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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  May 15, 2014 3:00am-6:01am PDT

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much exercise can be bad for your heart. scientists find overdoing high intensity exercise may increase the risk of heart attack for those with existing heartç disease. this is one way to ruin your prom. an 18-year-old was arrested inside his prom wearing the $600 tux he stole last week. >> "fox & friends" starts right now. >> bye. >> good morning. taos is -- today is thursday, may 15. fox news alert, casey kasem has been found. where he has been and can his kids get him home? breaking details on this by star story ahead. >> new bombshell e-mail show the i.r.s.'s target of tea party andç conservative groups came from washington, not cincinnati. and, yes, it was political. and, yes, it involves a
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u.s. senator who is a democrat. how serious is this scandal? americans speaking out in a brand-new poll straight ahead. >> what would you do if you found $40,000 in your couch cushion? it happened to these people and what they did next is priceless. mornings are better with friends. start it with us. ♪ ♪ >> welcome aboard, folks. it is a very busy thursday. thank you very much for joining us. it is a red-letter day, brian, for elisabeth. she used to be at2"the view." she came to join us here. today she is going back because barbara walters is saying so long. >> what a throwback thursday. i have to say i'll be on instagram and you guys will be posted. i'll send you secret ones as i'm there. it is going to be quite a
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throwback for her exit. >> do you know what you're doing or what it's going to be like? >> all the cohosts from the past -- i call them coghosts -- will come to barbara and wish her well. >> you'll be joinedç by your former co-ghosts. >> my best friend rosie o'donnell will be there. >> we won't be watching that but we'll get highlights tomorrow. >> i'll send you the instagram. >> heather nauert, what's going on? >> we have breaking news to bring you so let me get right to that. casey kasem, the radio legend has been located in washington state just hours after his daughter filed a missing person's report. his daughter just releasing this statement saying, quote, we are grateful to local authorities for finding my dad. we are one step closer to bringing him home. a judge ordered a search warrant for the 82-year-old
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after the family said their step mother kidnapped him from a medical facility. they had been battling her in courtç over access to their father with advanced parkinson's. we're not sure of the exact location where he was found but we'll keep you posted on any information as we get it. a heartbreaking end for the family of a missing fort bragg soldier. police found the body of private first class kelly bordeaux in the woods near a bar where she was last seen after a night out with friends. >> it's two years of what if? >> nicholas holbert has been chargedç with her murder. police were eyeing him from the beginning after he said he gave her a ride home the night she disappeared. the white house announcing the administration's review of the v.a. scandal will be headed by one of the president's closest advisors.
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rob neighbors will work with the v.a. to try to figure out how to get better care for our veterans. a few hours from now the scandal will head to capitol hill. secretary eric shinseki is set to testify about the alleged secret waiting list at clinics across the country. we'll bring you more on that throughout the day. they deserve an a-plus for ethics. three college students found $40,000 stuffed in old cot at a salvation army store for just $20. but instead of blowing that money on pizza, vacation and keg parties, they tracked down the originalç owner who turned out to be an elderly woman whose husband gave her the money before he passed away. she kept it there for a year, but she went into the hospital for a heart operation. while she was recovering, her daughter sold the couch to make way for a bed. lucky she got it back. for the students' honesty, they gave them $1,000. how nice is that. those are your headlines. the students said there was no question they were going
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to track down the owner. >> actually that looks like the couch i donated. >> thanks. >> they went to sit on it lumpier than a $20 couch should feel. >> they're not sitting on it. they're going to give it back. that's great. >> i looked at that couch. i wouldn't sit on that couch. >> if you're buying a $20 couch, you can only be so choosey. we've got big news for you this morning. here's the bombshell. the i.r.s. -- there are i.r.s. e-mails that show that the white house defense that they say, yeah, that targeting of tea party and conservative groups, that was all based in cincinnati with those rogue agents. not true. there are e-mails that were received under a freedom of information act request by judicial watch that shows that the targeting was based in washington, d.c.,
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and the e-mail is not just for 2012. it actually goes back to cover 2010 too. two election cycles, the i.r.s. was targeting conservative groups. >> right. we're talking many months. it was a year later we're getting this only because it was requested by court order here. senator carl levin, we're learning through these e-mails, a michigan democrat, he applied pressure to slow down the most of the right-leaning groups applying there for tax-exempt status. we are looking at a slow rollout here on e-mail based inç d.c. that had to do with those that may have some sort of complaints about the administration or just want to voice more conservative views. looking for tax-exempt status to be back roomed in terms of their applications. >> senator levin is writing doug shulman in charge of the i.r.s. then, saying is the i.r.s. sending out
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additional information to applicant groups, citing a rejection letter to a conservative group of how the i.r.s. should be conducting their business. this is a series they processed to slow down the approval of these organizations. >> bad news for the white house because this blows up their story. and bad news for carl levin because he's been caught red handed trying to use the i.r.s. to go ahead andç use, to clobber his political opponents. there are a lot of e-mails. here's one excerpt. exempt organization technical is working the tea party applications in coordination with cinci. in coordination with cincinnati. d.c. is talking about cincinnati. we are providing copies of our development letters with the agent to use as examples in the development of their cases. what is curious is remember it was our attorney general eric holder who said awhile back, there weren't going to be any charges pressed
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at all. you know, take a lookç at what was going on there. something illegal was happening there, and for the administration not to follow -- >> you mean a smidgeon more than just a rogue operation? charles krauthammer put it wisely here. this is something they were on the lookout for and this is about a coverup. take a listen. >> this is a major abuse of power. they covered up for two years and now they say, hey, dude, two-year-old story, so it's old news. let's see if the mainstream media will treat it as old news or what it really is, new news of misleading america and covering it up. >> what's so unbelievable is all these e-mails that were requested, they don't come out. they just areç ignored. it is the freedom of information act requests that are doing it. why are we even bothering going through the normal process? >> actually a bunch of these e-mails were sent to
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congress but they were blacked out where you couldn't tell what it was. >> here's why it matters. this has to do with conservative groups but down the line this could mean anyone with any political belief could be targeted. in this recent poll how serious do you consider the i.r.s. targeting conservative groups? this is astounding here. 44% that say very. this is very serious. and 27% say somewhat. the majorityç of people believe that this is important because it may affect you right now, but it may affect somebody else down the road. and the fact that this was not investigated properly from the beginning is astounding as we move through election season. >> talk about astounding, that's what's going on with the new york city -- "the new york times." it is probably the most read newspaper in the world. you can get it in france as quick as you can get it in new york. when they have their manager fired, you have to
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wonder what happened with the "new york times"? is it something about converting to the digital era or is there another reason why a woman hired a short time ago is shown the door? >> she apparently found out her pension benefits andç pay that receives receiving did -- that she was receiving did not measure up to the man who held the position before she did. >> who is a man. >> she apparently wasn't happy about that, hired attorneys to send a message to the bosses that this is not okay in her book, and the response was not met with a smile. >> i'm smiling because i think about remember during the election cycle where the administration and the political left was pushing with the "new york times" the whole war on women thing, saying republicans have a war on women which was not true. and yet, behind the scenes "the new york times" actually was paying their executive editor less than they paid the guy whoç had it before. look, she got screwed. she should have been paid the same amount of money. and then when you just
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detail some of the headlines, they were saying one thing but doing something else in the back room. here's some actual headlines. they did equal pay for women denied again. shortchanging america's women. pay gap is because of gender, not jobs. just some of the things. this reminds me of remember we told you a couple of weeks ago about how media matters, that left blog that is the propaganda wing of the white house, what they did is they historically talked about how great unions are until a union tried to unionize their shop and suddenly it is like they too hired a big attorney to try to tamp them down. >> twitter was all over this.ç if "the new york times" pays him more than her, it's proof that they are sexist. if it doesn't, it's proof that they are racist. >> that's the guy who is going to replace her, is her deputy who she requested to get on. said i need help her. let's see what happens. when they do all the stories about discrepancy
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in pay and republicans trying to level the playing field in which it is tilted towards men, somebody who is probably doing all these stories, approving all these columns and reports goes why am i making so much less than bill keller who was just here, why is my pensionç percentage so much less? when she speaks about it, she is fired. in "the new york times" when you're let go, you usually get a column or slow lead. they basically told her to hit the road. >> i wonder how many other stories "the new york times" publishes where they say one thing but do something else. >> hypocrisy alert. beep, beep, beep, beep! >> convicts can get coverage right away, so why are our military members being left to die waiting for treatment at hospitals? our next guest who has been critical of that joins us with a plan to fix it. >> have you seen this
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every time my husband reached out to the v.a., they just kept tellingç him, "be patient, sir." i'm here to tell you that my dead veteran husband cannot be much more patient than he is today. but me, i'm pissed. >> every right to be. it is reckoning day for veterans affairs secretary eric shinseki. just hours from now he will face senate panel questions over the alleged deadly treatment delays at some v.a. hospitals.
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our next guest, an point of the president's health care law says our service men and women may be better off with obamacare, even convicts are receiving care under it. so why not our veterans? former lieutenant governor of new york, governor betsy mccoy, author of "beating obamacare." thank you for joining us. you are one of the few people that has gone through obamacare andç read the entire law. we see your notebook tattered with notes. today eric shinseki will probably answer questions before the senate. this is nothing new, the delay in care for veterans? >> that's right. congress has held hearings and investigations in 2000, 2001, in 2007, in 2012 and again in 2013. and this report was presented to congress 14 months ago by the general accountability office, an arm of the federal government that investigate, and it
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disclosed once again the corruption in the waitingç lists, the games that were played with the waiting lists, deadly games that left veterans without care. it is not possible that secretary shinseki didn't know about this report. it was presented to him. house and senate -- his deputy under secretary was in the hearing when this was discussed. the report says it was widespread across the v.a. system. it also assessed the willingness of the v.a. and said the v.a. is neither willing nor capable it appears to rectify these waiting lists. that is why congress needs to take action. no more investigation in committees. that is congress's way of doing nothing. >> there is no time. we've gone months and months. 14 months ago, nothing has been done. ouryu home. they go to serve our country, fight for our freedom and the freedom of others. yet they come home and die here. what can be done, though,
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in the meantime? >> exactly. what can be done? a one-page amendment to this law that would create an additional category of obamacare. they've got the bronze, silver, gold and platinum but those have high premiums and deductibles. there should be the red, white and blue plan for combat vets, no premium pay, no deductible to meet. and for other vets, minimal costs if any. vets have already earned their health care benefits but they deserve a way out ofç these interminable waits into private-sector medical care. they should get-it's comparable to a voucher to go to a doctor or hospital in the civilian community. >> this is under the hire more heroes act that already passed in the house. you say amend it with this one-page document here and this will solve the problem? >> yes. once obamacare is repealed and replaced, whatever health plan replaces it, this time the lawmakers should look out for the vets especially when they look out for groups like
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convicts. >> maybe this is a silly person to ask. i'm a layperson, haven't read the entire law. if they knew the problem 14 months ago minimum, and this was the fifth time it was brought forward, why not in these documents was there not this oneç page that would solve it for the veterans? >> it is very unfortunate but clearly the authors of this law they cared more about convicts than about vets. that's really the bottom line. they were looking for other groups. >> sickening. betsy mccoy, thank you for bringing this forward. i have a feeling this will make its way to eric shinseki. coming up, remember when you spent millions to build brand-new soccer fields in iraq? now they are sitting empty. wait until you hear just why. when it comes toç parenting, which type is better? hands on or hands off?
