tv Fox and Friends Saturday FOX News August 1, 2015 3:00am-7:01am PDT
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you're lucky, you don't have to go to work today. august 1st. i'm filling in for anna. this is a fox news alert. a drone coming dangerously close it a packed plane at one of the nation's busiest airports. now the feds are warning all of us, drones are the next frontier on terror and could be used as weapons. week after kate tynely gunned down by illegal immigrant in san francisco, this legal immigrant arrested weeks ago. he's now charged with murdering a couple in wyoming in cold blood. two people who just offered him a ride and he shot them to death. why was he on the streets to begin with?
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full details, coming up. the curse of the cool kids. >> here we are again. >> yeah. but this time we're seniors. we're going to rule the school. >> why popularity in high school means bad news later in life. mornings are better when sitting next to ainsley. >> thank you. i need a booster seat. y'all are so tall. ♪ gotta love the american ride funny how the world ♪ ♪ keeps turning look ma no hands♪ >> look at that. >> classic. >> classic american cars and they are parked right off of aur plaza. look at that, 1938 ford truck. >> amazing. >> we're going to be hopping in later this hour. >> beautiful cars. are you guys car people? you can appreciate good american-made car. >> certainly can. that is mesmerizingly beautiful. >> you look puzzled now. >> i'm completely into it.
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6:01 on the east coast. we have four hours of pure awesomeness for you. stay tuned. >> great to see you. >> good to see you. we're filling in, miss anna got married last night. >> late night. pictures from the wedding coming up. some point, it was really fun. wish you had been there. >> you're on a plane from miami. >> i was with hillary clinton yesterday. i couldn't make the wedding. >> we both were at parties. >> let me tell you what you missed while you were sleeping overnight. important news to tell you. fox news alert, scare in the air after a drone comes within feet of a delta plane approaching jfk airport. 154 people on board that flight from orlando. the pilot spotting the unmanned device, 100 feet below the wing, thankfully that plane landed safely. other pilots warned about the scare. the drone was not seen ever again. and all of this coming as the department of homeland security is issuing new warnings this morning that those drones could be the new weapon in terror
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attacks. also new overnight, private jet belonging to bin laden's family, look at that, crashes outside london, killing all four people on board. the black smoke there, all of the flames, seen rising from the crash site. we're told that bin laden's stepmother and sister might be dead. the plane overshot the runway, clipping a fence, before nosediving into a car dealership. no one on the ground was hurt. while you were enjoying your friday, the state department proving hillary clinton wrong. releasing brand-new e-mail showing there was classified information on her personal server. this coming as her campaign releases eight years of tax returns from 2007 to 2014, clintons pulled in $139.1 million during that time, they paid $43 million in federal taxes. in 2013, that year alone, the couple made $23 million from peeking fees and another $20 million for other public
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appearances. now we're finding out longtime clinton aide was overpaid nearly $10,000 by the state department for unused leave time. okay. from tears to cheers, two days after crying on the field amid trade rumors, no crying in baseball, new york mets shortstop wilmer flores delivers big. >> drives it. deep left center field. taylor back. near the wall. it's out ta here! >> slamming the walk-off home run in the 12th inning, helping his team to take down the washington nationals, 2-1. >> washington nationals, my hometown. >> all right. the debate this week, the first republican primary debate, airs here on fox, some predicting the highest ratings ever for a primary debate. not donald trump. amazing piece where trump
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adviser -- >> which website? >> "the daily caller" and so what is trump doing to prepare? the answer, quote, doesn't the fact he's at the british women's open tell you something? right now, that's in scotland, not preparing, at a sporting event. right now, by contrast, jeb bush in a holiday inn suite eating sucky sandwiches. trumps not doing any of that. trump already knows what he's saying, knows his own mind. >> wow. >> a lot of people like him he's honest, says what's on his mind. he's saying that about the debate. i'm going -- i'm in a tournament. i'm not preparing, it was tennis and golf, right? wasn't it both. whatever. >> it was not debate prep. >> this is what he says about what you can expect next week from him in the debate. >> i look forward to. i've never done it before. i'm not a debater. i produce jobs, beautiful buildings, a lot of good things. i built great business.
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built an incredible business. i'm not a debater. maybe i'll be good, maybe i'll be terrible. who knows. >> now being a politician there, lowering expectations, politicians like to do. i've never debated before. i might not do well. >> i like it. it's being honest. >> who doesn't do well? there are stakes here, no? >> i agree with you i agree. maybe his numbers will drop. >> rick perry found out the hard way. smart guy, successful governor, poor debate. >> last year herman cain was doing well. >> donald trump has done well throwing out the rule book, not doing conventional things and the fact is, most people are cramming, going to stay up all night get ready. i'm going to golf a tournament. owns a golf course there and wants to show it off, a big tournament. i'm going to go there, relax, come back and work hard. he'll be in iowa tonight. only been gone a couple of days include chucking out rule book
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and continues working. >> impressive. >> interviewing with our friend, you can see the full interview on "cashin in." what do you think of the donald trump phenomenon. his assessment of what it means, watch. >> it's a phenomenon. i think he's captured the deep frustration that people feel. he's, in a graphic way arc peeled to people's anger about those things and i think it's important to be respectful of that, make the case that we can fix these things and, over time, the trump phenomenon will either succeed or fail based on his proposals. >> i think this is a temporary sort of loss of sanity but we're going to come back to our senses and look for somebody serious to lead the country at some point. >> spoken like somewhat rand paul. he had been doing fairly well at beginning he got in early, he's one of the people who suffered from trump rising. so now he's saying, you know
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nonsense -- >> bush rise about it. it's important to respect the phenomen phenomenon. when they get on the debate stage and donald trump goes after him to his face, his forte, that what he's good at, savaging people to their face, how will governor bush respond. >> engage or go to his own me messa message? will it be obvious. some people saying, don't get into it with donald trump. do your own thing. you ignore him, maybe you cannot do battle. >> he has a way of saying what's on the mind of many voters without making too many people upset. one month after murdered in front of her father, the failure of obama's immigration policy is in the spotlight again. in an indian reservation, two good samaritans murdered after
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trying to pick up this man, legal immigrant, came to the country two years ago, on the side of the road, picked him up. he returned the favor by murdering them with a .22 caliber rifle. >> fating charges at the time. why did he have legal status? but beyond the immigration issue, just as crime of justice issue, why he was out. >> exactly right. >> to kill. you know, he's wanted for burglary, facing these charges, and he's out on the loose, and look what happened. >> right. these are two innocent people. you have a mother and a father trying to do good, trying to help this guy on the side of the road. look what he does in return. their daughter's fighting for her life, in the hospital, left without parents now. trying to do good. >> the tragedy is, there are so many smart people around the world who want to move to the united states, want to come here, build businesses and write software, make his a better country, invest money here, and they can't. instead, we are importing people, like this, with no known
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skills, criminal records who come into the u.s. why wouldn't you take the very best people you possibly can? i don't understand. >> when i sat down with the steinle family, they said this is not what it is. they're trying to earn a living. there are many people here trying to earn a living. we're not going after that. we're going after people that have misdemeanors, felonies, in trouble with the law, those are ones we need to send back. >> how about super impressive people, like janis dean, gets to come to the country, simple, no? >> good morning. >> good morning. >> nice introduction. you want to learn about weather today? >> yes. >> it's hot here in the northeast, right. >> yes, it is. >> a cool-off is coming in the next couple of weeks for august for the northeast. we'll talk about that. current temperatures across the map. a lot of 60s. 75 in new york city. 80 in dallas, you know the northwest is baking. that is a big story. so, summertime heat for new york city, louisville, washington, d.c., 97 on tuesday.
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but then we've got a potent cold front that's going to come midweek and stay with us for the first couple of weeks of august. that's going to be impressive. the northwest, look at these highs today. 99 in portland. 101 burns. it is going to be baking. these areas, some areas don't have air-conditioning. that's going to be a concern. heat advisories in place for all of the coastal cities and interior sections of the northwest. we'll continue to monitor that. back to you, ed, ainsley, tucker. >> good morning. >> thank you so much, janis. >> you're welcome. >> so happy in the morning. >> unbelievable. whatever janis is doing early in the morning, we need to do it. >> the best personality in the building, thanks. first, they dump trump from the political page. now "huffington post" pushing to get him off the debate stage. is that their role as a group of journalists? we debate next. a pilot struggling to land a plane as it tosses and turns in the air. dramatic video. it's just coming in. we'll show you.
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watch as these magnificent creatures take flight, soaring away from home towards the promise of a better existence. but these birds are suffering. because this better place turned out to have a less reliable cell phone network, and the videos on their little bird phones kept buffering. birds hate that.
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another jab at donald trump after removing him from its political stage, now lobbying the gop to drop him from thursday. debate. in an op-ed, trump is not worthy have rnc should exercise some discretion and insists they exclude the parasite from the free ride he seeks from the party he plainly despises. they should bar him from the debate. here to have their own debate and react, patrick brennan and the founder of the accountability project. good morning. >> good morning. >> what do you think about this? you know, for a website, news site to say, first of all, we're not going to consider a major
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republican presidential candidate, you know, somewhat is in politics, put him on our entertainment page, now saying he should be booted from a debate. >> it's a stretch to suggest that the republican party switch up the rules they've set out and ignore rules in an effort to get rid of trump. it's reasonable for republicans to be concerned, to be annoyed by trump's role in the debate right now. but they can't do an end run around him. they need to beat him on terms they've set out. >> let's take a quick look at polls. real clear politics average right now, trump at 20.8%, walker 13.7, bush, 12.2, rubio, 6.8, huck by, carson in the 6s. call, cruz, 3 n. t5s. when someone's at the top, we can't base it on the polls they should be treated seriously, first of all and as journalists
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aren't we supposed to be scrutinizing them rather than saying in or out. >> a question of integrity of "huffington post." we get it we don't like them, but they're trying to get attention to themselves as networks. it in the networks' best interests to have the best, most lively debate. donald trump, we may find him amusing and comical but he is a real candidate. he's raised or has real money, has an audience and getting the most attention. the question is, is he going to be able to actually produce results in these primary states. right now he's polling pretty well in iowa which is a big surprise to everybody. can he get the operation going, is he going to make a difference as the election goes on? we'll see. but for now, he's a real candidate. >> what do you think about the key to the debate in terms of making sure it's not just a reality show? how do you think the focus will be in terms of getting not just donald trump but the others to explain their policy positions? >> well, something a lot of the candidates are thinking pretty hard about, they're worried about what trump's role's going
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to be. at this point, nobody has any idea what he's going to do. >> when you see donald trump, he goes to his golf course to celebrate the women's british open, major tournament, maybe take a breather. but then he's going to come right back. but says he's not prepping. >> right. >> someone who chucked out the script from the beginning, people have laughed him off. but chucking out the script has worked. >> he knows his brand. you go back and you look at donald trump, since like the '70s, a man who speaks from the gut. he's not going to switch from that brand to another brand overnight. i have no doubt he's preparing because he has to look good on stage in front of 16 or 10 other candidates. >> seems what you're getting at, authenticity. you have to admit, this who is he is and people respond. >> it works in favor of the rnc, republicans to keep him in the race. if, if, i'm on the left, so we believe that the republicans want a strong, moderate, right-leaning moderate candidate i think this will split up the
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primary voters who tend to be further to the right and it will bring them out to vote while making the same person on stage look even more sane. >> what do you think will be the two top keys to the debate. >> it's important for people to figure out how to handle trump but respond to the things that trump is getting voters to care about. there's something that's missing here. republican voters are angry and candidates need to figure out a way to exploit that and to draw that away from trump but also away of policies that are responding. >> trump may be the center of attention, either way. good to see you both. thank you for joining us this morning. still to come -- remember popular kids in high school? >> well, here we are again. >> yeah, but this time we're seniors. >> we're going to rule the school. >> i know she was popular in high school. they may be worse off later in life. we'll tell you about the curse of the cool kids, next. and forget male or female.
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one taxpayer funded university letting students choose from six different genders. ♪ every auto insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company understands the life behind it. those who have served our nation. have earned the very best service in return. ♪ usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an auto insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life. do you suffer from constipation or irregularity? trust dulcolax® for dependable relief. try free at dulcolaxoffers.com dulcolax® tablets are comfort coated for gentle, overnight relief. hurry! try free at dulcolaxoffers.com. dulcolax®. designed for dependable relief.
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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. 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. ♪ quick international stories from sky high. first up, new overnight, the plane debris that washed up on an island in the indian ocean arrived in paris for testing. investigators will examine the wing parts to determine if it does, in fact, belong to the missing malaysian airlines plane that vanished nearly 17 months ago. 239 people on board. and nerve-racking plane landing at one of the world's scariest airports.
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wow. an air berlin plane struggle against the wind as it approaches the island of ma dara. wings bounced as it landed nearly sideways but it did touch down safely. unpredictable weather does make for sketchy landingsen that's an understatement. thank you, tucker. well, the pc police patrolling college applications. as the university of california's apps have six different gender options, male, female, transmale, transfemale, gend gender queer and different identity. joining us, a student at uc berkeley and executive director of the school's college republicans. thanks for being with us, claire. >> good morning. >> good morning to you. so, what is the benefit of this? >> i'm absolutely at a loss to
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understand what role these criteria would play in the application process for university. i think it's irresponsible for a -- for a taxpayer-funded university system and elite university system at that to feel compelled to include bjective self-identifiers in its admissions process. firstly, continually classifying students in smaller and smaller groups and descriptors is going to perpetuate spiral of affi affirmative active policies finding rund representation that isn't even there secondly i don't understand how these categories in any way reflect the identity of these applicants as students especially students applying to competitive colleges. >> all right. let me get the statement in from janet napolitano, she is the president of the uc system. she was a former cabinet member
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for president obama. she says uc is working hard to ensure campuses model inclusiveness and understanding weep must continue to look where we can improve so everyone at uc feels respected and supported. she's saying why they're doing this. what's your reaction? what's the message the university system is sending? >> you know, it's tough because i can honestly say all of us support diversity and inclusion, not only on college campuses but in our country as a whole. in my head i can't understand how this initiative specifically targets inclusion on campuses. if that's the goal for the uc's programs, what they should be doing is circulating campus surveys that can gauge students that are already on these campuses. but when you're at the admissions stage and application stage, there's no reason that we should be prematurely classifying students that may not even choose to attend the schools. but even if you go to the post acceptance phase where you're
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circulating campus surveys you're going to fall into the same trap that the uc system falls prey to consistently where we're constantly -- >> thank you so much. we appreciate than running out of time now. thank you. wish you all of the best with your studies. you're smart and i'm proud of you. have a good one. family is nearly run off the road by two trucks in a terrifying case of road rage. >> my phone's dead. call the cops. >> well, someone did call the cops but no one came to help. plus, everyone likes a classic car, right? and there's one all-american family business that's keeping these on the road. and there is tucker trying to drive one.
