tv Shepard Smith Reporting FOX News July 1, 2015 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT
12:00 pm
some people take those for granted. and others have said they don't realize what they have until it's gone. happy birthday america and happy fourth of july. thanks for being part of the real story today. i'm gretchen carlson. anti-airlines. have air carriers been working together to keep ticket prices high. the justice department confirms there's an investigation underway right now. the pentagon has updated america's national security strategy for the first time in years. the chairman of the joint chiefs says global security is the most unpredictable he's seen in his all days. ahead these new warnings about russia and china and isis. also the woman in our wall may be the toughest grandmother in all of the great state of texas. she drove her car off a road in the middle of nowhere. even with broken bones, she
12:01 pm
didn't give up. >> i thought all right now, you've got to do something. >> got to do something. and wait till you hear what she did and how she survived by herself for days. the extraordinary stories ahead. so let's get to it. to start things off, this is a big one. the justice department is investigating whether some of the biggest airlines in america are now illegally working together to screw over customers by keeping ticket prices high. the associates press first reported this. fox news has confirmed it. a justice department spokes woman tells us her department is investigating potential unlawful coordination among the airlines. cuclusionollusion collusion. she won't say which airline it is but rich edson. >> the associated press focuses
12:02 pm
on whether the airlines is expanding their business at a slower pace in order to keep their number of seats low, demand high and prices higher. the airline industry has been consul consolidating lately. as a result, consumer groups have complained this consolidation is leading to fewer choices for passengers and higher prices. the department of justice usually blocks the mergers and negotiates with the airplane and get them to give up airline slots before allowing the deal to go through. the airline industry has said these mergers are good for the industry and consumers now refusing one airline have a larger network that flies to more cities. following to news looking at the airline stock industry down 3.5%. >> judge andrew napolitano is here with us.
12:03 pm
you cannot collude. >> this is a unique theory. it's basically saying that the airlines agree do slow down their growth. not to buy more planes not to expand more. to keep prices from going down. now, that's called price fixing. you can slow down your own growth. that's not a basis for a cause of action. you can't do it in tandem with somebody elseual with a wink of nod or an agreement. the allegation would be a conspiracy to fix prices by slowing the rate of growth of the entire industry. >> and there are penalties for this sort of thing? >> they would be financial and draconian. they could be as much as three times the harm that was caused. if each ticket went up ap dollar you're talking about millions of tickets. whatever the expense is the government occurred in prosecuting the case just multiply it by three. we should say, no complaint has
12:04 pm
been filed. the ap and justice department will not share this document with us. we onlivilley have the ap's interpretation of the document. if it's accurate it appears to be this is the earliest stages of this. it goes back to 2008. which is very interesting. because that's the period when the mergers and acquisitions by the airlines began. now, those mergers and acquisitions every single one of them was approved by the department of justice. therefore the mergers and acquisitions alone cannot be the basis for this cause of action because the justice department gave the go ahead. >> the airlines are up there with the cable companies on how much we love them. >> correct. >> this can't be good for that. >> this cannot be good for the consumer. can't be good for the shareholders as rich edson just said. they're done 3.5% since this came out in the last hour.
12:05 pm
who would want to use the airlines that cheated people? it's also going to be a draconian financial burden imposed on those airlines to compensate the people who they cheated. >> i remember when the delta northwest thing happened. they were like this is going to be great. everybody's going to love it it will be wonderful. you can't get anywhere in the whole nation without going through atlanta. it's going to be horrible. >> that alone cannot be the basis for this. >> i know. >> the department of justice approves that. >> do you know how to get from memphis to new york? you walk. that's how you get there. you walk. >> how do you fly there? >> you don't. you cannot do it. not anymore. you can't do anything anymore without -- once you do you have to listen to their mouths. >> that is the government as well. the government tells them where they can fly to and from. they make an argument this is profitable this isn't. the government decides whether or not to accept the argument.