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now the stories making headlines around the world, i'll share them with you. in south korea 15 crew members from tho ferry disaster indicted. four of them including the captain are charged with murder. the group involved in the ship's navigation. in iran, thousands of women are using facebook to defy the law. they are posting pictures of themselves throwing off their hijabs. the facebook page with their photos have gotten 170,000 likes so far. to baghdad, millions
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wasted on soccer fields. a report that the fields are littered with broken bottles and garbage. people don't use them because they're targeted by terrorists. fantastic. >> there are many different stylesjez parenting, some not as great as others. >> not like a regular mom. i'm a cool mom. so, you guys, what is the 411? what has everybody been up to? >> when it comes to parenting, which type is better? hands on or hands off? >> here is the author of "seven decisions, understanding the keys to personal success" and a man who has two kids of his own, andy andrews. you told us you've got it figured out. >> i am amazed at our ability in society to think logically to incorrect conclusions and some of them are becoming dangerous, and it's allç
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parenting. >> give us an example of that. >> here's -- one of the things people say all the time, we think that feelings are so important. we're obsessed with feelings. and yet, the truth is to create regulation, to do so much with feelings is not taking care of our kids and their futures because nobody really cares how you feel. our entire economy, our relationships, everything works according to how you act, not how you feel. from the time you were a little kid, every good thing that ever happened to you, not a single one of them happened because of how you felt. every teacher who gave you the benefit of the doubt, when you began to interview for jobs, did anybody ever say if i give you the job, how are you going to feel? it's how you act. this is why we teach children manners. >> you're right. it does all come down to parenting. yesterday on this program -- i don't know if you saw it, andy -- but we were talking about this
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woman who had written a column called the beta parents manifesto for the huffing ton post. it is about alpha parents, pushy parents -fplgts. she writes beta parents don't try to engage their children every second of the day. sometimes they leave them alone with a string, a crayon. beta parents own televisions. beta parents don'tç hide pumpkin puree in their pancakes. >> it's good. it's fine. it's good ideas. i can't disagree with that. however, if we want to effect society in a great way, if you want to be certain about your kids and where they're going, then you have to have more than a great idea. and until somebody can prove to you beyond a shadow of a doubt to your satisfaction that what they have will work for you,
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it's just their opinion. >> you say you have seven decisions you've got to make in order to find that success. wzat are they? >> principles basically. and, you know, i'll give you an idea. responsibility is one. and yet, we think about responsibility in our society totally incorrectly. two distinct sides, you've got one side doing it until these people accept responsibility and you've got the other side going it's not their fault. you know how their mother is. >> the buck stops here. you don't expect people to be perfect. persistence without exception. >> that is different from persisting. in our society there is no penalty anymore for quitting as long as you persist, as long as you try. but persisting without exception allows you to succeed where others stop. listen to this, all has to do with parenting. i'll sit down with a division chief whereç there's something going crazy in the company and the guy's 46 years old and within five minutes i'll go
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this could have been handled when he was eight. so many things -- and we think logically to incorrect conclusions. people say all the time i'm just trying to raise great kids. i want to raise great kids. >> everybody does. >> no, you don't. >> yes, you do. you want your kid to be great. >> no. you want to raise kids who become great adults. it's a totally different result and it requires a totally different process. >> i want them to be great >> if the result is to raise great kids? they had great kids. >> there's a lot of accountability in choosing. it is not a passive book. it's action items you take. you choose happiness. >> you chose not to wear a blazer, and i respect that. >> that's right. >> fantastic. >> i have a parenting thing that's absolutely free that people can go on andy
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andrews.com and download it for free. >> thank you very much. straight ahead? >> do you recognize a familiar face in this photo? it's throwback thursday graduation style. we'll tell you who's in there next. >> then a new turn in the now infamous elevator brawlç between rapper jay z and his sister-in-law solange. a bigup date on the hotel worker that apparently leaked the footage. >> ander son cooper sat down with magic johnson for a follow-up interview. at one point magic actually said he's praying for sterling. [laughter] >> praying for him to get stuck in an elevator with beyonce's sister.
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throwback thursday, t.b.t. our assignment today? graduation pictures. brian, who's that guy with the curly hair in the middle? >> i guess it was a humid day. that's me. you cut out the bottom, i'm getting my degree from high school. >> there you go. >> before you started
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gaining a lot of weight. >> that was provided after five days of hard search. i was able to find my 1982 graduation picture. >> love that. are you there on the bottom? >> i'm right there in the middle. >> where are youç there? >> they cut me out of it. >> this is my kindergarten graduation. >> kindergarten graduation you found? >> yeah, that's the only one i had. this is me, my friend kristen is there, hr*z stka. look how nervous i am. >> are you the one --? >> i'm wearing the pink dress. there i am with my bangs crushed under my cap. >> didn't you know to wear white? >> i didn't get that memo. i'm not wearing white. i'm going to wear pink. >> that was a call to action to the viewers. >> it is throwback thursday, which we love on
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this program. we love looking back over ourhshoulders. e-mail us your graduation pictures. it could be from kindergarten, it could be including your soccer team. it could be college. e-mail them to us friends@foxnews.com. >> i would love a before and after since we don't know what you look like in a lot of cases. >> pressure. stepping it up, kilmeade. heather, we didn't see your tow -- photos. >> i've got breaking news. the hotel employee who leaked the tape of beyonce's sister attacking jay z is out of a job this morning. the standard hotel in new york city fired the security guard who sold the footage toç tmz for -- listen to this -- $250,000. the hotel now says it will be, quote, turning over all available information to criminal authorities. 250 grand. wow. the teacher you are about to see gets a big fat f for doing this. this happening in ohio and
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it is very serious. the teacher was caught on camera outside the bathroom lifting up a six-year-old boy by his shirt and then she grabs his face. she's now been suspended for ten days, but the parents of that boy say that's not enough. >> we thought it was just a little, you know, a little incident that happened and that's what the school made it out to sound like. then all of a sudden we get this video. this is just outrageous. >> that makes you mad to see that video. no word on what sparked dhq woman's behavior. an incredible cancer breakthrough to tell you about this morning. researchers at the mayo clinic in minnesota wiping out a woman's blood cancer with a measles vaccine. the 50-year-old woman went into complete remission after given a high dosage of that vaccine and now she's been clear of the disease for more than six months. we'll continue to watch that one. they say a dog is man's best friend but in this case a cat is the best
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friend. take a look at this video. four-year-old jeremy was riding his bike in california when a dog %ttacks him. that's when his cat jumps into action. the boy's family says they have one word to describe that cat. >> he's a hero! >> loves him and clearly protects him with his life. >> jeremy needed a few stitches after that but the family says they're glad his injuries were not worse than they were. that dog in the neighborhood, they say the dog did not like kids or bicycles. >> didn't look like it. >> that dog has been taken away. >> he didn't like cats because it scared him. super cats. >> maria molina is going to join us now from outside. we don't have her throwback pic yet. >> we have it on file. we'll be showing it later on this morning. i want to talk about whereç it's raining cats and dogs along parts of the east. we have flood watches in
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effect from northern florida up to parts of upstate new york and western pennsylvania. that flood threat is going to be in place throughout the day. the storm system is a relatively slow mover. areas of rain not only today but also as we head into tomorrow. that's going to be a concern out there with flooding. by the way, temperature-wise across parts of the northern plains well below average. across the southwestern united states, those temperatures still hot, steve, elisabeth and brian and they are going to be reaching possibly 100 degrees across parts of florida. over to you. >> maria, nice earrings. >> thank you. >> switching gears, nearly 13 years after the twin towers fell, new york city's ground zero is reopening today as a site to remember the 3,000 people who lost their lives on september 11, 2001. >> our own anna kooiman is
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outside the september 11 museum which is set to be dedicated today. good morning, anna. >> reporter: good morning to you, elisabeth, brian and steven. good morning to etch at home. in a sense it's a set of artifacts within an arrestty -- artifact. president obama will be inç attendance at the ceremony as the gallery will be unveiled. >> we have a very tragic alert for you right now. an incredible plane crash into the world trade center. very few can forget where they were the morning of september 11, 2001. and here, beneath the ground that once held the n andtowers, memories of heroism relived. >> the innocent who died that day did what we do every day. simply get up in the morning and go to work. >>ç there's been an
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explosion at world trade 1. that's the other building. it looks like a plane struck it. it's horrible. >> the terrorists tested our patriotism and faith that day but the american flag flew high and who can forget the cross forged in steel. more than 10,000 artifacts. the antenna from the tower. the staircase telling stories of survival. frantic civilians fleeing from the towers before they collapsed. the entire crew of fire fighters from ladder 3 responding died inside when the north tower fell. and this watch belonging to one of the heroic passengers who overtook the terrorists on flight 93. >> so many faces vanished that clear september day, family members posting signs after calling hospitals andç hot lines searching for the missing, many of which never turned up. >> in all, 2,983 innocent people died. >> i can hear you. the rest of the world hears you. and the people who knocked
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these buildings down will hear all of us soon. >> but just as america vowed, we will never forget. >> u.s.a.! >> we will never forget. for the first six days the museum will be open to the 9/11 community, survivors, family members and first responders. then on may 21 it will be open for aç general admission price of $24. but elisabeth, brian and steve, there have been calls for there to be federal funding and for it to be free. we're told it will be $60 million a year to operate the 9/11 memorial museum. >> anna kooiman live from ground zero, thank you very much. >> great job. what a comprehensive look. it's a very unique museum. do you know anything else like this? >> no. >> like the holocaust museum, it marks a terrible day and all that death. she's right, though, it ought to be free. straight ahead coming up.
