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tv   Americas News Headquarters  FOX News  November 23, 2013 3:00pm-4:01pm PST

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more people out of poverty than aid everywhere. that's our show. see you next week. hello, everyone. i'm arthel neville. welcome to a brand-new hour inside america's news headquarters. >> i'm gregg jarrett. glad you're with us. topping the news this hour, pushing for an agreement on iran's nuclear program and diplomats try to close the gaps at the midnight hour. we're going to have a live report on the marathon negotiations. also a new day, a new problem for obamacare. we'll tell you how it's slashing the paycheck for doctors and how this could affect the medical care you receive. plus, panic at lax on a very busy travel weekend.
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a car crash, reports of a gunman sending passengers fleeing for the exits. we're live in los angeles with the latest at one of the nation's busiest airports. we start with a fox extreme weather alert on a deadly storm system slamming the southwest. at least five people have been killed so far as a powerful system has already brought rain, ice and freezing temperatures from southern california to texas and is now making its way east. meteorologist janis dean with more. >> this is going to be our weather maker as we head into the busiest travel day of the year for the east coast. across the four corners, we're getsing heavy rain, very gusty winds, and some higher elevation snow. in some cases, over a foot of snow. look at these temperatures. dropping into the 20s, even the teens in the overnight and into tomorrow. a very cold system.
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in some cases, 30 degrees below average. as we stretch into texas. look at the pink on your map here. the potential for freezing rain and/or sleet tomorrow into monday, which could make travel next to impossible in and around the dallas area. your forecast precipitation, again, we could see lower elevations getting several inches of snow. the highest getting over a foot in some areas and then we'll watch very carefully over central and northern texas for the potential of icing. in some cases, a quarter of an inch to half an inch of ice, which could be really, really dangerous if you are traveling. so there is your forecast for dallas. really concerned sunday and monday when the temperatures kind of hovering around the freezing mark. that's where we have the potential for some very dangerous driving conditions. and then we are going to watch this low, the same low that's in the southwest right now, push across the southeast and give us the potential for a coastal storm. a nor'easter. so wednesday, the busiest travel day affecting millions of people all along the coast, rain, wind,
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we could see snow on the backside of this causing major delays from the mid-atlantic to new england. mainly i think it's going to be a rain events with some very gusty winds. but behind this very cold air, so we could get some wrap around snow heading into thanksgiving day. but of course, this is the last thing people want to hear on the busiest travel day. arthel, gregg, we'll certainly be keeping you up to date throughout the weekend. >> thank you. >> you got it. negotiators in geneva burning the midnight oil as they inch toward a historic deal with iran over its nuclear program. secretary of state john kerry and five diplomats for five other countries are now reportedly focusing on the fine print. but nobody is predicting a breakthrough as yet. >> tough and challenging negotiations. it's not easy to get to the finish line and as the secretary has said many times, he is the last person who is going to
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accept a bad deal. obviously that's not something anyone wants to accept. >> molly henneberg is live in washington with the latest. molly? >> reporter: gregg, there have been a lot of metings today, but not many signals indicating whether or not a deal can be reached. top at this time mats from the u.s., britain, france, iran are trying to work out an arrangement to push iran to curb its controversial nuclear activities in return for the international community lifting some of the its sanctions. iran has been struggling economically under the weight of the international sanctions. today secretary of state john kerry met with iran's foreign minister and a representative from the european union. zarif said previously that allowing iran to continue its uranium enrichment program for peaceful purposes, iran asserts, is a nonnegotiable. >> any agreement should include
