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tv   FOX and Friends  FOX News  November 18, 2014 3:00am-6:01am PST

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obama is far from being the most transparent in history? log on to our facebook page, #keeptalking. >> have a good one. good morning. it is tuesday, november 18. i'm elisabeth hasselbeck. we begin with a fox news alert. terror in the heartland. a 29-year-old woman behind bars in virginia this morning for having ties to the islamic state. was she trying to recruit americans to fight for isis? we have those breaking details for you. >> he's never met a microphone he didn't like. until now. >> professor, do you really think the american voters are stupid? what about the obamacare? is that just a hoax on the american people? >> go get him, dave. watch what happens when the men who sold obamacare faces the fox news cameras. it is the best video
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perhaps you will see all day. because you know ♪ ♪ i'm about ♪ that baste ♪ more butter ♪ i'm all about that ♪ baste ♪ about that baste ♪ >> america's favorite singing family taking on turkey day. your move hasselbeck family. you can match it. mornings are better with friends. >> this is nancy o' del and you are watching "fox & friends." >> thank you, nancy. welcome aboard, folks. ladies and gentlemen, we're all back together. >> i can't believe it. i know we've got a lot of to get to but so good to see you elisabeth. you can say you're back and you're okay and everything's okay? >> i'm back, i'm okay and everything is okay. thank you for having both of my brothers by my side and all of you joining us this morning.
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we'll get right to a fox news alert. overnight palestinians armed with knives and guns and axes stormed a synagogue killing at least four jewish worships that were praying inside. we're live in jerusalem with the breaking horrific details. what can you tell us this morning? >> we've seen a spike in violence in jerusalem, really around the country in recent weeks and months but today's attack in comparison to what we've seen was particularly brutal. about 7 a.m., 50 or so israelis were beginning their morning worship. two palestinian men armed with axes, knives and a pistol stormed a local synagogue here in jerusalem. most of the people were able to get outside and escape the violence but the two men began hacking and shooting at different people and at least four people were killed. several others were injured. we're getting word one of those dead is an american citizen. one of the first responders on the scene described the situation like this. have a listen. >> they stabbed people once
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and twice and three times to make sure that they did the job. very bad. very bad. >> police say the two attackers were brothers from east jerusalem and one of them worked at a grocery store in the area. they knew the synagogue. they knew the area. tensions between israelis and palestinians have been tense in the last few months particularly after this summer's war in gaza. clashes and attacks happening on both sides fairly regularly here in jerusalem. but in recent weeks it's a spike because some very extreme jewish groups have been trying to pray on a exawnd, -- compound, devoted to both muslims and jews. this has ratcheted up tension. we've been seeing the spikes for a few weeks. the city in jerusalem is as calm and chill as i've seen it because there's sort of a real fear about what's going to happen.
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people are describing this as a second interfad did a. there is a real concern that a third intifada may be starting or we may be in the middle of one. >> thank you for the barbaric details. >> if you look at the pattern of violence, something's happening and it's not good. and they keep on going up on each side. >> keeping you posted with the headlines this morning, heather nauert has got those. >> good morning. a lot of news back home. the governor of missouri is activating the national guard and declaring a state of emergency as we await a grand jury decision in the shooting death of michael brown. the state of emergency declared as the f.b.i. issues a nationwide warning. law enforcement across the country being advised that the grand jury decision will likely lead to violent backlash by protesters. new this morning, a 29-year-old woman is behind bars in virginia. she's charged with lying to the f.b.i. about possible ties to isis. court papers reveal that
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she promoted isis on facebook using fake names and talking about arrangements for her husband to train with the terror group in syria. he backed out when the couple split up. investigators say the woman offered to make similar arrangements for an undercover agent. she is supposed to be prepping for the miss world competition but instead she is missing. she and her sister vanishing after a party in honduras later in the week. police have four suspects in custody but they have not found the woman nor have they say what might have happened. the beauty queen is supposed to be in the world competition which takes place next month. an oxford dictionary releasing its word of the year, vape. that is the word and it's short for vapor. it means to inhale or exhale while smoking an ecigarette.
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it has terms including slackivist. last year's word was selfie. those are your headlines. what does bae mean? >> loved one. are ecigarettes bad for you? >> they don't have nicotine. they have tar. >> where do you get the tar if you can't get it from cigarettes? how do you get that into your diet? >> you've got to drill for it. go to your asphalt sidewalk. >> we've been talking about jonathan gruber and the damage he has done to that man -- the president. and there's john gruber right there, the m.i.t. professor. obviously he's doing real damage because this morning "the new york times" in the editorial page is defending him. what's curious is of all the video that we have
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released and shown so far, it shows him shooting off his mouth, mr. gruber talking about how he did all this stuff for the president. the white house has been saying he's kind of a fringe player. well, here's the president of the united states on television in 2006 talking about how he, barack obama, actually stole ideas from mr. gruber. >> you've already drawn some of the brightest minds from academia and policy circles, many of them i've stolen ideas from liberally, people ranging from robert gordon to austin goalsby, john gruber, my dear friend jim wallace here, who you can talk, i think, who can inform what are sometimes dry policy debates with a prophetic voice. >> prophetic? was he prophetic about the premiums going up right now, the increases in the lowest point plan right now in obamacare? prophetic? that word stuck out to me
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and what's sticking out to the american people, is obama, remember, he was opposed to the individual mandate. >> during the democratic nomination. >> absolutely. he attacked hillary clinton for her stance on it. saying imagine being forced to take on an insurance plan you can't even afford. imagine that. imagine no more. we're in that area. but gruber who was tbrawt in with his mathematical machine to give numbers behind the madness of obamacare is the one president obama denied, he wasn't even on our staff. not on your staff? he was paid over $400,000 by the department to get in there. and he had a lot to say. maybe you should have had him sign a nondisclosure. david webb went to get him at m.i.t. yesterday and ambush style asked him a few questions and jonathan gruber was all hush yesterday. >> you have had lots to say to the media. what about talking to us? we just want to talk to you. >> no thank you.
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>> do you think the american people would have actually bought into obamacare without all the deception on the c.b.o. scoring? >> i have no comment. >> if you're telling the truth, why are you apologizing, as you did? >> i have no comment. >> professor, one last chance. let's have a conversation. >> professor, do you really think the american voters are stupid? >> no comment. >> what about the obamacare? is that just a hoax on the american people? >> i don't think he wanted to talk. i'm not really sure. that was easily voted the most unpleasant walk of the
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day. meanwhile, jonathan gruber comes out and it turns out he was a member of the transition team with the obama administration. he ends up being a member who visited the white house 12 separate times and got countless state and federal contracts. but in the end peter gruber -- >> john. >> jonathan gruber, i'm thinking about the producer. here is jonathan gruber talking about essentially what the president's legacy is. >> i think the short attention span of the american public works to his advantage here. i think a year from now when the law is working, it will be long forgotten. >> so to recap, we're stupid and we forget things quickly. >> we're not going to have the attention span to remember this. how about this latest poll from gallup? 56% of you out there disapprove of the a aaffordable care act.
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there's going to be zero forgiveness. >> that's the tippy top of disapproval. that's the largest number of americans who haven't liked it. and the critical number is only 33% of people who identify themselves as politically independent like it. people don't like it and now that we're learning more about how it was made, people are liking it even less. >> they certainly don't like the fact that someone said we're too smart and you're too dumb. we know what's best. the only way to sneak this in is to undermine -- go ahead and just get in there and throw a hoax at you because we know what's better because we're smart and you're not. the american people aren't buying that. unfortunately, they're buying plans they don't want to. >> he's going to be in front of congress and also senator rand paul on hannity said i think we want that 400-plus dollars back because of the way you handled it and the way you did it and you ultimately came out and said that you deceived the american public and bragged about it. coming up straight ahead -- >> the president vows executive action to push
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his immigration plan forward. one g.o.p. lawmaker has a way to stop it in his tracks. live next. >> convicted serial killer charles manson may soon be getting married. how does that happen? we'll do some explaining.
