tv Americas Newsroom FOX News July 6, 2015 6:00am-8:01am PDT
6:00 am
itunes. is that right, marlena? >> right. david l. cook is the one who helped me with the cd and l.d. trevino does miami sound machine. he records that. >> that's great. marlena, thank you so much for joining us here in new york today. >> you're very welcome. >> see you tomorrow everybody. sweet child there. the candidates hit the airways. >> when it comes to donald trump, i like donald trump. >> i said very clearly donald trump does not represent the republican party i don't agree with his remarks. >> i have gotten to know donald trump, he's a unique individual. let's put it this way. chris christie is in studio this morning. a potential avalanche of financial uncertainty.
6:01 am
greece votes no on another bailout. welcome to america's newsroom. patti ann: i'm patti ann browne in for martha maccallum. bill: fox business network's jerry willis is with us. people who voted no, what does not mean? >> reporter: market are poised to open lower. the greece people rejected the austerity and evening cuts. the reactions could go further on the streets of greece. we are seeing grocery stores emptied.
6:02 am
medicines in short supply. it's difficult to get money out of atms. and those banks there are fears could run out of money as soon as today. the big question now is contagious. will other countries in the eu facing financial problems largely because of government overspending. italy and portugal facing problems. what's their next move? bill: greece has a gdp the size of connecticut. does gdp matter? >> reporter: what matters is greece's debt. they owe $60 billion to german
6:03 am
banks. if you don't owe the bank a lot of money they may not help you. but if you owe them tons of money as the greek people do, then you are important. patti ann: the u.s. women's soccer team makes history taking its third world cup in dominant fashion. that was team captain and world cup golden girl carli lloyd's first game. the fastest in tournament history. and she wasn't done. she scored three goals in just under 16 minutes. in the end the women ran away with a 5-2 victory or japan.
6:04 am
the u.s. now the winningest team in history with three titles. lloyd doing every single morning show saying her success boils down to one thing. >> it takes a lot of the work and dedication. i have pretty much dedicated my entire life to soccer. everything has come second. there will be ups and downs. nothing is a smooth ride and it takes a lot of hard work if you want to get to the top. patti ann: mike tobin was at a viewing party last night. tell us about the impact of this historic game. >> reporter: this is a sport that struggled to expand its fan base despite being ranked for 12
6:05 am
years. everything turned the corner for the u.s. women last night. at a watch party in lincoln park it was packed. what a show they got. carli lloyd got herself in the books with a hat trick in the first 16 minutes. japanese women did battle back. but in the end the u.s. women took home the cup and won a lot of fans. >> all americans should be proud of the team. they dominated. >> i didn't expect the that trick out of lloyd but it was awesome. >> you knew u.s.a. was going to light it up. they had so much con if confidence going into it, it's just
6:06 am
perfect. >> reporter: some of these flairs were just little girls when the u.s. squeaked in 1999. patti ann: do we have numbers on how many watched? >> reporter: it looks like the viewership is 30 million dollars. 53,000 fans streamed across the u.s. border to pack the stadium in have. even when you look at the watch party in chicago's lincoln park, 8,000 people packed into the watch party. they took -- took liberty on the song "sweet caroline" and sang "sweet carli lloyd."
6:07 am
bill: watch here, her reaction. >> i have 370 text messages. just thrilled. super proud of every single person on this team. we made history. this will remain with us for the rest of our lives and i can't wait to enjoy it. bill: no doubt about that. hope she has unlimited plan on the data there. this is like a lightning strike. if you tuned in afterwards you missed these awesome highlights. patti ann: i love the fact that she attributes it to the team. she was the star but really it was the whole team. bill: the way they played against germany where the americans got and the germans pretty much did not. a ton of excitement and well
6:08 am
deserved. patti ann: 24 hours and counting with the iran deadline. mr. kerry says the negotiations could quote go either way and he's willing to walk away if iran doesn't make up its mind on some of the major issues. >> if hard choices get made in the next couple danes made quickly we could get an agreement this week. but if they are not made, we'll not. patti ann: iran insisting sanctions on its ballistic missile be lifted. >> that was the demand, the bottom line demand, we'll see if that is in the final arrangements if there is one. family vacation takes a terrible
6:09 am
turn here. listen. >> horrible tragedy. it's unfortunate. >> there were two dozen people plunge together ground as the patio breaks apart. what caused the boards to go away. plus there is this. patti ann: a fiery wreck at daytona. a car going airborne crashing into a fireball. the driver miraculously walked away. governor chris christie in studio next on donald trump and much more. >> first of it's not a jab at donald trump.
6:13 am
6:14 am
christie is in studio now. thanks for coming back on america's newsroom. i know you were in new hampshire over the weekend. donald trump is forcing this issue on immigration. do you support what he said? >> no, i think it was wrong and doesn't have any place in the primary. ted cruz is giving us lectures on republican on republican violence? i don't need to be lectured by ted cruz. bill: republicans reacting to republicans and there is maybe not blood on the floor but a little bruising. >> donald made comments and those who have feelings about it
6:15 am
had a reaction to it. on this one we disagree. i think the comments are inappropriate. when you are running for president you have a responsibility to answer some of that stuff. i have a problem with ted cruz lecturing about republican on republican violence. let's not be hypocrite cam with donald trump and attack lamar alexander. bill: is this where it's leading in the where you are a month away from the debate in ohio? your stance is against the top of the field. >> all the folks running for president all want to be the nominee. so there will be competition and
6:16 am
i don't think that will resort in violence. i don't think any comments have resulted in violence. bill: rick perry said he was offended by what donald trump said. >> no. i just disagree. i'm not personally offended. i think it's inappropriate but nothing i would ever say. bill: here is what jeb bush had to say. >> he's doing this to inflame and incite and draw attention which seems to be the organizing principle of his campaign and he doesn't represent the republican party for its values. bill: there is a bigger issue and that's how the republican party attracts hispanics.
6:17 am
>> i don't think it hurts or helps. i think it's a small moment that we are all ema sizes that will be long gone by the time we get to a general election campaign. take this from somebody who comes from the most ethnically diverse state in the union new jersey. i know how to discuss these issues and listen to the latino community in our country about what they care about. bill: on greece you were asked by shannon bream when you were up in new hampshire. you said third world politics is something you won't touch but you have said you will hug it because the debt in america is so great. >> you have to increase retirement in social security.