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>> it's being called the biggest jailbreak in history and the president is the ringleader. why thousands of convicted criminals are being set free by the obama administration. >> bill coming to his wife's defenseç over her health. they say she's fine but dr. segal says there's a reason her medical records need to be released in full. coming up. ♪ ♪ a a
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♪ (vo) oh. my. tongue. finally. (announcer) all-new friskies saucesations. a taste experience like no other. in cheesy, creamy, homestyle, or garden sauce. friskies. feed the senses. bill clinton defending his wife after karl rove questioned her health. >> she worked out every week. she is strong.
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she's doing great. as far as i can tell, she's in better shape than i am. now they say she's really got brain damage. if she does, i must be in really tough shape because she's still quicker than i am. >> but do we need to see her medical records if she does decide to run for the white house? we are paging dr. marc siegel from the fox news medical a team on this one. dr. segal, what do you think? >> it's not exactly consistent. different candidates get different amount of attention. back in 2008, barack obama released aç letter from his physician that he was in good health, even though he was a former smoker. we didn't get to see a lot. john mccain, i went out to arizona and i looked at over a thousand pages of medical records. everybody was trying to see if that melanoma was going to be a problem. it was clear that it wasn't going to be from the records but they still speculated about it. i think here, steve, that because hillary had a major health issue in 2012 where she had a blood clot which
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probably did not cause any kind of stroke or problem like that at the time, but again, we haven't seen her medical records. because she had aç previous blood clot in her leg in 1998, it raises the question of whether she has the tendency to form blood clots, whether she's on blood thinners. we don't know those answers. even if she is on blood thinners it shouldn't interfere with her running for president. it certainly looks like she is in great shape, as president clinton says, out working out. we don't have any reason to believe otherwise but we need more facts. >> if she does run, we should note let's see it rather than a one-page summary like obama and clinton, president clinton. >> when john mccain ran, it was like what was the lasting impact of having been a p.o.w. all of these questions came up. some of them weren't entirely fair. i think it is fair game to look at her medical records about what happened in 2012. >> one of the reasonsç the press were clamoring for
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mccain's records were he's too old to run for the job. let's look at hillary clinton. currently she is 66 years old. if she was elected president, she would be 69 years old. then if she were to serve two terms, she would be 77 years old. you're concerned? >> no. i'm actually not one that buys into the age problem. ronald reagan was in great shape. women are notorious for living longer than men. i think they effect us over the years. women are in better health than men and live longer. i don't think that per se is anç issue. i think it is an issue of ongoing health issues. >> when we started with the sound bite there when bill clinton said she works out every week, ep -- he probably meant more than once a week but that is all he said. >> he also said she is sharper than he is and other people would agree. >> thank you dr. segal. coming up, movies like this
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are gone with the wind but there's something happening right now to bring back the golden years of movies. we're going to explain. then 36,000 convicted criminals who are in this country illegally set free.
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situation in which your personnel, you got to spend time dealing with somebody who is not causing any other trouble other than the fact that they were trying to make a living for their families. >> wow. the president says law
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enforcement has better things o do than enforce immigration laws. is that what he's indicating? those comments a day after we learned immigration ask customs released 36,000 illegal convicts awaiting deportation. so why would we ever let criminals go free? what's behind this? joining us now, judge andrew napolitano. what's behind this? >> i wish i knew what was behind it. the president's statement that we just ran is highly misleading when he said the only thing you're trying to do is earn a living for your family. these are people who are not only here illegally, but while here illegally, committed a crime, got convicted of the crime, served time in jail for the crime, and now we're supposed to be -- were supposed to be deported. the problem is he has exercised his discretion to keep them free, out of jail during the period that they're waiting to be deported. you think they're going to show up for the deportation. the president's got a hangup with immigration laws and i don't know what his motivation unless et cetera these people to vote for the democrats because by giving the circumstances under which you can avoid
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deportation to immigrants and making up those circumstances, he made them up, basically telling people what to do to avoid being prosecuted, he has effectively changed the law. he was elected to enforce the law. not change the law. >> right. you know he wants comprehensive immigration reform and getting frustrated because the house hasn't done anything. here is a look at what some of these convicts who have served their time, but are not being detained, look what they've done. 193 have homicide charges or convicted of that. 426 convicted of sexual assaults. 1075 aggravated assault convictions. 1160 stolen vehicle convictions and others. >> when you have a conviction for a felony, and most of those are aggravated felony, meaning they involve violence -- the deportation procedure can be very fast. the deportation procedure is not
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a retrial of your criminal trial. the only issue is, are you this person who was convicted of this crime? answer yes. you go home. he has stopped those trials. >> think about the risk. if any of these guys go out and commit any of these crimes again while they're waiting fort deportation hearing, that goes right back to the global office. >> the government can't be sued. the response is political and he's won a second term. >> but people have a emotional reaction. >> of course people do. until there is another innocent injured victim. >> sorry to aggravate you. usually a peaceful place. thank you very much. let me tell you what's coming up over the next two hours. did you just take a sip of that coffee? you may want to slow down your sips. we'll tell you why. then it's the hit we all sing along to. first graders banned for performing the ymca at a talent show because it's racist.
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yes! ♪ ♪ usic♪ go to a park that doesn't have a theme. go to bass pro shops' go outdoors event and sale this weekend for free workshops and big savings on great gear for camping, hiking, boating, and paddlesports. bass pro shops.
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smoking with chantix. as a police officer, i've helped many people in the last 23 years. but i needed help in quitting smoking. along with support, chantix (varenicline) is proven to help people quit smoking. chantix reduced the urge for me to smoke. it actually caught me by surprise. some people had changes in behavior, thinking or mood, hostility, agitation, depressed mood and suicidal thoughts or actions while taking or after stopping chantix. if you notice any of these, stop chantix and call your doctor right away. tell your doctor about any history of mental health problems, which could get worse while taking chantix. don't take chantix if you've had a serious allergic or skin reaction to it. if you develop these, stop chantix and see your doctor right away as some could be life threatening. tell your doctor if you have a history of heart or blood vessel problems, or if you develop new or worse symptoms. get medical help right away if you have
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symptoms of a heart attack or stroke. use caution when driving or operating machinery. common side effects include nausea, trouble sleeping and unusual dreams. i did not know what it was like to be a non-smoker. but i do now. ask your doctor if chantix is right for you. woman: this is not exactly what i expected. man: definitely more murdery than the reviews said. captain obvious: this is a creepy room. man: oh hey, captain obvious. captain obvious: you should have used hotels.com. their genuine guest reviews are written by guests who have genuinely stayed there. instead of people who lie on the internet.
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son: look, a finger. captain: that's unsettling. man: you think? captain: all the time. except when i sleep. which i would not do here. hotels.com would have mentioned the finger. good morning, today is thursday, may 15. i'm elisabeth hasselbeck. we begin with a fox news alert. missing radio legend casey kasem has been found. where has he been and can his children bring him home? we've got the breaking details straight ahead. and she was the first to publicly mislead america about benghazi. so what does susan rice think the new committee will find? >> dang if i know. i mean, honestly. >> is that just a little too flip for you? we'll report. you decide. meanwhile, in one of the most unusual stories of the day, we ask you, is this racist?
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♪ it's fun to stay at the ymca ♪ it's fun to stay at the ymca ♪ >> okay. one school banning the school because it could be corrupting your kids. that is racist. how? you're going to find out this hour of "fox & friends" live from a rainy new york city. >> yeah. "ymca" racist. you'll find out why in two minutes. >> a lot of dancers will be in trouble across the nation if this continues. >> the fox news polling people never stopped. they asked this question, president obama and hillary clinton, are they seen as deceitful or right on the money? this seems to be more troublesome for the president now as we see the results in terms of being deceptive. look at this question. benghazi, terrorist attacks. is the president being deceptive or candid trying to deceive 54%
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say yes. hillary clinton, secretary of state then, just 4%. has been honest, 38% say i've heard enough. 40% say that hillary clinton has been honest. >> right. this next polling question here, did the obama administration knowingly lie about benghazi to help the reelection campaign? 51% of you said yes. >> there is one other one. this is also bad news for the administration and that is that 67% of americans approve of the benghazi committee and the investigation. so you know what? a majority of the country wants us to look into what exactly went seven weeks before the reelection of barak obama. what's interesting is susan rice, who went out on the sunday chat shows and repeated the white house lie that it's all because of that video, she was yesterday at a woman's foreign policy group in washington, d.c., was hosted by pbs's judy woodruff.
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judy asked a question about republican allegations regarding benghazi. and then susan rice said, you're too smart for that. come on, she said. and then judy woodruff to her credit said, do you think any new information is going to come out of it? and this is what she said. >> dang if i know. i mean, honestly. the administration has produced i think 25,000 pages of documents. it's hard to imagine what further will come of yet another committee. what i think about and focus on is the national security advisor, is what we can do and what we must do with congress to increase the security of our embassies and facilities around the world. what is lost in all of this discussion about sunday shows and talking points is that we lost four brave americans. >> that's not lost.
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that's at the center of it. that's the whole point. no one lost that. that's ridiculous. why would you even say that? >> but her head line when she went on the sunday shows, was it was a video. it was a video that caused that and we know now that was a lie and they knew it was a lie in the beginning. >> those lies weren't lost. they were wrongfully and brutally taken. they were killed in benghazi on her watch and on the watch of this administration and on the watch of hillary clinton. over 20 months later, we still don't have answers and dang if i know is a cavalier approach to a question that is trying to probe into this investigation that should have revealed answers long ago. >> i would like to see the democrats put up their five people and get started. leon panetta said democrats should do this. if people still have questions, we should have this and mike morell said the same thing. so democrat, stop with the rhetoric and let's get started. >> you're at a women's
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conference, the four who died are the son of a woman, husband of a woman, fathers. we're talking about individuals who directly affected women 'cause they are no longer here on this earth because of what seems to be a hidden reason that we didn't know and danged if i know wasn't a good enough explanation yesterday and it isn't good enough today. >> are you focusing on their reaction? >> yeah. >> they seem to be laughing after she made a comment? >> the audience seemed to laugh. >> she also made an inappropriate comment about going down in flames and considering how chris stevens died, ill advised. meanwhile, let's talk about the war on women. it is real, ladies and gentlemen. absolutely. but it's at the "new york times." why do i say that? jill abramsson, executive editor, was fired yesterday. she had found out the guy who had her job before she did, bill keller, was paid a lot more than she was being paid for the same job. he also had a bigger pension.
