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tv   Red Eye  FOX News  December 10, 2014 12:00am-1:01am PST

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right here at 7:00 p.m. eastern. follow me on twitter at the handle at greta. go to gretawire. tonight on "red eye." >> coming up on "red eye" is bruce lee alive and well and training for the greatest come back of all time? some say yes while others say most definitely. plus, is the obama administration planning on blocking the entourage movie from ever hitting theaters? >> it will not happen on our watch, period. period. end of discussion. >> and finally, a dog who has had enough of walking around on his own four legs. this genius canine stops by to find out request he is boldly rejecting traditional means of transportation next. none of these stories "red eye" tonight. >> i'm tom shillue in for greg
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gutfeld who is supposedly back tomorrow. like anyone cares. now let's welcome our guests. she is hotter than the fires of hell. i know. i visited. anchor and reporter for ktla in los angeles. she starts every day with a delicious smoothie and by smoothie, i mean a gin and tonic. and everyone is entitled to his or her opinion. it is tv's andy levey. and his hair is harder than calculus. it is buck sexton, host and editor of "the buck sexton show" on the blaze network. >> a block. the lede. that's the first story. >> did the cia go a stray? on tuesday a democratic-lead panel released a deeply critical report on the agency's interrogation practices. i read all 670 pages.
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lawmakers warn it could endanger the lives of americans and more than 6,000 marines were put on high alert. chairwoman dianne feinstein believed the extensive and expensive under taking was necessary. >> history will judge us by our commitment to adjust society governed by law and the willingness to face an ugly truth and say never again. >> the center report which did not have the full support of the intelligence committee's republican minority concluded in part that the cia program was not an effective or productive way to gather intelligence. 1k3 that the interrogation of detainees went beyond the authorized procedures. the report and the cia disagree over the initial tip that lead to taking out osama bin laden. >> i do know the information we got from the detainees including detainees who had undergone enhanced interrogation contributed to the wealth of knowledge that
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we needed to have in order to find his true identity and that lead us to uh bad do bad. >> a summary was released as well as a 20-page summary. >> i want to go to our national security expert. courtney? >> well, yes, i too read all 672 pages. >> i am not making fun. we haven't had a super expert sitting over here. i am talking buck sexton. >> to be fair you are referring to andy levey. >> with an emphasis on the super. you were a cia officer, am i right? >> that is correct. do you think they went too far with some practices? i know we talked about water boarding, but there are a lot of other details. >> it is 90% crap. i will talk about the 90% and
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then talk about the 10%. >> i want to talk about the crap. >> i want to talk about the overall conclusion is. if you believe this report, you have to believe cia officers were doing something pointless for no reason other than to say them. they weren't getting good information. there was no point except to go through all of the elaborate procedures which we know they were worried the whole time. they were worried they could be running a foul. it was under pretty tight oversight as these things go and i foe people freak out true. that's how you have thousands and thousands of pages because they were trying to create an institutional record on it. and whether they went too far in some cases, they are fighting a war. it is an intelligence war. what i find interesting is despite the tact this report comes out and they are look at specific excesses, beyond water boarding, no one says prosecute these people. they should say abolish the cia, but they won't say that because they are a bunch of
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wimps and it is about political grand standing. >> like you said, there are pages and pages. why do they have pages? if these are black site -- what are they taking notes for? >> they were and now they have been brought into the light. >> this is what i am saying. >> this is one of the problems with the bush administration. you remember what they call the torture memos. they had a lawyer trying to take it to the line of legality. why didn't they just go off book with this thing like they do on "homeland" my favorite show? >> then there would be no institutional memory of what was going on. they were trying to get information out of these people. they had to have a paper trail. you had to share that with the rest of the agency. you can't have one guy who is like tell me the secret, and then no one else -- >> they do it on homeland. homeland has ruined -- >> i just keep thinking about scandal. >> and there are plenty of times when jack bower did not let them know what information
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he gathered. >> that's the way i see the world. who needs snowden when we have the democrats releasing the reports. >> it is good to have both. >> there are two issues here. maybe there are three or four actually. the first is did we do the things described in the report? nobody seems to be saying we didn't. i think. the second is did those things work? the report says no. heavy hitters in the intelligence committee says yes. the third thing is if we grant that the torture worked, does it make it okay? the answer for me is mostly no. the answer for mostly other people including most americans is yes. and then the fourth question is should this report have been released? there are so many things in this report that are problematic, tom and buck. and let's call it torture. if you are going to support it, don't call it enhanced interrogation techniques.
