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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  March 9, 2014 3:00am-7:01am PDT

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hello and good morning to you. it is sunday, march 9th. i'm anna kooiman. it vanished in flight and still this morning there's no wreckage from the flight. they are investigating four mystery passengers with stolen passports. was this part of a sinister plan? we'll take a look. and bringing down the house last night. >> i do not like this, uncle sam, i do not like this health care scam. i do not like --
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>> what the cpac straw poll has and why many are surprised by the results. and she's entitled to sue her own parents, but now then teenager is calling out an entire generation saying the baby boomers are to blame. "fox and friends" starts right now. oh, good morning. it's 6:01 on the east coast. it was 5:01 at the same time yesterday thanks to the miracle of daylight saving time. >> no "s." i was worried that the software wouldn't update. a few years ago, everyone used their iphone to wake up and it didn't work. >> i was praying for that. >> there's also a decrease in productivity and increase in car accidents. it's crazy.
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and moodiness. anybody else wake up grumpy this morning? i did. so we have a sleep expert coming on in a bit to tell us how to get around it. >> look outside right now. here in new york, you can see police arresting a but bright and early. i mean, sunshine right here on sixth avenue. >> you can't see the arrest. >> it's right behind us. like right over our shoulder. >> meanwhile, outside the studio, the mystery endures that begins with a fox news alert. the mystery surrounding the malaysian airline that disappeared. the radar indication showed the plane may have turned back shortly before it disappeared entirely over the south china sea. there's still no signs of any wreckage at all. at this hour, a team from the national transportation board is on a plane heading to asia. we are live from washington with brand new information on the investigation into what happened. elizabeth, what do you know? >> good morning. the bottom line is at this hour experts still have not located
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the expert in the south china sea. while investigators are not ruling out mechanical failure or pilot error, the fact that malaysian authorities are saying four pass jengers on the flight are suspects are of grave concern. we are learning this not long after officials in italy and austria say two people were traveling with passports stolen from thailand. the intelligence agencies are also investigating the alleged stolen passports. authorities say they are checking closed circuit television footage of these alleged travelers saying in part the recordings do show the passengers from check-in to departure. and we're learning more about the american passengers on board. the first one, 50-year-old phillipwood. he was an ibm employee from texas. and two american children, nicole meng, age 4, and yan
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zhang, age 2. details will come forward more today and in days to come. at least 22 aircraft and 40 ships have been sent to the area by a number of countries. back to you guys. >> thank you, crystal. questions on whether or not this aircraft did turn around and it was confirmed by civilian radar this aircraft may have tried to pivot at one point. foxnews.com reporting that as well. the question this morning is was this an act of terror? it was very odd after two hours of flight for no communication to have unfolded. yesterday general tom mac mcnerney said this. listen. >> it had to be catastrophic, judge, because as i'm talking to you right now, the pilot or co-pilot could have put out a mayday call in the blind unguard channel, but we have no evidence that that happened.
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so it means it was instantaneously catastrophic. the only thing i can think that that could be would be a bomb. now, it's speculation, i'm the first to tell you that. >> immediately i think you're seeing indications of an al qaeda plot where they could be operating in there. >> it is all speculation at this hour. the only evidence that we have are those two oil slicks right around vietnam where they lost signal. but in a post-9/11 world, it's something you think about and terrorism could be something that takes a long time to rule out. with the other crash, it took a year to rule it out. >> if the plane did reverse course, that's very unusual. that is not something airlines do unless they have to. the pilot, without question, if he was capable, would have radioed to air traffic control to indicate he was changing his course. so if that's true and he didn't,
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what does that suggest? he was not in control of the aircraft, not to make the call. >> right. this could be a flight where the heroic passengers, everything is speculation. >> there are things we do know to that point and the fact there's no wreckage that we can find. so catastrophic, probably, and if it went down at 35,000 feet barrelling into the ocean, there may not be anything left, broken up completely or a bomb midair, same thing. >> and the black box is due amiss. electronic signal, over the sea, it would be harder to find. >> more on this story throughout the morning. we'll have experts here who know a lot about this exact type of aircraft and the types of flight patterns as well. we have other stories making headlines on your sunday morning. we'll get to those. happening overnight, a major scare at six flags in san antonio, texas. two people rescued from the park pandemonium roller coaster. it stranded rider 50s feet in the air. no one was injured and the investigation is underway to
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figure out exactly what happened. pre-st. patrick's day parade taking an ugly turn near the university of massachusetts. more than 70 people arrested when the annual blarney blowout spiraled out of control. fox says partyiers were throwing beer cans and snowballs. they had to use pepper spray when it became violent and four officers have minor injuries. this morning russia is escalating military presence in ukraine's primary region, that's according to the latest report. one week from today, they will vote if russia will join ukraine. >> a marine who lost both his legs in afghanistan is getting an amazing gift. a mortgage-free home.
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dave martinez and his family moved into the house in the denver area with huge crowds welcoming them home. >> we believe that this is a moral obligation of our society to take care of our veterans. >> from the bottom of my heart, thank you for your organization, thank you to the troops and every single person out there supporting myself and other troops. >> well, it's nice, too, the four-bedroom home has 155 special adaptations from automatic door openers to rolling countertops. it's the 166th home built by the nonprofit group home for our troops. love to hear stories like that. thank you, anna. well, cpac has closed up, has finished. last night the keynote speech was given by sarah palin and there was a straw poll in which the attendees were asked who they would like to see become the next president. it happens every year and it's
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interesting. senator rand paul of kentucky, 31%. that's three times what his nearest competitor ted cruz got at 11%. and number three is surprising because he's never been in politics and says he is not interested in joining, ben carson, dr. ben carson to join us later on the show. 8%, governor chris christie. >> does the paul family always win? they win every straw poll. >> cpac does have a strong libertarian event, at least in the last several years. so the pauls do pretty well. >> but judging from rand paul's speech, he got the biggest reception. as far as applause goes and standing room only, apparently. >> he addressed the nsa spying scandal, which is something that really fires up a lot of the republican base. a lot of americans, you don't have to be a republican to be concerned about the government spying on you, and he talked a lot about it and i think that resonates. >> dr. ben carson also resonating with the audience there with a theme sort of running through his, too, which
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is to get back to our roots as americans. and don't let the left try to shut you up, stand on your principles. listen. >> we have got to get back to the same mentality that americans had in the pre-revolutionary days. they got together with their friends and their neighbors and their associates and talked about what kind of america do we want to have? what do we want to pass on to our children? and they encouraged each other. and that's how a bunch of red tag malitia men defeated the most powerful army in the world at that time. you need to go out to talk to people. everybody you know, have the discussion, don't let the left shut you up. >> speaking of that, ben carson always speaks and i'm impressed by it. just this week harry reid, senate majority leader, attacked the koch brothers as un-american for releasing their political views. >> and sarah palin talking about
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the war on women. she wanted to go after this and got everyone fired up. take a listen to sarah palin. >> girls, we know better than to fall for that victimization line from the president and his party. ask them, whose really stereotyping you? is it the people who believe that you are a thinking, achieving, striving, strong individual? or those who put you in a box and they define you still by body parts, enticing girls to think that they need these guys to grow government to take care of them. women, don't let them use you unless you choose to be their political pawn. honey, that's not liberation, that's subjugation. and this sisterhood fights against that. >> i love it. talking about the phony war on women and basically saying the
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true war on women actually does indeed come from the left making women think that we only care about women-centric issues and our sexual organs and we don't care about immigration and foreign policy and the economy and everything else. the left is putting up the boxes. sarah palin, you can see the crowd fight that, too. >> leading the sisterhood. our top story, what happened to the missing plane, why the stolen passports could be the key to unlocking this global and very odd mystery. a formal fbi special agent on that, next. and it's the heart-stopping video of a surfer wiping out. what was going through his mind at the time? we'll hear from him, coming up. ♪ so there i was again, explaining my moderate to severe chronic plaque psoas
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a fox news alert as the search continues for the missing malaysian flight. the plane may have tried to turn around before it disappeared. and at least two names on the plane's manifest match stolen passports. >> this is new information, does it point to terrorism? joining us is a special agent with the joint terrorism task force, jonathan, thank you very being here. what was your initial reaction upon hearing about the passports? >> it is suspicious there are two on there, and the fact they were stolen at different times, but snow ended up on that plane. it does tell us two people were moving in a covert manner loosely, or they were actually traveling together. and that area is not uncommon for passports to be stolen for people to get on planes to move underneath the radar. that's kind of a little bit more
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common over there, a little more difficult here. but the fact that there were two of them that were stolen at different times and ended up on that plane, for me that shows some coordination. whether or not it is terrorism, we don't know. >> it may be, possibly, some criminal. a lot of experts think it could be for something else, drug smuggling, something else. >> in that area, there are a lot of people moving around trying to get from one place to another, or on a list. so they get these i.d.s, it is easy to get a passport. those things get lost and stolen, but the fact there were two on this plane that were being used fictitiously is an odd thing. >> we know that a number of americans have u.s. government officials dispatched on the scene, on the way there now, officials and the ntsb, one navy vessel is involved, perhaps fbi
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agents, how big will the force be going over there to investigate this? >> now that they are starting to look at the possibility of a terrorist-related incident, the way this unfolds is the country will request legates or people who work for the fbi, they are in the countries and they will reach out to them. one it starts to get bigger, those people get involved. the l.a. fbi office handles asia, so they will be in the area. >> one thing they send out to me that's odd is the idea that these passports were allowed, when they scan them at the airport, they were able to get on the flight. we knew the passports were stolen, why wouldn't they have flagged -- >> isn't there a database or something? >> once again, we are talking about databases that fail. so when a passport is stolen, you would think that that would be marked and that regardless if it's the real person that got a new one, that that would -- something would come up and they would have to have another form
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of i.d. i don't want know if that works but obviously it didn't work in this case if it does. >> are you confident it will happen in the u.s.? >> i'm not confident of databases. databases are a technique criminals will constantly try to get in front of. add to the fact that our databases are so big that so many people are involved, it takes a lot of people to run that and not everyone is going to wake up 100% every day going to work to try to stop it. >> sticking with the passports, one is from austria and one is from italy? >> well, it did strike me at first, but i think they were stolen in the same place, in thailand. so that kind of brings it more close, but had they been stolen in two different areas and ended up in the same place, that would be more odd, but in that area it's not uncommon for passports to be stolen. so, you know, the hope here is that it was just stolen passports, they were either dealing drugs or doing something moving criminally, but now that
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they are saying there are two other suspicious names, which we don't know anything about those individuals, they are starting to show patterns of something -- we know this, we know something happened on the plane to cause them to turn. and then something happened quickly to make the plane disappear. so when you add that to this suspicious problem that you have with the passports, they are starting to be a little bit of a picture here. that's the way the investigations develop. >> jonathan, thank you. >> my pleasure. coming up on "fox and friends weekend," caught on camera, the terrifying moment a plane and parachute collide sending both to the ground. wait until you hear how they all survived this one. and a task for teenagers that's about to change completely. why our next guest says she says this is a big reflection of the government that's coming to your school, qul r whether you like it or not. that's coming up. okay ladies, whenever you're ready.
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doing all right? hope you're doing well. a look at headlines now. sigma alpha epselon is now banning pledging. the frat will continue to offer bids but those potential members will have to complete an alcohol safety course. and one of the president's most trusted advisers is leaving the white house. melissa matrimonico has worked
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alongside him since he first became a senator nine years ago. she will leave her post in may to look for a job in the private sector. clayton, over to you. thank you, anna. this week the college board announced major changes to the s.a.t. beginning in 2016. the man behind the overhaul is david coleman, also created the common core, the standards adopted by 45 states, despite complaints it will call the nationalized control of the school curriculum. what do these changes mean for our children? here to explain is a former teacher, whitney neil. nice to see you this morning. >> good morning. >> can you walk us through exactly what the changes are for the s.a.t.? >> i can. we are looking at significant changes to the s.a.t. perhaps the most important is the writing portion, the portion where people sit down to express their ability to critically think on paper is now optional. some other changes they are making, they are taking the vocabulary from the s.a.t. words
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that people struggling with, and now tow common core words. a lot of people are concerned about this. >> what does this mean for the states opted out of the common core standards, the federally-mandated common core standards? do they have to add here to the standards even though they are technically not in the same rell system? >> unfortunately, yes. you are looking at states like texas and virginia that opted not to accept this and take common core. so those states if you are a school district and trying to compete with other school districts in your state around the country, now you are inventiveized to teach common-core standards because your students are going to take the s.a.t. and their scores will be compared with those around the country. it's an unfair way to place this upon the states who didn't want common core and against those who don't want to teach it.