12:06 pm
this is part free market. >> the first thing they do they take a jet and bring it down to a regional jet you can't get in without slumping over. and people stop flying them and nobody's not flying them. i wonder why? it's flying in a tin can. >> all these things you're talking about, if there is a case are likely to come out. this is the type of case that's basically lawyers and documents. it takes 12 years to litigate. and it could be in the hundreds of millions of dollars in legal fees on the part of the airlines. who will pay that legal fees? shareholders and consumers. >> do you know who won't get a dime out of this no matter what happens. >> the average guy who wattbought a ticket. >> $840 to memphis. >> you got to be kidding? >> no, sir. it's the most expensive place to fly. if you google it it's true.
12:07 pm
>> in the google? >> i have a lot of things. >> i love working with you when you're riled up. >> you should have to fly occasionally. how do you like flying? >> i don't enjoy it part of it is because of what the airlines have done to the industry. i somebody would enter the industry that is airline friendly. i would pay more for a ticket that worked there that got there and was comfortable and pleasant. part of it is the tsa. it would be nice to tuavoid them. >> we could go on this all day. everybody is going, cable companies, tsa, airlines yep. >> i will watch this case for you. >> i hope you will. this one we'll follow and i'll duck like this trying to get on the plane. the pentagon releases the updated national military strategy. we have a military strategy and they've updated it and the nation's blueprint for taking on
12:08 pm
the enemies and keeping the country safe is out. among the dire warnings they cannot predict the next grave threat to the nation. military leaders say it will come faster than in the past. this is the first update in four years. the islamic state grabbed land across iraq and syria. russia's president vladmir putin if invaded ukraine. iran has yet to reach a deal on the nuclear program. north korea has already built a nuclear weapon. it predicts now any new fights will likely come in long campaigns, not short baeltsttles. it points out different strategies for waging war against nation. verses extremists. it's interesting the islamic state comes up four times in a
12:09 pm
25 page document. ash carter said defeating isis is ultimately the responsibility of the locals. >> the only way to have a lasting defeat of isil is to have someone who can govern and secure territory once isil is defeated. that has to be a local force on the ground. that's why the strategy calls for the united states to help train and equip, and then help enable a local ground force. >> that's been the problem for many years. the strategy pledges to continue working with our allies to fight islamic state terrorists. with us now is retired colonel cedric layton. he was the joint chief of staff. he spent 26 years as an intelligence officer in the united states air force. thank you. >> my pleasure. >> i don't know there's so much new here. the more you can emphasize this
12:10 pm
grab hold and give to someone else to take care of seems like the better off we're probably going to be. >> that's the premise behind this strategy. this new national military strategy. it falls in the wake of the national security strategy which was promulgated back in february by the white house. so these two documents basically are supposed to be taken together. but on the national military strategy side of the house we're looking at really the realization that in this particular situation, we don't know what's going to happen next. the whole idea of prediction is realized to be a very difficult thing at best. >> the problem is leadership over there. i wonder if this addresses what to do when a government for instance in baghdad won't include all its people and its people won't get on board to what it's doing. that's our problem. >> that is our problem. one of the big idea that we can rely on locals in many historical instances where the
12:11 pm
locals weren't up to where they needed to be in order to defeat the people they were facing. we have that one possibility there. if the locals can't take care of it, absolutely wonderful. but my bet is in many cases we'll see they're not going to be able to do it. >> in many cases we found that those with whom we might work have a different long term goal that we do. in parts of the campaign in syria, does it address what to do about that? >> not really. we take this view that all of these people that we're working with will share the same long term goals we have. that's simply as you pointed out, not true. what we're doingealing with is we will have temporary alliances in order to tucheapachieve our goals. today's friend may be tomorrow's adversary and enemy.
12:12 pm
the strategy does not address that at all. >> what we've just said and what this says is if you can't get it and hold it and give it to somebody who will take care of it and not use it against you you don't need to be getting it and holding it which is what we've been doing for the last ten years and hasn't worked. >> that's a possible interpretation of that. the idea is you get it hold it briefly and you get out so the others can take care of it. and you know in essence what these strategies do is they fight the last war. so this idea that we're going to be in a situation where we're going to be in a protracted campaign may be true. we may end up in a situation where we have a lightening quick war. the strategy does not address that issue. >> good to hear from you, thank you. >> some history in havana. >> today i can announce that the united states has agreed to formally reestablish relations with the republic of cuba.