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>> isn't there a difference between pulling out electrodes and pulling them out of other people's body? >> that and feeding people rectally. >> they were in excess of what the doj guidelines were supposed to be. i want to know why there are no calls -- -- >> the doj signed off on that. it is another thing to say in this one instance this guy beat the you know what out of a guy with a stick and he almost died. no, that actually should be prosecutable. even under the guidelines the doj had. the democrats don't want that. they don't want accountability. by the way, if we were in a situation like we were in 9/11, the same kind of dynamics around this, there would be enhanced interrogation torture and it would absolutely happen again. barack obama himself would give the order, probably. >> i 100% agree with that. i don't disagree with is that at all. the heavy hitters who are saying this stuff worked which the report -- a lot of those
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guys don't have the best track record. we showed a clip of michael hayden. joanne agrees with me. >> i got to 46 and then lost interest. >> the torture of prisoners was so extreme that personnel tried to put a halt to the techniques and we were told by senior agency officials to continue. that's not good. there is a lot of stuff in this report that is not good. >> why can't guantanamo bay be like las vegas? what happens there, stays there. >> i think we should lump it into the category, politics and sausage. you don't want to know how either are made. >> exactly. >> i'm with you on this. >> courtney, weren't these guys just doing their jobs? guys and gals?
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>> yeah, but it is how you are looking at it and who has time to read all 6700 pages. >> that defense does president president -- doesn't always work. we were just doing our jobs. >> i was going further back than that. >> you could. there should be more of a weighing of what comes out of this when they made this public versus the very real risks we have in the middle east. this does give a big talking point to not just isis. people go to isis, but people who don't like america and they exist. there is a lot of them actually. >> what are we releasing this for? the administration admitted that our people are in danger now because this is being released. really what is -- how can they justify putting americans in danger? they are saying we are about to put americans in danger and then they release the report. >> it is not for
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accountability. everybody says there are no prosecutions and there have been prosecutions in the past for some of the most egregious over reaches. what is it for? >> the democrats who voted for it -- they let it go and then said oh no, we didn't actually know. there are members of congress who said do this, do this. and now they say we didn't know. >> i believe that a lot of people who right after 9/11 said go ahead and do this or said do what you gotta do. ii don't want to know the details and they are now ringing their hands and can't believe this happened. >> you give out information after a couple of glasses of wine. >> i am chat tee kathy. that's what they call me in the black holes. >> don't you appreciate -- aren't you like -- who was that girl in the movie? i want them on that wall, right? don't you feel like that? >> i don't know this movie.
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>> "a few good men." >> we need them on that wall. don't you want to -- you just want to let these guys handle it out there somewhere. >> we all know too, i love my ignorance. there are lots of things i don't know and i don't want to know. sometimes we will never know the whole story. we will never know exactly everything that happened. sometimes knowing only a part of it is even worse than not knowing anything. >> that's good. >> andy, she is selling you on that, sbt she? isn't she? >> yes. >> no. >> now to some really important information. >> i have more to say, tom. >> i know you do. >> can i ask one final question, the report concludes that out of the 119 detainees some were wrongfully held. they were not terrorists. is it okay to torture one person who was wrongful leal held?
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>> if you apply the same logic to the jus cities system -- justice system we have people rotting in jail. the point is that is a miss san -- mistake. they didn't say we will hold you and torture you anyway. >> i am not saying they did it on purpose, but to me it is just -- it is no different than people on the left saying false charges of rape are the price men pay for all of the actual rapes that happen. >> who says that? i would never say such a thing. >> andy, i bet they were guilty of something. maybe not terrorism. >> some people just have a guilty face. >> i understand you read through this report and was like, did that, did that. did that. >> i been through these things. >> they are too stressed to take a test. columbia law school is giving students the option of postponing their exam if they are traumatized by the michael
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brown and eric garner grand jury decision. the school's interim dean september a letter to students students -- sent a letter to students saying it has shaken the faith of some in the grand jury system and in the law more generally. and that, quote, students who feel their performance on examinations will be sufficiently impaired due to the effects of these recent events may petition to have an examination rescheduled. but an nyu law professor tells the "new york times" that students cannot expect that from their boss in practice and nor would i imagine they would ask for it and they can't expect it from a judge when papers are due. academic institutions are worlds of their own. you know who is not stressed about the grand jury decisions or anything really?
