tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News November 24, 2013 3:00am-7:01am PST
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good morning, everybody. it is sunday, november 24th. i'm julian. we begin with a knocks news alert. the u.s. and world powers reaching an historic deal with iran. can iran really be trusted? what message does this send to our allies, particularly israel. we're live in washington with the latest. the obama care disaster the number one issue plaguing the white house. plus, fast forwarding, cassette tapes and using roadmaps to plan trips. sound familiar? part of the time-consuming
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problems from the 1980s that no longer exist. we've got all the breakdown and i dug through the dusty archives in the basement. "fox & friends" begins right now. good morning. >> good morning. >> it's sunday morning, 6:00 a.m. in the east coast. >> hello, fellas. >> it got brutally cold? >> can i interrupt? >> no. no. >> when we were talking about the eight track tapes, cassettes, you looked at me and started laughing, why is that? >> because i still use them. >> oh. >> because you didn't jump ahead. i've always preferred eight tracks. >> the technology. the future. >> that's what your car still has it. >> it's stuck. i have one stuck in there. >> we have a fox news alert.
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the u.s. and other world powers striking historic deals with iran. what are the deals and does it go far enough. peter doocy is live at the white house. peter, what's going on? >> tucker, basically here's the deal. iran has agreed to freeze their nuclear program for six months and in return they're going to have some economic sanctions lifted and they're going to get access to some foreign accounts that they have been sealed off from. it's a little bit less than $7 billion in total economic relief for iran. we heard president obama speaking about this late last night here at the white house. >> these negotiations, nothing will be agreed to unless everything is agreed to. the burden is on iran to prove to the world that its nuclear program will be exclusively for peaceful purposes. >> so the whole deal is going to be off if iran is caught trying to build a nuclear weapon, and we heard via twitter from their president today who wrote,
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quote, iran talks progress in such a way that rights of iranian nation to peace full nuclear energy and enrichment were acknowledged by world powers. another tweet said iranian people's vote for moderations and constructive engagement and tireless efforts by negotiating are now open to new who are rye zans. #irantalks. marco rubio sent out this blistering statement overnight. in sum, this agreement shows other rogues that wish to go nuclear that you can obfuscate, cheat and lie for a decade and eventually the united states will tire and drop key demands. we're also now hearing from the israeli prime minister, benjamin netanyahu. he is calling this an historic dangerous place because of this agreement. back to you in new york.
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>> peter doocy, thank you. good seeing you. >> thank you. >> it's easy to become cynical when it comes to iran. there's a long track record of them dragging their feed, playing out the deals and walking back sanctions that we put in place. >> not following the deals at all. >> right. not following the deals. they have six months, six months under the agreement. the president if you don't want to be cynical, maybe we ought to be happy and think positively. if you hear the president, he says no deal will go into place in six months if they violate any of these. >> right. we should be totally clear about two things. one, this is not just between iran and the united states, this is an agreement between the united states and iran as well as great britain, germany, france, china, and russia. this is really a global deal. also be clear, it's not just the israelis, it's also the gulf states and saudi arabia. i'll make a third point. anyone that i've ever spoken to in the region is that iran will
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have one because they have the desire and they have the money to pay for it. >> when i was first listening to the breaking news on fox news channel, six month deal seems like it's reasonable because it's a short period of time. you've got intrusive inspectors going in there. the iranians have agreed to this. this is part of the six-month deal. the thing that's interesting is if after six months they haven't followed the deal, what? >> then there's no deal. >> the sanctions go back. >> doesn't seem like there's any sort of here's what's going to happen if you don't. >> it's the reverse of that. there's still inducement that they want. i ran is suffering. their oil money is tied up. in six months once they get a taste of a better economy they'll want a taste of it. >> you have to separate the
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cooks that have been running it and the government now. >> he wants to rebuild the relationship with the west. maybe we can be hopeful on sunday. here's part of what iran has to do. they have to commit to halt the enrichment above 5%. if you get it above 20%, that's where it gets close to be able to be used for a bomb. >> right. >> also significantly increase the inspections at their plutonium reactor to the current level. all of this raises the obvious question, which is why is a country sitting on as much oil as iran is building nuclear reactors in the first place? you can't say we have an energy crisis. these are, of course, designed to produce nuclear grade fissionable material.
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>> none of these reports talk about iran copying to what the problem has been in the past and what they've been doing in all of these clandestine and secretive moves. you don't hear of them having to justify or open up about it. >> they haven't had to admit, hey, when we agreed to these frameworks before, we were secretly building underground nuclear reactors. >> right. >> we shouldn't take our eyes off of the fact that it's not iran building a nuclear weapon, they're the world pons sponsor of terror. they keep the shiite militias alive. they're keeping the assad regime in force. that's why the saudis hate them, the emirates hate them. they make the region more volati volatile. the region didn't want that. by limiting the enrichment program down to 5%. that was an agreement that maybe everyone could get on board with. israel not happy about it.
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wanted it down to 3.5%. secretary of state john kerry said it does make i will race safer. listen. >> it will make our partners in the region safer. it will make our ally, israel, safer. >> so israel not terribly happy about it this morning. they say from israel's cabinet minister, it's still bad and it will make it more difficult than before to achieve an appropriate solution in the future. israel cannot participate in the international celebration which is based on iranian deception and international self-delusion. >> john kerry and everybody from iran when they made the deal, it came across at 3:00 in the morning. there was a celebratory feel. i wouldn't say the united states is in a celebratory mode. we're waiting to see what happens. >> watch them over the nicext s
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months. >> maybe we can be positive. let us know on facebook. can we be positive? >> are you sold, is this a new era of peace and prosperity. >> they do have a new president. maybe things can change there. on the heels of this deal, the epic debacle that is obama care, the president is set to m embark on a three-day trip. what is he doing? is he visiting the states that lost their health care thanks to obama care? is he trying to rally the deals? no, he's going to raise money. >> he's going to raise money for 2014. >> he's hanging out with magic johnson. he's going to get an earful. these are the very same democrats that have to answer back in their home districts for having supported obama care.
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he's going out there to try to raise money. in california they lowered the ticket price because they wanted it packed. they're having a barrage of commercials saying, you supported obama care. the democratic party is the party of rich people. rich people, we know this from oaks it poles. voted for obama twice. people making over $200,000 a year. you see it in the fundraising. >> especially in california. in the silicon valley and the hollywood hills. this is 17 fundraisers over the course of the month. now observers, you've been inside the beltway. is that a typical amount for one month at this point in a second term presidency. >> it's an awful lot. especially an awful lot. when he's saying i'm running my last campaign. >> let me finish with this. sales force.com. he's holding a lunch for president obama.
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clearly everyone in the silicon valley is holding a lunch for him. it will be an intense conversation. let's get on to other news making headlines. the army launching a new review to consider reclassifying the fort hood shooting as a terrorism. that's coming from john mchue, south carolina congressman joe wilson says the intelligence community considers major hasan to be a home grown violent extremist, quote, unquote, a person who may engage ideologically motivated terrorist activities. he's been sentenced to death for killing 13 people and wounding 32 at fort hood in 2009. the victim had been denied purple hearts because the massacre is still considered workplace violence. the person who sent ricin
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laced letters says her husband did it. the terms of her deal have not been made public. looking for the perfect christmas present we wonder. former president george w. bush may have a good idea for you. number 43 selling his famous artwork at the bush center museum in dallas. it features the cardinal, as you can see. it's going for 30 bucks according to the store. it is flying, pardon the pun. off the chef. >> he's a really good artist. he showed a picture of barney. he was on leno the other night. >> if you ever see him again, tell him. i hate him but he really has
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talent as an artist. >> i can evaluate our own rick who told us about the weather. >> there are storms in the west that killed eight people. it started across areas of california. incredibly heavy wind. that turned into very incredible rainfall across parts of arizona and snow and icing in through new mexico and texas. the cold air has made it all the way to the east. 24 towards new york city 367891 down towards atlanta. also windy. 20 in atlanta. winter storm warnings in many areas, including dallas. it's mostly ice. big storms today in texas. guys, there are some impacts with this storm tuesday and wednesday. much more on that coming up at the bottom of the area. >> thanksgiving time. the u.s. and world powers
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fox news alert. late last night u.s. and world powers agreeing to a nuclear deal with iran. >> here's a question everybody wants to know today. can we trust them? here to weigh in is national security analyst for the clarion project. brian morrow. good to see you. >> good to see you. >> can we trust them? >> absolutely not. that's why we've made our film,
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"iranium." it details the history not just of the iranian nuclear program but the ideology that drives them because if you look at their constitution, the leadership is mandated to pursue the downfall of what they deem to be all nonislamic governments around the world. the second that they stop supporting terrorism, they're actually in breach of their own constitution. >> will they come along with this because money is in play? are they able to side step ideology because they're going to get a boat load of cash. >> the difference between ahmadinejad and rouhani is tactics. we knew this deal was coming because he's given public speeches that are publicly available where he has said what his goal is. he says, look, i'm very good at deceiving the west using language and a calm demeanor in order to string along the west in order to buy time for the nuclear program and eventually it will advance to the point where the west has to just
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accept it as is. there's one great quote from a 2005 speech that he gave where he sayins, we're not lying, we' just not disclosing everything. >> my question is it's not just the united states, it's great britain, germany, france. my question is one of the reasons the west went along with this is they see this as an option against war. they want to avoid armed conflict. do you think that's why they went along with this? >> i'm sure it's a factor, but i think over the long term this makes war more and more likely. the so-called modern president of iran has a plan. one step back to later take two steps forward. they'll freeze major parts that are lagging behind. it's important to recognize that iran's nuclear program is not just based in iranian territory. their allies in north korea can
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work on things like the warhead that is more problematic. >> the little optimism thing you were hoping for, you know that -- >> it just collapsed. >> went downhill fast. >> three and a half hours to rebuild it. brian moore, if you want to get that film for a free time, go to clarionproject.org. thanks, ryan. >> that's right. well, it's another obama care promise he hasn't been able to keep. if you like your doctor, too bad for you. the straight advice from a doctor everyone needs to hear about. it's a college football touchdown everybody is going to be hearing about this morning. it comes from a war hero. we'll tell you about it. ♪ an american child ♪ an american child uld save yot or more on car insurance. everybody knows that. well, did you know that when a tree falls in the forest
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and no one's around, it does make a sound? ohhh...ohhh...oh boy! i'm falling. everybody look out! ahhhhh...ugh. little help here. geico. fifteen minutes could save you...well, you know. anybody? h sleigh bells♪ the bass pro shops 5 day sale starts wednesday with huge savings on great gift ideas. like bass pro logo hooded sweatshirts for only $10. ladies 5 pocket jeans for only $10. and a wildgame rage 4 game camera with free viewer for under $100.
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welcome back. 23 minutes past the hour. some quick headlines for you. robert kennedy's killer transferred to a new prison in california the same day as john f. kennedy's assassination. the transfer was routine and the date just an unfortunate coincidence. the son of one of the world's most wanted drug lords set to face a judge tomorrow. 23-year-old is a u.s. citizen and was arrested on federal drug charges while crossing the border from mexico into arizona. his father is the leader and one of the mexican's biggest drug cartels. his group is believed to smuggle more drugs into the u.s. than any other cartel. if you like your health care plan, you'll be able to keep your health care plan, period.
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if you like your doctor, you will be able to keep your doctor, period. [ applause ] >> period. an obama care promise that can't be kept. insurance companies are slashing payments to physicians. what does this mean to doctors and what does it mean to you and your wallet? joining us is dr. jeff singer. thank you for joining us this morning. >> good morning. >> you're already seeing health care companies slashing payments to doctors and one company in new york is paying $20 per mammogram reading to doctors. what is the effect of this going to be? >> well, insurance companies are racheting down the reimbursements to doctors because they don't want the premiums to go up even higher than they are going. doctors are going to make a decision not to enroll in the
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programs because they can't keep their doors open at these kind of reimbursement rates. as the reimbursement rates start to approach medicaid reimbursement rates, what you'll see is participation rates of doctors will be like the rates of medicaid rates. just like with medicaid patients, the people in the plans will find delays in getting care, long waits to see doctors, particularly specialized care, and it's going to be -- you talk about substandard policies. you're going to have substandard care within the exchange plans. >> so the irony is the president's all worked up about income inequality and the haves and the have notes. it seems to me this system guarantees a two tier system where the very rich pay for it and get good care and the middle class and everybody else gets crummy care. >> that's true. in fact, a lot of insurance companies are choosing not to
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even offer policies in the exchange and only offer policies outside the exchange. if you don't think you're eligible for a subsidy, you don't have any reason to go through the exchange. you may see people get insurance outside the exchange having better plans and choices. i think you'll see more people want to pay cash and more and more doctors are going to opt out of all of these plans and say, i'll negotiate and give a substantial discount and price for cash and you'll see like a separate economy develop of a cash economy which, actually, i think is a good thing. that's going to be very market based. where we do see that happening we see accountability. if people are paying directly for their care, they expect accountability. >> exactly. >> prices actually come down and are very competitive. >> very quickly, doctor. you're a surgeon. would you want your children to follow in your footsteps and become doctors? >> it's kind of tough because they ask them to go to college for four years and then medical
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school for four years and then three to five years of residency only to look forward to a world in which, first of all, they're being bureaucratically being micromanaged and every day their rules get worse and then the compensation will be hardly enough to justify the years and investment of their time to train for this. it's a tough decision to ask them to make. obviously i'd like them to make whatever decision they want to, but it certainly loses a lot of its appeal. >> that's really sad to hear. dr. singer, thank you for joining us. >> thank you for having me. everybody is getting ready with their thanksgiving meal. that comes with a ton of prep work. what happens if you cut your finger or burn yourself? will you be ready for thanksgiving then? we have the easy at-home remedies that will make you thankful. remember fast forwarding through cassette tapes. it was a beauty that no longer exists. we'll tell you what else you no
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pictures, it can be done. skeptical. anyway, they're in the world's deepest lake in russia. the torch is lit by a water resistant flair. >> the guy is floating, too. >> it came up to dry land. it was handed over to someone wearing a jet pack, naturally, who then shot up out of the water. the 39,000 mile torch relay began in october when astronauts took it on an historic space back. it will end february 7th in sochi marking the start of the 2014 winter olympic games. >> when did fire become water resistant? >> they're flares. >> it's like antibiotics not working. >> like a little light. >> a downward spiral. >> come on. you think you can put out a flame by water. not anymore. >> as you'll find out if your deep fried turkey catches fire, it does not work when you throw water on it. >> you can tell we've made technological advancements. we now have water resistant fire. we also have some things that
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we're saving so much time. remember things we used to do in the 1980s. >> let's go back in time. >> great story about the things, technology -- >> yeah. so i grew up in the '80s, okay, i did. i admit it. >> i don't believe that for a second. >> like from the movie "say anything" where this won't happen anymore. watch this ♪ in your eyes >> best scene ever. ♪ i want to be in your eyes >> standing there with a boom box. peter gabriel song. >> all of these pieces of technology that we used to use on a regular basis are gone. >> let's talk about some of these. >> number one, phone book. do you guys use a phone book anymore? >> no. >> but they still do make them. i see them. >> do you remember how long it took you to find the thing you needed in the phone book. >> you don't look under be the right category.