6:18 am
you have to means test social security. it will save $1.2 trillion. nobody else is talking about it. we know we have to deal with it to save social security and medicare and that money to invest. bill: raising the retirement age, what sort of reaction are you getting? >> in new hampshire i have a lot of people nodding back at me. they know we have to address it. no one likes it but theyth know we have to deal with it. bill: we might know this week whether there is a deal or not. how do you think the white house has hand this? >> he's giving the biggest sponsor of state terrorism a pass. he should walk away.
6:19 am
bill: do you think he will? >> no. i think he cares about legacy and library. that's all he cares about right now. bill: isis. how would you as president fight back against islamic terrorism. >> with isis in particular we need to train our allies down to bat tallonto -- down to the battalion level let them lead the fight with american support. the president doesn't have a strategy and if you don't have a strategy you can't win on anything. bill: i'll talk to you in a moment about where you stand in this race and what you are doing on the trail. president obama is
6:20 am
set for a rare appearance at the pentagon, meeting with top generals on isis. will there be a change in strategy in kt macfarland joins us. a small plane crash lands on the sand forein front of beachgoers. great proposal! let's talk more over golf! great. better yet, how about over tennis? even better. a game changer! your 2 o'clock is here. oops, hold your horses. no problem. la quinta inns & suites is ready for you, so you'll be ready for business. the ready for you alert, only at lq.com. laquinta!
6:21 am
6:22 am
6:23 am
6:24 am
a been was stick can out of one lady's elbow and a bone stick can out somewhere else. patti ann: the cause of the collapse is under investigation. bill: i want to show you an image from new hampshire over the weekend. this was a press rope line that surrounded hillary clinton walking in a parade. what did you make of that? >> it many outrageous. i have never seen a candidate who wants to have so little contact with the media. bill: i have heard some argue this is smart politic for now. she doesn't need to press the flesh. there i no one challenging her.
6:25 am
>> i saw bernie sanders with 10,000 people in wisconsin. i think mrs. clinton ought to be careful. she took a wildly u.s. senator and she ended up being secretary of state not president. >> i think she is trying to do it that way and the press need to fight back. bill: what if the media said we'll go home if you won't give us access, would she change? >> she would have to. the media wouldn't allow this to happen with any of the republican candidate. if we tried to put a rope line there would have been a riot for
6:26 am
mrs. clinton. bill: as you screen sick candidates left to right and you on the second page are number 10. you need to be in the top 10 to make the debate here on fox. what happens for to you drive the up 3% higher. >> you work. if campaigns didn't matter we have them. bill: if you are not in the top 10 will you participate in the forum? >> i will in the top 10. >>.bill: if you are not in the top 10 will you still play ball? >> of course. bill: last night you were active on twitter. you are very proud of new jersey's soccer abilities. >> four of five goals were from
6:27 am
women from new jersey. these are proud moment for our country and proud moment for new jersey soccer. bill: how did your daughters react? my sisters and neeses were so amped up. >> so were my sons. all six of us were in front of the tv. it's what a great point for our country. it's a great thing for women in our country to know what they can achieve. bill: we'll see if you cleveland a month from today. patti ann: a terrifying crash in the final lap at daytona. a car going airborne. but the drive walked away.
6:28 am
will john kerry walk away from and you iran deal? also a lawmaker he we shouldn't be talking to them. >> iran is an anti-american terror sponsoring regime that has killed thousands of americans from iraq to afghanistan. and ones you never thought you'd make. we help connect where you are. to places you never thought you'd go. this, is why we travel. and why we continue to create new technology to connect you to the people and places that matter. if i buy a car through usaa, i know i'm getting a fair price. i was like, wow, if i could save this much, then i could maybe upgrade a little bit. we realized, okay, this not only could be convenient we could save a lot of money. usaa car buying service. powered by truecar. save money zero hassle.
6:31 am
i take prilosec otc each morning for my frequent heartburn. because it gives me... zero heartburn! prilosec otc. the number 1 doctor-recommended frequent heartburn medicine for 9 straight years. one pill each morning. 24 hours. zero heartburn. bill: a volatile start to the week for stocks. this amid the turmoil inside europe. the greek people voting no, overwhelmingly. 60% rejecting the terms of a bailout deal just days after the country default on its debt. greece is trying to find out a way to pay for it own interest by the day.
6:32 am
patti ann: a top-level status report in a fight against the islamic state. following that the president will update the nation. all of this coming as his strategy comes under blistering criticism. k.t. macfarland was the deputy secretary of defense. >> the president is going to the pentagon. what happens they all go to capitol hill. and they are going to say what is the anti-isis strategy, how effective is it going to be? the president is being in advance to make sure everybody is on the same page and they don't go on capitol hill and criticize this very effective policy which everybody agrees
6:33 am
won't stop isis. patti ann: the obama administration announcing it will send another 450 to iraq. but that has not stemmed the criticism. but what about the policy? >> it's not working it's not going to work. the president wants out of the middle east. he was the guy who campaigned, i want to stop wars in iraq. i think the president wants nothing to do with isis. the problem is it will fester. so what should our strategy be? i'm a conservative and i'm a hawk. but i part ways with a lot of them. if you have got two enemies fighting each other. at this point it's isis and the bagging today/iran element. if you have two enemies fighting
6:34 am
each other step back and let them go at it. but what can we do to protect the american homeland. patti ann: their recruitment efforts seem to be highly effective on social media. what can we do? >> in the last two years isis has shown they own social media they can recruit on line. they can find people. they never even travel to the middle east. sleeper terrorists can be activate bid a couple of tweets. the fact that they are sticking their heads up on the social media and the internet we can find them. that's what we need to start doing. not top secret stuff. look at at social media. isis is active in front of the public eye on facebook and twitter and in chat rooms when
6:35 am
they stick their heads up. you have said arm our allies. >> we are giving weapons to the iraq government and saying pass them along but they are not passing them along. if you have people willing to fight in the region it's port to allow them to fight. but don't think you will put in a couple hundred or a couple thousand that will make a difference. bill: :35. a fox. world leaders are still talking hoping to reach a deal on iran's nuclear program.
6:36 am
john kerry trying to tamp down expectations. one republican lawmaker blasting this apparent stand still. >> this is not like russell wilson and the seattle seahawks trying to make everybody happy. they dismantle that nuclear program entirely or face destruction of their nuclear facilities. bill: golf john sununu is with me. 43 has a birthday today. bill: i'm watching the alerts come out of vienna, austria. they dispute the u.n. sanctions
6:37 am
on the missile program. do they do a deal or not and should they do a deal? >> president obama is obsessed with doing a deal. the iranians know it. they keep getting additional concessions. we returned billions of dollars of frozen assets to them. they won a major concession on the economic side and they will continue to win. i think anybody who thinks there is not going to be a deal will be surprised. it's not a guarantee there will be one. but this administration wants one so badly the iranians will continue to get a slice of benefit here and a slice of benefit there. negotiations and he pretty much says iran is in it for themselves. they have gotten a lot to these negotiations so far. even on the outside i think that can be conceded.
