tv Huckabee FOX News July 5, 2009 8:00pm-9:00pm EDT
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i feel like i was charlie brown's teacher didn't hear a word, get off that video! i hope you enjoyed the beautiful i hope you enjoyed the beautiful sights this had he of july. captioned by closed captioning services, inc. >> mike: coming up to salute to the greatest nation in the world. as part music or patriotism but 100% all american. a special huckabee starts right now. >> announcer: ladies and gentlemen, owner mike huckabee. [ applause ] >> mike: think you very much. thank you. thank you and welcome to the "huckabee" on the fox studios in new york. across america we celebrate this day as our nations 233rd birthday.
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what a wonderful country. we ought to never take for granted our freedom nor forget the death of sacrifice for those who've given to us. just watch the events in iran and breathe it deep the air of freedom you have. we know the shock that murdered 26-year-old mina sultan in iran has been called the shot heard around the world. that's a reference to waldo emerson poems commemorating the concord bridge in 1775 which begins at the rude bridge that arched the flood their flights through april's race on for old here once the embattled farmers stood in sharp and fired the shot heard round the world. there's a huge difference between the two shots. a difference not just in hundreds of years and thousands of miles. the shot that took me that was for brutality and darkness. there was fired not just to stop her young heart but destroy the demand for dignity and fairness. develop concord ended differently from the battle and
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event five years earlier when americans had thrown snowballs at the british and five americans and the dead. that confrontation again known as the boston massacre. what's the difference between a massacre and the battle? i will tell you: guns. some of us fail to understand our first amendment right to speak and assemble it is worthless without her second amendment right to bear arms. we don't make the connection sometimes. without the second amendment during a battle's just murders. some people are so gung ho on the second minute but the first amendment on so much. some doubly we have an individual right to bear arms and the founding fathers wanted to make certain that whatever happened in this country we would be prepared to protect our freedom like the minutemen and not be reduced to pathetic victims throwing snowballs or chunks of cement like the poor souls in iran. for warren about the danger of tyranny is for armed against it.
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unarmed is simply dead. as long as evil exists shots will continue to be heard around the world. as free men and women we need to do everything we can to ensure that a coat the battle of concord and not the massacre of tehran. [ applause ] >> mike: we have a perfect show including her favorite is just that joined us this year. yields a backup, chris allen, and so many more. there have been 1.8 million purple heart medals given to our brave men and women since world war i. >> i was captured on the night of november 28. we were getting machine-gunned ann-margret from both sides of the hills there. and once we were through the past i thought god almighty i made it. >> i woke up the next day i picked up the sheets and my leg was gone. and that was it. that was my new world.
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that first vehicle went by, kind of spotted something. by the time we committed to each other if there was something there i was next to it and it went off. >> whatever medals i have, nothing means more to me than the purple heart. >> mike: whether it's a gunshot, a shrapnel and injury or more fluid every single purple heart recipient has suffered injury or been killed defending our country. the national purple heart hall of honor brick and -- recognizes these acts of bravery. these holes are filled with artifacts, tributes for veterans whose lives were ever changed on the battlefield. if you or someone you know has been awarded the urquhart you deserve to be recognized in the national purple all of honor. my next guess is on a mission to document every recipient. this welcomes everett smith. it is good to have you here.