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the program for iran. we will not accept anything other than that. we have the right, as i said, the rights need to be respected. it's an inalienable right. >> reporter: some republican members of congress says it doesn't make sense to allow iran to continue to enrich uranium while also lifting some of the sanctions. >> what we're actually signaling for those who want change in iran, for those who really saw that the ayatollah was under an enormous amount of pressure, we're signaling that we're going to release that pressure valve, that we're going to make it easier for the ayatollah. >> reporter: israeli prime minister, benjamin netanyahu also has pressed secretary kerry to increase sanctions on iran, not weaken them. gregg? >> molly henneberg in washington. thank you. an emotional appeal from the
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family of an american detained in north korea. 85-year-old meryl newman, south korean war veteran, was arrested by north korean authorities in october on the last day of a sightseeing trip. his family issuing a statement calling it a, quote, dreadful misunderstanding. now they're asking for cooperation with north korea to quickly return newman home. the family has not heard from him since his capture. they say they're worried about his health. >> we're learning more details on the troubled obamacare rollout. a new report says the web site failed a key test right before its launch. this as the white house delays next year's obamacare enrollment until after the midterm elections. elizabeth prann has the latest from washington. >> reporter: just how many red flags were raised before the rollout of healthcare.gov? a "washington post" reports of a, quote, preflight check list
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compiled overseeing the launch, it shows 41 out of 91 contractor functions were still not working. it lists dozens of the effects. the company was aware of classifying some as, quote, critical. such as an incapacity to handle heavy traffic, or the ability to allow consumers to browse without registering. this while a house committee releases a status report from the same agency, internal documents demonstrate the testing time frame was, quote, not adequate. while the white house acknowledged the rollout has been imperfect, officials continue to change deadlines. this year's enrollment is december 23rd, next year's 2015. some republicans say this is playing politics to midterm elections. >> democrats realize holy cow, there are 5 million policies being canceled right now. probably be millions more than that in the next couple of months. who knows how many? but it would be enough to certainly swing the election. >> reporter: however, the administration says this simply gives the consumer more time. >> there will be substantial
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numbers of people still enrolling right up until that deadline. this gives them more time to assess the pool of people who are getting insurance through the marketplace. >> reporter: this while many state insurance commissioners are still deciding whether to go along with the president's instructions to let consumers keep their insurance plans for just one more year. arthel, back to you. >> elizabeth prann, thanks. some new fallout over the army officer who sparked controversy by saying only average or ugly-looking women should be used in promotional materials. colonel in charge of a study looking into how women could be better integrated into the army has been removed from that study. the colonel's controversial e-mails leaked earlier this week. in one example, she referred to a female soldier in an army magazine article as being too pretty. a plea deal for the texas
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woman accused of sending poison. police say she mailed ricin-laced letters to president obama, as well as new york mayor michael bloomberg. the terms of her plea deal have not yet been released. she has been charged with two counts of threat by mail and one of threatening the president. richardson has been in jail since she gave birth this past july. things are just starting to get back to normal at lax tonight after a major security scare yesterday. two terminals were shut down, hundreds of flights delayed after a car accident and several reports of a gunman inside the airport. all this as a different u.s. airport, hundreds of miles away, was the scene of another disturbing incident. dominic dinatale with the details. >> reporter: hey there. you bet. disturbing is right. a man aboard a spirit airlines plane that had just landed in atlanta, which is one of the
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most busiest airports, was caught on tape shouting these heart stopping words that you never want to hear while aboard a plane. take a listen. >> there is a bomb! i'll blow this plane up! >> reporter: thankfully, no bomb was found and he was forcibly removed from the aircraft. police believe he may have suffered a psychotic breakdown or perhaps had a mental illness. he was taken to the hospital, but not before scaring the plane full of passengers. >> he upset a lot of people. >> maybe a psychiatric problem or whatever. >> lax, total panic. reports came in of shots being fired. it was about 7:30 last night. of course, happening just three short weeks after a gunman opened fire in terminal 3 there and killing a tsa agent.