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>> food, where do you look for getting a shoe repaired? >> how about if you just want to hear your song and you have to rewind your tape or fast forward your tape and it takes three hours and stopping. >> yeah. you have to stick a pencil in there to rewind it. >> peeling perforated ends of printer paper. >> yeah, it was the dot matrix printing paper. >> i remember getting lost. i remember driving in silence. i remember flying on airplanes without doing e-mail. >> it was hell on earth. >> do you remember the thomas guy. in california we have that. >> i was thinking about that. i don't know why i have these. this is junk in my house. >> money makers for you. >> i dug these out this morning. the old cassette tapes. i already respect you, there's journey. >> some bon jovi. >> that was good. >> what else is in here.
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>> you have some mix tapes. >> yeah. twisted sister. >> oh, boy. >> you just killed all my '80s nostalgia. >> rick, did you not believe that i would be listening to a twisted sister album. >> did you have spandex? >> i can't believe you have that case. >> this is real wood. it's not particle board. >> art of noise. >> what else have you got? >> do you have any little romantic -- >> tears for fears. >> i do have some mix tapes in here. >> are there any little messages? >> oh. >> while we go to rick i'm going to snoop through. >> keep your hands off my tapes. >> whoa, as he storms off the set. >> juliet. >> i'll find it. anything happening? >> oh, yeah. i might as well give you these headlines since everybody is waiting for me. a warning from the fda about some of your favorite foods. watch this. they say a cancer causing chemical is released when foods like french fries, chips, and cookies are ground through
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frying or baking. now they're releasing new guidelines. it suggests companies tweak ingredients, lower frying temperatures and cut thicker chips. new problems for boeing. a new warning about ice forming on the engines of some of its dreamliner planes. a company recommending these planes don't fly through storms that may contain ice crystals. flights resumed after boeing redesigned that battery system. and a new york deli owner and his son try to bank on another man's lottery ticket. i cannot believe this story. police say these two, this long island duo, tried to give the customer that actually bought the winning ticket $1,000 instead of the $1 million the ticket was worth. they basically tried to scam him out of it by giving him $1,000 to go away. the customer got suspicious and he went to police who then arrested and charged the father and son. their attorney is claiming the
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payout was based on a lottery. inspiring story at the clemson football game. tigers wide out daniel rodriguez is an army veteran. purple heart recipient. scoring his first ever touchdown on military appreciation day. rodriguez has been an emotional leader since walking on in 2012. the tigers, by the way, won 52-6. those are your headlines. yes, they are. powerful storms hitting the west. killed eight people. it will wreak havoc on your thanksgiving day plans. >> the east and west, looking good for thanksgiving day plans. the eastern corridor will be the problem. those flights originate out of there. take a look at temperatures right now. this is canada. 35 in anchor rablg. in the u.s., 11 in fargo, 28 in
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el paso. cold, arctic air that has made its way all the way down to the main land u.s.a. the cold air and moisture is bringing freezing rain and snow across the south. heavy rain is beginning to taper off as the main gulf of energy moves farther off the east. still snow across parts of new mexico, another three or four inches in places like albuquerque. we'll see snow across the panhandle of particulatexas. so we have winter storm warnings in effect across areas, places like dallas where we'll see a coating of ice. that means you can't see in those conditions, a really, really rough one. storms down here, later on i'll show you where that storm is tuesday and wednesday. that's what we'll be doing with some of that potential snow. clayton, we'll send it over to you. >> question for you, rick, are you bloated this morning? >> can't you tell? >> that's why i didn't have to ask. from burning your hands, cuts and reaction and bloating.
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a lot can go wrong on thanksgiving. luckily the remedies might be right in your kitchen cabinet. we'll get to the bloating in a moment. >> we will. >> let's start with the burning. in fact, one of our producers, anna, i'm going to calling her out on air, she burned her finger lasnight. if you get a burn, how do you recommend do i that? >> run to your only salad station. pick up the vinegar. that's an astringent. it takes care of the burn. all you have to do is mix one part vinegar with one part water and put it on gauze and put it on your burn or if it's closer to tea time, you want be to grab the tea, tea is an antibacterial that takes away the fluid from the area. just put a little bit of honey on a gauze. >> say you nicked yourself, cutting vegetables, you cut your finger. >> or football out in the back, skin your knee.
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so this is super surprising. this is cayenne pepper put on a cut makes it stop bleeds. >> really? >> within 15 seconds. what it does is it equalizes the pressure around the wound making the blood clot faster. >> you would think you wouldn't want to eat a hot wing af you cut your finger. >> maybe you put it on it. >> i'm going to try that next time. >> that's a really good one. >> bloating. we have a big thanksgiving meal. >> right. you want a natural solution. the natural solution is to brew a tea with clove or dill. it releases the below the. >> bloating. >> from something on the thanksgiving meal, something got mixed in there. >> if it's an emergency you want to call 911, let's preface it with that, but you may want to head to the cabinet to pick up p
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pepto bismo or milk of mag niece yeah. put it on the wound. >> we say we won't have that third helping of pumpkin pie. >> please, don't make me go back. >> i've eaten so much. here's what you do. you head to your spice cabinet. pick up some fennel or get fresh fennel. make tea. it's very sweet and it's a natural appetite suppressant. >> instead of eating your pumpkin pi, you just nau on a big gourd of fennel. >> that will make me not want to eat. thank you so much. it tastes pretty good. coming up on the show, many of us can relate to family drama during the holidays like this. >> get off my roof! >> i can't wait. so how do you avoid family feuds like this one?
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dr. keith avlo is answering your questions next on the show. stay tuned. still missing. so my dog and i we're going to go find it. it's out there somewhere spreading the good word about idaho potatoes and raising money for meals on wheels. but we'd really like our truck back, so if you see it, let us know, would you? thanks. what? i need a newn't investment pn. i need to rethink the core of my portfolio. ishares core etfs are low-cost funds. so you can keep more of what you earn. get started with the new ishares core builder. design a personalized plan that can help you achieve your investment goals. ishares by blackrock. call 1-800-ishares for a prospectus, which includes investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses.
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so turkey, one of the big things a lot of people get stressed out about is the whole big family gathering, like this type of thing. >> not going to go. >> oh, shut up and let me work on it! it's not a satellite, genius, it's a satellite dish. >> brings back too many memories for you? >> that's real. so how do you deal with relatives who are coming over to your house to eat and drink and avoid fights this season? here with his tips is fox news medical a-team dr. keith ablow.
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to bei doctor, this may be the most useful segment you've ever done. i'm grateful that you are here. >> thanks. >> your first piece of advice is don't trite to right past wrongs during the holidays. what do you mean? >> not unless you're bringing a psychiatrist to the holidays with you. this is not the time to bring up the grub the grudge from the past or the way you were disappointed by another family member. call a truce, enjoy the day and nobody brings up any difficult conflicts. >> here's the deal though. in my family i may go in with that attitude but then there's the other family member that's in there that doesn't have that attitude and is not willing to partake in that strategy. how do you deal with the annoying person, not that any of my family is annoying. >> the annoying person, you want to listen and ask questions because the way to settle people down is to try not to dodge and weave or defend but instead to say, yeah, tell me more. that's very interesting. listen, i have to go get another
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gingerale but initially ask for more. >> don't expect to have fun. that's your advice. what does that mean? >> it is. everybody gets all excited about the holiday and family gatherings. we love our families, but the bottom line is that if you go and you say, this is going to be some work, i'm there mostly today as a bit of a therapist, i want to make other people feel good, it's not about me, you'll be ahead of the game. >> are you going to get in trouble, not you specifically -- >> yes, i will, i'm sure. >> -- for leaving early -- we're all getting in trouble by some family member. i always feel pressured to show up first and be the last person to leave. it's not a big deal to end the day early, end the movie early as you say? >> i always say leave the movie before it's over. bottom line is a lot of the trouble comes towards the end. people are tired. people have had their fun and -- >> are drunk. >> that's the time people are stressed out. people have had too much to drink. i say drink less, have more
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coffee because the coffee will bring your mood up, energy level up. the alcohol, that's a wild card. it could make you irritable, confused, anything else. >> yeah, fist fights, all the rest of it. you say speak less, listen more. >> you know, that's the key in life in general. if you want to feel connected to people, if you want them to feel they had a good time, that's my agenda here, to make you the therapist, ask a lot of questions. how was the year? how was this month? how are you looking forward to the next weeks? it's less about you than them. >> so we have some questions on our facebook posts out there. >> okay. >> tom wants to know how to deal with the scrooge in every family? there's always one. sit there and is grumpy and yells at all the little children. >> in general, you let them be. bottom line is you might even do a little bit more to make them feel comfortable. get them a little git. this is a time to be generous of spirit especially with strooj.
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>> kathryn asks what do you do if family members won't talk to each other? >> you don't invite one of them or both of them because here's the thing. you can't contaminate the whole day with the conflict of just one or two people. >> this is such wise life advice probably worth keeping after the holidays. >> i try. probably worth having me over. coming up, four tips to a successful marriage. is it really that simple? stick around. >> which of these guys is moormanly, chris christie or arnold schwarzenegger. our next guest to answer this, he wrote a book about what makes a man a man. here's a hint. it's more than about muscles. huh. details ahead. ♪ macho, macho man ♪ macho man ♪ i want to be a macho man ♪ i've got to be a macho, macho man ♪
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welcome back. well, when you think of manly men, the names george clooney and ryan gosselin may be popping into your head, right? but according to our next guest, manliness is defined by what's on the inside. men like george washington. winston churchill are truex apples of manliness. here to elaborate is the author of "mansfield's book of manly men." why did you decide to write this book? >> i spend a lot of time with men on campuses. we just want to know what to do. just tell us what to do. what does a man do? i got to thinking about the fact that we have lots of theories of
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manhood, lots of therapies. we don't have a lot of books that say this is what men do. >> do you feel like young men have become emasculated in this country? >> no question. the middle aged man is the guy who loses the remote in the couch. >> infuriated. >> especially guys our age. i'm older than you. oh, yeah. the man is always an idiot. young men are portrayed about dogs. they're portrayed about the strip club, can't control their drives. men are starting to say, hey, wait a minute. that's not who we are. let's talk about who we should be. >> the maxims you put forward. manly men do manly things. what do you mean? >> simple way of saying you can't get men to do what they're supposed to do. you can't put them in a room and talk about what they're supposed to feel. it's all about doing. the healing, restoration of what they're supposed to do is reclarming a sentencstences -- reclaiming a sense of being. >> manly men tend their field. >> what you're responsible for, wife and kids, home.
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what are your responsibilities. irresponsibilities of men in our nation have left families destitute, left us sort of a blight on manhood. i think it's about reclaiming what are our responsibilities and what are the duties of men? >> manly men build manly men. >> you don't build -- the young men today are in crisis. we actually know that young men given how they're eating and sitting in front of video games, their bodies are changing into girls bodies. >> you're right. lower testosterone. >> it will take an older generation to raise younger men. >> some of the manly men, chris christie. >> i like chris. >> bono, tom selick, john lewis. go to amazon right now. it's called "mansfield's book of manly men oifrmt put it under the treem this year. >> fun book. >> coming up here on this show, it's our top story.
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while you were sleeping, john kerry announcing a nuclear deal with iran. the secretary of state in london at this hour. more at the top of the hour, governor mike huckabee will be weighing in on that when we come back. (coffee be♪ng poured into a cup.) save your coffee from the artificial stuff. switch to truvia. great tasting, zero-calorie sweetness from the stevia leaf. target is in sight. yes, dad, i see him. now pour some chloroform into a white rag and.... no. hi. i unrstand you're looking for a hotel with a pool. with priceline express deals, you can save big and get exactly what you need. do i have to bid?
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good morning, everybody. sunday, november 24th. i'm julie he had huddy. iran and six other world powers reaching a break through deal. what does this mean to one of our strongest allies, israel. news on what israel is saying about the pact. he screamed alla akbar before opening fire. major hasan's rampage was labeled workplace violence and not terrorism. they could reverse that. will his victims finally receive justice. pack your patience. a deadly storm slamming parts of the western u.s.
