tv Hannity FOX News February 5, 2014 7:00pm-8:01pm PST
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go to facebook.com/t facebook.com/thekellyfile for highlights of tonight's show. thank you for watching. i'm martha maccallum in for megyn kelly. welcome to hannity tonight. we have a jam-packed addition to the show. america, are you ready? let's roll. >> why did you decide to stop? >> i was 22 and i got panicked for my life. >> the inside story of the drug bust in the phillip ip seymour hoffman case. we'll tell you how this all went down. >> they can ask me anything and i don't know the questions ahead of time. >> that is absolutely the case. >> you asked and i asked. another edition of ask sean. ♪ >> some loved it- >> if another country found
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america to be beautiful let them sing it. >> some hated it. >> america should be sung in english. >> coke releases clips of some of the people who performed in the commercial. could that change people's minds. >> i think people will feel really good in themselves to hear it in many other languages. >> two nights left for leno. >> nbc said they would like me to be just like bob hope, dead. >> we'll take a look at some of jay's most memorable moments. >> what the hell were you thinking? >> hannity starts right here right now. >> as we predicted, obama care is crumbling right before our very eyes. yesterday we learned the cbo is projecting this debacle will cost nearly 2.5 million jobs today the head of the cbo, this nonpartisan group said this. >> by providing heavily subsidized health insurance to people with very low income and withdrawing those subsidies as income rises the act creates a dis disincentive for people to work relative to what would have been
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the case in the absence of that act. >> pretty unbelievable. that's not all. the administration is now resorting to using pets, pets to try and sell this disastrous law. ♪ listen to me i'm talking pets you see ♪ ♪ if you get health care insurance preventive care is now free ♪ ♪ so sweet enroll today we're here something to say ♪ ♪ enroll today take care of people for goodness sake ♪ ♪ there a's a plan for every budget don't accept defeat ♪ ♪ now you can get covered and still buy me treats ♪ ♪ enroll >> just pathetic. you really can't make this stuff out. this ad put out by health care.com and reads mom loves her comfy jeans and also loves it when you have historians. and to help defend this debacle,
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juan williams, obama care is creating a disincentive to work. do i need to play it again? a disincentive to work. is this america, hope and change? >> that's your best argument. i'm surprised you are so spot on this evening because that's exactly right. but it's not the case and i'm glad you're not going down that road, sean hannity so many conservatives are saying, oh, it is going to result in job loss. there's no job loss. no one being fired. there are not people working full time being forced to part-time. this is about -- >> now, we're parsing words. what we're talking about here is we're dealing with 2.5 million people, what is the total number of hours americans work is going to be reduced, the equivalent of 2.3 million full time jobs. >> that was choice -- that's not being forced on them, they are making a choice. >> that's what you're saying. >> that's liberty. >> that's not freedom and liberty. what's happening once they get to the point they will lose their subsidy, they won't work
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anymore. that's not freedom and liberty, that's dependency. >> there's almost no falloff. the cutoff you're referring to is $72,000 a year. people who make more than $70,000 are not going to say, you know what, i think i will quit my job so i can get obama care. >> juan, you're missing the whole point here. they have created two dis incentives. we're getting whacked from both sides all the names we named including sea world they're not hiring full time people and reducing hours and putting people below the 30 hour threshold. >> that's not right. what we're seeing here is people who work right now. >> juan juan juan. >> on low level jobs. >> you are drinking this kool-aid and it is full of poison and cyanide. >> i understand what you're saying. i think the disincentive you're talking about is legit. >> we agree on that. let's not get too lost here >> hold on.