6:38 am
>> they have got and lot and they will continue to get a lot because they are negotiating with someone with an administration that feels that the most important thing to them in terms of is to be able to have obama's name on a deal. they are not as worried about the details as they are about getting one at all. and the iranians will continue 0 negotiate until they get virtually everything they want. bill: i think if there is a deal this one phrase you can point to and that's whether any time anywhere inspections are included. when i heard kerry say this is something experts all over the world will look at. he's aware and people will look at this and figure out whether the united states got hoodwinked. >> the administration is running out of time.
6:39 am
they very many a little more than a year left in office and it will take more than a year to see every "i" dotted and every "t" crossed. bill: you say there will be a deal. if that's the case what happens next. >> even when you get a deal written down the administration will spin sit one way the iranians will spin it another way. the american public will be confused. we'll have our experts but there will be a partisan tinge among the experts. in my opinion it puts the world at a more significant risk and is bad for everyone. but this administration will
6:40 am
spin it positively. i don't think we would have gotten to this stage. i think the use the let itself start gore graight weakness when we established a policy of not wanting to be a leader in the middle east. my old boss would have made sure our friends and enemies there made sure we were committed to make sure things were done right. piece through strength is an effective phrase. bill: governor, through for your time. a happy birthday to 43. we won't make that mistake again. patti ann: hillary clinton's campaign treating reporters like cattle roping them off as she starts her campaign.
6:41 am
6:44 am
bill: dirty job for rescuers in arizona. they are called to free a man from a chimney. firefighters say friends locked him out of the home in scottsdale and he tried to get back inside by climbing down the chimney. does that ever work? patti ann: it works for canada every year. the guy is going to be okay. patti ann: when it comes to reporters hillary clinton's campaign taking a page out of
6:45 am
rawhide. her team literally pinning the meade -- penning the media as she walked in a parade. >> i am all about new beginnings. a new grandchild. another new hairstyle. a new email account. why not a new relationship with the press. patti ann: mark, how is that working out for her? >> i have heard of campaigns herd the press i have never seen them do it literally. is she going to have them walking down the streets with a
6:46 am
rope. patti ann: she is herding them like cattle. >> the worst part of this is the press weren't along with it. what kind of respecting journalist lets a 20-year-old campaign volume corral them. dunk the rope and go after your question. patti ann: it brings up that "o" word optics. >> everybody knows hillary clinton has been avoiding the press. as of this interview it's 25,180 minutes, 17 days since she was asked a question from reporters. americans know that but they didn't have a visual, an optic of it. they say a picture tells a
6:47 am
thousand word. they have a visual of her herding the press. patti ann: it may not just be the press she is worried about. is it the press or ordinary people who were also yelling out important questions like emails? >> it's not just the reporters they want to avoid. they don't want the press to overhear her talking to ordinary americans. she is a control freak. they literally vet people. when you see her in a coffee shop talking to ordinary americans, those aren't ordinary americans. but when you go to a parade you can't hand pick who shows up at a parade. there will be people who ask about the missing emails you didn't submit to the federal government. they used the rope to keep the press out of earshot so they
6:48 am
could not hear her interactions with ordinary americans. patti ann: what we are seeing is criticism on both side of the aisle, a lot of democrats coming out criticizing her badly for this. is she damaged now? her numbers have been dropping. >> reporter: her numbers have been dropping and maybe that's something they didn't want somebody to ask her. she is in trouble. one thing she has going for her is there isn't and lot of competition unlike the republican side where we have 14, 15 candidate in the race. she has bennett. bernie sanders has closed the gap. they don't want people asking her about why she is losing the campaign to bernie sanders. bill: we'll see if that rope
6:49 am
comes back. a debate shake under the south. will the confederate flag still fly on the ground of the south carolina capitol. some say they will not go down without a fight. but which way? and there is this ... >>'s airborne. right up into the fence. patti ann: it was a wild crash at daytona but the driver walked away. >> watch the car stop. he goes from 180-190 miles per hour.
6:50 am
this allergy season, will you be a sound sleeper, or a mouth breather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicines alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. ♪ whoa what are you doing? putting on a movie. i'm trying to watch the game here. look i need this right now ok? come on i don't want to watch that. too bad this is happening. fine, what if i just put up the x1 sports app right here. ah jeez it's so close.
6:51 am
he just loves her so much. do it. come on. do it. come on! yes! awww, yes! that is what i'm talking about. baby. call and upgrade to get x1 today. ♪ for over 60,000 california foster children, having necessary school supplies can mean the difference between success and failure. the day i start, i'm already behind. i never know what i'm gonna need. new school new classes, new kids. it's hard starting over. to help, sleep train is collecting school supplies for local foster children. bring your gift to any sleep train and help a foster child start the school year right. not everyone can be a foster parent but anyone can help a foster child.
6:53 am
royal watchers cheering them on as they arrived at a 16th century church on queen elizabeth' estate. it's where the royal family attend church service. bill: watch this. a dramatic ending to a nascar race. that is just epic. austin dillon's car goes airborne hitting the fence. debris hitting the stand injuring some of the fans. the crash destroyed hill on's car but he was able to walk away without serious injuries. >> reporter: 13 fans were
6:54 am
injured. four were treated on site. one was taken to the hospital. some of the shrapnel flew up into the stand. the drive austin dillon was able to walk away with just a bruised tail bone. >> you see up a bad accident in the rearview mirror, that was frightening for the drives. you don't want to see that kind of thing happen. >> reporter: the crash happened in the last lap of a rain-delayed race at almost 3:00 in the morning. bill: nascar has done a lot to keep the fans safer. >> reporter: they have a catch wall that protects the fans. nascar officials are saying they
6:55 am
are proud of the way the catch wall protected fans. he says the problem may be the high speed. he says with such high speed it's hard to keep the car on the track. bill: that's something else. it seems every month or two we watch one of these things and they live. patti ann: governor chris christie weighing in on the debate over immigration. donald trump and party infighting. bill: this is just wonderful to watch. a world cup for the record books. only hat trick for the women ever. and u.s. women are your world cup champs.
