tv FOX and Friends Sunday FOX News September 27, 2009 7:00am-10:00am EDT
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>> conservative media.... >> the lyrics is not the best but there has to be a for children to talk about the president. >> maybe they should use the postage stamp rule, only dead presidents. that is a wrap on fox news >> good morning to you, it is sunday, september 27th, here is what's happening right now. iran's show of force, the country fires two short range missiles and says it has more tests in the works. so, how should the world respond to this? dave. >> also, the rift is growing deeper over afghanistan. is president obama snubbing his top general's request to send in more troops, a development. >> a development overnight,
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famed film director roman polanski is taken into custody on a 31-year-old arrest warrant and you'll never guess where they found him. >> always ruling the roest, giving my mornings a boost. i love that. >> this is "fox & friends." >> it's sunday morning to you, good sunday morning to you, welcome to "fox & friends" here, i'm clayton morris. >> ainsley is filling in for alisyn. >> dave is wearing the pumpkin colored tie. >> i thought it was squash color. >> it was nfl sunday, appropriately dressed. al lynn camerota is off. you can if you want read about her in today's new york times, i'll link at that article on twitter hoo in just a bit. >> we should explain, do you want to go in any deeper. >> it's not like she's been
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arrested. >> they followed her for the day. it was a study of her day at "fox & friends." >> where is it? >> a cute article, i read it, here we dp, right here. >> it's 97,000 pages. >> there's a picture of her, there's a picture of her throwing on his shoes in his office, there you go, can you zoom in? >> there is aly. >> op-ed 3. >> it used to be at six, we used to go on at six in sundays. >> and black and white look amazing on camera. and another story, how to lose 600 calories with doing nothing at all. this is cool, no exercise and you just sit there. >> amazing. >> i'll believe it when i see tfrjts the developing story overnight we're following for you, iran, this comes at an interesting time. iran test firing short range missiles. now, this comes amid all of the controversy over whether or not they will open up this
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second nuclear site in the city near a holy site. it's a strong military installation guarded by republican guards there, republican army guards there and what is interesting new, test firing short range missiles while they're awaiting whether or not the world is going to react to this? >> what you're looking at. these these are the satellite images of the new facility and iran is saying that they will let the inspectors come in and look at this facility. >> they sure are. >> see if that happens. >> the u.s. demanded quote, unfettered access to that secret nuclear facility within weeks, as for the short range missile test they called there code named messenger four, this is iran sending a message to the world they do another show of strength, if you will, and two short range missiles, they're expected to go on the next 10, 11 days, very interesting teeming always with iran and offing always
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coincides with some type of threat. >> and the allies, of course, u.s., britain, germany, france, china, russia, will be meeting with the first time in 30 careers, any open negotiations between the united states and iran, and one of the things that i allies will demand of course is open transparency on that second nuclear site and whether or not iran of course, claims that it's peaceful and it's energy related. of course they've done anything, but tell the truth in the past and now it's up to the u.s. al lies whether or not we can get inspectors in there to prove whether or not it's peaceful. >> where do we go from there. two options, one sanctions, number one is cutting off oil, only 40% do they produce themselves do they refine or military action, will there be military action against iran? we don't know, but ahmadnejad has said what the president did was a mistake. he says they've done nothing wrong with this secret nuclear facility. he calls it a mistake, president obama brought this
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up. >> here is what a mistake is, when the world is focused on you this morning and you test fire short range missiles especially when israel is on edge. >> scary. we got a notification, two in the morning, a breaking news alert. a new development overnight whether president obama will grant the request for more troops in afghanistan, caroline shively with the details. good morning, caroline. >> good morning, ainsley. on saturday, general stanley mcchrystal had an urgent request for more troops in afghanistan. they're going to hold that until president obama decides what he wants on the war. washington post reports that the president scheduled at least five meetings with hess national security team to reexamine the strategy in afghanistan and pakistan and that there's no deadline for a decision. mcchrystal's report asks for tens of thousands of reinforcements on top of the
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americans will and that includes an extra 21,000 that mr. obama okayed earlier this year and mcchrystal wrote his mission would likely fail if he didn't get the extra troops. last week, president obama described himself as a skeptical audience for the choice of sending in forces. and some discussions he could go with, vice-president biden as, unmanned drones or some congress militia democrats, a complete pullout. last month's afghan elections riddled with fraud accusations and trying it figure out if you can call that legitimate. a gallup poll shows that 50% are americans are opposed to more troops. others support the idea. >> thank you very much, caroline. we'll check with caroline in a little while. a lot of news will come out on the sunday talk shoes and see if there's noi movement there. let's talk a little about-- well have tucker carlson on in a bit and his take on what
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happened the last couple of days, when comparing the protests at two sites. what you're seeing on your right is the protest that went on at g-20 in pittsburgh, on the left, the very peaceful protest that went on at the tea party marches on washington d.c. and the tea party express that went throughout the country 16 different cities. you might notice a stark contrast between these two. funny that it had to have been pointed out. >>. >> there's a period fog on the right and i can't figure out what that is. >> the last check there were friday night, something about 80 arrests, $50,000 in property damages, again, a very stark contrast. tugger carlson on that in just a couple minutes. >> at last check no violence or arrests at the tea party. >> here are the headlines this morning. fame us director roman polanski is held in switzerland in connection with a u.s. arrest warrant.