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some moms and dads are sending their kids to private schools or charter schools or homeschooling their children, all these families are directly affected by common core because the college bought into this. >> is there anything more important than learning how to write and think critically and c contextualize the information. >> we used to teach our children here in america to strive to be the post possible student and best person in the workplace they can be. and now we are saying, we are going to make it easier for you to look like you have a great score on the s.a.t. and that's just an awful thing. we should be teaching children that they should set the bar high. and the world renewspaper, everybody gets a trophy from little league and some are eliminating the honor roll. we are not letting our children
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dream to be the best child they can be, and that's scary. >> you don't know how to write? we'll remove that from the test to make it easier finance hon y. >> thank you for coming on the show. >> thank you so much. this girl is suing her own parents. now this hard-partying teen is calling out an entire generation, the baby boomers. plus, if you are feeling extra tired right now, you should be. you lost an hour of sleep. and our next guest says daylight saving time causes heart attacks. stay safe and feel refreshed at the end of your workweek. ♪ doing this all day, my feet and legs got really tired.
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i do not like this, uncle sam, i do not like this health care scam. i do not like -- i do not like these dirty crooks or how they lie and cook the books. i do not like when congress steals. i do not like their crony deals.
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i do not like this spying, man, i do not like, oh, yes, we can. i do not like this spending spree, we're smart, we know there's nothing free. i do not like reporters' smug replies when i complain about their lies. [ cheers and applause ] >> i do not like this kind of hope and we won't take it, nope, nope, nope. >> alaska sarah palin the keynote speaker on the closing day of cpac there talking about all the phony scandals and all the problems she has.
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taking a page out of ted cruz's book, i guess. this is an unbelievable story, we have been following this all week, the teen suing her parents over tuition. demanding that they pay her tuition. really, this is the type of the spoiled, entitled teens. well, now she has taken or one of her supporters has taken to facebook to attack her parents for not being willing to support her. and it's an entitlement. and she says baby boomers make too much money and that's why she is fired up. >> most of you are at home in bed, so you can't literally buckle your seat belt, but listen to us as we read this on behalf of the child suing her parents. suburban baby boomer types are the spoiled lot, they make massive amount of money a year and they are used to flying to
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luxury destinations when they want and buy things that they don't need, people should be inclined to see things rachel's way. we have been stunned by the financial greed of modern parents who are more concerned with retire iing instead of the child's college tuition. >> there's a new development out, too, that the attorney who is helping her with this has kind of taken her under his wing, he let her get sopped up on vodka at the age of 15. >> on a regular basis she came home drunk and her parents said this is enough. her lawyer is defending her and he's going after her to make sure she gets tuition. >> this is about more than just one annoying teenager. this is the obama generation.
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this is my favorite line. they are providing for their children's college and young adult years. when was that part of the deal? i have four kids and have no plans on paying for their young adult years. no parents would, but in the obama age, you're paying for them until they are 26. i mean, there were expectations to float your kids until they are adults. >> right, at what point do you cut them off? >> 14. >> 14? if they are not living in your house and you took on the responsibility of having children, don't you take them on until a certain age? >> it's not good for you. ask most successful adults, what's the best thing that happened to you? getting cutoff by my parents. >> absolutely. hit us up on facebook, what do you think of this? on april 22nd, that's when there will be a hearing to find out whether her parents have to fork
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over the cash for her tuition. all right. on to news headline this is sunday morning, a fox news alert. happening overnight, the latest in the missing malaysian flight. radar shows the plane disappeared and there's no wreckage as the international search for them continues. malaysian authorities say four passengers are being investigated as, quote, suspects. this does not include two passengers who used stolen passports from italy and austria. they are now reviewing surveillance video to learn more about the people who stole them. also this morning, caught on camera in tampa, florida, the terrifying moment a sky diver and airplane collide both coming in for a landing when the skydiver's parachute gets tangled in the plane's wing. the pilot loses control taking a nosedive slamming into the
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ground. >> both of the guys walked away unscathed, scratch here, bruise here, but both are alive to be here today. >> i'm tickled to death that nobody was seriously injured. >> the pilot was doing takeoff and landing just before the expedition and the ntsb said he should have been on alert for skydivers. a 9-year-old massachusetts boy is hailed a hero this morning, credited with saving the lives of his mother and brother by calling 911 after their house catches fire. >> okay, is everybody getting out of the house? >> yes, my brother and mom are stuck in the room. >> the boy then handed the phone to his fan rick father who was able to make it out of the home safely. >> help me, there's too much smoke. hello? >> sir, can you get people out of the bedroom? >> they're trapped in the bedroom. >> there's too much smoke.
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>> investigators belief a cigarette sparked the fire. a terrifying moment for a daredevil surfer. check this out, shane palmer takes on a wage so huge it makes him look like a speck. the wave crashes down on him and spits him right back out. >> i thought i was actually going to go -- i don't know what happened. >> that was the craziest thing that has ever happened to him. those are your headlines. those guys are really brave. >> right on to a coral reef under there, too. >> janice, you gave us a little tease yesterday of some spring shall have like temperatures. are we about to plummet back to snow territory? >> yes, i don't need to do a weather forecast. and thank goodness they posted my bail earlier on. >> that's right. >> i was the one being arrested outside with the flashing light. joking. let's take a look at the current temperatures. a little taste of spring, yes,
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but don't get used to it if you live across the northeast with a big winter storm shaping up for wednesday into thursday. we'll take a look at the temperatures. the average for minneapolis is around 37. we'll be in the 40s the next 48 hours and then back into the 30s. chicago looking good, monday, 53 for you. and for new york city, we'll be 54 on tuesday, but it will change in a heartbeat with a winter storm we'll talk about it a the top of the hour, but a quick look at the moisture across the northwest as well as texas. we'll talk about that big possible storm for the northeast wednesday into thursday at 7:00. so stay tuned. back to you. thank you, janice. >> thanks a lot, janice. >> if you are feeling extra tired, you should be. you got an hour less sleep thanks to daylight saving time. >> the extra hour of sunlight is bonus but losing an hour can hurt us. here's our sleep expert, dr.
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carol ash. >> good morning. if you feel like it is too late, we are already awake. what can we do to bring back energy? focus? happiness? >> well, the clock changed one hour, but the internal clock is not able to keep pace with the rapid change and it causes stress. you will see increased ranks of heart attacks and car accidents. le 8% at night. you want to expose yourself to bright light in the a.m. that's the strongest center of the clock. open the windows and get out in the sun as soon as you can at morni morning. >> the brain tells you that avoiding light can help as well.
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>> you saying? about melatonin. >> that sets the clock. it's a darkness hormone to block the signal so it will help you get to bed an hour earlier. so you can take it as one milligram as needed, two hours before or chart terrys. chart terrys ever. tart cherries are naturally high in melatonin. >> i don't want to take this now or i'll fall asleep on the set. >> we'll figure it out. thank you for joining us this morning. >> my pleasure. wrong overwhelmingly approved $1 billion in aid to you crain. this is our nation as heroes wait a year for their benefit. coming up, why one veteran wants to know why he's no longer a priority to the obama administration? >> and just forget it.
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♪ ♪ does it really take four years for the department of veteran affairs to respond? one veteran says it has taken that long for them to respond to his claim. why do they slow-walk the needs of our vets? joining me is jim handy, thank you for joining us this morning. you served in the military for ten years, 1973 to '83. you say you have hearing loss and knee problems and filed for disability and what happened next? >> i filed in august 2010.
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they told me it would take some time, so i waited until june of 2011. i called in to find out the status, they told me at that time they had no record of me ever filing in 2010. so i had to start all over again there. i refiled the claim in february of 2012. they approved my hearing loss, but they denied my claim for my knees giving me the reason that there was no evidence that my injuries occurred while i was on active duty. and when i did some research into it, i found out that the reason there was no evidence is because the v.a. lost my medical record for the whole ten years i was in the army. >> i'm sorry to laugh, that's just overwhelming. if you were applying for food stamps, how quickly do you think you would have been approved for those benefits? >> in a day, maybe two.
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>> right. so because you served the country as a veteran, you have to go through the veterans affairs administration and now are getting the run-around. you live in the state of maryland, i believe, have you gone to your elected official or senator or congressman? and what have they done for you? >> i sent senator mccaulskey a letter and two other senators a letter a week. and they contacted the v.a. the same thing they told me, it's in the appeals process, we'll get to him when we can. >> huh. what does that mean when they can? at this point, just to recap, how long has it been since you first filed? >> i filed the first time in august of 2010. >> okay. so it's been 3 1/2 years since you first filed. >> right. >> and have they given you a sense how many more years it will be until they respond to you? >> well, i went into appeals, it's been in appeals for two
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years. and they told -- they give me a timeframe of 503 days. well, today is day 644. and i still haven't gotten a response and they can't tell me why i haven't had a response. >> so the crisis in ukraine happened a few weeks ago and immediately the u.s. government is sending over a billion dollars to the ukrainians. what do you notice that when people need food stamps, they get them instan takes youly, government aides get money instantaneously and you're still waiting? >> it is frustrating. last year we gave all this money in tanks and aircraft to egypt. we give money to pakistan. we built a $50 million headquarters in afghanistan and nobody's ever going to use it. and it seems like the government can come up with all the money they want for the things they want to do, but they can't do nothing for veterans. >> sure. you get so a needle exchange in
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a methadone clinic much faster than you get your disab handy, g us. >> thank you. a brand new plan to keep our borders safe? it's simple, run away. and forget sitting on a hardwooden bench. these church worshippers listen to them from their own vehicles. the drive-through tabernacle. they pastor joins us, next. ♪ i'm rdy, and i quit smoking with chantix. as a police officer, i've helped many people in the last 23 years, but i needed help in quitting smoking. [ male announcer ] along with support, chantix varenline is pron to help peop quit smoking. chantix reduced the urge for me to smoke. it actually caught me by surprise. [ male announcer ] some people had changes in behavior, thinking, or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood, and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after opping chantix. ifou notice any of these, stop chaix
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53 minutes after the hour. hope you're doing well. when most people drive to church on sunday, they expect to sit for an hour-long service on
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uncomfortable wooden pews, right? but that's not the case at the daytona beach drive-in christian church there in florida. where drivers park in rows facing an altar on the balcony of an old drive-in theater to hear the service. and they switch on their radios, that's all they have to do. here to tell us more about the program is senior pastor bob kent bayer. thank you for being with us so early before you get your service going. >> right. good morning to you, too. glad to be with you. >> well, i understand this draws quite the crowd, between 650 and 700 people on sundays. what do you attribute that to? >> well, i think we have a unique setting. and it really appeals to the visitors that come to the d daytona beach area, but it also appeals to those who live in the area full-time. they call it their church and are very special to us. >> yeah, it gives people an
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opportunity who are missing out on their sunday service to go to church. but some say we are getting so lazy in our faith we are going to drive-in movie theaters to do this or we're watching this on television or going online or to a church that seems more like a rock tradition, what do you say to those people? >> well, i think we have gotten away from tradition a bit, as you and i think about it, but as you think over the broad spectrum of christianity, the church has changed in every generation. and i think we're just meeting a new generation where they are and we love our cars and we love to be in them and why not come to worship and be where you're comfortable and be with others who are feeling the same way. >> right, it's cool. you saw people bringing out their dogs. i hear one guy brought his
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turtle one sunday. what is it like for you to be preaching to all these windshields, though? and you don't get to see everybody's faces very often? >> yeah, i do try to meet people at the gates as they come in and as they go out. but that was a big adjustment for me when i came to the church a couple years ago. and i just have to remind myself that there are people behind those windshields. and they are people just like people in any church, people who are celebrating, people who are hurting and people who need a message of love and hope and grace for their lives. >> well, pastor, thank you so much for your time today. it's a great way that you're helping these people celebrate jesus christ. we appreciate your time. >> thank you. >> pastor bob kent there in daytona, florida. 56 minutes after the hour. still no sign of any wreckage from the missing malaysian airlines flight, but there's a brand new clue.