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losers later on in life. >> do you believe this? >> i think all studies are conducted by definition by people who are unpopular. >> right. couldn't wait to do the study. >> species of revenge. >> trying to get back at cool kids like us. >> this shows kids that were cool in high school much more likely to have drug and alcohol problem as they get older. >> i think the mean people, mean girls in high school that don't end up doing much with their lives. it's not popular ones. >> do you get the feeling -- >> look at ainsley. >> some of my friends in high school. two best friends, lindsey and cindy. high school pictures. just of us, you know, studying. >> i bet you were super popular even then. >> i tried to be nice to everyone. >> as it happens, weirdly, there he is. >> who is this? >> ed henry. >> i was really short in high school. i was not. i was like 8 years old at that point. they asked me at last minute for high school pics and i'm traveling. there's me and my sister colleen
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at the white house. >> prepopular days. you became popular after this. >> i don't think i was popular in high school i'm done think i'm popular now. i want to recollect the study. i've never been popular. >> being an adult, it doesn't matter. we love you no matter what. >> tucker didn't say he loves me. >> i sat next to someone who went to school with ainsley who said not only was she cool, she was the nicest person. >> really? >> yes. >> thank you. who was that? >> you know who was cool in high school but can't look at us now because we're really cool. >> right, right. >> we don't want her -- >> look at that. >> look how cool. >> janis, you haven't changed a bit. the hair has. hair has. the face has not. just as beautiful. >> so kind. >> tremendous. >> the medals. >> whoa! >> janis. producers asked, any pictures of you in high school. i was like, thought you'd never ask. >> touring with megadeath.
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took me several hours to get that hairdo intact. >> that was a perm, couldn't wash it a few days. >> i remember. yes. >> this is air band competition. i wish i took first prize for doing pointer sisters. >> i saw you on gretchen carlson's show doing that you are really good. >> love it. one of my favorite things to do. >> we'll come back to you for the weather in a minute. first, read you headlines that you missed while you were sleeping overnight. state of emergency declared in the state of california. more than a dozen wildfires scorched that state. you're safe, tucker. now one firefighter unfortunately is dead because of all of this. 38-year-old david rule was brought in from south dakota to help fight one of these fires. he leaves behind a wife and two children. dry and windy conditions helping to spread the flames and making fighting those fires a lot tougher. >> they are calling it a gut wrenching decision. the coast guard suspending its search for the two teen averages
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who disappeared on the fishing trip in florida. hundreds of rescuers looking for the two. they're from florida, like i said. that search moved up all the way up to south carolina. private pilots and boaters will now continue that search. family remains committed privately to the search and rescue mission. we've had a lot of dear friends, colleagues, neighbors, community, contribute to bringing these boys home ourp focus to continue to do that privately. >> teenagers' families holding out hope, believing they could have built a raft from life vest and cooler on the boat. a texas family nearry run off the road by two pickup trucks in a case of road rage. >> my phone's dead. call the cops. >> now parents are outraged. emergency dispatchers didn't do more to help them than family, they called 911 but the
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dispatcher couldn't figure out who to send since they traveled through several communities. >> you're going to have to come in. we can't send an officer into northlake. >> can i not give you her information and you guys can contact her and work out a location? >> easier have her call us. >> the family calls the confusion unbelievable and says they are thankful that no one was hurt. wrestling legend rowdy roddy piper has died. the 61-year-old suffered a heart attack and then passed away in his sleep inside his home in hollywood. such a young age. the wrestling icon one of wwe's biggest stars back in the '80s you probably know after his debut in 1984. he was diagnosed with hodgkin's lymphoma in 2006 but beat that cancer. retired from wrestling in 2011 and leaves behind a wife and four children. those are the headlines. back to janis who has the forecast for the weekend. >> did you know we had a blue
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moon last night? a rare event that happens. it's not because the moon is blue. it's just because it happens, this is two blue moons in a month, which happens every 30 months or so. this is from brooklyn. seen from the liberty state park in jersey stip gorgeous and our second picture cellular field, eighth inning of the baseball game between the white sox and new york yankees than kind of looks look a blue moon. it's not the hue of the moon it happens rarely, blue moon. let's take a look at the maps, shall we, for this saturday across the country. we do have some showers and thunderstorms across florida as well as the southeast. we have a stationary boundary there across the gulf coast that's going to bring potential for showers and thunderstorms. monsoonal moisture getting into southwest, much needed as we get into the drought season. we could see potential of hail, damaging winds and potentially isolated tornados this afterfine for the midwest and great lakes.
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there's your threat for sunday. not looking at a tornado outbreak but keep an eye to the sky. forecast highs for sunday. feeling like summertime. it's hot out there. speaking of hot, we're going to go to tucker and hot cars! >> it's really like a time machine on wheels. but without one company, many classic cars and trucks would not be as treasured as they are today. >> true. since 1974, held the largest car and truck collector event in the united states with more than 500,000 visitors every year. >> a man who knows a lot about the old vehicle, bill miller. >> good morning. >> overshadowed by downshifting, perfect. >> did well. very well. >> impressive, the vehicles you brought. i can't -- can't resist starting with this one. 1936. >> 1936 ford flathead v-8. they had one jump up on everything else at that time because they had a v-8. most everything was six cylinder
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in those days. >> such an impressive, unbelievably well-restored -- you said not restored. >> not restored. this was basically maintained and repainted one time. >> carlisle events, buy vehicles like this? >> absolutely. an auction twice a year. >> where? >> carlisle, pennsylvania and also in lakeland, florida. two auctions in lakeland, florida as well. >> can you bid online? >> yes, you can. this could be you. >> it could be me. this is a -- 1971 barracuda. this is four-speed car, 340 cubic inch. this is winchester gray. winchester gray is a very unusual color. they didn't make very many of these. and being winchester gray, it wasn't real accepted when it was new. >> i can see. >> no, all of a sudden, it popular because they made so few. >> why would you put a massive 340 engine but only a four
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speed? >> that's all they had in those days. >> too bad. cries out for six-speed transmission. this here, corvette, what year? >> 2012, but tucker a special car. we were fortunate enough, my partner, lance. father, that you'll meet later in the segment, was mr. corvette. >> yes. >> and he started the corvette show in 1982. for 2012, the 30th anniversary, general motors honored us by making this car carlisle blue. >> fantastic. >> only made 535 of these cars. though it's a 2012, it's very collectible. >> if i wanted to buy this, and i do, what would it cost me, ish? >> cars around $50,000 new. that's not bad. >> no. no. >> this, probably more than that? >> this is a ford gt. the ford gt was made early on but then made these cars just recently. and these cars are extremely
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popular. they were about 150,000 new. you can't touch one for under 250 right now. >> probably not going to buy it but i'll admire it from afar. more with you later in the show. carlisle events. premier vehicle auction house. making me want to buy one. >> great. >> thank you. >> you bet. >> all right. up next, one sheriff has an offer for drug dealers they may not be able to refuse. rat out your rivals. unusual crime fighting strategy goes viral. he joins us live, next. isn't superman supposed to be fighting crime. why is this guy punching out a cop? we'll tell you what happens. stay tuned.
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i sure had a lot on my mind when i got out of the hospital after a dvt blood clot. what about my family? my li'l buddy? and what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital but i wondered if this was the right treatment for me. then my doctor told me about eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. not only does eliquis treat dvt and pe blood clots, but eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment. knowing eliquis had both... turned around my thinking. don't stop eliquis unless your doctor tells you to. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding.
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don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. if you had a spinal injection while on eliquis call your doctor right away if you have tingling, numbness, or muscle weakness. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily... and it may take longer than usual for bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. eliquis treats dvt & pe blood clots. plus had less major bleeding. both made switching to eliquis right for me. ask your doctor if it's right for you. you do all this research on the gas mileage, horsepower torque ratios. three spreadsheets later you finally bring home the one. then smash it into a tree. your insurance company's all too happy to raise your rates. maybe you should've done a little more research on them. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates
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baltimore sees its deadliest month in 43 years. homicide soaring to 45 in july alone. bringing the total to 189 homicides in 2015 compared to just 119 this time last year. super insult, the man of steel seen fighting police in the latest action comics issue. superman's secret identity of clark kent revealed, returns to a town where residents are scared of him. a riot breaks out. superman punching an officer in the face. tucker? >> wow. thanks, ed. well, a georgia sheriff making national headlines for his ad inviting drug dealers to rat out their rivals. the advertisement ran in a local paper reads, is your drug dealing competition costing you money? we offer a free service to help you eliminate your drug competition. sounds like a joke but it's not at all, says the sheriff. it may be the new frontier in fighting drug dealing. macintosh county sheriff joins us now. good to see you this morning.
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>> good morning. >> tell us the idea behind this. >> well, we have got a lot of young people that work for us and they come up with some innovative ideas sometimes. this was an ad that was tried in south georgia about 20, 25 years ago and worked. and i had a young investigator come in my office last week, wanted to try it and macintosh county. we tweaked it a little bit, put it in the paper and now off to the races. we'll see what happens. we call it -- i had a major within nigh department -- called it a snitch application. >> pretty good. basically you're using market principles in order to snare these guys. idea is their capitalists gone wrong but still capitalists and main goal is to make money and put their competitors out of business. do you expect peel to respond? >> i really do. i think that they're going to snitch on each other and to lessen the number of drug
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dealers so their ability to sell drugs will go up. >> so they will presumably send in this form or call and then once you get the information you'll use that to bust the people they name as competeitor. >> we'll use that information to start an investigation. there's a process that you have to go through and establish and probable cause and we'll go from there. >> what's the reaction been like to this? >> it's been good. people of our county are getting a big kick out of. we campaigned on trying to do something about the drug problem in macintosh county, georgia and is this other avenue doing it. >> how is the drug problem? has it gotten worse? >> it's bad across the nation. but seven years ago it was real bad. we had open air drug markets throughout our county that provided curb service to automobiles they pull up to the
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right spot. we eradicated all of those problems and now they do it in the dead of night or behind closed doors. >> all of the attention is on urban crime and drug use but rural america, as you know better than i, has a problem innovative solution. best of luck. thanks for copping. >> thank you for having me. >> up next, fighting to get into next week's debate. how is john kasich, governor of ohio, ready to take on rivals in the republican party? we'll hear from him in the next hour. then, cbs accucvs aexcused overcharging. we'll tell you the tell-tale signs next.
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hundreds of thousands of people likely over charged for generic drugs by cvs according to a new lawsuit accusing that one pharmacy to submitting claims to insurance companies at inflated prices. >> cvs is accused of charging $135 for 90-day supply of generic osteoporosis drug. others paid $12. todd cooperman is the founder of pharmacycheck pharmacychecker.com. good morning, doctor. >> good morning. >> we wanted to point out cvs is accused in this suit but other pharmacies do the same thing. >> i think so, yeah. >> talk about that but also talk about first of all, what can people do to check these prices? >> it's really kind of
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ridiculous because you have people with insurance who are paying for that insurance or their employers are. they're being charged more than if you simply walked in and asked for the cash price or the discounted price. in this case cvs has a program where i think it's maybe $15 a year and you can join their discount program and you can get generics cheaply, $5, $10, $15, depending on the drug. if you have card from your employer and you go in you have to pay the copay. if the copay is $15, $20, even though you had you asked about the cash price under the discount and it was $5, you're going to end up paying whatever your copay is. that's what this case is about. >> i've got a cvs caremart card and that's where i get my drugs. >> i have insurance for my employees. we've done mystery shopping at pharmacychecker.com and verified this is true. if you go in, we show our card and have united health care, you know, we're actually paying more
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than if we had used the discount. and you can basically go to all kinds of major pharmacies and they will have these discount programs but you need to ask for them and -- >> don't be shy. >> don't be shy. be an advocate for yourself. and unfortunately now, some generics, whether you get it through your plan or a discount program the prices have gone crazy. i mean, you might have to pay $100 or something a few years ago might have been $10. and there are some options, you know, there, for consumers as well. >> what's your advice for people watching? if you do have the caremark cardnd you can only shop at cvs, what do you do if you don't ask about the bonus cards or plans that you were talking about, there something else we can go, go to your website and shop around for different prices for the drugs? >> in most cases probably you can shop around and get a good price. >> i need to call walmart and cvs and walgreens and find out what they're charging? >> right. you may have to go in with your
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prescription sometimes and show it to them. but if the price is too -- really ridiculously high and about 5 million americans act l actually are going outside the u.s. to get their prescriptions filled because they can't afford the price here. >> can you trust other countries' prescription drugs? >> if it's a licensed pharmacy, you can. it remains illegal for the consumer to do it. the fda do not go after consumers for doing it. that's what another thing pharmacy checker does is make sure they're licensed pharmacies because you can get something bad on the internet. >> i think about my grandparents on so many drugs before they passed away and the astronomical costs they were paying is ridiculous. a lot of people can't afford it and lose their lives because they can't pay for the drugs. >> my grandmother in her 90s was faxing her prescriptions to canada to get medication at a lower cost. >> it might be illegal but some people do what they have to do to save their own lives. it shouldn't be that way. >> 35 million people can't afford their medication in the
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u.s. right now, even with what's going on. >> thank you, dr. tod cooperman, pharmacychecker.com. check it out. thank you. >> thank you. meanwhile, fox news alert. passenger pain with 200 people onboard lands at one of the busiest airports with a drone in its path. why the feds are now issuing a terror warning. you know how some women like to go after younger men? >> you got me into your house, you give me a drink, you put on music, now you start opening up your personal life to me and tell me your husband won't be home for hours. >> so? >> mrs. robinson, you're drying to seduce me. >> well, those women could land, believe it or not, better jobs. we're going to tell you why, straight ahead.