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but he had been there longer. she had been at another place. that kind of makes sense. but why would he make so much more? she hired an attorney. they looked into it. the bosses in the back room, the guys in the back room, they didn't like it. they felt she was pushy, according to a couple of new yorker reports. so yesterday they canned her. a war on women at the "new york times" and it exposes the hypocrisy where they say one thing in the pages of the "new york times" and yet, in the back room, they do something else. >> to your point, look at the recent headlines, dating back to 2009, equal pay for women denied again. that was may 20 in 09. shortchanging america's women, september 19, 2010. pay gap is because of gender, not jobs, april 23, 2014. for five years, there is a glimpse of the headlines with that banner of women's rights and equal pay where it was going on apparently under their own roof. >> she's replaced by a deputy
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that she insisted they hire to give her a hand. it's a male. i've heard of them, the men. >> he's african-american. >> yes. so here it is. here is a tweet. says the "new york times" pays him more than abramsson is proof they are sexist. if not, it's proof they are racist and sexist. that's the drain find themselves on. we think the reason is because of the pay discrepancy and the fact she got a lawyer involved to get her pay equal. we don't know. >> there are a number of sources now that confirm that. some other things could have been a factor, but the war on women is alive, it is true at the "new york times." i feel bad for her. >> we treat you equally, right? >> yeah. >> am i right? >> yeah. without a doubt. you have some breaking news out of california for us. >> we do. let me bring that right to you. brand-new pictures. take a look at this.
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some 50,000 gallons of oil now coating the streets of los angeles. you can see it right there. there are reports that a pipe has ruptured. the spill is covering about a half mile area in the glendale area, east of los angeles. we'll keep you updated on the story as it develops. radio legend casey kasem located in washington state hours after his daughter filed a missing person's report. she just released this statement saying, quote, we are grateful to local authorities for finding my dad. we are one step closer to bring him home. a judge ordered a search warrant for the 82-year-old after his family said that their stepmother, jean, you can see here, had kidnapped him from a california nursing home last week. they've been battling her in court for some time now to try to get to see their dad who has advanced parkinson's and can no longer speak. three hours from now, the september 11 museum will be dedicated before it opens to the public next week. inside more than 10,000
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artifacts, including the ground zero cross that's forged in steel, and also the antenna from the north tower. some other items you can see there, a melted phone from the pentagon and a fire truck from ladder company 3 in new york city. the firefighters who worked at ladder 3 died that day trying to save others. the white house just announcing the administration's review of the v.a. scandal will be handled by one of the president's closest advisors. rob neighbors is the deputy chief of staff to the president. he'll work with the v.a. to figure out how to better care for our veterans. hours from now the scandal heads to capitol hill. v.a. secretary eric shinseki will secretary about the alleged secret waiting lists at clinics across the country. and those are your headlines. we got word this morning there will be a new on line whistle blower program that's been announced by a veterans group so people can report some of the problems. >> that's great. >> we get a lot of e-mails and notes from people who have problems at these places. >> that's a step in the right
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direction. thank you very much. do you remember this song, because i don't. ♪ go to the ymca ♪ . >> you got it. >> how many times have you sung along, have you done the dance? as it turns out that, is a racist song. and in fact, in fargo, north dakota, at bennett elementary school, they were going to do this number at a talent show and one parent objected because of the native american in it and now it's been canceled. >> because they were come supposed to come dressed up like members of the village people there. >> they have no problem with this guy, or the construction worker, or the cop. >> right. one parent dubbing it offensive and racist to be dressed up like stereo typical native americans
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caricature. >> so you can't do the ymca. sorry, kids. children, stop crying now. by the way, did they shoot that video in one day? for a song that's an iconic song, they basically got a hand held camera and went out and said dance in the streets. i'll put my boom box on the side and just prance. >> here is our question for you, is the ymca, is that a racist song if you have the village people doing it in the costumes? let us know. you can tweet us as well or facebook us. >> or send the video of you dancing to the song. >> we've got video of you doing it at a wedding. but you only did the y. >> what was wrong with m, c, and a. >> my problem is i thought it was a team work thing that everyone had their own letter. i didn't know you could spell ymca. >> ryan just went y. >> y.
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>> something worked. edie is still married to him. at least i didn't screw up that relationship. >> meanwhile, it is 7:11 here. coming up, new e-mail revealed the irs's targeting of tea party groups came from washington. yes, it was political. so just how serious is the scandal? the attorney for a number of tea party groups joins us next. plus. >> baseball player's walk up song has people wondering this morning. ♪ ♪ though i'm never going to dance again the way i danced with you ♪ ♪ meaty centers and teeth cleaning texture,it's dental that tastes so good.
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bombshell new e-mail offering a even more evidence the irs specifically targeted tea party groups and conservative groups and that came from washington. one e-mail reads, exempt organization technical eot is working the tea party applications in coordination with cincy. we are providing copies of our development letters with the agent to use these examples in the development of their cases. that was from washington. we heard it was out there in cincinnati. joining us with her reaction is the attorney representing the tea party groups involved in this scandal, including true to vote, good to see you. the white house and democrats in congress have been exposed. they have been pushing the story that this was just a few rogue agents out in cincinnati. they just decided to take it on on their own. not true. it originated in washington, d.c. and cincinnati helped them
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out. >> that's exactly right. in fact, speaking of truth about it, i talked to someone in cincinnati, an agent in cincinnati in october of 2011 and then again in december of 2011 and he told me that they -- he could do nothing about true to vote applications for c 3 status because it was all being hammed out of washington. so when these people have been saying this, i have another client who applied in october 2009 and they were fighting obamacare. i never heard from anyone in cincinnati. we only dealt with washington. so all of this has been a lie from day one, from lois lerner. they were very involved at the very highest level in this from day one. >> plus a new name and that is carl levin, the retiring senator, a democrat from michigan, he's been caught red handed. he repeatedly was pressuring the irs to clamp down on these political opponents of his. >> let me tell you, that's the
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thing that's the big headline that people need to really focus on. you had carl levin summoning lois lerner and sending letters to the irs demanding that the irs use its power to crack down on people who disagreed with him and the democrats in the obama administration. but he's not the only one. we see the same thing with sheldon white house who was trying to get the justice department to criminally prosecute conservatives and it's all the same kind of thing that you see today with harry reid attacking the koch brothers. political -- people who disagree with him philosophically and i think we in america need to say, these democrats need to stop using government to try to beat up on and silence their political enemies. it's a terrible situation. >> and yet, not a smidgen of corruption, according to the president. >> right. well, that's because he and his contemporaries and his colleagues were practicing chicago-style thuggery politics to try to stop people who
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disagree with them and they're still doing it and they don't see anything wrong with it. so that's why i guess he doesn't think it's corrupt. >> now that judicial watch has actually gotten their hands on some of these unredacted e-mail, the irs had sent some to congress, but they were all marked up. you couldn't tell what they were. now we actually know what was going on and there were a lot of shenanigans. >> remember that judicial watch filed a request, freedom of information act last may, irs did not stopped, did not respond. and they were asking -- judicial watch was asking for all the documents surrounding this scandal and the targeting of tea party groups. they filed suit in federal court in october. now the irs is under a federal court order to turn over the documents and now judicial watch, a citizens group, is getting more information than our elected representatives. >> well, the government certainly does have a loft explain -- lot of explaining to do. thank you for your information on this. >> thank you.
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>> all right. coming up, did you just take a sip of coffee? if you haven't, you will. you might want to actually slow down. we're about to tell you why. then you know him from full metal jacket. this morning we'll see a whole new side to lee ermey. he's going to the dogs. good morning to you, sir. ♪ ♪
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welcome back. time for news by the numbers. 140,000. that's the number of 2014 chevy malibus gm is recalling because the brakes could fail. the cars were manufactured between june of last year and now. more than a dollar. that's how much a pound of
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coffee is expected to go up this year. the drought in brazil is to blame there. 102 years old is not too old to hit maximum speeds. edith pinninger drove around the indiana speedway with mario andrete, hitting speeds of 100 miles per hour. other only regret is they didn't drive faster. >> best known for his role in "full metal jacket." watch this. >> your senior drill instructor. from now on you will speak only when spoken to and the first and last words out of your filthy sewers will be sir. you maggots understand that? >> yes, sir! >> but he also served 11 years proudly in the u.s. marines where he was promote to do gunnery sergeant before retired and joining us with two of the stars from "saving private canine." >> good morning. this is america and we love our
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dogs. >> we do. this is davonte right here and ho is on the leash? >> i'm not sure which one is which. we've got a couple of them. they're very well behaved animals. we came up with the concept of the show. there is some very dramatic moments and some real tear jerkers. we reunite a working dog that's been in combat with his handler. they get wounded. handler goes one way, the dog goes the other way. the handler spends the rest of his life look for his dog. a couple of our shows we reunited and found the handlers. i looked up at my camera guy that's bawling and the sound guy has a kleenex going over there, pile of them. it's all i can do to keep my composure, but these guys are beautiful animals. >> can we see a clip of the show? let's watch. >> dog goes up there, sniffs the
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door and responds. they all turn around and look at me like, what does that mean? and i say, that means there is bombs in there. >> while i'm in the process of handcuffing this first subject, i hear a loud crash. immediate yelping. he had to be hurt badly. i was almost scared to pull my leash in because i didn't know what exactly was going to be on the other end. i would say rex is definitely my hero. >> there are 2500 trained canines that are actually working to help the military. the dogs we see here are really acting to get the message out to tell the true stories that have happened and when you see the reunions, it is just so heart warming. >> it's important to me -- my objective with the show is to -- we need to work it out where we retire these dogs, they go to a loving home. these are not vicious, mean
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animals. they're well disciplined animals. they can fit into the household. so one of our shows, this dog had gotten lost from his handler. his handler was wounded, he was wounded. he came back to combat after he was repaired and they retired the dog and the dog went to a kennel. he was in an 8 by 8 cage and he lost all of his teeth. >> this is a beautiful dog. you got him when he was eight weeks old? >> yes, sir. >> brought him back from where? >> slovakia. right in czechoslovakia. i got him when he was there. >> do you want to see another dog that you had on your show? this is an acting dog, not necessarily a service dog. this dog is an actor? >> they are. >> they hate to share the stage. >> they like their moment. >> icon. >> come on, baby. >> can i get your comments?