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what we learned overnight in a live report, top of the hour. and another slip-up for toronto's crack-smoking mayor. what tripped him up this time? daylight saving time? he's still wondering why we can't be friends. ♪ the joint is♪ osteo bi-flex® elps strengthen your joints.° like calcium supplements can help your bones, osteo bi-flex can help your joints.° osteo bi-flex... also in joint & muscle and joint & bone. if you have a buness idea, we have a personalized legal solution that's right for you. with easy step-by-step guidance, we're here to help you turn your dream into a reali. start your business today with legalzoom. [ banker ] sydney needed some financial guidance so she could take her dream to the next level. so we talked about her options. her valuable assets were staying. and selling her car wouldn't fly. we helped sydney manage her debt and prioritize her goals, so she could really turn up the volume on her dreams
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good morning. it is sunday, march 9th, 2014. i'm anna kooiman. the hunt for the missing malaysian flight is intensifying this morning. there's still no sign of the airplane after it vanished mid-flight. and now officials are turning their attention to two mystery passengers with stolen passports. and a new plan to protect our borders, run away? why they are tell agents to turn their backs on illegal immigrants entering the country, even those attacking them. details coming up. and a crack-smoking mayor, rob ford, making headlines again
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this morning. after telling twitter followers to turn back the clock, fall back for daylight saving time. not spring forward. oh, canada. "fox and friends" starts right now. ♪ >> i think spring forward needs a blast from the heat. >> it is daylight saving time here at 7:01 a.m. eastern time in new york city. i threw this on twitter, can anyone tell me why we have daylight saving time? arizona is fine without it. why is the government controlling my clock? can you explain this to me? >> dinner thousand dollars evening and it will still be light out.
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we begin with a fox news alert, overnight we got more information on the missing malaysian airlines flight with 239 people. >> listen to this, now we learn radar indications show that the plane may have turned back or attempting to turn back shortly before disappearing over the south china sea. >> and there are still no signs of any wreckage. families desperately wait for any sort of news. elizabeth is live in washington, d.c. with brand new information with the passengers on board. elizabeth, what are you learning about them? >> malaysian airlines have started flying out members of the missing flight where it departed to get the lazette updates. those families have been told to expect the worst. why they are not ruling out mechanical error, they are saying the identities of four passengers are being investigated as suspects as a grave concern.
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this information being released not long after officials in italy and australia say two people aboard were traveling with passports reportedly stole n in thailand. the agencies are also investigating the alleged stolen passports. they are checking closed-circuit reports. and we are learning more about the american passengers on board, 50-year-old phillip wood, an ibm employee from texas. woods' ex-wife elaine posted a statement on facebook that reads, phillipwood was a wonderful man, although we're no longer married, he is still family. his sons and i just want peace and quiet right now. we also know two american children were also on the flight. nicole meng, 4 years old, and yan zhang, 2. information on the children's families and where they live have not been released. we know details will come
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forward more today and in the days to come, but at least 22 aircrafts and 40 ships have been sent to the area by a number of countries. the u.s. officials say the national transportation safety board is also sending a team of experts to southeast asia to assist in the investigation. anna, clayton, back to you guys. >> thank you for that and where the investigation stands. a lot of questions remain with how the plane just moments before disappearing attempts to turn back. that was confirmed by civilian radar as well as other radar stations there. >> that's the most puzzling thing. its inconceivable that the pilot would not radio that somewhere or make note of it over the radio. very odd. so that suggests he either didn't have control of the plane or the radios weren't working.
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>> we talked to jonathan gilliam earlier on the show this morning, a form er fbi air forc man, and there's a couple things fishy. listen to what he said. >> the hope is they were stolen passports, they were moving drugs or something criminally, but now that they are saying there are two other suspicious names, which we don't know anything about those individuals, they are starting to show patterns of -- we know this, we know something happened on the plane to cause them to turn. and then something happened quickly to make the plane disappear. so when you add that to this suspicious problem that you have with the passports, there's starting to be a little bit of a picture here. >> and you also wonder, how did the stolen passports make it through the airport and get through people on board in the first place. you said, it appears to be a failure of databases. and you said, could this happen
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here? you know, can you assure us that this wouldn't happen here? and he said, i never 100% rely on these databases. and, you know, this is a scary situation. >> which is absolutely chilling. because apparently both of these passports were reported stolen. >> they were reported stolen from vienna and italy somewhere. and were stolen in thailand. so they were registered in the database as stolen. why they didn't get flagged at the airport is a big mystery. >> and it could take some time as elizabeth mentioned, the oil slicks are the only signs. the black boxes do emit electrical signals, even through water, but sometimes it's more difficult there. >> there are also questions at this hour about two other passengers on the flight, but there's so much we don't know so we don't want to draw conclusions. >> things are changing by the hour, stay tuned. six minutes after the hour, a major scare at six flags in
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san antonio, texas. two people were rescued from the pandemonium roller coaster after the ride stopped halfway through the track stranding travelers 50 feet in the area. nobody was injured. an investigation is underway to figure out what happened. a brief day st. patrick's day celebration takes an ugly turn in massachusetts. more than 70 people arrested when the annual blarney blowout spiraled out of control. the partiers were throwing beer bottles, cans and snowballs. the police had to use pepper spray when the crowd became violent. four officers had minor injuries. cpac came to an end last night and a straw poll shows who they would like to see as president of the united states. coming up, senator rand paul with 31% of the vote followed by texas senator ted cruz and dr. ben carson coming in third place. he'll be on the show next hour. representative paul ryan came in
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last with 3% of the vote. and toronto's pot-smoking mayor strikes again. an hour before daylight saving time he tweeted followers to change their clocks, but he tweeted the wrong way. daylight saving time starts evening, turn your clocks back and change batteries in smoke alar alarms. he was quick to point out his error and corrected it. it is now on his timeline. people get it mixed up. >> i do, too, because he's still stuck in october. so -- i think it was from the smoke in his smoke alarms, no doubt about it. janice dean, can you back me up on the daylight saving time? why do we still have it? >> you got me. >> for the farmers at harvest with the harvest soon? >> i curse the clock when i wake up. is it 2:30 or 3:30? what time is it? the good thing is the clocks are
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automatic and we don't know -- the vcr, we have to get out the manuals and do that kind of thing. >> but there's a big clock above the fireplace to remain there for two months untouched on the wrong time. >> those are the same people that leave their christmas decorations up until next year. i had someone tweet me on twitter that said, i'm retired, i'm not doing it anymore. i like it. let's take a look at this big winter storm that's happening this week. can you believe it? mother nature has been so moody this season. here is the midweek storm. we'll watch this sharpening trough unit with cold air to pull southward from canada. we'll blame rob ford for this, too. canadian mayor. and that's going to move and bring us the potential for a blockbuster storm across the northeast. it could be a mixing of the i-95 corridor and interior sections will get a wallop of snow. and then an all snow event for wednesday to thursday. we'll watch this very carefully. obviously, take a look at new york. we'll enjoy the next couple of days with people walking around in shorts, i'm sure, down sixth
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avenue. then wednesday and thursday a drop of 20 degrees as the cold air moves in and the snowstorm develops. taking a look at right now over the radar, fairly quiet. we're watching the storm move in from the northwest as part of that energy is going to give us that midweek storm across the central u.s. and then eventually the northeast. so we'll continue to monitor this never-ending winter. back to you on the couch. >> please make it stop. >> i'll try. >> thank you, janice. this is an amazing story. so the administration has pushed america's 21,000 border patrol agents into the following position. as of now, border patrol agents who find themselves in physical threat, which is to say people were throwing rocks at them or charging them with cars, can not respond. keep in mind, three patrol agents have been killed on the border doing their jobs. they cannot respond using their firearms or vehicles, they have to retreat to make sure they don't hurt anyone.
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>> meanwhile, they have rubber bullets in their gun, not real bullets. here's what dhs is saying for the new agents and their guidelines. agents should not discharge firearms in response to thrown or hurled projectiles. agents should obtain a tactical advantage in these situations, such as seeking cover or running by distancing themselves. you can't defend yourself. >> and it goes on to say if you know a drug smuggler is driving by, not only can you not get in front of their car or do anything else, but wave as they go by and make sure the gun is still holstered. >> why did this happen? because of best practices or best for the country or for border patrol? no, it happened for political reasons. there are two forces that drove this. one is pressure directly from the government of mexico, to which this administration pays close attention for reason that is e collude me. the governor in mexico didn't like our policy and we changed it. and the next is the administration is convinced that securing the borders, actually
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securing the borders would mean losing votes. >> according to "the daily collar," a reliable news source, says that these new standards essentially match those of advocacy groups who think that policing our borders is not a good idea. >> right. so interest groups are pushing -- by the way, since when do interest groups determine our border policy? i mean, can you imagine, what about border patrol? >> interest groups drive all policy in this country. >> but not policies on personal protection, right? so this is about whether or not border patrol agents can defend themselves from physical threats. >> think about interest groups driving to get airport security, those machines in airport security, that don't work and we get government con trackers to spend millions of dollars. >> not driving hard enough, i would notice. but the difference here, this is about border patrol agents being physically attacked. >> yeah, there were 21,000 of them, you at home, what do you
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think? >> e-mail us at friends@foxnews.com. facebook.com/ffweekend. coming up, still no answers after the official targeted conservatives and they plead the fifth again. so why is everyone focused on this exchange instead? >> i gave you an opportunity. >> a man targeted by the i.r.s. wants answers. he's next. and this little boy just couldn't wait. meet the mom who gave birth while her husband was speeding to the hospital at 80 miles an hour. good job!
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less for us, more for you. and a hotel is the perfect place to talk to you about hotels. all-you-can-eat is a hotel policy that allows you to eat all that you can. the hotel gym is short for gymnasium. the hotel pool is usually filled with water. and the best dot com for booking hotels, is hotels.com. it's on the internet, but you probably knew that. or maybe not, i don't really know you. bellman: welcome back, captain obvious. captain obvious: yes i am. all those words are spelled correctly. coach calls her a team player. she's kind of special. she makes the whole team better. he's the kind of player that puts the puck, horsehide, bullet. right where it needs to be. coach calls it logistics. he's a great passer. dependable. a winning team has to have one. somebody you can count on. somebody like my dad. this is my dad. somebody like my mom. my grandfather. i'm very pround of him. her. them.
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on the advice of my counsel, i exercise my fifth amendment right and decline to answer that question. >> oh, that's lois learner of the i.r.s. refusing to answer any questions to explain why the i.r.s. targeted conservative groups. so why is all the focus on this exchange instead of lois learner? watch. >> your honor, close it down. >> i am a member of the united states of america congress. >> his reaction lynch pins of liberty was targeted by the i.r.s. kevin, thank you for joining us this morning. how frustrating to you to watch
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lois lerner invoke her right not to answer basic questions that the i.r.s. did, that kind of gets ignored in favor of coverage of the cummings/isis problem. is this crazy? >> yes, the whole isis spat, i think he knew what he was doing. and the president who is his god is in trouble and they will do anything to protect him. and lois lerner, 23 times she's pled the fifth in this process. we know from her e-mails what she's done is participate in criminal activity. that's why her counsel advised her not to speak in this matter, but as you remember, you may recall, just two months ago the
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justice department said there wouldn't be any criminal indictment, so i want to know why lois lerner, if there's no indictment, why she's afraid to testify? >> why is this a partisan issue? this is about the abuse of power, it's the executive branch using the federal government to punish people who disagree. and that's something liberals should be up in arms about, too. >> absolutely they should be. it is not a partisan issue. it should not be a partisan issue. we've had our -- i had my tax exempt status delayed for 35 months unawfully obstructed and delayed, and now the same administration that delayed my tax status is obstructing the administration's justice, they are delaying and stonewalling, can you imagine this in another administration, tucker? if there were another president, this would have brought a lot of trouble and you would have heard cries for impeachment long before we got to this point, but we have barely been able to scratch to surface in this administration. >> on the question of whether
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the i.r.s. should be investigated, our polls suggest 71% of americans say -- there it is right there, 71% say congress should continue to investigate the i.r.s. do. you have hope we'll get to the bottom of exactly how and why the i.r.s. targeted obama's opponents? >> i do, but i think the delay is causing a problem. i think if you go back to the letter that senator cruz sent to eric holder two months ago asking for a truly independent investigation, not one run by the civil rights division of the justice department, not one run by a political hack, a democrat donor, but a truly independent investigative attorney in this matter, then we'll get to the bottom of it, tucker. >> i hope so. i'm not saying that as a conservative but as an american thank you. >> thank you, tucker. do you like action movies? well, forget it.
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they now want to make movies like "die hard" disappear. and cosmos is reborn in the 21st century. we'll hear more on this, next. doing this all day, my feet and legs got really tired. so i got dr. scholl's massaging gel work insoles. they absorb the shock of working on my feet all day. i feel energized! get dr. scholl's massaging gel work insoles at walmart.