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>> courtney, what do you make of this? are they too sensitive? >> i feel people are jumping on the band wagon and they are getting more pressed whether it is the school or these trauma specialists. i feel like one of the lawyers is speaking out and if you can't go through something like this and are too traumatized by this, you shouldn't become a lawyer. >> and these students, if they are -- they are certainly getting it out of their system. they don't seem that sensitive to me. that's why they can't take a test, right? they are marching up and down the street. you told me in the green room that you command columbia for their sensitivity. >> if you are so traumatized by the concept of some trial somewhere not going the way you think it should you can't go and take your exams in law
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school, then you are not the guy i want to be on my size against capital murder charges. you wouldn't be good at bystander trauma. i would say that they are not traumatized by black owned businesses being burned to the ground in a pile of cinder. >> i think it may make a better lawyer because they can't skip out of the exam. they have to petition to not take their exams or postpone them. >> all they had to do -- there was a template that was e-mailed to the students that said you can use this word for word. just put in your name since you were trauma -- traumatized. >> i would take full advantage. why wouldn't you? if someone gets an extension, i want one too. i am all for equality. >> but doesn't that give those students who postpone obviously an unfair advantage because they have more time to
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study? >> they will be hassled by their peers so it evens out. >> go ahead and defend youral -- your alma-mater, the columbian. >> what did they call them? >> the lions. >> oh, i thought they were the columbians. >> this is nuts. those who said they are institutions of their own nailed it. the weird thing is instead of letting students postpone exams, maybe a law school should use this opportunity to , i don't know, teach their students? >> they are. they are putting it on the press release that they will be discussing this issue further. >> yes, by bringing in trauma counselors and things like that. we hear about teachable moments. here is an opportunity to have that with one that actually involves students for a change. let that happen and if you don't like something the world will bend it is to you. if you raise an objection in
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the courtroom and the judge over rules it, you can't postpone the rest of the trial because you are traumatized. >> if you want to skip out of class you have to sue somebody. >> it if they will be traumatized shouldn't they be traumatized back when the insurance department happened? these things happened a longtime ago or the grand jury? >> i am doing reporting on hard news now. >> this is not hard news? >> i was anent intan meant reporter. i was on the red carpets and now i am out and covering these protests. a lot of the people don't know what they are talking about. they don't know the facts of the case. they are just jumping on the ban wagon. >> are you saying some of the protesters are not sincerely motivated by politics and they are opportunists? >> we need to change ban
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wagon. let's jump on a band wagon. what is that thing you push around? wheel bear row. that's a lot of work. >> these protests are -- i assume that there is a wagon that rolls around. joanne is off the wagon. >> they are the most boring thing that you can ever imagine. i have covered them before. and people standing around and do the twinkle fingers. >> and they like wearing the mask. >> the new york ones are peaceful. i appreciate a boring peaceful one over anything else. >> that shows you, new yorkers are not going riot. we had our own protests and they were boring and more well behaved. >> the main reason for that is the nypd.
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they have a lot of experience working -- you know, protesting and crowd control and they know what they are doing unlike in ferguson where they escalate. coming up, why chinese restaurant menus hate madison square garden. christmas is canceled for kids in utah. it is not canceled for me. i was extra good this year. 'wóót
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a visit from st. nick was saint nixed. a couple inost couples are based has canceled christmas for their three brats. their boys ages 11, 8 and 5 had been, quote, acting up quite a bit and weren't very grateful for what they had.
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when timeout didn't work, they decided to go full on grinch mode. the mom wrote on her personal blog that the money they would have spent on gift s who go to buy things for the needy. here she is on a show i like to call fox and friends. >> we wanted to do something for our kids to help them realize that it is not all about getting. >> it seemed like a right time to give them an intense experience to enjoy giving instead of getting. >> speaking of intense experiences. >> wow, that was intense. i feel bad for calling her kids brats. she seems like a nice woman. she seems humble and nice. not what i expected. courtney, are you a mom. is she going too far and not far enough? >> any mom that has two boys,
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three boys, four boys, i sympathize for them. little girls are so much easier and little boys can be flat out jerks sometimes. so sometimes you gotta use santa and say you better behave. when they are not -- i actually applaud her if they were really bad that she is cancelling christmas and then turning it into something good, a learning experience. my son will not poop in the potty. he will only go in a pull up. i am kind of -- i have read some stories on what to do. people say tell him he will not get his christmas gifts until he goes poop in the potty so i'm debating that. >> i don't think -- i am all for cancelling christmas if they misbehave. >> wait. you are supposed to go poop in the potty? >> i go next to the potty. >> i don't think you can -- i think he is having a great time going in those practice pants of his. let him go as long as he wants. buck -- >> it is so much easier. >> it is a lot easier.