6:56 am
what we are learning from the players that makes them so good. ♪ have you ever thought, "i could never do that"? have you ever thought... you just didn't have anything left in the tank? well - you do. because the courage is already inside. i have lung cancer. and i've heard it all... the well-meaning advice of friends... the guarded words of doctors... the brave resolve of loved ones... what i haven't heard... what a lot of us haven't heard nearly enough... ...is new news. over 430,000 americans are living with lung cancer today. in fact, every two and a half minutes another person is diagnosed.
6:57 am
although there are known risk factors anyone can get lung cancer. and every case is different. but now patients could be hearing some unexpected news. this news goes beyond what you may know today. research is leading to scientific advancements... that could offer some patients the potential of longer life... and the chance to share more moments and memories. news in lung cancer? now, i'm listening. if you have lung cancer, you haven't heard it all. yet. talk to your doctor today for more information on lung cancer. and call now... or visit lungcancerinfo.org for a free patient education kit. you know i never get tired of my job, but like you i think about my retirement years, and like you i wonder have we done enough to plan for them. a reverse mortgage is a great program that could help you live a better retirement. it's a mortgage, with no monthly payment. it could give you extra money to live on, or save. call one reverse mortgage now to get
6:58 am
your questions answered and ask for your free guide. it can give you relief from house payments, allow you to make home improvements, or give you more money to save. some people ask me "do i still get to keep my home?" ...and the answer is yes. you remain the owner of your home. it's worth a call to find out more. call one reverse mortgage now and get your questions answered, and ask for your free guide!
6:59 am
bill: the republican field for president divided over comments by donald trump and how to respond to them. new jersey governor chris christie last hour here in "america's newsroom" voicing strong disagreement with his republican rival. had a little more to say about that. welcome to a brand new hour. hope you had a great holiday weekend. welcome to "america's newsroom." martha has time with the family. patti ann: i'm patti ann browne in for martha today. trumps convent ascomments on immigration are making waves and forcing his rivals to respond. new jersey governor chris christie weighing in minutes ago on "america's newsroom" reacting to the comments of senator ted cruz. >> i think what he said was wrong. i don't think, it was inappropriate and i don't think it has any place in the
7:00 am
campaign. i find it ironic ted cruz is giving lectures on republican on republican violence. the guy put together a group sponsoring primary ads against senator lamar alexander is giving us the rest of us lectures on republican on republican violence. all due respect i don't need to be lectured by ted cruz. bill: brit hume, political analyst with us. how are you, brit? >> i'm good bill. how are you? bill: i'm doing fine thanks. the quote, unquote republican on republican violence is difficult to avoid when you have 10, 14, maybe 16 people vying for the same job. and that's perhaps what we're getting now this reaction to comment by donald trump. what is extraordinary to me though how donald trump has been able to drive this conversation for a week now. >> well that there is not a lot happening. he is new to the race. no one thought or many people did not think he would do this
7:01 am
would take the full step of announcing and filing his papers and so forth. so and he is enormously colorful and he makes news there for. how often he can make news with the same kind of stuff he has been saying, i think is doubtful but he is, but he, for the moment, he is kind of the flavor of the moment. and that is, that is going to probably continue for a while. bill: this is one of the tweets over the weekend. rick perry failed at the border. now he is critical of me. now he need as new pair of glasses to see crimes committed by illegal immigrants. you think it is doubtful he can make news what? >> understand this about trump. there is a, there is a segment of the republican electorate which is so deeply disappointed in and disaffected with the republican mainstream leadership they are more angry with them than they are at the democrats
7:02 am
at least in terms how they express themselves. that segment of the electorate was ted cruz country. now along comes donald trump and to some extent upstaged cruz in that because he is attacking all these establishment figures in language far beyond any that cruz has used. cruz you know could see that. he can see the trump is a threat to whatever standing he haste in the race. so cruz is not, he is not taking trump on. he is not going to do that. because that would alienate his people. that illustrates another point, bill, which is important here. these kind of attacks of trump making are personal in nature. the crack about perry's glasses being one. he has attacked other candidates as failures and so on. when these candidates debate or disagree, mostly disagree on issues. they vigorously attack each other's positions on issues or policies they advocate it canned. they don't do it personally.
7:03 am
the reason for that is pimple n a primary field you're trying to win support from these people's voters. if you attack a candidate personally you hope to best that candidate. okay, you do that. then you want that candidate's supporters to many could to you. if you attack the guy they personally. it is shortsighted politics. it reflects that donald trump is new to politics really. bill: i remember you as a reporter at abc news. i don't know -- >> you're older than i thought. bill: a little bit. i, i don't know how many campaigns you have covered but i wonder if you have ever seen anything like we saw in new hampshire over the weekend where the reporters were held away from a candidate, in this case hillary clinton by a rope? >> no i have not seen that. i will tell you this issue that has to do with candidates walking typically in new
7:04 am
hampshire we used to see this what would happen to a candidate in new hampshire is that a huge swarm of media would gather around the candidate, swarm around the candidate and render the candidate basically invisible to the public. you would have cameramen walking backwards and camera woman shooting pictures and fish pole microphones sticking in. we have this thousand foot monster proceeding down the street totally obscuring a voter's views of the candidate. people around hillary clinton didn't want to have that. so they improvised and put this, herd the press along behind a mobile rope. the problem -- bill: should have reacted there. i can't imagine sam done allison putting up with that? >> the truth of the matter you could get out of there, but, got secret service around here. you will not get any closer to the candidate. looked as if they all had a view of her, because she wasn't
7:05 am
completely obscured bit rest of the press. so they were getting their shots. but it looks terrible. and reinforce this is image that she is this regal figure already, sort of halfway to the presidency who has to be treated specially and reporters kept at a distance by means after mobile rope line. bill: do you blame her or should the media have said, we're not doing this, we're out of here? >> let's assume the media said that, we'll leave and not cover the campaign. how well -- what kind of abdication is that? when you're at the scene of a story you deal with the restrictions as best you can but you cover the story. you just don't walk away because you don't like the rules. you can sometimes do that in a particular event but when you're trying to cover a candidate in a wide open situation like that i don't think that is viable option. bill: thank you brit. talk to you soon. brit hume there in washington,
7:06 am
thanks. patti ann: well vote could come as early today on the fate of the confederate flag flying on the capitol grounds in south carolina. the state senate taking up the issue today. that flag of course has been at center of a heated debate since last month's deadly church shooting in charleston which investigators believe was racially motivated. jonathan serrie is live right now in columbia, south carolina. jonathan, what would it take to move the flag from its current location? >> reporter: hi, patti ann, it would require a vote from 2/3 of members of both the south carolina senate and the south carolina house of representatives. the reason the bar has been set so high because this requirement was part of a compromise in 2000 when the confederate battle flag was taken down from the dome of the south carolina statehouse where it had flown since 1962 and moved to the confederate soldier monument on the front lawn of the capital grounds where it flies today.
