a. puts a ban on trans fat. officials say the move could prevent 20,000 heart attacks a year and 7,000 deaths. the u.s. ambassador to the united nations is not wasting her diplomatic skills on vietnam vets. during a speech in new york
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city she praised jane fonda for being outspoken in her antiwar beliefs. she posed with enemy soldiers during the war on a tank and nicknamed herself hanoi jane. >> there is a vaccine being tested that could revolutionize cancer treatment and it uses your own immune system to do it. dr. marc siegel from our medical a team has details. this is something, you must think it can't be true. a vaccine to treat cancer. how? >> it is the wave of the future. it used to be that we poison the cancer and the side effects we get from traditional chemotherapy and radiation is because when you poison the cancer you also poison the body. now for the very first time in what's called the cancer vaccine they are taking a piece of the tumor out of the body and using it to provoke an immune response,
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antibody response. they make the cancer out to be an infection and your body fights off the infection. let's have a look at the head of the brain center using it against brain cancer. >> ultimately we would like to find a cure for this and other types of cancer but now this seems to be our best weapon to make this a more chronic disease that you can live with this tumor and not die from it. >> doctor, i keep hearing this and i'm thinking what a breakthrough. every type of cancer can be treated with this or not? are there some that will not work. >> it's called d.c. vacs and being used in solid cancers in stage 1 and 2 trials. testing at 48 centers across the country and thousands of patients and actually for brain cancer they have extended the life of brain cancer patients almost double to like three years, which is almost unheard of. in thyroid cancer, we interviewed one of the thyroid cancer survivors
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who said he did better with this vaccine with minimal side effects than traditional treatments for colon cancer. let's watch. >> if it happens again i will go with the vaccine, every reason in the world to say that is the future and it's better for me. it will be better for millions of other cancer sufferers. >> the millions of other cancer sufferers, when will this be available? >> they're all going to ask us that this morning. i think there are stage 3 trials and almost out there, i would say within a year or two you're going to see this. you should ask your doctor about it. this is a very exciting advance on the road to minimal side effects. another arrow in the medical treatment quiver. >> great information. next on the rundown, we play it every friday on the fox news channel, turns out it's not patriotic. it's a war anthem and it should be banned. those comments from a pant coming your way.
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talk about the greatness of america. the spirit of liberty foundation's mission is to share liberty with the united states. their newest endeavor is to show support for those who have served in the armed forces and everybody else across the country can join them by ringing this grand bell. here to explain, we've got our friend richard rossnick from the spirit of liberty foundation. good morning. this is a new bell that was cast this year; right? >> we drew this on a napkin on may 15 and just a few weeks later on june 6, the 69th anniversary of d day this was cast. and in this bell is steel from the world trade center from 9/11. >> it's symbolic. >> what do you mean you drew it on a napkin? >> i literally was at dinner. we were saying what can we do to honor the men and women in the armed forces and i said let's put the official seals of each
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branch of the armed forces. we wrote on the napkin that night honoring our armed forces past, present and future. >> it's beautiful. gary, where is the freedom bell go from here? >> from here valley forge, also tpefl -- also to philadelphia and then after that to arlington national cemetery. >> what are you doing with the bell at each stop? >> the dignitaries in the state will ring it but it is available to the public. we want everyone in america -- after veterans day it will be flown to honolulu for december 7. we're going to ring it for every single person who lost their life there. then it will return here and begin a national tour. our goal -- and this is very sensitive -- is to take it to the united states capitol and literally challenge the members of congress to do something in unity, have every single one of them come out and ring it. do you agree? >> absolutely.
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i understand you would like me to ring it for somebody in my family who served in the military. >> yes, we wofplt >> i've got two rings. the first jim doocy, u.s. army, my father. [bell tolls] >> and for my uncle phil, phil doocy in iowa, u.s. marine corps. [bell tolls] >> i should mention on veterans day from 10:30 until 12:30 the bell will be silent in the cemetery. >> on 11/11. great to have you. richard and gary, thank you. very, very nice. do you have a website? >> we do. spiritoflibertyfoundation .c om. do we have one more minute? >> seconds. >> where's our product? we're doing something nobody has ever done before. we've created a company that will employ wounded
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warriors and the profits go to wounded warriors. our model is what paul newman did. we're going to employ over 250 within a few months. >> that's fantastic. >> smooth and spicy. >> very nice. guys thank you very much. back inside. >> we've got more information on that on their website. 26 minutes before the top of the hour. >> heather has headlines. what about the sound of that freedom ring? >> so simple but means so much. really beautiful and profound. got headlines to bring you. we told you a lot about this story. just days after the mayor of toronto rob ford admitted to smoking crack cocaine in a secretly taped video, he is now caught on camera in a drunken tirade. take a look at this. [bleep] >> obviously that was extremely, extremely
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inebriated. that's all i have to say. >> well, that's a tiny snippet of the video. you get a better sense of it here. footage shows him staggering around and he makes violent threats about some unknown person. toronto city council filed an unprecedented motion that could remove the mayor from office if he does not take a leave of absence. check out this video coming out of ohio. a forklift driver lucky to be alive this morning, this after a propane tank he's carrying explodes. witnesses say the tank fell off of his forklift. >> it does not appear that they were secured or tightened. it didn't look like they were. and it looked as if maybe one bounced off. when he came into the driveway. and then he drove over it. >> it seemed like he got a little singed and maybe a little tan and he's on his way. >> the man was treated for burns on his hands and his face. his wife says he's now
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resting comfortably at home. lucky to be alive. should "the star-spangled banner" be played -- or should it be banned at football games? there is one espn analyst who says no. he makes a shocking attack on patriotism. take a listen to this. >> you sell this, you should be selling the rest of them, military, symbolism whether it's the singing of a war anthem to open every game, whether it's going to get a hot dog and being able to sign up for the army at the same time, whr-s the nfl embrace of the pat tilman story. it's been going on in sports since the first national anthem was played in the world series in 1917. >> that is sports journalist kevin blackstone. he made the comments during espn's show around the horn on wednesday. the guests were talking about northwestern university's wounded warrior project.
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blackstone took issue with that saying he has a problem with military symbolism in sports. there are obvious dangers when it comes to bowling. throwing the ball backwards, dropping it on your foot and apparently this. [inaudible] >> it turns out showing off in tpropbtd -- in front of your friend doesn't always work in your favor. >> that wasn't a gutter ball. that was more of a rafter ball. >> how do you even do that? >> he must have a big thumb. >> was there a hook in it or something? >> stuck. lousy release. >> probably a little heavy. >> yesterday in our meeting after the program, maria molina brought to our attention the fact that we could be over in the philippines witnessing one of the biggest storms in history.
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>> a super typhoon? >> a super typhoon. it is essentially the same exact thing of what a hurricane is. hurricanes across parts of the atlantic ocean. a super typhoon is the equivalent of a category 5 hurricane. incredible images coming out of the philippines. catastrophic damage is forecast out here and the storm still does have maximum sustained wind of about 165 miles per hour. it is estimated that when it did make landfall yesterday across the philippines our time -- actually it made landfall friday in the philippines their time it had wind of about 190 miles per hour sustained stronger gusts than that. estimated to be at about 230 miles an hour. an incredible storm system. we have had other storms in our history that have had winds of comparable strength. the difference is this storm had that strength when it made landfall. other storms like hurricane katrina did weaken before making landfall at least compared to the strength we
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have on the screen for you. otherwise hurricanes, cyclones, typhoons the same thing occurring in different parts of the world. right now maximum sustained wind of 165 miles per hour still lashing the central philippines with a lot of heavy rain. looking at over a foot of rain expected in these areas. >> our thoughts and prayers are with them. >> absolutely. they had an earthquake this year? >> about a month ago. many people were not living in their homes. they were displaced and had to be evacuated. i believe over 700,000 people evacuated. >> a one-two punch. keep us posted. 20 minutes before the hour. it's never boring here on "fox & friends." >> you don't believe us? well, luckily we can prove it, and we're going to do that, i believe, right now. >> that's right. we're going to check out our best moments from the week that was. >> best moments. ♪ ♪
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>> we are huddled together. >> so trustworthy that he became chief of the long island sound. >> that's better. >> fantastic. >> what's the matter? >> how do you write on a yoga ball. you need form i ca. >> it says it helps the kids focus, gives them a place to put their energy. kicking off "fox & friends" dog week. >> i thought this whole time you had a dog sitting to your left. >> where i come from we wouldn't feel it.
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we would tip it over. >> if you like your doctor, we'll pretend to be your doctor. >> that's right. >> we will not probe you. >> thanks for the interesting fact this morning. >> it's no science quiz. it will have to do. >> how long has it been in the bottom of your purse? >> probably since last fall. >> here we go. >> look at this. >> the guiness record was 14 seconds. your time was 48 seconds. >> i really was proud of myself. >> 3, 2, 1, go. go get'em, elisabeth. >> that's the last we saw of her. who did that? >> give me the pillow. >> just turn that off. that's it. >> what was that?