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this is so heart warming. heart break something what we're hearing when it comes to the v.a., we hear what's happening with the v.a., general shinseki about to be questioned on that. >> there is only one person that we need to point the finger at and that's the guy in charge of veterans affairs. he's up there on the hill desperately trying to figure out who to point the finger at. >> do you blame general shinseki? >> you know what? if the shoe fits, that's what i say. but here we got a little v.a. hospital, they're trying to blame the v.a. hospital itself. if it's underfunded and we've been at war for how many years now? so they doubled the workload, whose fault is it? i say department of veterans affairs and whoever the big boss is up there, that's the one we need to look at. >> sure. if it was just one hospital, but suddenly it's a whole bunch of hospitals around the country and
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they're all doing the same thing. they had to get the word electric somebody. >> they're broke. they don't have the money. they're not funded well. >> so that's a good point. real quick, what's this dog's name? >> icon. she's a long haired belgian shepherd. >> check out the new show that will debut on may 15 at 8:30. >> go to the web site. sportsmanchannel.com and put your zip code in there and let me tell you -- it will tell what you channel to go to. tonight at 8:30. come on, guys, we got to watch this show! >> thank you so much. >> coming up, you've heard the safest place in a thunderstorm is in your car. that's not true. this car got struck by lightning and just wait until you see what happens next. and the baseball player's
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walk defines who they are. that has everybody -- >> this is his song? >> this is his song that has everyone whispering this morning. hey, it must have worked. he got a couple of hits. ♪ ♪ waste the chance that i've been given ♪ ♪ though i'm never going to dance again the way i danced with you ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ it's throwback thursday, that's the day i graduated from the university of kansas with a masters in morning television. >> that was a night course, wasn't it? >> it was right there. >> proud moment there. >> i love this. you know what? we asked you to send in some pictures of your graduations. viewers jeff and darla graduated high school together and today they're married. congratulations. >> that never works. >> graduating from the united states military academy in 1986 is shown right here. >> this was tweeted and writes, quote, shear one from the university of tennessee in 1996. can you see peyton manning? he's a few rows in front? nice. remember he stayed in school for
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an extra year because he wanted to get a degree in case the whole football thing fell apart. it ended up working out. >> today it's graduation day on throwback thursday. go ahead, continue to e-mail them to us. we'll post them on line and on the air. >> yes. we're going to graduate now to heather nauert with some headlines. >> good morning. i've got news to bring you this morning. remember the story, the iraqi man who was accused of murdering his wife because she wanted a divorce? he will learn his fate the mother of five was beaten to death back in 2012. the husband was angry over his wife's plans to move to texas to be with her sister. a dramatic rescue caught on camera. take a look at what happens when lightning strikes a woman's car. it sets it on fire and it traps her inside. >> jump out! you okay? >> help her out! back to my car! >> that's it? >> oh, boy. that happened in minnesota.
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a police officer used his pocket knife to smash open that window and 18-year-old man saw what was happening and helped pull out the woman. >> i looked back and look at it, it's pretty shocking what i actually did. lifted up this lady and pulled her out of her car, across the car. >> according to him, he's in the law enforcement program. he can come back and help any day. >> that's great. smith is studying law enforcement at the minnesota state university. congratulations for that save. the hotel employee who leaked the same of beyonce's sister attacking jay-z now out of a job this morning. the standard hotel in new york city fired the security guard who sold the footage to tmz for $250,000. wow. this is our favorite story of the day. a baseball player's walk-up song has a lot of people whispering this morning. listen to what it is. >> listen to his new walk-up song. it's a favorite.
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♪ ♪ >> look at the pitcher rocks out to it. that is josh there from the oakland a's and the sound is "careless whisper" by wham. these players are so superstitious. so we had to pick our theme songs and i picked mine. i love white snake "here i go again." >> when you walk in, this is what we hear. ♪ ♪ ♪ here i go again ♪ . >> that's great. >> heather, we're going to play that every time you walk out. >> i love that song. >> every time i walk out from here on out, i want to hear bon jovi singing this. ♪ it's my life ♪ . >> come on, crew! ♪ live forever
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♪ i just want to live forever. >> i want to here yours first. >> this is a song that gets me going. the crew knows this 'cause i play it every morning. >> parry manilow. ♪ i write the songs that -- >> do you have one, elisabeth? >> yeah, but i'm going to wait. i'm going to wait and send it in a little bit and you'll hear it. in the meantime, we'll sing it out to maria molina who is outside. >> she's singing in the rain. >> cats and dogs, pouring down there, yes? >> good morning. no, not yet here in new york city. we had a little -- we have a little lull at the moment. but we are expecting that rain to continue over the next several hours out here. anywhere along parts of the east coast today, you are going to be dealing with the same storm system producing areas of rain and potentially even some flooding from northern parts of
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florida all the way up to parts of northeast. we're looking at several inches of rain anticipated out here. that's why that flood risk is in place. temperature wise, well below average across parts of northern plains. early this morning, we had them dipping down below freezing levels. so a number of warnings were issued out there in terms of those freezing conditions and hot temperatures continuing in place across parts of the desert southwest. that's a concern with the elevatorred fire danger in place. by the way, yesterday i had the amazing opportunity of participating in the sadie nash leadership project teacher for a day event here in new york city and there i spoke to about 50 exceptional young ladies about becoming a fox news meteorologist and gave them a little advice for their future. take a listen. >> a lot of men are in science and math and my degree was very math and science heavy. so i did notice when i would go to classes that there would be a lot of other guys around. not a lot of women. but it made me proud to
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represent women and entering my field, i think that makes you unique doing what you love and try to make that your career. that way every day you wake up, you don't feel like you're going to work. >> yep. every single day is a lot of fun when you do what you love, right? >> awesome. >> very good. >> how many people could do what maria does, get up in the middle of the night and go to school at night? >> straight ahead, breaking overnight, radio legend casey kasem is found. but where and what happens next? what kind of rights does his family have? we're going to talk about that. >> then it's an olympic sport, but the fencing team at one college is now kicked off campus because it's too dangerous. olympic medalist tim moorehouse here to help us prove that is indeed the wrong thing to do. >> first the trivia question of the day, born on this day in 1969, this three-time super bowl champion won the third season of
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"dancing with the stars." who is he? be the first to e-mail us with the correct answer. >> i wonder if his walkout song was barry manilow. ♪ ♪ how did we do it last time? i don't know... i forget. feeding your lawn need not be so difficult neighbors. get a load of this bad boy. whoa. this snap spreader system from scotts is snap-crackin' simple -- just snap, lock, and go. [ scott ] feed your lawn. feed it!
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time for quick headlines. the trouble with schools edition, coaching doesn't pay the bills, but apparently stealing from kids does. 43-year-old rodney barns, a florida high school coach under arrest for stealing cash from kids' lockers. cops say he took 1,000 bucks before he got caught head handed. this teacher in ohio caught on camera outside a bathroom. look at this, lifting up a six-year-old by his shirt. she then grabs his face. the teacher is suspended ten days. parents say that's not enough. they want charges filed. no word on what sparked the
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behavior. but the video is shocking. elisabeth? >> outlandish. you are right. he is one of america's most famous voices. >> hello again and welcome to american top 40. my name is casey kasem and i'm ready to count down the most popular songs in the nation. >> after a frantic search, this morning case cree kasem has reportedly been found in washington state. his daughter had filed a missing person's report and claimed he was kidnapped by his wife. in the aftermath, a new war beginning for control over casey's life, the famous d.j. has lost his voice. so who will speak for casey? joining me to explain the options, fox news legal analyst, peter johnson, jr. >> who speaks for casey now that he's lost his voice from either parkinson's or louis body syndrome, which is another neurological disability? there has been a fight between his wife, married since 1980, and his children from the first marriage. now one of the daughters from the first marriage has been
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appointed the temporary conservator. what is a temporary conservator? that's a person who is appointed to take care of the immediate needs of the person, has access to medical records and reports that were previously sealed by the court and they get to pick a doctor or health care facility and to decide going forward how casey will be taken care of. >> sure. and that's a lot of responsibility. >> it is. >> you say this is just the beginning, though. they're really looking for what? >> this is the beginning, i believe. this fight will go on, unfortunately, until his death and then there after. we wish him all good speed and all good health. but i think this is the prelim for the big, big fight in terms of casey kasem's substantial estate at the time of his death. so there is concerns about documents that were made earlier in his life, whether he had the ability or capacity to actually enter into those agreements. that will go to the will that he has, assuming he has a will. i'm sure he does at this point,
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whether he had the testamentary capacity. so the fights are starting now. but i believe the fights will go on. people can control their own lives in terms of neurological disability and parkinson's disease and alzheimer's. you can make plans today in terms of power of attorney, in terms of other documents in your particular state to ensure that you appoint a specific person to look after you in the event of disability so you don't have this kind of fight. evidently there was some kind of document signed here, but that's become the subject of a fight. now the daughter incredibly, one of the daughters has been named the temporary conservator over the existing wife. >> does that override documents that may have been signed? >> it has. there was a court order and they come back june 20 to find out what's going on. common thing in hollywood, even britney spears for the last five or six years had a conservator. not only over her person, but over her financial estate. >> interesting here. thankful that they found him,
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but we're going to find more details ahead. thank you. >> good to see you. up ahead, it's an olympic sport. but the fencing team at one university is now kicked off campus because it's too dangerous? olympic medalist tim moorehouse here to help us prove that wrong. first on this day in history in 1928, the first mickey mouse cartoon premiered in 1991. president h.w. bush took queen elisabeth to her first baseball game. in 1982, "ebony and ivory," paul mccartney and stevie wonder was number one. ♪ there is good and bad in everyone ♪ ♪ learn to live when we learn ta give each other ♪do ♪ r aspirin regimen to help reduce the risk of another one. if you've had a heart attack be sure to talk to your doctor before you begin an aspirin regimen.
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the answer to the trivia question is emmitt smith and our winner is michelle gee from louisiana. you'll get a copy of my book, "george washington's secret six." hopefully you'll like it. a fencing club forced off campus because the school says it violates the weapons policy. our guest is the founder of fencing in the schools. he taught president obama how to fence. he doesn't understand why they sanctioned the sport. in fact, tim, welcome. thanks for bringing your guys and ladies with us. >> to defend our sport. >> you wrote a letter to the school. >> we wrote a letter to the president. it's a sanctioned ncaa sport. it's extremely safe. so everyone knows in case there is any misunderstanding, no one gets stabbed in fencing. no one bleeds. we're not in the victorrian era. the rules -- it's all life. we got things that light up when we hit. simple sport. very safe. safer than curling.