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he was picked up before the start of the film festival. the u.s. considers him a fugitive because he left the country after pleading guilty to having sex with a 13-year-old girl back in 1977. he fled before his sentencing in california and then never came back. well, he now wants a judge to reconsider hess case, but the judge says that polanski must return to the u.s. to get his hearing on his request. three more guantanamo bay detainees now transferred out of the u.s. prison in cuba. the department of justice says two went to ireland and a third was released to his native country of yemen. the transfers are the latest toward the president's goal of closing the controversial detention facility. and president obama continuing hess push for heb reform. this time at the speech of the congressional black caucus dinner last night and the president says the time is running out. >> now is the time to offer stability and security to americans who have insurance. now is the time to make it affordable for those who don't have health insurance.
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now is the time to so slow the growth of health care costs for our families and business, our government. despite the task at hand shall the president and first lady seemed to enjoy themselves, dancing off stage together. several thousand people turned out for at that event. and let's check with domenica davis. and a look at the weather. >> hi, answersly, well, we do have some rain to talk about and some thunder coming in for your sunday, but the good thing sit's not down to the south. the front that we had yesterday that did bring about an inch to parts of georgia and alabama has now pushed off to the coast and the rain is pushing up through the coast. so, really, from the mid atlantic up to the northeast today. that's where we're going to be seeing scattered showers and thunderstorms and back behind the great lakes, can't rule out thunderstorms running through later this morning and this afternoon. a closer look at the radar, pretty good showers are coming down from morning all the way up to new england. precip accumulation the next
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24 hours does give us one to two inches from new york all the way up through the interior parts of new england with some of the heaviest rain around the carolina coast line and isolated three plus inches by monday morning, other than that, a fairly quiet day across the country with the rain sitting to the east, it will be 65 for the high in new york, 75 down to the south, 89 hot and sticky in tampa and off to the west, 84 in san francisco, sunny and hot out there. guys? >> more rain, domenica in atlanta? >> no, they actually are drying out so that's certainly good news. >> thank you, those are your headlines, i'm going to pitch it to the guys, i can see the bottom of his feet and what are you wearing. >> he's comfortable in his sngie what if you could lose
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600 calories? a snuggie inspired spa. >> she joins me with the details. they call it a snuggie sauna. you don't wear a snuggie in it. you call it the snuggie. >> not really. the word toasted gets a whole new meaning as we're sitting there and drinking our coffee and having a toes. it's not a new concept. what we did with it in our medical practice, we incorporated this unique technology into our protocols, customized for clients with different needs in order to i am perfect the lymphatic drainage, enhance their skin and it's very simple. as you can see, i'm toasting my associate here. >> yeah, gina is getting burned up in here. how hot does it get. what are the benefits. gets it be about 110 to 130 degrees fahrenheit in there.