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>> i can't really talk about that. we had a pillow fight yesterday. you missed a little, you missed a lot. >> there was a pillow there. you were talking about making a bed and i happened to chuck one at you. >> she threw it first. >> been a fun week. next on the rundown, hate having the flu? the cure could be in a simple drink. >> she's got six members of her family serving our country. how one military mom is inspiring our troops overseas and here at home with these bracelets and scarves. that story straight ahead. ♪ ♪ i'm beth... ♪
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time for quick headlines. a probiotic drink may help you avoid the flu. the key ingredient is found in a japanese pickled turnip. when the drink was tested on mice it helped their immune system create more flu-fighting antibodies. tomorrow night fox news is taking a look at the jfk assassination. the f.b.i. investigation and the warren commission findings, 50 years of questions. the jfk assassination tomorrow at 9 right here on fox news. brian? >> she has a son and three nephews and two nieces serving in the military and a discussion at a family reunion has grown into a unique way to honor, inspire and protect our troops on the battle field while raising money for our wounded heroes. are you curious? let's find out organization battle saints creates bracelets featuring the scarves with proceeds
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going to help people with brain injuries. welcome, both of you, welcome back. tell me what you have in your hand and the significance of this. >> i have the battle faith bracelet. around the reunion we heard stories of war and close calls and close friend. as a family, we believe red, white and blue. so we decided to create a brace hr-t unique to the military -- bracelet unique to the military. they are all pictures of saints relative to the military. saint barbara protects those who work with explosives, so important in the current conflict. recently the scarves. the way to make this work is we knew we wanted to do something to help our soldiers make a difference, find a place for them to heal when they came home. we partnered with the
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intrepid fallen heroes home and bill white. when you wear a scarf you're helping save a life. >> you said there's something magical about wearing the battle saint bracelets. >> we heard stories that literally they feel it's protected them from being blown up from an i.e.d. explosion from saint barbara or any of the saints on here keep them safe. it is a feeling of support and safety. when you're out there in the middle of a dangerous war zone having that faith and something that will protect you is important. >> $5 for the bracelet. $15 for the scarf. the money goes to? >> the intrepid fallen heroes fund. >> men and women coming home with post traumatic stress and brain injuries. we are building nine post
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traumatic stress centers, a $100 million project. we're almost halfway through. we just on fox had a big fund and they raised millions of dollars going up for the center at fort campbell. >> your son is recovering from ptsd? >> he is. he is doing well. i don't think anyone who goes through combat comes back unchanged. to have the resources to be able to help is what matters. >> great thing. great thing you're doing. thanks so much for the bracelet. veterans day, we've got to get over $100,000. the fund is? >> battlesaint.com. >> on fox on monday the veterans day parade in new york is going to be live. thank you roger ailes and rupert murdoch for your support of our veterans. >> thanks so much. 11 minutes before the top of the hour.
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country's biggest night takes a jab at the obamacare rollout less. a country legend is here next. ♪ ♪ [ woman 1 ] why do i cook? ♪ to share with family. [ woman 2 ] to carry on traditions. [ woman 3 ] to come together even when we're apart. [ male announcer ] in stuffing, mashed potatoes, gravy and more, swanson makes holiday dishes delicious. the #1 selling pain reliever, in one cold medicine. advil congestion relief. it delivers a one-two punch at pain and sinus pressure with the power of advil and a nasal decongestant in a single pill. advil congestion relief.
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dawn ♪ >> that is so catchy. joining us now from nashville with reaction, country music legend larry gatlin. good morning to you. >> good morning, kids. how y'all doing is this. >> terrific. we loved what they did. you know what? what country music did, you would never see open the oscars, would you is this. >> you know, it will be a cold day in hell before that -- i thought they were great. the satire, they pulled it offment it was worthy of "saturday night live," poking a live fun at it. i thought they were fabulous. >> i always thought country music beats in the heart of every american. why do you think they chose to take this issue on on such a big night? >> it's the issue of our day. i have a theory. i told people before it was either plato or johnny cash or cocrates who said take me not to
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those who write your laws, for they will lie, take me to those who write your songs, for they will not. actually i made it up myself. you can take any ten-year period in american history and find out more accurately what was happening in america by listening to the songs than you can by listening to the politicians or those who write history 'cause they're always tilted one way or the overt the song writers are -- the other. the song writers always tell the truth. that was our audience. we know the demographic of our audience, the folks who watch fox are mostly conservative. i thought it was cute. >> it was. >> i agree with them. >> country human being is so -- music is so hot now. every day it gets hotter. there were a lot of celebrities at the cmas more than ever. they were sitting there hoping they wouldn't be on camera. the country music men and women were losing it and the everyday person was laughing. it showed where we are as a
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country in my small mind. >> i believe so, too. country music is world wide. it's now the pop music. it's now the top 40 music of america and of the world. they're playing the sound track of the world, country music. i don't do it in shows. when we do a concert, we don't beat anybody over the head. >> you got 30 seconds. i see guitar there. >> i'm ready. shear what it says. -- here is what it says. ♪ no offense intended but we're smarter than you ♪ ♪ we went to harvard, precinctston and yale and you went to tcu ♪ ♪ we know how to get this country back on track ♪ ♪ we're gonna go to the whip on everybody's back ♪ ♪ we're gonna put a tax on everything standing still ♪ ♪ everything that moves ♪ the beatings will improve until morale improves ♪ >> wow. very nice. >> have a nice day, children. >> your serve, mr. president.
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>> thank you for joining us from nashville. >> god bless. >> god bless you. >> thanks. >> straight ahead, the president of the united states apologizes, kind of. we got details straight ahead. [ female announcer ] it's a grand gesture that isn't the least bit over thtop. it's thoughtful, considerate, well-planned. it's the best gift ever. nothing says "happy holidays" like the photos y love. create your personalized photo gifts on shutterfly.com. create your personalized photo gifts [ female announcer ] some people like to pretend a flood could never happen to them. and that their homeowners insurance protects them. [ thunder crashes ] it doesn't. stop pretending.
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but with less energy, moodiness, and a low sex drive,y first. i saw my doctor. a blood test showed it was low testosterone, not age. we talked about axiron. the only underarm low t treatment that can restore t levels to rmal in about 2 weeks in most men. axiron is not for use in women or anyone younger than8 or men with prostate or breast caer. and children should avoido are contact where axiron is applied as unexpected signs of puber in children or changes in body hair or increased acne in women may occur. report these symptoms to your doctor. tell your doctor about all medical conditions and medication serious side effects could include increased risk decreased sperm count; ankle, feet or body swelling; enlarged or painful breasts; problems breathing while eeping; and blood clots in the legs.
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common side effects include skin redss or irritation where applied, increased red blood cell count, headache, diarrhea, vomiting and increase in psa. ask your doctor about axiron. good morning. today is friday, november 8, 2013. i'm elisabeth hasselbeck. the president issuing a carefully worded apology for the botched obamacare rollout and admitting he got burned. >> having said that, given that i've been burned already with a web site -- well, importantly, the american people have been burned by a web site that has been dysfunctional. >> what about all the americans who lost their insurance? talk about burned. >> the mayor of toronto in more trouble this morning. caught on camera going completely -- he gets in more trouble and it's worse, you know it's bad. he goes completely berserk. his excuse is classic.
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>> does that guy still have a job? >> they can't fire him. >> yeah, i know. running late for work? this morning, it's official. you can now blame obamacare for that. we're going to explain. we have that and so much more, hour two for this friday. "fox & friends" live from new york city starts right now. ♪ >> thank you, elton. setting it up. >> good morning, everybody. >> president of the united states yesterday went on to nbc and after -- many people say he lied to the american people, dozens, if not hundreds of time, thousands when you count his men and women out there pushing his affordable care act, he finally apologized, kind of, for people
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losing insurance. we're going to play this for you and then we've got lots to talk about. >> even if he didn't intentional three it, but at this point, they feel misled and you've seen the anger that's out there. >> i regret very much that what we intended to do, which is to make sure that everybody is moving into better plans because they want them as opposed to they've been forced into it, that we weren't as clear as we needed to be in terms of the changes that were taking place. and i want to do everything we can to make sure that people are finding themselves in a good position, a better position than they were before this law happened. and i am sorry that they are finding themselves in this situation based on assurances they got from me. >> what do you think? >> i think someone being sorry because of your actions that made it possible for them to be
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there should be a more simple apology. certainly that's just my opinion. >> by the way -- >> it was not compared to those that are truly suffering. did you guys see the kelly file fan, bill elliott, terminal cancer patient. actually an obama supporter, voted for him. he should be asked how he feels. i'm not sure an apology that he heard last night would qualify as enough. listen to this. >> i believe that was more of a insult to me and to all the people who have been canceled than him saying 41 times that, period. you will keep your doctor and keep your insurance, period. to me now he's saying like a doctor comes into the operating room and says look, i cut out the wrong kidney, but i'm sorry about that. he misled me because, in fact, i voted for him because that fact, you know. governor romney come out with his side.