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let me finish this point to you, sean, about somebody about to retire and has a health care problem and realize they can't retire they have to keep working to keep their health care insurance. that person right now might retire, a young mother who wants to take care of her kids and not rush back to work >> because the government subsidies are so high, all about a government dependency ponzi scheme. let me go over this a second. yesterday at the white house briefing economic advisor jason fuhrman, listen to him stumble and stammer over his words. he can't get it out. he can't explain it. watch this. >> this report confirms the aca is -- has -- is making positive impacts today in very important ways and it confirms what we've all known, which is when you do something like that it gives people new choices and new options and people will sometimes make different choices in the face of new choices and new options. i am not saying that i accepted
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that number. i think there's a whole range of factors that go into estimating that number. >> here's the reality. i want our audience to be very clear on this. i'll go and then i promise i will let you go. it is the equivalent of shrinking the workforce the equivalent of 2.3 million full time jobs in terms of the hours because once you get to that working point, then the incentive, you start losing your subsidies, it's a disincentive to work. number two, they are creating dependency now as a selling point for this country. if this is this hope and change with 50 million americans on food stamps and the lowest labor participation rate, 92 million americans out of the workforce, if i think this is good for this country, you and i will never ever see eye-to-eye because that's not the country my grandparents came to, where there was no safety net at the turn of the last century, juan willia williams. sean, you want us to go back to the last century and have no say or -- >> that's not the context, sean,
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follow the bouncing ball. >> i'm telling you when you say you don't want individual americans who might be elderly and having to work a job because they need the health insurance and have the capacity to retire i don't think you're about liberty and choice. when you say to a young mother you have to rush back to work instead of take care of your baby because of obama care. let's look at what that report says, more people will have insurance. >> excuse me, that's not true. this report says 31 million non-elderly americans, residents of the united states will be without health care by the year 2024. it is not insuring every american as the president said. let's remind everybody you don't get to keep your plan, you don't get to keep your doctor, you don't save $2500 a year, 31 million americans are uninsured and it incentivize's people not to work. you're supporting it. >> that was the talking point >> it's called reality points. check reality academic. >> let's not argue about the
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facts. >> the truth. >> the facts are in the reports that came out. what you said at the start is absolutely true, some people will have a reason to say, i don't want to work. i agreed with you. it's also true more people now than the cbo previously estimated will be insured. >> you kept saying it. every promise made here is broken and cost more than they ever dreamed and 31 million americans according to the report won't get insurance. let's go to the former cbo director. here's what he had to say. >> we're headed straight for a minefield and no one seems kogz distant of this. i thought mortgage cognizant of this. i thought this was a relatively depressing report that we can stable the gdp until this president turns over and everything goes north in a very bad way. debt explodes and deficit explodes and driven by spending no one is willing to touch. >> straight for a minefield,
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depressing, 50 million americans on food stamps, 92 million me out of the workforce lowest labor rate participation in 30 years and juan, you came here and defend the president the promise to keep your plan, keep your doctor and save money and now it's a disincentive to work. you defend that? i don't get it, juan williams. beam me up. >> when you have a system that came out with a flawed website and the cbo says despite all those flaws. >> $600 million. >> we thought 7 million people will sign up, now we income it's 6. that's good news. when you hear them say they will reduce the deficit and put money into the treasury, good news. yet sean hannity you are here still banging the drum. you're a hater. you should stop the hating. >> i don't hate. i hate unemployed americans and the fact people don't hatch jobs and the fact that our government is creating dependency and d
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disincentive to work. juan williams, the american dream is dying before your eyes and you're defending this madness. >> i would never defend it. i'm telling you this is not about -- >> i want jobs and i want the economy fixed and i want to get rid of these deficits. >> you want to go back to the turn of the century. you want my grandmother and your grandmother out on the street. >> get out of here. . get out of here. coming up next. arrests tonight have been made in connection with the death of phill philip seymour hoffman and hannity has obtained the exclusive images of the suspects and drug busts of nypd detective. you ask me anything you want, this week's edition of request sean. all that and much more as hannity continues. [ male announcer ] introducing new fast acting advil.