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good morning to you. it is saturday, it's august 1st. i'm filling in for the bride, for anna kooiman who got married last night. we're going the start with a fox news alert. a scare in the sky. a drone comes within feet of a passenger plane at one of the busiest airports in our country. this is the feds are now saying that drones could be used in the next terror attack. aviation expert with what you need to know, straight ahead. plus, he's been tough on immigration but there is a softer side to donald trump. watch. >> i really think i have a big heart. i want to take care of people. if i lose some votes, i don't care. >> will donald trump lose votes because of the size of his heart? more on that from the gop front-runner, ahead. and you know how some women like to go after younger men? >> you got me into your house. you give me a drink. you put on music. now you start opening up your personal life to me and tell me your husband won't be home for
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hours. >> so? >> mrs. robinson, you're trying to desseduce me. >> why those women are landing a better job, mornings are better with cougars and friends, i'm sorry, and friends. ♪ zip lines on the plaza. you thought it couldn't get any more exciting on america's most invigorating morning program. we have upped the ante. we're going to be later. >> one of us is going to do it. >> will it end well? >> who will it be? >> probably not. it's great to see you this morning. we want to start with something fresh from the american political world. donald trump, he's been denounced by many on the left as
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a racist. in other words, be quiet, donald trump. but he says not only is he not a bigot, he's a deeply compassionate man with a huge heart. here he is, donald trump on his heart. >> i think it's the opposite. i really think i'm -- i have a big heart. i want to take care of people. even on the health care. i want to take care of people that a lot of people aren't talking about. frankly, if i lose some votes, i don't care. i think i have a much bigger heart than people understand. at the same time, i love our country. i hate to see what's going on. we need a stronger tone. when jeb and hillary both of them the same day said i don't like his tone, we need a stronger tone bep need enthusiasm. we need strength. we need toughness. we need a stronger tone. >> there's the real donald trump at the end. >> the stronger tone. >> our owner rick bowling is going to be on cashing in on the whole interview later this morning. donald trump says i've got a heart. he's trying to say, wait a minute, i'm not a bad guy, i'm a nice guy because he's had tough comments out there. attend he's telling eric, no, we
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shouldn't lower the tone. we should be tough. i think he's frustrated. he sees people out there are frustrate with the political. they're tired of people dancing around it. he wants to take people head-on. >> i don't doubt for a second he has a big heart. i think his kids are really nice. everyone says that. he's certainly got a lot of them. but i don't think people like donald trump because of his heart but because his of districtness and toughness and strength. >> jeb bush says it's a phenomenon how he's rising up in the polls despite anything he says that might be controversial. take a listen. >> it's definitely a phenomenon. i think he's captured the deep frustration that people feel. he's in a very graphic way appeal to people's anger about those things. i think it's important to be respectful of that. make the case so we can fix these things. over time, the trump phenomenon will either succeed or fail based on his proposals. >> you can see jeb bush also trying to prepare for the first fox debate thursday night by saying, i understand what he's
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tapping in to, but i kind of want to talk about these other things. >> right. >> that's what smart politicians try to do. whether jeb bush can pull that off or not is going to be an interesting stories. >> not putting him down because i think within the party, the party has to strengthen itself by not putting one another down. i like that he wasn't. he answered the question without putting someone -- >> without dismissing donald trump's supporters as some have done. he's just got crazies. no, jeb bush has said, i understand what he's tapping in to but here's what i want to do. he'll rise or fall. >> we'll see, that rise strategy was put to the test last night in florida. hillary clinton and jeb bush both addressed the urban league. hillary clinton spoke first. the bush campaign expected basically to kind of friendly exchange of ideas. she went off script and slammed jeb bush right in the middle of the speech. watch this. >> i don't think you can credibly say that everyone has a right to rise and then say you're for phasing out medicare or for repealing obamacare.
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people can't rise if they can't afford health care. they can't rise if the minimum wage is too low to live on. they can't rise if their governor makes it harder for them to get a college education. and you cannot seriously talk about the right to rise and support laws that deny the right to vote. >> so there she is. she's of course referring to governor bush's campaign slogan right to rise. that's the name of his pact. accusing him of trying to prevent minority voters from voting. this is a pretty heavy duty allegation, bordering on slander, i would argue. governor bush basically ignored it. got up on stage. thanked her. didn't make any reference at all to her attacks on him. later his aides sent out a series of angry tweets. some republicans running, why didn't he respond to attacks? >> donald trump has been saying that mitt romney didn't take president obama head-on last night. some republicans, whether it's trump or someone else emerges, wants to see pushback against
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hillary clinton and not just walking away. >> she basically just called him a bigot on the stage. you ignore that? it's interesting. maybe it's the right strategy. >> two different strategies. it's going to be interesting to see what the voters like. if you look at the polls it seems like they like donald trump's strategy where they'll go back. we'll see though. i don't know. >> he's got a big heart. let's talk about this because this is a serious topic you need to know about this morning. delta airplane preparing to land at jfk airport has a close call where w. a drone. the faa says the unmanned aircraft was seen 100 feet away from the wing of that plane. >> this is the department of homeland security issue a security warning that drones could be used in terror attacks. >> joining us now to weigh in is president of nyc aviation, ill if gerner. good morning, phil. what do you know as we go through the news reports about what happened at jfk, how close of a call it was? we've seen similar indents in newark. >> we saw the pilot say that the drone was 100 feet from the aircraft and that is within 500
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feet which is the definition of a near mid collision. to be honest it's getting news coverage but this is something that's been happening almost weekly in new york city alone. drones are becoming a serious concern all around the country not just with near collisions but we saw them on firefighting in california with the forest fires. firefighting aircraft are unable to fight fires because people are flying drones to take picture. >> hobbyists flying model aircraft or something more sinister? >> mostly hobbyists, enthusiasts who assume i hope for their sake they're just being ignorant to what the rules and regulations are. there are many, many commercial applications as well around many good things for drones, too. not all drones are bad. >> this worries us, especially when you have the federal government saying that terrorists could use drones. something that small could it really take down a plane? >> well, you know, aircraft are made to absorb strikings from birds which happens all the time, aircraft brush them off. not that big of a deal. the drones are made with some similar materials as other aircraft. heavy battery, aluminum.
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it goes into an engine. it could take out an engine. if it goes into a cockpit window it would injure or kill a pilot. it's happening more and more. >> is there any way to detect them? i don't want to be on an airplane and -- how can you tell if a drone is close by? >> a lot of it is eyesight. pilots are aware of what's going on when you're going toward critical phases of takeoff or landing they're looking out the windows while monitoring the systems. they're keeping a close eye out there. it's difficult. a lot of these are the size of this table, maybe smaller, some are larger. it's a challenge out there for them. >> this bulletin alarming because it's saying obviously terrorists are watching what's happening. and if hobbyists can do it, terrorists could easily get their hands on a drone and the way you're describing this unless the pilot can see it with eyesight it could potentially bring down a flight. >> there is a danger. i'm much more concerned about people that are being careless with these. i'm not too nervous about the terror suspect yet because the careless part is out there and so prevalent these days. >> is there any way to stop it?
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you can buy them anywhere. you should be able to buy them anywhere but how can you monitor this, regulate it? >> it possible? >> this right here, us discussing it, sharing awareness. in new york city almost every inch of new york city is illegal to operate a drone above treetop or rooftop levels. awareness enforcement. and just people kind of -- >> the faa has said, phil, they're studying this because they haven't still, to tucker's point, come up with a formal regulation on it but they've been looking at it. >> there are enough regulations right now. >> on the books. >> yeah. once you're in that airspace you're operating illegally because this is an aircraft. this isn't a toy. this an aircraft. pilots are saying this is a close call. >> phil derner, thank you for your expertise. thank you. now to other headlines this morning. developing right now, the fight against wildfires turning deadly in california when 38-year-old firefighter is killed in the northern part of that state. 38-year-old david rule, here's
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his picture, he was actually brought in from south dakota. doesn't even live in california. came out to help. the goodness of his own heart, to battle the fires. now he leaves behind a wife and two children. the governor of the state jerry brown calling california a tinder box. declaring a state of emergency to free up additional resources for the thousands of firefighters working to contain those flames. a prison wide hunger strike at the utah state correctional facility. 42 inmates reportedly refusing to go and eat their breakfast because they're demanding gang leaders be released out of a maximum security unit. all of the inmates participating are documented gang members. the prison monitoring their health and now continuing to offer them meals. family and friends saying good-bye to bobbi kristina brown today at private funeral inial far rhett a, georgia. it is invitation only. nick gordon, brown's boyfriend is not invited. he's reportedly begging her father bobby brown and her aunt
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pat houston to be put on that guest list. brown died on sunday during hospice care will be buried on monday alongside her mother at cemetery up here in new jersey. it's a bird, it's a plane, it's a record-setting sky dive. 164 skydivers joining together over central illinois to form the largest ever vertical sky difing formation. the new record smashing the old one of 138 divers. the formation resembling a giant flower floated above the rural drop zone before those divers broke away and then opened up parachutes and all of them landed safely. they are definitely professionals. >> don't try that at home. >> those are your headlines. >> i don't think many people are at risk of trying that at home. >> zip line you can try at home. we're going to do that later. the stage is almost set for the first gop debate of the season. one of those who may be on the debate stage, john kasich, governor ohio, here to tell us
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including fatal infections. cases of lymphoma and lung cancer have been reported. tell your doctor if you're prone to or have any infection like an open sore, the flu, or a history of copd, a chronic lung disease. orencia may worsen your copd. if you're not getting the relief you need... ask your doctor about orencia. orencia. see your ra in a different way. in only five days the candidates will take the stage for the first gop presidential debate of the season. right here on fox news. we don't know which of the 17 candidates will take the main stage but they're all trying to make their messages heard. i talked to ohio governor john kasich about what sets him apart from the rest of the field. >> governor john kasich, thank you for joining us on "fox and friends." obviously it's a huge week in
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american politics. first fox debate on thursday night. you got into this race pretty late. but you seem to be surging in the polls. do you think you're going to be able to make it into the main event thursday night 9:00 p.m.? >> i don't know, ed. we'll find out, right? i mean, it's one of many steps that you take on the path to a nomination. and i'd love to be there. if i'm not there we will be doing some other things. and you know, it will all work out over time. >> as i travel the country covering hillary clinton i hear from a lot of voters that as they survey the republican field they're somewhat confused. it's such a large field. they're trying to see how the candidates differentiate themselves. why don't you tell our viewers now, what do you think of the two or three biggest things you accomplished as governor that can sort of set you apart from the rest of the pact? >> let me start in washington, ed, because i spent ten years in my life to get to a federally balanced budget and we were the chief architects of a balanced budget in '97 the first time we balanced a budget since man walked on the moon.
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we haven't done it since and the economy took off and we paid down debt and cut taxes. i was a military reformer. i served on the national security committee for 18 years. that's a unique resume with both national security, executive experience, and actually doing something in washington. >> well, you know, obviously first you've got to get past the republican primaries and win the republican nomination. you may have some trouble with your fellow republicans on the fact that you worked to expand medicaid, you worked with president obama on that. you obviously feel it was the right thing to do but there are some republican voters who are surprised that you sort of joined forces with the president on obamacare. >> first of all, i'm not for obamacare. joint join forces with the president. all i know is that ronald reagan expanded medicaid, i think about three times. and i had a chance to bring ohio money back to ohio and to me it's a conservative principle, ed. it's not just to help people but it's to get them trained to hold them personally responsible for what they do and to get them on their feet. but are you going to have to cut entitlement programs?
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i mean, i hear mike huckabee and others out on the trail saying that we can't touch these programs. are we going to have to cut medica medicare, cut social security? >> ed, we reformed all entitlement programs when i was in washington. guess what, i reformed entitlement programs in ohio. the medicaid budget eats up most budgets in the country went from 9% growth to less than 4% growth in this budget without taking one person off the rolls or cutting one benefit. it's about innovation, making things work. >> how do you balance that though with what you were laying out before about your record in washington about balancing the budget with then president bill clinton reaching across the aisle. you want to help people. you have priorities with the federal budget. as you know, we're $18 trillion in debt. how do you do what you did with bill clinton if you're elected, is it realistic to think that you can actually balance the budget? >> there's no question. remember, i had an $8 billion hole in ohio which was almost 20% of our general operating
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fund. now we're running a $2 billion surpl surplus. our credit is rock solid. we've cut the taxes and we're growing jobs. so absolutely. i've not only done it once, me, my team has not only undone it once was bev done it several times. to go down to washington and balance this budget is critical for economic growth and, frankly, security. we need to be strong economically and militarily. there's no doubt in my mind that over time we can balance a federal budget. how do you eat an elephant, one bite at a time. that's how you move to balance the federal budget. >> i think john kasich does have a lot of potential. >> for sure. >> he's very compelling. he's accomplished a lot as governor. he's got a lot of challenges as well. the resume he pointed out, if he is facing hillary clinton in general election, interesting to go head to head with her to say i worked with your husband. on the other hand, he was cutting me off there about cutting entitlements and he said we reformed them al 17, $18 tri
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debt. those entitlements keep growing. so, you know, you're going to have to do something. >> you cut benefits in the end. i'm not saying he has but in the end you can't have endlessly growing benefits and, you know, a sustain -- >> put it on your calendar. if you have a calendar like this and you're old school like i am, put it on your calendar next thursday, debate. >> if you still have a paper calendar, you can do that. >> it works. >> put it on your iphone. coming up next, something we've seen way too often. children being left alone in sweltering cars. >> you left her in the car. >> i'm so sorry. >> no sorry. she could have died. >> how exactly does this happen? we'll take you unside the mind of bad parents. that's coming up. good news if you're one of those ladies out there who likes to date the younger men. >> you got me into your house. you give me a drink. you put on music. now you start opening up your personal life to me and tell me your husband won't be home for hours. >> so? >> mrs. robinson, you're trying
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news by the numbers, first, $139.1 million, that's how much hill -- hill -- bill and hillary clinton -- let me start over -- made from 2007 to 2014. in 2013 alone they pulled in $43 million. that was speaking and public appearance fees. next, 30%, that's how many americans would vote for ht obama if he could run for a
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third time according to this new poll. this comes just days after he said he would easily win if he could. and then $25, that is the new limit of how much cash kansas welfare recipients can get out of the atm. lawmakers there looking to keep the controversial program after it drew national attention earlier this year. >> thank you. >> you're welcome. here's this. a new study shows good news for ladies who go after younger men. cougars. >> you got me into your house. you give me a drink. you put on music. now you start opening up your personal life to me and tell me your husband won't be home for hours. >> so? >> mrs. robinson, you're trying to seduce me. >> good call. according to the new study, women like that -- >> those cougars have a better chance of landing a top job apparently. 50% of women dating younger men have higher managerial roles but the same study says those women could die earlier because of all the stress at home and their relationships. >> so why is all of that?