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no shooter this time. it was a traffic accident caused by a medical emergency. some passengers and people in the terminal mistook the loud bangs of a vehicle collision as gun fire. >> as officers were responding to that particular traffic collision, people reported that there was shooting that was taking place in terminal 5. as officers responded in terminal 5 to address that particular issue, people fled out of the terminal. >> reporter: very complicated, very quickly. it was an anonymous call reporting a man with a weapon at a gate in terminal 4. so two terminals evacuated in the end. but no gunman was to be found. everything back to normal at lax today. all the flights are taking off and security is taking 40 minutes to get through. jackson atlanta, everything is fine there. that's good news for what is one of the busiest weekends on the calendar for travel. back to you. >> thank you thanks very much.
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candidate obama promised to make his administration the most transparent in history. well, now the same journalist whose job it is to cover the white house is saying it's anything but the case. details on the growing tension next. as we continue to mark 50 years since the assassination of president john f. kennedy, we'll speak with larry sabato about our president's lasting legacy.
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twitter is tightening up security against cyber predators. the social networking site is following in the foot steps of facebook and google, taking steps to protect user data. in the wake of the nsa spy scandal. the fallout causing a number of web sites to take additional security measures to stop on-line snooping. criminals mock them as snitches and rats, but now they're intimidating witnesses on a whole new level. they're doing it on-line. brian is in our new york news room to explain. what is this all about? >> with the rise of social media
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web sites, like instagram, twitter and facebook, intimidating witnesses is easier than ever. witness intimidation is reaching near epidemic levels. consider this, just two weeks ago in philly, an anonymous instagram account was taken down, the account reportedly outed more than 30 witnesses to violent crimes since february by posting witness photos, testimony, and police statements. so far no arrests have been made. but the city's d.a. office has filed charges in over 1,000 intimidation cases since january 2010. >> folks are going to be less likely to put their names out there if they know there is a possibility that not only are the people in their immediate circle going to know, but potentially thousands of people or tens of thousands of people are going to know what they said to the police. >> one retired philadelphia judge has written a manual on stopping intimidation. she says the down side to the
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internet is that it allows people to remain anonymous, making it difficult to track down those doing the intimidation. she urges courtrooms to ban sunglasses, cell phones, and gang attire in courtrooms. >> witness intimidation is a chilling factor, but without sounding dramatic, it is beyond a chilling factor. it shuts down the system. when witnesses will not come forth and testify, justice is not done. >> it is ultimately up to facebook and twitter to decide which accounts they shut down. but they coo have specific policies to deal with specific law enforcement requests. >> gosh, it never stops. thank you very much. we're just getting word that the assassin of robert f. kennedy has been moved to a new prison in california. kennedy was assassinated at the ambassador hotel in los angeles in 1968 after winning the california primary for the
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democratic presidential nomination. the murderer serving a life sentence, transferred yesterday from cochran state prison to another facility in san diego. an official says that the timing of the move as the nation marked 50 years since the assassination of kennedy's brother was, quote, an unfortunate coincidence. speaking of the kennedys, americans closing out a very solemn week as yesterday marked 50 years since the assassination of president john f. kennedy. president obama remembering that dark day, laying a wreath at arlington national cemetery, the final resting place of our 35th president. john kennedy was shot and killed as his motorcade drove through the streets of dallas, texas. his life ended much too soon, but his legacy remains to this day. joining me now is larry sabato,
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who is author of this book, "the kennedy half century" and director of the center for politics at the university of virginia. professor, i've enjoyed reading this. it's a wonderful book. what's interesting about it, what struck me initially is that president kennedy's achievements in office were regard by some as not all that remarkable, but you conducted an extensive survey by peter heart and jeff guerin and it found kennedy to be by a wide margin, the most esteemed president since 1953. why is that? >> gregg, there is no question that a lot of it is the assassination itself. the blood from that assassination, that horrible event on elm street, the real nightmare on elm street in
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dallas elevated kennedy to a kind of secular sainthood, despite all the revelations that we've had about president kennedy's private life, which are i think shocking to most people, there wasn't any real effect on public opinion. and partly it's because people understand he didn't have the same opportunity other presidents have had to serve out at least one or maybe two terms and solidify his own legacy. so in his case, legacy becomes a kind of life after death and people may misremember the kennedy years, or they may look back on them fondly without remembering the times of great cold war crisis, for example, that were part of the kennedy years. >> sure. the cuban missile crisis. when we were on the precipice. but there have been, professor, a myriad of conspiracy theorists, scientists who looked into it, some postulate shots
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from the front, others from the behind. you reexamined the assassination in-depth, in part on heretofore unknown information. what did you learn? >> gregg, we undertook a major scientific study of evidence that the second major investigation of the kennedy assassination, the house select committee on assassinations in the 1970s looked at in order to conclude in their words, that president kennedy was probably killed as the result of a conspiracy. we have found their evidence to be invalid. we've used methods not available to them in the 1970s, but it's pretty clear they misinterpreted what they had, which was a recording from the police department in dallas taken at the time of the assassination. long story short, turns out there are no bullets on there at all.