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but when the president come out and said you keep your insurance -- i like my doctor. i loved my insurance. >> if the president is truly sorry and wants to win bill over, he has an opportunity. speaker boehner brought it up. if the president's apology is sincere, if he is sincere, in the house we will vote next week to allow anyone with a health care plan, they'd like to keep it. if they were canceled, reinstate it. if the president is sincerely sorry that they misled the american people, the very least he can do is support that bipartisan effort. so mr. president, you laid the groundwork. prove your sincerity. >> is the president watching right now? are you talking to the president? >> i think i might be. >> it's so cool. >> i sense he's there. >> i'm sensing elisabeth was picking up when we played that sort of apology where you were picking up this sort of essentially saying, i'm sorry, people, believe me when i said i was gog do something like this where you could keep your health care. i'm sorry that people believed
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me and i feel bad about that. what's interesting is why is he apologizing now for people losing those policies? last were lousy policies and they shouldn't have them anywhere. what's interesting is how often does the president of the united states apologize? >> not since tom daschle health and human services secretary was named -- >> i don't think they apologized for that. >> you would think the "new york times" would have the apology on page 1 above the foal, right? no. >> come on, below the fold? >> no. not there. >> if you got to the "new york post" right there at the top, oh, so sorry. >> big moment. when we're at home and not to oversimplify it all. >> when we're at home, we always try to make it better. there is an opportunity for the president to make it better for the american people. both democrats and republicans
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want to help you do just that. i hope that he takes the opportunity, given all that he has in terms of power, to do that and make it better. >> the big problem was the rollout. now that we have the plan, we're getting it in drips and drabs. it's been a disaster for 3.75 people who lost their plan. 5% of the population, 5% of the people. but the president says about the web site, he got burned. i mean, you got burned. listen. >> having said that, given that i've been burned already with a web site -- well, more importantly, the american people have been burned by a web site that has been dysfunctional. >> the president got burned? now he's playing the victim card? >> sure. >> kind of sounded like it. >> there is a difference between a reputation getting burned and your legacy and then your actual healthcare, health policy finances and security about the health of your entire family. those are two different things. >> here we go. the president says i'm sorry we weren't clear enough in saying what the policy and the program
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is about. so he has an opportunity to reinstate everybody who lost their plan. so game on, mr. president. >> he's not gonna. >> the other thing he said is i'm sorry you weren't clear. if you really want to be clear action can you adjust your web site? 'cause if you read your web site, the 3.75 million who lost their plan still don't understand why they don't have it because it says this: if you like your plan, you can keep it. and you don't have to change a thing due to healthcare law, closed quote. >> there is a period there, too. >> but he usually says period in this speech. >> you would think if the president of the united states issues that kind of apology yesterday on television, you would think a it would be reflected on the affordable care act web site, but it was not. we'd like to query our audience. what do you think of the president's apology? >> steve, i was on facebook before. i couldn't find anyone who thought okay. all forgiven. most people aren't buying it and they think the worst is yet to come. >> they want some action and they want it to be done as soon as possible. big reset button.
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>> e-mail us. do you think he's really sorry about the people who lost their insurance or is he sorry that he got caught or what? e-mail us or facebook us. >> we have an extreme weather alert. we were talking about this last hour. one of the most powerful storms ever recorded is slamming the philippines right now. forecasters warning of the potential for catastrophic damage. david piper got the short straw. he's in bangkok. hey, david. >> reporter: good morning, everybody. yes. this is truly a massive typhoon. it swept in from the western pacific to hit the philippines a few hours ago. packing winds of 195 miles per hour, i believe. the typhoon is so large, it covers the philippines and can easily be seen from space. it's the equivalent of a category 5 hurricane. millions of people had to seek shelter. officials say three people have died, but there are fears that could rise because many places hit can't be contacted as phone
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lines are down. it's being reported that some buildings have collapsed, including a hotel. the philippine authorities say around 12 million people are adrift from the storm. the central philippines is the worst affected. the country's second largest city hit by hard rain and winds. they were just recovering from a powerful earthquake last month. back to you guys. >> david, thank you for that update. certainly listen for more soon. >> that is a gigantic storm. >> i don't know how you report from it. >> you can't. that's why he's in bangkok. >> safe place. heather nauert is here for the rest of the headlines. >> imagine some of those winds, up to 200 miles per hour. maria has been talking about the heaviest sustained winds. >> off the chart. >> unbelievable. hope everybody is okay. got other news to bring you. a couple of new jersey lucky to be alive after their home exploded. take a look at this video. you can see that their house was
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virtually blown to pieces. neighbors heard a blast and luckily able to rush in and save the family. >> the only thing i had to do, i tossed a couple boards out of the way, pulled out insulation and then black smoke. just got really intense. like i can sneeze it out right now. just pulled her out. >> imagine that anyone survived that. the husband and the wife both suffered serious burns. no one else was hurt. new gas lines were recently installed in the neighborhood, but utility crews are saying there was no sign of a gas leak. a dramatic rescue to tell you about. stranded hiker on the cliffs in los angeles. city helicopter crews swooping in to save the guy. the hiker left with only minor injuries. food stamp recipients, they went on a massive shopping spree at a wal-mart and other stores in louisiana last month. they could now lose their benefits all together. there was a glitch in the ebt
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system at the time and it allowed people to spend more than the balance on their cards. that led to a real frenzy in the store. the governor's office now says that anyone who spent money that they didn't have on their card will lose their food stamps. no word on how many people that will affect or for how long. love this story. caution, obamacare accident ahead. there was a contractor at the north carolina department of transportation and this guy sadly is out of a job today. he sent six bogus tax pollers and said accident ahead. the cause, women and obamacare. they said they were testing an alert system when this happened. the messages were supposed to be for internal use only. then they went out on twitter and all to those tax people who subscribe to that. that contractor responsible for it was then fired. those are your headlines. poor guy. he had a sense of humor.
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give him his job back. >> no kidding. i was examining with the microscope, the "new york times." earlier i said if the president apologized, it's big news. >> do you have to apologize? >> i found it! i used a microscope. right here. this tiny little thing. >> you found it, though. >> here it is. it says obama apologizes. see page a-14. >> on the bottom, how hillary clinton is accepted by the hollywood community. all forgiven from 2012. >> look at this. >> everyone can relate to that. >> meanwhile, 12 minutes after the top of the hour. you heard the president kind of apologizing for obamacare's many technical rollout problems. but one state found a way to make parts of the law work. the governor of the great state of michigan, rick snyder. good morning to you. >> then one father not loving it. he was told he was an unfit parent because he wouldn't take his kids to mcdonald's. his response when we come back. now let the governor come out
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i don't smoke. [ male announcer ] ask your doctor if chantix is right for you. people frustrated how this web site has not worked over the first couple of weeks and, well, i take responsibility for that. my team takes responsibility of that and we are working every single day, 24/7, to improve it. >> hurry. president obama saying he's sorry that some americans are having trouble with his
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healthcare site. but with obamacare deadline approaching, are americans willing to accept that kind of apology? joining us right now is the governor of one state that needs healthcare.gov to work, michigan, the governor of that state, rick scheider. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> how is the affordable care act working in your state? >> it's not. we all know that. that was one of my concerns looking at this project. i used to be in the i.t. industry. >> gateway computer. you ran it. >> yeah. if you looked at the project they had. i had a great concern from the earliest days that they wouldn't be able to implement it. my preference would have been to do a state exchange. i asked our people, would you rather have the state doing something or the federal government? that's an easy call. >> sure. one of the things we've seen in other states is a fraction of people are signing up for the affordable care act because of web site problems, but also eligibility. so many people are eligible for medicaid. so they're winding up on those rolls. you have essentially put aside a rainy day fund to focus in on
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the big bill you're going to get. >> we passed healthy michigan. the generic version wasn't good enough. in particular what it didn't cover was wellness. and preventive care. so we really focused in on that and made a bigger product. we set aside dollars for a couple of years. so we're in good shape in michigan. >> wait a minute. you're in good shape in michigan? i've been watching the tv news. >> for health things. >> detroit is bankrupt! >> first of all, when you look at the bankruptcy, think of a solution to 60 years of problems. this is not a new problem. we're solving the problem now. the second thing is the comeback of detroit has been going on for years. the problem has been the municipal government's lack of services. we're solving that now. we've had over 12,000 jobs move into detroit. we've had over 10 billion of investment. young people can't even find housing. it's 95% occupancy in mid opportunity to and downtown detroit. >> is that right? take a look at your enemployment rate. you should be proud of.
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in 2009 it was 14%. in august, it was 9%. >> we're the comeback state. it's a great message. i appreciate that. in fact, not only that, our personal income climbed up five states in the ranking in the last two or three years. and it's because we've really created a climate of success and our countries are doing well. >> how are you getting jobs to relocate to michigan? >> you want to focus on growing jobs in michigan. you want to do more gardening than hunting. it's really encouraging entrepreneurship. >> joining us live, good luck to you. >> thank you. >> it is now 19 minutes after the top of the hour. straight ahead, the crack smoking mayor caught on camera again. not pretty. >> (bleep). >> extremely, extremely -- that's all i have to say. >> he was extremely inebriated. his excuse is coming up. plus, she played many roles, but
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now taking on one of the most challenging ever. lee harvey oswald's wife. that's next as we roll on live from new york city. ♪ if you think a prune is a prune, you haven't tried sunsweet, the amazing prune. two great ways to enjoy the amazing prune are plum amazins and sunsweet ones. plum amazins diced prunes are great as a snack or on just about anything. i like that! i'd put these on a salad. these would be perfect for cookies. ones individually wrapped prunes are simply irresistible. that is so juicy. it's packaged by itself. that's fantastic. delicious and nutritious my kids are going to love this. ones and plum amazins. only from sunsweet, the amazing prune. when you do what io, iyou think about risk.. i don't like the ups and downs of the market, but i can't just sit on my cash. i want to be prepared for the long haul. ishares minimum votility etfs. investments designed for a smoother ride.