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welcome back to "hannity." there are major developments in the phillip ip seymour hoffman investigation. they arrested four of heroin dealers you see on your screen and believed to be connected to hoffman and sources say hoffman's phone number was found on the phone of one of these suspects and all four charged with drug possession and questioned by police about the hundreds of bags of heroin found in their manhattan apartments. and new york city's chief medical examiner said the autopsy was inconclusive but warranted continued study. joining us bo and dr. bob, b&b. >> we used to work in the '70s and '80s. i pick them up and he opened
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them up. >> wow. the height of the heroin deaths, you were getting how many deaths a night? >> two or three a day or evening in new york city. each one had to be investigated, had to be autopsied. >> they didn't go after the drug dealers the way they are here. why? famous person? >> yes. it's a news story. remember something, they have undercover operations going. the ace of spade heroin they stamp it on the nfls there, operations going on that already. they have undercovers making buys out of there but now a rushed buy. now, they get the undercover to say, yeah, i observed bags of heroin in that apartment and get a judgment and bingo run through the door and able to make the rest. they will not i believe in new york state they will not be able to charge these guys with murder for the fact if you sell me 20 bags of heroin, shame on me, like if i buy airplane glue and snort it and kill myself, how will you charge my intention although some states i believe
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dr. baden will say can charge you for the murder. >> in new jersey, just across the border, if you supply somebody with heroin and the person dies from it, they can b charged with some degree of manslaughter. but they do that for doctors also. i've been involved with a number of federal dea cases where doctors have been charged with oversupplying scripts and oxycontin and method doll and giving it out improperly. >> how can an autopsy at this point be inconclusive. how many autopsies have you done at this point? >> i've done over 20,000 autopsies. >> not inconclusive. >> they know 98% what they will do as far as cause of death. they're waiting for the microscopic slides and finish up the toxicology. i think the toxicology that's been released, came from the police department looking at
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doing tests. >> you said last night the fact that needle was still in his arm means that heroin was so potent he passed out before he could pull it out. >> that's right. >> the whole thing, doc, too, how much had he used? was hat his first shot or done three shots prior? that could have been his third shot he didn't realize it. i think it had something like 50% purity. >> 54%. >> usually if you get 15, 20 is pretty high. 50 is like unheard of. they like to call it a hotshot. you know what, that just shows you druggies, i use that heroin, you have no idea what you're on. >> the reason they put down the ace of spades and all is to indicate it's coming from the same supplier all the time and it will be approximately the same consistency. however, in the middle of the cutting of it, the police come or something, they'll stop cutting it, put it aside and then it's much purer than it was meant to be.
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>> is there a big difference, as we discussed last night, this is an epidemic, small towns, big cities across the country, rich neighborhoods, middle class, poor neighborhoods, does it make that big a difference if you shoot it, snort it, smoke it? >> shooting it by far you get a reaction faster. smoking also, snorting it, least. snorting goes through your michele brain and all that takes a little more time. membrane shooting it, yeah. >> i had somebody on the radio program say they were addicted the first time they tried it. have you found that to be the case. >> that's a lot of psychological things. yes, there have been some. they found in england people given heroin intravenously for injuries during world war ii would not get addicted if they had a good background. >> last question. you have done how many autopsies on famous people, famous cases like this one. why is this case going to be treated different than any other case? the reality, right? >> it depends on the newspapers,
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media sources, what the other news is for the day >> you pick up the two main newspapers in new york, what's the headline and picture, you want to solve that right away. they did solve it right away. this could be good in the sense parents are now aware, kids in college now using heroin. >> everywhere. people have to have their children and talk to them and let them know the danger of it. >> b&b, you have a rap song? >> b&b when we're out there, dr. baden, i pick them up, he opened them up. >> he's the one with the good voice. >> all right. i don't have a clue what the questions will be. i'll answer each and every one of them. back with this week's edition of "ask sean." >> what about the little boy? >> they come to the door, it's, i'm sorry to the community, i'm sorry to any who has a heart string attached to this situation or scenario. i know it sucks. i know it's a drag.