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how will this blast impact one of the busiest travel weeks of the year coming up? we'll have the answer straight ahead. it is like 20 degrees in our studio this morning. >> really cold. "fox & friends" hour two starts right now. do we have any extra blankets? >> parka. >> freezing. >> i'm cold. >> including here in our studio in mid town manhattan. >> juliet huddy is here this morning. >> thanks for having me. >> we have a jam packed hour coming up including governor huckabee to join us. while you were sleeping, the u.s. and other world powers reached an historic agreement with iran. moments ago israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu expressed his concerns about this deal. >> what was concluded in geneva last night is not an historic agreement, it's an historic mistake. it's not made the world a safer
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place. >> so what's in the deal? does it go far enough? amy kellogg is live in london with the very latest on this breaking story. amy? >> hi, tucker, clayton and juliet. well, a lot of people are saying that this could, in fact, be a triumph for diplomacy if, in fact, the deal holds. certain nonproliferation experts and iran watchers are saying that the world powers actually got much more out of it than had been previously expected. there are critics including israel's prime minister benjamin netanyahu who has said this morning the world is a much more dangerous place. what went down in the wee hours of the morning in geneva overnight was something that all sides agreed to a deal that would halt the expansion of and roll back certain aspects of iran's nuclear program. there is a long list of technical demands attached to this, but one of the key sticking points is that iran wanted its right to enrich uranium recognized. iran is spinning the fact that the deal allows uranium
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enrichment. secretary of state john kerry says that is not the case. >> this first step does not say that iran has a right to enrichment no matter what interpretive comments are made, it is not in this document. there is no right to enrich within the four corners of the npc, and this document does n not -- >> so recognition of the rights on iran's part might be a fudge. they ended up giving up that key demand in the end so they feel they have a deal that restores their standing in the international community. >> it is important that we all of us see the opportunity to end an unnecessary crisis and open new horizons. >> now in exchange for its concessions iran is getting some
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modest sanctions released to the tune of about $7 billion. the key sanctions, architecture, does remain in place. i think the most salient comment i heard from a key nonproliferation expert is that what this deal does effectively is expand the breakout time. that is the time that iran would take to build a weapon if it choose to by two and if a deal hasn't been cut at all, the time would have been halved by the summer. that is significant in terms of the world's ability to catch iran if trn to cut and run. back to you. amy keller, great point there. let's bring in governor mike huckabee on that point. benjamin netanyahu is saying this deal doesn't go far enough. it makes the world less safe. how does it make it less safe given the factor of two that amy was talking about? >> if you trust iran, this is a great deal. how do you trust iran? this is the nation still holding pastor abidine.
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it held american hostages for a year. this is the nation that said the holocaust didn't exist. this is a country that shoots 20-year-olds in the streets because they protested the results of a rigged election. what could go wrong? >> i think the argument is iran is a horrible place, the prime sponsor of terrorism, but they're on their way to gaining a nuclear weapon. they have every intent to do that. they can afford to do that. maybe this is the only thing short of war that will slow them down. >> i hope so. there has to be a lot more sense of anxiety than going around and putting candles on the cake. i don't think we're quite ready for that because, again, there's no history of the iranians in this government acting with the sense of responsibility and with a sense of decency. they still haven't said, yes, israel has a right to their homeland. they haven't said that. doreen gulf has an incredibly important editorial just broke this morning on national review online. doreen gold one of the many
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experts of the world. he points out that the iranians have soldiers in syrian right now fighting with assad against the syrians. i am not as willing to step up and say, this is great. the iranians have said they're not going to do something. >> doory gold says they lie, they lie, they lie. why would we believe this is going to be any different this time? he says it will not be different this time. >> well, and i think door y gol is right. we're talking about the credibility of the iranians. there's the credibility of our own government. this is a government that has repeatedly lied to us about benghazi, the irs, the nsa and obama care. now they want us to believe that what they said about iran and this wonderful agreement that we're supposed to say, sure. after all the things you said aren't true, this will be true. i'm sorry, i'm not buying it. >> it's basically about them buying time and getting paid for it. we were talking about the
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president going out on the west coast. heading up to the san francisco silicon valley area, los angeles for some fundraisers. he's had 17 in the past month. you -- your monolog last night, you called it your soliloquy. >> at least you didn't call it my swan song. >> i loved it. >> the thing that i find is washington is dysfunctional. it's broken. people keep talking about how to reform it. i've decided we need to abandon it. give it up. it's not going to work. the thing is we have to step -- washington is so irreparably broken, maybe it's time to let it live on its own. >> it's so great. it's so rich. i live there. there are construction projects in every corner. >> the only city in america that is completely recession proof while the rest of the nation's economy sputters and stutters. the economy thrives, why? because they never run out of money. >> they don't make innovative products people want to buy?
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>> no. they make nothing that people want, that's just it. they make -- they spend $634 million building a website that doesn't work. this week we commemorated john f. kennedy's assassination, a man that said within the decade we will put a man on the moon and bring him back and we did it. we did it. we took the technology and the incredible courage of astronauts and in an amazingly short time we accomplished something of epic proportion. we can't even build a website in three and a half years right now as a government. come on. what i suggest, let's move the capitol to nashville, tennessee. i was there -- >> i see you're behind that. >> remember when the flood happened in nashville in 2010. >> zbliet did they sit around and say, when is the federal government going to save us? >> know. they took it upon themselves and rebuilt their city. i'm saying, the heck with it. it's a nice place. very hospitable. good food. the music is great. >> the problem is you'll have all of the senators going down
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to tootsies, the stage bar and grill. >> they're getting drunk off their feet now. hear some decent music while they're doing it. >> you had great muse sing on your show. i saw kansas. >> i hope folks will watch. >> 8:00 p.m. tonight, "huckabee." >> thank you, governor, appreciate it. other headlines this morning. the army is launching a new review to consider reclassifying the fort hood shooting as an act of terrorism. the revelation coming from a letter sent by army secretary john mchue to south carolina congressman joe wilson. it says, quote, the intelligence community considers major hasan to be a, quote, home grown violent extremist, a person who may engage in ideologically motivated terrorist activities. he's been sentenced to death for the shootings at fort hood in 2000 nine. the victims have been denied purple hearts and the accompanying benefits because
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the shooting is said to be workplace violence. willie nelson is suspending his tour when three band members were injured. nelson was not on that bus when it crashed. we've been telling you about a disturbing and deadly new trend. teenagers going out on the streets, many times in groups, punching strangers out. knocking their lights out. it's part of a horrifying game called knockout. the latest victim is in filly and he's speaking out. he didn't want to be identified. he woke up with a black eye and broken bones in his face and never saw it when this happened. >> they didn't steal anything from us. had a cell phone, wallet, money, everything, that was untouched. seems like they hit us and ran. >> earlier this week philadelphia police arrested two teenagers for a similar attack. an injured vet and his wife
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are given a brand new home in florida. retired army sergeant charles claybaker served five tours of duty and was injured in 2010. on saturday his friends and community got together and welcomed the couple to their new home. >> i've been speechless maybe twice in my life and today was the second time. the idea of having a home that you don't have to do anything, you don't have to remodel, you don't have to do anything but mow the lawn pretty much. it's that kind of stress relief that is hard to put into words. >> well. he's a young guy. five tours. the home was one of 17 donated to wounded veterans this year by the charity building homes for heroes. that is so jool let's get outside to rick right now. we sent him out into the cold. >> it's probably warmer out there than it is in here. >> powerful storms hit out in the midwest, right, rick? >> yeah. it killed eight people so far. it all started in northern
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californ california. 60,000 people were without power. the storm turned into a lot of rain in the lower elevations of arizona. incredible snow into the higher elevations. there's been icing across much of west texas. the ice storm will continue today. take a look at the weather maps. the cold air is solidly in place across a lot of the country. it's moved into areas of the northeast. right now it feels like 11 degrees here in new york city. these are january temperatures. these are not the types of temperatures you see in january. we're dealing with a lake effect snow event. much colder snow. right there. some of those bands, some areas might pick up over a foot of snow. it will be anywhere from around
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ohio around the issues of the west. roads will be good. roads are going to be fine. it will be the eastern seaboard where you'll deal with the wind and rain. on the east. >> you're right, by the way. >> told you. >> coming up here on the show, could the key to a successful marriage be the way that you fight? >> you're not supposed to fight. >> you're supposed to fight, you're supposed to resolve it right in front of your kids. one of four tips you need to know and will you agree? stick around. we told you about the latest victim of the disturbing game. mike huckabee is back to weigh in on that next. [ woman 1 ] why do i cook? to share with family. [ woman 2 ] to carry on traditions.
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[ woman 3 ] to come together even when we're apart. [ male announcer ] in stuffing, mashed potatoes, gravy and more, swanson makes holiday dishes delicious. [ camera shutter clicks ] now, that's cardworthy. [ n ] all right. here we go. ♪ cardworthy. [ female announcer ] this holiday season, visit shutterfly.com for all your cardworthy moments.
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welcome back. this horrifying new trend in the nation called the knockout game. players target strangers on the street and try to knock the person out with one punch to the back of the head. >> at least seven deaths and numerous assaults have been linked to this game. among the victims, a 78-year-old woman and a 12-year-old boy. >> what attacks like this say about our nation as a whole. we furn to governor huckabee. part of what bothers me is a lot of the implied promises of the obama nation is bringing the races together. i wanted that to happen. everyone did. it hasn't happened. this is another piece of evidence. >> i think it's a general trend we see in our culture where we've depersonalized each other, devalued each other. if you think that we're a nation
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that thinks some people are expendable and once you create that cultural norm, the depersonalization of human beings, the sense that some people just aren't worth worrying about. once you've decided that, you can pick and choose which humans are disposable and which ones aren't, why are we so shocked when people get on a train and say, that person is disposable. i can hit them in the back of the head. if they die, they die. >> put on your governor's hat. you're back in arkansas, this is happening in little rock, arkansas. we heard from an assembly man in new york that wants to propose mandatory sentences of up to 25 years in prison setting a precedent for this. >> i understand that mandatory sentences is always sort of a reaction. it sounds very good at the time, but i think you have a bigger problem. one of the ways to attack it is the same kind of cultural attack that created it in the first place. you have to have a community
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outrage. there has to be a sense in which this is so disgusting, so vile, so unacceptable that we uniformly just condemn it and that it becomes popular among the people who are most likely to carry it out. that's not something that you accomplish overnight nor is it something you can put up a public service announcement and say, oh, this is really, really bad. it goes to the heart of the culture. it heens that churches, synagogues, every organization in the community, all the nonprofrlts need to focus on why people are valuable. essentially get back to the teaching of the golden rule. >> it could be my son, seven people killed? where is the leadership. >> where is al sharpton on this? >> yeah. i'm not going to blame the president because obviously he didn't instigate this. i think this is a topic of the
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leadership of the white house. he can speak out. he's not going to change it. i'm not saying he's responsible for it. the president of the united states should join the voices of every american in saying just how vile, disgusting and utterly unacceptable it is to treat. it's bad when we devalue people. we see it in the blogosphere. >> thank you for joining us. >> coming up, you think a model would have no trouble getting dates. so why is she suing match.com? it's one of the most anticipated movie releases of the year, "hunger games, catching fire" kevin mccarthy is here. you're givi away pie? would you like apple or cherry? cherry.
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time for news by the numbers. sunday means nfl football. we have a special news by the numbers for you today. the amount of money teams are wasting on big stars expected not to play this weekend. first, 4.5 million, that's how much the packers are spending on aaron rodgers this season. he's riding the bench with his fractured collarbone. next 3 million, that's the salary of jacksonville jaguars blaine gabbert who he lost his starting job due to injury. michael vick is a convicted dog torturer, he's out with a hamstring injury. clayton? the problem is we do this all the time. have you ever noticed that?
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>> what do you think? >> so i kind of know a lot. >> i actually don't know what her favorite color is. >> i don't know what mine is. >> white castle. >> we need to work on this. >> hajj ng on. >> the thing is, jennifer, i don't have a favorite fast food restaurant. >> kfc? >> no, i like taco bell. >> no, he hates kfc. >> mcdonald's is just reliable. >> did i tell you that i took woody through a drive through at mcdonald's? >> no way. >> he had a total meltdown. he ran out of the car. i was like, i'm hungry, we're going to mcdonald's, no, oh, my god. i can't breathe this air. tried to get out of the car. what in the world are they talking about? it's the movie that's setting the box office on fire. the second installment of ""the hunger games."" >> nice to be in studio, man. >> great to have you here. you sat down with the stars of
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the movie. box office wise is this blowing things up? >> it's predicted to break the opening november box office record which is currently held by twilight new moon. 70.5 million on friday. >> wow. >> over 50 million last night. they're predicting between 150 and 160 for the weekend. obviously a massive box office set. the third film is going to be broken into two films, "mocking jay." >> i read the first hunger games book, never saw the movie. >> it's a pretty violent movie. >> like "twilight" is for the "twilight" fans. is this movie for anyone who hasn't read the book? >> "the hunger games" films transcend the genre. this is a movie that has thought provoking elements. you're dealing with commentary on society, commentary on celebrities. amazing action. jennifer lawrence, an amazing
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actress. here's the key. this movie, the arena sequences were mostly shot with 70 millimeter imax cameras. what that means for you an as audience member, when you see the movie in imax, there are black bars, but when she's racing for "the hunger games," the image expands to a full blo blown imax shot for an hour. >> the city scenes and joker scenes. >> "dark knight" was way more than be a super hero movie. >> you're recommending see it in imax. don't waist your money on 3-d, see it in imax. >> 100% worth it. if you can find a true imax theater, eight story imax screen. that is going out worthy, my friend. >> i gave it a 4.5 out of 5. this year i've only given 2
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fives out of 130 films, "gravity" and "captain phillips". >> shocking. >> it's thought provoking and it works. jennifer lawrence is amazing and the action scenes are incredible. >> you're okay if you haven't read the book? >> i didn't read the book. i went there and enjoyed it. if you want to stay home for a rental, check out a movie called "the way way back." absolutely if he nominal. >> kevin, great to see you. >> i'm going to twitt twitter @kevinmccarthytv. >> i trust kevin's opinion and you should. that's my endorsement. >> thanks, clayton. appreciate it. one young boy scaring off a car jacker. what he did that has everyone talking. watch this. we'll show you more of that. don't wait to go the traditional route for thanksgiving dinner. why not try frying up your turkey? >> j.c.: mcc-- john mcwill he m is here.
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swelling of the lips, tongue or throat, or difficulty breathing or swallowing, stop takg cialis and get medical help right away. ask your doctor about cialis for daily use and a 30-tablet free trial. welcome back. we've got a turkey frying in the studio. it is of course the holiday season. that means lots of family. it means cooking at home.