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rise and shine, 24 minutes after the hour. time for news by the numbers. two weeks is how long a kansas kid had to wait before one of them could win the regional spelling bee. the two went through the entire word list and organizers had to compile a new one. the seventh grader kush sharma walked away the winner. and 85 decibels is the
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maximum sound level for a proposed connecticut lawmaker for movie theaters. this is to prevent hearing loss. and check this out, 85 feet. and boom, dynamite. that was a buzzer-beater shot 85 feet from the basket to end the first quarter of a high school basketball game in indiana. clayton, over to you. well, nearly 35 years ago astronomer carlos agan took us on a scientific understanding with the "cosmos of personal voyage." now the show has been rebooted as the space time odysseodyssey. this film debuts tomorrow night on fox and will also air on national geographic channels. take a look. >> let's go back as far as we can to the very first mobile
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universe. january 1st, the big bang. >> that's cool. joining us now is the host of the visually stunning cosmos. neil, good to have you. >> because this is airing on fox we have resources to tap the visual effects talents of people who normally give those efforts to first-run to tell stories of people and dramas and things. and now they are helping us tell the story of the universe itself. >> back then it was on pbs, how has the show changed other than the visuals? >> so the fact that we have access, for example, our director of photography was the director of photography for "the matrix" trilogy and
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"spider-man." i like to think the visualizations of the universe and story-telling are part of the viewer experience rather than hearing me tell you about the "cosmos" film. >> it is also about dna and scientists. >> i count that as the cosmos. >> everything. >> yeah. we happen to be in some zone, you know, that is the size of this, right? but there are things smaller than this and larger than this. and cosmos, a spice-time odyssey, there is no scale outside of our reach. >> what do you think the appeal is? if you go to itunes, your podcast is one of the top podcasts. >> star talk podcast, yeah. >> there's a real appetite for the real contest. this is the largest ever television launch in history. 90 national geographic channels, 180 countries and on fox as well. how did you get fox? >> and 45 languages.
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it got to fox because we were shopping it around to the usual suspects initially, and then i met seth mcfarland and was reminded that deep down beneath stewy and other characters we associate him with, he's a fan of science. he said, i like this and why don't i bring it to fox. and i said, he doesn't get it, this won't work. fox said, hey, wait a minute, maybe -- then i thought, fox has this huge distribution and they are part owners of national geographic. so it took me ten seconds to realize that was one of the most brilliant ideas i had ever heard. so they warmed up to it and saw the dailies on it and out came this huge marketing effort to spread the love of the universe. >> well, hopefully we can do our best to get people's eyeballs on this program. "cosmos: a space time odyssey" airs tonight at 9:00 on fox and also airing on national geographic channels around the
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world. neil, great to see you. >> thank you for having me. caught on camera, the terrifying moment of a plane and a skydiver colliding. and it was opening day or it is just around the corner, we are making sure your children show off their team pride with the wife of yankees' c.c. sabathia. ♪ [ male announcer ] legalzoom has helped start over 1 million businesses. if you have a buness idea, we have a personalized legal solution that's right for you. with easy step-by-step guidance, we're here to help you turn your dream into a reali. start your business today with legalzoom. legs, for crossing. feet...splashing. better things than the joint pain and swelling of moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis.
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the desperate times call for desperate measures, so i bought him a threat. come on in here. >> vladimir, watch closely. we are going to speak to you now in a language you can understand. ♪ ♪ obama
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♪ obama >> oh, call him liam nieson. >> did you see that thing about putin versus obama and it showed obama eating an ice cream cone. >> so you're saying "snl" is not an original? >> eating ice cream is what you do after five years. we have other stories making headlines. in tampa, florida, the terrifying moment with a skydiver and plane colliding. both coming in for a landed when the parachute gets stranded in
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the plane's wing. the plane drove straight to the ground. >> both these guys walked away unscathed, scratch here, bruise there, and i think they are just happy to be here. >> the pilot was doing takeoff and landing exercises just before that collision. and then the tsa spokesperson said he should be alert for skydai skydivers. 80,000 killer bees attacked a woman nearby. >> we are estimating a thousand. she was completely covered in bees. it was like she was wearing a bee suit, if you will. we immediately threw her into the back of the ambulance with the bees on her. >> she was rushed to the hospital in critical condition, but doctors say she is expected to survive. the incident prompted the
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sheriff's department to issue a reverse 911 call warning everyone within a two-mile radius to stay indoors while the hives were relocated. a california couple got a huge surprise. their son was born while racing to the hospital. >> i hear ya. i was pretty loud with a yell following a -- there's a head out, the head's out. >> i couldn't stop it. he's got to come all the way out now, you know? >> the couple pulled over at a fire station. moments after their son was born, the firefighters helped them get to the hospital safely. it is like that country song. ♪ rolling down the highway 41 >> that was so good! let's check in with janice dean who was singing along.
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we should have put the camera on her. ♪ trying to make a living and doing the best i can ♪ that's all i know. >> you can't help but be in a good mood. all these cheery people here. >> let's get to some weather, shall we? we'll have a nice warm up for much of the country. we'll be in the 40s today for new york, that's just unbelievable. we are all jumping for joy. and then it gets cold again. so let's enjoy it while we can. we'll take a look at the temperatures. bismarck, the average of 26, 55 today. dallas, 80 on tuesday. omaha, nebraska, 68. you're up to 35. and for minneapolis, i mean, lovely. into the 40s sunday and monday. and you have been into the freezer much of the winter, so enjoy it. we have this active pattern across the northwest. a lot of rain and mountain snow. avalanche concerns. then we'll see the system move out of the gulf of mexico. that's what is going to give us
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the potential for a big storm across the ohio valley and the great lakes on wednesday and thursday. take a look at the precip they will get across the northwest. in somecases, 4 inches of rainfall. there's the evolution of the storm system grabbing moisture from the gulf of mexico to bring us the potential for a big storm across the northeast for wednesday and thursday. of course, we'll track it from the fox news extreme weather center. ♪ lord i was born a rambling man ♪ >> i think dogs are howling all over the place with you and me singing. >> where is the key to pull me off? spring is almost here, meaning spring training is in full swing with opening day around the corner. the new fashion line on fun sports clothing for the kids to help them root for their favorite time. >> joining me is the creator and
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designer of c.c. candy? >> no, it is c. capdy. >> joining us is amber sabathia. >> the name comes from cotton candy. >> every kid wants cotton candy at a baseball game. >> this is a brilliant game you came up with for kids. we are going to see the phillies in spring training and i have to get them decked out a bit. do you have phillies' team? >> yes. and my kids stay in the home court but we have all teams. >> there's your husband. by the way, he looks fantastic. has he lost a lot of weight? >> yes, he has. he worked out all off season and is ready to go this subpoena. >> he shot down my phillies last week, thank you very much. we'll look at the first child. >> we have andora. we had kid's fashion week yesterday. we were gripping the runway and dora did an amazing job. what she has on is a tee, not the normal traditional colors.
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you'll see the bright yellow, the fun tee. what kids want to wear, not just look looking like the rest of the kids. >> next up we have a little b boy -- these are not your yankee colors. >> you have hyper orange and teal, so you have your favorite mlb logo. i don't know if you're a yankee fan. >> are you a yankees or phillies fan? what do you say? >> say yankee. he could be mets, you never know. see? >> so the hoodies are there, too. what ages do you -- >> i go from infant up to extra large boys and girls. so we are all ages. the thing is kids love to wear the bright shoes now and they want to match. so you can wear this to the gang
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but you can wear this outside. >> is it comfortable? finally, i'm sure a lot of the girls like this one. this is debbie, my model, and every girl wants a pink shirt. the thing is, girls love -- they want to represent that baseball fans are girls, kids, and be fashionable at the same time. >> so -- what does c.c. say about this? >> a few years ago when i brought him to this, he said, can i be involved in the design? >> he's not just a basketball player. >> all my kids are in it and we love it. what website do we go to to check this out? >> purchase it at mlb.com.
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we are in the tri state area. so you can be more important than arguing right now. >> amber sabathia, good luck to you and your huds this wehusban this week. 42 minutes after the hour, tucker, over to you. >> coming up, a symbol of faith and hope at ground zero, bbut atheists want this cross gone. and fox news is the moment of pit pocket and it is all caught on camera, look at that. stay tuned. [ male announcer ] it's simple phics...
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for a body in motion.
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45 minutes past the hour. and quick headlines for you, caught on camera. the moment of sneaky pickpockets caught sneaking someone's wallet. watch here as the thief casually walks up behind a woman in a crowded marketplace. is suspect takes off and immediately is taken down by an undercover cop who saw the whole thing. and a debate over separation church and state. for using the name "in jesus name we pray" in an opening city council meeting. residents of the town are asking for universal prayer to include other religions, which brings us to this. what was once considered a symbol of hope, faith and peace after the 9/11 attacks is now causing controversy driven by
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atheist groups. >> well, the cross is scheduled to be displayed in the 9/11 museum, but now the group american atheists filed an appeal to ensure that the cross is not part of that museum. >> here to weigh in on that controversy is fox contributor father jonathan morris. nice to see you this morning. what do you think of the move keeping it out of the history of the museum. but i think it would be a great idea to show museum and history. i don't go to a museum to tell me what they wish would have happen. new zealand is about what did happen. and the fact is, this cross was not only found but placed in the pile, and it became a place of great comfort and serenity for those working in the terrible conditions. >> no one is suggesting the public is required to worship jesus in this cross.
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it's a museum. if a group of people had found, a group of atheists, for example, found a picture of sigmund freud in the pile and placed it up on a pedestal, i'm looking for some symbol, but if they had for weaks and months laid down a picture, i would want that in the nuseum. it didn't happen, and for this it aist group to try to get something out of history and out of the museum is un-american, it's irrational, it's not human of thinking. i'm disappointed they would go this way. >> the americtheist group will there with the cross. >> it was created this way, the
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beams, it was not as -- >> but once people found it, it became a place of encountering a prayer. >> it could be a publicity stunt by a tiny group to get coverage, right? >> it's a publicity stunt. and yes, i think we need to take it eerzly. >> what's a one-two things. they don't want religious expression expression either. >> thank you, father jon. >> good luck preaching. 49 minutes after the hour and still no sign from the wreckage of the missing malaysian airlines flight.
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so what happens now? jim costa aboard twa flight 800 is joining us live, top of the hour. already thinking about your spring getaway? when is the best time to book it? there's one day better than any other. courtney scott is letting us in on the spring getaway story, and she's here, next. ♪ it's what you love about her. but your erectile dysfunction - that could be a question of blood flow. cialis tadalafil for daily use helps you be ready anytime the moment's right. you can be more confident in your ability to be ready. and the same cialis is the only daily ed tablet approvedo treat ed and symptoms obph, like needing to go frequently or urgently. tell your doctor about all your medical conditions and medications, and ask if your heart is healthy enough for sexual activity.
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traveling in style, there you are. planning a getaway?
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what about memorial day? when it comes to travel plans, how do you know when is the best time to book? here with the best trip tips is courtney scott. good morning. >> good morning. >> tell us, you know, those advanced booking windows, are there certain days of the week better for booking? >> it's the question we get asked all the time at travelocity. here's what you need to know, the advanced booking window is 60 days, domestic is 30 days, but when it comes to peak high-demand holiday periods, we recommend booking even farther in advance because these windows do not hold waits during those times. you really have to go online as soon as possible. and the rule of thumb is, when you see a deal that looks good to you, book it. no matter if it's 90 days, 120 days out, the upside of getting that deal far outweighs the deal of losing out on it later on. >> if it works with your wallet, do it. how about easter time? >> well, we are only five weeks
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away from easter break, which starts around april 12th. so now, now is the time to book the easter break vacations. when it comes to memorial day, the best time to book is mid-march. think about mid-march to book the memorial day vacations. then when it comes to thanksgiving weekend, the busiest travel time of the year, late september into early october. keep the key periods in mind. >> okay. we are showing a couple deals there. we'll go back to the one for easter weekend. tell us about that deal in los angeles. >> one of the newest properties on the l.a. scene is the ace hotel in downtown l.a. $219 a night. one of the chiccest hotels. fantastic rooftop with fabulous views of downtown. close to malibu, go to the farmer's market. l.a. during spring break is fantastic.