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>> you're doing so much for the sport. they should do that. curling actually, it's safe and sweeps. it's the cleanest sport around. give us some basics. let us see it in action. show us who we have. >> we have a member of our beijing and london olympic team. ben stone from new york. we'll show you a few moves. looking good. >> all right. let's see how safe this is. >> he's going to -- she's going to get ben in the head. these mats are safe. >> he's okay. he's in high school. he's doing good. hit him to the left and right side. and they're made out of the same thing as bullet proof vests. the university said people would be scared that they would think the sword fight had on campus, like a real one. i think you can see from these outfits, if you saw them, no one will be worried about a sword fight. >> what is the goal? points when you hit your body? >> the objective is simple. she wants to touch her opponent
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to score a point and she's going to try to block her. you'll see a parry right here. basically you're defending and trying to score on your opponent. most ancient sport in the world. one of the first olympic sports around. 1896, the founder of the olympic games is a fencer. >> george patton was a fencer. >> right. i had a saber around president obama at the white house. the secret service had to problem with it. >> has it ever happened where you're having a one on one where someone comes running out of the locker room and it ends up two on one? >> only in the movies. >> i want to learn basics of fencing 'cause you never know when i'll go pro 'cause obviously i need another profession if you seen me work. >> i'm going to show you the enguard position. put your front foot forward. twist your back leg and bend your knees and you're now in enguard position. i'll hand you a saber. you're ready. >> stay where you are. >> you're ready. so you can lunge and hit me in the mask. >> should i put my helmet on?
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>> go ahead. i won't hit you. you got to learn how to block, too. block like that. i'm using a foil. that's a block to head. very safe. a lot of fun. kids love the sport all around the country. we have 10,000 kids fencing. one of the safest sports in the world. i heard you want to take on all five of us. >> come on. stay where you are. >> you guys ready? >> the light goes on! you lost. >> they didn't touch me! >> be careful with my buddy there. five minutes to the top of the hour. coming up, he's a tea party favorite who won a big primary. so what does ben sasse think about the latest irs bombshell connecting the scandal to the white house? stick around. he'll be here in minutes. ♪
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good morning. today is thursday, may 15. i'm elisabeth hasselbeck. we begin with a fox news alert. missing radio legend casey kasem has been found. where has he been and can his children bring him home? the new details breaking overnight just head. new bombshell e-mail revealed the irs targeting of tea party groups started in washington. not cincinnati. and it was political. just how serious is this scandal? serious. americans speaking out in brand-new polls. you'll see this hour. also what would you do if you found $40,000 hidden in a couch cushion in a cup that you bought for $20? it happened to these people. what they did next is priceless.
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mornings are better with friends. ♪ ♪ mama said knock you out i'm gonna knock you out ♪ >> i wish this song worked for me. this is my walk out song because it's throwback thursday. i figured i'd blend the two. >> i'm a little troubled. knock you out? >> well, it's what i would sort of say to the ball when i would play baseball or softball. it never worked out. i never put one over. >> on softball, are there theme songs for each hitter like there are in baseball? >> no. like the oakland players of walk out song that has everybody talking. >> because this oakland player, "careless whisper" came out that song and it was different than the average walkout song.
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steve, yours was? >> bon jovi, "it's my life." >> heather? >> headline wise, here she goes again. >> out of california, new pictures just in to "fox & friends," take a look at this. 50,000 gallons of oil so far coating the streets of glendale, california, just outside of los angeles. there are reports that a 20-inch pipe ruptured around midnight local time. that spill covering half a mile area. it in some areas, it's knee deep. we'll keep you updated as this story develops. what a mess. a heart breaking end for the family of a missing fort bragg soldier. police discovering the body of private first class kelli bordeaux in the woods about four miles from the bar in north carolina where she was last seen out after a night out with friends. >> just relief, moving on from that stage of the not knowing, which has been horrible.
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two years of what if, what if. >> nicholas holbert has been charged with murder. he said he gave her a ride home the night that she disappeared. hotel employee who leaked the tape of beyonce's sister attacking jay-z is now out of a job. the standard hotel in new york city fired the security guard who sold the footage to tmz for $250,000. the hotel now says it will be, quote, turning over all available information to criminal authorities. listen to this one, there is no sibling rivalry here. watch as a 13-year-old girl carries her twin sister on her back to the finish line. this happened in southern illinois state university track meet. khloe hurt her leg and that's when her sister, claire, jumped in and carried her 370 of the 400-meters left in the race. wow. claire says it's about showing compassion, love and sportsmanship. even if you lose and help somebody, it is still worth it. what a good sister.
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those are your headlines. >> so she wasn't disqualified? >> that part, i don't know. >> stay on that. >> one of the reasons you want a tip. number one, the a smarter of the two can show up and take the test. number two, if you choose the same sport and one gets hurt, the other is obligated to carry you, by the law of twinship. patty duke. >> someone else may need a twin shortly. could be lois lerner. we learn more about new e-mails with regard to the irs scandal as they targeted conservative groups filing for tax exempt status. these e-mails judicial watch is revealing actually reveal that this whole scandal wasn't just a small group in ohio and cincinnati that was dealing with this little scandal here. no. it actually links directly the white house, dc, to the irs pressuring these groups, putting them in the back room and really
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not dealing with them. really not allowing them to communicate with you, the american people when it comes to elections. >> this is a bombshell because congress has gotten a number of these e-mail, but they've been all blacked out. they've excised the important part. judicial watch wound up with clean copies of it. it's very clear that while the white house, while democrats have been saying, you know what, this is just a few rogue agents out there in cincinnati, it originated in washington, d.c., and you've got a very powerful democratic senator, carl levin from michigan, who constantly was calling the irs, telling them to crack down on his political opponents. this is a bombshell. we've got the proof. >> yes. senator levin and senator schumer were speaking out saying these shouldn't be tax exempt organization. we think they have a political bent and should not be tax compel. so we just thought that was rhetoric and they were taking a position. little did we know they were picking up the phone, calling
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the irs and saying hammer these guys. push them aside. delay their application. deny their application. and some of the interplay here shows that familiarity between them. for example, levin wrote on march 30, 2012 to douglas shulman. he says the urgency of the issue of possible political activity by nonprofit applicants. says if the irs was sending -- wanted to make sure the irs was sending out additional information forms to delay the tea party organizations from going ok'd and getting up and running. >> 12 nonprofit groups they wanted to investigate for, quote, political activity. >> his office says look, it wasn't just the republican groups. it was also people on his side as well. one of the e-mails -- keep in mind, there are a lot of them out there. here is one of them we're going to highlight this morning. the e-mail said, exempt organization technical, eot, is working with the tea party applications in coordinating
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with cincinnati. in other words, if they're coordinating with cincinnati, this is coming from washington. see, it's not just rogue agents. >> that's what the eot is based. >> yeah. we are developing a few applications here in dc -- look at that, once again proof -- and providing copies of our development letters with the agent to use as examples in the development of their cases. earlier we had on the program cleta mitchell, who represented a number of the groups, the tea party groups, and she's told us that she knew early on that it was being done in washington and not cincinnati. here she was one hour ago here on the show. >> i talked to someone in cincinnati, an agent in cincinnati in october of 2011 and then again in december of 2011 and he told me that he could do nothing about the true to vote applications for c 3 status because it was all being handled out of washington. i never heard from anyone in cincinnati. we only dealt with washington. so all of this has been a lie from day one, from lois lerner.
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they were very involved at the very highest levels in this from day one. >> all the congressional committees appointed to look into this, none of these e-mails were released. it took a court order to get this information out and get a little bit closer to the truth. recent polling question said this, how serious do you consider the irs targeting conservative groups? 44% of you said very. 27% somewhat. that's 71% of you that say this is something to be considered. this is serious. >> how about that 11% that says not at all concerned? well, if your group was being targeted, you would be upset by it. maybe it's just the 11% who doesn't care about whether or not the rights of conservatives infringe. coming up in a couple minutes, brian, you'll be talking to the new guy out there in nebraska. he just became their nominee for the republican party. >> shear what else we'll be investigating now. what's the art of redacting?
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now we have to find out why certain things are blacked out, which goes against why things are blacked out to begin with. you could arbitrarily say, we'll get rid of that name, rid of that name. what are the rules on recaucus. it indicates perhaps there was a reason behind the redaction and incriminating those who didn't want it pout out in the first place. >> anyway, it's hitting the fan. meanwhile, live pictures this morning outside of the september 11 memorial in lower manhattan honoring the nearly 3,000 people who died on that day. >> today that museum is finally opening its doors. anna kooiman joins us live from lower manhattan. >> reporter: good morning to you. good morning to everyone at home. guys, the 9-11 memorial museum is unique because in a sense, it's a set of artifacts within an artifact and the dedication ceremony is set to get underway
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in a couple of hours. president obama will be attending as 110,000 square foot gallery is unveiled 70 feet below ground zero. >> we have a very tragic alert for you right now. incredible plane crash into the world trade center. >> reporter: very few can forget where they were the morning of september 11, 2001. here beneath the ground that once hell the twin towers, memories of horror, confusion and heroism relived. >> the innocents who died that day did what we do every day. simply get up in the morning and go to work. >> there has been an explosion in world trade one. it's the other building. it looks like a plane struck it. it's horrible. >> the terrorists tested our patriotism and faith that day. but american flags flew high and who can forget the cross forged in steel.
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more than 10,000 artifacts on display throughout the museum. the antenna from the north tower, melted phone from the pentagon, the staircase telling stories of survival. frantic civilians fleeing from the towers before they collapsed. the entire crew of firefighters from ladder 3 responding, died inside when the north tower fell. this watch belonging to one of the heroic passengers who overtook the terrorists on flight 93. >> so many faces vanished that clear september day. family members posting signs after calling hospitals and hot lines searching for the missing. many of which never turned up. in all, 2983 innocent people died. >> i can hear you! the rest of the world hears you! and the people who knocked these buildings down will hear all of us soon! >> reporter: just as america vowed, we will never forget. >> usa! usa!
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usa! >> reporter: usa. for the first six days, the 9-11 memorial museum will be only open to the 9-11 community, that's survivor, family members and firefighters. then on may 21, general admission price of $24. but there has been an outcry for it to be for free because of the nature of the event. but we're told a $60 million is what it's going to cost a year to operate this museum annually. back to you. >> all right. anna kooiman in lower manhattan where someone boyser ously ously shouting usa. >> i talked o a family member and they said it will provide great comfort. great comfort to have a special place to go to remember. it is now 11 minutes after the top of the hour on this thursday. coming up, more than 7 millionso
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expedia, find yours candidate who just won nebraska's gop senate primary this week. joining me right now for his first cable news interview since claiming victory is ben sasse. congratulations. i know everything must be in a whirlwind right now.