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they claim there were four bullets which produced a conspiracy. it doesn't mean there wasn't a conspiracy. it's possible there was somebody behind the picket fence. but i'll tell you something, gregg, i was a little more inclined toward conspiracy when i started this study five years ago. and i concluded without any question that the evidence is overwhelming that lee harvey oswald did indeed kill president kennedy and wound governor connally. it doesn't mean that there wasn't anybody who encouraged him. doesn't mean he wasn't helped. doesn't mean he didn't tell one or more people in advance what he was going to do. we'll never know those things because he was shot 48 hours after he was captured. >> you wrote, and i'll quote here: in the blink of an eye, america had changed forever. so true. in what ways do you think? >> you know, we lost an
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innocence that we had. we probably shouldn't have had it. i can remember because i lived through, so many people saying, i didn't think that could happen here. well, actually our history, unfortunately, is full of events like this, successful and unsuccessful assassination attempts against presidents and other high officials. but we had just convinced ourselves that post-world war ii, with the economy moving up, with the united states as really the undisputed number one world military power, that we were somehow impervious to the laws of human history. well, we weren't. and it was such a shock, gregg. anybody out there who is listening who lived through this, who remembers seeing their parents cry, their classmates cry, their teachers cry, knows what a shock to the system it was. >> it surely was. professor, last question: john f. kennedy is often quoted by his eight successors in office.
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how has kennedy's legacy influenced subsequent president presidents? >> gregg, they have all tried to use kennedy because of the static you cited. he is the most popular post-world war ii president. and conveniencely for boast parties, kennedy has liberal parts and conservative parts of his legacy. democrats can use that the liberal components. republicans can use the conservative components to project and promote their own ideas, their own platforms. and it's a reasonable thing for presidents to do. it's a useful tool in their tool box as they attempt to convince americans of the rightness of their own cause. >> well, i must say over the years i've read a great many books on john f. kennedy and this one by far is the very,
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very best and thank you for taking a few moments to share part of it with us. thank you, professor. >> thank you very much, gregg. i appreciate what you said. >> very nice. coming up, new warnings over obamacare. this time from doctors themselves. why they're raising red flags over the new health care law. and then shopping for kids this season? you're going to want to see this year's toys. the top ones, that's coming up. singer willie nelson is suspending his tour. we're going to tell you why. ♪ on the road again ♪ ♪ i just can't wait to get on the road again ♪ ♪ the life i love is making music with my friends ♪ ♪ i can't wait to get on the road again ♪ ♪ on the road again ♪
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welcome back. bottom of the hour. time for the top of the news. secretary of state john kerry and world leaders in geneva trying to nail down a comprehensive deal over iran's nuclear program. the group of diplomats are work to convince tehran to cut down on its nuclear activity in exchange for sanctions reduced. reports of at least five people after a powerful winter storm slams parts of the southwest. that system heading east. expected to reach the atlantic coast line by the middle of next week. and singer willie nelson postponing several performance after three of his band members are hurt in a bus accident in texas. police say the bus plowed into a bridge after losing control on wet roads and high winds. nelson was not on board. obamacare may become a harsh pill to swallow for some doctors who are now voicing concerns
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they're going to be paid much less and these doctors say the new system would also make it harder for patients to get the care they need. joining us in studio, managing partner at chapwood investments. it's nice to have you on the set. >> nice to be here. >> so i want to talk to you about you're telling me some of your clients who are physicians, that they're concerned about the insurance payouts under obamacare. talk to me about that. >> without question. this is basically bullying. doctors have been bullied for years. these are the ones that were the smartest kids in the class, went to med school, 17 years of schooling, and every single year they seem to make less and less. a quick example, many years ago, if you went and had a hip replacement, a doctor would have gotten $7,800 back in the 1980s. today they get $1,200. so every single year they make less and less. now under obamacare, they make 60% less if an insurance company comes in through an exchange.
