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tv   Shepard Smith Reporting  FOX News  July 15, 2015 12:00pm-1:01pm PDT

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a lot of news today. the news that donald trump is filing financials with the fec, thank you for being start of "the real story" today. president obama explaining the plan for iran. he had that he knows there will be debate about the deal >> i want expect the debate to be robust and that is how it should be. and so far he has not heard good alternatives. we will hear from supporters of the agreement. and hunting the world's most infamous drug lord. video shows the moments before el chappo tunnelled out of a national security prison. i will ask what it is going take to put hip back behind bars. right now, we have a reporter that is getting ready to do a live shot at more than 100 miles an hour. >> here we go! this is a nice curve. >> nice curve, as he takes us on
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a road to the nashville super speedway where a company is trying to turn video game players in to race car drivers. let's get to it. >> good afternoon to you. president obama's question to congress you have a better deal? that's what he asked them today. in a news conference the president took on critics of the nuclear deal with iran and said that the bottom line is it makes our nation and the world a safer place. and he delivered a message straight to the republican critics. >> i challenge those who are objecting to this agreement. number one, read it before you comment on it. number two, to explain specifically where it is that they think this agreement does not prevent iran from getting a nuclear weapon and why they are right and people like m.i.t.
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nuclear scientists are wrong. and why the rest onf the world is wrong and present an alternative. >> quite an argument. it requires iran to cut back the nuclear program and get rid of 98% of the enriched uranium and in exchange billions of dollars of economic punishment will be lifted and in stages. remember the letter that 47 republican senators sent to iran's leaders warning againstking the deal saying that the final agreement is worse than imagined. >> it not as bad as we feared it's much worse. remember iran is a anti-american outlaw regime and we are going let them keep their nuclear program largely in-tact. >> congress gets to vote on the agreement, but the president said he will veto any attempt at
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derailing the deal. this morning, the white house said that vice president biden was sent to capital hill. president obama is trying sell the agreement to allies abroad. the opposition in israel is so strong it's bringing together political rivals. one of netanyahu's opponents are traveling to washington to disagree with the agreement. >> the hearings on the iran deal could start as soon as one week from today. chairman bob corker said that the foreign relations panel needs to hear from john kerry and energy security ernest monese about the details of the deal. they would like to hear from secretary kerry first. but the lawmakers are waiting to of
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the agreement. >> we await the beginning of a comprehensive review process, premised on a simple question. can the agreement meet its essential test of leaving our country and our allies safer. >> the vice president made a convincing argument as he can make but i think there's a lot of questions to be answered. i was -- i have been skeptical from the beginning of this. i'm still skeptical, i read the joint comprehensive plan of action last night. there's nothing that relieved my skepticism. >> chairman bob corker said paperwork of the final deal could come up to capitol hill by the end of the week, this would start the 60-day period of review allowed to lawmakers. >> the matter of americans being held hostage by iran has been fodder of critics and the president addressed that. >> he talked about if you tie the fate of the four americans releasing the four americans to the nuclear deal then you
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threaten the possibility that the iranians could think they could extract more concessions from the u.s. side. >> there are four americans in iran. three held on trumped up charges according to your administration and one, whereabouts unknown. can you tell the country why are you are content with the fan fair around the deal to leave the strength of the nation unaccounted for in relation to the four americans and last week the chairman of the joint chiefs of staff said under no circumstances should there be any relief for iran in terms on of ballistic missiles or conventional weapons. it was perceived that was a last minute capitulation. could you comment? >> i have to give you credit for how you crafted the questions. first, the notion that i'm content as i celebrate with american citizens languishing in
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iranian jails, major that -- that's nonsense. and you should know better. i have met with the families on of some of those folks. nobody is content. and our diplomats and our teams are working diligently to try to get them out. >> you is have got americans saying at this point that the president was willing to trade five guys who were in guantanamo bay for an american soldier who perhaps had deserted his unit. their thinking that this was perhaps the time to get the four americans out. obviously the president said that the nuclear negotiations were complicated enough without adding the americans to the mix. shep? >> i think that our friend used to be here. he has responded and said his intent was to be provakative,
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major, you scheduleucceeded. >> the president will make a couple of key point and he is made them again toward the end of the press conference. what's the alternative? the military component of this nobody wants to go to war. the second option -- >> i don't know about nobody. there's a few that want to be constantly at war. >> they might want to but the american public is not ready tore another war. interest the other is keeping the sanctions in place. grind down iran for a better deal. the point he made was look we have a lot on of players in the sanctions regime not all are in, they are 1%. you would see the sanctions erode over time if the people walked away and they felt hey, we gave you an option and we were sincere in letting you try t u.s. the did not come through, as time went on, the countries that count on oil and are taking it in the neck finally at the moment would slowly but surely reenjaj with iran and the sanctions would unravel. >> if you are a political rival and you want to make hey out of
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this, you can and they are. to listen to some of them you would say, they have just signed off on a nuclear agreement with iran. >> he said it again at the end. he feels that any president ten years from now, when an agreement comes to the end. not all will end in ten years but a chunk of it arewill. that president will be in a better position than he is now, than to get in a way toward them getting a nuclear bomb, they are closer to achieving that now than if they had nothing and had no agreement is his contention. ten years from now they will be furlth away. which gives them more time for other action. that's the argument. >> the matter of iran's money being unfrozen if that is the way to put it. that came up today. >> it's a big issue. it's empowering them to arm hez bola and empower themselves in other parts of the region.