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before we talk candidacy and chances of keeping that senate seat republican, i want to talk to you first about these new e-mails that have come to light thanks to the freedom of information watch and judicial watch, i should say, that show a connection between washington, cincinnati, and the irs targeting of tea party groups. your reaction? >> there is a pattern with this administration. you try to object if i indicate and deny and delay and by the time there is information that comes out, they say it's old news and it's really troubling. we need more aggressive congressional oversight in and this administration needs to stop to write law. they're out of control. >> it really took high profile type candidates like sarah palin, ted cruz and others to help you out. but other people didn't have the benefit, weren't beneficiary of the tea party and how they have organized. that election is now in our rearview mirror. to you think it's time for us to move on or drill down? >> what i find in nebraska is that the folks here, they
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believe that the center of life is in nebraska. not washington, d.c and what tea party means to most of the folks across our state is they want more urgency out of washington about the bigger things and staying out of the vast majority alike. so i think when you talk to people across the 93 counties in nebraska, what they're looking for is a lot more serious return to constitutional principles, which is just the american idea that life is fundamentally lived in the private sector. i think that idea is a winning idea all across the electorate. >> you're a especially guy that elect -- a guy that collected 49% of the vote in your district and looking to fill the republican seat. in the big picture, you're a guy that fixes thing, starting from our old university on down. you think you can do that same thing with washington? >> i think the people of america when they're set free to build great things, they do it. we can fix big things in this country. but not if you try centrally plan life. you look at obamacare trying to centrally plan 18% of gdp, it's not work. the people know it isn't going
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to work. you need to reempower doctors and patients and the local community. i think that's true in sector after sector in america. so we need to free up the american people to be fixing things by having washington stop meddling in things of life. >> do you think ted cruz and company and senator lee are coming out and saying good, we hope ben gets in because we need help in there. do you find yourself much different than the so-called main stream republican? >> you know, i'm not always sure what mainstream republican means. so many of these labels seem like they're driven by national liberal media whose favorite topic is republican fighting republicans. in the election that we just had tuesday night, we had five good candidates running on the republican side. but what ultimately happened in our election was people rallied around the idea of america and i think that if mainstream republican means you're satisfied with the way washington works right now, then the people in nebraska we don't believe in that. i'm a very conservative guy. but we don't think the problem in washington is just with the
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democrats in charge. we think it's too many republicans want washington to be in charge and we want nebraska to be in charge and we want our neighbors in the south to want their states and their communities to be in charge. so i think we can bridge a lot of these republican divides and we can move forward building the bigger future. but not if you think that washington ruling the country is in our interest, 'cause we don't believe that. >> ben, when you look at the tea party today and the fact that you are the so-called tea party candidate who won convincingly the nomination, what do you think that says about the health of the tea party that so many want to write off? >> in our campaign, what we were trying to do is say we wanted more of everybody. we wanted more pro-lifers and more second amendment folks and more tea partiers, constitutional conservatives and more small business people. but what most tea party people want to talk about is a constitutional recovery. i really believe that that's a winning message across the whole republican party and across the middle of the electorate as well. i want to celebrate the tea
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party ideals of constitutional conservatism. but let's talk about what it means and what we're for. not just what we're against. when you talk to nebraskans all across this state, that's what they want. they want to hear what we're for. >> i don't think ben nelson nebraska compromise is on your agenda. let's see if you get the seat. dave domino will be your opponent. it's game on. congratulations on your victory on tuesday. >> thanks a lot. welcome to nebraska. we're glad you're here. >> great. 20 minutes after top of the hour. we told but this story, we've been tracking them. casey kasem, we'll tell you the details and how it happened and could something similar happen to you, your mom, your dad. bob massi takes you inside the law next. and remember when we spent millions to build a brand-new soccer field in iraq? they seemed to happy then. now they're ripped up because the terrorists and fear of what could be done there if they show up just to kick the ball around
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24 minutes past the hour. a time to give you the stories making headlines around the world. in south korea, 15 crew members from the ferry disaster indicted. four of them, including the captain, are charged with murder. the group all involved in the ship's navigation. iran, thousands of women are using facebook to defy the law. they're posting pictures of themselves throwing off the haja about, s. the page has gotten 170,000 likes. now to baghdad, millions of u.s. taxpayer money wasted on new soccer fields. a report revealed the fields are littered with broken bottles and
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garbage. people don't use them because apparently they are targeted by terrorists. steve? >> thank you very much. time for some legalese. scamming seniors is a growing epidemic with more than 7 million americans over the age of 65. they've already been victimized and the annual financial losses totaling at least $2.9 billion. what you should know to keep your parents and grandparents and friends safe. bob massi is a fox news legal analyst and joins us live. this is important for anybody, bob, who has got an older parent or grandparent. then you look at the casey kasem story where it sounds like he could have been exploited by a family member with the advanced parkinson's. >> here is what exploitation looks like. you have somebody who is in a trustworthy position, a neighbor, a care giver, a friend, all of a sudden there is no family members around, or maybe there is one family member that all of a sudden appears, steve.
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and they get this sense of entitlement. all of a sudden, names appear on checking accounts. names appear on real estate, the home. in this case with casey, all of a sudden they take him somewhere. it's almost like they're taking over the will of the person and they are exploiting them and many times the elderly become vulnerable and they don't even know that it's going on and that's the danger and that's why it's at an all-time epidemic in this country. >> so you've pretty much answered our first question about the signs. what's the danger behind giving a family member financial power of attorney, because people, power of attorney, i don't know what that is. it can't be bad. it can be bad! >> well, here is the problem. when you usually do your estate planning, you have a trust. you have a will. you have what we call medical door of power of attorney and special powers of attorney which become effective, generally speaking, when somebody becomes
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incompetent. here is what happens. those of you who have been empowered to be that special power, that doesn't give you the right to take their money. it doesn't give you the right to all of a sudden borrow money from that account to buy a car. it is generally designed specifically in the language of most power of attorneys for financial reasons. it's to pay the bills of the person, to take care of that person. but it doesn't give that person who has been empowered the right to say, oh, you know what? i need $10,000 to loan to my son, to my daughter. i'm just going to take it out of that account. as a result, the bottom line is many times these documents become very dangerous. that's why competent estate planning lawyers explain to their clients, listen, this is the power you are giving to somebody. do you you understand what you're giving? they're necessary documents, but please understand the dangers also that surround them. that's why competent people will explain that to them.
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>> unfortunately, it happens all the time. for the people looking in right now, what's the number one most important thing they need to know? >> if in fact you believe that you have a family member that's being exploited by another family member, it's amazing, steve, what impending death does to people who think money is coming down the road. greed is a terrible thing. there are divisions in every state for elder abuse. if you believe somebody, a loved one is being exploited in any way, you have the right to file a complaint with the elder abuse divisions of the police department. they're very easy to find on line. you can google it. file a complaint. let them know and they will immediately -- they're pretty aggressive. they will investigate to make sure that, in fact, these people are not being exploited. so there are remedies out there more than ever before. and thank goodness for that. >> absolutely. 7 million americans impacted. maybe more. you've given us a defense against it. bob massi joining us today from las vegas, thank you. >> thank you. next up on this thursday,
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♪ ♪ >> maria looks so different. barely can recognize her. >> maria molina -- >> exactly the same. >> it was a week ago! >> throwback thursday. one week ago. look at her there. >> there is heather. >> look at heather nauert. >> graduating from -- what is that, high school? >> sleeveless. >> i love the winged out hair. i love it. >> this is brian tully. >> yep. he's scream left. and there he is graduating western illinois university. there he is with his broadcasting professor who by the way watches "fox & friends" every day. so good morning to you, sir. >> we should tell tully that it can't affect his grades.
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we're not going to be able to affect anything that's happened. >> look who we have here. this is michael tammero, graduating from fairfield university, 1993. got the shades on. >> that's great. speaking of, look who joins us now, right? what do you have for us today? >> he's throwing back to the ole time. >> we're throwing back to the golden year of hollywood, 1939. i had to think for a second. i got thrown by the picture. 75 years ago was quite a year in hollywood in terms of the movies they put out and some people actually wishing to go back to that time. >> sex. >> oh, my! >> drugs. >> let's do all the drugs. >> violence. life blood of the film industry now, but not always. >> great principles don't get lost once they come to light! they're right here! >> the year, 1939.
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america is a country on the brink. >> great stress and trauma in the united states. you had the beginnings of world war ii. unemployment in many places in america, real unemployment was close to 40%. >> people needed a shot in the arm to remember what makes america great. >> there is no place like home. there is no place like home. >> the story of bruce is a life long student of what many call the golden years in cinema. >> in 39, all these movies about hope and promise in the country reassured people that they were a good people once. they could be a good people again. >> more than half the box office top 20 in 1939 were history films. the oscar picked for best picture "gone with the wind." >> i love you, scarlet. in spite of you and the world goes to piece, i love you. >> the most classic movies reveal hope and promise.
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today some say hollywood sends a different message. >> the real question is this, was all this legal? >> absolutely not. >> true blue american characters like jefferson smith have been replaced by crooks like jordan bellfort in wolf of wall street when did hollywood turn negative? >> i'm not sure there is one water shedy. but slowly but surely, the trend did change. we see so many movies today about what's wrong with america and not a lot of movies about what's right with america. >> we're challenging everyone in hollywood to embrace a double bottom line. please, let's come back to a sense of responsibility. >> director john irwin and his brother are at the forefront of a positive trend in hollywood with the new film "moms night out." >> life is about finding the meaning and the joy and the purpose in all the chaos. >> i think there is certain banner of responsibility to make
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movies that are good for people. >> it's just blood and bone of this democracy that was handed down! that's all! >> there is a market for hope and promise in hollywood. we want to thank bow tie cinemas world famous zig field theater for letting us shoot there. "moms night out" earned more than 4 million. check out my web site, foxlight.com. as always, you can follow me on twitter. >> we all do. they just don't make movies like they used to very often. >> very often. there we go. >> true. >> thanks. it is now 23 minutes before the top of the hour. heather nauert now over there with the headlines. >> hi there. good morning to you. big news out of washington. the white house just announcing the administration's review of the v.a. scandal will be handled by one of the president's closest advisors. rob nabors is the deputy chief of staff to the president and he'll work with the v.a. to figure out how to better provide care for our veterans. and then just over an hour from
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now, that scandal heads to capitol hill. the secretary of the v.a., eric shinseki, will testify for the first time about the alleged secret waiting list at clinics across the country. earlier in the show, the actor ermey, who served in the army said this. >> there is only one person that we need to point the finger at and that's the guy in charge of veterans affairs. he's up there on the hill desperately trying to figure out who to point the finger at, who to blame. >> do you blame general shinseki? >> you know what? if the shoe fits, that's what i say. >> more on this throughout the day as we get it. an incredible cancer breakthrough. researchers at the mayo clinic in minnesota wiped out this woman's blood cancer with the measles vaccine. the 50-year-old woman from minnesota went into complete remission after she was given the high dosage. she's now been clear of that disease for more than six months.