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i could talk to you all day. very simple solution to
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this perception that somehow i'm exercising too much executive authority. pass a bill i can sign on this issue. >> there's president obama in australia defending his plan to push ahead with an executive order on immigration. but a brand-new poll shows nearly half of the country wants him to wait. what's the hurry? now one lawmaker says he has a plan to stop the president once and for all. here to explain, congressman from arizona matt salmon. he is a republican. good morning to you, matt. >> good morning. congressman, tell me about the letter you sent off. >> the letter that we sent last week instructs the chairman of the appropriations committee on our side and then the appropriations committee on the senate side in our funding bill to put language in that says no money in here can be used for the president's executive amnesty. >> there wouldn't be money available to -- >> no money. >> -- to deport people
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essentially. how much does it cost not to do something? >> well, the cost of doing it is blatantly breaking the constitution. this is exactly what our founding fathers envisioned when they gave us exclusively the power of the purse. when we're at an impasse with the president, when the president wants to go off road, this is the only option that we have to be able to stop him. he can do things through executive order but we will not provide the funding for him so he cannot get him past. >> what's curious in the past we've heard the president of the united states say i can't do what he's about to do. >> he said it countless time. when he was speaking to la raza a couple of years ago he said i'd love to be able to do whatever i want to do but that's not the way things work. that's not the way our constitution work. now suddenly he believes differently. i don't think he believes differently. i think he's basically thinking i'm going to do whatever i want to do. i'm president. the election never happened. i rule this place
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regardless of what the people say. >> right now about half the country, as i just told you, congressman and everybody else listening, would like the president to wait. what's the hurry, really? but what a lot of people are wondering is you've sent off this letter and you said let's cut off the money to do this. all right, if he doesn't and he goes forward, then what are you going to do? are you one of the republicans who would like to shut dow the government? >> no, i don't believe that a shutdown would be productive. but i do believe that there are a lot of people on the senate side that are bluffing and blustering right now and i believe that if we give them a bill that defunds the president's ability to do this, i believe there are a lot of democrats that saw what happened in the last election when they don't listen to the people, and i believe that things will turn out well if we just simply have a stiff spine and do what we're supposed to do. >> he said last week, i hear you, regarding the midterms. if he really hears americans, he heard the latest poll and he knows
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half the country doesn't want him to go ahead. >> if he doesn't listen, he does it at his own peril. i think that's something we need to put on his plate. >> all right. the plate is full, getting fuller. 18 minutes after the top of the hour. congressman, thank you for joining us live. good luck to you. coming up on this tuesday, a grand jury decision in ferguson, missouri, can come at any moment and now a state of emergency has been declared by the governor as businesses and police officers brace for potential trouble. a ferguson store owner joins us live with how he is preparing just in case. it's the best video you're going to see all day. america's favorite singing family, the viral family, takes on turkey day. ♪ on thanksgiving day ♪ i think it's really true ♪ that i can make it
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two quick headlines. british police on high alert at this hour. authorities have been told not to wear their uniforms to and from work over fears they may be targeted by terrorists. cops also being told to be extra careful on social media because jihadists are combing instagram, twitter and facebook for victims. the government worries terror groups may be planning another attack similar to the public murder of a british soldier. 80-year-old convicted killer charles manson is about to marry a 26-year-old. she abandoned her life in illinois nine years ago to live near manson's prison
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and clear his name. manson and his followers killed seven people including actress sharon tate. >> we have a fox news alert for you now. the governor of missouri activating the national guard and declaring a state of emergency as we await a grand jury decision in the shooting death of michael brown. the f.b.i. sending out warnings as protesters prepare for violence regardless of the decision. how is the city preparing? jay, thanks for being with us this morning as we wait for the jury decision here. most people are anticipating violence. what's the tone? >> well, it's anxiety. a high helpful of anxiety -- a high level of anxiety about the decision and what might happen once that decision comes down. >> what steps are being taken? i know the governor has the national guard saying they're ready to stand in
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to assist local authorities should anything occur which everyone is anticipating. are you confident? are the small businesses confident that will help them? spoil the businesses in ferguson after the last -- >> the businesses in ferguson after the last looting want to see for themselves that things will be different this time. i think the entire area learned some lessons and they hope that it will be, but they are actively preparing for the worst and hoping for the best. >> everyone understands the right to peacefully protest, but we understand, and as the national guard is now deployed this, that violence is anticipated. when that does occur, has there been training for business owners? are there funds to help them during these times? >> i know a number of the businesses that i represent have already started securing their stores not just with boarding up the windows but with doing more
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than that and making those preparations on their own. these were the stores that were hit the worst last time around and they just can't afford another round of looting and violence. in terms of what's being done, the community as a whole is preparing. we truly are hoping for the best. >> sure. we saw photos yesterday of the die-in protest with bodies chalked on the ground there and everyone is literally holding their breath. but as it relates to business in general, a, safety is of grave concern. secondly, this is the livelyhood of so many individuals. how are they to recover post this decision? >> i don't know that they can recover, some of them. they'll be gone. business right now for many of them is down 50, 60, 70 percent from where they were in august of this year. if there is another round of violence, another round of extended protests like we had then, most of those
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businesses along that route will close up shop forever. >> as we await the jury's decision, we thank you, jay, for joining us from an area that has faced already too much violence. thank you. coming up this morning, more than 200 million americans waking up to a record freeze and snow. in the chill talking about it now, maria molina is live from right inside that storm affecting the entire country straight ahead as she trudges through inches and inches of snow and wind. and they clean planes after every flight but a new investigation reveals what is left behind and the results, they're a large. first happy birthday to actor owen wilson. he is 46 years old today. he is 46 years old today. ♪
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. at the g-20 summit this weekend politicians took a break from saving the world to do a couple of photo ops. check out these three world leaders who have never shaken hands before. what? >> put your hand on red and left hand on yellow. at one point they took a break to pose for pictures holding a koala bear. vladimir putin and tony abbott with koalas. here's one with president obama with a koala. check this out.
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>> hilarious. the way they did the handshake. >> that could have been the most awkward -- >> i don't think it's done like that. >> can we play the beginning of that again. >> can we play that? [sound of buzzer] >> i think i'm asking you to dance. >> now i feel like the koala that putin had. >> isn't the koala the thing that hugs us. what's the other thing that hugs us? it's got three fingers. it's a big hugger. yeah, the sloth. if you've been hugged by a sloth and a koala, what was
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better? if you can write us. >> we're going to need some hugs because it's getting cold. >> it is getting cold. peskt -- perfect transition. moreamericans waking up to a freeze and snow. and maria, we sent you there because it is going to snow and jackpot, it's snowing. >> we knew it was going to be a really bad storm here. we arrived in buffalo, new york, last night and conditions have deteriorated. we were expecting two to three feet of snow and the forecast is for this to continue over the next several days not only off of lake erie but off of lake ontario and others as well. we're seeing significant lake-effect snow and it is very early in the season. it is only november so the lakes are relatively warm and it's slide a lot of energy for these storms to continue to produce such significant snowfall.
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we're seeing snowfall coming down at a rate of three, even five inches per hour. very persistent snow out here and we're even hearing reports now that parts of interstate 90 have been shut down. that's what we're hearing. it's very dangerous out here. conditions are not good to be on the road and people are urged to stay home, stay off the roads. we're seeing wind gusts over 45 miles per hour out here and that's what's producing those whiteout conditions. on the radar you can see snow moving over the great lakes. very cold arctic air moving over the relatively warmer lakes producing such a potentially historic snowstorm out here across parts of upstate new york and temperatures setting records down to the southeast and also the plains, we're looking at about 200 million people waking up to temperatures below freezing. very early in the season. it's only november. this is a little unusual. but again, we're going to continue to monitor the
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situation here. we're in pembroke about 17 miles east of buffalo. we had to come here because our truck had issues driving to buffalo. it's cold, very windy, whiteout conditions and even thunder and lightning with some of these snow squalls coming off the lakes. let's head to you in new york. >> maria molina, as you can see, plenty of lake-effect snow and what not and freezing temperatures across the country. it is a good morning to watch cable. >> the good news is though, heather nauert, as you know, the people in buffalo can handle it. at five years old they drive trucks in this. they can handle it. >> pretty much. i talked to some of my friends back in the midwest. they said the lakes had already frozen over, which is pretty early for this. >> that just means hockey. >> i have news to bring you also out of the midwest. it is a fox news alert. there is a pilot who is missing this morning after
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crashing a small plane into this home near chicago's midway airport. officials say that the pilot reported engine trouble right after takeoff, tried to return to the airport but didn't make it. this happened about 3 a.m. local time. that plane reportedly crashed through the roof ending up in the basement. two elderly residents were able to escape their home with the help of neighbors. emergency crews are still trying to locate that pilot. he was the only person on board. actually i should say he or she. today the vote for the keystone pipeline goes to the senate floor but louisiana senator marry landrieu and other supporters are stuck at 59 votes which is one shy of a super majority. all senate republicans and some democrats support the bill. the white house passing an identical bill that was sponsored by congressman bill cassidy. he is landrieu's run-off
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opponent but the vote is seen as a last ditchest to try to save her seat. even if it passes, the white house says president obama will veto it. if you're getting ready to travel for the holidays, you may want to bring purell for the plane. there are studies that show everything from the airport bins to seat belts are crawling with dangerous infectious germs. and the worst offender? >> the tray tables often had a large number ofs of bacteria. we found influenza virus because they are not cleaned between every flight. >> they say bring a lot of hand sanitizer and bacterial wipes to wipe down the tray tables and everything else around. call it a last-minute way to create a holiday feast. there are thanksgiving-flavored potato chips. they're manufactured by a boulder company called boulder canyon. the chips have all the
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fictionin's, stuffing -- the chips have all the fixin's. look at all the stuff. available at target. >> monday night football, we'll review what they finished. the tennessee titans holding the steelers. the steelers staging a massive come-back in the fourth. 27-24. marilyn -- marlon carlo, 25 just signed the richest contract in sports history, an opt out after six years. if stanton stays for the duration heel be -- he'll be 37 years old. as justin timberlake says what goes around comes all the way back around.
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♪ ♪ >> his favorite team, the memphis grizzlies are the team to beat after lighting up the rockets 119-93 but one fan taking a jab at justin accusing him of being a band wagoner on twitter. timberlake's response, epic. i'm from memphis. and i'm an owner. anyone else? i'm a band wagon, i'm an investor. >> remember last christmas we played a great parody by a family in raleigh, north carolina and it was called christmas jammies and it was hilarious. you know the song now by meghan trainor called "all about the bass." they have used that song to depict what goes on in homes across america at thanksgiving. the mom, the woman prepares the turkey, they say.
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and the dad prepares the baste. here they are. ♪ ♪ i'm all about ♪ that baste ♪ more butter ♪ on thanksgiving day ♪ i think it's ♪ really true ♪ dads can't make it ♪ like they're supposed ♪ to do ♪ the dining room ♪ we have no taste ♪ all the wrong forking ♪ in all the wrong place ♪ all about the baste the family offering a new parody for us. we want you to send us your horror stories, how to avoid them, anything that happened in the past with your baste. we want to know. send it on facebook, twitter, e-mail and we will share them all. >> if you have a family parody which the whole family participates in, please send us that. we understand according to reports, they do this full time now. >> nefs tv news for a very long time.
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-- he was in tv news for a very long time. they were on the program last year. he said they have decided to do the video so they're doing it and that is a catchy tune you're going to have in your head all day. >> your move, weird al. >> coming up? >> starting a business? what if you could learn everything you need to learn at a bar. >> your personal life is interfering with your business. >> it is unnecessary. >> i think it is emotional discipline. >> that tough-talking host of bar rescue joins us straight ahead. >> as the obamacare architect admits the white house deliberately misled the public, is this anything you can do about it? judge napolitano has been asked that question. ♪ ♪ ♪
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welcome back. we have quick headlines for you now. a jewelry store insider arrested in a diamond district heist in new york. police say he was in the store when two crooks stole $500,000 worth of luxury watches and $6,000 in cash. the other crook still at large. >> that happened a block from here. >> it sure did. speaking of the crooks, he ran the largest ponzi scheme in history but now victims of bernie madoff getting become $5 million. madoff is serving 150 years in jail. videos surfacing of obamacare architect
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jonathan gruber admitting deception was used to get the bill was passed but is there anything that can do legally to fix it? we're going to ask judge andrew napolitano. >> good morning. welcome back, elisabeth. >> thank you. a lot of people wondering if there is anything the g.o.p. can do now? >> there is two ways to look at it. one is political. the fallout for the democrats has been horrific and rightly so given the intimate involvement professor gruber had with writing the laws and the admissions he's made. the other way is legal and it's really too late in the game for professor gruber's admissions to make their way into the one case remaining, which is a challenge to obamacare. remember, the supreme court already found it constitutional, for better or for worse. i profoundly disagree but that's the law. they're not going to go back and revisit it. but there is a very interesting case they're going to hear this spring involving ambiguity, which is professor gruber's field, as we know.