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let's ask development psychologist dr. kooper lawrence. good morning. >> good morping. >> what is the deal? >> well, okay, first of all, you don't die because you're married to a younger man. it's because of stress. but you know, women want equality in every way, shape, and form. if you're in a higher role, if you're an executive, you have all the stress. your well being is lower. your stress is higher. it comes down to how well you cope. so if you cope really well and you have a good healthy relationship you won't die earlier. >> you're saying live like a man, die like a man. >> exactly. >> men die younger. >> true. >> equality in the end, not such a good deal. >> well, not if you don't have good coping skills. that's the thing. men are worse at that. men don't reach out and say, like, i'm having a really tough day, can you help me? women will. women will support each other whereas men tend not to. >> what is this based on? personality traits? >> exactly. personality traits are robust so there's five main character or personality traits that we have. i won't go through all five of them. >> there they are on the screen.
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>> great. >> openness, con she understand innocence, troeks version, agreeableness, nur rot sichl. maybe someone low in neuroticism, date a young enman would also have a good job. >> i want to get something back to women support each other. i don't know what country you live in. i wish that were true. i see women undermiping each other. >> that was the case for a long time. but there's a good deal of research now that shows that women, especially in the workplace, are tending to support each other more because they realize the importance of supporting other women to get further. >> i've learned if you support your friends at work, then you're also going to soar as well because you have a great relationship with them and help each other out. >> that's exactly what it is. they're saying that women who want to get further support other women who will help them get further. >> ed and i have supported each other for a long time. >> look where it's gotten me. >> you support us, you buy us breakfast. >> if you think about it, like, okay, younger man, someone who
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is 29. date another 29-year-old that woman is going to want to know where is this going, are you making enough money, what's the plan. an older woman instead, has all the stuff she doesn't need you to decide how much money. i have my own money. i'm paying my own mortgage. i don't need you for that. we can have a regular relationship. you and i can have a very good relationship. >> no, i think i'm older than you. >> i ended up marrying a younger guy. we just got along really well. i didn't need a guy to support me because i had my own job. we just really clicked and got along really well. i said the benefit of this is one day i'm going to be sick and i'm going to be old and you're going to be taking care of me. so it's like a bit-in baby sitter one day. there are benefits. >> but you did have a job. you did have all the things that a younger woman would want from a younger man. >> which i encourage. if you you can get a job and have the luxury of being able to work, it's a wonderful thing, in my opinion, because you can make choices that a lot of women can't. they don't have that option. >> the kind of job you have at
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29 is not the job you're going tv at 39. you're a lot more settled. you don't require as much from a man. it can be more about sex and fun and develop a relationship out of that. >> much greater detail. in our next segment, when we come back tomorrow. >> that's what we have at 7:30 in the morning. wait until 8:30. >> stay tuned for that. up next, can you name the rights you have under the first amendment? >> name me three rights that are protected by the first amendment. >> speech, you can bear arms. >> no, that's the second one. >> freedom of speech is one. that's good. >> oh, boy. >> is shocking results right outside the national archives where the first amendment resides. have you ever wanted to see janice dean the dancing machine on a zip line? today is the day, she will go for a ride.
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asked what did you just see? here's what they said. >> name me three rights that are protected by the first amendment. >> speech, you can bear arms. >> no, that's the second one. >> freedom of speech is one. that's good. >> freedom of speech, right to bear arms. >> no. >> the right to bear arms. >> no. >> no. second one. >> the second one. i don't know if i can. >> thank you very much. >> sorry. >> no problem. don't vote. >> just don't vote. >> all right. can any of you guys name what's in the first amendment? >> tucker can recite the whole thing. >> it's pretty meaningful. it's very short. it protects the right to free speech. establishes that right. freedom of the press. freedom of religion. freedom from government sponsored religion. freedom of assembly and free
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some of petition. >> petition your government. >> what's interesting is if you look at support for the first amendment, recent poll showed the majority of democrats, 51% of democrats would like to criminalize speech, they disagree with. so there is a cost to people not knowing what their constitution says. you can't criminalize it. the first amendment and bill of rights protects my right to have opinions you disagree with. people don't seem to know that. it's a little scary. >> yeah. >> i agree. >> maybe they just don't care. >> i love having you on this show. >> no, i don't know. first amendment keeps us from going to jail. it's what sets us apart from the rest of the world. >> i agree. >> it's our gift to the rest of the globe. we should be proud of it. >> i agree. >> first amendment is there just for tucker. >> i agree. yeah. >> i would be hanging from my thumbs without it. >> let me tell you what you missed while you guys were sleeping. here are the other top stories making news. temporary not guilty plea for the accused charleston church shooter dylann roof, not guilty. the 21-year-old originally
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wanted to plead guilty to avoid the death penalty but his lawyers don't want him to do that until they know it is a death penalty trial. family members from the nine that were killed, here are all of their pictures, in that june 17th attack, also given a chance to speak out in court yesterday. the trial starts next july. new overnight. a private jet belonging to osama bin laden's family just crashed outside of london. look at that, all the black smoke. killing all four people onboard. the flames, the smoke seen rising from the crash scene. we are told bin laden's stepmother and sister might be among the dead. the plane over shot the runway clipping a fence before nose diving into a car dealership. no one on the ground was hurt. a lifeguard spots a child almost drowning in a crowded pool, but could you see the problem? all right. take a look again. the child flips off the tube and
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begins to struggle. wow. the lifeguard hailed a hero for quickly recognize that dangerous situation. rescuers say it's important to remember people drowning are often unable to call out or even wave for help. what a hero. because i would not have seen that. would you guy have? >> not at all. >> dozens of kids. >> i know. >> in another story. connecticut cop's act of kindness going viral. its officer michael castillo from anstonia police department helped a group of kids fix a chain on a bike. someone snapped the photo and shared it and liked thousands of times. officer castillo just happy to serve his community. where were you when i was growing up? the chain broke all the time. you have black fingers from all the oil on the chain. >> totally. as if police officers don't have enough to do. >> that was very nice of him. speaking of nice, janice
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dean with the janice cam on her head. >> it's a gopro on her head. >> is this the look or what? >> it's summertime. we all know that. so we want to talk about what we can do outside for summer. sinclair is here. meredith, you have a website called her sdmeredithplays.com. >> that's right. like you said, last weeks of summer break. if you zip lined on vacation you can now bring it into your backyard. this is a slacker's zip line. >> jeannie is going to demonstrate. >> put this between two trees. >> this comes with enough cable, you could go from 40 to 100 feet in your backyard. we have one of these ourselves. my boys love it. you can get i'm home for 80 bucks. i totally do it. this can go up to 250 pounds can get on this. jane is going to go for it and show us how it works. >> i'm going the get up there, too. >> meredith does play by play here. >> so jamie is also showing you
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this light-up seat which is cool because we have done this at night. >> at night? >> disco seat. >> you can do it at night which is super, super fun. >> it goes between two trees. it's really easy. >> what is the weight restriction? >> 250. you're good. >> 250. thank goodness. >> you know, really sturdy grips for kids. >> so you guys got my jan cam? are you ready, america? here we go. you're going to bring this zip lining to your backyard. >> everyone loves it. >> a party. super fun. >> you did it! >> and i didn't break it. i did not break the zip line. >> meredith, you are right. how much is this thing? >> you can get this home, the starter is 80 bucks. you can get this basic kit for 80 bucks. and depending on what you add to it, the price will go up to like $200 but that's if you're adding accessories. >> the ratings went up so high they want me to do it again. testing the zip line.
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what did everybody think? right? does everybody want one? who has a zip line in their backyard? >> i want the disco seat. >> it's super fun. >> fancy. >> like i said, we have one of these in my backyard. my boys love it. my husband has gotten on it. >> i'm taking this home. i'm taking this baby home! >> yeah, girl. >> and you're really only a couple feet off the ground so it's really -- it's safe and fun. >> okay, guys, back to you. >> that's awesome. >> great job, january niice. >> you did great. >> like a miss america crown at first. it was a gopro. >> i bet you're the best mom, janice, so fun. full of life. thank you, janice. well, have you seen it far too often? kids left alone and boiling hot cars? >> are you married? >> yes, sir. >> do you need to call your husband and you need to have him come here right now because you're going to jail. >> coming up next, we look inside the mind of bad parts.
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then he's already beaten cancer, now one air force captain has another goal, playing in the nba. he'll share his hoop dreams when he joins us live. stay tuned. when a moment spontaneously turns romantic, why pause to take a pill? and why stop what you're doing to find a bathroom? cialis for daily use, is the only daily tablet approved to treat erectile dysfunction so you can be ready anytime the moment is right. plus cialis treats the frustrating urinary symptoms of bph, like needing to go frequently, day or night.
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just an hour and 20 minutes of exercise a week is needed to make a difference. thanks so much, ed. it's a scenario that we see far too often. parents leaving their children trapped in dangerously hot cars. there's a mom in new jersey getting some choice words from this police officer. >> you left her in the car. >> i'm sorry. >> no sorry. she could have died. >> in oklahoma, another mother facing charges after leaving her daughter in a car that reached 120 degrees when she was stopped at a walmart. >> husband and you need to have him come here right now because you're going to jail. >> so why would anyone, anyone in the world, put their children in harm's way to go inside a store and run errands? we're asking our dr. chuck williams, educational psychologist, with lincoln university why and how this could happen. good morning, doctor. thanks for being with us. why in the world would a mother
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do this? >> good morning. first, before we jump on parents not doing the right thing, let me say that from a psychological perspective the issue is that our memory isn't as good as we think it is. the problem is that we forget and much more often than we like to admit. this is a part of it. outside of that sometimes parents are just rushing trying to get too many things done and they are, in fact, being irresponsible and can put their child in harm's way. that's a problem. >> forget your child? i mean, i'm pregnant with my first child. i would hope that if i'm going shopping -- >> congratulations. >> thank you. i don't understand how this could happen. i don't think memory loss is an argument here. i don't think that you even have a case if you would even say that in a courtroom because that's your job as a parent. your first -- top priority is to protect that child for the rest of their life. and i mean, i have a dog. i've never forgotten my dog in a car. i can't imagine my child. i mean, is it --
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>> i agree. >> so what are these -- >> to some extent i agree. but -- >> this one woman at the costco. go ahead. >> no, sorry to cut you off. i was going to say, having a child and a dog are two different i think so this. while there are similarities, when you have this child we'll have the conversation again, the stress level goes through the roof. there are a million things you're worried about, concerned about. again, central to that is overall making sure your child is safe. the welfare of your child is paramount. all of those things cause you to have all of this stuff running through your mind. believe it or not although it's a your child or an dog or args an ickes phoiphone, we can forg >> i try not to be judgmental but, come on, this is a child. child's life is at stake here. this child could die. i was watching the video of the costco at new jersey. the child is whaaling inside. this has been viewed more than 2 million times on facebook. the mother in comes out. not only did she leave her child
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in the car. the mother comes out of the costco with another child. to me it's saying i took one child in, i forgot the other one. is she picking favorites? what's going on here? >> now, having said all that, there are parents who can be neglectful. believe it or not, this can be considered childhood neglect and harm. law enforcement can get involved, as we saw with costco. the child protective services of the state can get involved. you can be locked up. you can be fined. your child can be taken from you and placed in foster care. we do have parents who engage in willful neglect, try to get too many things done. >> do they follow this parent for the next five years, ten years of her life to make sure she's not doing this again? >> i don't know about five or ten years. maybe a year or so. i think we need public awareness campaigns, don't forget that you will forget, don't keep your kids in a car. outside of it being hot, believe it or not psychologically when we leave a kid in a car they become anxious, they become fearful, they have attachment issues. they feel as though you maybe
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left them permanently. to a child they don't know you're coming and going. to them when you're out of sight, they feel like you're completely gone. >> five minutes is an eternity. >> exactly, in a car. or a pet, by the way. >> dr. williams, thank you so much. if you're a parent, do not forget your child in a hot car. thank you, dr. williams. just weeks after cait sometiwas gunned down this legal immigrant is charged with killing a couple until cold blood. two people who just offered him a ride home trying to be nice to him. why he was on the streets to begin with? full details coming up. and then, he's already beatibea beaten cancer and helped defend our nation in battle. now one air force captain wants a shot in the nba. his remarkable underdog story. you have to hear this to believe it. put your hand over your heart.
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well, antoine hood is a captain in the united states air force. he has beaten cancer and now he has just one more thing he wants to accomplish. >> the goal i'm trying to accomplish is make it to the nba. >> his window of opportunity is really closing. >> i think he's smart enough to know the difference between reality and a pipe dream. >> well, he once had a chance to play professionally in the nba but he missed out of that because of his commitment to the military. now he's 32 years old but he
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said don't count him out. the story is being told in a story called "anatomy of an american dream." captain hood, good to see you this morning. >> hey, likewise. >> you gave up an opportunity to play professional basketball because of your commitment to the air force. what happened? >> that happened in 2006 when i graduated from the air force academy. guys of high character like myself, that's what you do. i was given the honor to protect and serve the great people of this nation. it was a challenge in itself but when you raise your hand and take an oath, you got to stand by it. >> wow. iti it's easy to say that and harder to do when people are offering you a lot of money to do what you love, play basketball.