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>> that was a local fox news reporter speaking with a hostage taker during a very intense standoff in colorado. she will join me later for her very first national interview and tell us how this tragic situation came to a deadly end. that's coming up next and we will play more of that tape straight ahead. ♪ we're gonna be late. ♪ ♪ ♪ oh, are we early? [ le announcer ] commute your way with the bold, l-new nissan rogue. ♪
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welcome back to "hannity". you've been posting your questions all day on twitter and now time for "asksean." i have not seen them yet. how are you? those are not the questions. i don't have them. >> ready? >> people are enjoying that you like to trip me up. >> i've got some stuff for you. i have stuff lined up. get ready. julio sosa wants to know, do you have any advice on how to start a career in radio? >> in radio. yeah, i do. here's the biggest problem people ask me. they read rush limbaugh makes this amount of money or i hear you make a lot of money in radio. that's not how it works. if you want to get in radio, the best thing you can do is get on the air in a small station in a small town in a small city. i worked for free for over a year.
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>> was it a college radio station? >> they threw me out of town. i deserved it. i was horrible. next, got a job in huntsville, alabama, drove cross-country, didn't know a single person on the state except the guy that hired me on the phone, i think paid $19,000 a year. just because when the red light went on i loved it. you can't have these self-imposed limitations where you say i'm not moving here. >> would you get into radio? >> i wanted to. >> now, would you do internet? would you do -- >> if you love something. if it's a passion. i don't know what happened, i listened to talk radio, i did my first show and when the red light went on i was hooked. i would have pursued this, no money, worked for free, part-time, whatever. >> you did wind up on television, too. we have video, if you want to look at it. >> oh, boy. >> of an appearance you made on "the donahue show" in 1995, early '95. i want to see the hair. >> a little darker back then. >> a little eddie muenster. >> a lot eddie muenster.
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>> i can say because i look like more tisha adams. >> and a unibrow, too. >> can i ask you this? do you enjoy tv or radio more? >> i love my day. does that make sense? i love -- radio is great prep for tv. because on radio, i can do a 20 minute monologue. on tv, you got to get your questions, your answers out quick and you have limited time. you have to still get to the point. but the power of television is you can 82s a image or akin just go, really, and makes a point you can't do on radio. >> you've got it all. >> i'm blessed. >> penny hart wants to know who is your favorite interview of all time. >> people ask me this, i'm not ducking an answer. when you go to the white house, as i have been and interview a president, i don't think it gets better than that but there's a but. i like this. i like bob beckle. we had juan williams on the
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other night. i like the whole package i get to interview a lot of people. i find people fascinating. i love debating. >> your not answering the question. one person. >> i would have to say the white house, george bush. >> 41 or 43? 43? >> 43, while he was in the white house, yes. >> from sam anderson, what is your favorite thing to do outside politics? >> sports sports sports. >> tennis? >> i play tennis. i run. >> we talked about that's last week, do you have little matching tennis outfits you buy? >> what do you mean by that? >> like they match. like the shirt matches the shorts. >> you want to know how i live in real life. first of all, i wear jeans every night. i wear sweatpants, a t-shirt, a baseball hat, usually on backwards when i play tennis. that's how i live my real life. >> i know. i've seen you come in here. >> you're saying i'm a slob when i come in here. >> well, you're comfortable.
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james rockman asks, who is your favorite historical character from american history and why? >> i can't pick one, you're asking me to pick one all the time. can i give a quick summary? i like our founders and framers. i like washington because he gave up power, amazing to me, when he could have held on to it. i read jefferson. you can't read the declaration, our founding document an not be amazed. those that put together the ferred rallist papers. f federalist papers and i have to saline con because saline -- say lincoln, because he kept the country together and more moderate figure, reagan. >> finally, you won't get by without me playing -- >> i knew you were going to do this >> roll the tape. >> i'm 6 for 6 the last two weeks and i'm picking the broncos because i think this is a peyton manning destiny.
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>> i take the other side and say seahawks, russell wilson. >> how much? >> a drink. >> deal. >> you're 6 for 7 and you got the big one wrong. >> i got it wrong. >> let me do this a little bit. >> you want to rub it in? here, you can have a sip. >> no, no, no. if i wanted water -- >> now i sound like clinton, right? >> exactly. but you're never clinton. >> you're getting tougher every week. this is getting harder. >> you had fun, hush up. >> you have to pull out the donahue video? you have to pull it out >> you should be proud. >> i will tell you a tape you will never find. there's tape of me on sally jesse rafael's program which was actually my first national television show. i've never played it on know and i have the tape and i doubt you can find it. >> that's the challenge. i have a week. >> game on. thanks. coming up next tonight right here on h"hannity."