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that has to do with whether or not the i.r.s. can grant tax credits to certain people in states where the federal government, not the state government, has set up the exchanges. what's the difference? the statute says in order to get the tax credit the states have to set up the exchanges. bottom line, if the supreme court takes away the tax credit, obamacare will fall of its own weight. there will not be enough cash to compensate the people it was intended to benefit. that will be based on ambiguous draftsmanship. >> you said you disagree with how the supreme court ruled regarding obamacare in the past. mr. gruber said if anybody knew it was a tax, it wouldn't pass. justice roberts actually said it's a tax. so he was right, you know? >> you know, i'm loathe to criticize but i will. here's the thing. if you're in a court and one side says the light is green and the other side says the light is red, the court can't say the light
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was yellow. you're in the supreme court of the united states. the government says it's not a tax. the people challenging it say it's not a tax. where's the court? we now know that language wag written intention -- was written intentionally to dupe the court. >> because it was a tax. >> in the big picture rand paul hast night said i want to get that 400,000 dollars back gruber got from the government. can he get it back because it was seen as the stupidity of the american public that he got that money? >> i don't think he got that money because of the insults and those insults are profound, the american public is stupid but they can get it back if they found he did more harm than good. house republicans will bring him before a house committee probably now or after christmas and ask him
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to say under oath what we've seen him say in a half dozen tapes. >> i hope he likes washington because he's going to spend some time there. judge, thank you very much. coming up on this tuesday, want food stamps? you better be looking for a job. that is the rule for anybody collecting entitlements in indiana. governor mike pence of indiana here to explain his controversial new plan to brian. >> struggling to start a business? maybe you need this guy's help. >> your personal life is interfering with your business. >> this is unnecessary. >> i think it is emotional discipline and i think you [bleep] need it. >> okay. >> he is the tough talking show from the hit show "bar rescue." he joins us live next. he joins us now in the studio. hey. ♪ ♪
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that looks good. john is used to saving struggling bars on "bar rescue." now we see an emotional turn in a contentious exchange between two bar owners who used to be married. >> i think i am. i wasn't until you brought it to light keeping me alive. big help. >> i'm glad. all right. >> that's why the show is successful. the host who knows this business like nobody else. that was emotional you said for you watching that. >> it was. >> because there is business and there is relationships.
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tell us what happened. >> this was a husband and wife. she ran the front of the restaurant. he was a chef. they got divorced years earlier with a ten-year-old daughter. hadn't spoken to each other in years. so her friends wouldn't go in the restaurant. his friends, because of their wives, wouldn't go in the restaurant and they were family. i had to get them both together again to coexist. they never thought they were going to go to the ball together after. get them to coexist for their daughterrism forced them to work together and the first -- no, no, no. second day they started to -- that was the third day. and by changing the dynamic between them, i turned the business around. >> i like the way you do. it's the tough way. you're like, let's yell about it. like your way, i'm used to that at my house. let's talk about some of the contributions not only with this show helping people survive in a business, but you played a vital role in forming the nfl sunday ticket and made everyone sunday a little better. tell us about that. >> years ago, comsack wanted to hire my company to do a fees
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county study on out of market sports programming. so if you were in new york, you could buy the dallas signal for a particular game. i put together a business plan, combined the marketing elements and multi-games. they presented my plan to the nfl. the nfl liked it. did it themselves, put me on the advisory board of nfl enterprises and sunday ticket was rolled out. >> wow. >> so i didn't invent the idea, but di create it as it exists. >> you talk to customers and try to make a bar and say, why do they stay? what do they drink? put the game on. finally, you have a new app not to make for profit, but to help people because eight out of ten of these bars go under. tell me about if. >> most bar owners and small business owners manage their business by how much money is in the bank. i created an app that is in their pocket. i give them promotions every week, revenue programs. i track their sales. they push a button and it goes out to social media. it really helps them grow their business easy.
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and that was my point. >> what's it called? >> barhq. it's available in android and ios. >> we're going to watch you sundays as we are 9:00 o'clock -- 8:00 o'clock central. always great to see you. we'll talk more on the radio. i love that blazer. coming up straight ahead, he's never met a microphone he didn't like until now. >> professor, do you really think the american voters are stupid? what about the obamacare, is that just a hoax on the american people? >> wow. watch what happens when the man who sold obamacare faces the fox news cameras. and she was at a wal-mart when her infant stopped breathing. >> needing cpr right now. no pulse, no breathing. >> is there somebody on scene that knows how to do cpr? >> next hour meet the hero teen who came to the rescue and saved
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with 1% when you buy and 1% as you pay . with two ways to earn, it makes a lot of other cards seem one-sided. good morning. it is tuesday, november 18. i'm elisabeth hasselbeck. a fox news alert, breaking overnight, a house with two people inside takes a direct hit from a plane. the pilotñi still missing at ths hour. the new images are coming in straight ahead. and he never met a mic he didn't like until now. >> professor, do you really think the american voters are stupid? what about the obamacare, is that just a hoax on the american people? >> watch what happens when the man who sold obamacare faces the fox news cameras. getting the idea. it's the best video you'll see all day.
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♪ because you know i'm all about that bass, about that bass ♪ ♪ more butter, more butter ♪ that base, that baste, about that baste ♪ ♪ more butter >> all about that baste, about that baste. it's america's favorite viral video family taking on turkey day and your thanksgiving stories are pouring in. there is a lot to gobble up this hour. so put down that remote. you're watching "fox & friends". >> i'm raquel welch and you're watching "fox & friends". and welcome aboard. brian was down in texas. you know that this arctic plunge is significant. it was freezing down there. >> it was. but there is nothing we can handle that's back up to 60, 70. your daughter would know that. but people were stunned. i think i'm the bad news. the last time i was there for a significant period of time, dallas had the super bowl,
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people were hydroplaning. >> it could be you. >> it could be me. i think they had ice and sleet, no one had snow tires. >> they had to kick you out of there. >> they don't really like me and they like you. >> they could get a couple feet of snow in new new york state. right now we turn to heather nauert who has a fox news alert. >> very serious news coming from overseas. overnight, palestinian terrorists who are armed with knives, guns and axes storming a synagogue, killing at least four jewish worshipers there who were praying inside. one of those who was killed was an american citizen. the two suspects were shot dead by police. the group hamas says the attack is revenge for the death of a palestinian bus driver. secretary of state john kerry is calling it an act of pure terror. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says israel will respond with a heavy respond. back here at home, another fox news alert, a pilot is
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missing this morning after crashing a small plane into this home near chicago's midway airport this morning. officials say that the pilot reported engine trouble right after takeoff, tried to return to the airport, but didn't make it. all of this happening around 3:00 a.m. local time. two elderly residents who were inside that home were able to escape with the help of neighbors. emergency crews are still trying to locate the pilot. but as of now, the house is too unstable to search inside. that missing pilot was the only person on board that plane. ferguson, missouri bracing for chaos. the governor of that state, jay nixon, declaring a state of emergency as we await a grand jury decision in the shooting death of michael brown. he announced the national guard has been activated and, quote, support law enforcement during any period of unrest that might occur. the f.b.i. also releasing a statement saying that violence is likely following that grand jury decision. matthew mcconaghey is
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returning to the stage for the sequel of "magic mike." he originally said he wouldn't do it, but he was such a fan favorite as dallas that he couldn't help but perform it again for everyone. the announcement comes on the heels of getting a star on the hollywood walk of fame yesterday. let's give it your best all right, all right, all right. >> all right, all right, all right. >> normally you're better than that. >> all right, all right, all right. >> all right, all right, all right. >> i'm still trying to figure out "interstellar." he's dumbing it down for me. >> it was an hour too long. >> but he lives, right? this morning more than 200 million americans waking up to a record freeze and snow. maria molina is live in upstate new york. that area now getting hit by more than a foot. we can barely see you there. you're getting pelted with snow. what else can you tell us? >> yeah. we have some extreme conditions up here in upstate new york. our cameraman was cleaning the
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lens so you can hopefully see the scene because it's just incredible. we're looking at feet of snow coming down in a very short amount of time. this is all part of a much bigger story. it's an arctic blast impacting about 200 million americans early this morning. so they're looking at temperatures that are below freezing very early in the season. it's only november. we're seeing some very cold air from canada dipping down and impacting portions of the gulf coast. take a look at those current temperatures. you can see how cold it is out there this morning. that's without factoring the wind. so in areas where you have a bit of a breeze or some windy conditions, you're going to be look at significant windchill temperatures, as much as ten to 15 degrees colder than what the temperature reads. as the cold air goes over the relatively warmer lakes, you're looking at a very significant lake effect snow event occurring off of the great lakes. parts of michigan, new york, and where we are. we have a lake effect snow warning in effect not only for today, but the next few days because we'll continue to see feet of snow accumulating.