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about a half a point from the regular heat sauna, but here is the dramatic difference. the infrared technology is beneficial to our nervous cells, to our circulation, to the generation of the cellular malia and long determined that mediterranean folks, people who live in the so sun are having less depression, much healthier, levels of hdl are higher so what we're doing, using a patented semiconductor technology to isolate the rays of the sun we don't need and isolating a narrow wavelength. >> right into the snuggie. >> exactly, 14 microns. >> right. >> going straight to the individual's tish use and getting that lymphatic drainage going it. >> they're calling it the snuggie sauna, the hands and face are free and i hear you can wear snuggies around the salon or spa, if you will, right? >> well, you could wear-- in our medical office what we
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do, we have the individuals strip and makes them feel much more comfortable inside because the temperature gets to be generated prior. >> we want to mention it costs $50 for a 15 minute session and you can burn up the calories. toasted in here. >> thank you. >> thank you very much. or ainsley buy them from 900 to $1,000. back to you, ainsley. >> thanks, guys. iran kicking up controversy again this morning, taking more threatening actions after announcing another nuclear plant. we'll talk to a journalist in close and frequent contact with those inside iran, that's coming up and "saturday night live" it's back and they wasted no time giving us their take on the biggest stories in the news right now. here is a preview. >> the computer with my speech crashed so i had to write one at the last minute on loose leaf paper and that may be crazy. >> much more of that straight ahead. bicycle, i've missed you.
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not really. with priority mail flat rate boxes from the postal service shipping is easy. if it fits, it ships anywhere in the country for a low flat rate. that's not complicated. come on. how about...a handshake. alright. priority mail flat rate boxes only from the postal service. a simpler way to ship. >> welcome back. our top story this morning, iran test fires two short range missiles less than 24 hours after saying the u.n. can inspect their covert nuclear facility. what should the world response be? >> here with an insiders'
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perspective is lisa daktari in frequent contact with those inside iraq. >> good morning to you. >> you've spoken with those inside iran and given this escalation and possible military strike or whatever is going on. escalated tension, what are you hearing from the young people in iran, are they fearful of that? >> obviously, nobody wants military action against their own people, but the people of iran are not naive and they realized there's increased world pressure on their government and also know that their government has chosen to go down a certain path and if they continue to go down that path, military action against them might be inevitable. >> are these people, a disenchanted company because of what happened with the recent election, a lot of questions whether it's even legitimate, that ahmadnejad is the president. so, is this a country that's angered over the entire government establishment itself? >> actually i think the two most important facts to he
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merge over the last three months after the upheaval following the election, has been that we have here, a country of 70 million people, 70% of which are to take the more conservative statistics, two-thirds of which are under the age of 35. incredible force. these are educated, savvy, secular, nonpolitical young people who just do not-- there's just such a difference between the government and the people and the iranian people really want that to be known to the world. >> that's interesting you say that because now, let me ask you this question, many people have criticized president obama for wanting to have negotiations with iran. a number of countries of course are going to meet with iranian negotiators on october 1st, among young people in that country, there are some here who say, look, this is an opportunity for those young people to grab hold of democracy by seeing the u.s. president coming to that country. what are the young people saying about that? >> absolutely, i think across the board, a majority of iranians both living in eye rn and abroad feel that our administration really lost a
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huge opportunity to help the iranian people and now, obama is talking about full engagement with the government of iran. why not full engagement with the people of iran. they risked everything, got in the streets, killed, beaten, tortured and the president this have country's administration could have given the support to the people. >> interesting. it was a delicate situation, i'm sure. lisa,way appreciate your insight this morning. >> thank you, thank you. >> thank you so much. >> coming up on the show, it's a story we told you about yesterday on "fox & friends." children asked to sing a song praising president obama without their parent's permission in class. now, turns out there is more controversy surrounding the same new jersey school district where this happened. we'll tell you what it is straight ahead. passpass