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and his argument was that we need better intelligence to keep iran from arming hezbolah and the second point was interesting. he said that iran is a player against isis. and perhaps a stronger iran this was kind of a suggestion he seemed to be making. a little bit stronger iran make help us on the battlefield against isis. >> does this issue displace immigration? is it still a thing for those people? >> i think at this point, as an issue in if united states iran is the exsostential threat for everyone. it's a volatile issue going in a presidential election. it's big on the agenda at this moment. the 60 days that we are now going have to debate it i think
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it will be vigorously used. it will be a big public debate. >> we hope so. you would hope it would be legitimate and not political. we need a legitimate debate here. >> it's right. and it's almost better that it's 60 days, right? it was going to be 30. it does give time for everyone to read the document and to assess what the president said today. and to say, i agree or disagree. there are other avenues and here's what they are. >> and speaking of other avenues, thank you, we will take a closer look at the deal itself and how the inspections would work. it's fas fascinating. and what we could get out of the agreement if some iranian products go back on the market. there's much more to this than meets the eye as there is to most things. we will get in to that coming up. that and the big earthquake in the pacific northwest. did you read the new yorker? >> i did not. >> wait until you see this, hang on.
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iae, who they admit they are still deciding what inspectors will be pulled from. >> it will take timely to discuss, and implement. it is too early. >> but today mr. obama stressed that the 24-day notice for an undeclared site is sufficient. >> the nature of the programs and facilities is such this is not something you hide in a closet. this is something you put on a dolly and wheel off somewhere. >> part of the deal with the iaea is a full disclosure of the activities by the end of the year. but thissing of course will come after the lifting of the sanctions. >> did those sanctions go in parts? or part by part and by part when they go away more benefit than just iran it appears. >> that is right, had in the final pages of the 159 page text the is a list of companies, individuals, who will have
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decades old sanctions lifted against them. near a the bottom of a page is a known prolifitor he provided iran with the enrichment technology in the first place. earlier this year a day after the frame work was agreed another member of that group, was also taken off the sanctions list. the state department said that all of this is a coincidence but on a personal note having fwhn iraq in the late '90s when we had the last big inspection procedure of weapons facility i can tell you it's no picnic unless you get cooperation of the host country. and that's one of the big unknowns. >> that could mean who iranian oil hitting the market. and food and other goods. >> obviously oil is talked about a lot. it's in a low.