7:07 am
a bill from the senate would permanently remove the flag from the statehouse property and display it in museum. a poll by the courier newspaper out of charleston suggest there is enough support in both chambers to move this flag. patti ann? patti ann: nonetheless, a strong passions on both sides of this flag debate. how heated is it down there? >> reporter: very strong passions on both sides. opponents of the flag say that the confederate battle flag is a symbol of slavery and racism but supporters say it has nothing to do with racism. it is about southern pride and civil war history. one group has launched a social media campaign to save it. watch. >> like isis, obama's haters want our monuments down, graves dug up and schools roads, towns and counties renamed. they have taken the duke of hazards off tv. what's next? >> reporter: conservative response team the group
7:08 am
sponsoring that ad, plans another series of robocalls to voters today urging them to call on legislators to keep the flag where i it is. over the weekend opponents of confederate flag described a a patriotic protest rally. several hundred people turned out the event. naacp says civil rights leaders plan another vigil on the statehouse grounds. patti ann? patti ann: jonathan serrie live in south carolina. bill: greece launching further into financial uncertainty. 61% vote no on the bailout deal offered by the european union. the economic crisis sending a ripple across global markets. the dow is down 100 plus at the moment. greg palkot live on the scene. he is in athens greece. what is the reaction there greg? >> reporter: hey, bill, it is day after that dramatic no vote in yesterday's referendum against eu austerity. now it is down to reality.
7:09 am
at banks all over athens today lines remained long. we heard and saw several branches running out of cash. the government is set to extend the closures and cash controls through the end of the week and there is no indication that the european central bank will increase important emergency funding for these banks. this amid new word that greek prime minister alexis tsipras will present a new bailout proposal to e.u. officials on tuesday. but those officials are still talking very tough and a greek exit from the euro looms very large. here is what a few greeks had to say to us today. >> we had already angry and against our government. >> reporter: your government. you think it will not go well? >> worse can not be. >> i think we're all spectators. >> there is to money in the banks but we have to be optimistic.
7:10 am
>> hopeful, thank you. >> reporter: hopeful or not? >> no. >> reporter: no? >> no. >> reporter: bill, another line we hear not, mostly from young people we are not afraid. going to take a lot of courage over the next few days. back to you. bill: thank you greg. good to have you on the ground there in athens. greg palkot. patti ann. patti ann: president obama with a rare visit to the pentagon. does his administration a strategy for defeating isis. bill: witnesses holding their breath here. check it out. that is a plane landing on a beach in california. plus there is this. >> lloyd with morgan streaking. by the post it is. hat trick for lloyd! patti ann: what a game. team usa bringing home the women's world cup in soccer. brian kilmeade up next about the big win against japan. nyet ♪
7:11 am
super poligrip seals out more food particles. so your food won't get stuck and you can enjoy every single bite. eat loud, live loud, super poligrip. usaa makes me feel like i'm a car buying expert in no time at all. there was no stress. it was in and out. and it was just easy. usaa, they just really make sure that you're well taken care of. usaa car buying service. powered by truecar. save money zero hassle.
7:14 am
when you travel, we help you make all kinds of connections. connections you almost miss. and ones you never thought you'd make. we help connect where you are. to places you never thought you'd go. this, is why we travel. and why we continue to create new technology to connect you to the people and places that matter. >> that's it. game over. the u.s. wins the 2015 women's world cup. patti ann: unbelievable fame.
7:15 am
team usa crushing japan 5-2 bamming the first team ever to win three women's world cup titles. carli lloyd scoring three times in the first 16 minutes, pulling the fastest hat trick in world cup history. here she is on "fox & friends" today. >> we knew that we wanted to come out of the gate fast and strong. we knew we wanted to put them under pressure. score early would be great but the score three goals in the first 16 minutes, was, great and, you know, credit to every single player on this team. patti ann: the game also blowing up on twitter last night all around the world. looking right now at a heat map showing a spike in tweets, key moments in the game. a lot of coming at beginning of early goals. let's bring in "fox & friends" co-host brian kilmeade. hey, brian, lots of firsts and lots of records. give us highlights starting with
7:16 am
carli's hat trick. >> great to see you, patti ann browne as we simulcast on radio. we're talking about a team four years ago beat the u.s. all of sudden carli lloyd comes out hit is in the back of the net. whose former national team said was too delicate and emotional to perform in big games. boy did she prove everybody else. she scores a second goal. lori holiday with the third and one of the most amazing world cup goals, men and women. you see a lot of courage inside of the box. happened towards the forth goal from 55 yards out when she hits a shot just past mid field, when she is doing that. here you're about to see it. she had a spot to keep her off the line. off the line hit it to the corner. she panic inned. this is one of the world's premier keepers. panicked, falls backward, foes to the net. world champs are thinking. would bounce back and score two
7:17 am
unanswered goals. second half u.s. puts in the difference. make it up 5-2. that would be it. individual performances men or women, this will stand out as one of the all-time best performances if you watch at end, patti ann, the u.s. team was running the japanese into the ground at a time they should have sat back around let japan come at them, they said we'll attack you to the 91st minute. they did and this personifies the american personality. we'll come at you. we'll attack you, if we're going to lose we're leaning forward not leaning back, we'll press you into answering us. patti ann: yeah. >> i don't think they were as strong i don't think they were fast as i don't think they were as good. patti ann: brian you mentioned men or women this game was huge in terms of viewership. we showed social media, twitter heat map, how the tweets were lighting up. in the past women sports were mainly watched by women. this, had the whole country
7:18 am
watching. is there a sea change here? >> here is what has to happen. patti ann in 1999, they had 101,000 at the rose bowl. had all-time records. cover of "time" magazine "usa today," "new york post." everybody was talking, leading in the evening news and everybody here was talking about the women's team mia hamm, brandy has stain and was here and fell off the map. they didn't market it. they have to get an outdoor league going. the advantage they have the best players on the world on their roster. the men don't. keep these girls in america. grab the world stars and start small stadiums and start building it up. with women's sport in legitimate spot in probably mort highest participant sport in the country. these women are fast and can be populated throughout an outdoor league. by time four years comes by might get similar to the men's ratings worldwide. england is excited about the
7:19 am
women's team. they were never excited about the women's soccer before. so is europe. >> carly lloyd, the knew it girl. you mention marketing she will break out and become a huge star. what is next now for the team after this. >> simple. win a gold medal in brazil. look at bench. some younger players, the next generation is ready to go. i'm not sure how much turnover there will be. christine lampone will retire, may end up coaching team. abby wambach, may be pro but done with international competition. i'm not sure with hope solo what will happen with her some of the controversial off the field. they will stay together to be favorites for the goal. we'll see what happens there. i think america is in very good company. they said america wouldn't be number one. we were first to get good. they showed america will be good and better than everybody else for a while. they destroyed permanent any. if you watched the became, they
7:20 am
really handled colombia, and undefeated in group play. you saw what happened in the finals. the rest of the world has to catch up. i don't think they do it anytime soon. patti ann: fantastic group of athletes. brian kilmeade joining me live from his radio studio. thank you very much. bill: good job, bk. this team plays at different level than the rest. world. just the physical aggression they bring to the field. well-done lady well-done. you made us very proud on 4th of july weekend. patti ann: that was a great moment. bill: meantime new deal with iran. will the u.s. agree or will we walk away? patti ann: a criminal illegal immigrant returns again and again to america and is allowed to remain in the country before he kills a woman. now her family wants to know why he was allowed to stay. >> family close, that is the only solace i've got. that's it. that we were so close.