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a lot of parents threaten to do, this but then don't follow through. these parents are following through and helping all of us as parents, right? >> i think this is good. this is a bit of creative discipline. this is exactly what should be done. we are not trying to raise a generation of government employees and socialists and obama voters. we are trying to get kids to pay attention. what happened to getting coal in your stocking? everybody gets a trophy to everybody gets a present. that's rid -- ridiculous. >> it is ridiculous. we had the threat of coal and it kept us on our best behavior. >> joanne, you have been smirking over there like we are not making sense. >> with the shaving of the -- shaming of the christmas present and the christmas spirit, these are not bad kids. this is a result of bad parenting. and if you were going to volunteer or donate to a charity, that should not be a punishment. that should be something you are doing every year in addition to gifts.
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>> i bet they don't go to church every sunday. my mother got my sister and i to not fight. they said jesus was sitting in between us. and we know that christmas is really about jesus and not the presents. >> they should be doing this every year. >> it means i am never having children. >> andy, you don't have any children, right? >> no. >> i think you agree with me that these parents should stick to their guns? >> using the money that would have paid for their children's gifts to purchase goods for the needy? they are making a holiday celebrating the birth of the guy who died for everyone's since and it is all about giving. this is an outrage, tom. it makes no sense whatsoever. >> i felt like there was a tinge of atheist.
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>> don't you get like 11 days in a row? >> eight. you don't really. >> you don't? >> no. >> you get some nice kids you get a pair of socks one day. >> by day eight you are lucky to get an unused stick of gum. >> my parents used to threaten me that santa would give you coal. >> i am going to use that one. >> anytime i saw a helicopter i thought it was santa claus looking out for us. >> fear of the lord. it works the best. >> i thought other people had it as well. >> i am stealing it. >> and let the kid take a dump in his pants. >> grandma will give him a snuggui. coming up, why did an airline executive force a plane to land? >> tonight's guests were taken
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to and from the studio by dog sled water skis. the only water skis powered be a team of dogs. when you need to get somewhere you need dog sled water skis.
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supply we -- we're back. before we get to our next story i want to show i a story -- i want to show uh story on next year.
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>> sir, do you live around here? >> you are super pretty. do you want to go on a date? >> you are live on ktla, actually. >> awesome. >> do you live in one of these houses? are you evacuating? >> i live down the street and was checking out the fire. >> what do you think of it? >> pretty cool. >> it is pretty cool. come on, courtney. >> it is amazing how many things can go through your head in a moment on live television. i wanted to be like, heck yeah, get me out of here. i literally had almost died. my photographer and i had to out run the fire and i wanted to be like, what a freaking moron. hey, can my husband and two kids come too? i had a bunch of things i wanted to say. never in my viral moment did i think i would look like that. >> that's a bold move. >> he was interviewed in local newspapers. i guess the clip has over five million hits. >> i like his directive. the great thing is he didn't use a line.
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hey, you are great looking. you want to go on a date? that's amazing. >> they say dogs help pick up chicks. it wasn't even his dog so he just found it. >> i didn't know that was a dog. >> i was not in the mood for that. my eyes were burning. i was wearing my extra large jacket because i was on another story. don't you like guy is who think that fires are cool? i don't come to your job and mess it up. or maybe i am. it has been three years since i have been on the show. i am a little rusty. >> no plate made her irate. they forced a flight to turn around because the crew served her macadamia nuts in a bag instead of on a plate where they should be.
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korean air's vice president who was siting in first class ordered the plane back to the gate so that the clearly inept flight attendant could be kicked off. for some reason if anyone should it is the flight attendant. she resigned from her post as head of inflight services, but hillary tan the title of vp. probably because her daddy is the chairman of the company. >> andy, please defend your hero , this woman. >> i don't know if any of you are academiaen enthusiasts.
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they need to breathe. they can't be on a bag. they need to be on a plate for 10 to 15 minutes before you eat them. >> can't it be an open bag? >> no. they have to have 360-degree breathe ability, tom. >> i don't know if you are lying. >> why are there so too few? >> i am talking about macadamia. >> where does the sock go when you do laundry? >> you are probably a high maintenance flyer. >> i would get people all the time and then feel a little guilty. >> i am not with you though with the breathe and nuts. i think that this steward ease ease -- this attendant was using her critical thinking which is always important in the service industry. you might have a little
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turbulence. they are not on a plate where they can roll around and escape you. maybe she was. i bet that woman was not even supposed to be eating nuts. aren't they supposed to get to 30,000 feet before you start to snack? >> i think this woman, but karma is a b. if you don't have respect for people's time on that plane and she probably felt a little entitled because of who her father was and i am glad. >> she is the vice president of the airline. >> i am surprised there wasn't a riot on the plane. can you imagine if you heard about this? we have people that will sit here in a plane that is brought back to the gate. that's insane. i would be like the guy that didn't have enough water at the concert years ago.