12:13 pm
>> embassies will reopen here and there. what about the cuban embargo or cuba's demand we give back guantanamo bay. the new normal with cuba. coming up on the fox news desk. [announcer]when we make beyond natural dry dog and cat foods. we start with real meat as the first ingredient. we leave out corn,wheat and soy. and we own where our dry food is made-100 percent! can other brands say all that? for nutrition you can trust and your pet will enjoy... does your food go beyond? learn more at purinabeyond.com.
12:15 pm
12:16 pm
the united states will open an embassy in havana for the first time in more than half a century. cuba will open its embassy in washington as well. this is said to happen in less than three weeks and marks the biggest step yet in what the president called the new chapter in u.s. relations with cuba. he said the cold war era policy of isolating the country did nothing to take down its communist ruzemeegimeregime. the best way to advance democracy is to have a presence on the island. >> nobody expects cuba to be transformed over night. i believe american engagement is the best way to advance our interests in support for democracy and human rights. >> president obama cannot do it all. only congress can lift bans on trades between our countries. the white house says there is strong support from both political parties. but you wouldn't know if from reactions from some of the republicans today. i was interested to hear and
12:17 pm
reading today that 60% of americans are for normalization, only 40% of people in south florida, cubans that is cubans in the country. the majority of cubans are for it. the reaction has been weird. >> big names from the gop reacting today. we have a speaker of the house john boehner saying the obamatricationobama administration is handing the castros a lifetime dream of legit legitacy. then we have a florida congresswoman saying opening the american embassy in cuba will do nothing to help the cuba people and it's an attempt for president obama to go legacy shopping. we have marco rubio saying throughout this entire negotiation, the castro regime has stepped up its repression of the cuban people. the administration has continued to look the other way and offered concession after concession. he has also said he would not confirm an ambassador to cuba.
12:18 pm
>> marco rubio -- >> both. >> they've been two of the -- the thing is congress has to approve the money. so we need $6.5 million to fix up what is now our interest section down there. i got to get the money. if they don't, i don't know what they are going to do. got to fight about everything. >> right. president obama admits cuba has long way to go to giving its people freedom. rights like free speech and political opposition they don't have those. the president says u.s. will speak up whenever cuba violates human rights. steve, things are moving forward, but the debate is not over. >> it's really a sharp debate. you have people on opposite sides. the president saying engagement is the way to go forward to help the cuban people. by opening things up it will nudge them toward democracy. a lot of political leaders are saying the effect will be the opposite.
12:19 pm
since the government controls the economy, any money that flows into the economy will go to the government. they say president obama is extending the -- >> they don't appear to need help extending. they're get at it. what are the next steps? >> july 20th we'll see the flags raised. there is a new flag pole in d.c. we'll see a visit by secretary kerry and possibly a visit by president obama before his term ends. that would make him the first sitting prz sitting president to go to cuba since 1928. >> greece is offering options to try to get more money from its creditors. europe doesn't seem too keen to play ball. what happened now? the crisis in greece. it's a whole bag of weird. we're sort through it in a minute.
12:21 pm
[dad]i wear a dozen different hats doing small gigs,side gigs...gig gigs. quickbooks self-employed helps me get ready for tax time. to separate expenses,i just swipe. it's one hat i don't mind wearing. [passenger] i work for me. and so does quickbooks. it estimates my taxes,so i know how much stays in my pocket. and that's how i own it. [announcer]stay in the flow with quickbooks self-employed. start your free,thirty-day trial today at join-self-employed-dot-com.