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>> it will bring it down. ha ha ha houston. >> when sanctions ease next year it could bring down the prices for americans. restrictions on u.s. trade investment according to the administration will remain in place. there's a few notable exceptions like food. for instance pistachios everyone loves them. we may be seeing you know, price changes there. the prices have been high. >> they are not cheap. >>, and caviar. they are known for delicious caviar. saffron, they have a great environment for growing the crop. >> also expensive. >> exactly. >> so we may be able to import saffron and carpets. rugs. washington post noted this the u.s. used to be the largest importer of iranian made rugs. so the weavers over there must be thrilled. as far as exports go the lane
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equipment, including passenger planes are on the list and iran's companies could import the planes but they have a horrible safety record. the transportation minister said they need to replace up to 00 planes in the next decade. so that could potentially mean business for american companies there as well. >> sounds not horrible. thank you, sarah. fox urgent now, a live look athens greece getting rowdy. crowds are growing, and demonstrations against bailing thm them out. they were throwing things in the street. they are arguing against the painful cut backs that are required for the loan by the lenders. the essence of this is simple the prime minister promised we
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would fight against the austerity and what did they get? more and they are not happy, and it's not the end. a monster earthquake off america's coast, the worst natural disasterer in the history of the nations coming say the scientists and they are all in agreement, it's coming. thousands of dogs will bark at alert before the ground liquifies in an area and a wall of water will slam in the pacific northwest, up to 100 feet high and 700 feet across. more than 10,000 will die. it is coming and it's a certainty. the question is when. the warning is from the new yorker magazine. we will give you the details from the scientists and find out why already it's the big big one in the pacific north west an area i have not heard of when it comes to this the type of activity. hold on, it's interesting.my help all day.
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. read a stunning article by the "new yorker" this week if i lived in the pacific northwest, i would be considering moving seriously. the gist of it is this the federal government he was 13,000 americans will die in a major earthquake and tsunami in the pacific northwest. this is coming. and it's overdue. consider this a magnitude 9.0 earthquake in japan. just a few years ago, it killed thousands in japan. scientists said is that will strike our coast line will be stronger up to a 9.2. it's as bad as it sounds. here's the reason for it.
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our entire continent sits on the north american shelf, plate, off the coast of the pacific northwest, from the top of washington state to california, this is it. and the other one is trying to slide up under north america, but it's stuck, we have an illustration. this is our continent here this is a cascade of mountains. this is what? they call it what? the cascadia bridge. i was asking him, but thank you. the north american plate here and the plate here this is sliding up under and it will eventually go down and send a huge wall of water up that wall will go to japan and other will come on our shore in 15 minutes. and when it slips, it will unleash a earthquake and tsunami, 700 miles long and up to a 100 foot high wall of water and whatever it is pushing. like houses and dump trucks and schools. thousands and thousands will not
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escape. "the new yorker" quotes a fema worker that said that everything west of interstate 5 will be toast. everything west of interstate 5 is gone. that seattle, tacoma portland olympia, salem and eugene wiped out. all together about 7 million people. that is not including tourists. so think of summer time. fema calculations indicate that it will damage or destroy about a million buildings, including 3,000 schools and 1/3 of all fire stations and perhaps the worst of it all, these sorts of earthquakes happen in regular intervals in exactly this part of the world, have forever, on average, according to scientists every 240 years. when was the last one? the last one was in 1700 it struck in the pacific northwest, and sent a 600 foot wave of water ally the way to japan.
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so right now on average, the pacific northwest is decades overdue for the really really big one. we have a scientist and professor at the city college of new york. this article is stunning. is it over stated in any way? >> no the cascadia fault is an earthquake waiting to happen. we know it will happen with an energy 30 times the maximum energy of the san andreas fault. this fault would pack energy 30 times the energy that the san andreas fault can muster. >> it speaks of a liquefying of the earth. >> that is right, we are talking about major energy surges in the ground that will cause it to liquefy. we saw it in japan, and it's like quick sand a day you are walking on solid ground and the next you are falling right in to
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a quick sand. >> this would last four minutes or more, the rattling and shaking and then within 15 minutes the wall of water and the entire zone you could have water up to 100 feet high. >> right, in that zone we have 70,000 people that have no clue as to what could happen. you know in japan, you have to live with earthquakes every day. children go through tests. and drills and people are conscious of this. but, in the pacific northwest, it's barely it barely rates on the radar screen. >> there's something that happens before the shaking that we can sense. that we can pick up. that is an early warning system that they have all over japan. especially in the north and in the tokyo area. they have been trying to get it pushed through for money for it in the seattle tacoma area nothing. >> before it hits. there's a compression wave that is detected by animals. they start the to act strange. and we have seen it happen
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before earthquakes and a minute two minutes later, boom you head for the hills, because there's nothing left to do but go to high ground. >> you mentioned what this sort of event has caused in history. >> that is right. in the year 1700 there was a massive earthquake and tsunami which surged over japan. and then, running the videotape backwards. you can see that it originated with this fault. and then we can calculate the magnitude and dynamics. once we have the two events linked together. that was what we have only done in the last decade or so. >> and you mentioned mt. everest. >> yes, it was created by the collision of two faults. that created the mountains. and mt. everest, that's the power, power packed by the subduction zone earthquake. >> predictions of when it will the happen is not reliable.