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cancun, mexico, $195 at the marriott there. i recommend exploring cozumel and talum to participate in ancient rituals. and there's 14 miles of white sand beach, which we could use right now. >> the best time to buy an airline ticket is tuesday at 3:00 p.m. eastern time. >> monday and tuesday are the days when the airfare launches. so the early bird crashes the worm. earlier in the week is by far the best time to book. >> courtney, thank you so much. >> thank you. coming up, the cpac straw poll is in, so who came in on top and what does that mean for the gop? chris wallace is light next hour. but an army veteran booted from a restaurant for having a service dog. but that's not the worst part of this story. that hero is live to tell his story, coming up. ♪
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hello, good morning. it is sunday, the 9th of march, 2014. i'm anna kooiman. the hunt for the missing malaysian flight 370 intensifying this morning. still no signs of the plane after vanishing mid-flight and now officials are turning their attention to four mystery passengers, including two flying with stolen passports. and sarah palin giving the keynote last night at cpac. >> i do not like this, uncle sam, i do not like this health care scam. i do not like --
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>> plus, the cpac straw poll, who wants to run for president? the results may surprise you. we have them coming up. and ever feel like you can't keep your eyes open? well, this adorable video going viral. why this puppy couldn't help from nodding off. did we just cut away from a puppy video? >> we wanted to see your face. >> did we just cut away from a beautiful puppy video? mornings are better with friends. he cut away from the adorable puppy video because he didn't get enough sleep last night. daylight saving time. we left off the "s" for sleepy. >> a lot of people are waking up grumpy. we had a sleep expert on that said it is not just the
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grumpiness that you experience but there are more car accidents and heart attacks, all kinds of things. >> don't waste your time sleeping when you can be awake living your life. >> i thought you were on my side. why is the government controlling my clock anymore? we don't need it anymore like we used to need it back when farmers need it. >> i need it. >> yeah, i'm needing the extra hour of plowing. >> people need an excuse to sleep in and not go to church, some people. not a good idea. >> you can weigh in on that. e-mail us and tell us your thoughts. we begin with the fox news alert. overnight, more information released on that missing malaysia airlines flight carrying 239 people. >> we are learning radar indication showed the plane may have turned back shortly before disappearing over the south china sea. >> and yet there are still no signs of the wreckage apparently at this hour. elizabeth prann is is live in washington with the passengers
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on board. what do you know? >> the search is ongoing and huge. dozens of helicopters and planes and ships from a number of countries were sent to the area. the u.s. officials say the national safety transportation board is sending a team of experts to southeast asia to assist in the investigation. and while experts are not ruling out anything that could have led to the disappearance, the fact that malaysian authorities are now saying the identities of four passengers on the flight are being investigated as suspects is certainly a grave concern. this information released not long after officials in italy and austria say two people aboard were traveling with passports reportedly stolen in thailand. american law enforcement and intelligence agencies are investigating the alleged stolen passports. experts also say they are checking closed circuit television footage of these alleged travelers saying, in part, the recordings do show the suspected passengers from check-in to departure. malaysian airlines also started flying out families of passengers on board the missing
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flight to kuala lumpur to get the latest updates. since they are still unable to locate the aircraft, they told the families to, quote, expect the worse. we are learning more about the american passengers on board. the first one is 50-year-old phillip wood, an ibm employee from texas. two american children were also on the flight. the first is nicole meng, age 4, and yan zhang, she's 2. there are no other details about exactly where the children are from or where their families are, but we have learned from officials that the semiconductor incorporated based in austin, texas, and 20 workers were on the flight. 12 from malaysia and 8 from china. anna, tucker, clayton, pack to you guys. thank you, elizabeth. the next guest was the chief fbi investigator of the crash of flight ew800 which exploded off the coast of long island back in 1996 after a wire short circuited near the fuel tank.
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jim callstrum is joining us. thank you for being with us. >> thank you. great to be with you. it brings back awful memories for me. >> i can imagine. any similarities that standout to you between the two crashes? >> there are a lot of similarities. first of all, morton jets like this with all the new systems on board just don't disappear off of radar. the fact that the transmissions of the plane, you know, they are constantly talking to the airline company, they are talking to boeing, and of course they are talking to the air traffic control system. and even if those electronic systems were to go out, there's battery backup on all of them, so the idea that, you know, boom, nothing happened after that, is very, very similar to a
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catastrophic event on the airplane, where like within a second, pretty much everybody is gone. the strange case in the twa case, the debris field stretched for miles and was very, very obvious as the plane came apart and ended up being a million pieces. i know it is a big body of water out there, but they had radar returns of where it was when it lost contact. and i'm very surprise they have not seen any kind of debris, which we're guessing at this, but maybe the plane didn't come apart the way twa's was. twa was a massive explosion in the centrifuge, but it's a tragedy and looks like a catastrophic event. we shouldn't jump to a conclusion, but there could
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likely be a bomb on the plane. if people try to take over the plane, kick in the door or something, the pilots would certainly have time to push the buttons. they are right next to them. i think you are looking hard at the pilots themselves and also all the passengers. >> well, jim, we are hearing it is not entirely rare for people with fake passports to board planes in asia, but we are also hearing there may have been four passengers flying under false identities that seems like a lot. >> tucker, it is a lot, but i don't know, there's thousands and thousands of passports that are stolen and missing. last number i heard was something like 70,000, if you can believe that. it could have something to do with it, but if this plane just explodes in midair, these guys are on a suicide mission. or they were on some other strange mission that went awry, but the choice is now a couple
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of things but could have happened. >> jim, we now have confirmed the plane was attempting to turn around. >> yeah, i heard that, that's strange. >> what do you make of that? >> it also dropped 600 feet. >> turning around but also no communication back to let air traffic control know they were turning. what do you make of that? >> well, that makes me question the pilots even more. you know, i'm not condemning them or saying they are involved but it's a very strange set of circumstances. so i was likement -- >> what are the other possibilities that are not criminal. what about the stolen passports being used for something else criminal like drug smuggling or the passengers didn't want their identity known on the plane and
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there was an accident. what's the possibility of that? >> if it isn't criminal, it could be tw800 where some massive mechanical/electrical situation happened on the plane. i think there's very, very low on the list of things that could actually happen because the age of the plane, it was a very old airplane. and the false passports could help people get aboard the plane, obviously, to me, they would be on a suicide mission or some other criminal activity and landing it. i don't know how they would have shut down the communications as they are battery backed up. >> we want to talk about what's
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happening on march 22nd go. to this website, jim kallstrom, thank you for talking to us. >> thank you, guys. >> keep it here on fox news channel throughout the day as we begin to get more details in this morning. they are still wondering whether or not the oil slicks had anything to do with it. reports saying, this is sort of shocking, but there could be massive shocks. >> someone is telling me that the aircraft did break up in air, we have seen this in a number of cases, but the debris field is enormous at 35,000 feet. if your aircraft breaks up, you are scattered over many, many, many miles. >> different than tw800, which was closer to the ground, which the debris field -- >> it was only 12 minutes in the air. >> that explains that.
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let's go get to our top headlines. happening overnight, a stage falls endangering 250 students who were performing in a school rally when the stage gave way. 25 girls were taken to the area hospital with moderate injuries including broken bones. the exact cause of the collapse is under investigation. and a major scare at six flags in san antonio, texas. two people were rescued from the pandemonium roller coaster. riders were stranded 50 feet in the air. nobody was injured and the investigation is underway to figure out exactly what happened there. here you go, clayton, one adorable puppy is getting a lesson on how to behave but that's not it.
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>> hello? >> oh, she's had melatonin, like all of us tonight. this puppy can't stay awake while doing training. he's repeatedly sat back up but he eventually lays down and dozes off. you're a good boy! >> paying attention to your instruction? i want to sleep. >> i love the way you talk to dogs, anna. >> she was talking to me there. the cpac straw poll came in and who was on top? conservatives have voted. we have the info. the host of "fox news sunday" chris wallace weighs in on that, next. and forget about what you've always heard about men and women. >> there's not a single woman that i treat that doesn't wish her man understood her better. if men are from mars and women are from venus, then you speak
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good morning. >> welcome back. the cpac straw poll is in. who came out on top and what does that mean for the future of the republican party? chris wallace is joining us now for that and many other things. chris, good morning. so senator rand paul of kentucky, 31% in the cpac straw poll, that's three times what the next highest senator ted cruz received, is the republican party moving in a libertarian
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direction? is that the lesson here? >> well, i don't think you can overstate it as you well know, tucker, because the cpac has always been very favorable to rand paul. he won the straw poll last year. and his dad used to win it regularly when he was running for president. but it's interesting. rand paul is presenting a different profile than the others out there. on one hand, man tainting conservative values when it comes to the scuff of government, but also pushing this libertarian agenda when it comes to opposing government snooping and even meeting with eric holder who is viable to discuss limits on mandatory minimum sentences for some drug offenses. so it is an interesting drug profile and an interesting way. >> did you see we are all
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looking to read the tea leaves here to see who might emerge as the gop frontrunner for 2016. did anybody sort of stand out to you over the three days? >> no, i think a bunch of them did very well. and certainly got very warm receptions. ted cruz certainly did. chris christie did okay. surprisingly, for a group that smoked him a year ago, didn't even invite him up hire, even if he didn't do well in the strong paul. the limit to how far you can see this is a predictor, first of all, it's two years out, but even when it's the same year as the campaign, there's a limit on who will l-- we'll let you go,
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but what do you make of the obama administration's response? >> well, look, i'm not sure there's anything you can do to stop putin from taking crimea. having said that, criticism is legitimate this president has not sent the strongest signal in terms of, one, his outrage, and two, sanctions. he's not imposing much of a cause on putin for what he's doing, but one thing people are applauding is the idea of air defen defense. there's going to be a highest cost if you expand into those territories, but there are certainly limits on what he
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could do to stop putin and crinea and he's limited in his response. >> chris, who is on your show today? >> tensions of the u.s., the former secretary of defense, george gates. i've been asking him what he thinks putin is all about here and whether or not he thinks putin is going to get out of crimea. and then when he later discussed rand paul, the winner of the stroll pal. i'm worried about the libertarian agenda and how that helps to tllead the nomination.
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>> thank you, chris. >> thank you, guys. one veteran is given the cold shoulder because of his service dog. is that the way to treat our vets and our heros? that vet is live here on the show. see the special psyllium fiber in metamucil actually gels to trap some carbs to help maintain heahy blood sugar levels. metamucil. 3 amazing benefits in 1 super fiber. we are thinkers. the job jugglers. the up all-nhts. and the ones who turn ideas into action. we've made our passions our life's work. we strive for the moments where we can s, "i did it!" ♪ we are entrepreneurs who started it all...
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restaurant's decision, despite it's a misdemeanor to refuse service to someone with a service dog? how can this happen and how should we be treating our heroes and veterans? with me, a ri and his dog, bandit, you were rejected from a restaurant, and our producer called a number of times to the restaurant and finally got the manager of that restaurant on the phone. and i want to play you his version of what happened. here it is. >> when he came in, he did not let us know he's a veteran.
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we asked him to hold on, like wait at the front inside, not outside, with his dog, of course. probably about like five minutes. and then he started saying that if we don't let him in, i go, that's not my table. two waiters at different times tried to serve him and he denied it. >> channel 11 asked them the same question two weeks ago with a completely different response. >> and also the question arised, if they didn't have a problem with you or your service dog, why did they call the police? which they called the police on
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you, did they not? >> no, i'm the one that called the police. >> you called the police. >> when i came in and walked in the door, i was approached by the waiter. and he told me no dogs allowed and i told him this was a service animal. and according to the ada this went into effect january 1st that we are allowed in. and then the young lady behind the counter, the cashier/hostess said, no, sir, no dogs allowed. and i said, ma'am, it's a service dog. you have a computer right there, please look it up. they said, no, no dogs. and at that point i said, well, i am going to call the police, you can, too, and we'll talk about it in a few minutes. and i went to sit down. >> you explain this was your service dog you were allowed to have the dog, did you explain you were a u.s. military veteran? >> no, i didn't. that's something that is --
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doesn't need to be said. he was wearing his vest, i told them what was going on. if it's a veteran or another disabled person, it should be, it shouldn't matter. >> and they were skeptical that you needed the dog at all? >> that would be my guess. that i had no idea they would come back with a different version of the story almost two weeks later. >> interesting. so whose side did the police take? >> the business. he came up, bandit and i walked outside the meeting, and we started telling him what happened inside the restaurant, and then he looked at me and said, well, you're not blind, you don't need an animal, you don't need the dog. and i started to tell him that the veteran -- he was wearing his vest, and i started telling him that just for his own personal knowledge that he really doesn't need to know, but
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i told him what my disabilities were. he said it's a civil matter, take it up with the civil court. i said, no, sir, it's a state law. he said he would call the d.a.'s office. he got in his cruiser, got on the phone with somebody, maybe the d.a. or the supervisor, i have no idea of the conversation. >> the police officer said, you are not blind and are need iing dog, how insulting is that? >> well, it is insulting to anybody with a disability. you're correct, he's not a doctor. he's just making an assumption. >> you spent 23 years defending the country in uniform only to have a local concept saying you don't need your service dog. >> even though texas is on your side. >> it was not constant but actually a houston police officer. it would be interesting to see what governor perry has to say about that.