12:23 pm
here's a greece update. it's all very confusing. the prips the prime minister is defying banking officials as his country teeters on the brink of a financial melt down. president obama has warned the crisis could rattle markets around the world. greece failed to make a payment of nearly $2 billion. making it the first nation to default on its debt. a live look at the dow. if you were afraid to look at your 401(k) you're not alone. today is better. on monday it took the biggest hit of the year 350 of them down. greece's prime minister today vowed to move ahead with plans for a referencedum and whether the country should accept the budget
12:24 pm
cuts for more money. in other words continue austerity austerity. he's urging people to vote no. and bankts officials are acting in an undemocratic way. the banks have been closed. people have been lining up at the atm's but the prime minister says their money is safe. we have a former ambassador to greece. he's a -- she's a member of secretary john kerry's foreign affairs policy board. thanks to see you. >> good to see you. >> is the better thing for greece in the world to vote no and just you know open the wound and start over? or to vote yes and continue austerity and the toilet bowl syndrome? >> you know i think the best thing for the greek people is to vote yes to agree that they need to stay in the european union
12:25 pm
and accept this however unfortunate it is the package from the european union. this prime minister is young and inexperienced. he governed a very radical faction. and they really miscalculated. they have alienated the germans and the united states. you see they don't have a single friend in the european union standing up for them. and he called for a no vote he urged the greek people to say no means that he thinks he can strengthen his negotiating position. al but the europeans aren't going to budge. he's not understanding what the game is. >> he said no does not necessarily mean an abandoning the euro and going back to the drak droxmaw. >> what he's trying to do is toib continue the negotiations. he's trying to strengthen his hand by having the greek people
12:26 pm
vote no support the greek government. he wants to go back to a negotiating table on monday or tuesday morning with the german chancellor with a european central back with the imf and say i've got the greek people behind me. the europeans have decided they're not going to go further. greece owes them money. the government has given no reform proposal that would entice the union to have serious negotiation. i don't see the european union budging next week. >> we know we owe you a birchbunch of money. you're asking for austerity measures that prevent us from paying you back. >> i mean, the greek economy has contracted by 25% by one quarter over the last five years. there's 25% unemployment 50% youth unemployment. it's a catastrophe in greece.
12:27 pm
i think they had a case when this government first came in five, six months ago if they had tried to get at that issue of fairness and created a loligz to talk about whether continued austerity is the right way to go they might have had traction. they went after the germans, they called for reperations for world war 2. that made a lot of faints towards russia. they try to cozy to putin which has alienated the united states. they haven't handled this in a responsible way. you're sitting at home and looking at the internet when all of a sudden it dies. it's not your computer but somebody has cut a high capacity cable that serves the whole yooir area. this thing has happened a dozen times in one area. what is happening? the feds are on the case.
12:28 pm
another company cuts ties with that presidential candidate named trump. he claims he made the decision. the donald, next. you total your brand new car. nobody's hurt,but there will still be pain. it comes when your insurance company says they'll only pay three-quarters of what it takes to replace it. what are you supposed to do, drive three-quarters of a car? now if you had liberty mutual new car replacement, you'd get your whole car back. i guess they don't want you driving around on three wheels. smart. with liberty mutual new car replacement, we'll replace the full value of your car. see car insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ ♪ [ male announcer ] you wouldn't ignore signs of damage in your home. are you sure you're not ignoring them in your body? even if you're treating your crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis an occasional flare may be a sign of damaging inflammation. and if you ignore the signs, the more debilitating your symptoms could become. learn more about the role
12:29 pm
12:30 pm
more on the headlines. a man who helped save more than 600 children from the holocaust has died. nicholas wynton arranged for trains to carry them from nazi territory and set them up in foster homes. he said he kept his story a secret for half a century until his wife found old paperwork. a relative said he died in his sleep at the age of 106. the white house installing spikes on the fence to try to keep out intruders. this comes several months after a man hopped the fence. tourists inside the white house can snap photos. but you still can't take video and selfie sticks are off
12:31 pm
12:33 pm
top of the news now. senior white house officials knew as early as 2009 that hillary clinton was using a private e-mail address as secretary of state. that's one of the new details we've learned after the state department released 3,000 pages of e-mails. it's not clear whether officials knew secretary clinton was using a private server from her home. it's not clear whether they understood she didn't have a fax machine either. critics have called this a potential security risk. secretary clinton said the system had numerous safe guards. ed henry is at the state department for us. secretary clinton said she never -- used classified information or sent it by e-mail. some of the messages are now classified.