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they have used by example the difference between four and six is two. i forget how they did it. we cannot be sure when it happens. but we are positive it happens. if you live in the pacific northwest, and you had i had can kids would you live there? >> i would drill them where to go in case of an emergency. what to do. and so on and so forth. and we know it going to happen. by simply drilling in the sea floor, we can see evidence of ancient tsunamis going back 10,000 years. and we know -- >> there's been how many over that period? >> 41. >> which means the time between the cycles is about 240 years. >> and it's been 315 years since the last big one. now, of course this is not rigorous or absolute. but according to this figure we could be overdue for another big one. >> yeah, by many decades.
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nice to talk to you, thank you. really weird and scary. >> and within the lifetime of the viewers, they may see seattle and portland destroyed. >> it's a great a article in the new yorker and it's in this month's edition. and a well written, and the facts that go along with it onare really mind numbing. see you soon. thank you. we are getting our first look at what happened inside el chapo's prison cell. the moment he broke from the bars the second time. the video shows his escape. and the feds have nabbed a suspect in this woman's kidnapping. this after cops had called it a hoax. you will hear how they are still not back. that was clearly -- we will sort it out after this.
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in to chris brown's mansion and tied up his aunt and locked it. they took off with cash and electronics. the cops did not say how much it was worth. chris brown was away at the time but video shows him outside his house afterwards. his aunt was not hurt. new video showing a plane making a landing on a highway over the weekend in new jersey. look at that. everyone got out safely say investigators and they are not sure why the plane's power cut out. and folks that check in to a new hotel, get a room assignment from friendly dinosaur. really? it's one of the few robots at the weird hotel. the manager wants to save money and not scare people away. good luck.
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breaking news and just in to the fox news deck. great stuff from nasa.
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our friends released the closest ever snapshot of pluto, this was coming after a fly-by from the new horizons spacecraft. there's pluto and the face of pluto the dog. to appreciate the new picture. take a look at the image as the craft closed in on pluto yesterday, listen to the excited scientists as nasa revealed the new high definition shot. >> here's the image, here it comes. >> oh, wow. [ cheers and applause ] >> look a that. part of pluto is sort of colorless. who would have thought. the picture, the end result of a decade long flight of three billion miles in a spacecraft the size of a baby grandpiano, the mountains are about 1,000 feet high and are made up entirely of ice and when asked
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how the peaks formed a researcher said with great assurance, we have no idea. we know that there's water ice on the biggest of the pluto moons, and we are going learn more about this with many many more pictures to come. what a fascinating journey. a newley released surveillance video shows how the most notorious drug lord shorty el chapo walking to the cell. they missed it but there's video of it. he will disappear from view that is when he dropped down a shaft to the a highly sophisticated tunnel that he had cronies dig beneath the prison. and the video shows the rusty hole in the floor that led to the passage. it had lighting and ventilation systems and a motorcycle on rails that he reportedly used to ride to freedom. the tunnel is about a mile long. stretching from the prison to an empty building under
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construction. the feds say el chapo's cartel builds complex tunnels to smuggle drugs beneath the u.s. border. the tunnel was longer than any passage the cartel that they have found at the border. the mexico's government has launched a huge man hunt to track down the drug lord. and sent soldiers to his hometown. good afternoon, thank you. >> how are are you do something. >> think chance at this guy? >> this guy is a very smart, very innovative and probably going to be a long time before you find him again. unless somebody next to him decides to do otherwise. >> who would turn -- who in the world would turn this guy in he is not nice? >> no he is not nice he is not nice at all. but it's more of a mistake
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potentially. i think last week there was a tweet going on from one of his sons that he will soon be back. well that might be something that could have foiled this whole plot all together if it was taken seriously. >> could you give our viewers an idea of what he has done over time? >> he grew up in the drug trade. as far as i think the first marijuana field was put together when he was 15 years old. he is about 60 and he has been involved with various traffickers throughout mexico. he has proven himself in the various organizations that he continued theed to and showing he can take opportunities when he is there to expand what they are doing. he learned from the columbians and they were using the mexican and traffickers to move the dope until in the 90s they decided to do it themselves now they are buying from the columbians and the south americans versus being the the mules. >> the feds indicate that he is a murderer so many times they don't know how many times