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we have four tips from a real stdy that suggests you will have a successful marriage. wrap the covers around you if you're still in bed this sunday morning. wives, researchers say, should take the lead to cool down conflicts. >> oh, that would be great. >> well, obviously, it's an impossible goal. >> oh, my. they just don't talk. >> we stew. >> you stew. >> what do they want us to do? >> take the lead in cooling down conflicts. a husband and wife have a dispute and it's most helpful when the woman says, let's de-escalate that. >> if the man is stewing, he storms off, right? >> i think time-outs are good. i'm going to go out and see my friends and happening out with them. you can sit at home and be bored. >> time. >> you go to the bar. >> i enjoy myself. >> yeah, alcohol will help.
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>> that's what i'm saying. >> it's important to be versatile. that's a good point. that's the next one for a successful marriage. you have to be flexible and say we instead of me. i don't know about that. >> it's interesting. researchers said when they studied tapes of marriage counseling they found that the couples who ultimately healed their marriage were the ones who instinctively referred to themselves as a unit. >> i can appreciate that for larger life decisions. don't you find it annoying when they say, we don't like kewa. rick can't speak for himself? we don't like brown rice. >> really? >> what is that? >> it's a grain. very delicious. here's the other thing. accept some things as they are. you're going into this knowing this person is different from you. you're going into a marriage understanding this is the person you're going to be with. you can't change them. the sooner you realize that, the -- >> yeah. what's that line people always say, women go into marriage
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thinking they can change a man. yeah. >> men go into marriage thinking the woman won't change and she does. >> that's exactly true. >> probably true. let us know your secret marriage tips. what have you used? we meet some great fox viewers on the plaza. >> long married viewers, that is true. share your tips, ffweekend on facebook. ffweekend, go there and share your thoughts. >> don't take things so seriously. let's get to headlines now. charges have been dropped for two florida teens accused of bullying a girl so badly that she took her own life. the sheriff is not backing down. >> we worked with the state attorney's office when we filed these charges. we filed them because we had probable cause. the first appearance judge confirmed our probable cause the next morning and at the end of the day this lawyer has wanted us to forget about a 12-year-old
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child that jumped to her death because she was bullied. >> the sheriff added these arrests brought attention to the growing threat of cyber bullying. the state attorney's office said it didn't have enough evidence to prove the bullying victim was stalked or bullied. a young boy scarce off a thief. the kid started screaming and the thief took off. the boy chased him. they hope fingerprints will help find him. and a model is suing match.com for $1.5 billion. >> billion? >> claiming her photo was used in more than 200 fake profiles. she says the fake profiles on the site are often posted by scammers outside the u.s. a lawsuit says match.com could eliminate the fraud. we have to talk about this.
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>> that's not sasha smithstein? >> no, it's not. >> a billion dollars? >> we'll have a legal debate coming up on that. thank you so much, julia. let's get it over to rick watching this thanksgiving storm approach. hey, rick. >> we're talking about this storm that might cause problems. with all coastal storms we get stuck in this, is it going to be a rain event or snow event? if you have that area of low pressure in land, not over land or the sea, everything along the coast is all rain and not snow n. this case it would mean everything is snow on the interior sections. you have to go maybe 100 miles inland. everybody else is seeing wind. another model is pulling it farther out to sea. it brings the snow line a little bit closer. all the coastal cities we're talking about rain and wind. it is hard doing your job in
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here, tucker, when john is in the studio. >> it is. i'm totesly distracted. >> you never come alone. you come with amazing food. >> food. you're talking about the weather, okay? instead of having to worry about deep frying your turkey outside and worrying about the weather, bring the recipe indoors, okay? it's all about safety when you're frying your turkey. >> you love to fry a turkey. >> i do. >> these things are fully safe for inside? people burn their houses down all the time. >> they absolutely are. this butter ball turkey fryer is thermostat controlled. it allows you to fry it indoors. talking to bill huckabee about a new recipe we've come up with. the first thing you want to do is make sure you have a completely thawed turkey. no ice. give it a warm water bath. find all of this on the website.
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here comes the secret -- >> the key is to get the water off. >> all the water, ice, cold pockets out. >> hot. >> that's right. no we're going to take some ranch dressing and we're going to make a new recipe, guys. oh, you lost my -- >> sorry about that. >> we'll put in 12 ounces of water. we'll whisk that together. this is our marinade. this is a ranch fried turkey. so -- >> that looks like you're going to the doctor because you have typhoid or something. >> see that? that's my needle. we're going to inject this turkey, guys, with ranch. we've got some water mixed in there. that is where you get all your flavor from. typically if you'll notice here. this is what we typically do the turkeys with. instead, we're ranchifying this
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turkey. we'll inject it with 12 ounces of marinade in the breast, the legs and the thighs. >> like botox here. >> you want to season the outside of that turkey with the rest of that dry ranch seasoning, the turkey, the cavity sk cavity. >> how do you get it into -- >> we'll show you that. >> we're frying the turkey inside. >> i'm backing up. >> you don't have to back up. >> thank you, rick. >> always want to recommend that you put on some safety gloves when you lower your turkey in, guys? >> what about glasses and helmet? >> no glasses or helmet. we'll lower this turkey in. we have it set at 375 degrees. >> oh! >> there you go. >> lower it in slowly and, guys, that's how easy it is. you lower that turkey in. >> just like a hot tub.
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>> yeah. close it up. now this is an 18 pound turkey, guys, that we've fried in 72 minutes. free up your oven, okay? you don't have to worry about it. >> this is awesome. >> this is awesome. >> we have more with you coming up. >> how long did you cook this? >> 72 minutes. folks that are watching, lowe's, home depot, walmart. get your turkey fridayer. >> dadgum good food. >> one of the greatest cook books of all time. >> juliet's hungry. >> next on the rundown, a huge scare for the big food network stars. it's all caught on camera. a prominent christian leader issues a dire warning that he calls the imminent extinction of christianity. father john, does he agree? he joins us in moments. ♪
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on the table by not choosing the rit medicare d plan. no one could hav left this much money here. whoo-hoo-hoo! yet many seniors whoompare medicare d plans realize they can save hundreds of dollars. cvs/pharmacy wants to help you save on medicare expenses. talk to your cvs prmacist, ll, or go to cvs.com/compare to get your free, personalized pl comparison today. call, go online, or visit your local store today.
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(coffee be♪ng poured into a cup.) save your coffee from the artificial stuff. switch to truvia. great tasting, zero-calorie sweetness from the stevia leaf. welcome back. 7:45 east coast time. giada cut her finger. she went pale and whispered to one of the other shelves that it was a bad cut. medics worked on it during a commercial break -- why are you laughing about this? >> she's a chef. it happened all the time. >> it was a scary moment. a break in at miley cyrus's home. they made off with her jewelry
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on friday. maybe they made off with her eyelash eyelashes. >> the day before her birthday. >> christianity in the world are making a shocking proclamation. the form general archbishop of canter berry says christianity is a generation away from extinction if believers don't find a way to reach out to young people. >> is he right? here to weigh in is father jonathan. >> is he right, father? >> i was waiting to see what kind of segue you would make from miley cyrus. >> how can we reach out to miley cyrus? >> exactly. >> i think the archbishop of canter berry, the former archbishop, has a point that especially in brittain, the churches are mostly empty. he says, we're one generation
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from christianity being extinct. maybe an exaggeration. i don't think the solution is, come on, let's get a program to reach out to young people. let us old people have some program and figure out a way to get them in the church. i don't think it's about that. i think it's about finding a way to present the basic message of christianity and a joyful and convincing way. preach the gospel in love and truth. that's about a man named jesus of nazareth. it's so simple and basic. you don't fix things by having a program and saying, we need people to get involved in the stuffy stuff we've been doing. >> maybe that's it. this is the former head of one of the main line protestant denominations. i don't see a lot of spanish language tabernacles that are empty. >> i think you're exactly right. the reason is -- the reason why
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people are flocking to those churches and other churches is as well is that that is where the simple, basic message of christianity is being taught with vibrance and joy and with love. christianity is not one generation away from extinction. people died for centuries for the christian faith and there's people in the middle east, for example, who are still dying for christianity today. that's the message that they're willing to die for. >> to tucker's point, maybe the churches aren't the pillars of the zmun knit at this anymore. in spanish speaking communities they are the lynchpin of the communities. tucker, you are anglocan. >> yes. >> it's so tied with the church obviously, official religion. you go in there and it's just dead. it's going back and teaching things that -- a kind of cultural religion. you go there for -- to be with
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people and to hang out in a cultural way sharing the gospel that jesus preached through love. >> it's like a boring liberal club that has nothing to do with the supernatural. >> it's not very inspiring, is it? >> not to me, it's not. >> the good news is christianity is not on the verge of extin extinction but the old way of doing things is on the verge of extinction. i think there will be new leaders coming in and creating vibrancy within the church. >> let's hope mime miley was watching. coming up on the show, speaking of slipping fido some thanksgiving treats. the hidden dangers all pet owners need to know this holiday season coming up. >> surprises on this actually. how would you like a "duck dynasty" chia pet.
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letting your pet have thanksgiving treats, you might want to think about it before sling your dog a piece of turkey. >> things all pet owners need to know. tips to keep our pets safe is dr. jeffrey thorberg. chief veterinarian. >> we have some visitors as well. >> we have a lot of them. >> let's bring some american dogs. >> right here in the u.s. this is an american cocker spaniel to differentiate from
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the english cocker spaniel. the first one came here in 1620. >> truly american dog. >> this is an american -- >> this is aaron over here. what makes aaron so cool is he actually served in the u.s. armed forces. he's a bomb sniffing dog. >> beautiful dog. >> his owner is still there in afghanistan. >> for a lot of dogs, one of the keys to a happy thanksgiving, what should we be worried about? >> the keys are there are three phases. prepare the turkey will come sometimes wrapped in string t. will come wrapped up. the problem with that is that string is a bad problem for dogs, especially cats. it often ends up in surgery. >> you have to be careful because, for example, there are two that are overrated.
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poinsettia and christmas cactus. it's more the irritation. lilies, highly toxic. lilies will kill a cat. >> really? >> yes. highly toxic and the water they're in. >> keep an eye out when the festivities begin. we like to start imbibing a little early. dogs like alcohol. alcohol is poisonous to dogs. it's pous so he news to us, too, obviously, but it causes a lot of problems. when you buy a six-pack of beer, they'll chew on this. that's a problem. when guests start coming over to the house, if you have a dog, be careful. keep them in a different part of the house. when it comes to cats, they get afraid with all of the noise and commotion, that's a problem. as you're preparing, sitting by the oven is hot. grease is spattering. these things can be hot also. >> what are these foods that are dangerous? >> when you're sitting do you
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know, dark meat turkey, ham, too fatty. white meat turkey is okay. this year, the snow, the holiday of hanukkah comes up to thanksgiving. potato pancake, very greasy. this is the cake that has raisins in it, kcurrants in it. >> i trained my dog, gomez, not to have anything. >> can you resist these eyes? >> you can't. give them something they like. here, marrow bones. be care flg if they're with marrow. bully sticks are great. >> i like that. >> hours and hours. that will help a lot. egg nog you have to be careful. >> not too much. >> the eggs and the alcohol. and also volume. as we talked last fwiem obesity. >> these are tips we can remember, too. >> absolutely.
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>> thanks a lot. >> we'll have them on our website. >> thank you, doctor. iran and six world powers reaching a break through deal. what you need to know about what this means for america and our allies abroad. chris wallace joins us in a moment. [ male announcer ] even ragu users a. chose prego homestyle alfredo over ragu classic alfredo. prego alfredo?! [ thinking ] why can't all new things be this great? ha ha! whoa! [ monkey squeals ] [ sighs ] [ male announcer ] choose taste. choose prego.
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of their type 2 diabetes with non-insulin victoza®. for a while, i took a pill to lower my blood sugar, but it didn't get me to my goal. so i asked my doctor about victoza®. he said victoza® is different than pills. victoza® is proven to lower blood sugar and a1c. it's taken once-a-day, any time, and comes in a pen. and the needle is thin. victoza® is not for weight loss, but it may help you lose some weight. victoza® is an injectable prescription medicine that may improve blood sugar in adultth type 2 diabetes when used with diet and exercise. it is not recommended as the first medication to treat diabetes and should not be used in people with type 1 diabetes or diabetic ketoacidosis. victoza® has not been studied with mealtime insulin. victoza® is not insulin. do not take victoza® if you have a personal or family history of medullary thyroid cancer, multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if you are allergic to victoza® or any of its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction may include:
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swelling of face, lips, tongue, or throat, fainting or dizziness, very rapid heartbeat, problems breathing or swallowing, severe rash or itching. tell your doctor if you get a lump or swelling in your neck. serious side effects may happen in people who take victoza®, including inflammation of the pancreas (pancreatitis), which may be fatal. stop taking victoza® and call your doctor right away if you have signs of pancreatitis, such as severe pain that will not go away in your abdomen or from your abdomen to your back, with or without vomiting. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you have any medical conditions. taking victoza® with a sulfonylurea or insulin may cause low blood sugar. the most common side effects are nausea, diarrhea, and headache. some side effects can lead to dehydration, which may cause kidney problems. if your pill isn't giving you the control you need ask your doctor about non-insulin victoza®. it's covered by most health plans.
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good morning, it's sunday, november 24th. i'm jewel yet huddy. we have a fox news alert for you. while you were sleeping, iran and six other world nuclear powers reached a deal. what does this mean to our country's strongest allies. what is the leader of israel, by the way, saying about this? we have a live report from the white house. hello, tucker. >> good morning, juliet. pack your patience. how the winter blast could affect your travel plans on the single busiest travel day of the year. the interception of terrible weather and the holidays. tell you more. and take a look at this.
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don't try this at home. hugging a shark. if you have a shark at home, call me. >> good for you. >> i'd like to know more where you live. in atlanta. "fox & friends" hour three starts right now. good morning. my pleasure. good being here. >> wonderful having you. >> cheerful morning person. when we turn the temperature down in the studio, that's when she is not cheerful. >> i'm looking at a fried turkey, i can't cut it. >> we're going to be talking more turkeys. john will be back with us. >> he's so great. i love that guy. >> tips when you gear up for that. we have other big news. >> we do. while you were sleeping, fox news alert, the u.s. and other world powers reach an historic agreement with iran.