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>> thank you. >> mike: how did you get interested in the purple heart? and want you to picture people recognize? >> this started with a letter to the editor, to my newspaper. >> mike: you're a publisher. >> publisher of a newspaper in upstate new york. started with a letter from a patrick morrison suggesting there was no place in the nation that exclusively honored people that had been awarded the purple heart. so i contacted a friend of mine, lieutenant general james t. hughes, who liked the idea. we contacted state senator bill larkin, and joseph farina who is a veteran's advocate, and we got together, the four of us, and we worked for 11 years to establish the purple heart hall of honor. >> mike: you found out purple heart records had been compromised to make that's been a problem since the project
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began. back in 1995. in 1973, the national archives where the records are held at a fire. and about half of the military records were destroyed either by fire or by smoke, water and so forth. these records no longer exists. so we have had to accumulate these names, one by one. we are up to about 145,000 right now, out of 1.7-1.8 million people who have been awarded the purple heart. it goes to anyone who has either been killed in action or wounded in action. it's a thing where people have to apply now. they have to contact us in order for us to get them into the purple heart hall of fame speech and the main mission is to make sure we don't miss knowing who these recipients are what you want people to do is contact the
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organization so we can register the recipients. >> that's correct. world war ii veterans are passing away on a very heavy -- i think it's about 1700 per day that are passing away. we want to get these people into the hall of honor. it is important that the sentence of these people, relatives of these people, anyone who is a survivor, contact the hall of honor and get these names put in because we have no other way of getting them unless someone contacts us. >> mike: one thing that draws all recipients together as they have all suffered a wound. they have been in combat. so these are the people who have literally put their lives to sickly on the line for the rest of us as americans and on this fourth of july weekend, how important it could ever be for us to remember the great sacrifices that men and women have made to give us this incredible gift of freedom. >> the hall of honor has two
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purposes. number one is to honor the people that have been awarded the purple heart, but also to educate people. to educate especially the youth who really don't relate to what has been sacrificed. all the sacrifices that have been made to preserve the freedoms that we have today. freedom of the press, speech, religion, all these things did not come free. it was a heavy price paid for it. these people that have these 1.7 -1.8 million people who were either killed or injured were protecting these freedoms, not only for the united states but protected freedoms for other countries as well. >> mike: everett, thank you. if you want more information on the hall of honor, these welcome the purple heart.com or call 877-284-6667. you'll hear a lot of traffic music this hour. but on america's birthday, nobody honors the nation better than lee greenwood, singing god
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bless the usa. >> if tomorrow all things were gone local work for all my life but go and i had to start again with just my children and my wife vocal and thank my lucky stars to be living here today because the flag still stands for freedom, and they can't take that away. and i'm proud to be an american where at least i know i'm free. and i won't forget the men who died who gave that right to me. and i would gladly stand up next
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to you and defend her still today because there ain't no doubt i love this land. god bless the usa. >> from the lakes of minnesota to the hills of tennessee. across the plains of texas from sea to shining sea. from detroit down to houston, and new york to la. but there's pride in every american heart and it's time we say that i am proud to be an american least i can know i'm
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free. and i won't forget the men who died who gave that right to me or you and i would gladly stand up next to you and defend her still today because her in about a love this land. god bless the usa. ♪ i'm proud to be an american where at least i know i'm free ♪ and i won't forget the men who died who gave that right -- right to me and i would gladly stand up next to you ♪ and defend her still today, because there ain't no doubt i love this land ♪ god bless the usa. ♪
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and everything started to change. announcer: activia is clinically proven to help regulate your digestive system in two weeks when eaten every day. now i enjoy every minute. my grandkids are happy, and so am i. ♪ activia >> mike: if you have noticed your church or synagogue isn't as crowded as it used to be is not your imagination. my next guest tracks cultural trends and america and noticed stunning shifts and religious beliefs and values. will america state one nation under god to give let's ask the author of the seven-page tribes.
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great to have you hear george. >> thank you so much. >> mike: you have written 41 books which makes you a very prolific author. i have been reading them for years. you've had some traffic books that sort of give insight into the future as well as trends that are taking place. this book is startling because what you have noticed is that there is a very definitive shift in people's faith and beliefs. what's happening in america? >> have all kinds of trends taking place simultaneously not the least of which is you have a couple of younger generations growing up assuming there are no boundaries, that everything is fair game. so they can make it up as they go along. and what you have consequently is a lot of experimentation taking place in your religious arena we have never seen before. they are making a lot of unusual choices. >> mike: he says a muslim people going through cafeteria line saying i like this but don't like this connected to pick and
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choose spirituality in america. people are exposed to so much information and there's this underlying worldview that says there's no such thing as absolute truth. so the only person that can dictate truth for your life is you. so you hear everything and you figure okay, i don't have to make sure it all fits together into a seamless glossary of life. but i have to do is make sure i'm happy and i'm comfortable and i'm getting my needs met. so they hear something from perhaps the buddhist faith that i really like that. they hear something from the christian faith who that's good. they hear something from the jewish faith i love it. i put it together and before you know it resembles nothing like we've ever seen before but they feel good about it. >> mike: it's like self-inflicted spirituality. whoever wants to pick and choose whatever they want. what is that doing go to let's say that traditional models that we see church, synagogue, mosque >> as we track things like church attendance or involvement in religious activities, we are seeing those numbers are
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declining because again you have a population of people who say it is not that important that i affiliate with an institution or with any other traditions. what's important is that i affiliate with people i like to be with doing activities i like to do. so it is changing all the kinds of measures that we have relied on. >> mike: it sounds like people are opposite of brick warning -- rick warren's book which is it's not about you and people are saying up is about me totally. practice equal of that book is being written by the neck in public and it's wrong you're wrong. it is about me. >> mike: sociologists say younger americans are not brand loyal. they don't live in the same neighborhood go to the same church, try the singular. they are very independent. they think differently, do differently and they are tied to a different worldview because of mobility. how much of the mobility is driving this? >> it's huge. this loyalty factor you bring up his incredible also.