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>> every race, every culture, every ethnicity, every religion. >> people coming from all over the world sharing their food and languages. >> the world in one country. >> coca-cola releases the behind the scenes footage of the super bowl ad. our great american panel will weigh in on that. and later, a hannity exclusive, a reporter who spoke with a hostage taker is here for her first interview on national tv straight ahead. you don't want to miss it. the end. lovely read susan. may i read something? yes, please. of course. a rich, never bitter taste cup after cup. 340 grams. [ sighs ] [ male announcer ] always rich, never bitter. gevalia. i'veot a big date, but my sinuses are acting up. it's te for advil cold and sinus. [ male announcer ] truth is twon't relieve all your symptoms. new alka seltzer plus-d relieves more symptoms than any other behind the counter liquid gel.
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[ speaking foreign language ] >> that commercial sparkeded a little bit of controversy, crit critics claiming it was un-american and coke released the footage of people featured in the ad. >> i was singing "america the beautiful" in the language that you can't translate it word-for-word. it's conceptional. >> don't forget the idea, too, is to bring out what's poetic about each language. [ speaking foreign language ] ♪ >> every race, every ethnicity, every culture, every religion. >> different people coming from all over the world sharing their food, sharing their languages. >> the world in one country. >> our great great american panel, "imus in the morning,"
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bernard, how are you? >> very well, hannity my boy. >> and geraldo rivera. i don't think people complained about diversity and i think people were annoyed why don't they sing it all in english? >> i saw it myself. wasn't offended by it. you read about the reaction on the blogs, which if kittens were drinking coke out of a bowl, people would get hateful and nststy, the way it is. when i heard actual right wing commentators were offended by it. i myself was shocked by that. i'm the son of irish immigrants albeit english speaking immigrants. >> i don't think the complaint was diversity. english, success in america. if you can't speak english the door will be shut in your face, geraldo. >> immigrants are learning english at a pace faster than ever before. what this hostile reaction shows
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is how deep seated the zena phobia is, the deep fear of the other, why we don't have immigration reform >> i don't think fear of the country changing in a way that's not helpful. i don't think diversity. english as the country's official language is passionate. >> english is not the official language >> i'm saying they want it as the official language >> it's not and not for a good reason. everywhere we learn english and that's how we get ahead in life >> we are american and do stand behind our american flag. the problem a lot of people had with this they were putting this off that our diversity of culture and languages is what defines us as america. that's definitely not the case. the sum of the parts is greater than the parts themselves. they failed at getting that message across. coca-cola has been in a lot of trouble lately. they had customizable cans you
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can't put gay on. >> i'd like to think the world would be in perfect harmony ♪ >> we're all in this together. >> these are legal immigrants that embody mostly conservative principles. if americans want to win hearts and minds the type of commentary i heard about this commercial is not going to be helpful. >> let me go to the show, "friday night tykes." the original clip and the two coaches had been suspended and here is a clip of the show. >> sometimes parents say i may be crossing a little bit of a line. >> they need to toughen up with the kids. >> wrap your big ass butt arms around them and put them on the ground. do you understand? >> i put 100% into it. when i see them not giving me 100% and i know their potential, it -- me off. >> i apologize for that. it was a bonehead moment. a bad decision on my part. >> looking back it's not good.