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so if you have an employer plan, let's just say you have a dollar there, if it comes in through blue cross through an exchange, they'll make 60 cents. they will start telling you they don't want to see you. i've talked to my doctor friends, i will tell you, you're going to say i'd like to get an appointment and they'll say, how did you come through? where is your insurance? and they're going to say no. especially if they're really good doctors and they're really busy. they're going to deny you. >> let me throw this out. you may not want to hear this. there are some people who think that doctors will do surgeries even when they're -- i mean, not saying all doctors, but not really there for hip replacement, just yet. but your insurance is going cover it, so let's go ahead and do it now. there is that aspect of it. >> i've heard that before. but i also tell you if you sit down with any doctor, they basically make very, very little out of any surgeries at all. i thought about that. i have a bad hip and i thought about getting it. my wife has a bad hip. when she went to the doctor, he said not yet. it depends on the doctor. >> that's a good doctor. >> that's right.
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i think a is an exception that people are doing surgeries otherwise 'cause most of them don't make money doing those surgeries. it is a problem. a lot of doctors will go to concierge medicine where you'll pay $5,000 just to have the right to call them directly. i'm fortunate i have friends, i can call them any time of the but some will pay a lot of money just to have the ability to get to a doctor. it's access to the doctor that matters now. >> and then the insurance officials there acknowledging that they have reduced the rates in some plans which is the result of the pressure to keep the premiums affordable under obamacare. but the insurance officials saying the doctors, they can make up for this by seeing more patients. how does that idea fly with your clients who are physicians? >> do you know any doctors that are happy? when give to a doctor, i want that doctor happy to see me, well rested and knowing that i'm going to get the best care possible. a general doctor, a family doctor has to see 25 patients on average to break even that day.
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now it's going to get even more. these doctors are going through very, very quickly just to break even let alone make money. so the idea that there is some positive silver lining here for doctors is absolute nonsense. doctor continue to get bullied and we got it find a way so they're not because just like you and i and gregg, we want to go to a doctor and we want that doctor happy to see us. not just seeing us as a number and okay, that's number 31 today. now i've broken even. >> i understand your perspective coming from other physicians, but what about the folks looking -- they need health care. they need access to doctors, but they can't afford it and that was the whole idea of obamacare from the beginning. so if it's lowering health care cost for the people, where do the cuts come from? >> i'm not sure where they come from. but it was an idea. it sounded great. it got people elected, but it isn't working and there is an old line, when riding a sick horse, dismount. right now, i guess it's a good way of saying it because right
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now it's not work. it's not going to work. i don't want it to not work. i want everybody to have affordable health care. but this plan that we have right now, not working and no one is happy about it. >> ed, good to see you on the set and your family is here. thank you so much. >> thanks for having me. gregg? >> it is called spice. guess what? it can kill. our latest installment of fox files, heather nauert investigates the menace of synthetic marijuana and how it is killing users all over the country. here is a preview. >> reporter: spice delivers a powerful and dangerous high and that list of banned substances is growing at the federal and state level. packaged to appeal to teens, this is the package that killed a boy. >> it's packaged as bubble gum flavored, some of the other flavors that mr. smiley comes in is mango, potpourri.