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something also very unique that you can call some of this weather out here when you have very convective snowfall is thunder snow. we saw a lot of that last night in buffalo, new york. take a look at this video. you can see a flash of lightning and that does tend to occur when you have very convective systems producing such significant snowfall. so it's really just like a regular thunderstorm, but it's so cold out that instead of it being rainfall, you're looking at heavy snow. so that's what we're looking at here just east of buffalo, new york. this is an area that is used to dealing with significant snow. but this is even a lot for buffalo. we saw snowplow off the road, trucks off the road. many car accidents. so please be careful out there across the region while you're seeing those areas of heavy snow. almost 50% of the u.s. is currently snow covered. let's head back to you in new york. >> all right. thank you very much from convective to invective,
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jonathan gruber thinks we're stupid. >> he does. and the american people will not have it. the president denying he was a major player and he challenged the media to look back at the debate over obamacare over the years and you will find that that was not true, or was that not the case? another video now surfacing actually where gruber is actually saying that he was part of it all, that the american people don't have the attention span to get through it, and now the president actually on camera as well saying that gruber is pathetic. he pulled some of his ideas and stole them and our own david webb went to go talk to gruber and all of a sudden, he was silent. >> you had lots to say to the media. what about talking to us? we just want to talk to you. >> no thank you. >> do you think the american people would have actually bought into obamacare without all the deception for the cbo scoring? >> i have no comment. >> if you're telling the truth, why are you apologizing as you did for being honest about what
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was done to get obamacare passed? >> i have no comment. >> professor, come on, one last chance. let's have a conversation. professor, do you really think the american voters are stupid? >> no comment. >> what about the web of lies to a web of david. >> yeah. of course he said the lack of transparency used to your advantage, the stupidity of the american people, they have a short memory. yet the president of the united states did to jonathan gruber what most democratic candidates two weeks ago. they froing they voted for the president. they forgot they voted for his policies and again, the democratic strategy is when confronted with a horrific truth, it's easy to deny it ever
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happened. however, the problem is he's visited the white house 12 times and known to sit with the president one on one many times. even david axelrod said he played a vital role even though he said his comments were stupid, he said he played a positive role in the construction of obamacare. there is a problem between truth and reality and they're counting on you not to pay attention. pay attention. >> $400,000 he was paid for that work. >> and made millions. >> that's right. shifting gears here, louisiana senator mary landrieu's front yard becoming center stage for a keystone pipeline protest. more than two dozen activists assembling complete with an inflatable pipeline, if you can believe that. this coming as a vote to begin construction on the oil pipeline hits the senate floor today. the president has vowed to veto the bill if it crosses his desk. peter doocy is live in washington where supporters are scrambling to get the super majority. what is the very latest? and good morning to you. >> reporter: good morning. the latest is that right now there are 59 senators who are
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publicly pledging to vote for the keystone xl pipeline today. if one more senator supports its construction, then the measure passes. it's filibuster proof and will head to the president's desk. once it gets there, a veto could be on the way. >> one major determinant of whether we should approve a pipeline shipping canadian oil to world markets, not to the united states, is does it contribute to the greenhouse gasses that are causing climate change? >> reporter: today's vote could also determine if louisiana's senate seat stays blue or turns red. there is a runoff the first week of december and democratic senator mary landrieu, who is behind in the polls, is hoping a successful vote will help her keep her job. even if she does, the republicans have a majority in the next senate and it might be enough to passkey stone whether
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the president likes it or not. >> my own view is eventually we are going to be successful here because when we had the republican majority, we will not only have 60 votes, we will have mid 60s, which gets very close to overriding a president's veto. >> reporter: so even if today's measure fails or passes and then gets vetoed, the new republican senate majority plans to try again with their beefed up numbers in january or february. back to you in new york. >> busy day on capitol hill regarding keystone. peter, thank you very much. meanwhile, remember the family that came out with their christmas jammies video last year? well, the family of raleigh, north carolina, professional video makers, they've got a new one. it's all about the baste, regarding thanksgiving. watch. ♪ i'm all about that baste, about that baste ♪ ♪ thanks, baste ♪ on thanksgiving day ♪ i think it's really true ♪ a dad can make it, make it ♪ like they're supposed to do ♪ the dining room, room, room.
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♪ we put all the wrong forks and all the wrong plates ♪ >> things go haywire on thanksgiving as the family here is depicting. we asked you for your examples and you heated up the e-mail machine. >> you sure have. it's stuck. joan is saying, i spent one week carving soup bowls out of gourds. 36 of them, and then i burned the soup and didn't serve it at all. sorry about that. >> mildred has facebook and says we always took a picture of our thanksgiving table and one year our beloved cat jumped up on the table and gnawed the leg off the turkey. no dark meat that year. >> that's like our dog, charlie, actually jumped up on the table and pulled the whole turkey off on the floor. >> wow. >> we washed it. it was fine. >> majerle has nothing on charlie. >> i think i forgot the stuffing depletely one year. >> you forgot the stuffing? >> yeah. where is the stuffing? >> at least you didn't leave the
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plastic bag this there. >> keep the stories coming. 13 minutes after the top of the hour on this tuesday. coming up, we just learned just days after we learned about the hoax used to pass obamacare, another rate hike is on the way. is there any way out of this law? neurosurgeon and potential presidential detainee ben carson, joins us live next. and billions of your tax dollars down the drain. the big mistake and how the feds are trying to explain it all. ♪ i'm all about that baste, about that baste ♪ ♪ on thanksgiving day ♪ i think it's really great ♪ a dad can make it, make it
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ing
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obamacare, dr. gruber revealed, they tricked us. now they're charging us. days after we exposed the hoax the democrats used to pass the affordable care act, we're learning of more double digit premium rate hikes in eight states coming up in the next year. >> see them right there on the map. is there anything that the american people can do to reverse this trend and make things right? joining us now is pediatric neurosurgeon and potential 2016 presidential candidate, dr. ben carson. good morning to you.
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>> good morning. >> always great to have you here. >> thank you. >> i love that introduction, by the way. >> pretty cool. >> is there anything that we can do right now as americans, feeling as though the wool was pulled over our eyes and this is just a big hoax forced upon us? >> we begin to ask the question, is there such a thing as morality left in this country? is there such a thing as right and wrong? does that mean anything anymore, or is it just who can pull the slickest deal and who can pull the wool over people's eyes? if morality does mean something to us, we should stop, our congress should stop and say, now that we know what's in this bill and now that we know that there has been a lot of subterfuge involved here, let's rediscuss it and let's vote again. >> i thought this was an opportunity for democrats to say, that's not what i was told about this bill. and for guys like angus king when he was on, he should be equally outraged if there was a
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moral foundation to politics. am i dreaming to think there is? >> well, let's hope that some democrats will come out and actually talk about that, talk about what's true, what's right rather than what is politically expedient. it's one of the reasons that i've said that i will never be a politician, because i don't believe in political expediency. i believe in what's right and wrong. and i think that our country was founded on some of those principles and if we allow this to go through, we'reetting a precedent that says whatever you can do, however you can do it, it's okay, as long as you get it done. >> and as a doctor, your motto is do no harm. we want to play a video of dr. gruber a while back and we want to get your assessment on what he's talking about here. >> i don't think it's the voters in florida don't care about the low income insured. they're misinformed.
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if we can't politically help explain the cost to society of cutting provider rates, of cutting back medicaid, i think we get the majority of people to support strengthening that program. i think it's just because of racial reasons, other things, we haven't managed to get through with that message. >> they can't get through the message because of racial reasons. what's he talking about there? >> that's always the fallback position. if nothing else is working, then let's call it racism, or let's call it sexism or whatever. i think the american people are a little smarter than that. i think they are really underestimating the intelligence of the people. >> we're glad you said that this morning, dr. carson. thank you for being here. media doctor will be in the white house in 2016. >> thank you for joining us in our waiting room. now this, she was at wal-mart when her infant stopped breathing. coming up next, meet the hero teen who came to the rescue and saved her life. dr. carson, you would like that story. ♪ ♪
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24 minutes t at the top of the hour. $2.4 billion, that's how much your taxpayer dollars for the usda wasted this year giving out food stamps to people who weren't eligible. and 19 puppies. that's how many were just delivered by this great dane in pennsylvania. the owners had no idea that she was pregnant with so many little ones there. the average this great dane litter is usually about eight puppies per litter. eight stories, that's the height of the world's largest hd screen lighting up for the very first time tonight in times square. the length of a football field and the most expensive ad space
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in the united states. $2.5 million a month. that will cost. steve, a great story you have there. >> i do indeed. take a look, folks, at this. shocking video shows a mother struggling to revive her 11-month-old daughter who stopped breathing last wednesday inside a missouri wal-mart. one of the employees at wal-mart called 911. >> they are needing cpr right now. no pulse, no breathing. >> is there somebody on scene there that knows how to do cpr? >> that was the question, was there somebody there who knew how to do cpr? the answer is yes. there was a 17-year-old high school senior who was shopping a couple aisles over, abbey snodgrass. she seen the commotion, ran to the rescue. emergency workers say that she saved the girl's life. she joins us right now from st. louis. abbey, thank you very much for joining us this morning.
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so you're just doing some shopping last wednesday. what did you hear a couple aisles over? >> i heard over the associate's radio that there was some kind of emergency over in electronics. >> so what did you do? >> my first reaction was just to run over there. >> so you ran over there and what did you see? >> at first i really couldn't see a whole lot pause there was a pretty decent size crowd. and as soon as i got through the crowd, i saw it was actually a little baby girl. at first i thought it was like some kind of adult or something, but it ended up being a little girl. >> and at that point the baby was not breathing. did somebody say, does anybody here know how to do cpr? >> no. when i walked over there, the first thing i asked was if anyone knew cpr. and the one wal-mart associate that was holding the baby, she said that she used to be a nurse a long time ago, but told me to
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go ahead and do cpr. >> okay. now for you to be the one to do the cpr, that is a big responsibility. but you had just learned how to do cpr in school a couple of weeks earlier, right? >> yes. >> that's amazing. how lucky. one of the problems with an 11-month-old baby, it's a completely different kind of cpr than you would use on an adult, right? >> yes. >> so what do you do? >> when the wal-mart associate firsthanded me the baby, i put her on my forearm and held her head in my hand and started doing chest compressions with two fingers on her chest. then i would flip her over onto her stomach still in on my arm and do the ones on the back and flip her over again and do them on her chest. >> that's exactly how they teach you thousand do it. while you were doing that, what were you thinking? >> while it was happening, the only thought that crossed my mind was what if it didn't work?
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but i pushed it out of my mind 'cause i knew i had to keep going whether or not. >> yeah. how long until the baby started breathing? >> i couldn't really tell you exactly how long. the time was so distorted. but it probably was about a minute. >> that family is so lucky. i know they reached out to you. they had a statement on facebook thanking you for that. you're such a brave person to run toward where the commotion is and take charge. but it makes sense because what do you want to do when you grow up? >> i want to be an e.r. doctor some day. >> and right now, are you involved in the national guard? >> yes. i am enlisted in the n guard. >> that's fantastic. all right. abby, it was great that you were in the right place at the right time. you saved a baby's life. congratulations. >> thank you. >> wonderful. and good luck to you. >> thank you. how great is that? meanwhile, 28 minutes after the top of the hour.