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quick headlines now. the world trade center ribbon cutting is set for next week. the 978-foot building will be the first office tower to open up. but the ribbon cutting doesn't mean people will be working in its offices any time soon. workers not expected to occupy the office until 2015. a woman battling breast cancer refuses to let it bring her spirits down.
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♪ >> check her out. she's having a dance party moments before she underwent a double mastectomy. it's been viewed more than 3 million times. >> what spirit, right? >> no kidding. 50 years ago, the assassination of president john f. kennedy shocked our nation. and today the conspiracy theories remain an endless source of fascination. >> sunday night, national gina gaston graphic will air the film "killing kennedy" based on the book by bill o'reilly. the film follows the lives of the kennedys and the oswalds until that fateful day in dallas. actress michelle trachtenberg tackles the role of marina oswald, the wife of lee harvey oswald. >> where are my guns? >> i want to have a look.
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>> promise me you will never shoot no more people. >> okay, i promise. >> michelle trachtenberg joins us this morning. good morning to you. >> good morning. >> of the jobs you've had in hollywood, this has got to be one of the hardest ones, being the wife of the most hated man on the planet. >> it was incredibly challenging. of the four main players, jfk, jackie, lee and marina, she's the only one who is still alive. she's in her 70s and her daughters are in their 50s. she was actually just photographed for the first time in 25 years and i believe she still lives in texas. >> how much pressure? that must have be a lot of pressure on you. did you ever have any desire to see what she thinks about everything? >> we talked about at length how -- and also rob lowe and i how they have these monumental characters and so many people have played jfk and jackie, so they're battling with that and
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i'm trying to battle and challenge -- the challenges that she's still alive and may or may not be watching this. and i wanted to honor her living legacy. i'm also of russian descent. so it was a little helpful in this situation. >> how do you describe her? they seemed to be having marital problems anyway. it is cased closed to bill o'reilly. it was him and she was his wife. >> yeah. she was 18 or 19 when she first met lee in the clip you're seeing now in a dance. she started dating him to make an ex-boyfriend of hers jealous. >> wow. >> but at the time in russia, my mom was born in russia and she would say, america was the dream. so marina was just a young girl that wanted to live out the american dream. she just never knew she would live it out in infamy. >> she believed that he did not do it. >> right. i believe she testified in the warren commissions that he did. there was an amazing cover-up
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from time magazine getting ready to say he did it and then switched her story. >> why do you think? >> it was a stand by your man mentality. there was a youtube clip that i found of her on the 30th anniversary and she was saying, my husband is a patsy and he was innocent. i think that she was influenced by a lot of the conspiracy theories. the fact of the matter is, lee was in the texas school book depository and he took shots, whether you want to believe that is the kill shot or not, that's for discretion. bill o'reilly believes it was a lone gunman. marina was like this is the father of my children. where he was abusive, i'm going to protect my babies and love my husband. >> it's so impresssive the amount of research that you did on this character. a woman in history that to this day could watch and see the product of this. bill o'reilly himself couldn't say enough about your performance. but you spoke russian for the majority of the piece? >> yeah. >> what a way to connect with your own background, too.
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>> thank you. it's funny because before i signed on to it -- that's her. before i signed on to it, it was predominantly all in russian because marina, when she came to the united states for the first time, she didn't speak a word of english. and then when i signed on, they wanted to use that a bit to their advantage of the but my mom actually was my translator and broke down the entire script for me and would fix everything phonetically because there are words i didn't grow up with, like don't kill men. or where are your guns. so luckily i didn't know those things. we broke down also there is the feminine and masculine and conjugation of russian. >> one thing about rob lowe when you see him in person, not that good looking. >> we're going to be watching sunday night. we're going to have bill o'reilly on this program about an hour from now. >> about his book, which is his
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movie. >> i'm honored to be part of it. he does a good, solid job. >> so do you. >> thank you. >> thank you very much. >> two minutes before the bottom of the hour. she posed with enemy soldiers during the vietnam war. but now what one ambassador is saying. >> then one father not loving it. he was told he was an unfit parents because he wouldn't take his kids to mcdonald's. when we come back, his response. ♪ pain. once you feel it coming, it's almost too late. or is it? introducing new fast acting advi. with an ultra-thin coating and fast absorbing ail ion core™ technology, nothing works faster. new fast acting advil. ugh! actually progresso's soup
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you demand of yourself. aarp medicare supplement insurance plans insured by unitedhealthcare insurance company. go long. the past 238 years, the marine corps has been keeping us safe, both home and abroad. >> and today we have the special honor of celebrating the 238th birthday with some special guests. lieutenant general william faulkner and captain tim irish. we're so thankful you're here today. first of all, thank you all for your service and what a special day to share with us. the tradition here is so specific. will you walk us through that a bit? >> first off, thanks for having us. thanks to "fox & friends" for having us here. it's really a pleasure. we take our birthdays pretty seriously. i think you can see that already. this is just -- every year, it's an opportunity for us,
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regardless, young and old, marines around the world, to just pause and pay tribute to all those that have gone before us. not only that, it's an opportunity for us to reaffirm our commitment to the marine corps and for the marine corps to reaffirm the commitment to this great nation and being part of our security effort. >> part of that is having the oldest marine and the youngest marine, part of the celebration. >> absolutely. >> so why don't you go ahead and cut the cake and we'll have captain tim irish describe who gets the first piece of cake and who gets the next piece. >> it's customary, to get a cake in celebration of the birth of our corps. the first piece goes to the guest of honor, lieutenant general william faulkner. >> congratulations. general, there is your cake. >> thank you. who gets the second piece of cake? >> the next piece goes to the oldest and youngest marine
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present, symbolizing experience and the youthful spirit that are hallmarks of our corps. what's your name? >> sarah. >> and the third piece goes to? >> the third piece goes to the youngest marine presents. private first class brandon thomas. born september 4, 1992. >> all right. you're going to share some cake. here is your cake. >> how come i don't see these cakes on "cake boss"? it's incredible. >> what symbolism there, really, to join and a promise, really. >> what's really impresssive, elisabeth, is here we have chief warrant officer farrah, 95 years old. and we have private first class. so even though there is almost seven decades between the two, they share a common bond. >> can i just do one thing?
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what's your rank? >> corporal, edgar. >> corporal cull. >> jesse thomas. >> ed farrah. >> soldier euly. >> sergeant king. >> corporal valley. >> major song. >> thanks so much for coming in. happy birthday to the marines. we appreciate it. >> cake for everyone. >> we're going to cut some cake. put that down! >> happy birthday to all of you. and chief farrah served in world war ii. got some headlines. first he confessed to smoking crack and, quote, drunken stupor. now the mayor of toronto is caught in on a video -- in a
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video on another drunken tirade. >> obviously it was extremely, extremely moving. that's all i have to say. >> you can see right here the mayor staggering around, making violent threats about some unknown person. toronto city council has filed an unprecedented motion that could remove the mayor from office if he does not take a leave of absence. we'll keep watching that story. the u.s. ambassador to the united nations, samantha power, isn't wasting her diplomatic skills on vietnam veterans. she praised jane fonda. you may remember this, the actress earning the nickname hanoi jane after she posed with enemy soldiers during the war. in her recent speech, powers said, quote, there is no greater embodiment of being outspoken on behalf of what you believe in and being all in in every way than jane fonda. a father sues his child's
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psychologist after she labels him an unfit parent for not taking his son to mcdonald's. david shore wouldn't take his son to mcdonald's because he physical his son was eating too much junk food. the boy threw a tantrum, but the dad stayed firm. the boy later told his mother that he was sent to bed without a meal. she reported the incident to the child psychologist who then told the judge that shore was incapable of taking care of his son and should be denied weekend visitation rights. shore has filed a defamation suit. what do you think about that one. and we all know this is supposed to be the happiest place on earth. he got to meet other famous grumpy cats. he remained unimpressed by everything happening around her. she wandered around grouchily through tan town and sat looking completely bored as usual. that's are your headlines. >> all right. thank you very much. >> let's head outside where
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maria has it here and everywhere. >> good morning. hello, everyone. we do want to actually show you this new video that's in to our studio about the philippines and that storm that continues to lash their area. this is impacting parts of the central philippines and it could be the strongest tropical cyclone to ever make landfall in recorded history that we know of. we're looking at an estimated landfall wind strength of 195 miles per hour and it's believed that gusts were much stronger than that of 230 miles per hour. so this is equivalent to what would be a category 5 hurricane in the united states. very powerful still. maximum sustained winds at 165 miles per hour at the moment and it is continuing to impact the area right now as we speak. these storms again, very similar to hurricanes, are exactly the same thing. they feed off very warm water and that is what is takes place out there. i want to show you this map that highlights all the different
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ocean basins and you can see hurricanes, typhoons are the same thing in different areas. maximum sustained winds of 165 miles an hour. continuing to move westward at about 25 miles per hour. that's really what is the only little bit of good news because the storm is in and out very quickly. but again, extremely powerful storm heading westward and it could be impacting other areas. of course, we will keep you updated. now let's head over to brian. >> i got to tell you what happened last night on thursday night football. it was a tight game, good game. redskins and vikings. let's fast forward to the third and there we see robert griffith iii. ponder hoping to turn back the clock. watch this. a scary moment. takes a hard hit, stopping a touchdown. hurting his shoulder. then you'll see the vikings battle back. peterson takes it 234 from one yard away. the vikings would lead 34-27. washington's final chance, fourth and goal. rg 3, guess what?