12:34 pm
>> yes you'll remember at the news conferenceats at the un back in march. she was definitive she never sent classified information on that personal server in new york. which was the source of so much controversy. interesting, because we learned in the last few hours that in this batch of 3,000 pages of new e-mails released by the state department about 25 e-mails were held back because the state department after the fact has now deemed those 25 e-mails are in fact classified. now, john kirby, the spokesman at the state department says there's nothing wrong with that. listen. >> this was a prudent decision made to are try to protect sensitive information. and, again, just because it's classified now doesn't mean that it was wrong to send it at a time. >> officials say when she sent the information it wasn't classified. >> we learned more about
12:35 pm
blumenthal. >> he was handling secretary democratic diplomatic missions for hillary clinton. he e-mailed the chief of staff here in 2009 fyi, we just heard from an ap reporter that sidney outed himself about coming to the department and mentionsing it without realizing he was talking to somebody. folks at the white house did not want sidney blumenthal working at the state department. it's clear from this e-mail he was working for them and they wanted to keep it under wraps. >> make sure to wear warm socks at night. >> that was the advice from padesta to hillary clinton. >> good to see you. you don't have much time to buy donald trump ties from macy's because they're stopping selling
12:36 pm
his products. it's the latest fallout after donald trump called mexican immigrants rapists, and said they bring drugs and crime to the united states. he also said he assumes some are quote, good people. donald trump is suing univision $500 million. he did it for dropping his ms. usa and universe pageants. for now donald trump is a top contender for the republican presidential nomination. the latest poll shows him in second place among gop primary voters. isis fighters taking credit for wave after wave of terror attacks on police and army checkpoints. officials in egypt say at least 50 of their officers have died. it's the most intense fighting
12:37 pm
they be seen they've seen in decades. security forces claim they killed at least 100 militants today. this is all happening in the sinai peninsula. we do not have video from today's attacks. the bbc reports the egyptian army has enforced a blackout there. special forces killed nine members of the muslim brotherhood. that happened in the capital city cairo. as we reported on monday a suicide bombing in cairo killed egypt's tomp prosecutor. he was the most senior official to die from an assassination in years. worth noting hundreds of thousands of americans used to visit each year. that number plummeted after the arab spring. this unrest comes two years after the anti-government protest in egypt which led to the overthrow of president morsi
12:38 pm
of the muslim brotherhood. let's bring ambassador ross and he served as a advisor to clinton. where are we now, mr. ambassador? >> we're seeing what is a profound conflict within egypt. clearly the egyptian military and president el sisi felt they've been making headway in terms of taking on isis and the muslim brotherhood. this is the second anniversary of the removal of morsi. and president el sisi assuming power. the real fight has been in sinai. we've seen the egyptians shut down the smuggling tunnels from sinai into gaza. they run into both directions. clear a wide area around the city of raqqa.
12:39 pm
to insure any smuggling could be cut down. close off significant areas of the sinai, not just for news media blackout but for different kind of movement. this has been designed to try to stop the forces within the sinai that are -- they're not part of isis but they identify with isis. and what we've seen today is those forces have been able to organize themselves underground in a way that allows them to carry off a coordinated attack. >> help us how problematic instability in egypt is? >> think about it in this way, in the middle east today, we see the state system under assault. syria may never be the same again. iraq is struggling to try to hold itself together. libya has come apart. yemen is obviously unlikely to ever be completely whole again. egypt has always been kind of the core. egypt is a pillar. if instability were to come to
12:40 pm
dominate egypt, it would basically affect the whole area. certainly affects north africa. because egypt is a pillar and it's important to us because they've been a partner on terror egypt is a linchpin in any way many ways. so we need egypt to succeed. the last thing that we or anybody else or the middle east can afford to see is egypt to unravel. i don't believe it will. but i do think we're seeing what is a kind of existential struggle. one other point on this president el sisi has significant popular support within egypt. he is seen as a bulwark against the radical islamics. he has to continue to succeed when it comes to security and he has to deliver the economic goods. that won't be easy. >> the world is hopeful. great to talk to you, thank you. >> my pleasure. somebody is cutting internet cables in northern california and causing blackouts.