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boy. they say dog is man's best friend. in this case, a cat takes the cake. take a look at this video. four-year-old jeremy was riding his bike in california when a dog attacked him. that's with a cat jumps into action. the boy's family has one word to describe the cat. listen to this. >> he's a hero. >> but loves them and will clearly protect them with her life. >> thank goodness for the cat. jeremy needed a few stitches. the family says they're glad the injuries weren't worse. those are your headlines. let's head over to elisabeth and maria. >> tonight you're going to have the chance to ride along the same male models right here. they've teamed up to benefit the boys and girls club of america. how can you participate in spinning for a cause? joining us now with all the info are model tyson beckford and chad white. welcome. good morning. >> good morning.
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>> cycling has become very popular recently. why do you like to cycle? >> for me personally, cycling just keeps me nice and lean, 'cause you can't constantly keep running, 'cause it's bad for your knees over time. so the cycling is good for me. i cycle all over manhattan. >> i love to cycle. i'm side saddle right now. >> we understand. >> both of you are so synonymous with the brands that we know so well. polar ralph lauren, chris polo shirt on and chad, you're coming up on the scene here with d squared, one of the companies you've worked with. why is it important to get together and get a bunch of people here in new york city and other cities to come for the boys and girls club to you? >> it's good because it really raises awareness for these kids to, like, really have, like, hope and opportunity, you know. and if we can bring awareness,
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then that's awesome for us to be able to do. >> you like it right here, too. >> i'm liking this. the bike is great. we also have these that i noticed. you were explaining a little bit to me what they're for. can you explain? >> basically you're supposed to -- some part of the clarks you're going to do this, hold it out there. chad tells me we hold it five, ten minutes like this. >> a couple of minutes. >> it's basically to get the core and abs psyched as you're spinning. >> wow. finally you can see the -- your position in the race that you're in. >> yeah. >> like a derby. >> yeah. so you can either look good or look bad. >> can people still get -- 100% of the proceeds goes to boys and girls clubs for tonight's event and possibly those moving forward. can you still get a bike
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tonight? >> yeah. i have think there is still some bikes left, yeah. >> okay. >> i don't know who is put next to each other, but you could ride next to me or maria could ride next o chad. >> there aren't going to be many bikes left. >> hopefully. i think me and chad now have on too much clothes, that's what it is. we -- >> how long is a session? >> an hour. >> a power hour. >> yeah. >> again, 100% of the proceeds go to the boys and girls club tonight. >> yep. >> check out our web site for details on that. we want to thank you both for being here today. coming up, pop quiz, who was just name the children's author of the year? here is a hint, liberals were outraged. he wasn't even nominated. then a big update on the economy. is it getting better or worse for those of you looking for a job? nicole petallides will answer that as we cycle out of this. ♪
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travel, gift cards even cash back. and my rewards points won't expire. so you can make owning business even more rewarding. ink from chase. so you can. at od, whatever business you're in, that's the business we're in with premium service like one of the best on-time delivery records and a low claims ratio, we do whatever it takes to make your business our business. od. helping the world keep promises. i'm 55 years old and i have diabetic nerve pain. the pain was terrible. um, i remember my feet hurt so bad that it felt like i had hot pins and needles coming from the inside out of my skin. when i did go see the doctor and he said, "i think i can help you" and prescribed lyrica.
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it helped me. [ male announcer ] it's known that diabetes damages nerves. lyrica is fda-approved to treat diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is not for everyone. it may cause serious allergic reactions or suicidal thoughts or actions. tell your doctor right away if you have these, new or worsening depression, or unusual changes in mood or behavior. or, swelling, trouble breathing, rash, hives, blisters, changes in eyesight, including blurry vision, muscle pain with fever, tired feeling or skin sores from diabetes. common side effects are dizziness, sleepiness, weight gain and swelling of hands, legs and feet. don't drink alcohol while taking lyrica. don't drive or use machinery until you know how lyrica affects you. those who have had a drug or alcohol problem may be more likely to misuse lyrica. having reduced pain is great and i'm grateful for it. [ male announcer ] ask your doctor about lyrica today. it's specific treatment for diabetic nerve pain. to hear more of michael's story, visit lyrica.com.
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quick headlines now. these three college students deserve an a plus for ethics. they found $40,000 in an old couch they bought for 20 bucks at the salvation army. instead of keeping it, they tracked down the original owner, an elderly woman whose husband gave her the money each week before he passed away. her kids had mistakenly gotten rid of the couch. rush limbaugh named chirp's book author of the year. he was awarded it despite liberals being outraged. he was even nominated. take that, good job. in his book, it's the reason why he got that award. good job. way to go. meanwhile, fox news alert.
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the labor department releasing brand-new weekly jobless numbers just moments ago, nicole petallides live on the into of the new york stock exchange with the very latest. you've had ten minutes to analyze. >> so far the news is good news. 297,000 versus the estimates of 320,000. so that is good news ultimately. the lowest we've seen for claims in seven years. so that's great news. what you want to see is fewer claims on these thursdays when we report to you the claims. then on the fridays when we do the month lie jobs, you want to see a higher number. you want to see more jobs added. it's ultimately good news. >> that is good news. but i understand in some of the fine print, they have revised some of the other numbers and maybe that's not such good news. >> that's right. that's absolutely right. that's why these wall street traders always take these economic numbers with a bit of grape of salt, you could say, because last week the prior week was 319,000. those are the numbers we came in
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with. but it was revised higher, up to 321,000. ultimately we want jobs for all the americans who are out there looking for them. i was on my way down here to wall street, but today is the day that we're watching the national september 11 memorial museum. i saw a helicopter right outside the heliport, says united states of america. i don't know if it was the president's. but we will all remember. we never will forget. there is a lot of police presence down here, even the coast guard out and about. right there on the water. big, big tow trucks ready to move anything. they can move trucks if they need to. interesting time down here. i don't think the president will come to the stock exchange. >> he whizzing by in midtown in the afternoon. i know they shut the whole thing down. today about 10:00 o'clock, he'll be talking and officially opening up the 9-11 museum. we'll see you tomorrow. >> thanks. >> thanks. coming up, have you heard about mission barbecue? every day at noon, the entire restaurant stops to honor our
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country by saluting the flag and singing the national anthem. i love that. the man behind that mission is here with us today. >> looks like pulled pork. right now let's check in with bill hemmer to find out what he has prepared for or entree at 9:00 o'clock eastern time. >> good morning. a significant morning. one of history, too. we will watch the opening of a museum, a memorial that will be for the ages. we'll also hear from the head of the v.a. today in his first testimony on the problems on a broken system. that is historic stuff. new irs e-mails that the scandal was not just in cincinnati, but tied to washington yet again. it is a packed morning. we'll start in 11 minutes. 9:00 a.m. eastern time at the top of the hour and his mandarin [speaking mandarin] xieúxieú, hou chiú but like up to 90% of americans, jim falls short in getting important nutrients from food alone. making jim more like us. add one a day multivitamins, rich in key nutrients you may need.
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still runnng in the morning? yeah. getting your vegebles every day? when i can. [ bop ] [ male announcer ] could've had a v8. two full servings of vegetables for only 50 delicious calories. two full servings of vegetables i use my citi thankyou card to get two times the points at the coffee shop. which will help me get to miami...and they'll be stuck at the cube farm. the citi thankyou preferred card. now earn two times the points on dining out with no annual fee. go to citi.com/thankyoucards.
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it's a barbecue joint that's cooking for our country. mission barbecue, a growing restaurant chain that not only gives back to its local community, gives back to america's heros to protect, serve and save us each day. >> mission barbecue is here with us to share some of their recipes and give away an early surprise in celebration of the national armed forces day. this is this saturday. with us is mission barbecue's co-owners, steve and bill. welcome. >> good morning. >> what a great cause. you do something at your restaurant that we do at the fox news channel every morning at 5:00 a.m. we play the national anthem. people who aren't up at 5 don't know that. you do the same thing at noon. >> we do. every day. 'cause very simplisticky, we don't think there is anything more american than barbecue and nobody more american than somebody that will raise their right hand, swear to protect, serve and save, be it our community or our great country. so it's our way of offering perspective of the country of
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what's important. >> in 2011, that was truly your mission to start this company for a vet. correct? >> it was. we opened our first doors on september 11, 2011, ten years after the world changed as we knew it. we were going to change it back and remind people of what made our country great, which were its heros. >> how did you get the restaurant community involved? >> continuously in terms of getting everybody involved. the outpouring and the support of the community has been fantastic. >> how did you guys meet? >> best of friends. our kids went to school together, kind of grew up together. our past life we spent a lot of time in the airport together. >> here is the part i don't get. you're a brand-new company. you got seven locations now around baltimore and whatnot. and yet you're about to present a gigantic check to the wounded warriors. shouldn't you be putting that money back into your company at this point? >> we believe that the mission of mission barbecue is serve, honor and thank america's heros.
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for these warriors that have given so much that now need a lifetime of care, they have our commitment in terms of us just wanting to do our part. >> private enterprise steps it up and you have this to present today. >> so on behalf of all the teammates of mission barbecue, the wonderful support that we've gotten from the communities that we do business in, we're proud to present a check to the wounded warrior project for 1 $66,813. >> there you go, guys. very nice. >> appreciate it. >> that's fantastic. >> you know what? they have had their smoker truck in front of our building for the last couple of hours and that barbecue, pulled pork is driving me crazy. >> made from scratch, home made. we don't own microwaves or freezers. barbecues should taste like you're in your backyard op the fourth of july hanging out with family and friends and enjoying what's great. >> we'll try after a brief time out. round of applause for mission
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bbq! and we'll be right back. ♪ ♪ ♪
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what are you waiting for? (vo) celebrate this memorial day with up to 40% off hotels at travelocity. (gnome) go and smell the roses.
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we're going to learn more about a great cause. tomorrow's show, chris wallace is here. we're going to find out about how a college kid can be ready to go to college by the age of 12. sporting race on the plaza, which i'm sure involves you. >> i don't know. >> during the commercial, they were doing the pulled pork with the six-pound boston butt. >> oh, yeah. >> comes right off the bone. >> classic sauce is fantastic.
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>> fantastic. >> if you would like more information about mission bbq? >> google mission bbq.com. >> highlights of her visit back to "the view." >> tomorrow. >> after the show show is next. bill: we have a very busy morning for you. the country will stop and remember the day that changed everything. the dedication of the national september 11 memorial museum in lower manhattan opens today. president obama joins those to honor those killed. the pictures we are seeing from lower manhattan are stunning. live coverage as soon as that begins. it will be a big day on tap hill.

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