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>> the wood stalk revival thing. >> and they lost it. how do you like your nuts to be presented? >> in some cultures if it is presented on a plate it says i will destroy your village and take score women. that she reacted this was made perfect sense. >> this was a case of white privilege. >> they were all koreans. >> not the point. >> have you flown on some of these asian airlines? they are great. china air. korea air. singapore air. they are well run. >> anything with air at the end is well run. >> who is the biggest pain on a plane? the most annoying people on flights are rear seat kickers. expeaked yaw's annual airplane etiquette survey found they deserve death or at least to be called out. the next top offenders were
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inattentive parents followed by the audio insensitive and the boozer and chat tee kathy. also of note, 38% believe reclining seats should be banned entirely or at least restricted. the last on the wrist seems to be your big bugaboo there. you don't like the reclining seats. >> i don't like sociopaths. >> one in 25 are a sociopath so that was a story i read. >> that's probably the same -- i imagine it is the same that recline their seats. people who recline their seats are sociopaths. >> what if the person in front of you reclines your seat. don't you think you should be -- >> there is a domino affect, of course. >> well, that's what got us into vietnam. >> or it is a fun children's game. >> courtney, what do you think of these seat kickers.
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i don't think they are kicking. tell me your theory. >> you know, it is little kids that denned to do it. it is only in my experience and i have not had that happen with my children yet. i will bring enough games to keep them occupied. >> can you be my mom? that sounds great. >> i also justify it in my head. they were not big plane cryers. i had one freakout on a plane and i am putting it back to the flying community because i had to suffer with a lot of babies crying on my flights. >> once you have kids, crying kids don't bother you. you have i'm sh -- immunity, but the rest of us don't have the immunity. >> that's why i am an inattentive parent and they.com bother me. >> you kids without kids can do whatever the heck you want
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to. anytime of the day. >> they need somebody who wanders up and down the aisle with a bucket of ice warning and you get one warning for seat kicking. seat kicking is the gateway to insanity. >> courtney is right. kids kick seats, but when an adult is behind you it is not really -- you can't really do it. they are putting their water bottle in the pouch. >> i have props for my flight. or items. >> are you a seat stuffer? >> i have magazines and i have my i -- my phone. i listen to music. sunglasses, mere. >> >> it is not kicking. >> it is not kicking. it is the knees, people. >> i am a tall guy and my knees don't touch. >> no one will hit the back of yo
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>> you couldn't fit a hobbit in coach. it is people stuffing. when you feel that, they should take away the little pouches. >> joanne is right. i never have had the rear seat kicker experience because i don't recline my seat. >> time to take a break. a story we didn't do yesterday. first, here is what is coming up tomorrow on "the independents." >> hello, good morning. tomorrow i go in search of the rockefeller christmas tree. >> excuse me. where is the tree? where is the tree? have you seen the tree? do you know where the tree is? >> right there. >> there it is. i will see you tomorrow at 9:00 on the fox business network.
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it turns out it is haunted. i am speaking of the bbc cameras. they spent zillions of dollars on the headquarters in london, but problems emerged. the state-of-the-art robotic cameras have minds of their own and often zooming out or turning away from the news anchors during the live broadcasts. have a gander, gander havers. >> watch. she moved on. the camera thought she was done. >> talked about so much over
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the last few weeks. >> get back to her. >> not meant to be doing that. >> let me tell but news agency in the last few minutes. >> >> the camera is like -- the camera has a mind of its own. it thinks it has more interesting things. just to prove that was not a fluke, look at this. >> i know which camera i can talk to. let me talk to that camera. you have to love the robotic cameras. >> turn the cameras back. >> i probably have to turn it. >> they are worried i am touching the cameras. i am not touching your precious robots. >> the bbc hoping adding an additional computer system will fix the problem because clearly the robots are the answer to all of your robot problems. qm at "red eye" we don't have robots. how are you doing over there sparkle dancer?