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this morning more than 200 million americans are waking up to a record freeze and snow. we're going to take tout worst hit area -- take you to the worst hit area in america next. and we're talking life, love and kids with the one and only nick lechay. hello, nick. ♪ ♪
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we've got a troubling fox news alert. breaking moments ago on that terrorist attack on a jerusalem synagogue, apparently now three of the dead have been identified as americans. conner powell live in jerusalem with the latest. conner? >> reporter: we're finding out now that three of those killed of the four were americans. the fourth was also a british national living here in jerusalem. the attack began sometime about 7:00 a.m. as about 50 or so
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israelis began their morning prayers in a synagogue in jerusalem when two attackers went into this synagogue. they apparently had knives, axes and a pistol as well. most of the people in the synagogue were able to get out, but several did not. there were at least five or six that were injured and one of the first responders on the scene had this description of the site. >> they stabbed people once and twice, a few times to make sure that they did the job. very bad. very bad. >> reporter: now, police say that two attackers were palestinians from east jerusalem. they again used knives and an ax to attack these israelis that were in the synagogue. tensions have been flaring up here in jerusalem over the past several months, really after the war in gaza between israel and the palestinians there. but also there has been fights over religious spots here in
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jerusalem and we've seen sort of tit for tat violence here and what we're seeing is that neither side is calling for calm. there have been escalations in the language that's used here by both sides. there is real concern that we're going to see violence here that we haven't seen in probably more than a decade or so, steve. >> all right. conner powell live in jerusalem with the very latest. thank you very much. got to figure there is a real good possibility they were targeted because they were westerners. >> absolutely one would think that. thanks. now we're going to move to heather who is standing by with more of what's happening this morning. >> we've got a lot going on at home. this morning a 29-year-old woman is behind bars. she's in virginia and she's charged with lying to the f.b.i. about possible ties to isis. court papers reveal that she promoted isis on facebook using fake names and talks about making arrangements for her husband to train in syria with that terror group. he backed out when the couple eventually split up. investigators say that the woman offered to make similar arrangements for an undercover
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agent. the hatchet attack on a new york city police officer has now been declared an act of terrorism. f.b.i. director james comey saying the attack was inspired by isis radical political and ideological views. he warns the threat of home grown terrorism and also lone wolf attacks is in fact rising. >> the primary way in which we worry about them bringing their poison and their savagery to the streets is through motivating people already in the united states to act on their behalf. >> comey adds there is no word if any impending attack on the united states. caught on camera, amazing show of strength in china. a group of passengers saving a woman who is pinned underneath a car. she was riding a motorcycle with her husband when they were hit. she was trapped under the wheels of the car. a crowd of people coming to her rescue, lifting up that car all together. the woman is still recovering at the hospital this morning and lucky to be alive. those are your headlines.
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>> thank you very much. busy morning. this morning as you get up, millions of you are going to wake up and it's going to be really cold. a deep freeze across much of the land and some spots of america going to wind up with two feet of snow. maria molina has been dispatched to upstate new york where you need a shovel. >> yeah. big-time shovel and a snowplow as well. we're here just east of buffalo, new york, where we have some significant lake effect snow occurring. this is a part of a bigger story. we have an arctic blast currently taking place across the country where many americans, about 200 million americans, are waking up to temperatures that are below freezing this morning. we could be looking at record low temperatures being set out there early this morning and this cold air reaching areas as far south as parts of the gulf coast. that cold air, when it moves over the great lakes, the lakes at this time of year are relatively much warmer. so that means significant snowfall occurring off the great lakes.
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we're looking at snowfall here that could be measured in feet. we already have more than a foot of snow. we're also looking at wind gusts over 45 miles per hour. that creates whiteout conditions. take a look at this video we shot earlier this morning. it was us driving to meet up with our truck to be able to broadcast to you and we saw incredible conditions, whiteout conditions, very dangerous out there. we saw trucks off the road and even a snowplow that was off the road. so that's just how dangerous the conditions are out here. we're also hearing that parts of interstate 90 have been shut down and the snow out here is forecast to last for several days. this could potentially be a historic storm for places like buffalo and also areas off of lake ontario. let's head over to you in new york. >> all right. maria molina joining us live from the snow belt. nick lechay joins us, remind you of growing up in sine? >> a little bit. >> did you get out and shovel? >> only because i was forced to. yes. if i wanted to get an allowance,
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i had to shovel. >> you can't just say it, you had to build character. >> but you never shied away from working hard. right now you have a lot going on. you have the big morning buzz live show. you have a new show coming out with your brother. what's that about? >> opening a sports bar and restaurant in cincinnati, our hometown. we're doing a show on a and e documenting the whole process leading up to it. >> so you're gog have beer and flat screens. do you need anything else? >> a 90-inch flat screen. very excited. more than anything for that. i'm going to watch all the big games. >> wait a minute. don't you think your wife, who is carrying your second baby, probably going to be a daughter -- where is my husband? oh, he's at the bar working. >> look at this cute picture. this is you. is this camden? >> s that. we went on her birthday to disneyland. we took him to disneyland for his first time.
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a moment to make him feel special before his sister comes. we had a great time. >> you were okay with putting on the ears, right? >> absolutely. i had my name -- we went all out. >> you'll have a new set of rules with a little girl who is going to fall in love with you? >> you always hear about the relationship between dads and their daughters. i'm excited to experience that firsthand. but it's also terrifying in a whole nother way that a son isn't. going to the ball game. >> let me ask but this, there is a new study out that says that if you have children, it's actually good for your career because they found that if man put down on an application, i belong to the pta, they'd wind up in the long run, getting a raise, whereas women actually are paid less. so this is good for your career. >> well, i'm probably not a good barometer 'cause i did a lullaby cd. >> tell us about this new album. i guess you still call them albums, dvds.
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you think now that you're married, more people should buy this. >> that's right. this is a cover album, always wanted to do a cover project. so this is all cover songs from movie sound tracks called "sound track of my life." all movies and songs that were meaningful to me growing up. >> like what? >> "falling slowly" from the movie" once." it was a special song for vanessa and i. we had it performed at our wedding shower. that's on there. "streets of philadelphia." "don't want to miss a thing." >> let's hear one of the songs. ♪ and i don't want the world to see me ♪ ♪ 'cause i don't think that they'd understand ♪ ♪ . >> after that we got to start paying for it. >> you're a good sport to do that. >> what about hawaii 5-0. ♪ ♪ >> did you think about putting that on? >> no. but i did have a guest starring role in "hawaii 5-0".
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the in your one. >> are you all about the baste on thanksgiving? >> it's so funny. that was one of the most brilliant things i've ever seen. all about the baste. i'm a deep frying turkey preparer. >> really? >> he's all about the fry, about the fry. >> new album for you. >> do you fry your turkey and then hand out stridex pads. >> congratulations. >> thank you so much. >> we look forward to seeing you working at your sports bar. >> next time you're in cincinnati, come down. i'll buy you a round. >> they're all showing up. >> thanks. coming up on this tuesday, want government assistance? well, you have to work. that's the new rule in indiana. that state's governor, mike pence, here to explain why it's going to work. and are you bundling up the kids before putting them in their car seats? a new report says you are making a dangerous, very dangerous mistake. first today's trivia question, born on this day in 1970, this fox news host was named to time magazine's top 100
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♪ (dad) there's nothing i can't reach in my subaru. (vo) introducing the all-new subaru outback. love. it's what makes a subaru,a subaru. it's about 15 minutes to the top of the hour. some headlines for you here. don't overbundle your kids before putting them in a car seat. tests showing that puffy coats create too much space between the straps, leaving a loose harness, which could lead to a child being thrown from the seat in a crash. experts say cover up with a blanket instead. good advice. and eat less for more brain power. scientists say restricting your calorie in take by 30% stabilizes the genes in your memory, forming areas of your
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brain. if you want food stamps, you may have to work for them. the state of indiana is reinstating rules that will require at least 20 hours of work a week for some benefits for people to get benefits. the changes could potentially cut off 65,000 recipients when they go in to effect next year. but can the state handle the new influx of job seekers? joining us right now is the governor of indiana, republican mike pence. governor, so you're saying if you want food stamps and you are single without dependents, you have to work for them? what do you mean? >> it's exactly right. the good news is here in indiana, we've got a real success story in our economy, brian. when i became governor, unemployment was over 8%. it's 5.7% today. we've seen our labor force grow by 50,000. we just thought it was very important to go back to a core principle of welfare reform in the 1990s and say that for able-bodied adults without dependents to receive food
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stamps that they have to be working at least 20 hours a week or participating for 20 hours a week in one of our job training programs here in the state of indiana. we want people working or training for work or looking for work to be eligible for these food stamps. and the good news is there is lots of jobs available in indiana and we're just very anxious to make sure that able-bodied adults find a pathway into being able to stand on their own two feet. >> how do you feel about people say, well, you're targeting poor people. don't they have it bad enough? now they got to go out and do service just to get things that they paid when they were working taxes into the state for? >> i'm someone that really believes there is nothing more enobling to a person than a job. and to make sure that able-bodied adults without dependents at home know that here in the state of indiana, we want to partner with them in their own success. it's the old story about give someone a fish, they'll eat for a day. teach them to fish, they'll eat for a lifetime. i think is an idea whose time
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has come here in the state of indiana. again, i would say to you, brian, many of your viewers would know this was part of welfare reform back in the 1990s. it's in the law today for food stamps, but many states, including indiana, waived this requirement during the great recession in 2009. but with a growing economy in the hoosier state, we believe the time has come to reinstitute for able-bodied adults without dependents this requirement that they're either working or they're in job training. we think that's great for them and we think obviously it's a great foundation for a growing indiana economy. >> governor mitch daniels is very popular in indiana and doing so well. people pushed him to run for president. he pushed back. now your track report and report card looks good and people are pushing you to run. when is that something you will decide if that's something you want to do? >> evidenced by this policy, we're talking about today, my focus is indiana. i'm always flattered to be mentioned for the highest office
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in the land. but we're going to stay focused on a growing economy here in indiana. we're taking steps to run for reelection. we'll probably make a decision about our future sometime next spring. but with a long session of our legislature up ahead, with lots of opportunities to build on the momentum we have here in indiana, i'm going to stay focused on the future of the people of our state and we'll let my future take care of itself. >> okay. we'll see how this goes 'cause the rest of the country has been watching indiana's success story. governor, thanks so much. >> thank you, brian. coming up straight ahead, we change gears. why work when you can play all day? cheryl casone is here with a job opening that has you working like one of santa's elves. on this date in 1957, elvis had the number one song in america called "jailhouse rock." it was much different then. it was black and white. ♪ ♪ bells♪
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remember when christmas was magical? let's get back there. at bass pro shops' santa's wonderland, kids can get a free picture with santa. and you can save on great gifts, like kids' jumbo adventure play sets for under $20.