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now you're 32 and you say the door hasn't closed on that dream. >> no. i believe can i do this. i won at cancer, i won at the afor air force academy and i believe i can win at the nba. i want to encourage people to inspire themselves like people have inspired me. >> what's your plan? how are you going do it? >> just hard work. >> i'm steadily new yorking on every door, derek fisher, spike lee, i want to come to new york and help the knicks get back to putting banners in msg. >> so you've talked to phil jackson about ithis? >> i have not but i am right
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now. >> you certainly are. i'm not saying he recruits from "fox & friends" but he may start after today. what's your conditioning like? >> i'm in the best condition of my life. i'm like fine wine. age is is nothing but a number. i think the game slows down. to understand the xs and os and the angles and the things i need to do to be a more efficient, athletic player. i think i've had the opportunit for is that contract in hand to do so. >> that's exactly right. wisdom matters and it accumulates in time. we are rooting for you. captain hood, when you make it, we'll be celebrating here this morning. >> likewise. thanks. take care. >> a family nearly run off the road by not one but two trucks. watch this. >> my phone is dead. call the cops. >> it's terrifying and
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authorities say road rage caused it. when the family called the cops, nobody came to help them. we'll tell you why and exactly what happened. plus, he got arrested for his rocking version of the national anthem on july 4th. now he's rejecting a plea deal. he's back for a "fox & friends" encore. just ahead.
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your oab symptoms and myrbetriq. find out if you can get your first prescription at no cost by visiting myrbetriq.com good morning to you. it is saturday. you probably don't have to get up for work this morning so congratulations. it is august 1st. i'm filling in for anna, who got married last night. we'll show you her bridal pictures coming up in about 30 minutes. there's a drone that came within just a few feet of a passenger plane at one of the nation's busiest airports. as the feds issue a chilling warning now that drones could be used in the next terror attack. >> and then just weeks after kate styling was gunned down in
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broad daylight, a legal alien is charged with murdering a couple in cold blood in wyoming. two people who offered him a ride, good samaritans, are now dead. we have the story. >> and call it the curse of the cool kids. >> here we are again. >> but this time we're seniors. >> and we're going to rule the school. >> why popularity manse bad news later in life. mornings are better with the cool kids right here on the couch. ♪ because i'm happy ♪ clap along if you feel like a room without a roof ♪ >> look at, that the hottest summer ties on the plaza, including rockets you can stomp on. >> that is awesome. if you have nieces and nephews and you have birthdays coming
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up -- >> you don't even need kids to enjoy stuff like this. buy them for yourself. nobody's watching. >> tucker just bought three or four of them. >> they didn't make that when i was little. i would have loved that thing. what is that called? >> i keep up with all the latest developments in toys. >> and the man behind parent problems is coming up. send us your parent problems. >> that's what happens when your little girl gets in your red lipstick. >> we had one a couple days ago where -- look at that lipstick. a little boy got into the groceries. in the back seat he had eggs and milk and bread. the bread was all smushed up. you can't help but laugh but if you spent $200 -- >> that's cute.
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>> we start this morning with two good samaritans are dead, murdered after they picked up a legal immigrant on the side of the row. they were on the crow reservation in wyoming. he admitted he shot the husband and wife and their daughter. the daughter survived. there he is. >> so as of two years ago, right, he became a legal immigrant, allowed here in the u.s. as of two years ago but he has been -- he has been accused of several other crimes, a misdemeanor, and a felony, one for burglary, one for drugs. he wasn't convicted. that's why ice let him go. now the mother and father are dead, the daughter is fighting for her life in the hospital. >> why was he out on the streets there able to kill this lovely couple? it gives you an idea of how much the system is broken right now. it's pretty obvious. >> it's broken really at its core. the macro question is why would
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we be importing someone like this in the first place? comes to our country at 16 years old at the benefit of our tax dollars and he starts immediately committing crimes. tons of good, affluent people want to be here. we're in charge of who comes here and who doesn't. why are we doing this? >> i had the privilege of sitting down with the family. they said the same thing. our daughter would have been alive if the criminals were taken off the street. they said we don't have a problem with the people that are here and working and sending money home and doing the right thing. but it's those with the misdemeanors and fell an feloni. those are the ones who don't believe here, they're walking on t
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the piers with father, in their father's arm saying help me. >> anyone who raises issues about immigration is shouted down as a bigot. why in a post-industrial economy would you want to import a lot of people with no schools? trump responded to the charge that he is not a compassionate person, that he's some kind of bigot. he says i have a huge heart. >> i think it's the opposite, i really think i have a big heart, i want to take care of people. even on the health care. i want to take care of people that a lot of people aren't talking about. frankly, if i lose some votes, i don't care. i think i have a much bigger heart than people understand. at the same time i love our country. i hate to see what's going on. we need a stronger tone. when jeb and hillary both of
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them the same day said i don't like his tone, we need a stronger tone, we need enthusiasm and toughness. we need a stronger tone. >> you can be tough and you can still have a heart. let's flip it around. he has a heart for families like the steinly family who are celebrating every family for the rest of their lives without their daughter. he has a heart for the people doing the right thing. he doesn't have a heart for the people breaking the law. he doesn't want them in this country. a lot of people agree with him. >> bush is going to make the point as well at that he has a heart as well and that's why he wants something like comprehensive immigration reform. if he starts pushing back on tru trump, they have much -- >> when i'm picking a godfather
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for one of my children, i'm much more concerned about their heart. it's interesting to see what wins, heart or strength. >> i'll be in new york. when hillary clinton debates, i'll be there. >> and i want you to watch "cashing in" at 11:30 this morning. our friend eric will be interviewing donald trump. >> why do you want to watch this one? from what i've seen, he presses donald trump on some of these key issues to get a bit more specific. that's important. >> we'll be tuning in as well. let me tell you what else is in the news. a scare in the air after two pilots reported seeing a drone as they approached new york's j.f.k. airport. one pilot reported seeing the drone just 100 feet below one of the wings of the planes he was in. thankfully the plane landed safely. earlier we did speak to an aarea expert who explained why drones
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can be so dangerous. >> these drones are made with sm lar materials as other aircraft. it can take out an engine. this is a very serious threat. >> the scare comes as the department of homeland security issues a warning that drones can be used in terror attacks. also new overnight, the plane debris that washed up on the island, it is is now in france for testing. investigators think that someone deliberately switched off the transponder before veering thousands of miles off course. and while you were out enjoying your friday, the state department proving hillary clinton -- proving her wrong, releasing brand new e-mails showing there was classified information on her personal server. this coming as her campaign
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releases eight years of tax returns from 2007 to 2014. the clintons pulled in more than $139 million during that time. then they paid $43 million in federal taxes. in 2013 alone, the couple made $23 million from speaking fees and another 20 million for other public appearances. and now we're finding out long time clinton aid uma abedin was overpaid $10,000 by the state department. >> general martin dempsey breaking into uptown funk at an event for children with military families. he must be a huge fan. he referenced the same song earlier this year.
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>> are you sure hillary clinton said she made a lot of money? i thought she said she was dead broke. >> can you imagine? >> that's like tucker kind of money. >> that's ridiculous but she's going to crush the 1%! >> we have a new study on social trends. this shows that kids who were cool in high school over ten years actually don't do as as well as people who weren't cool in high school. this study, by the way, was conducted by people who were not cool. >> who wanted to get back back at the cool people. >> they peaked too early. >> i guess so. we were saying they couldn't wait to get out of school to do this story. >> this is all an elaborate revenge plot against the prom queen. >> i tried to be a nice person.
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they asked us for pictures when we got here for work. i was like i don't have any pictures on me. that's lindsey and cindy, my two best friends from like fourth grade on. >> i sat next to someone at anna's wedding last night who said you were not only the coolest person in school but also the nicest. you really were the unicorn, the fabled beast no one sees who is sweet and popular. >> oh, enough, enough. janice. >> and janice has some pictures from high school. >> whoa! hair is a little high. >> do you have the other one? >> this is the one with the big hair. >> i spent more time on my hair than i did studying. >> this was the style. i wanted a perm so badly. my mom said i'll do a box perm. we went to the drugstore, got the box perm -- did your mom do this or did you go to the salon? >> i did it myself. it was all me. i love the 80s, baby. i wish we could go back there.
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not really. >> looks like a def leopard concert. >> i love def leopard. >> where are you from? >> duncan oklahoma. >> and do you carry around a white board with you? >> just here. >> i think she's related to car rove. >> there are your temperatures. 76 degrees. a beautiful day here, are you having fun so far? >> we're watching thunderstorm activity across the southeast as well as the southwest. are you going guys going to do some zip line with me later today? >> yes! >> and what's your favorite cable news network? >> fox news! >> it sounds unanimous.
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>> did you catch that from the president this week? >> i actually think i'm a pretty good president. i think if i ran i would win. but i can't. >> would he really win again? the people have spoken. a fact check coming up. >> then up heard him talk debate strategy earlier. next john kasich explains how he'd win the war on terror. >> and the iphone wants to ban gun emojis. we'll tell you next. stay tuned. ♪ all fire fired up, all fired up, fire up, fired up, hey ♪ feel secure in your dentures...
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2016 will be a fight against isis and the best way to destroy the terror group that has promised to take their fight right here to america. john kasich talked about isis and a lot more. >> you've been out on the trail battling isis and how you don't think the president is doing enough taking on radical islam. when you talk about ground troops, can you get more specific? what kind of sacrifice are you going to ask from american people? is it 10,000 u.s. troops, 15,000 american troops? what is it going to take to actually defeat isis? >> it up to the civilian leader, the commander in chief, to decide we're going to take on the mission and then we need the military commanders to come in and tell you how they would conduct it. you take a look at what they're suggesting and you have good people around to do it. this is not theory on my part.
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i was there when we made a decision on the gulf war, we made a decision on what we would do in lebanon and i watched this all roll out. i do think we have to begin to kill isis. we need to take them out and destroy that caliphate. we're driving up costs and not getting what we paid for. when you strengthen the military, you not on have to strengthen it but you have to reform the building. we have too many bureaucrats, too much red tape, too much duplication. it all fits together. >> as you introduce yourselves to voter, let's end on your personal faith. you've within very direct in talking about it as you roll out this campaign. some candidates don't like to
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mix politics and faith. tell our viewers how your personal faith has impacted your life but also your political career and sort of how you approach all these big issues. >> well, first of all, ed, everyone needs to understand i'll be the first in line to declare myself a flawed man because i don't get it all right. i think what faith does is gives me perspective so things aren't so close. i know this life is short. you do the best you can here and you have a life yet to come. i'm a person that believes in the dos of faith, love your enemies, pray for your enemies. when i get the dos right, then can i worry about the don'ts. after 28 years of studying, i still worry about the dos. it does make my sensitive and concerned about the challenges that many have during their lives. >> if you make it into the
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primetime debate, you may need that bible. there's going to be some elbows flying around. >> it's interesting. heat controversial but he expanded medicare in ohio. some are not happy about that. i asked him, are you trying to bring back -- i remember your interviews about compassionate conservatism, are you bringing that back? when you listen to him, he kind of is. >> and he talked about his faith a lot. >> he does. >> i like that about him. >> a fiery plane crash. members on board, members of osama bin laden's family. >> plus, he's been offered a plea deal but he says no way, he's fighting for freedom. he's getting an encore on "fox &
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friends" next. ♪ you're down with crestor. yes! when diet and exercise aren't enough, adding crestor lowers bad cholesterol up to 55%. crestor is not for people with liver disease, or women who are nursing, pregnant, or may become pregnant. tell your doctor all medicines you take. call your doctor if you have muscle pain or weakness, feel unusually tired, have loss of appetite, upper belly pain, dark urine, or yellowing of skin or eyes. these could be signs of serious side effects.
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my here at c.k. mondavi.on, the vice president of operations to make this fine wine it takes a lot of energy. pg&e is the energy expert. we reached out to pg&e to become more efficient. my job is basically to help them achieve their goals around sustainability and really to keep their overhead low. solar and energy efficiency are all core values of pg&e. they've given us the tools that we need to become more efficient and bottom line save more money. together, we're building a better california.
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the search has ended but family and friends are vowing to continue. >> remember the guy given a citation for his rocking version of the national anthem on the 4th of july? ♪ ♪ >> there he is, lane pitman from florida, charged with braeceach the peace. he rejected a plea deal that would give him community service and wouldn't have to go behind bars. he's 22 years old and is telling us why he rejected that. good morning, lane. for viewers, will you just recap what happened on the 4th of july. >> i started playing the national anthem in the middle of the street and an officer came over to me and told me if i wanted to go to jail, i keep playing. i was like are you serious?
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he said, yeah, you can't play in the middle of the street. so i decided to walk back to the sidewalk. he said it was fine. i moved back and played the national anthem and then three other came officers over told me they needed to talk to me and told me to spread my legs and put my hands behind my back. >> what was going through your mind and what was the reaction of that crowd? >> i was tripping out. i was like this guy told me could i do it, what's wrong? the crowd was super peaceful. when i got arrested, that's when the crowd got a little upset about that. i was tripping out, man. it's crazy. >> they said -- the officer said you can accept this plea deal, do a lot of community service and we'll expunge your record. why did you say no to that? >> well, uncle ted nugent told me to never, ever back down.
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i'm innocent. i'll do community service with or without that. i'm not guilty of anything. i'm not going to accept it. >> no criminal record. you play in your church band. you're a high school lacrosse coach, you had no alcohol in your system on the 4th of july. i'm sorry you're going through this. i think it's ridiculous. couldn't you have made an exception? you're a good guy. will you play for us, though? >> you bet i will. ♪ ♪
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that gives us chills. thank you. >> thank you so much. >> we're all supporting you. for all those viewers that want to help you pay for the legal fee, you're selling the t-shirt, there's a group 8301 that's a clothing company. how much are these t-shirts? >> they are $30. he's pretty much giving me 50% of that to go forward legal fees. i'm very thankful for their support. >> we're going to put a link on our facebook page. we'll have all the information there. thanks so much, lane. i wish you all the best. >> thank you so much. have a blessed one. >> you, too. >> remember when the president said this last week? >> i actually think i'm a pretty good president. i actually think if i ran i would win. but i can't. >> so would he win? we fact checking.