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>> some of the packaging will say not for human consumption. legally what does that qualifier mean? >> nothing. absolutely nothing. >> reporter: one attorney general at the forefront of the fight against synthetic marijuana. >> one of my favorites that they try is they stamp this is not illegal, on the back of it as well. you can't stamp that on cocaine and make it legal. that's just a ploy. they try to get teens to purchase it. they call it synthetic marijuana, but there is no pot in this, right? >> no. >> harmless herbs like tea leaves are often used in drugs like spice. what is sprayed on them is what can kill you. some of the toxic chemicals are found in paint thinner, nail polish remover and insecticide. the contents of every package is a mystery, getting high on spice is like playing russian roulette. perhaps the idea is you're buying it from a convenience store, it can't be as dangerous as buying it from a drug dealer down the street?
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>> exactly. in their mind, they don't think it's anything like cocaine or heroin that they're buying at night on a street corner. >> amazing. you can catch that entire broadcast when fox files airs tonight, 7 and 10:00 p.m. eastern time and tomorrow at 9:00 p.m. eastern, only on the fox news channel. >> when we come back, shocking allegations from some members of the white house press corps. they're questioning whether you, the american people, are learning everything you can and should about the president and his administration.
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welcome back. there is growing tension between the obama administration and the white house press corps. the organization of top u.s. journalists accusing the white house of deliberately banning photo journalists from covering the president at official state events. questions about the practice leading to this heated exchange during thursday's press briefing. take a look. >> each presidential team that has come in here has basically used for some denial of access has used the previous president as an -- presidential team as an excuse for why they denied that abscess. you are setting precedent here that the next president is going to use and are you aware of that? >> i don't agree with that.
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i can't think -- the only precedent that i can think of in terms of the previous administration is where we have taken steps to be more transparent. >> susan estridge is the fox news contributor and professor of law and political science at the university of southern california. hello. >> hey, art. >> okay. so let's start here. does this tension, if you will, fall under the category of surprising or expected? >> i think it's perennial, might be the word. especially in the second term, you know. i'm thinking second term reagan, second term clinton, second term bush. now second term obama. every president i've known and every would be president, if you get them privately will tell you how much they hate the press. they always think they're being treated unfairly. they always do. but at the beginning, at least,
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there is the honeymoon and think, well, maybe they'll be different and they'll be transparent and they'll control the press. by the time the second term rolls around, they come to this conclusion that, wait a minute. we don't have to let these folks in all the time, you know. as in this instance. we'll use our own white house photographers to take these pictures and that way if the president's drooling or if, you know, he sneezes in the middle of dinner, if he does something embarrassing, that picture won't go out. so i would say this is perennial, would be the word i'd use. >> okay. so in the case of president obama, how much of the bad press do you think actually sticks with him or does he let it absorb or does he let it hit a teflon coating? >> there is no teflon coating with these guys. i remember a friend of mine went to meet the prime minister of
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israel for the first time. i can't remember which it was. he came back and he said, i had this conversation and i was so excited. there i was. he was going to take me into his camp and all he did was complain about his press coverage and i laughed my head off because, of course, while not naming names, i will tell you that every powerful politician i have ever met in my life in the most intimate of moments meetings -- not intimate that way, but you know, just talking one on one -- what do they say to me? they show me unfair columns. the press was unfair here. they've been too good to this one. they're not good to me. they'll all tell you they're thick skinned. none of them are. they all read the stuff. they let it get to them. i've heard reagan was pretty good. but he may be the last one who was. >> and then if they ignore the press, then there is a price to be paid, wouldn't you say? >> always a price to be paid. so i remember once when i was on