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we are so glad you're with us. it's time to answer today's trivia question. the answer is megyn kelly. we love her. congratulations to carey iowa. she will get a copy of brian kilmeade's book. well, 'tis the season for hiring. that is why cheryl casone from our sister network, fox business, is here with the top companies hiring for the holidays. a lot of people looking for some extra work or work in general as we move into holiday season. >> i say get the job for the discount. you know what i mean? i did that when i was in school. there are so many jobs out this year. you're going to know the name.
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wal-mart. of course. 60,000 jobs. >> what kind of jobs. >> they need people to work in the stock room, cashiers, sales floors, everything else. wal-mart, 25% of last year's seasonal hires stayed with the company full time and actually these turned into permanent jobs. all the companies i've got for the holidays are going to continue to hire through december. some of these guys are going to end up hiring the day before christmas. they just don't know what they're going to get. if they're going to get flooded at the store. >> they want to be prepared. if you want to be the hero of your kids, toys r us. >> right. i think brian does play all day and doesn't really work. that's just my opinion. >> he's protesting. >> but he had a point. if you want to play all day, play with toys, it's getting crazy in toys r us in the holiday season. it is every year. but they're hiring. >> there is employee discounts. >> exactly. 45,000 and 20% of their last
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year's work force permanent this year. >> great to know that. shutterfly. >> photo books. these are the manufacturing jobs we talk about during that big jobs report we cover every month. 4,000 seasonal positions and a lot of these again are going to be convertd into full time positions. these are people that can work to help make the photo books that will be on your christmas table. >> they have so many new products. i just got a catalog with all their options. j.c. penney? >> finally, j.c. penney. so big holiday season for them. they need this to be good. 35,000 people and they usually add about 20 to 25% personnel for each store across the country. you do get the discount. also really quick, they have something which i actually like. if you want to walk into the store and you think, oh, i'd like to work part-time here, they've kiosk, applicant kiosk. instead of having to go home and go to the web site, you can do everything right there at a kiosk. i think a lot of companies should start doing that. kind of makes it a faster process to get you hired. >> yeah.
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they also are look for jewelry specialists. thank you. you don't want to miss cheryl on the "fox business" network. we sure don't. to find it in your area g to foxbusiness.com/channelfinder. thanks. >> watch out, get brian to work a little harder the rest of the show. >> head over to the casone exchange. take a listen to this, he never met a mic he didn't like until now. >> professor, do you really think the american voters are stupid? what about the obamacare, is that just a hoax on the american people? >> silence there. but you're going to hear a lot from laura ingraham 'cause she's about to weigh in on the obamacare hoax next. and justin timberlake knows a thing or two about karma. ♪ ♪ >> now necessary a beef over basketball on twitter and his
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time? money? time and money. awesome. awesome! awesome! awesome! awesome! (all) awesome! i love logistics. good morning. it is tuesday, november 18. i'm elisabeth hasselbeck. we begin with a fox news alert. three americans murdered this morning, killed by terrorists while praying. breaking developments for you straight ahead. and he's never met a microphone he didn't like. well, until yesterday. >> professor, do you really think the american voters are stupid? what about the obamacare, is that just a hoax on the american people? >> m.i.t. has a lovely campus. watch what happens when the man who sold obamacare faces the fox news cameras. laura ingraham is going to react with her perspective straight ahead. >> like the beginning of "get
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smart." have you met the country bucks? >> go big. or go home. >> those brothers are here live because mornings are better with friends and we have to go outside now. thanks. >> this is alan thicke. you're watching "fox & friends." >> now, there is a guy who is thick. >> when was he on, by the way? i don't even remember that. >> a while back. >> a while back. >> i did play tennis with him. i think did you too. it's that chris everett thing a couple years ago. i think that's this weekend. i think he's back. >> if you know when alan thicke was on, please write us. heather nauert has breaking news. >> terrible news happening overseas in israel. that's our fox news alert. three americans are dead this morning in a brutal synagogue attack taking place in jerusalem.
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a fourth victim who is a british national, was also killed. two palestinian terrorists who were armed with knives, guns and axes stormed inside that synagogue while they were worshiping. the two attackers are believed to be cousins. they were shot dead by police. at least nine relatives of those attackers have now been arrested by israeli forces. secretary of state john kerry calling it a pure act of terror. israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu says israel will respond with a heavy hand. today the vote for the keystone pipeline goes to the senate floor. but louisiana senator mary landrieu and other supporters are stuck at 59 votes right now, just one vote shy of a super majority. all senate republicans and several democrats support the bill that will green light the oil pipeline project from canada to texas. the house passed an identical bill that was sponsored by congressman bill cassidy, landrieu's runoff opponent. it's seen as a last-ditch effort to try to save her senate seat.
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even if it does pass, the white house says president obama will veto it. she's supposed to be prepping for the miss world competition, but instead, beauty queen miss honduras is missing. maria jose alvarado and her sister vanishing after a party in honduras last week. right now police say they have four suspects in custody, but they still haven't found the women and they have not said what might have happened to them. the beauty queen is supposed to be in the miss world competition which takes place next month. and justin timberlake says what goes around comes around all the way back around. listen. >> goes around, goes around ♪ ♪ goes around >> so his favorite team, memphis grizzlies, are the team to beat after beating the rockets last night. one fan taking a jab at justin, accusing him of being a band wagon. his response is epic. i'm from memphis and i'm an owner. anyone else? and those are your headlines.
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>> can't be a band wagon if you own the team. they call that wagon, you own that wagon. >> thanks a lot. >> thanks. if you're look for laura ingraham over the weekend, does anyone know where she was? >> yes indeed. you were traveling, weren't you? >> alabama, you were at the big game. >> it's a bucket list. it's a bucket list deal for me, brian. you should know this. my mom was a big bear bryant fan. one of my bucket list things was meet nick saban before a game and i was blessed to meet the coach briefly. i gave him a little advice on the offensive line and he took it, so they won. >> i think he should listen to you more often. >> what the heck? >> i didn't know you were much of a blocker. i know you're a verbal tackler. >> offensive tackle. no safety for me. >> you're on the offense on twitter. you have tweeted out -- remember the candy good-byers?
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we really need a new candy called grubers. they're really expensive with a bitter after taste. >> yeah. you could throw those at the movie theater. they w to throw. goobers. you can throw the grubers and they really hurt. >> they do. not on the inside. it's curious, over the last week or so the white house has been going, we don't know anything about that guy. he was just on the fringe. he had nothing to do with the millions we gave him, until listen to this, this is juicy. here is barak obama back in 2006 talking about -- in fact, bragging about how he stole a bunch of his ideas from guys just like and including professor gruber. >> we've already drawn some of the brightest minds from academia and policy circles, many of them i've stolen ideas from liberally, people ranging from robert gordon to useston goolsbee, john gruber, jim
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wallace here, who can talk i think -- who can inform what are sometimes dry policy debates with a prophetic voice. >> there you go. what do you think? >> first of all, it's great to see elisabeth back. elisabeth, it's wonderful to see you. we missed you. >> i've been watching you. >> we missed you so much. but first of all, guys, that is an obama double. that's not really obama. this is his part of the fox news obsession with tearing down obama. so it's really not him. but look, this happens all the time with obama, right? he pretends he didn't say something, then the video surfaces and they try to move on to the next agenda item. and then undoubtedly they will say, we're facing real problems in this country. we need to get americans back to work. and talk radio and certain cable news outlets are just -- they're fanatical on this topic. they're going to go on the attack against anyone who raises this question. but mr. gruber is an ally of
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this administration, a paid advocate who was sold to us as an objective expert. for all of our friends watching how all these other debates are playing out, like immigration reform, i would remind everyone that when you hear objective expert, be very careful because when they say x is going to happen, usually y or z happens. so it's infuriating. i think the american people understand this now. this is based on a total fraud, obamacare, and now mr. gruber is mysteriously silent, i understand, after fox tried to get him to speak. >> yeah. what i think what really struck home, especially when it broke last week, is everything jonathan gruber said is everything that people were worried about obamacare being. >> right. >> he mentioned it. the lack of transparency, how we were told one thing, but it was something entirely different. >> bingo. >> david webb decides, who is usually serious radio contributor here, i'm going to ask him to answer a few questions. let's see how that went.
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>> oh, good. >> you've had lots to say to the media. what about talking to us? we just want to talk to you. >> no thank you. >> do you think the american people would have actually bought into obamacare without all the deception for the cbo scoring? >> i have no comment. >> if you're telling the truth, why are you apologizing as you did for being honest about what was done to get obamacare passed? >> i have no comment. >> last chance, let's have a conversation. >> professor, do you really think the american voters are stupid? >> no comment. >> what about the obamacare, is that just a hoax on the american
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people? >> surprised he didn't talk? >> well, look, someone like a gruber is perfectly happy behind closed doors, guys, trashing the intellect of the american people. >> an ivory tower. >> and so does it surprise me that when he's kind of exposed and all of this is exposed, everybody suddenly clams up? again, i think we all should be very careful about deals struck behind closed doors where there really is no transparency and all these broad proclamations about how certain pieces of legislation are going to expand the economy or lower costs when we the people don't have a bird's eye view into the legislative process, the horse trading that's going on and the real justification for why we're passing particular laws and with obamacare in particular, we were told one thing and it ended up being something completely different. and all of you guys and yours true complete a number of others on this network were proclaiming the truth and were vilified for
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it. we're not going to get apologies, but i think the people watching may know what time it is. >> it's amazing that the democratic party denied they voted with the president and for the president during the mid terms and that bombed out. now the president is denying one of the architects of obamacare was actually related to the actual construction of the bill which is now a law and that's going to bomb out. i just can't believe he's going to get away. >> we were grubered. all right. thank you very much for joining us today. go do your radio show. roll time. >> we're going to eat these during the commercials. by the way, gruber is -- grubered still trending. >> it sure is. >> meanwhile, a house with two people inside took a direct hit from an airplane. the pilot still missing at this hour. we got breaking news straight ahead. and he's a convicted killer and has ties to terrorism. now he's being allowed back inside the college classroom to
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have you received the legal advice from the attorney general about what limits you have and what you can do? >> yes. >> would you tell us what those are? >> no. i will tell them when i make the announcement. but it's a good try, though. >> well, it's for me to know and you to find out the hard way it seems to be the administration's line when it comes to immigration and obamacare. did the white house mislead the american public about obamacare. where the heck is the transparency the american people were promised and deserve. joining us is fox news legal analyst, peter johnson, jr. >> it seems in this administration that we are a nation of fools and a government of experts. so now we have the president of the united states saying that somehow the advice rendered to him by the attorney general as to what his constitutional authority is to do executive action on immigration, meaning not clarify the law, but
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invalidate the laws that are on the books, in my view, that's somehow a secret and that's a cute little secret. so we see it again with professor gruber, the m.i.t. professor, with cute little secrets, with cute little deceptions that i'm smarter than you. you're essentially stupid. we can put this over on you. we can put this over on the federal government. we can get money from massachusetts. we can take care of this and no one will know the difference. and no one will know who i was. >> until now. >> i'm just professor gruber and i only made $6 million and nobody ever heard of me and according to the president of the united states, watch it now -- does the president of the united states know professor gruber? >> the fact that some advisor who never worked on our staff expressed an opinion that i completely disagree with in terms of the voters, is no reflection on the actual process that was run.