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this morning benjamin netanyahu voicing his profound concerns about this. watch. >> last night is not an historic agreement, it's an historic mistake. it's not made the world a safer place. >> all right. so what is in the deal and does it go far enough. >> let's get out to peter doocy. he is live at the white house with the very latest. good morning once again. >> good morning, juliet. president obama says now sanctions brought iran to the negotiating table. the iranians have now agreed to freeze their nuclear program for six months and because they did that, some of those sanctions will be lifted. additionally, iran is now going to have access to some of their foreign accounts. the total in economic relief headed iran's way is about $7 billion. we heard president obama explain the benefits of this deal very late last night. >> as president and commander in chief, i will do what is necessary to prevent iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon.
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i have a profound responsibility to try to resolve our differences peacefully rather than rush towards conflict. >> iran's president rouhani has tweeted, quote, iran talks progressed in such a way that rights to a peaceful nuclear energy and enrichment were brought to new powers. there are some in the u.s. very upset with the terms. marco rubio doesn't think we should have been negotiating at all. he says, quote, in sum this agreement shows other rogues that wish to go nuclear that you can obfuscate, cheat and lie for a decade and eventually the united states will tire and drop key demands. you heard in the intro there the israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu calling this an historic failure. we understand that so far to
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this point president obama and prime minister netanyahu have not talked on the phone about this deal but we expect him to at some point later on today. >> peter doocy outside a very cold white house lawn. we should be clear about one thing, iran is swimming in energy. this is an oil rich country. this country doesn't need nuclear power. there's only one reason to have nuclear weapons. they want a bomb. they've been progressing towards one. >> let's look at exactly what this plan lays out. they have to stop enriching uranium at 5%. israel, who was not happy, wanted it cut at 3.5%. brian morrow saying you could build a nuclear bomb with 3.5%. you can get up to 20%. that seems like it's one step away from building a bomb. >> even though they're freezing the program, ryan morrow said he
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feels this is buying time for them. they freeze it. they're not really working on gathering the uranium. they can gather other feerl and they can work on their other warheads. the alternative is really war, still dealing with what has gob on, dealing with syria, libya, trying to bring a number of these countries together to have a negotiation to stall their program, amy kellogg is reporting speaking to experts that by getting this deal in place she saw a two-factor increase in the amount of time it would take to do this. this delays it significantly for them. >> yeah. i can't assess thattor not but i will say this. if you're israel, saudi arabia, you're very worried about a nuclear armed iran. we are, too. they're also a prime
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destabilizer. backing the assad regime and general mischief and backing of terrorism. there are a lot of problems coming out of iran, not just nuclear weapons. >> we ask you on facebook what you think of this situation about the iran deal. this is from ted. president obama and his administration are doing everything possible to damage our alliance with israel up to and including making a deal with the devil. >> this one from robin on our facebook page. netanyahu is right. now the whole world is in fear. maybe that is obama's plan. this way no one is laughing at him anymore. >> ken writes, i have as much faith in this deal of putting my hand in a burlap sack of rattlesnakes thinking i won't get 3wi9. we've just oechd a pandora's box he says. >> there is a long precedent for this and then see cred doors doing another thing. ffweekend is part of the deal.
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coming clean, all of the things they were doing subverse civilly before the deal. back domestically, the obama care deal getting worse. the fix isn't that as all. the states rejecting plans saying it will have little effect on improving obama care. the president comes out unilaterally without changing the law and says, we'll stop reimbursing people and allowing people to keep their own plans they had canceled on them. a lot of states are saying it's so confusing. even states like vermont which is no right wing strong hold, a state that voted -- every person in vermont voted for obama at least twice. just kidding. this is a very pro obama state and they're not going along with obama. >> that's why michele bachmann last night on "huckabee" had this to say about hearing from her constituents. listen. >> we literally get hundreds of phone calls, e-mails, letters,
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texts from people in my district every day. i'm not the only one. all the other members of congress are hearing the exact same thing. it's very reflecttive of what we're hearing, unbelievable as a matter of fact. not only small businesses but individuals. they're seeing doubling, tripling, quadrupling of the premi premium. states. a number of states are rejecting this. connecticut, indiana, california, minnesota, new york, rhode island, vermont, new york and washington. >> all states that went for obama. >> it's not like this is an ideological question. it's so ballicked up. they're trying to opt out of it. the president's press conference and fix, purely political. >> right. more on that coming up a little bit later in the show. first we have headlines. >> now the news. >> let's do it. the army reportedly launching a
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new review to reconsider authorizing this as an act of terrorism. john mccue saent a letter which says the intelligence community considers major hasan to be a home grown situation. hasan has been sentenced to death. the victims have been denied purple hearts and the accompanying financial benefits because the massacre is considered workplace violence. again, that may be changed. the walking dead actress accused of sending ricin laced letters to president obama has struck a deal. she faced up to 10 years in prison. the terms of that deal is not public as of this moment. country music star willie
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nelson suspending his tour indefinitely after three members of his band were hurt in a bus crash. police say the bus driver was struggling to navigate through a texas storm when they struck a bridge. they all have been released from the hospital. you watch "duck dynasty." the stars are chia pets. >> introducing chia "duck dynasty." >> booyah. >> there you go. really, uncle si in your garden, on your windowsill? perhaps in your bedroom. >> do you eat chia? is this something you put in a salad? >> i don't think so. >> i thought it was a tea. you could make chia tea? >> no, that's chie. >> who knows the difference. >> whoa. >> rick -- if there's one man
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that knows herbs dw-- >> what about those chia seeds? >> yeah, let's ask google. >> hop on it right now. >> there are some really powerful storms. take a look at some of this video. the storm started in the west on thursday bringing incredibly strong winds and it knocked down a bunch of trees. there were eight people so far been killed. some from the falling trees. then the storm moved into arizona bringing incredibly heavy rain and flagstaff, very heavy snow and now across parts of new mexico and texas where we're seeing icing on a lot of the roads. we'll see that for much of the day today. the cold air is in place. go to the weather maps and take a look at the temperatures across areas of alaska and canada. you see it's 34 in anchorage, 12 in yellow nype, canada.
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then go, all of na cold arctic air has made its way down. even miami you're only at 74. minus 2 is what it feels like in minneapolis. strepg out over the eastern sea board. in the south, a slow mover. winter storm warnings in effect including dallas fort worth and back towards midland. expecting to see a bit of an ice storm across the area as the storm continues to pull to the east. take a look at that. heavy snow now across oklahoma city as well. guys, send it back to you inside. >> rick, we got to the bottom of chia seeds and chia pets. apparently you can eat it. it is a plant in the minute
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family. >> and it grows on a duck dine nas sfi head. >> thank you, rick. our top story while you were sleeping, america reaches a deal. >> do you remember fast forwarding and rewinding cassette tapes? >> we were talking about it. >> it's one of the time-consuming problems from the 1980s like rolling down a window in a car. it no longer exists. we have the breakdown on all the time-saving things you aren't doing anymore, are doing. less doing. we'll tell you. ♪ i died in your arms tonight save your coffee from the artificial stuff.
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announced a deal. joining us now, the host of fox news sunday, chris wallace. nice to see you on sunday, chris. >> hi. >> i'm trying to remain optimistic this holiday week going into thanksgiving thinking, this could be a good thing. then you hear from benjamin netanyahu hearing this makes us less safe. what is your sense of washington and this deal? >> well, look, nobody has any misconceptions or allusions about the iranians, and on the other hand, you know, there is some sense the sanctions have worked. they have brought the iranians to the table and that there is a desire to test them out. it's an interim deal for six months. yes, iran gets to continue enriching uranium. that's something the u.n. resolution did not allow for. on the other hand, it's only a very slight opening of the spigot in terms of sanctions, about 6 to $7 billion that iran will get t. will continue to lose over $25 billion over that
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six months. so i'm not sure that another country looking a the this will say, boy, we want to go down this route that iran is going down. their economy has tanked. their currency is in a shambles. you know, this obviously is not the deal that some people would have wanted, but i don't think it's encouraging to other countries that this is a win-win situation. >> it's pretty remarkable to watch the prime minister to watch this and get up and denounce this and say that the u.s. is naive. does this represent a break or a real change in u.s.-israel relations? >> it is certainly striking. look, our two closest allies, not just israel, but saudi arabia, two countries neither of which agree on very much both say they think this is a bad deal and obviously are worried about iran being able to develop a nuclear weapon. you know, i don't think it's a
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breach. there obviously have been times when the sides agree and sometimes when they don't. this is clearly a decision that the president and the other western countries, the other five allies decided that this was a step worth taking to test the intentions of the so-called moderates who are now running things in iran and we'll see over the next six months. >> that was to my point that i was going to make. nowhere in what i read does it talk about everything leading up to this, the lack of trust that we can give these people because they have failed so many times and gone against deals so many times, there doesn't seem to be any sort of transparency. there isn't any sort of admittance of poor behavior in the past. one of the big questions today is how do we end up trusting these people that we're making deals with or this regime? >> first of all, we aren't just
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trusting them, juliet. sanctions remain in place. they'll lose $25 billion. they'll get $7 billion. they still won't get $25 billion. there has been a change in some sort. the sanctions have worked to the degree that a so-called moderate rouhani is in charge for now. i suppose the counter argument will be if you don't reach out to them and see whether it is the iranians under pressure from western sanctions and they've turned over a new leaf, all you'll do is empower the hard liners. coming up on fox news this morning, governor sarah palin will be talking about obama care. you have senator bob corker and ben carden on as well. thanks, chris. >> thank you, guys. a cardiologist performing a first of its kind surgery. that's just the first of its kind. he was performing surgery on his very own father.
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it's the college football touchdown everybody will be talking about this morning. we'll show you right here the football game with the star athlete who is also a major, major hero. ♪ and the eagle fly ♪ it's a big old land farmer: hello, i'm an idaho potato farmer. and our giant idaho potato truck is still missing. so my dog and i we're going to go find it. it's out there somewhere spreading the good word about idaho potatoes and raising money for meals on wheels.
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but we'd really like our truck back, so if you see it, let us know, would you? thanks. what? 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. find out why 9 out of 10 large professional investors choose ishares for their etfs. ishares by blackrock. call 1-800-ishares for a prospectus, which includes investment objectives, risks, charges and expenses. read and consider it carefully before investing. risk includes possible loss of principal.
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the story we're about to share with you is literally nothing short of a medical miracle. on october 1st a new jersey hospital approved procedures for patients having heart attacks. two weeks after that approval the surgery was performed for the first time there by dr. shatty unum by his own father. he was stabilized by his other son, also a cardiologist. a whole big family affair.
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the operation thankfully saved the life of the father who is also a cardiologist. you guys are doing well as a family i would say. all are doctors at bay shore community hospital. they're here this morning to share that remarkable story. first of all, tell me about the moment that you realized your father was having a heart attack. i believe it was you. >> yes. yes. he was basically complaining of crushing chest pain, substernal chest pain which is in this area of the chest. he was nauseous. i immediately brought him some aspirin and plavix, which is another blood thinner. i had my mom call in. >> and head for the hospital? >> yes. i was able to ride the ambulance back to the hospital with my dad and that's when shatty did the catheterizati catheterization. >> dr. shatty, you are his son, all doctors, familiar with the
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medical world. when you bring a family member into the mix it probably would, i imagine, create a whole other level of anxiety. what was it like when you realized you're going to have to operate on your father? >> it wasn't easy. you try to block out as much as you can. you know, a lot of thoughts are going through your head? >> worried about my brother, mother, the staff in the hospital, what their reaction will be. try to make sure something runs smoothly. >> it almost sounds like the staff was more freaked out about the situation. >> they were surprised because my dad has been there for so many years. they delivered. he made everyone deliver from the police to the ems to my brother being there to the paramedics to the emergency room and -- >> to your dad who's a tough guy, here today. >> your son saved your life. >> yes. >> i know you must be very proud and very grateful? >> it's hard to describe it in words but it gave me a lot of
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comfo comfort. when i woke up with chest pain i knew this was a real thing. this is what i do every day. i didn't waste any time. i called my wife. what's also comforting is i knew a lot of them, you know? two of them are on the board. they volunteered. >> as father and son, you work very hard to try to get this approved at this hospital, right? >> that's correct. we had just gotten it approved. >> two weeks earlier? >> a lot of staff training and the nurse was getting prepared. >> it will come to fruition. >> how is the family doing? how is everybody doing? >> we're doing very well.