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the vikings win and somewhere gretchen is smiling. college football, a great game. oregon, stanford. they really have to study hard just to stay in school. they also play really good football. hogan fakes a handoff, takes it himself up the middle. touchdown. cardinals ahead 14-0. stanford up 26-0 before the ducks got on the board. what happened to that high powder offense? williamson field goal attempt blocked. returned 65 yards.s the upset 2. a different note. in my book, george washington's secret six, i focused on a secret spy ring that gets credit for saving the country's american revolution and start the country. this morning i want to tell you about the most important spy of them all and where he lived. you're looking at the home of robert townsend, known in the spy ring as coper junior. if you believed washington's
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letters, he was the most indispensable spy. his intelligence was absolutely vital and he won washington's respect. but ironically, they never met. that's the actual house where he left. the door is in -- they say if washington came to visit, that would be the door he would knock on because it's the same door from the late 1700s. >> that's cool. >> it's random hall. >> how is the plumb not guilty that house from the 1700s? >> pretty good. they feel as though upstairs is where they found the papers where all the handwriting analysis was done and they matched it to him being a spy. >> it's such an exciting way to tell history. >> you can go see all that stuff. >> get the book and read it yourself. >> all right. meanwhile, cheryl casone, always tells what you not to do if you're looking for a job. she's going to do it again. >> i'm a little forgetful sometimes. >> pregnantful? okay.
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>> per fiscal. up next, cheryl casone introduces us to a woman who watched, took our advice and just landed a job. great news! >> i knew her name a minute ago, but i forgot it. good morning. how are you? [ paper rustles, outdoor sounds ] ♪ [ male announcer ] laura's heart attack didn't come with a warning. today her doctor has her on a bayer aspirin regimen to help reduce the risk of another one. if you've had a heart attack, be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen. [ male announcer ] the rhythm of life. [ whistle blowing ] where do you hear that beat? campbell's healthy request soup lets you hear it in your heart. [ basketball bouncing ] heart healthy. [ m'm... ] great taste. [ tapping ] sounds good. campbell's healthy request. m'm! m'm! good.® campbell's healthy request. could save you fifteen percent
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medicare open enrollment. of year again. time to compare plans and costs. you don't have to make changes. buit never hurts to see if u can find bettoverage, save money, or both. and check out the preventive benefits you get after the health care la open enrollment ends december 7th. so now's the time. visit medicare.gov or call 1-800-medicare each week right here on "fox & friends," cheryl casone gives you advice on how to get hired. today she's bringing up a different side of this story a success story. >> a success story. today's story is different from the past because our guest, debbie, whose job had always been a wife and mom, used our don't videos to help her ace our interview. debbie was just hired as a
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specialist at john woods community college. here she is. >> congratulations, first off. >> thank you! >> so you were a wife and mom, you worked part-time at the church, but for your father-in-law. so you hadn't really been on an interview before. >> no, i haven't. i had been wife and mom and i just knew that it was time for me to look for a job after my son graduated. >> so this the cool part. the fun videos we had to bring up real points resonated with you. >> yes. yes, it did. the tips that helped the best were the questions that you said would be asked in an interview and so i took that to heart and i really studied those. >> let's play one for our viewers to remind them -- this is about doing basically your research when go to the interview. >> hello. i'm cheryl casone. i am the president and ceo of casone exchange corporation. so how did you hear about the job? >> actually a friend of mine e-mailed me the job. so i don't really know what it's
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about. >> that's a don't video! >> you learned from that. >> right. yes, i did. you had asked that one of the questions that would be asked is what are your strengths? and so what that did was that helped me with i really pinpointed my strengths, 'cause i didn't really think i'd get the job. but as i started looking at my strengths, i realized i really did have something to offer. >> it gives you confidence. >> you look great. but you also -- the advice about clothing is another piece of advice that she took from us. >> wear clothing. i've always said that. >> that's a given. >> as long as i have a suit check and i'm tough, then maybe i can wear something underneath. >> here is the thing, i'd like the suit jacket and the idea of a nice top underneath it, but this is a corset and i don't think that would be, even if it's underneath the jacket, i don't think that's going to help. >> so you took your corset off? >> i did. >> isn't that amazing?
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>> but that helped -- you changed what you wore to the interview. you had never been on an actual interview, so you changed what you wore based on that. >> yes. i went and bought a pantsuit and you said don't wear open toe shoes, so i bought pumps. i kept nisqually conservative and i wanted to look real professional. >> did you and you got it. now the rest is easy. long lunch breaks, ask what the vacation time is. >> i haven't reached my six six-month time yet. >> don't worry. >> the college hired you. so thanks to them as well for hiring you. >> absolutely. congratulations. >> thank you. >> bess news i heard all day. ten minutes before the top of the hour. shocking findings, the irs is giving your tax refunds to identity thieves. just how much will make your jaw drop. then it's one of the hot films hitting theaters today. but will "thor" living up to its
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well, marvel is back with their next great thriller, "thor," and matthew mcconaghey takes on a cowboy diagnosed with hiv in "dollars buyers club" -- dallas buyers club." >> joining us to give us his take on this weekend's box office premiere social security fox news contributor and the founder of nerdtears.com, kevin mccarthy. >> good morning. >> we heard for the longest time, mcconaghey had to gain 130 pounds for some role. this is it, huh?
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incredible. he lost 47 pounds for this role. i spoke to him about that. i was wondering, where is the balance of losing so much weight for a role that you don't hurt your body, but you stay true to the character? this is what today say. check this out. >> you lose weight by diet. it's not as much exercise as i thought it was going to be. exercise probably was 5% of it. it was diet. then your body, at least mine did, once it got the message after two weeks that we were going south, it turns on and commits with you and makes it easier. don't go have meetings at your favorite buffet. i became a her met. your body is more resilient than i think we give it credit for sometimes. >> the movie is incredible. i gave it 4 1/2 how out of five. he will be nominated for an academy award. so will jarrett leno. prepare to see this on oscar night. it's a very, very tough movie, though. so it's not your typical
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saturday night, go out and have fun. but it's a serious. >> meanwhile, "thor," how many stars for that one? >> i gave it three out of five. the first half is absolutely terrible. the second half picks up when tom hidleston, who plays loki, he picks up right where the avengers left off. you had that funny banter/action style movie. the problem is the plot is too confusing. you can't be that confusing with an action movie. make it fun. the problem is skip the 3d. save yourself six bucks. do not see it in 3d. it's terrible. it's dark. it's murky. also for marvel fans, stay during the ending credits. there are two secret scenes as the movie ends. stay through the entire credit sequence. i gave it three out of five. it's not as good has the first "thor," but worth a matinee. >> you save us six bucks again. i love that. >> another example of hollywood
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going to a comic book. >> right. brian, by the way, i'm looking forward to talking to you on your radio show today, i'm on chapter 5 of your book right now and i already have some casting for the secret six. >> you're doing the movie? >> nerd tears presents the secret six. looking forward to it. >> thank you very much. >> thanks. coming up next on our friday telecast, the president says he got burned by the obamacare web site rollout mess. but what about those americans, the millions who have lost their insurance? geraldo rivera joins us live as he enters the curvy couch. >> that's right. the heartwarming homecoming, four navy commanders -- hi, geraldo. the emotional reunion, top of the hour. >> you can't be rude if you wanted to. >> it all synced up right there
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of providing a free world-class education for anyone, anywhere. if you look at a khan academy video, they cover everything from basic arithmetic to calculus, trigonometry, finance. you can really just get what you need at your own pace. and so, bank of america came and reached out to us and said, "we are really interested in making sure that everyone really understands personal finance." we're like, "well, we're already doing that." and so it was kind of a perfect match.