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as we tend to think they are not loyal to institutions, philosophies, oil two religions, though they're not even loyal to the thing that matters most which is people. so what we have found is we have tracked the relationship habits of young people. they will have a group of five or six people who are their core relationship group, but there is constant influx in and out of those inner groups on the basis. >> mike: how does this affect things like marriage which has been a stable relationship. doesn't seem to be any more. >> once again it's not about what's right or wrong but how do i feel. what does that make me feel good. so they're all for marriage. we found that more than 80% of people under the age of 21 say they want to get married someday they only want to get married once, stay married, but as we track them over the course of time we find that they modify that and say but, if i don't like it, if i'm not having a good time it's painful it can change. so divorce comes into it.
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nobody wants to get divorced but they're willing to go through it to get that happiness which had met. >> mike: hang around because when we return we'll talk about more than just recycling and conserving energy, we will talk about when people present other ideas, the trends that show what the next generation really cares [ female announcer ] there's a revolutionary cure for post party sickness syndrome. cascade all-in-one actionpacs. it has the power to pre-wash... and then rinse the whole mess away. cascade all-in-one actionpacs. for a perfect clean, every time.
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>> mike: we talked about the fact that children are not necessarily loyal to grand connected and connected to the things their parents and grandparents are. what matters to them? what interests them and makes their motor move. >> there are a number of arenas you can talk about that within. one would be lifestyle. when you look at that they want to make sure their voice is heard. when you look at the proliferation of technology that we have, they want to make sure they have the opportunity to broadcast their feelings and opinions as many people as possible because they think that's important. the other side of that coin is it's not just pure narcissism, they also want to make a difference in the world. they want to leave this planet better than it is today. so they look at things like the environment. and they say you know what, it really matters that we take this
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seriously. we don't think our parents generation took this seriously. we want to understand the issues more, we want leaders that will talk about these issues. they look at education. education matters a great deal to young people because they have been told that found out the hard way that your opportunities -- doors are open for you by the level of education you have, the number of experiences you've had, the people you had to meet along the journey. those are important things. >> mike: it sounds like on one hand these are people who are not necessarily as bad, maybe, two long-term institution, but the other side of that is they are socially aware and have a deep conscience about doing what's right. so help me understand how you reconcile those two seemingly divergent views. >> which were putting out is they are a cause of the generation so they're constantly looking at opportunities in terms of causes tried to figure out where is the best -- the best fit for me. where i can make the impact. the other thing you have to get your arm surround with this
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group and its so hard as they are not consistent in their thinking or philosophies. we like to think logically. my generation and prior generations removed from point a two-point b. two-point c. point d. younger generations have a mosaic style of thinking which is where they taken so much information and are not trying to make sense of it in a traditional pattern. they're trying to filter through their emotions as much as through the intellect and it brings about a whole different set of conclusions. >> mike: it is the emotion driven, how they feel not what they know because that is secondary to how i feel in a given moment. that would seem to me to say that even the political talk today that one political party will dominate forever is nonsense because whichever political party touches the emotion of the generation for this election at this moment will likely win the election. forget the past. is that a fair assessment eq snack i think it is. look at the eastern philosophies that are popular and one mantra
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is that in the moment. these are generations that really do live in the moment. whoever has the best idea that that is their new hero. so you look at this generation and to try to figure out who are their heroes. it is not people who have slugged it out for the long-term. its people have come to the front today and said this is what we need to do today. >> mike: if you're going to advise someone running for congress, what would you tell them you need to do in order to attract the younger voting demographic. >> first you have to spend time with them. >> mike: relationships. >> that's critical. secondly, you have people who surround you understand another important people in the campaign who are from that generation and can then go out and spend time with them. thirdly, you need constant communication through them through the mechanisms that make sense to them. whether it's twitter or facebook or these things, you have to have that open dialogue. >> mike: they will not read the flyers on your doorstep to cute
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specs are. the printing unions hate me. but yes, it really is all about how can you communicate in their language. that's another thing to keep in mind. every generation comes up with its own language. every generation is up with its own music which is kind of its own language. so you have to be able to communicate with them in that context that make sense to them. it's like church. you can invite people to come to church all the time. they won't come most of the time we know from research. you have to go to them they will come to you. it's the same as the candidate speak stand by me ask you quickly. >> mike: was the future of the church in america to give. >> is hard to tell. i would like to give you a simple, pat answer, but right now everything is up for grabs. we have these seven-page tribes in this country all of which have different beliefs that we find there are 20 core values that all seven tribes bite into and they happen to be among the core values of the founding