7:21 am
7:22 am
my school reunion's coming fast. could be bad. could be a blast. can't find a single thing to wear. will they be looking at my hair? won't be the same without you bro... when you go this summer, go to the new choicehotels.com and when you stay twice get a free $50 gift card. book now at choicehotels.com
7:23 am
my name is jose lopez. i'm a troubleman in san francisco. i've been with the company for 29 years. a troubleman restores and troubleshoots electrical issues, getting customers' power back on. we're 24/7, 365 days a year. i love my job. going up in the bucket and seeing all of san francisco, it's an exhilarating feeling. i was born and raised in san francisco. this is where i live and there's a sense of pride in providing great power to our customers. when i go out there and get their power back on, there's a great sense of satisfaction. together, we're building a better california.
7:24 am
bill: tough choices. looming deadline. marathon nuclear talks hitting a new roadblock today. tehran seeking better deal demanding sanctions on ballistic missiles be lifted and arms embargo. secretary of state john kerry saying there is still a long way to go. >> we're not yet where we need to be on several of the most difficult issues. and the truth is, that while i completely agree with foreign ministers zarif, that we have never been closer, at this point this negotiation could go either way. bill: chief washington correspondent james rosen back live in vienna. now that all the ministers converged back in vienna, what is their first order of business
7:25 am
today james? >> reporter: bill greets from vienna where a senior state department official told us with the ministers having so little time in which to resolve all of the very many differences that secretary kerry alluded to there, their first working session which was held late this morning in the concert room and lasted little overan hour was in part to design to structure the work load. it is not improve visionizational the official said. kerry previously told reporters we have our own sense of deadline. on sunday he was sounding a lot firmer about july 7th. >> what is your deadline, the 7th or the 9th? >> we're currently pushing as we've all said, for the 7th. that's the deadline. thank you all very much. >> reporter: one other factor that could complicate things here a conference being held in russia on july 8th and 9th for the ministers of the so-called "bric" countries,
7:26 am
brazil, russia india, and china which could well peel away two ministers who flew here from moscow and beijing, bill. bill: james, the iranians responding to kerry's somewhat than sterner than usual statement, what have they said if anything? >> reporter: not much from the two iranian top officials who have been most outspoken. twitter feeds for the ayatollah khamenei and on line venues for declarations of new red lines and negotiating postures have been more or less silent since the 4th of july. not so however one of the most prominent critics in the world of these takes. israeli prime minister netanyahu who called them not a breaks through but a break down. >> this will give them a jackpot of hundreds of billions of dollars which to continue to fund their aggression and terror. ing a breaths in the region, terror throughout the world. this is something that think we
7:27 am
should work against. >> reporter: as for secretary kerry he made clear he will speak out publicly less and less as the hours, the endgame in iranian nuclear talks grow shorter and shorter. bill. bill: james, thank you. update us when there are more from vienna, austria. patti ann. patti ann: president obama set to address the nation following a visit to the pentagon. what he could say about the fight against isis and u.s. foreign policy in the middle east. also? ♪ bill: it is shark week. kind of been shark summer, hasn't it, right? we'll talk to award-winning film maker about terrifying discovers made under the sea. check that out. ♪
7:30 am
7:31 am
bill: 10:30 here in new york. there will be a presidential speech later today on the fight to defeat isis. president obama heading to the pentagon for a meeting with his generals before updating americans on the strategy. among those in attendance, secretary of defense ash carter joint chiefs of staff chairman general martin dempsey. u.s. army special forces veteran ben collins served three tours of duty in afghanistan. he is with me in studio. good morning to you. >> good morning, bill. bill: what does the president say about the state of this war? >> i think at this stage once he can only say once leaves the pentagon we're all on the same page but let's be clear this is really political theater. there is really no need for him to go all the way to the pentagon at this stage to actually speak to the generals right? if he is serious about the fight against isis he could do it over skype. the administration has shown they're not willing to do, which to me presents significant long-term problems. bill: you don't think he wants this war? have you always thought that?