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good morning. it's friday, november 8, 2013. sorry, not sorry. the president issues an apology to the american people, but doesn't quite go all the way. he says that his regrets are that some aren't happy. but what about all those broken promises? >> meanwhile, politics in the classroom, the disturbing partisan lessons being taught to our children in some cases. we have the curriculum that will get you fired up on this friday. >> all right. we play it at the start of every friday here on the fox news channel. i'm talking about the star spangled banner. turns out not so patriotic. it's a war anthem and should be banned! >> what? >> those are the comments from an espn panelist. we also have geraldo rivera here to sound off, where hopefully he will use words instead of sound. "fox & friends" starts now. okay, peanut gallery. he was trying to read a great
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introduction. >> so rude. >> the hiss and boos were coming for the host of geraldo at large. >> good morning. everyone is so elegant today, dark suits. i feel like i'm in a lawyer's office. >> a place you've been before? >> let's talk doctor's office and apology. what did you think? >> let me make a call. >> here is the president on nbc last night. >> even if he didn't intentionally do it, but at this point, they feel misled. you've seen the anger that's out there. >> i regret very much that what we intended to do, which is to make sure that everybody is moving into better plans because they want them as opposed because of coerced into it, that we weren't as clear as we needed to be in terms of the changes that were taking place and i want to do everything we can to make sure that people are
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finding themselves in a good position, a better position than they were before this law happened. and i am sorry that they are finding themselves in this situation based on assurances they got from me. >> is that enough? >> well, you know, he's a proud, some say arrogant, stubborn man. i could put myself in his shoes, it's difficult to say i'm sorry. >> because you're proud and arrogant? >> i am proud as well. i think that's as close as you can possibly come to an apology. i read that as him saying, i really screwed this up. he had the unfortunate confluence of events, this catastrophic web site, this botched launch and he also had the fact that he clearly misrepresented what the law said. maybe he didn't read it. >> you don't think he lied? you say misrepresented. he knew what he was saying. he's a lawyer. >> he is a lawyer. the only reason i hesitate is because he's the president and i hate to say he lied. took me a long time to get there
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with richard nixon. clearly he misrepresented what the reality was. now he's backtracking. now his party is in severe trouble. they were riding high after the government shutdown. they had all the momentum going into the midterm 2014 elections. now this thing is a full stop. now the democrats are saddled with this awful law that is staggering. i have what i call geraldo's law. it says for every day since october 1 that the web site is not ready, we should postpone the implementation of the individual mandate for one day. day for a day. this is november 8, so you've got 39 days so far, so let's postpone the mandate for 39 days and for every day they don't have it up, delay it one more take. that would be the law that i suggest. the republicans are saying they want insurance companies to agree now to give the policies that existed to make the president's lie come true, maybe they'll get that done. >> i'm going to take a law, the
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law of whatever you do, i can do better. that's my law. i just made it up. it's the anti-geraldo law. >> anything you can say, i can say better. >> some in congress are working through -- they say anyone who had insurance and had it dropped, should have it reinstate. boehner is starting in the house. there is moving on a bipartisan level senate. if the president feels bad about it, he has got legislation to back up his feelings. >> clearly, there will be negotiation between the house bill and the senate bill. i think the passage of the law that you suggest, brian, is a very real possibility. that's one way out of the dilemma, to then go to the insurance companies and say, you guys really hung me out to dry. the reason i opposed this law from the get-go is, i thought it was a copout to the insurance industry. there are coo's of insurance companies making $10 million annual salaries. where is that coming from? from us? this law is deeply flawed.
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if they're going to salvage it, they've got to pass exactly the suggested bills that you cite right there, brian. they've got to say, if you liked it and you still like it, you can have it back. >> action usually is preferred to be followed after an apology for sure. another topic, we have the espn panelist, not my husband who actually loves the national anthem, but a professor there and contributor that comes on often. he said that our national anthem is a war anthem, shouldn't be used at nfl games, along with any military symbolism. listen to this. >> if you sell this along with news, you should be selling the rest of the military symbolism, whether it's the singing of a war anthem to open every game, whether it's going to get a hot dog and being able to sign up for the army at the same time. whether it's the nfl's he is bracement of the pat tillman story, it's been going on in sports since the first national
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anthem was played in the world series back in 1917. and it's time for people to back away. >> i think a is a nitpicking, literalist -- he's actually humorless. it has nothing to do with the military and directly it's a celebration of patriotism. why do we have jets flying over? >> he doesn't like that. >> we love the military. we honor them. they're football players. but what the national anthem is is a celebration of our patriotism. o say does the star spangled banner. contrast to the french what, it says. this is it, grab your weapons, citizens. form your battalions, let us march, let us march. may impure blood water our fields. you want to talk about a celebration of militarism, talk to the french. our national anthem is a wonderful celebration. we honor our military. i rang the bell throughout. >> what's your message to this guy? >> go back to the classroom.
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you have really no idea about the -- these military, our military loved football. it's the national sport. they celebrate their americanism. they celebrate their patriotism. we love them. we honor their service. get over it, dude. enjoy the game. >> wow. >> geraldo rivera. >> we love that take. >> he'll do his radio show this weekend. >> on the channel you've got a live kennedy special helmed by bill hemmer at 9 eastern, at 10:00 o'clock, i'm doing a live debate, was the conspiracy of john f. kennedyer -- was it a conspiracy or simple act of murder? my debate live follows hemmer's special. >> thank you. >> thank you. lot of fun. now we travel right across the couch, through geraldo to heather nauert. >> good morning. >> for her i turn around. >> good to see you. we've got news to bring you and an extreme weather alert. we're looking at new destruction that's been caused by a super typhoon that is slamming the
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philippines at this hour. it's called pacific storm hyan, considered one of the most powerful storms ever recorded, with winds approaching 200 miles per hour. imagine that. some winds are 175 miles an hour, sustained winds. trees are down, power out. widespread flooding. at least four people are dead so far and 720,000 people had to be evacuated. some of them already living in makeshift shelters because of the massive earthquake that took place last month. we'll keep following that story for you. a couple in new jersey lucky to be alive after their home exploded and take a look at this video. you can see their house is virtually blown to piece. neighbors hearing the blast rushed in to save that family. listen to this. >> the only thing i had to do, i tossed a couple boards out of the way, pulled out some insulation and then black smoke. i mean, it got really intense. like i can sneeze it out right
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now. just pulled her out. >> the husband and wife both suffered severe burns. no one else was hurt. there were new gas lines recently installed in that neighborhood, but utility crews right now are saying there was no sign of a gas leak. we'll keep you posted on that. remember the people who went on a shopping spree in louisiana last month? they could lose their benefits all together. there was a given with the ebt system that allowed people to spend more than their balance on their card. that led to that shopping frenzy. the governor's office is now saying that anyone who spent money that they didn't have will lose their food stamps. no word how many people that will affect or for what period of time. finally, a nice story. a heart-warming reunion takes place in utah. naval commander surprising not one, but four of his children's at school. >> i'm home. >> don't you love to see that? he's been serving in the navy
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since 1988. he's been deployed to afghanistan for the past seven months. after this emotional reunion, the two went on to surprise his daughter. they're all anxious to get back to a normal life. >> i'm look forward to getting back in the thick of things and all their activities and stuff. it will be fun. really fun. >> after those surprises, he then headed to the high school to see his older kids. next time your teen-ager won't give you a hug, you tell them about this video. very nice. >> what a homecoming. >> i guess they can take the rest of the day off. >> thanks. ten minutes after the hour. >> coming up, politics in the classroom. the disturbing partisan lessons being taught to our children. details on the curriculums that will have you fired up next. >> it's the film that's based on bill o'reilly's best selling book "killing kennedy" and it's set to air this weekend and bill o'reilly is here this next hour.
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welcome back. there are new questions this morning over some national education standards. are they putting politics into our children's classrooms? here to discuss the executive director of the pioneer institute, jim. welcome and good morning. >> good morning. >> so this classroom apparently that we're talking about today was asked to, sixth grade class, edit duties of the u.s. president and this bothered you to be part of the curriculum. common core lessons is your concern.
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what about their lesson actually bothered you? >> you know, they have three sentence there is that tell you about how they're looking at american civics. first thing, they're saying is that the president is someone who insures the fairness of the laws. in fact, frankly, that's factually incorrect. it's the judiciary. if you take a look, for example, at the idea that the values -- or the wishes of an individual should be sub sumed under those of the name, that's antithetcal to a couple of key concepts embraced by the founders. and there are other things in there, as well as the last one really is -- we should obey as citizens the commands of our government officials. >> the children were asked to take a word and simplify them.
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so this was part of a broader study, but they were asked to make these sentences more simple. what you're saying is what they're being taught is not sentence structure simpleification. it's actually something not in line with what our country is about? >> that's correct. that last one, think about it for a second. if mlk listened to them, we wouldn't have the opportunity of equality in this country. we're not a country that is commanded by government officials. we're a country that is governed by the rule of law. these are bad lessons. frankly, it's really odd to see these kinds of lessons shoe horned into an english curriculum. that's usual on ally about literature. >> one example you alluded to some. the first example that we had here was the president makes sure the laws of the country are fair. your thoughts on that? >> my thoughts on that are clearly that that's the role of the judiciary. >> right. so obviously something that is not correct being taught to the
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kids. number two, the wants of the individual are less important than the well-being of the nation. >> that's right. as noted before, that's really antithetcal to two core values embraced by the founders. free enterprise is what led to our success of the country and frankly, if you take a look at the founders' writings, they talk an awful lot about the fact that all people are ambitious. our system of laws, our separation of powers are there in place to make sure we can have a system that works given human nature. >> as you mentioned before, the command of government officials must be obeyed by all. another sentence they were asked to correct. >> that's right. the larger issues here are a couple things. one is it's odd to see this stuff shoehorned into an english curriculum. the second thing is, if you step back for a second, common core vendors, this is pearson education. pearson is not a fly by night operation. it's one of the largest materials vendors to schools.