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fathers of the nation had been put together a great nation. so the difficulty of our nation faces that have gotten away from those values. if we get back to them and that they tribes play a role in that we can be a great nation. >> mike: george barna is the author of this book it's a phenomenal book is all of your books have tended to be. this is so insightful. i hope people get it and find it as helpful as i did in understanding just what crazy stuff is going on out there. george, great to have you here. thank you for being here. [ applause ] >> mike: coming up more music and "american idol" chris allen as our july 4 celebration continues. said that most of us were pr >> people were shooting at us. and no way we'd be able to survive and carry him on their back. and they did fight and i think
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>> this is a fox news alert. hello everyone, and there you see the president of the united states, president obama, saying goodbye to his wife and children before he embarks on a very important trip. and moments ago, he just stepped off this helicopter, marine one right there. and he will be boarding on to air force one and head to moscow. he is now at andrews air force base head today russia. president obama has a big meeting ahead. he will be meeting with his russian counterpart, the president and former president vladimir putin now russia's prime minister. this in theory means that putin plays second fiddle to the current president, but don't forget, putin hand picked him to be his successor and the meeting
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between them is crucial, crucial stigses coming out of moscow, have putin's fingerprints all over them. so much so that president obama is going meet separately with him as well. a chill has set in in u.s. relations in recent years and both nations have pledged to ease the tension. certainly, when the conversations between med nedyef and president obama begins. russia and china two countries influential in an area where north korea has taken advantage of u.s. sanctions by simply ignoring them. in 4th of july weekend a significant one because on america's independence day, as we all celebrated our independence, yesterday, not one, not two, but seven missiles fired off by north korea. this is a situation that's a delicate one for international
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peace talks between north korea and whether or not china will step in. russia, of course, a major player in this. russia and china recently came out and saying that they're very tired of pyongyang's actions and finally, possibly, maybe the united states can come up with some sort of resolution with russia, importantly on this trip and china to make it all stop. that's the question and a big, big mission for president obama as all eyes are on him. this is the president who obviously campaigned through his entire presidential campaign, urging, his supporters urging americans this president is going to do it differently. he's willing to sit down and talk to leaders of other kupts, specifically countries that haven't necessarily seen eye to eye with the united states. a leader perhaps like iran's president ahmadnejad. and russia hasn't sat down with an american president in years so what president obama is doing this weekend and this week as he marks this overseas trip is
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going to be a historical one at the very least, after moscow, by the way, he could be joining the pope in italy and his trip goes on from there, but this is a mission that will reshape the u.s. image, at least that's the intention by our president. the president there getting on board air force one at andrews air force base for a very long, very important trip to russia this week heading to moscow this evening. that plane was scheduled to depart at 8:30, running about three minutes late. now, it seems the president and first lady have boarded and they soon will take off. we will now return you to huckabee, which is in progress, stay tuned to fox right here for the very latest headlines. met ♪ and you kissed me all through the night ♪ ♪ think of all that we have been through ♪ ♪ breaking up is hard to do. >> at the close your eyes to keep your eyes from screaming to
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♪ yet ♪ and i'm looking in the mirror all the time ♪ ♪ wondering what she don't see any ♪ ♪ i am funny and cool with lines drawn the way i'm supposed to be ♪ jessie's girl ♪ i wish i had jessie's girl ♪ >> whelp johnny cash house burned down, down, down ♪ ♪ there's a lot of weeping and wailing in nashville town ♪ ♪ other than is coming back ♪ johnny cash is dead in his house burned down ♪ quicker
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♪ >> train, train ♪ ♪ trained, trained. >> shut it down instead ♪ ♪ time to sow some wild oats ♪ pull the car around town with his wife comes running out ♪ ♪ sheet slides across the street no place it rather be than right there beside her ♪ ♪ in his midlife crisis or. ♪ >> every once and a while every
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four or five days and one given the cargo. >> mike: giving back to the troops who put it all on the line for america every day. country star neal mccoy talks about why he tours with the uso about why he tours with the uso every chance - ( truck engine ) - hey, wait wait wait wait wait wait, one more thing, one more thing! one more thing. all right. thanks. ( oboe/piano music playing ) announcer: why throw away your money? switch to sprint. save $360 a year with the everything data family plan and get the blackberry curve 8330 smartphone for just $49.99. deaf, hard-of-hearing and people with speech disabilities access www.sprintrelay.com. pick the windows, pick the windows... - anything but the windows. - deal. oh! new windex outdoor all-in-one -- cleans outdoor glass fast. just spray with water, wipe with a windex cleaning pad, and rinse for a streak-free shine in half the time.