7:32 am
>> i have. just watching their actions what they have done certainly with troop deemployments. our troops only in advise and assist. he just sent 500 troops. for one troop of actual combat you need three or four that are there in support. to me it hasn't shown serious. i look what we're doing in afghanistan. if stated policy what we're doing in afghanistan is to deny terrorist as safe haven for them to plan and execute attacks like 9/11 with impunity, looking what is happening in the middle east with isis of the because we as he said, the jv team. we're treatings them like a jv team. they might not meet the diplomatic he have did figures for it isis created a state. they are the size of approximately belgium. they have a population of eight to nine million people approximately sweden. they have about a billion dollars in resources. we need to stop acting like they're the jv team and start like they're a state. bill: i heard something two weeks ago. i don't know if it was profound or if it is true are some day we
7:33 am
have to negotiate with isis if they still rule the territory and control it? >> i certainly hope not right? i think the fact of matter is -- bill: you heard that possibility? >> i have but fairly disturbing. what i see more as another generation of young men and women will have to go over to the same battlefields that we spent the last decade plus fighting. the old borders are gone. if you look at syria and iraq and look where isis is and world's reaction to it, we haven't gone over and done anything with serious effect. with all due respect to the gulf states, they are not in a position to really lead this has to be western-led intervention. bill: get allies on board and let them lead. isis airstrikes, 10 a day, 15 a day, i don't know what your view is on that. special forces to get them on the ground. >> certainly. if you look at the amount of airstrikes we utilized just the first year in afghanistan compared to the amount of airstrikes we're using against
7:34 am
isis, it is significantly less in the fight against isis. there is a reason for that. when you don't have american-trained, individuals on the ground that have the experience and the professionalism to actually control close air support, in a way that reduces the civilian casualty, especially under the rules of engagement that our pilots will have, you will have a significantly less ability to effect against the enemy. this is an enemy that has been extremely tell bent in the way they have -- intelligent the way they gone into the cities. they have kept the population there. they know our rules of engagement. if isis was in the old out on battlefield we could hit them with impunity. they're surrounded by populace. that will take professional close air support professionals. yes, to me special forces is going to be key. bill: if there is a change in posture today, i imagine you would be pretty surprised? >> would but i think we've shown
7:35 am
certainly it is not going to happen. bill: we'll see what the statement is later today. ben collins with us in studio. three tours in afghanistan. >> thank you, sir. bill: you bet. patti ann. patti ann: a young boy is recovering after a plane make as dramatic crash landing on a crowded beach in california video shows the small plane touching down by the water and flipping over as witnesses rush to help. william la jeunesse is live in los angeles with that story for us. hi, william. >> reporter: patti ann this happened in carlsbad, north of san diego, great beach, filled with july 4th swimmers and people wake boarding and playing in the sand, a plane pulling a commercial banner loses power. the pilot as you see puts it down at surf line. you can see it on screen right. the volleyball guys didn't stop playing. but a 12-year-old could not get out of the way fast enough and was hit on the head by a wing. >> saw it and almost fell back trying to get out of the way.
7:36 am
i guess it hit his face and hit fist face and we were so scared. >> i was holding back of his head to try to keep him calm and wait for people to show up. >> tire hit him and down there. blood right here. but we tried to fet all the blood off. >> reporter: doctors had to shave the boy's head for surgery. in a sign of friendship his friends shaved theirs as well. pilot was not injured. salvage crew retrieved the plane later. an investigation is underway. the boy will be okay. amazing, patti ann, crowded as beach was more people that weren't injured. the plane glided in complete silence which people didn't hear it. why the volleyball guys kept playing until the very end. back to you. patti ann: wow. william la jeunesse, thank you. bill: unbelievable. beach like that? more than a million expected to turn out en masse in ecuador and quito led by pope francis. returning to his home continent,
7:37 am
south america for the first time since his election as pope, delivering a message of compassion for the poor and respect planet. also delivering in paraguay and home country of argentina. he will be here in the u.s. in late sent which will get a lot of coverage. cuba prior to that. patti ann: absolutely looking forward to that. a deadly shooting in san francisco is sparking debate on immigration as we're learning more about the suspect. is it time to do away with so-called sanctuary cities? we'll have a fair and balanced debate? bill: a bizarre incident leave as little girl dead. why officials are warning boaters about sturgeon. >> pay a little more attention to what they're doing as far as like on the rivers riding in the middle is a dangerous part for them to jump up.
7:40 am
7:41 am
sturgeon leaps from the river into the boat hid e hitting the young child. the girl's mother and brother injured by that fish. some of which grow up to eight feet in length. >> they have gotten worse and worse. it is a big concern. like my wife, we're on the boat every weekend. she won't even sit in front of the boat. she sits in the back because she is scared of them. they have gotten worse. worse and worse every year seems like. bill: in places that might be good advice. low water levels are causing sturgeon to jump apparently more frequently than they have in recent years. patti ann: illegal immigrant suspected in a deadly shooting in san francisco has allegedly confessed. police say francisco sanchez admits cheating kathryn steinle as she walked across the riverfront. sanchez has been deported five times but returns to san francisco which is a sanctuary city. the victim's family still realing from their loss. >> this is young woman, to
7:42 am
starting to be in her prime. had so much to live for. to die so senselessly is terrible. patti ann: joining us now, dinneen borelli, chief political correspondent for conservative review jehmu greene, former president of the women's media center. both fox news contributors. thanks for joining us. san francisco will not holder'sees for deportation hold unless they have a violent felony in the past seven years. sanchez did not. of course now he is apparently admitted to this random killing of kathryn steinle. does this, dinneens, the policy have to change? >> absolutely patti ann. five deportations seven felonies. this individual should not have been in the united states of america. and what we are witnessing and my heart and thoughts and prayers are with this poor family and all the other individuals who do not make the
7:43 am
headlines when this happens. clearly it is the liberal progressive policies that are killing americans. you look at this law, that has taken place in san francisco, it is selective. and it should be done away with because they're not obeying the laws that are on the books. patti ann: in this particular case lit he's listen right now to what the federal immigration and customs enforcement had to say about this tragedy. quote, an individual with a lengthy criminal history who is now the suspect in a tragic murder case was released on to the street rather than being turned over to i.c.e. for deportation. we're not asking local cops to do our job. all we're asking that they notify us when a serious foreign national criminal offender is being released to the streets so we can arrange to take custody. that didn't happen in this case jehmu. big problem there? >> well, certainly he should not have been on the streets. certainly i agree with dinneen that my thoughts and prayers go out to the family. this is senseless tragedy. i think what we're seeing now
7:44 am
there are some people who want to politicize this tragedy in such a way to vilify all undocumented americans, and then from a political standpoint, there are some mistakes that happened here and i think we should be focusing on what should have happened to insure that this doesn't happen again. perhaps i.c.e. should have been more aggressive in making sure that they had a warrant that they had gone to get a court order for him. and maybe reason that couldn't happen is because they have been given a mandate to go after all undocumented americans, guard owners people who are -- gardeners, people helping us so many ways in the economy. patti ann: that is not what is going on in this. this guy had seven felonies. this guy was a criminal. >> if their efforts were focused on criminals terrorist threats people who just come into the country, if they were laser focused then we would not have incidents like this in the numbers that we see them. we can't vilify all undocumented
7:45 am
workers. >> the primary role is to protect citizens. this individual had felony records. he has been deported numerous times. what is also very concerning, that there are four democrat individuals who are running for president including hillary clinton who support sanctuary cities, which in my view, she is supporting the fact that this individual was allowed to remain in the united states. patti ann: back to jehmu's point, san francisco did say that it would have honored this detention hold if i.c.e. gotten a warrant. these sanctuary cities such as san francisco argue they need legal cover. there are constitutional concerns. there is this case in oregon in which a county was found liable last year for holding an inmate for i.c.e. beyond her release date. it has gotten tied up in some red tape. jehmu, is that what we do just need to tighten up some of these technicalities that making these cities worry about getting into constitutional trouble? >> i certainly think we need smarter immigration policies and
7:46 am
enforcement. i think we need better more focused and we don't need people who are going to take this one isolated situation and try to paint a picture of all undocumented americans -- >> this happened numerous times. >> criminals that are not contributing to the society that is the not american way. we're a nation of laws. if they had gone gotten a court order would no the be an streets. this despicable character would not be if they were focused where they should be. >> too many families are being harmed. this happened more than once. there is also individual my heart breaks every time his father is on television talking about what happen to his 17-year-old. >> one first people died in iraq was undocumented immigrant. patti ann: not talking about undocumented immigrant, we're talking about undocumented immigrants with criminal history. >> that is where isis's focus should be. >> and illegal immigrants as well.