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that went on like four seconds too long. andy, what do you think of this? are you anti-robot? >> i am anti-robot it i am not pro technology, but it has to work. this could never happen at red eye. we could never, ever have robot cameras. >> what if we had the unicorns. >> he would never yell. >> we have robotic cameras. >> do you? there is somebody like one person who is controlling them all. they make mistakes all the time and make sure to call out the robot. it is not always that person who is controlling them. i do think this is the way of the newsroom lots of productions are starting to
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use more robotics anyway they can cut costs. >> there is no more diet cokes in the frige. >> are you in favor of replacing human beings? there is a cameraman pointing at you right now. >> i prefer to get people involved and give little shoutouts like the unicorn over there. what is his name? >> sparkles. >> i forgot his name. >> is this part of it the robotic cameras ? >> that's when they become self-aware and then they get control of the defense net and bad things happen. >> it is an extra you can pay for where you can control the angle. >> there is something going on in some country. oh today in this country you don't know. no, this is boring. you zoom away and you can see
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what is going on in the newsroom. choose your own angle. in this context you can choose -- >> they already have of a vaw tars on your phone where you can choose who will read the news. >> this will make the bbc. >> joanne, do you trust high-tech enology? you probably went on a date to see "war games" with matthew broderick. >> i definitely did. these kinds of things happen. what do you expect from robots? come on. i think we need to make the news more exciting. we need to keep cameramen on their toes. >> they can keep their jobs. we don't want robots replacing them. >> coming up, tips on tipping. the conference call.
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the ultimate arena for business. hour after hour of diving deep, touching base, and putting ducks in rows. the only problem with conference calls: eventually they have to end. unless you have the comcast business voiceedge mobile app. it lets you switch seamlessly from your desk phone to your mobile with no interruptions. i've never felt so alive. get the future of phone and the phones are free. comcast business. built for business. next "red eye" greg returns to host. his guests include the great t.j. o'rourke and lou daabs. >> e block. the last story. that's the last story.
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>> get a grip on what is a tip. tis the season forgiving to doorman teasers and paper boys. who gets the gratuity and how much is appropriate? they talked to etiquette experts about what to give and who went above and beyond throughout the year. they suggest gifting 50 to $100 to your hairdresser. the cost of one cleaning to your housekeeper and a $25 gift card to your teacher and a thousand dollars to your favorite caw mild yen/fill in -- comedian and fill in hosts. >> we have a different situation in new york. do you have a doorman in your build ?g. >> this is the first time i had a building with the door men. i have to figure out how to do this. >> you will have to take out a loan. >> you haven't lived there a whole year. >> you are supposed to pay them a hundred dollars for each. >> and then maintenance and
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the service people get like 25 and 50. you could literally spend like $1500 in a big building. >> that is really hush money. the door men know everything you are doing. >> it is also for the future. >> i only use the back entrance to the building. >> that's why you don't spend as much at christmas. >> i don't think the door men know who i am. >> i like tipping. but i'm sick of it. i am sick of the cash. i want everything automated. what do you think? >> i think that i feel a little tippy during the holiday. not tipsy, tippy. and today on my "red eye" flight, i spent two hours getting into new york and i tipped the guy $ent tw. it is the holidays and i felt bad. he wasn't able go go anywhere else and he was with me.
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>> that's great being with you for two hours. >> not too long ago you were on a budget. did you do things like bake cookies and bake gifts and things like that? >> if i could bake i would have. if i was good at crafting that would have been a good idea. i just pretend i have given something. oh yeah, my gift, yeah. great. good. i hope you enjoyed. it oh you didn't get -- oh, i didn't know what happened to it. i did get the envelope today. it was slid under my door. i will give him extra money because he decorates for christmas. he makes the building look so great. there is a fake fireplace and it is sitting in the lobby. it is awesome. >> i give the gift of knowledge.
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>> tv's andy levey and buck se xton. buck sexton. that's it for me. see you next time and i love you. ♪ push it. ♪ p...push it real good! ♪ ♪ ow! ♪ oooh baby baby...baby baby. if you're salt-n-pepa, you tell people to push it. ♪ push it real good. it's what you do. ♪ ah. push it. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. ♪ ah. push it. i'm pushing. i'm pushing it real good!
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everything. you don't watch us tonight, game over. hello, everyone, i'm dana, along with kimberly, eric, bob. the obama care architect who repeatedly called american voters stupid faced some of their angry representatives on capitol hill. >> the armyy were irresponsible incredibly disrespectful. >> night before last, i was at the kennedy center honors, where they honored tom

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