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governor perry made an effort to bring the service dog in when we signed that law just last year. >> the restaurant is thai spice buffet 2. and the number on the screen is on south voss road in houston, texas. >> when people are out in public, it's not just about one person, houston is the second largest veteran country in the nation, and if you get rid of the title veteran, there are other disabled people out there that need help and need access to places, too, that need to know what the law is. you could be dealing with somebody with sexual trauma, and you can't turn them away. you don't need to be blind to xwruz a service animal, either. >> thank you, sir. >> no problem, sir. next on the run down, meet one quick-thinking 9-year-old. >> okay, is everybody getting
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out of the house? >> yes, my brother and mom are stuck in the room. >> the actions he took to save his family's life. we've got details. and you know toys your kid has been playing with that has been recalled. the upsetting shock that every parent needs to know.
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i do not like this, uncle sam, i do not like this health care scam. i do not like -- i do not like these dirty crooks or how they lie and cook the books. i do not like when congress steals, i do not like their crony dill. i do not like this spying, man, i do not like, oh, yes, we can. i do not like this spending spree, we're smart, we know there's nothing free. i do not like reporters' smug
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replies when i complain about their lies. i do not like this kind of hope, and we won't take it, nope, nope, nope. >> and that is sarah palin being the keynote speaker at the final day of cpac. and also getting a big applause when talking about the phony war on women and talking about the real sister hood there. >> i was thinking it sounded a lot like the books i read to my kids add night when they go to sleep. >> "go dog go" and "green eggs and ham." other stories making news this hour we want to get to. the massive international search is underway for the missing malaysian airline plane over the
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south china sea. thousands of miles of ocean is being covered by dozens of planes and ships. three americans among the 239 onboard the plane, including 50-year-old phillip wood, an ibm employee from texas. and two american children, nicole meng, age 4, and yan zhang, age 2. more information on these two children has not been released. also on board, 20 workers from the austin, texas, based company freescale semiconductor incorporated. a quick-thinking 9-year-old massachusetts boy hail adhere row credited with saving the lives of his mother and brother by calling 911 after their home catches fire. >> okay, is everybody getting out of the house? >> yes. my brother and my mom are stuck in the room. >> the boy then hands the phone over to his frantic father whose able to make it out of the house
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safely. >> the whole room is covered in smoke. >> hello? >> minute me, there's too much smoke in the bedroom. >> they're trapped in the bedroom? >> the room is full of smoke. >> the boy's mother and brother are in serious condition. they believe a cigarette sparked the fire. we have all heard the saying men are from mars, women are from venice. >> if men are frommer mars and women are from venice, then you speak venetian and the world can be yours. >> i don't know how this happened or why, but you may just be the luckiest man on earth. imagine the possibilities. if you know what women want, you can rule. >> from "what women want." they claim that men and women are wired the very same way. professor jean says there's no scientific evidence to prove
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that the male and female brains are different. and the claim is also that men and women's brains are changed by the role society forces us to play. so when you hand a girl a doll, that's why she wants to playhou playhouse. >> because there are no inherent differences between -- >> she said there's scientific evidences when we change the >> have kids, the debate ends. janice is outside. >> i'm confused, very confused. we had the earlier daylight saving thing. >> confusion is for the men. you're supposed to be on the straight and narrow. you've got it covered. we are the confused ones. >> i know that i know a little bit about the forecast, so we'll do that first before we get to the other stuff. we'll look at temperatures to experience across the upper midwest and the great lakes and the northeast. isn't that wonderful? tuesday, new york city 5, 4 degrees. minneapolis, in the 40s today
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and tomorrow. chicago, 53 on monday. you know what's going to happen? i know, it's going to get stormy again this week. a quick look at the 24-hour loop with moisture moving in to texas and louisiana as well as the northwest. and that's part of the energy that's going to fuel the next storm system that's going to come into the northeast. here's what we are looking at. the computer model depicted wednesday into thursday. it could be a big storm for the northeast, we'll keep you posted. clayton, i know it's bad news, but i'll give you all the details. thank you, janice. i have more bad news for you. parents, listen up. only 10% of children's products are returned or fixed during the so-called recalls leaving many consumers with unsafe products around their home. here are alternatives to unclaimed items, we have founder of tested, parent approved. let's go to sharon.
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>> thank you for having me. >> nap nannymclinersrecliners. >> this is a great alternative. this is called a shade. a great product to protect your baby from the wind, snow and rain with a peek-a-boo window. machine washable fabric. >> on the left side of the screen, the green one was recalled and the shade is a great alternative. and baby lotion recall. >> there's too much naturally occurring bacteria. we love this tested by moms in their line, so everything is nut-free, pediatrician-approved. the organic creams are also tested by mom. >> what's next up on the list?
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>> baby monitors. we have brought in the levana ovia. this is a fantastic monitor that can be kept 3 feet away from the crib. if you look at the monitor, it zooms around, nothing to wake the baby up with. >> you can cner carry this all d the house. do you know the range on that? >> about 500 feet. and you can add additional cameras. it has tilt, zoom and night vision. >> 500 feet, you can go to the mall. >> beyond know if i recommend a the wall -- why have they been recalled? >> because of cord strangulation. these need to be kept far away. >> some of the toys, why do we recall them there?
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>> there are toys recalled, so whether a wheel has fallen off or different kinds of reasons you don't know until being in a family's home. we love the v-tech smart point that goes over points. it will fix the points, keep the kids playing along and not worrying about the little pieces. where can people go to? >> tcp.com and sign up to test products for people. >> thank you so much, erin. appreciate it. coming up, love loud action movies like this one? forget it. the new movie about to make "die hard" disappear. the new move to make "die hard" disappear. and the new commercial showing hard work, so why does the left wing base have such
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hard time with the american dream act. and it feels like your life revolves around your symptoms, ask your gastroenterologist about humira adalimumab. humira has been proven to work for adults who have tried other medications but still experience the symptoms of moderate to severe crohn's disease. in clinical studies, the majority of patients on humira saw significant symptom relief, and many achieved remission. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tubeulosis. serious, sometimes fatal events, such as infections, lymphoma, or other types of cancer, have happened. blood, liver and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure have occurred. before starting humira, your doctor should test you for tb. ask your doctor if you le in or have been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. tell your doctor if you have had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have symptoms such as fever, fatigue, cough, or sores. . .
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why do we work so hard? for this? for stuff? other countries, they work, they stroll home, they stop by the cafe, they take august off. off. why aren't you like that? why aren't we like that? because we're crazy, driven hard-working believers, that's why. those other countries think we are nuts. whatever, were the wright brothers insane? ali? >> that commercial coming under fire for embracing the american dream, but did advertisers get it right? pitching americans yearning to feel confident about this country? joining me, jim, good morning. you saw "the huffington post"
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offended by this ad saying that people work hard to make cool things and feel proud about their country. why is the left offended by this ad? >> the internet is heavily driven by people looking for something to complain about. that's a good driver for traffic to try to find controversy there. what kind of struck me about the neil mcdunna ad for chrysler is the fourth big ad this year. we want to feel good about america again. now we have a new one with mike rowe for walmart. things in america have not been what we want them to be, but by golly, we can do it and it is tapping into that electorate. >> put that up. >> at one time i made things, i opened my doors to all, and together we filled palates and trucks. i was mighty. but then one day the gears
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stopped turning. but i'm still here. >> that's a nice ad. work is good. it goes on to say. this resonates with people, doesn't it? >> it does. and i was kind of hoping that neil mcdunna would drive off to reopen the factory to tie the two together. it's fascinating to see "the huffington post" complaining about it. their headline is this turns the american dream into a nightmare. if you don't want his life, that gorgeous house he has, that's fine, you don't have to have that, but i think we all like to sort of have that attitude. key to me in the ad is early on he's walking through, he high-fives his kids and looks like his daughter is doing homework with dna projects. it is not just a fancy house but his kids are succeeding and his wife looks happy. he's happy with his wife and his work and feels like he's on the right path. and whether or not you want to buy the car at the end, just for 30 seconds you are like, man, i want to feel like that guy and be that guy. >> yes, filled with energy and
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vigor! not just sitting around smoking his newly legalized weed. he's master of his own fate, he's the dude! it's weird someone can hate that. jim, thank you for coming on. >> always good to see coming up, it's the lesson that could save your life. see what happens when clayton gets behind the wheel way too tired to drive. and ever wonder what it's like to live in simpler times? wonder no more. we're rolling up our sleeves and getting back to the basics. we'll tell you what that means, coming up. stamps.com is the best.
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do you ever wonder what it was like to live in simpler times? how about rolling up your sleeves to live like your grandparents did, but with a modern twist. >> what does it mean to live like your grandparents did but with a modern twist? >> the idea is being able to roll up your sleeves and learn some of those manually literal skills. even if you live in a small, urban space, you can grow 25 pounds of potatoes in your fire escape in a garbage bag. >> you're a chef and you do some of these weekend getaways with limitations on how to fish or how to hunt. this watermelon keg, how does this work? >> it's basically a way to take your watermelon rind that you would normally throw out, fill it with watermelon flesh, you can put wine or water in there. it's a fun way to have a -- my grandmother used to have a fun way to -- not to play bartender, but make the most of it.
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>> did you like that? >> free drinks. >> how about the fresh butter? >> this is something you can get your kids involved in it. you can use an electric stand mixer and have your butter churning. pour in some cream and start shaking. >> butter happens? >> absolutely. you can put flafers -- >> all you do is shake fresh cream in a mason jar for half an hour and you have fresh butter? >> 15 minutes. it's really quick. >> wow. >> and you have your butter milk at the end of it. >> what do you have here? >> duck pruschetto. this is two duck breasts, salt, simple, 24 hours. orange zest, lemon zest, thyme, black pepper. you basically cover it, let it sit in the refrigerator. basically you let it cure for about five days.
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so you don't have to cook it? >> that is so cool on. you could buy it, though, if you wanted at the grocery -- >> you could, but it's a lot more expensive to do it that way and less satisfying. >> you're suggesting there's a deeper importance to doing it yourself. >> absolutely. i think we all need to roll up our sleeves and do more. that's what i've been teaching women. it's not just about going to the grocery store any more. it's about living life in a more real and lasting way. it's more grounding than the virtual reality that we all live in. >> give yourself some moments of zen. >> duck pruschetto. >> make some at home now. coming up, dr. ben carson says it doesn't take brain surgeons to fix our country. >> you need to go out and talk to people. everybody you know, have a discussion. don't let the left set you up. >> that's what he said at cpac. he'll be joining us live in the next hour. stay tuned. instead of mailing everyone my vacation photos,
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hello and good morning. it is sunday, the 9th of march, 2014. i'm anna coyman. a fox news alert, a vanished flight and so far there's no wreckage of any wreckage from the malaysian airlines 370. moments ago, officials spoke out at a news conference. what they said, straight ahead. and he's not a politician. he's not even running for office. but he has some advice for conservatives. >> you need to go out and talk to people, everybody you know, have a discussion. don't let the left shut you up. >> that was dr. ben carson, of course. we'll join us exclusively this morning. and this, she's so entitled, she's suing her own parents. but now, people supporting this hard partying teenager are calling out an entire generation. saying that baby boomers are to blame. "fox & friends" hour four starts right now.
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>> all right. maybe this music will wake you up with a smile because you're getting an hour less of sleep. thank you for waking up with us. it is a daylight savings morning. >> point out you're getting an extra hour of sunlight. >> the glass is half full. >> yes, it is, anna coyman. good morning. i have put this out on twitter and people have not yet provided me with a response yet. hundreds of people respond and say they can't figure out, as to why we have daylight savings time. i heard one response saying you need it for retail employees so when they leave work at night, it's still light out.
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no, you can grill in your backyard and pretend it's summer in march. but if you're dealing with the drowsiness dealing with the change in time -- >> coming up in a few minutes, i'm going to show you what it's like to be drowsy behind the wheel of the car. we'll show you that from virginia tech in just a few minutes. >> we do start with a fox news alert. tension res mounting. the search for a missing malaysian airplane is well into its second full day. >> we have brand new video now. moments ago, malaysian officials hold ago press conference, but not many questions being answered at this hour. by his beth, what's the latest? >> well, not much. good morning. they still have found in evidence of wreckage of the plane. the search continues. tensions got heated. reporters pressed authorities as to why nothing has been found. >> our main focus here is to find the missing -- and if they
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cannot find the missing -- it's -- to determine what actually happened. >> the search, meanwhile, is huge, thousands of miles. this new search video shows an american pc-3 aircraft taking off from japan to help out. it has a long range search radar as well as a communication system in an attempt to locate the plane or any debris. while investigators are not ruling out anything at this point, the fact that malaysian authorities are now taking as many as four passengers on that flight are being investigated as they may have boarded with false documents. we can confirm at least two were traveling with passports reportedly stolen from italian and austrian citizens. this as authorities review footage of the travelers checking in. since the situation is so delicate for hundred oefs families, malaysian airlines has started flying out people and relatives to kuala lumpur where it originally departed.