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>> mike: next guest has sold over 5 million records. three of his albums have gone platinum and he was once in the top ten in the billboard country charts for 19 consecutive weeks. i think the most impressive number we can talk about today is 13. that's the amount of u.s. oh these welcome country artist and
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a great supporter of our troops, neal mccoy. great to have you. >> thank you governor. great to be here. thank you. [ applause ] >> mike: you have been one of the most faithful performers that have gone over to iraq and all over the world to do you as a tours for our troops. why do you do that? cervenca short story, i'm half filipino, my mother was raised in another, and she always tried to get through to us three kids how lucky we were to be in the united states of america because she did not grow up here and understands what it's about. i was lucky after 2001 i met wayne newton, he took met my first tour to bosnia and hungary, then i've been back to iraq about seven times most times of wayne. it just does your heart good to see these kids and what they're doing and they're not all kids understand that, but to be part of it and thank them it's a big deal. >> mike: you go, tell me what
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the experience is like for you. there are excited to see other system artists from back home, but someone does for neal mccoy spratt-furse about their just excited to see anyone from home. whether you are an artist, actor or take the time to visit them. if you're in congress whatever does appreciate you taking time to come over. for me it just does your heart good. it fills your heart. just to shake their hands. sometimes you get an opportunity to perform in front of everybody. just go shake hands and take pictures and for them to get an opportunity to tell you what it means to come over and it just does your heart really good. i have been over quite a few times and just keep -- hopefully i can go as many times as i can make it. >> mike: you never said no to the request to do a uso tour, have you to keep. >> not get. >> mike: i can't because you just been outed on national television to backpacks about governor i appreciate that. >> mike: you have to keep saying yes. i think it's significant that
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you don't have to go. nobody forces you. you make a choice to say i'm going to give this wonderful talent i have been given, but i'm going to give away to the soldiers and sailors and marines and airmen, and you know i want to say thank you, neil, for being so generous and a thoughtful american, that didn't just say hey, mike or is the only thing that matters to me what you're looking at the folks at us all our freedom. they give for doing that. >> unless i appreciate it. >> mike: i were going to ask you to sing for us ; now you're going to play are you? spec is just a joke. >> mike: neil heard it during recursive. that's why said that books are we going to do? speed web best practice is called wake. it's our biggest record so far. we haven't had that many. it's on you. check one, two, one, two, three, four. >> i will show you how to be a part of it. put these together.