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so in a way, this is probably -- on the upper end of the spectrum in terms of common core offering as. >> certainly something that parents appreciate you keeping an eye on in terms of what's going on in the classroom. thank you. >> thank you so much, appreciate it. >> you heard the president's apology for obamacare's failed rollout. should he be apologizing for the whole law itself? bill o'reilly coming up next. and take a look at this. a propane tank explodes on a driver of that forklift. but look closely here. he walks away. walks right out of that explosion. ♪
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welcome back. 22 minutes after the top of the hour. the king of cable, bill o'reilly is here. good morning to you. >> i don't know what i'm doing here. it's so early in the morning on friday. >> you're 12 hours off. good morning. >> crane lifted me out of the bed, dumped me into a truck. >> do you have youtube of that? >> you got to be excited on some level, the adrenaline gets you up and awake. you don't need the extra cup of latte. you have a movie coming out. >> it's not my movie. i wrote the book. you had michelle trachtenberg on earlier. she really is good. people watched "killing kennedy"
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, when you look at what she brings in, it's impresssive. we're trying to get the word out that "killing kennedy" is a movie you'll learn from and enjoy at the same time. that's rare these days. it's good and you learn. >> we just had her on an hour ago. she was very complimentary about the research that you had done on the book. i'm curious, i was in dallas two weeks ago and they've got the whole -- in every sunday paper, it's about the 50th anniversary. how are you so sure it was just oswald and wasn't somebody else, a conspiracy? >> in the book, we go into pain-staking detail that the dallas police department was controlling the investigation because it wasn't a federal crime at that time to kill the president of the united states, if you can believe it. it wasn't a federal crime. it's a local crime. j. edgar hoover desperately wanted to take control of that investigation because the dallas pd didn't know what they were doing. he sent 80 agents a day after the assassination, his best
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guys, with the order, find a conspiracy. if you can find a conspiracy, we can take it over. they couldn't find it. we looked at all the documents. we talked to the f.b.i. agents who were down there. they were desperately trying to find it. they couldn't find it. >> here is a clip from the movie to give you an idea of what you'll be seeing. >> the president now -- >> no, no. >> look at the lead you've got. >> we have to wait for the midwest and the west. it's going to be a long night. >> well, tell me in the morning who wins, mr. president. >> don't say that. >> excellent. we all know how it turns out, and yet, it is so compelling. >> you don't know the inside baseball. you don't know -- particularly with oswald. the guy who plays oswald, off
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the charts. and he really captures it. we kind of pain-stakingly walk you through oswald cutting back to kennedy, cutting back to oswald. so you see how the whole thing develops. there has been a loft money made in the conspiracy reins. i went through all of them. i didn't just throw them out the window, i said, maybe there is validity into the mafia or c.i.a. or castro. >> or johnson. >> well. >> that's a new book. >> that gets crazy. but i think what you're seeing in "killing kennedy" is really what happened. >> as guy that writes his own show, controls his own meetings on a daily basis, has his name in the title, how hard is it to take your book, give it to somebody and say, make a movie? >> well, we work with ridley scott who won the best director for "gladiators." he knows what he's doing. i'm the executive producer, so they have to run stuff by me. but i'm not a meddler in this
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regard. >> what if you think you're right? >> then i tell them that. i gave lowe a few tips -- not on acting. but this is how jfk carried himself. this is how he reacted, because he was a rich guy. jfk was a rich guy. rich guys react differently. lowe is like me, from working class. that kind of stuff. there i am. i wouldn't let him sit down, by the way. >> but you feel great 'cause the book is brilliant. the adaptation into film, you feel wonderful about it -- >> i'm very pleased with the movie. i think people will watch it and like it and the same crew is going to do "killing jesus." that's going to be a four-hour movie. it's the same thing. they hire me as the executive producer. i just make sure that they handle jesus -- you don't want jesus to be hollywoodized. we want to keep him -- >> he's not going to break into song. >> no, it's not going to be
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jesus christ superstar. >> there will be hell to pay. >> there you go. >> so the movie will be on nat geo sunday night. >> we got to ask but since we did roll the animation, the president of the united states sat down with chuck todd on nbc and it sounded like he kind of apologized for a sloppy rollout. >> i didn't even cover it last night on "the factor" because i think it's a pr thing. i don't think it's sincere and i'm not saying this with any malice. they sat there for an hour and said, what should we do? we'll bring chuck todd in and we'll tell him, gee, i think we should have done a better job explaining it. yeah! you should have! you know. so this isn't big news to me. >> doesn't change anything? >> no, doesn't change a thing. >> nothing will come of it, no action will come, he won't make good -- >> no, no, no. that's an interesting question because i think that president obama, as things get even will have to do some kind of delay. he'll have to do that because the crescendo of outrage is rising among his own party
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members! the senators are going to lose if this thing keeps going south the way it's going. there is no indication that it's not -- it's going to get better any time soon. these senators are going to get wiped out next november. >> it's interesting, senator mary landrieu knows the president will be in louisiana today and she will not appear with him. she said she has a family engagement that she simply has planned for a long time. >> it's out on the bayou. a little barbecue. they could have delayed it a little bit! mary landrieu is going to lose her seat because people are furious. >> they will lose that photo against her if she were to attend. >> absolutely. >> she parroted what the president said. >> they all did. because nobody read the damn thing. nobody read the 936-page law, including the president! he didn't read it. nobody knew. >> listen, we asked you 12 questions. you only liked elisabeth's, i'm a little hurt. >> i only liked her? >> you liked her questions. you said, that's a good yes.
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>> you're way too sensitive. now that you're a big-time author. it's good birks the way. a history thriller type thing. i was surprised. he gave it to me. i thought it was a coloring book. i did! >> i'm detecting a little hostility between the two of you. >> no, no. >> the next book is "killing kilmeade." >> and charles krauthammer. fox guys got three on the top ten. you think the "new york times" loves that, huh? >> pulling their hair out! >> that was on the front page this morning. >> once again, check out his show. he works nights here on the channel. >> he's the 8:00 o'clock host. >> "killing kennedy" airs sunday, november 10, 8:00 o'clock on nationally graphic. bill, thank you. >> okay. >> coming up, a fox business alert right now for you. a brand-new monthly jobs report due out any minute. the breaking news on the economy straight ahead.
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all right. a fox business alert. monthly jobless numbers are out. october unemployment rate rises to 7.3%. employers only added 204,000 jobs. >> let's dial in chris wallace. good morning to you, sir. >> good morning, guys. >> with the monthly unemployment number going up to 7.3%, apparently factored into that as well are those furloughed government employees from the slowdown or slimdown, or whatever you want to call it. >> actually i think tassets a pretty good number. obviously you don't like unemployment rate going up. but that's also a function of whether people are dropping out of the job market or going in. the fact that you had 204,000 jobs added at a time when you had hundreds of thousands of people furloughed for two weeks, is it as great as we need to have a roaring recovery? no. but it's certainly better than where we were last month. it's not bad.
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>> i tell you what, chris, one of the most exciting weeks in terms of news i can imagine. you had an election, not the biggest one, but you had significant results in that election. you also have the ongoing drama which is obamacare. do you think the president helped himself yesterday with his interview on nbc? >> well, look. when people are feeling misled, it's always good to say i'm sorry. you know, he's not going to say, i lied to you and he's not going to say, i didn't know. so this is about the best you could have expected from him. having said that, i don't think it really matters, brian. i think in the end, when you look between now and the next election in 2014, what's going to matter is what people's personal experience is. if the web site gets fixed, if people find that their policies are not more expensive and they're better policies, then they're going to be pretty happy with obamacare. conversely, if the web site continues to be a mess and if people find that they're getting the same or worse coverage for a
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lot more money, then they're going to be mad. so we're in a point where rhetoric doesn't matter. it's actions. not words. >> sure. i think you're absolutely right about that. reality versus the rhetoric. what about chris christie? 2016, presidential talk is heating u second term victory tuesday night. is he the future of the gop? >> well, he's the future of fox news sunday 'cause we're going to have him as a guest on sunday and delight to do have him. you're exactly right. huge victory. i mean, 60% of the vote, majority of hispanics, a majority of women. 30%, a third of democrats. these are all things that in national elections, republicans haven't been doing recently. he's certainly putting himself out there in the fact he's going on a sunday show this weekend is an indication he's putting himself out there as i'm the future of the republican party. on the other hand there are a lot of the tea partiers who are going to say no. he's too centrist, too
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establishment, not conservative enough. before you can run in the general election, let alone win it, you got to win the nomination. and activists, tea party activists were influential in nominate ago candidate. >> chris christie will sit down with you. i have a mole in the dc bureau and i understand that -- >> what has peter been saying to you now? >> peter told me -- >> he exposed his mole? >> that's okay. peter told me who your power player of the week is. >> it's like a spy in the dc ring who is coming. that's so interesting because we're doing it on a fascinating new book called "george washington's secret six." i'm trying to think of the author. is it o'riley? it is brian kilmeade. brian came down. we had a fascinating interview. it's a very good book. it pains me to say it.
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o'reilley is talking a book, brian talking a book, i got nothing. >> hawking a book, we had a conversation about the contents of the book. it wasn't a sales thing. we're reforming america about what's inside. >> at one point i say to kilmeade, so, are you going to write another book? he said actually, i'd like to have this book made into a movie. >> why not? who wouldn't? >> what about executive chris wallace? how much money you have? >> i just want to hang out with agent 355. >> that's the woman. thanks for doing that, in all honesty. >> listen, my pleasure. it's a good book. i was a little bit surprised. i was like o'reilley. >> it is a good book. chris wallace, we'll be watching fox news sunday. and we have a mole down there keeping an eye on who is going in and out of the studio. >> you just outed peter. >> people knew he works there. thanks, chris.
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headlines. >> how surprised he was by your work is good. >> he did giggle when he walked in. >> nice job. got some news. at first he confessed to smoke crack in a, quote, drunken stupor. now the toronto mayor, rob ford, is caught on camera in a drunken tirade. >> obviously it was extremely, extremely inebriated. that's all i have to say. >> in the video, look at this, you can see the mayor staggering around and he's make violent threats about some unknown person. toronto city council has filed an unpress debted motion that could remove the mayor from office if he doesn't take a leave of absence. we'll be hearing more about this one. and check out this video coming out of ohio this morning. a forklift driver, lucky to be alive after a propane tank he's carrying explodes.