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over. >> it's probably you never know. he has been attributed to a lot of killings and there's been people working for him that conducted killings as well. >> there's, i think a $3.6 million or so bounty or reward for his capture. i wonder if anybody bites on such a thing, given what we know about him. >> that's a small amount of money, really for somebody like this. >> well i guess -- we have been reduced to a strategy of hope. let's hope they can do something here. >> they hope they can do something. but he is innovative he started doing tunnels in the' 80s and the longest then was half a mile this one was a mile. that thing was right there at the shower where it's out sight of the camera. the money he has access to do a lot of things and he will be gone if he wants to be gone. >> you can get stuff done for a billion. richard garcia thank you for being here. >> my pleasure. >> the feds have arrested the
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suspect in a kidnapping case that police initially called a hoax. at the time, the cops even said that the people that reported it could have faced charges themselves for reporting a hoax. but even now, that police department is not back down. >> was the vallejo police department too quick to call it a hoax? >> i don't think so based on some of the evidence that we had at the time. >> except that it was not a hoax. the feds are charging the suspect in the kidnapping. he is a marine vet and a harvard graduate. he suffers from bipolar disorder and will plead not guilty. the woman turned up safe a couple of days later, more than 400 miles away. at the time, the police accused them of leading them on a wild goose chase and now the chief cannot comment on any aspects of the case. this is getting more unusual by
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the day, jonathan? >> yeah, it certainly is highly unusual with a case pitting the cops against the fbi and the victim in the middle saying nothing. police immediately said the kidnapping was a hoxax and now they are saying no it was a kidnapping and the cops were again casting doubt on huskins claims and by extension the fbi investigation while still refusing to say why. >> i would be revealing details in an investigation if i elaborated on had that. >> and according to legal experts we talked to it may take legal action to get the cops to reveal the evidence that backed their claim of a hoax. unless hu is skins files a civil rights lawsuit, i recommend she does. file a lawsuit and subpoena that investigative file. without a subpoena john without a lawsuit we are never
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going to know what is in that investigative file. >> matthew muller is the accused kid can napper he is a harvard educated lawyer and a marine veteran. and suffers according to his lawyer from bipolar disorder. >> a quest to fly a single engine plane around the world is on hold. an aircraft with 17,000 solar sells took off in march, before making stops in countries including china, wind damage to the aircraft forced an unplanned stop in japan. and one of the pilots flew for five days to outside honolulu breaking the record for the world as longest nonstop solo flight. according to the team but the flight came at a price. the pilots announced today that the plane had ir reversible damage to the batteries due to
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over heating because of the long haul. they may not fly until april of next year. >> hey, i have to tell you, as a pilot, it is very unnatural to think of get engine a plane and taking off without a drop of gas. so when your solar charges your batteries and that is your gas and then they are damaged, it has to be nerve wracking. well the to pilots knew this past leg across the pacific would be the most difficult of their flight off on this journey four months ago. >> we are getting ready now for take off. [ cheers and applause ] >> there's some applause from the technical crew on that historic takeoff, back in march. they said that they didn't properly anticipate how the batteries temperature would change a as the plane made quick climbs and decents. >> we will do the repairs and the flights will continue around
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the world next april. 2016. showing that making the impossible happen takes more time than the possible. it will be a flight around the world in two years instead of one. >> obviously record breaking in terms of solar powered flight. of course that is because this plane is slow. >> leah thank you. >> a major car company trying get video gamers behind the wheels of race cars. it's happening in the thashl super speedway in tennessee. that is where we sent jeff. jeff? >> oh, baby, you crazeare crazy if you think i will be a racecar driver. maybe not. here we go my practice lap is coming up. we will show you how they are doing it, stay tuned.