12:41 pm
it's confirmed from the fbi the agents say they're investigating 11 attacks over the past year. this latest one happened yesterday up in sacramento. investigators say lots of homes and businesses had no internet services. investigators say they have an idea about who is behind this? >> well they're not saying a great deal about their investigation at the moment. they're certainly not naming any specific suspects. they're not even saying whether these 11 attacks inside the last 12 months are definitely linked. they don't know whether it's purely vandalism or something more sinister going on here. but they are telling us that the 11 attacks began on july 6th last year. they tended to come in clusters. two or three cables being cut in different locations within hours or even minutes of each other. and now the fbi is asking the public to report any activity at
12:42 pm
those locations even if they didn't notice anything unusual. >> if they know anything about normal crews that were actively doing something in that time period people might think that they were workers, maybe they were just dressed as workers. >> now fiber optic cables are essentially the interstate highways of the internet. if those cables are cut, the internet simply doesn't work. this is restricted to northern california right now. officials are concerned this could be a test run for something much bigger. without the internet it's not hard to imagine the chaos that we'd all have to go through. >> indeed. we miss you back here jonathan come back and visit. >> sure i will do sometime. i miss you, too. >> thank you. he fibs. a grandmother survived for two days after crashing her car in a ravine. we'll hear from her and find out how she did it.
12:43 pm
going face to snout with a giant shark. the woman who shot this video stell tells us the folks who helped her into the cage hope to change the shark's reputation as a vicious man eater. their plan does not seem to be working. hang with us. if you want more on sharks, it is apparently the new summer of sharks. we've had this before. cue rock creek park.
12:46 pm
i heard i could call angie's list if i needed work done around my house at a fair price. sure can. so i could get a faulty light switch fixed? yup! or make a backyard pizza oven? oh yeah. i can almost taste it now. tastes like victory. and pepperoni... we got in a brand-new just in to the fox news deck. the maximum security prison in new york state is announcing big changes. after the two killers broke free. grab a pen. you'll want to write this down. according to the department of corrections listen here the new superintendent at clinton correctional facility will put several new rules into place. here they are. among the changes guards will
12:47 pm
check every cell once a week to make sure inmates are not chiseling away at the laws. truly they had to have a new rule to check the wall. construction workers at the prison will now have to store their tools in an area where the inmates cannot grab them. that would not have stopped the killers from getting their hands on the hacksaws. which a prison worker allegy smuggled inside hamburger mean. they shut down the honor block where a man who chopped up a guy and put him in a trunk and the other guy who killed a guy were able to get special privileges. you can cook in the cell. you get conjugal visits in the meat locker. that's where they met the prison worker. it's quite a place this clinton correctional facility. after the three work manhunt
12:48 pm
which cost more than $21 million. he probably does not want to go to clinton. probably will go to sing sing. if you wanted to get up and close and personal with the sharks you might want to reconsider. take a look at this video from south africa. the woman who posted it is a friend of the editor here at the fox news. she says those gigantic teeth were closer than they appear here. the shark ripped the blue barrier clean off the case. would you look at this? the woman says this was her first time -- you think? first time going in the shark cage dive. no word on whether it will be her last. she claims she saw eight different sharks in 30 minutes. i saw anderson cooper do this once. this seems like the stupidest thing to do. let's go to the shark's house and tease the shark. 75-year-old grandmother says
12:49 pm
she survived on pond water and soda for two days. after crashing her car into a ravine. would you look at that? the women says she swerved to avoid hitting an animal. that's the moral of the story. hit the animal. i mean because this is the result when -- nobody wants to hit the animal. we all love the animals. if it's me or the animal sorry. her car went off the highway and ended up on the side here. it happened friday near seymour in texas west of dallas out in the middle of nowhere with no cell phone service. grandma had to fend for herself. she was trapped in that car for a while? >> she was. she waited a little while hoping someone would be able to find her and sget her out. when that didn't happen she used her rearview mirror to crack through her cracked windshield and make a hole. you can see it if you look closely. that allowed her to get out and move to where you can see there is water. take a listen. >> i had noticed a little pool