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you don't realize what you say sometimes in the heat of the passion. >> is that too far for you? >> the last time we were on here you kind of defended this kind of coaching. i said firmly against that. i said, this is not war. these are sports, kids who are young enough -- >> i thought it went a little too far. i'm not offended. he yelled at them. >> i have an 8-year-old daughter. >> the parents should be pulling them off the field >> he made them puke. this is child abuse. >> sports are meant to be in a safe environment >> i don't curse in front of my dad or my kids. to hear that is jarring to the ears. >> i agree it's jarring. i think they crossed a line but i also think there ae's part of america when it comes to sports we give every kid a trophy, we don't play dodgeball, every kid is a winner, we don't keep score. >> this is not feminism of
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america, these are 8 and 9-year-old kids. relax. >> do you want every kid to get a trophy in a competition? >> dehydrated kids? >> i think you have to encourage kids to participate. this makes them think sports is something that will hurt them. >> i don't like it because it's more about the parents than it is about the kids >> and the coaches egos, because they can't coach in junior high and have to go for the second grader. >> that hurts. speaking of sports. look at these reporters and pictures, olympic opening ceremonies on friday night and shows sochi in a shambles. don't flush any toilet paper down the toilet but rather throw it in the trash can. a picture of a yellow water in a glass in a hotel room. >> yummy. >> what did you say? >> yummy. a picture of that. >> unfinished hotel and on top
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of it all you had this rock band come to new york this week and said where is obama criticize ing putin on the human rights abuses? laid the gauntlet down. will he take it up >> vladimir putin is a bully and 20 over $50 billion on this and it's still a mess. that being said has there ever been a real well run olympics? >> mitt romney. salt lake city. mitt romney was brought in to fix salt lake city at the 11th hour. they could have brought mitt romney to sochi. it would have helped them out. >> they voted to put this in austria and south korea and they lost out and should have put them in either one. russia is a bleak oppressive sort of place, joyless. putin is a dead eye'd soul. >> we had them in china a few years ago. >> looking at the terror threat here, who puts the winter
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olympics in a tropical climate insane, number one, number two, i'm concerned about safety and security, the potential for terrorism and you hear about the black widow jihadist. >> this is the first time you ever had an olympics at the edge of a war zone. to me, that's much more significant than the hotel faucet or doorknob. >> you want american athletes living in that hell hole? >> i heard the actual venues themselves are very well prepared and beautiful. >> you bite off more than you can chew as putin obviously did, $51 billion he spent. >> last exit question, should obama speak out about the human rights violations as the girl -- i won't say the name of the band suggested he do. >> the p riot? >> the p riot. >> hasn't he already? aren't we sending gay athletes to represent the country? he absolute ly should. he won't allow americans to adopt russian babies. he should have sent biden over
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there, too, to be with the athletes to show support. >> are we going to vet athletes for their political ideology. >> i hope it's a good olympics. we haven't even started >> i like to win, geraldo. >> usa, usa! >> i want america to win. up next tonight, here on "hannity." >> is there any way you could just let him go? >> absolutely not. he's the only avenue i have for them to even consider or entertain the idea of backing away. >> that reporter, who was on the phone with the hostage taker during a tense standoff with the police joins me next for her very first national interview. the tragic situation left one dead. later tonight- >> we've only got two shows left after tonight. >> i read where nbc said they would like me to be just like bob hope, dead.
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>> ouch. the countdown to the end of "leno" the end of an era. jay's best moments of the show. [ male announcer ] introducing new fast acting advil. with an ultra-thin coating and fast absorbing advil ion core™ technology, it stops pain before it gets worse. nothingorks faster. new fast acting advil. look for it in the white box. of fast is good and faster is better. good thing walgreens gets you in and out in no time. so you get the relief you need with new fast acting advil. at the corner of happy and healthy. [ male announcer ] to truck guys, the truck is everything. and when you put them in charge of making an unbeable truck, good things happen. this is the ram 1500. the 2014 motor trend truck of the year.