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one campaign where we got the order, no one should talk to the "new york times" because they haven't treated us fairly. and so i got caught talking to the "new york times" reporter and somebody started, you know, disciplining me. what were you doing? you were talking to the "new york times." i said, yeah, because the last i heard, they're still publishing. it's kind of easier 'cause it's easier now for candidates and presidents to talk directly to people. but this idea that we'll punish the press by denying them access rarely works, particularly if they've got an audience out there 'cause they keep -- you're still on television. there was an administration that tried to punish fox news and we're still here. looking pretty good. >> we do look good. thank you, susan. appreciate that. >> yeah. >> listen, i have to go. i always appreciate your
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insight. you know that. happy thanksgiving. >> happy thanksgiving to you, art, and to everybody watching. >> thanks. okay. i want to remind everybody that you can read susan's column in newspapers across the country, every wednesday and friday. gregg? santa can do his part this holiday season, of course. but sometimes mom and dad need a little help. that's why "consumer reports" shops smart is next to help you find the right toy that will make your child or adult's face light up when it comes to good stuff. ♪ ♪
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welcome back. tiz the season when children and ourselves have visions of toys twifrngling in their eyes. >> a ha.
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and to make those visions come true, consumers reports came up with high- tech toys for all of the little ones on your list. carol is the consumer editor reportment>> good to see you. >> this is digital dress barbie that gregg loved. >> she is very charming. you can bring up a palate and pick a color and girls can draw a design on her dress. >> or boys. >> i didn't mean to be executionary. >> that brings up her palate and thing you pick a color. >> say like purple. >> you can see the point and make it move or and it is turns
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to like a disco type of baesh. >> not very posable. >> this is very kids six and up. >> and okay, $50. >> and we are getting more high-tech here. this is a big shot camera all of the different camera components and kids along with parents can build a working digital camera. it is a very neat project. >> and have a crank. >> you can charge it with usb. but that crank will give it more juice if you run out. >> i like that. what is the age group? >> eight and up. >> and like if you are notting to create your own circuit board? >> this is a tron ton modules and each of them have different functions. one is a light and buzzer and
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pressure sensor and they fit together magnetically and create circuits. you can so how easy it is to turn in and turn on the power here. this is a power and dimmer and i can turn the light up and off and on. >> can you pick andment. >> they fit together a concern way. and it comes with a great instruction guide. >> parents can get involved as well. tell me the age? >> eight and up. it is a hundred bucks but for all of the ingenui ty it is worth it. >> what is that this. >> this is the twilight turtle. it is hard to see.
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he is a night light and also programmed to play lullabies and through the ipad app. >> you can make him change. >> i can hear waves. sound soothing waves. >> and turn it up louder and drowns out the snoring in the bedroom. >> if you are doing the snoring. >> i was not suggesting i was doing the snores. >> what do we have next? >> planet three d bock. a technology as augmented reality. you down load the app and hover it on the pages of the book, you will see extra animations and extra facts. it is magical. >> and $20. those days are demanding in the intellect department and got to
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keep them occupied. thank you. >> that's5>b >> harris faulkner is coming up with the fox report. >> in case we don't see you, happy thanksgiving. >> thank you. you want a way to help minimize blood sugar spikes. support heart health. and your immune system. now there's new glucerna advance with three benefits in one. [ male announcer ] new glucerna advance. from the brand doctors recommend most. was a truly amazing day.ey, new glucerna advance. without angie's list, i don't know if we could have found all the services we needed for our riley. for over 18 years we've helped people take care of the things that matter most. join today at angieslist.com
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>> this is a fox report. our ally israel said do not make a deal with iran the holiday season of worry. millions of americans scrambling to find melting care as the white house makes a political move for obama care. >> the wheels are falling off. >> and now a warning signs that were ignored and yes, it was before the website was launched. also on on

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