12:50 pm
of water on the other side of the car that was clean. so i sat down and done a -- took my tee shirt off and put it in the water and i sucked the water outex/*took my t-shirt off and put it in the water and sucked the water out of the t-shirt. >> she got some water. before that she -- the only thing she had to drink was a little sprite she had in the car. she says she actually remembers hitting a sign before going down into the ravine. take as listen. >> i thought after i got down, it was awful bad. i mean, it seemed like it's just wham, like that, you know. >> wanda says she tried calling for help but her phone didn't have coverage down in there. you see her in this picture we're about to show you. a gentleman in a blue shirt her grandson in law was able to find
12:51 pm
her. that's after the family worked with the phone company and local law enforcement to figure out where the phone last pinged off a cell phone tower. she had been on her way to a family reunion halfway into a six hour u drive when this happened. >> how is she doing? >> her family says she is doing better. she hurt her back pretty bad. her grandson in law says she is able to get up but does need help getting around. she is drinking a lot of fluids. she did have hypothermia -- >> more sprite. >> good grief. >> today moving out of the hospital to a rehab center and next road trip she will take someone with her. >> someone should have gone with her in the first place. she needs to be our guest. >> tough granny. we love her. i won't have time to read the tease. we'll be right back. with aleve it's just two pills, all day. now i'm back! aleve. all day strong.
12:55 pm
first look now inside a new tricked out super car from james bond's favorite automaker. it's pretty cool looking. >> it is. this is the aston martin vul can, $2.3 million price tag, 800 horsepower v-12 engine and track only. 0 to 60 in less than three seconds and so powerful they actually recommends people train on lesser aston martin models before they drive it. it is made almost entirely out of carbon fiber to keep it light. another look at the back of it. more carbon fiber there. has a carbon fiber interior. doesn't need radio leather seats or air conditioning because that takes up weight. the steering wheel looks like jet controls and has exposed roll bars. never know when those might come in handy and limited edition only making about 24 models, but no word yet whether james bond will be able to get behind the
12:56 pm
wheel. >> no cup holders. >> no cup holders. >> so many of us could not see. there are no cup holders. >> no soda or any drinking in the car. >> mayweather is getting a few car, too, and he will be drinking his. google that. thank you. we'll be back with a nod to this day in history and how we all used to listen to music before everything went digital.
12:58 pm
you're driving along, having a perfectly nice day, when out of nowhere a pick-up truck slams into your brand new car. one second it wasn't there and the next second... boom! you've had your first accident. now you have to make your first claim. so you talk to your insurance company and... boom! you're blindsided for a second time. they won't give you enough money to replace your brand new car. don't those people know you're already shaken up? liberty mutual's new car replacement will pay for the entire value of your car plus depreciation. call and for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. switch to liberty mutual insurance and you could save up to $423 dollars. call liberty mutual for a free quote today at see car
12:59 pm
insurance in a whole new light. liberty mutual insurance. on this day, in 1979 sony unveils an amazing new invention called the walkman. the company tried out different names for its new portable cassettes player like sound about, stowaway and disco jogger. the first walkman sold for more than $600 in today's money giving millions of people around the globe a new way to listen to music on the go. you needed two aa batteries and oversized headphones. cd players started hitting the stores a few years later.
1:00 pm
sony helped us change the way we listened to music 36 years ago today. when news breaks out we'll break in. breaking news changes everything on fox news channel. the dow having a better day today. 24 of the dow 36 are in positive territory this afternoon and the average overall up about 132 points. it's better than we've been doing. cavuto could probably make it better, he has a way with things. "your world with neil" is coming up. we'll see you later this afternoon. thank you, shepard. before you take off, are they actually ripping you off? you have to wonder because today they're moving. welcome, everybody. i'm neil cavuto. while you're taking to the skies are airlines working to stick it to you as you do? that is essentially what the justice department is claiming or could be claiming. launching reportedly a major investigation into what it calls unlawful coordination among airlines. airline stocks were getting hit on this day. almost all other sectors were up and soaring down 2 to 3%. more on the
104 Views
IN COLLECTIONS
Fox News West Television Archive The Chin Grimes TV News Archive Television Archive News Search ServiceUploaded by TV Archive on