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>> and you saw janice on the zip line earlier. coming up tucker is going to try it. he's going for a little spin on the go cart. there's a little tease of what's coming up. ♪ hey now, you're a rock star, get the show on, get paid ♪ creeping up on you... fight back with relief so smooth... ...it's fast. tums smoothies starts dissolving the instant it touches your tongue ...and neutralizes stomach acid at the source. ♪ tum, tum tum tum... smoothies! only from tums.
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>> it's your shot of the year. our own anna cooiman marrying her husband last night. >> they got married at the boathouse, the restaurant. they added on like a whole side to the restaurant and got married on there. there she is with her beloved dog baxter. he was walked down the aisle. sir baxter is what she calls him. he's been knighted apparently. >> there's the fox crew. >> ed, you couldn't make it because you were traveling. >> i was in miami. there's tucker right in the middle of the action. >> a lot of producers right on the right-hand side side of the screen. you don't see them on air. they do so much work here. they do so much of the heavy lifting. >> rick and i were the only men there. the fox contingent i don't want to say dominated the wedding
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but -- >> we kind of had a lot of fun. it was a late night for you, wasn't it? >> it was. it was so worth it. >> congratulations, anna and tim. >> this morning we're learning that osama bin laden's family, they owned this small jet. just crashed outside of london. four people were killed. we're told that bin laden's stepmother and sister might be among the dead. it clipped a fence into a car dealership. no one on the ground was hurt. remember when president obama said this the other day about seeking a third term? >> i actually think i'm a pretty good president. i think if i ran, i could win. but i can't. >> that's what he thinks. it turns out america does not agree. a new rasmussen report finds that 63% of americans say no to his hypothetical third round.
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even among democrats only 57% say they would elect him again. >> a texas family nearly run off the road by two pickup trucks in a terrifying case of road rage. >> my phone is dead. call the cops. >> now those parents are outraged that emergency dispatchers did not do more to help the family. >> the family called 911. the dispatcher said they couldn't figure out who to send through their rescue since they were traveling through several different communities. >> you're going to have to come into fort worth. we can't send an officer in north lake. >> can i not give you her information and you you guys can contact her and work out a location? >> the family said they're just thankful no one was hurt. can you believe that? and disarm the iphone wants to
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get rid of the gun emoji from the apple advice. they say it's too easy to get a gun in america. they -- there's been an outpouring are snark about the request. those are your headlines. >> and the revolution continues. >> emojis are not safe. >> it's unbelievable. it's hysteria. >> no one is safe. >> safe and decent and nice and -- >> actually -- >> a breath of fresh air. >> swinging is better with friends. >> we'll come join you. >> i hope so. jake, demonstrate what you're here for. very fun. i'm going to be trying that next. we're going to be doing some zip
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line. we had a blue moon last night. a lot of fox experienced the blue moon. look at this. this is the moon behind a cross in downtown scranton, pennsylvania. and another one, people silhouetted against a rising -- oh, awesome! that is the world's fun amusement park in kansas city, missouri. it's not because the moon is blue. it happens once in a while, it's kind of a rarity. that's why we say once in a blue moon. >> back to you. >> you were having so much fun. we agenda to join in. we're here with meredith sinclair. tell me your names, girls. >> i'm kayla. >> i'm julia. >> cool braces, pink and yellow ties. i love them.
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>> this is x-6 zoom rocket. you guys can show them how it's done. you just stomp on it and go. what what's cool but b these is they'll go like 100 feet in the air. they go six in a row. my suggestion is to take this to a new playground or park. it's a kid magnet. >> this was tucker's favorite. >> dads like it a lot. >> this is a really fun new game. it's a twist on darts. it's safer. what i like about this, it's called kuba, and it's a safer game to play. it's really fun on college campuses, getting your older kids off their devices and back out playing. >> you fling it. and then you keep score. you were to get right in the
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middle, you get kuba and you get extra points. it's sort of like darts meets sports game. >> and sponge bob! >> these are my friends kia, kaya and k.j. i bought these sponges at the dollar store. you take a rubber band, cut them into strips. you tie them up and this is a more fun water balloon. >> it's awesome. >> you dunk them in the water. >> you put water on them when it's hot and hazy like it's been and you can have these water balloon battles in your back yard. but they're not going to hurt. you can get them really wet. we were trying to not get them too wet for the cameras. >> that's such a great idea. >> have your kids help you make them. >> what about these scooters in? >> this is the first first scooter. this is for 3 and up. this is the kitten kicks and the
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robe owe kicks. he a robot, plus he's schoolering around, big, wide base for little kids. if you want to get those little ones on their first scooter, this is by razr. >> how much are they? >> $44. >> tucker is having a ball on the ground force drifter go cart. >> how much is that? >> this is a little pricier. it's for everyone in the family. it's $369. >> oh! >> what's really special about this, it has a spark bar on it. if he pulls up, sparks will fly out. >> do the spark bar! >> whoo! >> and then there's wheels on the back. they can do 180s and drift. >> thank you so much. great job! >> coming up, actor james woods sues a twitter user for $10
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in a city and you need a last what to dominute hotel?stranded a priceline tonight only deal! stuck out on the range? nowhere to rest your beard? choose from thousands of hand-picked hotel deals at the very last minute. only on your phone. only from priceline. actor james woods has filed a $10 million suit against an anonymous twitter who called himself a cocaine addict. it reads "cocaine addict james woods still sniffing and spouting." does he have a chance in court?
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if you can sue over this, i could be rich. >> we all could. >> there's a lot of nastiness on the internet. does james woods have a case? >> he has a case. let's applaud him for doing this. it's such an uneven playing field. it is so easy to spew hate for sport on social media. so difficult to fight against that. so james woods is not going to take it anymore. first he has to prove that the actual tweet was malicious because he's a public figure. that's an easy hurdle to overcome. second, he's going to have to subpoena records to figure out who it is the hardest hurdle will be proving that whatever this jerk said actually damaged him. that's going to be the hard part. >> at some point you have to profits untrue? >> you missed one hurdle. first you have to profits false. malice is a very tough burden to
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overcome. to prove something was malicious, we do have a first amendment in this country. that's why we have such a high burden. >> i'm totally opposed to the red guards on social media. on the other hand, we do have a first amendment and you are allowed to say unpopular and unfair things, aren't you? >> you're allowed to say unpopular things but you're not allowed to fib. it's not like he was tweeting about, oh, i'm a big fan of james woods, he overcame a cocaine addiction. when you have foes on the internet, they tend to be the loudest. this isn't the first tweet. if you look at every tweet that this guy tweeted about james woods, you could easily play malice. >> has anybody won a suit for
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saying something -- >> if you're a public person, you're assuming the job and you're going to get beaten up up on on twitter. you could be kind or unkind. you got to prove these elements. it's a very high burden because we have a first amendment and that is very -- we need to protect that, tucker. >> you can't say they they're drug addicts, can't say that-the-is a loathsome disease, can't -- >> if it's true, then it's true. if you're a well-known person, don't read twitter. >> you're assuming that risk. that's the bottom line. >> nice to see you. almost five days away from the first republican debate hosted by fox here on thursday. frank lund says it not what the candidates say that really matters. he breaks down what you need to know before the debate. be an informed watcher. plus, one mom making average
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parenting problems a viral sensation, like when your baby misses her mouth. there it is. that mom joins us next. ♪ ♪ born to be wild ♪ born to be wild boy: once upon a time, there was a nice house that lived with a family. one day, it started to rain and rain. water got inside and ruined everybody's everythings. the house thought she let the family down. but the family just didn't think a flood could ever happen. the reality is, floods do happen.
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one mommy with her hilarious instagram account is highlighting various parenting problems. >> like when it's time to leave and your kids are not done watching "paw patrol." or when your baby misses her mouth, a common problem. >> and when you have the play date at your house, look at what your house looks like. >> mommyshorts.com, elana wild joins us now. your kids were in those pictures as well. >> a few of them, yeah. >> we want to run through some of these photos because they're
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great. tell us about the reaction you're getting. >> let's put up the first one. what's happening here? >> okay. so that is my daughter had this little lego girl and she's saying the hair fell off and she's searching for it in the grass. she was running around and it fell off. there was no way she was going to find it. so, you know, i didn't know people would respond to this when i posted it but apparently this has happened to thousands of people. >> the lego hair. it's so funny. it snaps on and off. >> yeah. you can glue them but -- >> plus they're delicious. right? here's what i recognize. when you're the only one participating in your family photo. >> yeah. that's me and my girls. >> that's adorable. >> they're not paying attention at all and i'm smiling like i'm in a happy family photo. it's not like anyone's crying but -- >> a christmas card or holiday card, it's impossible. >> i think people should just start using their worst outtakes for holiday cards. >> i agree. like this one, when you have to
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sleep on the couch. >> yes. >> the kid have taken over the bed. >> i think that's happened to everybody. sometimes i have to sleep on like a little sliver on the side of the bed. >> look at the little boy. one foot is on the night stand. >> if they pass out, they pass out, you don't want to wake them. >> horizontally, not vertically, so no chance of getting in there. this is when your kids take over your life literally. >> they definitely have. >> and your purse. when you leave your purse in the back seat and your toddler finds your lipstick. >> yes. she's also drawn on the window and all over hertz. i love the idea this woman was driving the car and turned around once she parked and just saw, you know, the disaster that happened. >> when you realize that, you don't hear from your child for a few minutes. >> they say it's when it's the most quiet the most dangerous things happen. >> that's what happens with tucker on the set. how about this. you run out of pellets at the petting zoo. disaster waiting to happen.
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>> the goat actually looks like it's being nice to her, but she's being overly dramatic. >> at first i thought the goat had her hair in his mouth. >> the mom said nobody was hurt in that photo. >> where do you get all these pictures? >> people send us i in, #averageparentproblems. >> what's your instagram and your blog? >> my blog is mommyshorts.com and my perm account is @mommyshorts and averageparentproblems is inthe sta gram. >> what does mommy shorts mean, dare i ask? >> not shorts. short stories, content, videos. >> i love that this makes you feel better about average problems you might have as a mom. >> i think everybody goes through all these things. they're not necessarily posting them online but now you have an excuse to and everybody relates. i think people do feel better about their own lives. >> great. >> we need some of our viewers to send them in. >> if you have pictures like
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this, send them to us, to elana wild, we'll put them up. >> friends@foxnews.com. we'll air some during the show. >> thank you. too close of a call. a drone comes within feet of a plane landing at one of our busiest airports. the new terror warning from the feds that you need to hear about just ahead. there's some good news if you're a lady and you like to date younger men. >> hello, welcome. >> hello. >> you may or may not be a cougar. it could help you land a better job. there's so many benefits to dating younger men. we'll, plain coming up. >> don't send those photos. in the nation, we know how it feels
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good saturday morning to you. hope you're rolling over in bed. thanks for watching. it is august 1st. i'm filling in. two pilots report a drone just feet below a packed airplane at one of the country's busiest airplanes. the feds are warning all of us that drones could be the next terror weapon. less than a week from the first debate, donald trump says he's not preparing at all. >> i look forward to it. i've never done it before. i'm not a debater. i prodouse jobs, i produce beautiful buildings. >> can he produce an adequate debate performance? we'll hear from donald trump himself coming up. and pop quiz. can you name your first amendment rights? >> name me three rights that are protected by the first
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amendment. >> speech -- >> the shocking results that really outraged tucker from the civics test taken right outside, you won't believe it, the national archives. mornings are bet we are friends. ♪ >> classic cars on the plaza. there's a corvette right there. that andrea was in a little earlier. that was pretty cool. >> amazing. >> we have more. and janice dean takes her life into her own hands again for the sake of the cable morning news show. there she is on zip line. >> with that go pro on her head. >> it's awesome. she's so cute. >> i thought she was a beauty queen because she has a crown around her head. but it's go pro. we've been telling you about summer toys. a beautiful morning in new york city. welcome.
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>> great to see you. henry, ainsley earhardt. couldn't get any better. >> thanks for being here. we love it. >> filling in for clayton and ana. >> "fox news alert." what happened? >> a delta airplane preparing to land at jfk has a close call with a drone. ed happened to be there. what else happened? >> the faa says the unmanned aircraft was seen only 100 feet from the wing of the plane. the department of homeland security issues a security warning that drones could be used in terror attacks. we spoke to phil durner, an expert on this, and he said everyone should be watching out. listen. >> to be honest it's getting news coverage right now, but this is something that's been happening almost weekly in, no alone. drones are becoming a serious safety concern all around the country. they're made with some of similar materials as other aircraft, heavy batteries, aluminum, goes into an engine, it could take out an engine, a
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cockpit window, it could injure or kill a pilot. this is a serious threat. >> you mentioned i was at jafk last night. i didn't see this particular incident, but as we unpeel the onion, the pilot saw it off the right wing of the plane when he was at about 1,700 feet getting ready to land. as we mentioned, the drone was just 100 feet away. that expert, phil, was telling us, you know, just as pilots are worried about birds bringing down a plane, these drones, even from a hobbyist or god forbid from a terrorist could bring a plane down. >> because he says the drones are as big as this little table that we're sitting in front of. he said something that size could potentially take down a huge plane if someone does have, you know -- >> the faa has been grappling with this, and there are some rules, some regulations on the books but obviously those regulations were written before people could just go on to amazon.com and buy a drone. >> it's difficult to track. imagine the damage a drone could do if it had an explosive charge attached to it.
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it's one of the many risks we face day to day. >> it is illegal to fly a drone in air space so you have to keep that in mind if you own a drone and you're just having fun with it. >> keep it away from an airport. later this week we'll see the first debate of the season. a republican debate taking place here on fox. donald trump is the front-runner by double digits, expected to be, he may be at the center podium as a result. what is he doing to prepare for the debate? there's a piece this week that suggests, according to one of his advisers, nothing. here's the quote. "doesn't the fact he's at the british women's open in scotland tell you something?" "right now jeb bush is in some holiday inn suite eating sucky club sand witches. trump's not doing any of that. trump knows what he's saying. he knows his own mind. >> eric bolling sat down with trump. here's what he says about getting ready for the debate. >> i look forward to it. i've never done it before. i'm not a debater.