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those families, however, have been told to, quote, expect the worst. here is what we know about the americans on board. one is 50-year-old phillip wood, an ibm employee from texas. we also know that there were two children from america, 4-year-old nicole mang and 2-year-old yan zhang. we know the free scale semi conducted incorporated released a statement saying 20 of its workers were on that flight. 12 from malaysia and 8 from china. anna, tucker, clayton, back to you guys. >> 20 employees all from the same company. >> at this hour, we know much more than we did yesterday about what may have happened. what we don't know, really, is what caused this. we don't know whether it was an act of terrorism, whether it was some sort of suicide act or whether it was mechanical failure of some kind that brought down the plane. we do know that the aircraft apparently began to turn around. we know that the pilot did not at that point amazingly issue any kind of statement to air traffic control or to boeing.
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and we know that the debris field has not been found. >> right. we know that the oil slicks are somewhat common in that part of the world. so for them to jump to conclusions about the lengths of the oil slick toes think that that's from a fallen aircraft may be too quick to judge. although in that debris field, no sign of wreckage yet. those planes you were pointing to, the passports, all of those things, on our show earlier today says all this adds up to suspicious. >> the hope here is that it was just stolen passports, they were dealing drugs or doing something moving criminally. but now that they're saying there's two other suspicious names which we don't know anything about those individuals, they're starting to show patterns of some -- we know this. we know that there was something that happened on the plane that caused them to turn and then something happened quickly to make the plane disappear. so when you add ta that to this
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suspicious problem that you have with the passports, there's start to go be a little bit of a picture here. >> yeah. he's saying it doesn't really pass the smell test. we went on to ask jonathan, how does it happen where two people get on board a flight with stolen passports? isn't there some sort of database? he said yes, there is. it appears there was some sort of failure. we said could it possibly happen here? chilling, he said yes. >> he said he doesn't ever trust databases. also, we had jim calsatrano on the show. one thing that stood out to him is the pilot. he's questioning the pilot. if the plane were to turn around and there was some sort of, you know, pushing through of the cockpit door, they would have radioed back. it was complete silence. so he's questioning the pilot relationship in this whole thing, as well. >> and he says the fact that there wasn't a massive mile long debris field that has been located yet suggests that the plane did not explode in air
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because that would leave a massive debris field. so, again, we don't know what happened, but at this stage, the experts we've spoken to to the last three hours say signs are point to go something sinister. >> but they're also saying who knows how long it will be until we get answeres and for these 239 people who were on board that malaysian flight, their families and friends have to deal with this. i mean, it's just crazy. it takes a long time sometimes to even get this. it haas happened with twa 200. it took over a year to rule of terrorism. >> it took two years to find the black box of the flight that crashed off south america. >> it took weeks to find the bodies and things then. we have other stories making headlines this sunday, another fox news alert. we just learned ukraine's prime minister will visit washington this week to discuss the standoff with russia. this as ukraine's defense
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minister says the ukrainian government has no plans to send armed forces into the embattled area of crimea, despite reports that russia is escalating its military presence there. also, a stage collapse injures dozens of high school girls performing at an annual school rally at their brother school and the stage gave away. >> we were on their final performance. everyone was jumping around like crazy. all of a sudden, the front row just completely fell under. >> at least 25 girls taken to area hospitals with moderate injuries, we're told, including broken bones. the exact cause of the collapse is still under investigation. and riot police called to pre-st. patrick's day celebrations near the university of massachusetts. look at this. more than 70 people arrested when the annual blarney blowout spiraled out of control. partiers were throwing beer
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bottles, snowballs and four officers suffered minor injuries. a colorado marine who lost both his legs in afghanistan is getting an amazing gift. a mortgage-free home. >> yeah! >> dave martinez and his family moved into the house in the denver area with huge crowds welcoming them home. >> we believe that this is a moral obligation of our society to take care of our veterans. from the bottom of my heart, thank the organization, thank homes for our troops and every single person out there supporting myself and the troops. >> they have adaptations to a roll in shower and rolling counter fops. it's the 166th house built by the nonprofit group homes for our troops. >> there are a lot of nice people in this country. >> there really are. >> but they're also equally odd
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and entitled people in this country. did you hear about this girl, rachel canning? she's the girl who is suing her family over the fact that they won't pay for her college education, she feels she's entitled to her parents taking care of her at every turn. you heard about in this week. now, it turns out that she has some supporters to took to facebook to defend her and blast an entire generation of other people. they say this on facebook. suburban baby boomer types are the spoiled lot. they make massive amounts of money a year. they are used to flying luxury destinations when they want and buy things that they don't need. people should be inclined to see things rachel's way. we have been stunned by the financial greed of modern parents who are more concerned with retiring into some fantasy world than provide for their children's college and young adult years. >> remember, this is the new jersey teenager who her family says she's walked out of the house, left on her own accord. she says she got kicked out, but the dad is saying, hey, you know
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what? rachel didn't want to respect our curfew, didn't want to do her chores and didn't want to respect our rules. >> when people say why is it a bad idea to spoil your kids? keep a picture of her on your fridge. >> and yesterday we said the turn who has taken her under his wing actually was letting her get sauced up at age 15 on a regular basis. >> that's why her parents are saying we didn't want her coming home drunk and that's why we cut her off. we asked you to weigh in on this. chuck tweets us. >> sounds like it's time to enforce mandatory military service two years right after high school. >> even birds with small brains have enough sense to kick the young out of the nest when they're old enough. >> oh, wow. an e-mail from lisa, we had the entitlement issue with one of our children, but it was put to a halt quickly. they found out sans a door to
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the room and loss of all rights that everything was a parental given right. no other issue followed. >> wow. >> dad getting out the screwdriver. >> who are you texting? coming up here on the show, he's not a politician been, but he has some common sense, advice for conservatives. >> don't let the left shut you up. >> what else does dr. ben carson have to say? he'll tell us himself, next. and how about this? daylight saving time, he's back. ...so you say men are superior drivers?
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we have action steps to help people, every american citizen to get involved in having a country that is for, of and by the people. we can get it back, but we have to be brave. think about those people during world war ii. nations falling like dominos one by one. the whole world about to come under tyranny, except for one thing. this nation, the united states of america, a country that through its strength and its might and determination changed the course of the world. you want to tell me we're not an exceptional nation? you go jump in the lake. that is absolutely not the case. >> that was dr. ben carson, speaking at cpac yesterday. many are calling him the future of conservativism. he won third place in a straw poll on, though he's not, as far as we know, running. here is the man himself, dr. ben carson. so i think a lot of people watching that were inspired by
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your words. clearly a lot of people at cpac were. they voted for you. you mentioned action steps. what can people at home do to take action against the drift they see in this country? >> well, it's extraordinarily important to become a well informed individual. and i suggested that people spend a half an hour each day learning something new, get a history book, a physics book, you know, geography book, and do that for a year. at the end of that year, people will be astonished as at how much you know. but here is the real key. people who are very knowledgeable are formidable foes for falsehood and are formidable foes for truth. this is what we need now. there is so much subterfuge in our society and we have people who are unable to discern what's going on because their knowledge
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base is so small. >> and doesn't it seem to you sometimes that there's a penalty for those who say obviously true things in public? >> there can be because it can be distorted. tremendously. you know, it's much easier to distort something to someone who doesn't have a good base of knowledge. and that is why the founders of our nation said it's based on -- the nature of our country will change dramatically and rapidly. of course, that is accentuated when you have a media that takes sides. it gives license to the sides that they took to basically run rough shot over the law and over
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the constitution. >> so you came in third in this extra poll above christie, above paul ryan who ran for vice president in the last presidential cycle. were you surprised by your standing in this straw poll? and does it make you to rethink your decision to stay out of electoral politics? >> it's a bit surprising. i would only do it if i felt i had to do it. right now, there are very viable, very good candidates. assuming that someone really attracts the kind of attention and the following and the
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enthusiasm of people who have common sense, then we'll be okay. we're talking about common sense here. the reason i'm attractive to people is because i represent common sense. if we get somebody else who represents common sense, i think they will attract people. >> who are you most impressed by at cpac? >> i'm impressed with anybody. let's put it that way. i don't want to really get into distinguishing people at this point because that's the job of the people. our job is to put the truth out there and make sure people are basing their decisions on real facts and not on hype. >> dr. carson, it's great to talk to you this morning. it always is. >> always good to be with you. coming up, the terrifying moment a plane hits a skydiver and vice versa. they both survived. and it's a lesson that could save your life. see what happens when clayton morris gets behind the wheel way too tired to drive. does he survive?
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we have the dramatic answer, coming up.
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and sometimes people deal with insomnia at night, too. >> read a boring book. well, you lost an hour today of sleep and that can have a serious effect on your ability to stay awake behind the wheel. >> so i wanted to feel the effects firsthand of driving on a poor night's sleep. so i hit the road with the team from virginia tech after staying up most of the evening. watch this. >> okay. i just landed. didn't have much to -- no sleeping. no sleeping allowed. >> see how long this can last. how many episodes of "walking dead" you can watch. >> i didn't get a lot of sleep last night. had me up super late. jeff. >> clayton. nice to meet you. >> what is this car measuring? show me exactly what we're going
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to do. >> acid you can see right here, we have a reporter right here. cleths data, has two cameras in it. and the camera that's focused on your face and a camera that's focused on the roadway. >> just a food pedal down here. in case something bad happens, i'm going to take control of the car so we don't get into a crash. >> let's get in. let's try this. >> maintain 35. >> are you having trouble? >> a little bit, yeah. >> try to maintain 35. try to keep it at 35. try to keep it at 35 as best you can. >> i keep having trouble trying to maintain my speed on the road. this is a typical road in america. it's kind of boring. you can see how it would be monotonous. >> in the 70 minutes on the road, the researchers marked 24
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instances in which i displayed diminished driving ability. >> swerving, head bobbing, moving. we're going to go back and see what we found now. >> what are we looking at here? is this what you used to monitor me while i was out driving? >> yeah. this is exactly what we use. it's called a mask. what it's looking at right in and out, facial features. so it can look at your eyes, it can tell whether they're opened or closed. it can assess your head position. >> the mask picks up head movements, hard to detect on the surface, like the way my head is dipping right here. but most drowsy driving symptoms are well seen by the naked eye. >> i don't know if you remember, i had to prompt you many, many times about maintaining 35 miles per hour. that's kind of a vigilant task. i was looking at your lane position when you were going off the road. >> that happens a couple of times that i was going off the road? >> yes. several times. you can see a lot of feet movement. instead of having your hands,
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the characteristic 6:00 and 9:00, you put them at 1:00 and 12:00 almost, leaned forward. that's a characteristic sign of fatigue or drowsiness. >> so no more drowsy driving for me, jeff. >> today, drowsy driving causes more than 100,000 crashes a year, resulting in 40,000 injuries and over 1,500 deaths. it's a complex problem for americans with a simple solution. >> there's only one thing that can help you out. and that's get ago restful night's sleep. >> you know, virginia tech's research has been somewhat controversial, too, on directly phones in car. they found cell phones, when you're having a conversation with someone else on the phone, not texting, but the conversation, it helps keep you awake. >> of course it does. >> and people who want to get cell phones out of car completely are not happy about the research, but it turns out having a conversation with someone can keep you awake. that's why he was so quiet during the drive. the researchers. he's like, i'm not going to talk the entire time. >> did he have a emergency brake
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or what? >> can you imagine if researchers waited for the full information before changing law? >> bottom line, don't drive drowsy. you could really hurt someone. coming up next on the show, the department of homeland security has a new plan to protect our borders. run away. and this little boy just couldn't wait. meet the mom who gave birth while her husband was speeding to the hospital at 80 miles per hour. ♪ [ male announcer ] nothing says, "you're my #1 copilot," like a milk-bone biscuit. ♪ say it with milk-bone. if your denture moves, it can irritate your gums. try fixodent plus gum care.
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it helps stop denture movement and prevents gum irritation. fixodent. and forget it.