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>> some advisor? that's clintonian in the sense of denial. some advisor was known affectionately as gruber. known by gruber, by pelosi and referred to by the president of the united states and you showed the clip earlier in the day at a function at brookings or one of these outfit where he gives gruber credit for make him smart on this stuff. so he made the president is so smart that the president began to believe, maybe believed before, that the american people were really stupid. we can't have this web of deception. we need transparency in this country. we need the ability to know that if we're being told something, it's truthful. we need to remember the axiom of lincoln. and the president of the united states needs to remember that. you can't fool all the people all the time, especially when people like gruber who makes $6 million want to take credit for everything that you
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allegedly did. we see this spinning, the spinning going around and around on both issues. on a lighter note, i think we have a sighting of professor gruber. he may be trying to scale the white house walls. so they remind him of who he was. there he is. there is gruber, the $6 million man. >> scaling the wall of truth. >> the secret service will him in? don't know. don't know gruber. don't know what he did. made him 6 million. >> but he can jump. >> i don't know. where in the world is gruber? >> gruber goober. peter johnson, jr. >> steve austin. >> on a serious note, a great reminder to americans on the truth that they deserve. >> it's so funny, but so tragic, too. >> great reminder to the american people. now this, coming up, convicted serial killer charles manson may soon be getting married. how in the world can that happen? we're going to tell you. and thanksgiving is a great time to learn more about your family's heritage. our next guest does exactly that
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and today she's taking a look at ainsley's family tree. we can't wait. ainsley is in for us. ♪ ♪ right when you feel a cold sore, abreva can heal it in as few as two and a half days when used at the first sign. without it the virus spreads from cell to cell. only abreva penetrates deep and starts to work immediately to block the virus and protect healthy cells. you could heal your cold sore, fast, as fast as two and a half days when used at the first sign. learn how abreva starts to work immediately at abreva.com don't tough it out, knock it out, fast. with abreva.
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we've got quick tuesday morning headlines for you. terror in the classroom. the university of illinois rehiring murderer and known domestic terrorist james kilgore. he taught for four years but was let go when his criminal past was revealed. nearly 2,000 people signed a petition demanding he get his job back. he is convicted of killing a mother of four in 1975 during a bank robbery in california. unholy matrimony. 80-year-old convicted killer
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charles manson is about to marry a 26-year-old woman. she abandoned her life in illinois nine years ago to live near the prison that he's at in california. she wants to clear his name. of course, famously manson and his followers, manson family, killed seven people, including actress sharon tate. and that's ts. >> thank you, steve. thanksgiving is right around the corner, which means it's the perfect time to give thanks and look back at your family's heritage. >> every family has a story and we're about to discover some information about ainsley's family history and give a special discount for "fox & friends" viewers only because you watched. >> this is a special treat. first we'll meet the author who traced her own family's history when she wrote the book, which resonated with so many. why is it so important to you to really reach tout to others to get back into their family history and understand the mystery? >> because when i wrote the book, i learned what can happen
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when you dive into your family's story. the book is about my grandmother's life and how she, during world war ii, was one of a group of islanders who helped hide and save a family of jews from the nazis. i then sought out that family and after years and years of searching, i found this family and i thought i never would. i finally found them. they had no idea about this connection 'cause their mothers never spoke of how they survived the war. they never spoke of the holocaust. so after 70 years, we rewrote this family's history and anyone can do it. it's really incredible. >> we did it for ainsley. we found really, really cool things. >> what did you find? >> we found great things with our friends at myheritage.com, we put them on your family search and found cool things. ainsley, i know on your mom's side you have deep roots in this country. prerevolutionary war. one of your ancestors was a paul bearer for george washington. your dad's side was more of a mystery. >> that's trouble. >> there is a reason for that. >> we found great stuff. we know that your -- you knew
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your father's family was from germany and thought that they came in through ellis island. but they didn't. we went back ten generations to germany. you have good stock. you come from good genes. >> thank you. >> back in the 1600s, we found your great grandmother ten times back anna katherine roush and they lived to be 100 years old. that was back in 1635. she died in 1736. so imagine that. living to 100 at that age. you come from good, hearty stock. >> my grandmother lived to 98 when she died. >> amazing. and also we found we have great records for you. we found some christian sus documents from south carolina. i think ruben harmon, a postmaster in south carolina. we found a census document of him living with his wife, louisa and three children in 1860. you thought your family came through ellis island. it opened officially in 1892. this shows your family was here
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at least 30 years before that. but that's not all. >> they are in the country legally, right? >> well, you know. we're confirming that. we also found more of your relatives in south carolina in 1773. so you guys have been here for a very, very long time. >> that's fascinating. thank you so much. thank you for choosing know do this. >> it was wonderful. >> myheritage. >> this computer age has allowed people to go back and back and back. we don't have to depend on verbal history. can you put in simple terms how you've consolidated records of all these nations? >> it's amazing because my heritage.com, who helped me in my search, if you go on there and you build your family tree and coming up with the holidays, thanksgiving around the corner, it's the perfect time to do this. >> sitting around the table yelling at each other. >> if we sit around the table yelling at each other and if go on there and start plugging in information, it links you to other family trees. ainsley, we went to another
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family tree so you have a lot of cuffs you don't know about. >> how much information do we need? >> not very much. i went in with my in-laws and all of a sudden, we started getting matches of documents. and trees link up to each other. >> she's terrific because she did my family tree and i asked her to please look for a rockefeller somewhere back there. she did find out that my family had land in ireland. >> exactly. we found the documents for you. >> you absolutely did. if you would like to go ahead and trace your family tree, listen to this, you can save 30%. go to myheritage.com in the friends code, use the word friends. >> that's right. >> and you can also go to our web site to figure out how. >> if it turns out we owe debts and discover this, are we responsible to pay? >> not if donald trump is your relative. >> that's good. i hope so. >> that's so exciting. >> thank you so much. >> thanks for having me on.
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now that we both said good-bye, it's my turn. coming up, a state of emergency as the city of ferguson braces for riots. what's the plan? we're going to ask state highway patrol captain ron johnson next. and this morning more than 200 million americans waking up to a record freeze and snow. maria molina live from inside the storm affecting the entire country straight ahead. >> make a snow angel. ♪ ♪ ♪ (holiday music is playing)
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this weekend chuck hagel was giving a speech about nuclear weapons, but there was something on his face that had people talk. remember, this is the guy in charge of defending our country. take a look at this.
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>> i have an incident with a cabinet door. i engaged the corner of a cabinet. >> even isis was like, this is going to be easy. he can't defend himself from a cabinet. >> ouch. >> that might be embarrassing, this is going to give you a chill. millions of americans waking up to record freeze and snow. right here you're looking at buffalo, new york where at least two feet of snow have already fallen. and this is near where we're going to find maria molina live playing in the snow. she has been all morning giving us the latest. what are you looking at now? >> that snow just continues to pile up here across parts of western new york. this arctic blast is a big story for most of the country. we're looking at about 200 million americans experiencing temperatures that
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are below freezing along parts of the east coast, down to parts of the southeast and even across the plains. so a major story. very early in the season to be seeing this. it's very cold arctic air going over the great lakes is producing a very significant lake effect snow event that we do have warnings in effect out here and we're talking additional feet of snow, on top of what we've already seen out here off of places like buffalo and here where we are in pembroke, new york. i want to share with you some video that shows how much snow has fallen across the area. we've also seen wind gusts up to 45 miles per hour and we even seen some lightning and heard some thunder with this snow activity out here. people are likely going to be trapped in their homes for several days as it continues the clean-up, which has been ongoing. but of course, we're still expecting so much more snow that this is going to be lasting for several days out here across parts of western new york. i also want to share with you out of buffalo, my fiance has a live stream for you that you can see how bad it is out there.