7:47 am
they're breaking the law. >> this would allow them to have -- >> nice that you filibuster on criminals. focus on criminals not on people helping our economy. patti ann: jehmu greene, dinneen borelli, thank you for joining us. bill? bill: to be continued there. 13 minutes before the hour. jenna lee coming up next on "happening now." how are you doing. hope you had a great weekend. patti ann: so great to see you. is hillary clinton changing course with the media? that is one of the questions we'll ask on "happening now" after aides roped off reporters during a campaign event over the weekend in new hampshire. she said she is set to take in more interviews. our medial panel weighs in on that. eric bolling who worked on the floor, will join us on what all means. race day turns dangerous as a nascar driver wrecks on turn, shooting debris into the grandstand. we'll have live report. all on "happening now." bill: guess what, jenna?
7:48 am
>> what. bill: they are back. >> who? bill: watch. ♪ it is shark week, america. after 20 years, a filmmaker tells us what is different about this season that you need to know. ♪ you see the thing is geico well, could help them save on boat insurance too. hey! okay...i'm ready to come in now. hello? i'm trying my best. seriously, i'm...i'm serious. request to come ashore. geico. saving people money on more than just car insurance. ♪ quicker smarter earlier fresher
7:49 am
harder and yeah, even on sundays. if that's not what you think of when you think of the united states postal service watch us deliver. welcome to fort green sheets. welcome to castle bravestorm. it's full of cool stuff, like... my trusty bow. and free of stuff i don't like. we only eat chex cereal. no artificial flavors, and it's gluten-free. mom, brian threw a ball in the house!
7:51 am
patti ann: nasa re-establishing communication with new horizons. the spacecraft went silent for more than an hour just days before its scheduled to give us our first close-ups of pluto. scientists are trying to give us what went wrong and reboot new horizons in time for the fly-by. nasa says it is a daunting task.
7:52 am
each command takes nine hours to carry out more than four hours to transmit and another four hours for the spacecraft to respond. ♪ >> got it. got it. oh [bleep]. [bleep]. bill: don't want to go in those waters. it has been a summerrer for shark attacks in rate we rarely seen in america. right on cue here comes "shark week." one guy who gets in the thick of the "shark week" is andy. welcome back to "america's newsroom." 28 seasons on discovery. wow, this is big, big stuff. good morning to you. i want to get into the whole fasts nation on sharks. what is your view of news stories we covered off coast of authority caroline? >> everyone wants to say it is
7:53 am
an infestation of sharks but reality it is more infestation of humans. more people are going to the beaches. likelihood of encountering a shark is 3retty rare seems like in north carolina, south carolina, perfect storm. salinity sin creased because of drought bringing in bait fish, people swimming by piers. people are chumming to catch fish. seems like a bit of an increase. bill: whole point about the chum on the piers that is drawing them to you. you know how crowded beaches are in the carolinas. >> that is common essential. i wouldn't want to swim around fishing pier. predators are drawn to prey. if you're fishing with bait likelihood sharks will be in the area. bill: i totally agree with you, andy. you did filming on seven of 19 episodes. >> yeah. bill: we're kicking off 28 years of this of the this year is kind of different. >> yeah. bill: tell me why. >> discovery will focus more on
7:54 am
conservation science, education. we'll still have entertainment but a lot of the audience wants to see more science an learn more about sharks and maybe a little less of scary part and more of like the education. so you're going to have a bit of both which is cool for me. i'm fascinated with sharks. i have been since i was a little kid. bill: tell me about the science of sharks, that i'm missing. >> that's the thing. a lot of people are missing. we know so shrill about, thats. worldwide there is lots of research going on. they're elusive predators. you can't put them in a little box hook them up to electrodes like other research projects. they migrate worldwide. they conduct 5000 plus feet depending on sees she is. there is over -- species. there are over 5,000 species of sharks. holds true to one species doesn't necessarily hold to the rest. bill: what drew you to them. >> there are land sharks running around here.
7:55 am
bill: a lot of those. sixth avenue. >> first time on television i saw sharks through tv and media. i was fascinated by them. more of a fascination than fear. most people i think when they think about, thats they think about being eaten alive. reality, very polite predators. if they were out to get us, we would be in trouble. bill: i think about the shark tagging that foes on especially on east coast. you can go to websites watch where sharks are traveling. do you support that? is that a good thing? >> i think it is important to understand where sharks migrate and where they have their pups and where they mate. some people want to say that you know, poachers or some people could use that information to target sharks and fish them but i think, you know as long as the science is not too invasive we can learn a lot through research and tagging. so i think it's a good thing. bill: andy good to see you again. >> thank you. bill: by the way are you in cage or open waters when you're filming? >> depends on visibility and depends on the shark. i have done a lot of uncaged stuff with great whites.
7:56 am
bill: close calls? >> enough. bill: on camera close calls? >> close calls. bill: be safe, man. andy, nice to see you here. back to you, patti anne. patti ann: president obama is talking about isis strategy today. he is expects to announce the next step in the battle against terrorists after meeting with top military officials. we're live at the pentagon.
7:59 am
8:00 am
soccer ball. >> you have to watch outdoor sports. nurf balls maybe. >> have a great day. "happening now" starts now. well we are awaiting a key strategy update in the fight to defeat isis as the president heads to the pentagon just hours from now. welcome to "happening now." i am jenna lee. >> and i will greg jerrett in for jon scott. our commander and chief is getting ready to huddle with top military brackets today and then set to talk publically about the plan moving forward. this is coming on the heels of a stepped up campaign by a u.s.-led coalition in syria with nearly 20 strikes over the weekend pounding the city that serves as the capital for isis. >> the inte
570 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on