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the standoff lasted 18 hours but tonight a 13-year-old colorado boy who was taken hostage is in fact free and his captor is dead. it all started monday evening with a domestic dispute. 34-year-old don pooley a convicted criminal got into an argument with his girlfriend and fled to a nearby home and pooley held the boy captive while police were negotiating for his life and at one point in the night, pooley called a local reporter. listen to a bit of this chilling
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conversation with the reporter. >> regardless when i get caught i'm going to prison forever and won't ever see daylight again. i don't want to live there and that being what it is, death seems very beautiful to me. >> reporter: is there any way you could just let him go? >> absolutely not. he's the only avenue that i have for them to even consider or entertain the idea of backing away. i want to run away. i don't want to be here. i feel horrible for this little boy right now. he hasn't stopped shaking. he's whimpering. he won't answer me. i don't know what else to say. >> what about the little boy? he goes, too, if they come to the door. i'm sorry for the community and any who has a heart string attached to this situation or scenario. i know it sucks, i know it's a drag. >> here to fautalk tore phone c
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phone rings and it's him. he was telling me the same thing he was telling police negotia negotiators and over and over again he was going to kill the he'd kill the boy. we told them we can't do that. it was intense. >> yes. raises a moral dilemma. he's saying forth right with you he's the only chip in this game. he doesn't want to go back to
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jail. were the police monitoring that? i couldn't tell whether the police were there at the time you were talking to him >> what happened, like i said i was getting ready for a live show. they were watching in control room, then, i get the phone call the photographer called the station, one police officer put the photographer's head phones on, listening in. i just said a quick prayer saying help me find words not to do anything wrong he explained he has a boy tied up in an interior room the family had several dogs and he had stationed dogs near the rooms and told me he said if i hear those dogs bark, the boy dies the police had a tough situation. >> knowing that and hearing that head of time the story does have a good
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ending the 13-year-old boy set free the person this, came to an end >> what happened is that this had been going on 18 hours which is really long. especially for the boy in this family. what happened is that police he'd asked for breakfast. police were delivering breakfast. they have snipers stations around. my understanding is that when the hostage taker opened the door to get breakfast, the sniper took the shot. a shot him and immediately s.w.a.t. officers io safety. he was immediately killed. >> how long was time spent on the phone? >> well, that phone call was 15 minutes they called back a few times during night. probably about 25 minutes. >> unbelievable. you did a great job. thank goodness for police in this case they did an awesome job. great
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reporting and thanks for joining us >> thank you. >> and coming up next, tonight right here on "hannity"... >> celebrity in effect? >> david letterman? >> no. >> jerry seinfeld? >> that is correct. let's take a look. let's meet our celebrity. >> all right. more jay leno's greatest hits on the eve of his final show coming up next right here on "hannity". fighting constipation by eating healthier, drinking plenty of water, but still not getting relief? try dulcolax laxative tablets. dulcolax is comfort-coated for gentle, over-night relief. dulcolax. predictable over-night relief you can count on.
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amazing actors and musicians, athletes and presidents. had a lot of great moments over 22 years. in fact, here are some of my favorites. >> my first guest is jay leno. >> let me start with question number one. what the hell where you thinking? >> you're welcome. >> you're only four years way from driving. >> yes. i drive on the lawn sometimes >> will you let me know when you're on the highway so i can stay home? >> steve allen... >> i'm there. look at you. >> only about 10,000 calories.
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>> this is for you. >> you did? >> yes. >> did you paint that? >> wow. look at. that wow. wow. i can't make fun of him now. i was going to give you advice to save your career now do you want to hear it? >> no. no. i don't want to save my career. >> i want to save something else. >> what? >> your zipper is down. >> another great moment. i don't know if that is my favorite or hugh grant "what the hell were you thinking" was another great moment. a lot of time on the air. i think he'll be back. that is all the time left this evening. don't go anywhere. now time to set your dvr to record "hannity" every week night. why? so you don't miss a moment. start each weekday morning 5:00
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to 9:00 with fox and friends we'll see you back here tomorrow night. the o'reilly factor is on. tonight: >> as the most powerful man in the free world, sat down with obama. [ laughter ] to cover topics like loose nucleares, middle east peace, trade regulations and the environment. >> jon stewart mocking me again for not covering what he wants. tonight, i'm going to have to educate mr. stuart. >> just [bleep] with it. >> the g.i. bill -- smart ers thing we ever did was make an investment in the american people when those guys came back from war, that's what created our middle class. >> the president and some of his left wing followers seem not to understand military benefits this evening, we will set them straight. >> the best piece of advice just
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