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13 minutes before the hour now, nissan is looking at video gamers now to see who has the skills to be professional race car drivers. nissan's gt academy trains them on virtual tracks before they get behind the wheels of can s ofs of cars. jeff is suited up in tennessee. show off, jeff. >> virtual reality turned to real reality, shep we have cameras all over this nissan race car. they are taking the best video gamers and are giving them training and turning them in to real professional race car drivers like me. listen to this rev, yeah, baby and put ping them on the track. some of the guys are have never been in a race car before that is me too and they are putting them out here. we are going, i got up to 117 miles an hour without crashing.
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it's an indication that nissan who is known for the electric cars wants to push performance cars now with did gas prices as low as they are. and you see inside the vehicle. they are pushing it on the back step i'm up over 100, to 110. i have to trust the brakes in the curve, and 115. going to add a little. yeah. not like a video game i will tell you that right now. and maybe you can see me if i wave. i only have one hand on the staring wheel, but there you go. >> he is probably texting in there. jeff your mic stopped working, now it's working, talk. >> it's hot in here. what the -- oh! up to 107.
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you get in the turn thes i tell you, it can be tight. >> you sound constipated. >> okay we made it through another turn. >> jeff had a baby. wow. >> all right, i'm going to kill myself. >> don't do that. [ laughter ]
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keep your hands on the wheel and don't go through the mcdonald's drive-thru he went on through tennessee, there's more believe it or not. we have nine more minutes of stuff. hang tight. it's a fact. kind of like shopping hungry equals overshopping.
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mornings. wonderful, crazy mornings. we figure you probably don't have time to wait on hold. that's why at xfinity we're hard at work building new apps like this one that lets you choose a time for us to call you. so instead of waiting on hold, we'll call you when things are just as wonderful... [phone rings] but a little less crazy. we're doing everything we can to give you the best experience possible. because we should fit into your life. not the other way around. breaking news now on fox news channel, the president of france just announced a big terror bust there. the suspect alleged target, a
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military site. the french leader says cops this week arrested four people accused of plotting that attack. officials will release more details coming tomorrow. an explosion hit yesterday at an oil plant near the marseilles airport. president francois hollande said whoever was behind that explosion will be hunted, found and sentenced. no word of any connection of these new arrested related to an alleged plot to attack a military base. rescue crews are still searching for survivors after deadly floods sweeped through eastern kentucky yesterday. this is incredible. >> yes. about 60 homes were completely destroyed. unfortunately two people have died. crews say six people are still missing. this is the father of one of the missing. he said his son had gone back into their trailer home to try and rescue his grandmother. floodwaters swept both of them away. unfortunately crews found the grandmother's body.
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they're still hopeful to find the son alive, though. and this lady posted this video of a home being swept away. i think we can hear her -- >> yeah, we do. >> totally swept away. >> we'll let this video take us to break and we'll be back in just a moment. benny's the oldest dog in the shelter. he needed help all day so i a >> when my back pain flared up, we both felt it. i tried tylenol but it was 6 pills a day. with aleve it's just two pills, all day. now i'm back! aleve. all day strong.
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can a business have a mind? a subconscious. a knack for predicting the future. reflexes faster than the speed of thought. can a business have a spirit? can a business have a soul? can a business be...alive? it's so shiny. i know, mommy, but it's time to let the new kitchen get some sleep. ♪ if you want beautiful results, you
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know where to go. angie's list. everyone can shop for services from highly rated companies, even without a membership. but as a member, you can save more. and you get exclusive access to ratings and reviews. angie's list is there... for all your projects - big and small. pretty! come see what the new angie's list can do for you. remember last month when australian officials said johnny depp and his wife illegally brought two dogs into the country on his private jet? he's set to be in court. his wife is the actress amber heard and reportedly received a summons yesterday. australia's finance minister threatened to kill these two dogs if depp didn't take them back to california. they're now safe back in the united states. under australia law, all pets must go into quarantine to
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protect against the spread of disease. the dogs are fine. summons for mommy. when news breaks out, we'll break in. the dow up and down finishing down a little bit it appears. "your world" with stuart varney in today coming up next. look at this. violence comes to the streets of greece. molotov cocktails being thrown just as the parliament is about to vote on that crucial bailout deal to keep the nation afloat. that vote expected within the hour. more on this as it develops. but first this -- >> i'm hearing a lot of talking points being repeated about this is a bad deal this is a historically bad deal. >> does that sound like this? >> what a stunning historic mistake. >> did the president just take a direct slap at bibi netanyahu? did he? welcome everyone.