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i produce jobs. proi deuce beautiful buildings. i do a lot of great things. i build great businesses. but the fact is i've never done it before. maybe i'll be good, maybe i'll be terrible. >> his republican rivals say it's only temporary. listen to jeb bush and rand paul on one hand acknowledging trump's rise in the polls but also trying to downplay it a little. watch this. >> it's definitely a phenomenon. i think he's captured the deep frustration that people feel. he's in a very graphic way appealed to people's anger about those things, and i think it's important to be respectful of that. make the case that we can fix these things and over time the trump phenomenon will either succeed or fail based on his proposals. >> i think this is a temporary sort of loss of sanity, but we're going to come back to our senses and look for somebody serious to lead the country at some point. >> you can hear the conversations going on in the
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campaign edoffices. advisers saying you're above this, don't worry about it. donald trump unleashes a slashing attack against you right to your face, do you stand there and rise above it? you have to respond. >> that's what the country wants. they want you to defend yourself. donald trump's atop the polls and will always deaf himself. i think this is the first time i've ever candidate say i may not do great in the debate, don't expect much, because i might do great, i might not. i don't do this. >> deflating expectations. >> exactly. i know how to build a business. >> hess playing the expectations game. >> how do you think he'll do? >> look, nobody knows for sure, but based on how he's done, he has outperformed at every step of the way here. >> he has. >> people thought he's not really going to run, he won't fire the paper work, he'll lose because of the john mccain comment. he keeps surviving. he has momentum going into the debate. the real issue, can jeb bush or
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somebody who's not second or third not in that top tier sort of stop the trump momentum, come up with a moment in the debate that says wait a second, you're not getting specific about this or that. someone will try. speaking of battles, yesterday in florida hillary clinton and jeb bush and others addressed the urban league. according to people in the bush campai campaign, the idea was that this was going to be a pretty calm moment where there wouldn't be open warfare between the candidates but hillary clinton surprised almost everybody by unleashing a series of pretty harsh attacks against jeb bush specifically. see if you can catch the allusions in what she said. watch. >> i don't think you can credibly say that everyone has a right to rise and then say you're for phasing out medicare or for repealing obamacare. people can't rise if they can't afford health care. they can't rise if the minimum wage is too low to live on. they can't rise if their governor makes it harder for them to get a college education. and you cannot seriously talk
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about the right to rise and support laws that deny the right to vote. >> nobody is just to be totally clear, that is a slanlder. you can argue the rest of them, but nobody is supporting laws that deny the right to vote. nobody is in favor. apparently the bush campaign caught completely by surprise. governor bush did not respond to this. he complimented hillary clinton and greeted her when he got on stage. i don't know if that was the right call or not. >> donald trump will be on "cahin' in" today 11:30 a.m. eastern time. there's a whole lot more. now for other headlines making news. french investigators will begin testing plane debris that washed up in the indian ocean. they'll try to determine if it belongs to the malaysian airlines jet that vanished more than a year ago. investigators think someone deliberately switched off the
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transponder before the plane veered off course. california's wildlivs still raging out of control and now turning deadly. listen to this. one firefighter has been killed there as does a dozen fires scorched that state. his name is david rule. here's his picture. 38 years old. a young guy brought in from south dakota to come and help fight the fire and he ends uplo. he leaves behind a wife and two children. dry and windy conditions fanning those flames making the fighting extremely tough. she didn't think that she would survive, and we are now hearing from the college student nearly crushed to death by al 5,000-pound tree. stephanie epstein was fast asleep in her long island home when that tree right there came crashing down through her roof in the middle of the night on top of her bed, pinning her for hours. but she had no broken bones, no serious injuries. it happened to be because of the way she was sleeping, on her side. she is speaking out about the
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terrifying ordeal. >> i thought i was dreaming. i did not think i was going to make it. i cannot express in word how thankful i am for everyone who saved my life. >> she's doing okay this morning. you can tell a little shaken up. but she's going to be okay. remarkably, okay. isn't that amazing? well, are you a drug dealer? that's not the question i was expecting to ask you this morning. do you have too much competition? well, one georgia sheriff has your solution. mcintosh county sheriff steven jessup placed this ad in his rural town's local paper. it reads attention, drug dealers, is your drug dealing competition costing you money? we offer a free service to help you eliminate your drug competition. well, that sheriff joined us earlier. >> the people of our county are really getting a big kick out of it and we campaigned on trying to do something about the drug
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problem in mcintosh county, georgia, and this is just another avenue of doing it. >> so far, no snitches have taken the bait just yet. a-plus on that. those are your headlines. >> justine, she's no snitch. >> that's her motto. >> i'm meeting so many friends out here. hello. what's your name, young man? >> aaron bailey. >> what are you doing on the set? >> i'm here to wish my grandma a happy birthday. happy birthday, virginia bailey. >> where does she live? >> florida. >> does she watch "fox & friends" every day? >> yeah. i hope she's watching right now. >> how many grandkids? >> five. >> you tear favorite today. >> of course, and always. >> happy birthday to virginia? >> happy birthday, virginia! >> oh my gosh. let's take a look at the map and the weather across the nation. we have the potential for showers and thunderstorms across the southeast and the southwest. a little bit of monsoonal moisture getting in there so the potential for flashflooding this afternoon and later on overnight
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tonight into tomorrow. your highs across the northwest very warm, exceedingly warm with heat advisories up for many places across the knot west, interior sections as well. be really careful, make sure you're indoors in the air conditioning. very hot across the south. it is summertime after all, 89 in new york city. everybody having fun today? >> yes! >> you want to see me zip line later today? >> yes! >> all right. the challenge is on. back to you. back inside. >> thanks, shannon. >> eli man, a giants fan. you know what's the next best thing to the super bowl? the fox debate. five days away from the first gop debate. frank luntz's guide to the debate next. and more good news for the ladies who date younger men. >> hey, welcome to our -- >> hello.
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ask your doctor about farxiga. it's a different kind of medicine that works by removing some sugar from your body. along with diet and exercise, farxiga helps lower blood sugar in adults with type 2 diabetes. with one pill a day, farxiga helps lower your a1c. and, although it's not a weight-loss or blood-pressure drug, farxiga may help you lose weight and may even lower blood pressure when used with certain diabetes medicines. do not take if allergic to farxiga or its ingredients. symptoms of a serious allergic reaction include rash, swelling, or difficulty breathing or swallowing. if you have any of these symptoms, stop taking farxiga and seek medical help right away. do not take farxiga if you have severe kidney problems, are on dialysis, or have bladder cancer. tell your doctor right away if you have blood or red color in your urine or pain while you urinate. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including dehydration, genital yeast infections in women and men, low blood sugar, kidney problems,
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and increased bad cholesterol. common side effects include urinary tract infections, changes in urination, and runny nose. ♪do the walk of life ♪yeah, you do the walk of life need to lower your blood sugar? ask your doctor about farxiga. and visit our website to learn how you may be able to get every month free. let's get a pull-up bar out there. >> most of the prep we've done for the debate is just preparing to be president. >> i'm not a debater. i get things done. >> i'm not sure what trump is -- he hasn't gotten very specific. >> ten candidates, one stage, guaranteed fireworks, and potential serious gains or losses in the 2016 race for the republican nomination. how are the contenders looking as we approach thursday's
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debates here on fox? here to discuss it is pollster frank luntz. frank, what are you looking for? what would an informed debate viewer be watching for on thursday? >> i'm going to give you five different points. the first thing and most important, it's not what you say that matters. it's what people hear. it's candidates, they're rehearsi rehearsing, trying to get every fact, every statistic, that's not what matters. it's how they present themselves, how people see the entire picture rather than this sound bite of knowing the details. second, and i mentioned sound bites, it's whoever has that best sound bite wins. it's the one that's going to get played again and again. if you remember the howard dean scream from 2004, the ronald reagan, i paid for this microphone when he actually stood up, the lloyd benson attack on dan quayle, i knew john kennedy or know john kennedy, it's that one line that we get to see 50 times that will
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make a significant difference. third, and i apologize but i'm reading them. empathy. they want to know that you care. they want to know that you understand, that you feel the challenges and hardworking taxpayers feel. once again, policy, yes, it is important. you have to show that you're smart and you have a command of it. but they want to know that you understand how hard hardworking taxpayers are working and that you'll help them, that you'll have policies that support them. fourth -- >> frank, isn't that -- that's a little distressing that some people care more about your intent than the results of what you're going to do. >> but that's what indicates results. if they don't find a positive intent, if they think you're all about politics or that you're not going to be able to get anything done, that's the problem. people vote as much on candidate attributes as they do on policy. and i know that the average voter hates hearing that, but when you ask them why did you vote for barack obama over mitt romney when romney was beating
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obama on every single issue, it's because they thought obama understood them and had empathy toward them. fourth, yes, you have to follow the rules. that means when your time is up, you stop. these candidates that go over don't realize that when they hear the buzzer, at that moment the listener at home says, you know what, you can't keep to the time, i don't believe you can be a decent president. >> interesting. >> finally number five, be very careful how you handle donald trump. >> yes. >> i have never seen anyone who can eviscerate an opponent better, faster, more efficiently than trump. if you go at him, you better be able to kill him or he will kill you. i'm convinced -- >> it's likely trump can go after some of the other guys on the stage. should they take it, try to rise above it, should they respond? >> they have to respond. if you don't respond, it means that the attack is credible. but how you respond matters as much as what you say, which is
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that you have to look at him. i remember back eight years ago or four years ago when tim pawlenty was in a debate against michele bachmann. she would never look at him when he was challenging her and what she had to say. the fact she won't look a candidate straight in the eye plays against you. another aspect. do you appear to be paying attention? are you responsive? all these personal cues matter. i'm using my hands. are you animated or do you just sit like this and don't snoouf. >> these guys are under a lot of pressure. frank luntz, thanks for that guide for how to watch the debates. thank you. >> you got it. we'll be doing the dimes thursday night after the debate. if you tune in you'll find out exactly who won. >> we'll be watching. thanks, frank. >> thank you. up next, are you planning to stay at a hotel this summer? then watch this next segment. the five summer scams every traveler needs to be aware of before you book a room. isn't superman supposed to be fighting crime? why is this one punching out a
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well, we have some quick sports headlines for you this morning. the surfer attacked by that shark on live tv says he is having nightmares about that attack. his name is mick fanning and he tells 6 0 minutes he's seeking professional help. and the new york mets shortstop flores delivers big. >> flores drives it deep left
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center field. near the wall. it's out of here! >> flores slamming that walk-off home run in the 12th inning to win 2-1. and triple crown winner american pharoah is ready to race. at least 5,000 fans showed up at monmouth park to catch a glimpse of the racehorse. ed, over the you. even though many americans are ready to take time off and relax this summer, our next guest warns you criminals and con artists are hard at work. here are the most popular summer scams and how to avoid them. good morning, morgan right. it seems like one of the most important ones to pay attention to is what can happen at a hotel. >> absolutely, ed. stlor many scams and i know we all travel a lot, you travel a lot. you're up in new york today. you check into the hotel. what's one of the first things that happens? this is a call from the front desk, we have a problem with your credit card.
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so, you know, the quick tip there is never, ever fall for that scam. if they have a problem with the credit card, ed, the front desk never asks for your credit card over the phone. if it really is an issue, they'll say can you come down to the front desk to run your credit card again. >> talk about the takeout scam and the wi-fi scam. >> look, takeout scam is if you fall for the takeout scam they will take money out of your account. you'll see these flyers underneath your door. if you have an issue, look on yelp, or call down to the front desk. on the wi-fi, this is one that really people travel lot, you've got to really be careful. make sure you ask the front desk for somebody at the hotel, what are the names of your access points? i've seen one says sheraton wireless but it shows up as sheraton wired instead. people connect to that. that was a rogue access point attempting to steal your information. always ask. >> really important because you whip out the ipad and jump on the easiest one. >> connect to the first thing.
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absolutely. >> what about the concert ticket scam? >> you know, when you're down somewhere and you see we have a couple tickets to taylor swift 1989 tour. first of all, try and get them from a reputable dealer. follow the laws. there are scalping laws out there too. if somebody is legitimate, you're confident that they're legitimate, meet in person, do a cash transaction. make sure the ticket is legit. never give them your credit card information or do the papal thing. that money will disappear. >> and don't go on social media and hold up those tickets to sw numbers and bar code are there because -- go ahead. >> they'll fake it. like a guy one time showed his bip coin, somebody stole it right off of air. >> morgan wright, great tips. we really appreciate it. >> you bet. "pop quiz." can you name your fist amendment rights? >> name me three rights that are protected by the first
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amendment. >> speech. um. >> uh. the shocking results of the civic tests taken right outside the national archives. plus, everyone loves a classic car and there's one all-american family business keeping them on the road. we have some of the cars and that family on the plaza. look at ainsley looking great in the corvette. flonase allergy relief nasal spray outperforms the #1 non-drowsy allergy pill. most allergy pills only control one inflammatory substance, flonase controls six. so you are greater than your allergies. flonase. six is greater than one. this changes everything.
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welcome back. we have a new study for you, breaking science news. it turns out women who date younger men, popularly known as cougars, many believe they're performing a public service, but it turns out they're helping themselves. according to this new study, they get better jobs in later life. >> might hurt you at home. >> that it can cause more stress at home. but at work, you have a 50/50 shot of doing better at work. >> 50% likelier to get managerial jobs. we spoke to a psychologist who explained this phenomenon. >> if you're in a higher role, an executive, you have all the stress, your well-being is low sore your stress is higher. so it comes down to how well you cope. personality traits are pretty
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robust. there's five main characters or traits we have. you're high in some and low in others and you're born like that. maybe somebody high in conscientiousness is the kind of woman that would date a younger man that would also have a good job. >> all right. so what do you guys think about this? i want to hear some of your e-mails about this. did you marry an older woman? >> i did. she's six months older than i am. >> is she a manager at work? >> she certainly manages our house. cooper said women who assume managerial positions tend to die younger than those who don't. live like a man, die like a man. >> what do you think about this? what's been your experience? i married an older woman as well, but i shouldn't say, that should i? slightly older. a couple days. couple hours. >> we're all in the same boat because i married someone younger too. all three -- your wooifs would be -- we're all good marriagers. >> 100%.