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>> is this going to be a nice holiday season for you? >> i hope so. >> what do you have to say to your sons? they're sitting here and they saved your life. >> well, as i said, it's very hard to describe in woerds. i'm very lucky, okay? i'm really very lucky. >> you're all very lucky. >> thank you very much. >> we need it to work. >> get back to work. >> let him relax a little bit for goodness sakes. thank you for joining us. >> thank you. remember fast forwarding cassette tapes. you guys look a little young over here, but you probably do, too. it was a time-consuming problem back in the '80s, but it doesn't exist anymore. we'll talk about some of the funny things we used to do, tame waisters. then doing some holiday shopping. go ahead and pick up something made in america. we're here live with some great tips all made in america. ♪ back where i come from, where i'll be when it's said and done
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♪ ♪ and i'm proud as anyone, back where i come from ♪ gh bells♪ the bass pro shops 5 day sale starts wednesday with huge savings on great gift ideas. like bass pro logo hooded sweatshirts for only $10. ladies 5 pocket jeans for only $10. and a wildgame rage 4 game camera with free viewer for under $100. [ camera shutter clicks ] now, that's cardworthy. [ n ] all right. here we go. ♪ cardworthy. [ female announcer ] this holiday season, visit shutterfly.com for all your cardworthy moments. [ female announcer ] is a really big deal.u with aches, fever and chills- there's no so why treat it like it's a little cold? there's something that works differently than over-the-counter remedies. prescription tamiflu attacks the flu virus at its source. so call your doctor right away. tamiflu treats the flu in people 2 weeks and older whose
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>> you guys go ahead. i'm going to check in with josie. she wasn't at school today. >> just text us when you're done. >> just what you? >> i mean, pass me a note in the mail or with a pidgeon. bye. >> in the '80s, we looked like that. >> so didn't i, exactly like that. >> in the '80s, instead of twisted sister, i looked exactly like that. >> it doesn't seem that long ago. it was just yesterday. '80s nostalgia sweeping the country. take a look at the time consuming problems we faced. >> technology was supposed to improve our lives. did it? we don't use a phone book anymore. we don't have to struggle looking through the phone book. remember the things you used to prop up the door with. >> you don't need maps. >> if you want to know the distance between venice and
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florence, you just google. you have the distance right there. >> when you recorded like a mix tape, you only recorded the one side, have you to sit in your car and hit rewind. >> did you ever make a mix tape for somebody? >> of course. that's a skill. to make a mix tape, that's an art. >> you put a lot of thought into it and spend a lot of time to see what song comes next. am i right? >> so right. so right. >> in the '80s i once had a conversation with someone for over an hour without texting. >> he's lying. >> my short term memory is gone. yes, i do remember that. i remember enjoying it. >> you're not ripping paper. the perforated paper, dot make tricks. rolling down the window. we now have power windows in a car. >> that wasn't like a thing that was required in the car until the '90s, actually. >> there was no satellite radio. madonna, by the way, was at the
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top of the charts. had you to listen to madonna. there are a lot of ways madonna hassism proved. >> steve perry was the lead singer of journey. >> you hooked up your camera to the tv. >> i dug through trying to find some '80s stuff. i found some of my 1980s cassette tapes last night. this was in no joke. i used to keep them all in order. >> can we see some of the tapes we didn't see before. journey. >> here. >> journey. you can recognize that. do you recognize any of these? this was rocky, the rocky sound track. >> play these on your walkman. >> i had a sony walkman. >> tears for fears. >> that was probably first edition. >> the mix tapes in the back. >> we won't show you the mix tapes, the love tapes i made. >> oh, boy. >> little suzy, first girlfriend. >> really are. hold on a minute!
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>> love tape in the '80s, it was a mixed tape on cassette. >> that's right. >> pretzel by steely dan. >> that's a love tape. >> i'm going to read our headlines this morning. now to your headlines. more problems for boeing. a new warning about ice forming on the engines of some of its dreamliner planes. that's not good. it can cause engine mall functions. earlier this year the dreamliner was grounded after they had smoldering batteries. a new york deli owner and son arrested for trying to make bank on another guy's winning lottery ticket. police say they tried -- these guys tried giving the customer who won this million dollar lottery thing $1,000 basically to get him out of there. instead of the $1 million
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ticket. the customer got suspicious. the suspect's attorney is blaming the lottery machine. an inspiring story at the clemson football game. tigers wideout daniel rodriguez, army veteran and purple heart recipient scored his first ever touchdown. by the way, it was military appreciation day. rodriguez has been an emotional leader since 2012. the tigers beat the citadel 52-6. do not try this on your next vacation. a man vacationing in bora bora. this is a lemon is that correct. experts are calling this stunt idiotic. >> put that lemon shark in milk, it curdles. >> that's pretty good. speaking of pretty good -- not pretty good, pretty outstanding. our own rick indoors. >> if you put it in a glass of vodka. >> delicious. >> then it's delicious. yum. guys, cold air has settled in
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across pretty much the entire country at this point. still cold out across california and across the south. nine degrees. that's what it feels like in albuquerque. you have some snow there. take a look at what happens. we'll have lingering moisture across arizona and in towards much of new mexico. the worst of it is going to be this icing that begins to form across central texas and dallas. by the morning hours you can be waking up with a coat of ice across a lot of the roads and the vehicles and the trees. dealing with some power outages. definitely a very rough commute it will tomorrow morning across much of texas. wednesday, the big travel day. this storm will be mostly across the eastern seaboard. that's great news for everyone else. places from around kentucky and ohio down towards the deep south and stretching farther to the west. flights will be good. roads will be good. the eastern seaboard, mid-atlantic and northeast expect big delays across the
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northwest from snow and rain. >> every year the folks at garden and gun go through hundreds of entries and pick their top choices for items made in the south. >> if you're looking for a special gift for someone in the south, there's nothing more special. >> here's jessica mission ner. >> these are some of the winners. >> these are my favorite time of year. that is awesome. >> you can order this online and get it sent to you? >> yeah, they send it dry ice. >> we've had eight different shipments come to the office and they've all been perfect. >> what else do you have? >> the bowls we have them in are
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these hand pottery bowls. each one is a little piece of sculpture. two high school buddies love the clay. when you're done with the ice cream, it has a shape. >> pour it in your mouth. >> another food runner up was stampede 66. >> yes. i'm crazy about this hot sauce from texas. texas turns out good hot sauce. this is from steven kyle. he made four flavors based on things that he loved at home. i'm partial to the chipotle. it goes great with oysters, fries, burgers. >> i picked up wine. >> the vineyards. then there's a vodka with sweet potato. >> yes. >> so these guys, covington vodka decided if you can make vodka with white potatoes, why not sweet potatoes. it's caramely and sweet.
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>> i skipped over the wine but i picked it up. what is this wine? >> this is from sten son vineyards in virginia. it goes great with game, salty fit, good hits of acid. >> necklaces for the jewelry lovers. >> we do. this is another feather. it's a nashville based jewelry company. they're also just bare and simple. perfect for the lady on your list. >> this is looking pretty cool if you're a hipster in williamsburg, brooklyn. >> something like leonardo dicaprio should have ridden in the great gatsby. >> my husband would love to have his name on this and so wouldn't i. it's a vintage cruiser but tricked out with all the modern bells and whistles and painted charleston green. >> it looks like it's also tricked out so you can't get on it and ride it away.
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>> no training cheels on that. you can check out all of these products at garden and gun magazine. great gift ideas for the holiday. >> thank you so much. >> thank you so much, jessica. let's toss it over to juliet and tucker. >> why, thank you. >> save that bike for me. >> pretty expensive. may be one of the most controversial companies in our nation's history. blackwater. the founder is setting the record straight. there's this model, very pretty woman. there she is. she is suing match.com. you're not going to believe why. we'll tell you. the legal debate coming up. stay with us. ♪ ♪ [ 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.
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mat match.com is facing a lawsuit after this florida model discovered that her picture had been used 200 times without her consent in fake online profiles. what's the deal here? who's responsible for monitoring these sites. joining us to debate is lisa giovonato and david schwartz. good to have you here. lisa is for, you're against. let's talk about this lawsuit first of all. why are you for it? make sense to you? >> makes sense to me. i know they were sued in the past in state court. >> match.com? >> yes. this time is a different class. class action. the class, the plaintiff, including this model, none of them are members of the site. they were brought out of the public domain. their pictures were brought into a for profit site and match.com is aware that they're making money off of these very attractive profiles that are fraudulent. so dech knfinitely there's a ca here. >> why not sue the people who are using your photo?
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>> the reason they're not doing that is match.com has the deep pockets in this case. those are the people that are liable. the people that fraudulently used this photo, not match.com. if this lawsuit survives it opens up a flood gate for every online company and business that they will have to go through all these various aspects of policing their website which they shunned have to do. >> many people go on these websites optimistic thinking i'm looking at a person. maybe she's gained ten pounds, she's gained ten pounds. you're looking at the person you're going to be essentially meeting. doesn't match.com have a responsibility that you're not meeting up with somebody that's not that person or wears the responsibility? >> yeah. they have a duty of reasonable care to their members which obviously were the past lawsuits. they also have a duty to provide accurate information. it's not a question that are fraudulent profiles. the question is match.com is aware of them.
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this woman's profile, she had 200 photos repeatedly put on this site so don't they have an obligation to prevent such fraud? >> somebody at match.com knows fraudulent profiles are created. >> we don't know that for sure. the duty is to create a marketplace, a marketplace where people can meet each other. the duty is not to govern or not have people on that website. they can't do that. >> it doesn't have to be a duty to police every single one. there should be some form of monitoring even on a mass scale. maybe a random monitoring of the internet site that they're saying they know are coming from beyond the u.s. that they're claiming was inside the u.s. >> new software. we'll follow this. we'll definitely let you know what happens with the case as it heads to trial. >> thanks, david and lisa. coming up, it may be one of the most controversial companies in our nation's history.
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blackwater. the founder is setting the record straight about its role in the war on terror. he joins us. >> then, remember when bob costas started talking politics at halftime? get ready for more. what he says about sports and politics coming up. ♪ you can talk to me ♪ you can talk to me there are seniors who have left hundreds of dollars of savgs on the table by not choosing the rit medicare d plan.
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no one could hav left this much money here. whoo-hoo-hoo! yet many seniors whoompare medicare d plans realize they can save hundreds of dollars. cvs/pharmacy wants to help you save on medicare expenses. talk to your cvs prmacist, ll, or go to cvs.com/compare to get your free, personalized pl comparison today. call, go online, or visit your local store today.
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record straight on what blackwater did and did not do. his new book, civilian warriors details the riesz and fall of his company blackwater. joining us now is erik prince. thanks for joining us this morning. good morning, tucker. how are you? >> i'm doing great. why do you suppose that blackwater way played an integral role in many places became this focus of so much anger on the left? what was that about? >> all the company did is we said yes. after column boin, after the u.s.s cole. government kept calling and we said yes. by 2006 and 2007, a war weary american public, the left tried to key on that and the vietnam war, the anti-war left went after the troops. this time they went after contractors and i think blackwater kind of represented everything they didn't like. i was the sole owner. it was successful. i came from a conservative family. and our men, some of them had to
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carry weapons. unfortunately, sometimes they had to use those to defend themselves an the people they were protecting. some of them got killed doing that. i don't remember you declaring war in iraq or setting u.s. policies. it was confusing. you did watch u.s. policy unfold from a really close vantage. what do you think of what's happened in iraq? >> the sad thing is iraq is completely lost for all the blood, toil and treasure, effort of the u.s. really the last election cycle, the obama administration kind of sat on its hands and we lost t a decent guy won the last election but maliki, using his own influence and a lot of iranian money managed to keep control of the country. that's why we're seeing the sectarian strife with sunnis blowing things up. they were truly disenfranchised in the last election cycle. >> all those years spent there, all the deaths, including some of your employees and you're saying in the end, the u.s. got nothing out of it? >> u.s. has lost its influence
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there. the iraqis are allowing the iranians to move troops, equipment, everything across their airspace and across their ground to support the assad regime in syria, the same ones gassing their own people. >> what about afghanistan, we're in the pro process of removing u.s. forces or most from afghanistan. what will happen when that process ends? >> you know, if there's not some semblance of support left, the afghan forces will soon crumbling. i think there's valiantly trained decent units there. absent the combat support and logistic supply, they will fail. the problem is the u.s. has mastered the most expensive way to wage war. they budgeted $2.1 million per trooper in afghanistan next year. as i talk about in the book, there are ways to cut the cost, ways for the private sector to play a role. i mean, budgeting $2.1 million per trooper, a private organization will do it for way less than that. i'm not saying the private sector has to take over, but in
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an era of budget austerity, the private sector can be at least a price check to bring sanity back to the pricing. >> i mean, that can't change, the economics of fighting wars are such that -- contractors always have a big role, don't you think? >> contractors always had a big role. the original colonies in america, jamestown, massachusetts bay were founded icontractors that came here to trade, to establish new trade routes, look for gold to grow tobacco. they were protected like blackwater was. >> i'm sorry we're out of time. i think we could have a four-hour conversation that would be interesting to watch, for me. >> happy to have it. read the book, you'll get a good education. >> i'm getting the book. downloading it today. stripping republicans of the power to block obama's nominees. here's what the president once said about this idea. >> that doesn't serve anyone's best interest and it certainly isn't what the patriots who
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founded this democracy had in mind. >> ooh, the patriots are opposed to it and not the football team. anne coulter here to weigh in and looking for the perfect christmas present? george bush may have the right one. we'll tell what you it is. no one could hav left this much money here. whoo-hoo-hoo! yet many seniors whoompare medicare d plans realize they can save hundreds of dollars. cvs/pharmacy wants to help you save on medicare expenses. talk to your cvs prmacist, ll, or go to cvs.com/compare to get your free, personalized pl comparison today. call, go online, or visit your local store today.
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good morning everybody. it's 9:00 a.m. on the east coast, 6:00 on the west. i'm juliette hut i. iran and six world powers reaching a breakthrough a nuclear deal. what about the american pastors being held in iran. can we make a deal for his freedom. storms sweep the west and they're on the move. where are they heading and what you need to know for your thanksgiving day travel plans. they could be profoundly affected. we're tracking it all. we'll bring him to you. could the key to a successful marriage be the way that you fight? messages are pouring in.