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witnesses say the tank fell off the forklift. >> it does not appear that they were secured or tightened. it didn't look like they were. it looked as if maybe one had bounced off when he came into the driveway and then he drove over it. >> he seemed like he got a little singed and maybe a little tan. he's on his way. >> more than that, the man was treated for burns on his hands and face. his wife now says he's resting comfortably at home and lucky to be alive. there is obvious danger when is it comes to bowling, throwing the ball backwards, dropping it on your foot, and apparently this. take a look. what do they call that in basketball? a pot shot? well, it is an epic fail. it turns out that it doesn't always work in your favor.
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how funny is that? those are your headlines at this hour. >> all right. >> i guess we'll head to maria molina. >> she joins us with the weather. >> good morning. hello. we actually want to take you halfway across the world where super typhoon made landfall in the philippines with estimated winds of 195 miles per hour. it could be the strongest landfalling cyclone in recorded history. at least four people are dead and 720,000 people evacuated. some of them were already living in makeshift shelters because of a massive earthquake last month. now let's take a look at what's happening across that area right now where we do have the storm that we are still tracking. by the way, i want to point out that typhoons, hurricanes, cyclones, all the same thing. just happening in different parts of the world. so this is exactly what we would call a hurricane. this is equivalent to a category 5 hurricane, super typhoon still on the move with maximum sustained winds of 165 miles per hour, heading towards southeast asia, once it moves out of the
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central philippines. this is a story we will continue to track over the next several days. across our country, we're dealing with cold temperatures across parts of the east. temperatures below average. we're talking high temperatures only into the low 50s in places like new york city and surrounding areas as well. and by the way, next week, wednesday, thursday, steve, elisabeth, brian, we could be having a little storm system, snow across parts of the mid-atlantic. computer models is point to go that. >> break that model. >> thank you very much. by the way, we should point out when bill o'reilly was here, elisabeth got a picture on her ipad. here she is with the king of cable. notice right back here, there is keith photo bombing. >> he and ted right there. >> i thought he only did that in one picture. >> nope! what's up with that?
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>> the ultimate photo bombs. o'reilley will love that. >> 18 minutes before the top of the hour. >> next up, hate having the flu? the cure could be in a simple drink. >> and breaking news on the economy. we just told you the new job numbers for this month. nicole petallides will walk and talk about it. >> now over to anna kooiman with a preview of what happens this weekend. >> somebody photo bombing you right behind you there, steve. >> is there? >> welcome to obamacare and get a divorce. did you know there are hidden penalties in the affordable care act for married people? the surprising things that might be toxic for your dog. what every pet owner needs to know. join us tomorrow and sunday from 6 to 10 a.m
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welcome back. time for quick headlines. probiotics drink may help you avoid the flu. bacteria found in a japanese food. when the drink was tested on mice, the bacteria helped their immune system create more flu fighting antibodies. the rubber ducky is a hall of famer, picked yesterday as the newest edition to the national toy hall of fame. the other edition this year is the game of chess. there are now 53 toys in the toy hall of fame. who knew? >> rubber ducky. meanwhile, fox business alert. monthly jobless numbers just out. the october unemployment rate went up. now it's at 7.3%. employers added 204,000 jobs. nicole petallides is on the floor of the new york stock exchange. all right. so the unemployment rate ticked
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up. that's never good, is it? >> no. it never is good. ultimately when you start to talk about unemployment rate on its way up, you want it in the other direction and you want to see labor force participation. you want to see people looking for jobs. so that's number one. the second thing that we should note is that the 204,000 jobs added sounds good, doesn't it? but i would take it with a grain of salt. there was a whole memo that went along with it because of the government shutdown. the prior month was a revised higher. i almost feel like we need to wait another month to get this right to a certain extent. the first thing that you should know is that after hitting a record yesterday, the dow was almost at 15,800. we really hit a record yesterday. but now we start to talk about the fed and papering and that's where the speculation comes into this market. >> we have to get off the fake money somehow. people got to grow up. gdp grew, that's solid.
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everyone was talking about twitter. is this a good investment? were you surprised by its arc yesterday? >> it's pretty amazing. this is a 26-dollar ipo that opened at 45.10. it traded above 50, down to 44. anything about 40 feels like hype. it's unprofitable. it has a fifth of the users of facebook. longer term, the idea is they'll have growth and continue to move toward the upside. the sad part is when the retail invests, the regular people like you and i jump in and try and get it and buy it at 49 or 50 and then it closes at 44.90. that's the environment. it's a risky trade. you have to have a tough stomach to get into this kind of stuff. you might want to go with a company that's solid. the analysts are mixed on this. >> sure. that's what you say. you know where they love it? twitter. they love it on twitter. nicole petallides, thank you for joining us live. have a great weekend. >> you, too. >> coming up. >> do you have a disobedient dog? then you'll want to stick
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around. meet the man who is whipping canines across the country into shape. a dog party on the plaza you will not want to miss. but first, we're going to check in with bill hemmer for what's coming up at the top of the hour. >> i'm going to miss dog week when it's over. >> i hear great things about your special this weekend. >> thank you very much. 9:00 o'clock saturday night eastern time. you can tell all viewers. >> no, you just did. >> i think you just did. >> thank you. have a great weekend. kathleen sebelius making a statement this coming hour. we have no idea what she's going to say. will she apologize? speaking of apologies, what to make of what the president said. what is the state of healthcare.gov today? the changes by the day. martha and i will see you in ten minutes on a friday edition life with crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis
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is a daily game of "what if's". what if my abdominal pain and cramps end our night before it even starts? what if i eat the wrong thing? what if? what if i suddenly have to go? what if? but what if the most important question is the one you're not asking? what if the underlying cause of your symptoms is damaging inflammation? for help getting the answers you need, talk to your doctor and visit crohnsandcolitisadvocates.com to connect with a patient advocate from abbvie for one-to-one support and education.
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>> it's day five of dog week here and today we have a dog party on the plaza. the zoom room is here giving us some tips on fun and unique ways to train your dog. >> joining us is zoo am room founder and professional dog trainer, jamie. thank you for being here. >> thank you for having us. >> it's about taking care of the dogs the way you would your kids, right? setting up gyms for them to work out? >> yeah. we have indoor training centers and you come in and you your dog yourself. >> we're going to get out of the way. first of all, let's show folks some of the exercises. let's start with pup lattes. >> this is some things we do. the dogs are doing balance work on the core balls. this is great for not only their muscle tone, but also to kind of keep them in shape. great for dogs recovery. >> you're work on their abs? >> on their quads and hammies. >> you don't want them having back problems. >> then we have puzzles for
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dogs? >> yes. these are puzzles here. these dogs learn how it dot puzzles, which is great for keeping their mind engaged. we have senior dogs doing this. they basically move them around until they find the cookies in them, so they get rewarded from the puzzle itself. it's great for keeping dogs busy. >> that's genius. we also have the canine cross training. what took so long? >> cross fit for dogs. >> yes. we have dogs that will do exercises. we have classes, so you can work out with your dog. and they're great for exercising your dog. >> he jumps and the dog just barely walks! he jumps, the dog moves. >> it's like a dog run. >> exactly. >> the dog gets socialization and training and it's really fun for the dog and the owner. it's a great way to keep fit with your dog and keep your dog active. >> what ted is pointing to the
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middle section. this is good for your calfs. >> depending on the activity level of the dog, this is one of our senior dogs. so she kind of hangs out. >> the dog is not getting in shape, though. >> i didn't realize you could help them train to be better and more healthy. >> a lot of dogs have problems with their back legs. it's important to teach them to use their rear ends. >> that's with humans as well. >> absolutely. >> hold on a second. that guy has got -- there you go. >> the final thing is the tunnel run. >> yeah. >> we're going to show that in just a moment. dog week continues live on matzah. we'll be back in two minutes. >> you got to get your dog to do this (dad) just feather it out. that's right.
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(son) ok. feather it out. (dad) all right. that's ok. (dad) put it in cond, put it in second. (dad) slow it down. put the clutch in, break it, break it. (dad) st like i showed you. dad, you didn't show me, you showed him. dad, he's gonna wreck the car! (dad) he's not gonna wreck the car. (dad) no fighting in the road, please. (d) put your blinker on. (son) you didn't even give me a chance! (dad) ok. (mom vo) we got the new subaru because nothing could break our old one. (dad) ok. (son) what the heck? let go of my seat! (mom vo) i hope the same goes for my husband. (dad) you guys are doing a great job. seriously. (announcer) love a car that lasts. love. it's what makes subaru, a subaru. how do you react when you first see this? it looks kind of like a dancer? reality check: some 4g lte coverage maps don't really look like maps. seems like maybe... a bunch of berries. this one feels more empty. what do you see here? clearly a picture of thunited states. check the map. verizon's superfast 4g lte
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if you were watching 20 minutes ago, you saw elisabeth took a picture with the king of cable and it was photo bombed by that guy right there. have a nice weekend. >> bye, everybody. bill: a fox news alert. kathleen sebelius is expected to make some kind of statement within the hour. the president says he's sorry he guaranteed anyone who liked their healthcare plan could keep it but critics say that.not go far enough. martha: good morning. i'm martha maccallum. last night president obama said he should have explained that memorable promise a little bit better and more
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