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seems like being tough is more important to mr. putin than being rational. desperate times call for desperate measures. so i bought him a friend. come in here. >> vladimir, watch closely. we're going to speak to you now in a language you can understand. ♪
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♪ that's right. >> i think he already tried that. don't you remember those pictures of him flopping his wrists around and shooting clays, he said they were supposed to compete with putin wrestling a siberian tiger. >> if he could take him on in a game of basketball, obama would crush putin. >> i think snl was biting the style of the icon that was going around on facebook and twitter and it said putin versus obama and obama was eating an ice cream cone, riding a bike with a helmet on. legs crossed on the view. >> so they stole it? >> i think they might have stolen it. >> here is one indication of a country that has gotten a little
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less tough. obama administration has instructed the 25,000 border patrol agents to patrol our boarders to keep them security not to discharge weapons in response to thrown projectiles. now border patrol agents are being told they cannot defend themselves with firearm webs something throwing rocks at you. you have to stand down or leave. this is a result of pressure in part from the government of mexico, which apparently is creating our border policies. >> yeah. so you have to seek shelter or seek high ground, like the battle of gettysburg. you have to get to the high ground and then you also have to run. you have to distance yourself as much as possible. if someone is hurling projectiles at you, and by the way, what is a projectile? is it a rock? is it --
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>> i think a rock actually could hit you in the head and provide imminent danger of death, which they are allowed to -- >> but the point is, the mexican government and a bunch of interest groups here in the united states that want more illegal immigration here think we're policing the border too vigorously. and the obama administration has caved to this border. since when to foreign governments get to police our border policy? that's crazy. >> and groups that have been for years pushing for open boarders are now in charge and it's scary. >> let us know what you think about this. facebook.com/fsweekend. weigh in on that and more. especially if you are patrolling the border in uniform. we would like to hear from you. >> we do have some other stories making headlines this hour. a fox news alert, tensions mounting as the search for a malaysian airplane is well into its second full day. new video this morning, malaysian airline officials hold ago press conference, but still not many questions are being
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answered. they say there are still no signs the plane or wreckage, but reporters keep on pressing for information. >> our main focus here is to find the missing aircraft. and if we cannot find the missing aircraft, it's -- for us to determine what actually happened. >> and new video this morning of an american navy aircraft taking off from japan to head to southeast asia to search. it has a long range search radar and a communication system to attempt to locate the plane or any of the debris. and caught on camera in tampa, florida, a sky deaver and a plane collide. the skydiver's parachute gets stuck in the plane. >> both these guys walked away unscathed. a scratch here, a bruise there and i think both are just happy to be here today. >> it's terrific.
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i'm tickled to death that nobody got seriously injured. happy to report this. the pilot was doing takeoff and landing exercises just before the collision there. an ntsb spokesperson says he should have been on the alert for skydivers. a 72-year-old california woman was attacked by thousands of bees. the bees swarmed out, attack ago woman nearby. >> we're estimating a thousand as she was completely covered in bees. like she was wear ago bee suit, if you will, and we immediately threw her in the back of the ambulance with the bees on her. she was rushed to the hospital in critical condition, but doctors says she is expecting to survive. and a california couple got a huge surprise, their son was born as they were racing to the
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hospital. >> i hear a pretty loud yell following a -- there's a head out. the head is out. >> i can't stop it. he has to come all the way out now, you know? >> the couple pulled over into the nearest fire station moments after their son was born. firefighters helping them get to the hospital safely. >> what song does that remind you guys of? >> an almond brothers song. ♪ i was borng in the back seat of a greyhound bus ♪ ♪ rolling down -- come on, sing it. oh, look at this. we were singing this classic rock song and it brought me back to the days when i used to date rock stars. do you know who this is, everybody? that would be sdeeven tyler. and no, i didn't date him. but i used to be a classic room dee jay back in the days when i was in my 20s and had a cool job. steven tyler. if anyone knows steven tyler, i
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would love for him to sign that photo because we had a wonderful date afterwards and i think he should sign the photo. >> you should have asked me. i had a chance to play some guitar with him when i rolled out their air ae e raerosmith. >> when is this? >> '93 and i was 23 years old. and i have a lot more of these types of photos, rock stars that i've dated and i will post it on my facebook page. >> is it a long list, janet? ♪ love in an elevator living it up as it's going down ♪ here is your signs of spring. it's going to be beautiful today in denver and kansas city. look at that, 70 for you. national 75 on tuesday. then it's going to get cold again. i know. mother nature is being a tease again. northwest, we're seeing all of this moisture move in and that's going to be part of the energy that's going to make our next storm system that's going to move across the country, across the mississippi river valley,
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tennessee river valley and perhaps bring us a pretty big storm on wednesday, thursday to the northeast. look at philadelphia, okay? look at wednesday/thursday. so 60 depress on wednesday and then the storm moves in on thursday dropping those temperatures 30 degrees. so, of course, we will keep you up to date. ♪ love in an elevator call me. >> we have lost control, clayton. i love it. >> till no answers on this, tucker, after the irs official mind the targeting of conservatives pleads the fifth again. where is the mainstream media on this snld howard kurtz to weigh in. and a lawmaker trying to put an end to the free for all. friday night, buddy.
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you are gonna need a wingman. and my cash back keeps the party going. but my airline miles take it worldwide. [ male announcer ] it shouldn't be this hard. with creditcards.com, it's easy to search hundreds of cards and apply online. creditcards.com.
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♪ ♪ ♪
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the next time you nt a dvd, don't bother rewinding it. the way i see it, it's t next guy's problem. oh, larry. she thinks i'm crazy. mm-hmm. but would a crazy person save 15% on car insurance in just minutes? [ chuckles ] [ malennouncer ] 15 minutes for a quote is crazy. with esurance, 7½ minutes could save you on car insurance. welcome to the modern world. esurance. backed by allstate. click or call.
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welcome back. americans want to get to the bottom of the irs scandal. the new fox poll shows 71% of people want more answers from congress regarding the tea party targeting. but even though america is searching for the truth, the mainstream media continues to turn its back on the story. in fact, the mainstream media dedicated just two minutes to the irs hearing that took place on wednesday. even with all the fireworks that unfolded at that hearing. so why won't media outlets give america what it wants? joining us now is howard kurtz. howard, break this down for us. why is the mainstream media sort of paying little attention to the irs scandal? >> well, the "new york times" and washington post, for instance, should be spanked for not initially covering this hearing in print because you had this extraordinary spectacle of the committee chairman darrel isa cutting off the mikes when
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alike ya cummings was going into a rant. that's not about the irs scandal, but once that happens, the sheer thee at ricks of it, i don't think i've ever seen anything like it before, was going to over-shadow everything else about this story. >> how often do you see when you look at these sort of -- i just told but that fox news poll, 71% of americans want this investigated. is there a disconnect between a poll like that and the disconnection you see on television? is it fireworks or not sexy enough to get the mainstream media coverage that we would like to see? >> i think the simple fact is -- because i would like to see congress get to the bottom of this. you can include me in the poll. is that the investigation has stalled. and when that happens, and when you have lois lernor coming back and for the second time in ten months invoked her fifth amendment rights, the mainstream media have decided this is an old story and there's not much new.
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there's talk that her side will release more information from committee. i don't think the media are disinterested in what went down with the irs situation in the field office. but when you don't have new information, smoking gun e-mails, the central player taking the fifth, there's not a lot new there and so it becomes easier for the press to walk away. >> well, one of the big headlines this week came out about bob costas. and you're going to be sitting down with bob costas. questions about his eye. remember, i say pink eye during the olympic coverage, what actually went on there. of course, the rumors that came out, did he have botox? so will you get to the bottom of that? did he not want to touch that story, howie? >> this report unsourced about whether he had botox had come out at the time i sat down with him. but he did talk about his battle with pink eye and how frustrating it is. but also, bob costas in this interview talks about he hits back at his critic owes fox.
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he defends his treatment of vladimir putin, he talks about msnbc, his personal political views and his views of the culture that targets people like him. he has a lot to say. so i think our viewers may find it pretty interesting. >> yeah, certainly, at 111:00 a.m. eastern time. check out media buzz and check out howie's interview with bob costas. coming up here on the show, your tax dollars booelg being used so people can get high. how is that allowed? meet the lawyermaker who is trying to put an end to that free for all. that's coming up. [ male announcer ] v8 v-fusion plus energy. natural energy from tea packed with real juice from delicious fruits and veggies.
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it's what you need for that extra boost! oh and did we mention it's only 50 calories? need a lift? could've had a v8. in t juice aisle. so i got the new nokia lumia icon. it's got 1080p video, three times zoom, and a twenty-megapixel sensor. it's got the brightest display, so i can see what i'm shooting -- even outdoors, and 4 mics that capture incredible sound. plus, it has apps like vine -- and free cloud storage. my new lumia icon is so great, even our wipeouts look amazing. ♪ honestly, i want to see you be brave ♪ ♪
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. welcome back. quick look at your headlines now. do you love those loud action movies like "mission impossible." ? too bad for you, because connecticut is about to become the first state to ban loud movies. the proposed law would ban theaters from showing movies or previews louder than 85 decibels to minimize hearing loss. i wonder if they can do that for sporting events. and a tair phiing moment for a daredevil surfer off the coast of australia. a wave crashed down on him, spit him back out. cross admits it's the craziest thing that ever happened to him. do you think?
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tucker, anna. your tax dollars are being used to get people high. there are 56 transactions using welfare cards at 19 different marijuana shops totalling near four grand in tax dollars. >> since that report, congress is trying to put an end to that. paul joins us to introduce no welfare for weed bill this week. good morning, congressman. good morning, anna. i'm doing well. how about yourself? >> fantastic, thanks for asking. $4,000 right now, that's not a ton of money, but we do, as taxpayers, expect a lean government. so, you know, are you concerned that this could get to be even more of a problem as it's legalized in more states? >> oh, absolutely. you know, just you were talking earlier in your segment about the irs, about if you don't put it down, everyone will make sure that it's legal. so this is money being brought in by taxpayers and it needs to be spent properly.
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so looking at waste, fraud and abuse is something that my office is serious about. if you're not looking like senator coburn said, you're not looking close enough. >> i can't imagine many people disagree with that law. i'm confused as to how people could purchase pot using their welfare benefits. how does that work? >> well, what ends up happening, if you look at colorado, colorado, you know, banks are very leary of working with the pot 1407 shops because, as you know, federal law prohibits the use of pot. so what happens is they're atms and it's a cash only type of business. so they use their cards to withdraw money and then they can use that money to buy the pot. that's not what it's intended purpose is for under snap or the temporary assistance. >> and both program res important for people who really do need it. how do we make sure that the people gets the benefits they need but aren't wasting it weed?
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>> well, this is one of the provisions on what my bill is here for. it's sad that we have to introduce a bill along these lines. what we have to do is prohibit it just like what we've seen with tanip and s.n.a.p., gambling casinos, and strip clubs, this has to be a prohibited benefit that they cannot use that money for. we're trying to make sure that the people that need that assistance programs get it and utilize it for its intended purposes. >> are there effort under way in the congress to police the way food stamp res spent? there's a whole economy surrounding goods, soda and things that are bought with food stamps and sold on a secondary market. is there any attempt to reign in that? >> we had that discussion earlier this year in regard to the farm bill and regards to the snap program. the farm subsidies was a pretty easy aspect. but when we looked at cutting into the waste, fraud and abuse aspect, that's when we got
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bogged down. when you have a 50% administrative cost jourcoverru plus you have the waste, fraud and abuse, you have to do something to reign in those costs. it's a huge cost. taxpayer money has to go a long way. we want to make sure people that get it actually need it. but there are those that should be able to work and don't need that assistance and this is another program, you know, the weed aspect that they shouldn't be actually utilizing it for. >> congressman, thanks for joining us this morning. thanks for that. >> thank you very much. >> more fox and the friends coming up next.
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coming up on the show, donald trump will be here. >> and the dugger family. >> and stick around for the
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after show show. janice will stick around and tell us about the time when she was in an elevator with. >> i'll see you tomorrow, everybody. make it a great day. and we start with a fox news alert. more on the missing malaysian airliners jet. and it is a growing mystery this morning on exactly what may have happened to that boeing 777. military radar not ready kidding that the plane may have started to turn back shortly before it disappeared from the radars. that boeing 777 was on its way from kuala lumpur to beijing when it vanished so far without a trace. >> good morning, everybody. welcome to america's news headquarters. >> we have to emphasis without a trace because that is still the case. i'm jamie colby. we'll have a lot more on that story at this hour. there are still absolutely no signs of

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