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it's paid great dividends lo these many years. >> i looked at it as one day he's going to be taking care of me when i'm old and i need a nurse. >> we can't imagine you old. >> impossible. >> we imagine you young and beautiful. >> thank you. >> even more beautiful as a mom. >> i will be sitting around in a wheelchair and you'll still be beating men half your age in tennis. >> i guess i need to learn to play first, right? now to your headlines. this is another example of president obama's failed immigration policy. a montana couple shot and killed while they're trying to help a legal immigrant who ran out of gas on the side of the road. denise mendoza admitted to gunning down jason and tanya shane claiming that their daughter laughed at him. the 18-year-old became a legal u.s. citizen just in may of 2013 a few years ago. he was facing drug and burglary charges at the time of the shooting. but i.c.e. officials say they could not depart him because he was not convicted of the crimes.
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a hearing has not been set for mendoza. can you name the rights protected by the first amendment? these americans cannot even though they just walked out of the national archives. >> name me three rights that are protected by the first amendment. >> speech. um. >> freedom of speech. >> yes. >> religion. >> yes. >> right to bear arms. >> no. >> right to bear arms. >> no. second one. >> what's the second one? i don't know. i can't. >> that shocking video filmed by the nonprofit media research center. from the air force to the nba, a 32-year-old captain has big-league hoop dreams. antoine hood missed out on a basketball contract back in 2007 because of his military commitment. but he is hoping it is not too late now in his 30s. earlier on "fox & friends" he said that he beat lymphoma as a child and he believes he can overcome this challenge as well.
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>> i won at cancer. i won at the air force academy. and i know i can win in the nba. and i'm doing this for people like stuart scott and lauryn hill that had an opportunity to fulfill their dream but not always to completion. >> a documentary following hood's nba dream will premiere next year. and a super insult. the man of steel seen fighting police in the latest "action comics" issue. it all starts when superman's secret identity of clark kent is revealed. he shows up in a town where residents have scared of him. a riot breaks out and superman punches an officer in the face. those are your headlines. >> superman goes rogue. you know what, we have super woman here. >> we do. >> janice dean. >> where is she? >> i am inside this 1936 truck, this ford truck. hooking good for 80 years, baby. whooo! keep on trucking. we're going to look at a lot of these beautiful vehicles later
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on during "fox & friends weekend." but first it is 79 in new york, 72 in minneapolis, 80 in dallas, 65 in denver. showers and thunderstorms across the southeast in florida as well as the southwest and parts of north texas. monsoonal moisture getting in there, which is beneficial. however, we could see the potential for some flooding. and you know what, it's summertime. we only have a couple weeks left before the kids go back to school. here's your beach forecast. ocean city, maryland, looking good. pensacola, florida, couple of showers and thunderstorms, but then heading into sunday and monday, very nice. and san diego looks good. belmar, new jersey, a fantastic beach weekend. we've got more cars, more hot cars for a hot summer day. everyone loves a classic car. back to you guys. >> thanks, janice. that's right. everyone loves a classic car. it's like a time machine on wheels. without one company, an american company, many classics cars and trucks would not be as treasured as they are today. >> that's right. since 1974 carlisle events has
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held the largest car and truck collector events in the united states with more than half a million visitors every year. >> joining us now is lance miller, the co-owner of carlisle events, which his dad chip started in 1974. great to see you. >> great to be here. >> what a fantastic company. you are one of the world's largest marketplaces for automobiles. >> you got it. i have the absolute dream job. >> yes, you do. it's unbelievable. >> how much does it cost to restore some of these vehicles? a 1936 ford truck. it's beautiful. what kind of work and money goes into that? >> it all depends. basically the sky's the limit. truly it's the own they're cares about it, lovers it. they might take anything. they just love the car. >> i found what i love. can i hold your handle? i'm pulling you over here. we have to see this car. look at this. it's a lamborghini. i've always loved them because of the way the doors open. >> these are the coolest cars. >> that is amazing. >> every kid had this hanging on their wall. >> they did. >> this one's going up for
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auction so you can buy it in lakeland, florida. >> how much do you think it will go for? >> i believe this car will bring about $500,000. the sky's the limit. these are becoming very popular. >> only 658 produced. so you're buying something very rare. how fast does it go? >> i don't know. >> 183. 183. >> i was going to say 180. it's a good investment. >> there's another car that a lot of people like, the ford gt. that's where ed is. >> check this out. i'm going to fire it up. >> lance, will you go over with ed and tell him about this car? >> do you know how? push the button. >> i see the button. do i have to hit the brake? >> turn the key. clutch in. all right. go ahead. clutch in. >> clutch is in. oh. [ revving ] >> push the throttle pretty good. come on, don't be afraid. >> oh, man. tell us about this car.
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what makes it stand out? there are so many sort of race cars like this, the really hot cars. what makes it stand out? >> these are great cars. basically in the late '60s, ford came out to stomp ferrari. that's what they did. about 40 years later they came out with the ford gt. >> these can cost a couple hundred thousand dollars. >> absolutely. this is about a $300,000 car. >> this is awesome. let's go over to tucker. >> all right, lance. an american-made vehicle, the corvette, super fast and actually pretty inexpensive for what you get. what would this car go for? >> right now a new car like this is about $110,000, $120,000. right now you could go out and buy one for about $50,000 to $75,000. >> and how quick is it off the line? >> very fast. it will absolutely just give you whiplash. >> mack doesn't yet have his driver's license but this is television so he's going to drive this car across the plaza.
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>> understood. >> what year is this? >> this is a 2012 and it's so cool because of the fact the color, it's called carlisle blue. it's in honor of our 30 years of corvettes at carlisle. >> that's fantastic. >> general motors did that. it's awesome. >> fimted to buy this, and i do, how? >> well, carlisle blue is one year only so very hard to get now. >> could i go to your site and bid? >> well, no. we're not selling this car because like i said sky's the limit. that's my daughter's favorite car. she's 6 years old. she would grab me by the neck. >> mack likes it too. thank you, lance. >> thank you, lance. >> coming up, a man angers his neighbors after turning his driveway into a tarmac. can they legally make him move his plane? your rights as a neighbor coming up next. and what better way to get your kid outside than the zip line that you can set up in your backyard? coming up, some of the summer's hottest toys. mack and his brother will be
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playing with other kids on the plaza. first neil cavuto has a look at what's coming up on "the cost of freedom" business block. good morning. how is this for chutzpah? unions fought for higher minimum wage and got it and now they're fighting so that they don't have to pay it? and if you want to know how hillary clinton feels about the keystone pipeline, i think she just told you to get in line. is that out of line? and ahead of the debate, eric's got the donald on a special "cahin' in." s the truec.
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how does it help when you're buying a car? truecar gathers the latest pricing data so you can always be sure if you're getting a fair price. this is the way car buying was always meant to be. (funky cheerful music) this is truecar. ♪ a man living in long island, new york, angering neighbors and facing fines after he turned his front yard into a tarmac. harold gretzky says he's keeping his plane, look at it, parked in his driveway instead of paying the $150 a month to keep it at the airport. but can his neighbors legally make him move the plane? he says, hey, it's like a boat.
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joining us now is criminal defense attorney eric guszer. good to see you. >> god to see you. >> who's going to win in this case? >> this is going to be an interesting one because one of his complaints is people park their rvs, their boats in their driveways. this is wherekov nanlt covenan neighborhoods come into play. if neighborhoods have covenants saying you can't park vehicles over 50 feet or 30 feet, that would prevent him from doing that. the city has stepped in on his case and said this is an obstruction, it's a hazard, so you need to move it. they're fining him $2,500. >> i know. so it would be cheaper for him to put it in storage for $150 month. >> yeah, it is. >> and the fines will go up if he continues to keep it parked in the driveway. next scenario, this is in maryland, he bulldozes his neighbor's fence. this has been going on. they've been fighting half a decade. he decides i don't like hit fence so he bulldozes it. there it is. the video of it actually
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happening. >> it's nothing like great video like this. when you can go into court with evidence like this to show my neighbor is crazy, and this is what he's doing, you can sue someone like this, you can file a civil lawsuit against him and actually get a noise ordinance case against him because the noise that he's making all times of night where these people are -- you have the right to privacy, you have to right to peaceful enjoyment of your property, and this man is violating all those rights. >> that yard was so pretty. most neighbors don't have a bulldoze sore he probably had to rent that thing and bring it over just to make a statement. >> or he borrowed a bobcat. he was working a bulldozer like he works construction. tree trimming. a 65-foot maple tree causing a dispute between neighbors because part of the tree is growing into the neighbor's yard. what happens here? >> that is a very common issue. when we have lawsuits like this, people always have roots growing in their yard, tree branches encroaching on their property. and you have the right to cut
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any tree branch that is in your air space. or cut the roots that are under your ground because you own that property. >> but you could kill the tree if you do that. >> but that tree is encroaching on your property and it's okay. in many jurisdictions you have to let the owner know i'm cutting this tree, but it is on your property, you have to right to cut that tree. >> so maybe in the next pictures we'll see half the tree gone. >> like those bad divorce case where is they cut the card in half. cut half the tree off. the last one is a drone case in california. a man doesn't like his neighbor using a testosterone so he shooshoot -- a drone so he shoots it down. >> this is a double-edged sword. when people have these drones and this is emerging litigation because you have the right to protect privacy, the right to protect your family, and the right to stop this drone from encroaching on those rights. people have drones going over people's privacy fence, going
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into apartments and taking pictures of people. this is emerging litigation where people are taking these drones out of the sky, whether they're batting them out of the sky or hitting them or shooting them with shotguns. what happened in several cases, but the danger in shooting them out of the sky is the possibility of having a criminal charge against you for endangering other people. because what comes up must come down. that's what a lot of people don't remember. >> including drones. >> bullets and shotguns, the pellets are going up to hit the drone but you may hit someone else. >> great job, eric. thanks so much. get ready far party at the post office. party at the post office! that sounds fun. one lawmaker wants to help you get booze in the mail. eric, what's your address? you want some of that? trying to get your kid outside this summer? how about backyard zip lining?
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gas lines and our electric lines to make sure that you don't hit them when you're digging. 811 is a free service. i'm passionate about it because every time i go on the street i think about my own kids. they're the reason that i want to protect our community and our environment, and if me driving a that truck means that somebody gets to go home safer, then i'll drive it every day of the week. together, we're building a better california.
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some quick headlines. get ready for a party at the post office. a california congresswoman is now out to overturn a 106-year-old law banning the post office from shipping boo. jackie spear saying her new bill would help the company compete with other companies. a hilarious new instagram account called average parent problems. we asked us to send us your problems. patty says when your child gets creative with the sticker box.
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when you can't reach your kid in the back seat. paper towels everywhere. >> oh no. >> keep those e-mails coming. it is summer as you're well aware if you step outside. so instead of letting your kids get sucked into their computers, their ipads, their tvs, you need to get them outside. >> sunshine and virtue are directly related. what better way to do that than with a zip line. >> here are the latest in backyard equipment that will make any kid jealous, our expert who is with meredithplays.com, meredith sinclair. let's start with the swings. everybody loves them. >> all of this is going to make your backyard into an adventure park. a couple more weeks before summer break is over. the first thing is this sky saucer. these are all my slackers and they are experts at making, you know, your backyard super fun. what's great about this is that it's only 70 buck, lit last forever. it's made of really durable plastic. you can hang it from a tree or have it with two. and it spins and swings. you can even lay on her stomach
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and be like supergirl. really fun. hang them from a tree. >> is this a pogo stick? >> this is the sky pogo. it's combined a pogo and a swing so he can jump and bounce. he can also swing. >> is it fun? >> hold up to 120 pounds. >> weight limit. >> 120 pounds. >> everyone loves the zip line. >> we have one of these in our backyard. i can't keep anyone off of it. >> do you? >> yes. we have a place in michigan. we have it between two trees. you can get from 40 to 100 feet of cable depending on length and it seriously is so easy. my husband put it up in about an hour. it was really simple. really sturdy seat. kid just jump on it. what's cool about that seat, you can get one that lights up and has like disco lights on it so you can do it at night, which is really fun. >> and your kids will be so popular. >> oh my goodness. >> this is the house i would have wanted to go play. >> absolutely. if you don't have two trees, what about joining forces with a neighbor, getting it together
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and then doing it across two trees that are in your neighborhood? >> you can buy these platforms and attach them? >> absolutely you can do that if you didn't have big oak trees in your backyard to attach it to. ideally that's sort of what it was made for. also grips on there. it's very safe for kid. they're really sturdy when they're on there. just a fun way -- >> more important than safe, it's fun. >> thank you. >> your kid must love you. with the pain and swelling of my moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis... ordinary objects often seemed... intimidating. doing something simple... meant enduring a lot of pain. if ra is changing your view of everyday things orencia may help. orencia works differently by targeting a source of ra early in the inflammation process. for many, orencia provides long-term relief of ra symptoms.
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it's helped new ra patients and those not helped enough by other treatments. do not take orencia with another biologic medicine for ra due to an increased risk of serious infection. serious side effects can occur including fatal infections. cases of lymphoma and lung cancer have been reported. tell your doctor if you're prone to or have any infection like an open sore, the flu, or a history of copd, a chronic lung disease. orencia may worsen your copd. if you're not getting the relief you need... ask your doctor about orencia. orencia. see your ra in a different way.
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she's so happy and he's such a great guy. there's baxter. baxter was in the wing. it was beautiful. >> did the dog have the rings? >> i didn't see if he had the rings or not. i don't think so. >> like the pal bearer. >> pall bearer! >> i love it. heat is on as house lawmakers return to their districts. forces on both sides of this iran nuke deal planning major operations to pressure lawmakers to their side. and look who's coming out strong for the left. >> we've got a deal on the table that keeps us all safe. >> do me a favor, okay? don't let some hot-headed member of congress screw that up. >> because playing politics with our national security is actually not all that funny. >> call congress. tell them. support diplomacy. it's the only sane solution. >> if you've got to turn
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