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>> i woke up this morning ♪ ♪ my head felt tense drama i splashed it with water to make it make sense, i stumbled to the kitchen, she was standing at the sink drama of she had to do was to give me that link drama will slam, then, i'm feeling alright ♪ troubles take a hike in the blink of an eye drama don't need to psychoanalyze or have a stiff drink ♪ ♪ all she's got to do is to give me that week your head. >> anybody knows the words are welcome to sing around. >> it's her way of saying she's on my side and one an unspoken message that works every time, and my brain start smoking i can't even think ♪ ♪ all she's got to do is give me
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that went ♪ ♪ will slam them i'm feeling alright grandma and troubles take a hike in the blink of an eye drama don't need to psychoanalyze nor have a stiff drink, all she's got to do is give me that link. >> steve auburn on that old devil. ♪ >> in this competent world it may sound absurd, but simple little things are the miracle cure ♪ ♪ push to the limit for standing at the brink ♪ ♪ all she has to do is give me that link ♪ ♪ slammed, ben, i'm feeling alright, rebels take a hike in the blink of an eye turn on do not need to psychoanalyze or
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have a stiff drink, all she has to do is give me that link ♪ ♪ well i'm feeling alright ♪ troubles take a hike in the blink of an eye ♪ ♪ don't need to psychoanalyze or have a stiff drink drama all she has to do is give me that link drama all she has to do is give me that link ♪ [ applause ] >> mike: or else but in this country can you be a young singer from arkansas one moment and the next moment you are the newest "american idol"? newest "american idol"? chris allen proves why hee
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thing your knowledge of their longtime survivors were when >> it's crazy, we had a long distance relationship for almost five years and so, that's like, that was, you know, kind of meant to be, it kind of got us ready for all of this stuff. >> tell me, you've traveled all over the world. and a lot people don't know about. >> what is the most meaningful thing you ever saw. you've been to mosak beak, thailand, doing mission work in the past. what's the most meaningful thing you ever saw. >> i think the most meaningful. and the theme throughout all the
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trips. we were going to help them and we feel like we did, but more than anything, like they helped, they were teaching us how to be like real people and teaching us more about ourselves and like no matter what was going on, the smile on their face, it was so-- it meant so much because they've been through so much. and just happy and to be smiling. so, us in america, we have absolutely nothing to worry about. >> mike: it's amazing what we have. in the whirlwind of life. what keeps you stable and keeps you focused and grounded. >> family and friends and always making fun of me, you know, i'll do like the show like this and i'll say something and they'll be like oh, you're stupid, why did you say that? so, definitely, they get on me. and keep me grounded. >> mike: musical influences? who are your most growing up? >> yeah, you know, i actually am
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a big michael jackson fan growing up. i think he's incredible and like stevie wonder fan, like motown, definitely. and the beatles when i was probably in high school and everyone pretty much, alike a lot. >> mike: i would say there's a solid musical influence, the classics. >> and you. >> mike: yeah, right, right. you know, you keep talking like that, you'll be in politics before long, you've got to future. >> maybe some day i could be the governor of arkansas. >> mike: a great gig, is really is. when you get to be governor, you get tv shows and get to tla with guys like kris allen. let's do one, a beatle's song. >> okay. >> mike: we'll do "yesterday", but we'll do it today. >> okay. here we go. one, two, three four. ♪
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♪ oh, i, i had said something wrong now i long for yesterday ♪ ♪ yesterday ♪ oh, love was such an easy game to play ♪ ♪ now i need a place to hide away ♪ ♪ oh, i believe in yesterday ♪ i believe in yesterday >> kris allen, everybody. the final thoughts on this independence day when we return. spf measures uvb rays, not uva rays.
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>> we love hearing from you. you can always drop us a line at mike huckabee.com and click on fox news feedback. here is some letters and e-mails this week, scott writes, the show with bernie williams was okay until you wore the flag over your suit. it's against our flag code to wear the flag as an article of clothing. it's not a flag, it's a guitar strap, red, white and blue to show my patriotism. and leah wallace, thank you for your words about the legendary icon michael jackson, i was born in the 90's and seems like my entire generation thought mr. jackson to be a public joke and we are in a generation where people think only what's best for them is selves and not right for each other. we had a lot of folks commented on the michael jackson commentary, available on our website, and barry benton points out i made an error, okay, you ended tonight's show commenting about a viewer that didn't like
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the willie nelson and ray price versions of "crazy" and faded love. you pointed out willie wrote both songs, that's not correct. faded love was not written by willie nelson it's bob and john wills, my bad, thank you for catching me on it. we'll send you a copy of my book "do the right thing" you did the right thing and made sure we got it straight. i appreciate it. remember, we only get to celebrate our nation's independence because of the courage of those whose sacrifice gave it to us. we separate retined marine corps colonel, kenneth, a highly aviated aviator who flew in three different wars. combat mission ins world war ii, korea and vietnamese. he was shot down in all three wars, five times in all. for his valor and bravery
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awarded 59 medals, including two navy crosses, four purple hearts and two legions of merit. in 1985 based in okinawa stripped down his corsair fighter and intercepted a japanese operation plan in mid air, when his guns froze, he flew his fighter into the observation plane and hacked off its tail with his propeller. in north korea, his attack on an enemy oil tanker almost blew him right out of the sky. he then fought in vietnam where he flew helicopter rescue missions. his huey was shot down and he needed skin grafts over 35% of his badly burned body. in a world where we spend so much time talking about the death of celebrities, i hope we never forget that our real heroes may not be famous, but they are faithful and marines like kenneth russer, always faithful. next week we've got a terrific show lined up. tim
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