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keep them coming. ff weekend on facebook. that means "fox and friends" hour four is starting right now. boy, we've had a lot of food. we've had a lot of food on the show this morning. >> haven't been able to eat it though. >> we're going to be -- juliette huddy is here. >> they always provide food when you're here. >> look at the catering spread. when you host a morning show in new york city. i don't know if we can get a shot of it. there's a massive spread of it. >> we're going to find out how to deep fry a turkey and thanksgiving day tips coming up. big news that happened overnight while you were sleeping. >> in fact, while you were sleeping, u.s. and other world powers reached an historic nuclear agreement with iran. >> what is in the deal and does it go far enough to appease everyone? >> let's go to peter doocy live with the latest. >> reporter: juliette, this entire deal hinges on iran
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freezing its nuclear program. they have agreed to do so for six months and in return, they'll get $7 billion in economic relief. mostly because the bite of some of the sanctions imposed on them is going to disappear. however, if iran is caught building a nuclear weapon in the next six months, the whole deal is off. things can be reversed. we basically would be back at square one. we heard president obama explain the benefits of the deal here at the white house very late last night. >> as president and commander in chief, i will do what is necessary to prevent iran from obtaining a nuclear weapon. but i have a profound responsibility to try to resolve our differences peacefully rather than rush towards conflict. >> reporter: in its remarks, president obama said the united states will remain firm to our -- in our commitment to friends and allies like israel. but israel's prime minister is calling this deal between iran, the u.s., the uk, germany,
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france, russia and china a historic mistake. >> israel has many friends and allies, but when they're mistaken, it's my obligation to speak out clearly and openly and say so. it's my solemn responsibility to protect and defend the one and only jewish state. >> reporter: we're told the prime minister, netanyahu and president obama have not spoken on the phone about this deal. white house officials expect them to chat at some point today and those white house officials also stress that the next six months are really big in terms of determining whether or not iran is serious about having a nuclear program that is peaceful all the way. back to you in new york. >> well, thanks a lot peter. peter doocy, of course, live at the white house. what exactly does this mean? we know it's dissatisfied a
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couple key allies. key allies, period, saudi arabia sells us an awful lot of oil and israel our key ally in the middle east. both are pretty upset about it. >> they're unhappy about key sticking points. they want it reduced from the 5% they agreed upon. made israel a little more happy. for iran, they weren't even going to come to the table if they weren't allowed to have some enrich: they lay claim it was for energy in their country. we were talking about this earlier and the sticking points. listen to ryan. >> i think over the long-term, this actually makes war more likely. that's because the so-called modern president of iran has a strategy that is articulated that's basically one step back in order to later take two steps forward. they'll freeze major part of their nuclear program and work on the other parts are lagging behind. it's important to recognize that iran's nuclear program is not just based in iranian territory.
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their allies in north korea can work on the warhead and other areas that are more problematic. >> he says they're getting paid for it while it happens. britain, france and so forth, they have agreed to funnel mormmore money to them. the money held up. >> there are not a lot of good options. iran funds terrorism, the prime funder of terrorism. they hate us and israel. bad place. on the other hand, what are your options exactly? >> war with iran. >> effect regime changes from afar. complicated to do that. you can enter into treatise that are silly and embarrassing like this one. >> stricter sanctions. it's a tough group of choices really. >> the president has said that if iran doesn't meet the commitments during this six-month period, the u.s. will turn off the sanction relief and ratchet up pressure. a comment from the foreign minister of iran, he says this is only a first step. we need to start moving in the
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direction of restoring confidence, which i thought was an interesting thing to hear from someone in the iranian regime. >> you can restore some confidence in the american public. remember the american pastor held there. sigh yeed abedin i, he's been held there, serving a number of years for setting up churches within iran. >> exactly. >> there was no mention of him during any press conference about having him be released. >> why not press that as a negotiation point? there's precedent for this, certainly. other countries have pressed for issues like this during their negotiations, certainly that weave been involved in. the president should say we're not coming to the table unless as a matter of symbolic importance, american citizen, you let him free. >> let him out first and then -- iran had their sticking points, they weren't coming to the table in enrichment is off the table. we want enrichment as part of this deal. okay. you bridge the gap there. you come together and have a discussion about the two sticking points. the fact that there was no mention of it in secretary of
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state john kerry's press conference yesterday is disheartening. >> look, here's one principal that everybody can get behind, democrat, republican. if you fool with american citizens, snatch them off the streets and put them in prison like north korea has done to six or seven citizens currently, that's unacceptable. you should face real consequence for that. otherwise, what's the point of being an american citizen? >> conversely, the faith of an entire program or entire agreement should not be precipitated by the release of one person. >> one of their soldiers is kidnapped. they had a war over it in 2006. every time they negotiated something, they want him out of prison. whenever you think of that, they're standing up for people who help them. that's the point. whether you agree with it, the principle is worth defending. >> wars have started over one individual before in our history. more on this story coming up. happening overnight at 3:00 in the morning as that deal came together. we'll continue to watch it here
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for you. let's get to other headlines making news today. the army launching a new review to consider reclassifying the ft. hood shooting as an act of terrorism. a letter sent by john hk mu to south carolina congressman joe wilson. it reads the intelligence committee considers major hasan as a violent extremist who may engage in ideological motivated terrorist activities. he is been sentenced to death for wounding 32 and killing others in 2009. the victims were denied purple hearts and the accompanying financial benefits of getting a purple heart because the massacre is still considered workplace violence. more problems for boeing. a new warning this morning about ice forming on the engines of some of the new dreamliner planes. the company is recommending these planes avoid high altitude thunderstorms which can cause the engine to malfunction. earlier this year, the
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dreamliner was grounded after two planes suffered smoldering batteries. flights resumed after boeing redesigned the system. and willie nelson in trouble. sort of. country music star willie nelson suspending his tour indefinitely after three members of his band were hurt in a bus crash. the bus driver was struggling to navigate through a pretty brutal texas storm when the bus hit a bridge. all three band members have been released from the hospital and nelson was not on the bus when it crashed. if you're in the market for a very creative christmas present. former president george w. bush has the answer for you. number 43, now selling his famous artwork on a limited edition christmas ornament at the bush center museum in dallas. it features as you can see there, a cardinal. it sells for about 30 bucks. according to the store, it is flying off the shelves. >> uh-huh. >> that's the headlines. >> and now to rick who is i think standing outside facing frigid temperatures to tell us
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what's happening. >> it is chilly out here. been chilly across the country this week. finally made its way to the eastern seaboard. it's here. take a look at the weather maps. i'll show you what i'm talking about. windchills across the northern plains into the great lakes, across areas of the east coast, single digits for almost everybody if not temps feeling like below zero. that cold air made it down towards the southeast. it feels like 24 right now in jackson, mississippi. 38 in savannah. 80 in miami. hasn't got there yet. that's looking good. take a look, though. cold air is in place and it's been bringing a lot of rain and snow. look at some of the pictures that have been coming in to us. this is a picture sent to me on twitter out of new mexico. it's around albuquerque. you get an idea there. i-40 going through there and the snow on the roads making for very dangerous conditions. this next picture is from oklahoma. this was sent in to us from kwtv news 9. a great meteorologist at that
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station. incredible snow there. that town is southwestern oklahoma, just kind of north of the red river area. so incredible snow falling there. there's more to be had throughout the day today. it's a slow-moving system. the snow moving towards oklahoma city. get ready in dallas, you'll see a bit of an ice storm. dangerous conditions on the roads today, tonight and into the morning as you go back to work. back to you inside. well, democrats go nuclear stripping republicans of the power to block obama's nominees. they look like they forgot what the president once said out loud. watch this. >> that doesn't serve anyone's best interest and it certainly isn't what the patriots who founded this democracy had in mind. >> well, as of this week, the president was pushing for this personally. what changed? ann coulter joins us next to explain. >> he flips, he soars, the classic move on video coming up. stay with us. >> whoa. ♪ ho ho ho
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democrats go nuclear. the power to block obama's nominees. changing senate rules for the first time in decades. this is up for debate for a long time. they weighed in on this exact question not long ago. take a look at how they felt about it then. >> i rise today to urge my colleagues to think about the implications of what's been called the nuclear option and what affect that might have on this chamber and on this country. >> i pray god when the democrats take back control we don't make the kind of naked power grab you are doing. >> as long as i am the leader, the answer is no. i think we should just forget that. that is a black chapter in the history of the senate. >> so what changed? here to weigh in is columnist and author of "never trust a liberal over 3, especially a
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republican." ann coulter joins us live in the studio. that's a pretty major change. we're repainting the slogans on the barn like in animal farm. >> that's a great analogy. i would say obama care happened. this is the clearest indication of the democrats not expecting to do well in the midterm elections. >> yeah. >> they keep saying, oh, no, everybody loves obama care, we're going to work out the bugs. quick, jam judges through before the midterm elections. the whole filibuster argument started over miguel estrada, the first appellate nominee ever filibustered. it just ended. he was, by far, the most qualified potential judge in the universe and the history of the world and oh, gosh, he also happens to be hispanic and the memos came out, remember from the democratic senate judiciary committee saying we've got to stop him. they're going to put him on the supreme court and we can't be seen blocking an hispanic
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nominee. who got fired? the man who -- not the one who wrote them republicans, they have a reason to say no more filibustering. this is the first time an appellate nominee has ever been filibustered. one of the reasons he was filibustered because he's thanked in the acknowledgment ofs of one of my books and chuck schumer denounced him. >> for making an involuntary appearance in your acknowledgments. i love it. >> so they at least had reason to. when republicans consider doing it and it was basically the threat that they -- with the gang of 14. we'll let democrat nominees through, you'll let some of ours through and then suddenly, it's the doomsday machine, the nuclear option. now, it's just democracy. >> it changes something kind of profound. it's a fact. it changes the way the senate works in a very basic way. it's not supposed to be a simple majority rules chamber, right? >> yes.
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as i understand it, this will only be for judicial nominees. it's not for other legislation and they also, according to "the new york times," it's not for supreme court nominees. but it will just not be for supreme court nominees until they need us. >> this signals two things. one, the administration plans to kind of focus on its executive branch power from here on out. they're not getting anything to the congress, right? >> i think that's right. they may get a delay or a defunding of obama care through. i mean, you have enough democrats up for election next year, you go right back to everything ted cruz did a month ago. it might pass now. >> republicans could take the senate after all this nonsense. >> oh, please, heaven -- >> if they do, what does that mean? now, they're suddenly, they'd be much more empowered than they expected to be. >> they can do it. republicans as with many of these things, republicans could never be the first one toss do it because they only have an adversary media against republicans. now that the democrats have done
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it, republicans could do the same thing. by the way, in my latest book, never trust a liberal over three, i have a small section and i begin with some of the judicial nominees, nominees from, for example, bill clinton and others and many of them were completely crazy. identifying undercover officers in court. one judge, judge ma sigh a jackson defeated by republicans because they refused to vote for her. she said of a rapist who raped a little girl, they both have aids, why are we having this trial. that's the kind of judge republicans were blocking. the kind democrats were blocking were highly talented hispanic nominee. >> unbelievable. ann coulter joining us this morning. thank you very much. you've woken me up completely. next on the rundown. remember when bob costas broke into political talk at halftime? get ready for more. he's on a roll.
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why is this woman suing match.com. all the details coming up. [ male announcer ] if you suffer from a dry mouth then you'll know how uncomfortable it can be. [ crickets chirping ] but did you know that the lack of saliva can also lead to tooth decay and bad breath? [ exhales deeply ] [ male announcer ] well there is biotene. specially formulated with moisturizers and lubricants, biotene can provide soothing relief and it helps keep your mouth healthy, too. [ applause ] biotene -- for people who suffer from dry mouth. side-by-side, so you get the same coverage, often for less. that's one smart board -- what else does it do, reverse gravity? [ laughs ] split atoms? [ flo chuckles ] [ whirring ] hey, how's that atom-splitting thing going?
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welcome back. 23 past the hour. quick headlines for you. afghan tribal leaders give the green light for a security deal with the united states. but afghanistan's president says not so fast. he says the country needs more time to ensure the u.s. is committed to peace in the country. the deal could impact thousands of u.s. troops. the fda is releasing new guidelines on some of your favorite foods. listen to this. it says a cancer-causing chemical is released when foods like french fries, chips and cookies are browned through
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frying or baking. companies are being asked to tweak ingredients, lower frying temperatures and cut thicker fries and chips. over to clayton. we've got a frying segment coming up. is a sporting event the place for politics like this? >> hand guns do not enhance our safety. they exacerbate our flaws, tempt us to escala arguments and bait us into embracing confrontation rather than avoiding it. if javon belcher didn't possess a gun, he and cassandra perkins would both be alive today. >> bob costas thinks so. should politics be mixed with sports? here to weigh in is former nfl player and special agent randall hill. nice to see thu morning. >> nice to see you again. >> how do you feel about mixing politics and sports in general? then we'll dive into what costas is looking to do during the olympics. >> first, if you're going to talk facts, i don't have a
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problem with that. for example, race times -- equals distance. "fox and friends" love my bright tie. that's why i'm here. you know, with that being said, if you're going to only talk fact and be straightforward and let people or the viewers actually form their own opinion, i don't have a problem with it. >> now we move to the olympics where bob costas will have late-night duties covering the upcoming olympic games. he thinks and he has said that those late-night hosting duties of the olympics are a perfect opportunity to take on some of the international problems that may arise in sports, specifically russia. here's what he had to say about russia. he says, you can say russia has these laws, tis being, tis being -- 90% of americans regardless of political affiliations disagree with the law. the best service is not to wag your finger. the best service is to ask the right questions if you can get responsible people to sit down to be interviewed. he wants to sit down with vladimir putin and ask him about
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some of russia's laws. >> well, you know, i think that the american people are very intelligent and again, politics is very much a part of sports. even when you go back to the olympics, one of the greatest games ever played was the united states versus the soviet union in hockey. greatest game ever played. it's part of sports. but again, i think that the only thing you should do as a broadcaster and/or someone in front of the television camera, when you're talking about politics, just talk the facts and let people come to their own conclusions. >> on a sunday afternoon when you want to relax with your family, had a long week at work and you have two days off, you want to sit down there during halftime and hear a commentator totally out of the blue start talking politics when politicians rate lower than some communicable diseases for popularity and approval ratings? is that the type of thing you want to fill your halftime with? i don't know. >> you definitely don't want to
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flood your halftime with it. but i think that there are a lot of intelligent viewers of many different sports. you know, who really like to talk about politics and listen to it. again, if you're going to talk politics, tell me exactly what's going on, and don't form your own opinion. i think you're giving yourself a very large platform to form an opinion where i think the american people should be forming their own opinion, especially during a sporting event. >> in the context of this sporting event itself, the olympics, it would make more sense. an out of the blue random commentary in the middle of a program seems odd to me. randall, you're right about a number of things. including the fact that i do love your tie. >> thank you very much. i appreciate it. >> happy thanksgiving randall. hope you have a great week ahead. >> thank you. coming up on the show, check out this video. one young boy scaring off a carjacker. what he did that has everyone talking. don't want to go the traditional route this thanksgiving dinner, why not try deep frying your turkey.