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we're also seeing feet of snow out there and very strong wind gusts. that location is just off the lake. so that's what's really enhancing that lake effect snow out there across parts of buffalo and as far inland as we are, 40 miles to the east of the city of buffalo. again, this scene is going to continue out here off of the great lakes and that cold air is going to be sticking around and that cold air really is also making that snow very light and enoughy. kind -- fluffy. kind of tough to make a know ball. that's the scene here out of western new york. we'll head over to you in new york where it's cold, but a little colder out here. >> absolutely. for a girl from miami, any time you see the snow, it's like whoa, that is so cool. >> if she could make a snowball, she'd be throwing it right now. now from heather, you have an update. >> coming out of chicago this morning, fox news alert, a pilot is missing at this hour after a small plane crashed into this home near chicago's midway airport. you can see the jet smashed into
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the side of this house. officials say this happened around 3:00 a.m. local time. the pilot had reported engine trouble right after takeoff, tried to land at another nearby airport, but did not make it. two elderly residents escaped from that house with the help of their neighbors. emergency crews are still trying to locate that pilot. but as of now, they say the house is too unstable to search inside. that missing pilot is believed to be the only person on board. this morning a 29-year-old woman is behind bars in virginia charged with lying to the f.b.i. about possible ties to isis. court papers reveal she proposalled isis on facebook using fake names and discussed making arrangements for her husband to travel to syria to train with the terror group. he apparently backed out of the deal when the couple split up. investigators say that the woman offered to make similar arrangements for an undercover agent. a missouri teen-ager comes to the rescue, saving an
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11-month-old girl who stopped breathing at a wal-mart. the 17-year-old heard calls on the loud speaker, ran to the commotion to try to help. earlier on "fox & friends," abby snodgrass said she just learned cpr at school. listen. >> while it was happening, the only thought that crossed my mind was what if it didn't work? but i pushed it out of my mind. >> what a great young woman. the little girl is now home and healthy. rescuers say that abby without a doubt saved her life. al sharpton making a surprising claim that he's all squared up with the tax man. he was nailed by the irs back in 2007 for both himself personally and also his civil rights group tax return. the reverend is claiming he's now paid the millions in back taxes that were owed. sharpton saying, quote, we are now making the final payments on our installment agreement, both personally and organizationally. records on file with the city show that that may not be true. he still owes millions of
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dollars. and those are your headlines. let's head over to steve. >> all right. thank you very much. fox news alert, the f.b.i. declaring -- rather a state of emergency has been declared by the governor of mo in in ferguson. it's warning law enforcement officers, the f.b.i. is, to brace the city for violent protests as we await a grand jury's decision in the michael brown shooting. what are police expecting? joining us right now, speaking exclusively on "fox & friends," we've got missouri state highway patrol captain ron johnson. we've got st. louis police chief sam doddson and st. louis county police chief, john bellmar. thank you for joining us. >> good morning. >> captain johnson, you famously were walking with some of the protesters back when violence did break out and you were trying to calm people down. what are you doing to make sure that there is not more trouble straight ahead? >> we've been going around, all three of us, and meeting with several groups throughout our
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region, business leaders, community leaders, activists, high school students, middle school students, and just individuals and trying to connect with the community and find out their concerns and addressing those concerns. >> let me ask you this, chief doddson, are there a number of groups that you are particularly interested in, because i was reading on line this morning that apparently one of those anarchist groups have done some training with some people in ferguson, showing them how to screw things up. >> well, actually the coalition that we're talking to is made up of over 50 groups and there are a lot of people in those groups that really want peace. they want to come out and have their voices heard. but what we do find is there is a small percentage that want to come out with violence, that want to disrupt those peaceful protests. those are the groups where i think law enforcement really can play a big role and do what we do. we arrest criminals. if people violate the law in a violent way, we have a plan to take care of it. >> and it's great that you guys have all joined forces.
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chief bellmar, what kind of manpower are we talking about getting ready for some sort of an announcement there in ferguson? >> you know, steve, i think the manpower is going to be sufficient. st. louis county, for example l have probably 250 officers on the ground just in the evening. st. louis perhaps 300. the highway patrol perhaps 150. but keep in mind, we want to make sure that people understand we're going to ride their beats also. if you call 911, regardless of the manpower, we'll be at your house and business. >> absolutely. and captain johnson, the message is clear, violence will not be tolerated. correct? >> that's correct. we're out here to make sure that the public remains safe. we're going to forget the businesses. we're also going to forget the constitutional rights of visitors to our region. >> chief, i read somewhere on line that speak of protecting businesses, that there were some particular businesses you were worried about. is there a list of targets? >> well, there is not a list of
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targets. but in august what we saw these activities were happening in ferguson in the city of st. louis, about 25 window smashings occurred. as you talked about the governor activating the national guard earlier, that's part of our plan, to put police officers and national guard into neighborhoods to watch strip malls, shopping centers as deterrents, visibility, so that the community knows that we have a plan, and then early warning. so while we don't have a list, i think police chiefs all over worry about just about everything. >> finally, chief bellmar, i know that you got a lot of manpower there, but also got the national guard at the ready as well, right? >> we appreciate the governor offering a the guard. they're really a force multiplier for us. last time they were a lot of help in securing the command post. i think they're going to be a tremendous benefit this time and we certainly appreciate these citizen soldiers coming to our aid. >> we appreciate the three of you joining us this morning. we know you got a lot on your plate today. so we thank you very much. >> thank you. >> thank you. 20 minutes before the top of the hour.
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we have showed you this video of fox news catching up with dr. jonathan gruber. >> professor, do you really think the american voters are stupid? what about the obamacare, is that just a hoax on the american people? >> well, you know what? he's not talking, but you are. your e-mail pouring in. we're going to share some of them next. and matthew mcconaghey said he wasn't going to be in that stripper sequel. but you know what? this morning an update. he's going to take it off again. >> all right, all right, all right.
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welcome back. we have some headlines for you. dallas is back.
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matthew mcconaghey will reprize his role as a strip club owner in the sequel to "magic mike," but just for a cameo. rumors are producers couldn't afford him for the whole movie. and the word of the year is vape. short for vapor. last year's word was selfie. you know, it's funny, here at fox for years we've been telling you about the various angles in obamacare. pretty much dr. gruber has revealed that we were right. there he is right there. he has revealed that famously on video that the only reason they were able to get the law through was because americans are stupid and we forget things really fast. >> if you're in power, you don't have to be transparent about
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everything in the plan. after all, if you told healthy people that they had to pay for sick people, that plan would never have passed. >> plus it's a tax. it's a tax. they knew it was a tax, but he said if people knew it was a tax, it would never pass. >> he's been loose lipped, up until our own david webb from fox news actually ambushed him right at m.i.t. and couldn't get a peep out of him. he had nothing to say. look at this. >> you had lots to say to the media. what about talking to us? we just want to talk to you. >> no thank you. >> do you think the american people would have actually bought into obamacare without all the deception for the cbo scoring? >> once again, i have no comment. >> if you're telling the truth, why are you apologizing as you did for being honest about what was done to get obamacare passed? >> i have no comment.
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>> come on, one last chance. let's have a conversation. professor, do you really think the american voters are stupid? >> no comment. >> what about the obamacare, is that just a hoax on the american people? >> so it wasn't just -- it was not only did the fact that he was talking at a school and mocking the american people, every single thing that he went through was every single thing critics who bring up about obamacare and were quickly told that has nothing to do with it. you're trying o cloud the issue. you're trying to scare people away from this brand-new plan. so here is what you're saying. julia on facebook says this. >> it's about time these people get cornered and questioned. keep in mind that gruber is still trending on twitter. barbara said this on facebook. >> sure had enough to say when he was calling us stupid. absolutely. >> steve, if you can do a girl's
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voice, would you let elisabeth do a boy's voice. >> he's afraid of the mic. never happened before. good point. >> david had to walk in the open rain. >> maybe gruber was right that americans are stupid because david webb is walking outside with no umbrella. what's really curious is david axelrod, who a couple of days ago attacked gruber by saying, you know, you look up stupid, there is his picture. now he's backing it up. he says that his contributions to the affordable care act were invaluable and his throw away equips were offensive. this is the same time that the "new york times" is doing damage control on their editorial page. looks like there is more to come from mr. gruber. >> we know it was big last week and still resonating this week. meanwhile, we have a great close to this show and here is the question: have you met the country bucks?
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>> go big or go home. >> the brothers who built the outdoor empire here next. but first we're going to check in with martha mccallum for what's coming up at the top of the hour. >> i'm going to follow the country bucks. good morning. after all that, the president says he just heard about this whole gruber scandal and that he was just some advisor. david webb caught up with gruber and he's here with us this morning to tell us about that. and dr. michael bodien joins us with fresh testimony in terms of his take on what happened in ferguson. he'll tell you his findings. senator lindsey graham is here this morning on the iran talks. what now there? bill and i see you at the top of the hour how could a luminous protein in jellyfish, impact life expectancy in the u.s., real estate in hong kong, and the optics industry in germany? at t. rowe price, we understand the connections of a complex, global economy.
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love this story. they went from a simple stove to a multi-million-dollar hunting and fishing empire. >> that's right. we are talking about the stars of a and e's "country bucks". >> we're just a typical american family. >> goggles on. let's do this. >> that just happens to run a multi-million-dollar outdoor empire. >> we create, test and sell the world's coolest products for the modern outdoorsman. >> joining us from "country bucks" are ryan and matt. we're glad you're here. tell us about the start of your really empire. >> on a stove? >> in the kitchen? >> kitchen stove. true story. >> yeah. he came out, it looked like a cries crispy treat. we got started making hunting products. now we pretty much make everything for hunting and fishing. >> you're in the hunt for the best new products. >> that's it. >> so you're successful without the show.
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do you have to be convinced to do the show? >> yeah. they came to us. they heard about how we test our products and all our r and b and were fascinated with that. we thought it would be a great way to promote our brands and show everybody how we do this. >> i hear the robertsons are friends of yours. but it sounds like they stole your act. a couple of brothers, they got land and wildlife gear. hello. >> you're spot on. we got a long way to go. >> did willie robertson give you advice? >> oh, yeah. >> willie, doesn't give advice. >> best advice. >> there he is right there. >> you brought some of your stuff. show us the laser range finder. >> it's right by your hand. y'all know yardage, right? >> yep. >> just like you want to know how far the pin is. hunting is the same thing. you'll shoot a cross bow at a target. you got to acquire the range before you shoot so you know where to aim. >> i need that for my cross bow. >> that's it. >> you got a couple models here
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of cross bows. >> we do. this is our top of the line it shoots 400 feet per second. smoking. carbon and titanium. it's made for anything. >> you have a lot of vikings come to your ranch? >> whenever, we're ready for them. >> this is our kiddy, junior for the kids. >> i love this right here, the black antler call. >> yeah. the black rack. >> what message are you giving? >> it means you want a piece of me. >> every deer loves a fight. same with deer. if you saw rattling antler, that buck is coming on. >> you're pretending you're fighting to invite the other bucks? >> the buck starts there. >> the buck starts there. >> then we get them to stop. >> guy, stick around. we'll continue this conversation in a minute, 'cause it's not cold enough. >> we're here.
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♪ we are the champions ♪ my friends >> the 114th congress taking their class picture, the freshmen members of the house of representatives getting all set to take over when new congress begins in january. smile. >> that's right. we showed you this video earlier. all about the baste. ♪ i'm all about that baste, about that baste ♪ ♪ more butter >> and the comments have been pouring in. one said this, sensation in germany, i didn't realize the ovens used selfy. >> also how i love monkeys, so check out this.
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my friends are up in thailand acting like pirates. these monkeys steal from a kayaker. they jump on the boat for his pineapple and then more keep coming. >> monkeying around. >> see you tomorrow, everybody. bill. bill: a bloody terrorist attack in jerusalem and three americans are dead. martha: two palestinians storming a temple. they attacked worshipers there with meat cleavers and a gun. you hear the sound of shots ringing out as the first responders were arriving on the

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