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coming up we'll show you how. it's simple and it will save you hours. when i first got shingles it started on my back. and i had like this four inch band of bumps that came around to the front of my body. and the pain from it was- it was excruciating. i did not want anyone to brush into me to cause me more pain
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dell laptop, i plug in headphones and i cackle at the top of my dang lungs. you won't see me trying to jam a suitcase in the overhead bin. i carry everything in loose plastic bags. >> have you ever flown next to a woman like that? >> i've flown with her man i times. >> if you're traveling on a plane this holiday, you might relate to that skit from "saturday night live." the worst lady on an airplane character touched on some of the worse things you can do on an airplane. >> what are some of the best things you can do for your marriage? >> that's a good question. >> it is a good question. these are the holidays. you're going to spend a lot of time with your family. it's a wonderful time but tensions can emerge. >> ladies, this is remarkable. i'm glad the study came out. we learned the number one thing you can do to help your marriage, women, you have to take the lead on correcting the conflict. >> i'm confused why the women take the lead. what is it about the female contradiction? >> this is science speaking.
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not two men giving -- >> two men on a couch. >> giving male-based opinions. the data are in. women giving up an argument is the most important thing you can do. >> really? >> correcting the situation. instead of stewing on it and slamming a door and not talking for 24 hours, you need to bite the bullet. >> deal? >> what happened to the happy wife, happy life thing? >> research has thrown that out. >> '90s? >> it's important to be more versatile. so that could be a number of things. >> there you go. say no more. >> researchers found that when they looked at tapes of marriage counseling between couples, those couples that use the pronoun we rather than me, their marriage survives. >> i can agree with it if it's in larger life context. we don't believe in spanking our child.
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but i can't stand the couples that talk in terms of we and put words in other people's mouth. yeah, we don't like pizza. or we don't like action films. let your husband speak for himself. >> now we're back to tip one. >> people who think of themselves as on a journey together, this is part of a longer narrative. our life together. you have an advantage. >> look at the words, journey, narrative. >> i'm getting very -- i'm from california and it's coming out in the end. >> totally. very quickly, there's a study done by the journalist family psychology and it tells women, happy marriage, don't go into it being optimistic that it's going to be successful. >> go in expecting the worst and then you'll have a happy marriage. we've got great science this morning. we have people weighing in on this, this morning. we asked for your long-term marriage tips. from brian on the facebook page. the secret to a successful marriage, two words spoken by the husband, "yes dear". >> i like that, huh.
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gretchen writes us, it's okay to go to bed angry, tempers cool and things don't seem like such a big deal in the morning. >> i've been with my wife for 33 years by following this credo. if you're wrong and you shut up, you are wise. if you're right and you shut up, you are married. if you're right -- if you're right and you shut up, you're married. >> if you're right and you shut up -- then you don't need to one-up them. >> submit to them is tony's point. you don't always need to be right. >> remember, you're a family. committed to each other as a family. you elected to bring them into your life as your family member. treat them like you would treat anyone. >> we like eating pasta on wednesdays. >> yes, we do. >> we don't want to hear you say we anymore. >> we like a low carb diet. >> we need to go to headlines. a model is suing match.com for -- look at this. $1.5 billion claiming her photo was used in more than 200 fake profiles. she says the fake profiles on
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the site are often posted by scammers outside the u.s. earlier this morning on "fox and friends," we had a little debate about this. >> that there are fraudulent profiles. the question is, match.com is aware of them. so don't they have an obligation to prevent such fraud? >> the duty is to create a marketplace. a marketplace where people can meet each other. the duty is not to governor not to police every single person that's on that website. >> the lawsuit says match.com could easily eliminate the fraud on its site if it gets software to stop international addresses from posting profiles in the united states among other things. a young boy scares off a carjacker at a florida walgreens drugstore. according to police, he was inside his grandmother's car when a man tried to swap the car. he started screaming and the thief took off. the boy chased after him but the guy got away. police are hoping fingerprints on the car help to catch the suspect. check out this incredible
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football move. lincoln university senior running back marquis henner going out in style. he flips over the defender. landing on his feet. >> whoa. >> he goes another 13 yards. it highlighted a season ending 51-28 victory over southwest baptist. congrats. >> congrats. let's check in with rick now. >> that's fully legal? >> his knees never touched the ground, right? you would think you would see that more often to be honest with you. >> they do it in the end zone a lot. getting hit and flipping the end zone. not midfield. >> the new skill you need to add to your football resume. take a look at this picture from howard treks letter of the snow. this is the ramp on to i-10 west of stockton, texas. it's a mess on the roads attentiacross texas and new mexico. we have another 24 hours before
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it's gone. you can see the snow flying across new mexico into oklahoma and texas. we have winter storm warnings in effect for a lot of people, including dallas. so tomorrow morning, your commute is going to be icy and it's going to be treacherous. you can see this continuing to kind of linger through that area. it eventually becomes this big storm that we're talking about for tuesday and wednesday across the east coast. i don't think the coastal areas we're talking about significant snow. but we're going to see a lot of rain. many areas, 3 to 4 inches of rain. possibly wednesday flooding, wind. a big travel day for thanksgiving, which is what we are trying to celebrate today. we are starving. >> we've been drooling and tortured by this. mr. mcle more. >> i'm going to feed you guys this time. y'all been whining and complaining all morning. rick you said -- now we're going to feed you guys. >> nightmare trying to not eat this. >> earlier, we deep fried a turkey in 72 minutes. here's the results from the one we put in earlier this morning.
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i'm going to give you guys one more quick little peek while we let this turkey rest. now, this is how you free up your oven and safely fry your turkey with the butterball turkey fryer. we ranch-fied that turkey. we injected it with ranch dressing. >> botoxed it. >> it's coming out early. this is how our turkey looks. you guys will be eating this. we're going to do a little bit more. i've got buffalo sauce here. rick, if you will, you're going to take 2/3 buffalo sauce and put in a little bit -- there you go, of ranch dressing. we're also going to put in a little bit of cajun spice for taste. >> you don't know how good this smells. >> if this was my last meal -- >> i've never said anybody say they wanted my food for their -- highlight of my life.
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we're going to drizzle this guys over the top of that turkey. >> i have problems right now. >> so i'm going to add that. put that over on a plate. there you go. >> thank you. >> leftovers are a big deal. >> if you notice down front, we've got smoked sweet potatoes that we've had -- put some pecans and brown sugar on them. while you guys have that, i'm going to serve you up a little bit of my mac and cheese. take a look at this, guys. >> you make good mac and cheese. >> we do it every year we come here to fox. you can also take the deep fried turkey and do lettuce wraps. if you want to have a little healthier spin to it, take the skin off and do lettuce wraps. we've got deep-fried turkey sliders down hear and you can actually do a wrap as well. ranch buffalo deep-fried turkey. do the sauce.
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get the family involved. that's what master built wants to explain to everybody. it's all about great food but it's also about sharing around the dinner table and enjoying great food. >> we're glad you shared with us today grateful. >> john mcle more, author of dad gum that's good, 1 and 2. >> and 2. >> thank you very much. >> thank you. it was fantastic. let's go over to tucker and clayton. >> dad gum, that looks good. >> alec baldwin suspended from his msnbc job for his drama with a photographer. meanwhile, his colleague making remarkably repulsive remarks about sarah palin and getting away with it. howard kurtz has the media buzz on that. emergency rooms used to treating car crash victims. what happens when the car crashes into the hospital? that story, next. ordered shoes from us online
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quick headlines for you. a new york deli owner are arrested for trying to make bank on a customer's winning lotto ticket. they tried to give him $1,000 instead of the $1 million his ticket was worth. the customer sensed something might be up so he contacted the police. people were hurt when a car came crashing into a wisconsin emergency room. the e.r. was forced to close, of course, while the driver of the car had to be transported to another nearby hospital. the irony is four people were working inside the hospital and they suffered minor injuries. juliette in. >> thank you very much, tucker. msnbc host martin bashir apologized after making lewd and deplorable comments, actually, about former alaska governor and one-time vice presidential nominee sarah palin. here's what he had to say. >> i wanted to take this
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opportunity to say sorry to mrs. palin and an unreserved apology to her friend and family and our supporters and viewers and anyone who heard what i said. >> that's it. there has been no suspension, no firing and nbc hasn't said anything about it so how is bashir able to get away with it? many folks are wondering. hourt kurtz, host of media buzz and fox news contributor join us from our d.c. bureau. good to have you on today. >> good morning. >> i have to get first of all, let's start off, lauren, with the response when you heard the comments. >> i was absolutely shocked. what is even more amazing is that there has been no punishment, no suspension, especially when alec baldwin, who had a gay slur outside of the studio, not on air, was suspended for two weeks. david schuster who used to work for msnbc tweeted this week that he was suspended for two weeks for talking about pimping out
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chelsea clinton and he said he doesn't quite understand what is going on here. >> i guess the question for you, howard. what do you think is going on here? what would have happened if somebody said that, one of their anchors said that perhaps about hillary clinton? >> that's exactly the point. there would have been an uproar beyond the halls of msnbc. the mainstream media would have been really angry about it. not only has martin bashir not been suspended or disciplined in any way, executives more than a week now haven't said anything about it. sarah palin has responded on fox news sunday with chris wallace saying they were vile and evil comments. while she accepts the apology, there's a different standard for conservative women. i'm not here to defend sarah palin, she's a fox news contributor. i would be upset with anyone who made horrifying comments about another human being. >> i was going to say, juliette. but she also said in this interview that she's a big girl and she can handle it.
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if you're going to do it to somebody, you might as well do it to her and not a poor innocent child. >> i think, you know, saying that you're willing to be a doormat is one thing. overall, that's not really the point. the point is that people are out there saying these despicable things, whether you say it about hillary clinton or sarah palin, in a lot of minds, it should be the cause for at least a suspension if not a firing. what do you think should happen, howard? >> i can't believe that martin bashir hasn't had any suspension given msnbc's track record in taking hosts or contributors off the air when they say something truly offensive. also the lack of speaking out, even to put out a statement saying that we don't think this is acceptable commentary, i cannot understand why msnbc won't do that. because the silence is deafening and it suggests that well, it's okay, he took a shot. he apologized, let's move o on. >> we'll wrap it up from that. very quickly, tune in to media
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buzz at 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 eastern time on the fox newschannel. thanks for joining us guys we appreciate it. >> we'll keep you updated if there are any moves made on that story. next, we're taking a walk on the wild side. yes, that is a live creature in our studio about ten feet away from me. visitors from the rainforest, reptile show joining us next. farmer: hello, i'm an idaho potato farmer.
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looking. we're not talking about rick we're talking about the reptiles on the set, brought in my our friends, michael and joan, the owners of the rainbow reptile show. >> this is actually happening. just getting a rlittle huggy wih rick over here. this is a common -- believe it or not, a common boa contradictor. >> common where? >> under a house in connecticut. somebody had it as a pet and it got loose. those are not illegal, but they're one of the six large stz snakes in the world. a beautiful, beautiful creature. you can see it's very calm. it's not biting rick at all. if i pinch his tail, it will bite? >> what? >> how do these end up going after their prey? they wrap around the pray? >> they have 120 teeth. they bite first and then wriep around their prey aconstrict their prey like this. >> you wouldn't want to put one around your neck. >> you wouldn't want to do what rick is doing and put it around the neck. let's bring her right down and get something else for you.
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boas average about between 10, 11 feet, and this guy will weigh when it's full grown, about 100 pounds. >> is he loaded? >> loaded, he's an alligator. charlie came to us from the charles river in boston. >> what was charlie doing in the charles river? >> somebody obviously had him as a pet and didn't want him anymore and let him go. >> one of you has to take him. please. >> these guys actually came off of long island. they were seized out there by the suffolk county spca. >> pithauncythons in connecticu. alligators in boston. >> responsible pet ownership, and we're at the family pet expo in the meadowlands today from 10:00 to 5:00, and these guys -- >> it's okay. >> am i hurting him? >> no, you're good. >> they wonder why i don't want
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to hold it. >> what we're doing is responsible pet ownership. alligators are not pets by any means, but you can have boa contradictors as pets, different animals as pets, and reptites do make good pets, but you need to know what you are doing. >> if they were everywhere, black mambas and everything. >> we work for a lot of law enforcement agencies and we get animals from everywhere. we don't ever buy an animal. they're used in education because they're not able to go back to the wild. >> alligator is not a good pet? >> no, and they're not pets. they're illegal in the state of new york and new jersey. >> really solid choice. >> you need to research the animal before you decide to get it. these guys live longer than dogs and cats. there are many hanmanimals who 75, up to 200 years for turtles. >> this seems like a sweet
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little -- >> it is right there, but then it gets this big, and then it get 12 feet. >> he's not going to hurt her. this is a marine toad from south america. people commonly refer to this as -- watch out. there you go. >> that's the face. >> this is what's commonly referred to as a cane toad. look at the size of him and what he's doing. he's blowing up like a balloon so he looks bigger than he really is. this is a great defense against a predator. >> he's frightened of rick. >> if that doesn't work, tucker, he has venom. >> he just bites your face. we're going to take a quick break and be back with more dangerous animals on the set. >> the neck-biting toad. [ male announcer ] even ragu users a. chose prego homestyle alfredo over ragu classic alfredo. prego alfredo?! [ thinking ] why can't all new things be this great? ha ha! whoa! [ monkey squeals ] [ sighs ] [ male announcer ] choose taste. choose prego.
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indigenous to africa. he was found running down -- >> navy street in brooklyn. >> what's going on with our country? >> where was this found? >> we rescued from a soup pot in the midwest. somebody was going to eat him, and he came to us. >> go on to foxandfriends.com. and a fox news alert. the deal is done. world leaders in iran ending three decades of mostly diplomatic gridlock. making history last night by reaching an interim deal that calls on tehran to cut down on its nuclear activity in exchange for sanctions relief. critics are already speaking out, and some are calling the deal dubious at best. others describing it as down right dangerous. good morning, everyone. weu welcome you here to americas news headquarters. i'm jamie colby. >> i'm erin shawn. this agreement was announced at 3:00 in
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