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>> welcome back. the same school district under scrutiny for asking school kids to sing a song praising president obama. no stranger to controversy apparently. it turns out they were under fire for inventing a fiction al group. >> hi, tucker, good morning to you. >> good morning. >> all right, so what is this, 2007, they created a right wing fundamentalist group to president bushing some sort of safety drill in the school. what in the world happened with this school district? >> not a real right wing fundamentalist group, but sort after stand in for the dangerous scary things in the world. right. this was part after drill, kind of homeland security drill that allowed the school to posit that right wingers are the great threat to this country. do you sense a theme, this is
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a left wing activist school district. i spoke to parents and one child who goes to the school over the weekend and told me something i didn't know, which is the same school district has needless to sabaned the word christmas as a dangerous term, but also halloween, the now preferred term is fall festival. halloween having apparently some kind of religious connotations i'm not aware of. it must be. this is p.c. run amok and so it's not surprising that this same school district forced kids to sing praises of the dear leader. >> you would think they would be on their p's and q's after getting in trouble in 2007. >> it would. if you don't run across anyone who disagrees with you. >> what is the makeup, the demographics. >> this is a school outside of philadelphia and voted overwhelmingly for president obama. but that's not the point. you know, whether or not the kids or their parents agree with the politics being established in school doesn't make the fact they're being
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espoused anymore palatable. it's wrong to prostheltize. they can't leave there, people should be fired over this. >> let's throw up two pieces of video, tucker, a tale of two cities, rather dickenson of us. on the right size, the screen right, g-20 in pittsburgh, tear gas, tear gas fog rolling in and on the left the tea party protest. what strikes you about the two different protests. >> the one on the left. where they're holding signs, those people look very, very dangerous, that's a direct threat to our nation, to democracy itself. look, on the left you have the tea party protests which were demonized in the media as somehow subversive and illegitimate and bigoted. on the right the g-20 people
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are expressing their constitutionally protected right to speech. never have you seen media distortion on fuller display than here. the press has a lot of sympathy with people throwing rocks through the front of mcdonald's and no simply for the others. >> over 80 arrests, and pittsburgh papers, i was in pittsburgh, oh, peaceful protests there. tucker carlson, a dangerous man. thank you. >> we'll tell you why scientists are over the moon, literally. >> and nba star chris paul is taking on a new challenge. how he's reaching out to young children. that's next. - n:gadepet r bprs
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>> hey there. welcome back to "fox & friends." dave briggs, i can't say my own name. >> you know why? >> he knows why. >> why he said that. >> ainsley earhart in for al lynn camerota. if you e-mailed yesterday and we should change your name to david biggs. >> dave b.i.g. >> why did they say that. >> they said that my name shrinks me a little bit. that dave briggs doesn't do it. that david bigg. >> david bigg is better. >> i love briggs because i
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think when your daughter grows up and she can name her child briggs, isn't that cute. >> as a first name? >> we are going to keep briggs. >> i like the way you think. >> we've got a lot coming up on the show. you can get in your e-mail, twitters, if you want to follow david bigg. >> bigg. >> clayton morris on twitter and ainsley earhart. first the headlines. >> yes, i do. here is what you missed overnight. beginning with a fox news alert. in the middle of the night, iran test fires two short range missiles according to state tv and plans to test the controversial long range missile capable of reaching israel tomorrow. the tests are only heightening tensions among nations. and they come only days after tehran announced that it was building the second iranian plant, despite the plans. iran will meet with u.s., russia, china, france and britain, geneva to discuss its nuke ambitions and we'll keep
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you posted on that of course. secretary of state hillary clinton says arab leaders need to do more to get the mideast process again. clinton met with arab leadners new york and said they should take steps to normalize relations with israel. leaders of kuwait, bahrain, were among those attention. at least 106 people are dead and dramatic rescues continue in the philippines after a tropical storm dumped more than a month of rain on the asian nation. several survivors stranded on roof tops waiting for help and others spotted clinging to high voltage power lines. pretty dangerous. a man snuck into a grizzly bear exhibit at the san francisco zoo. amaze willing i got out without a scratch. like a seen out of anchorman. someone jumped into action, firing a warning shot to keep the bears away. police took the 27-year-old into custody and saying he will be charged. if you're watching and want to try this, don't do it.
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this incident shows how the safety procedures put into place after a fatal tiger attack, remember that, that was at the zoo back in 2007. and that attack, a tiger killed a 17-year-old boy. it's dangerousment and fox news's own glenn beck makes a special visit to his hometown. he was given a key to the city by the mayor and congratulations to you, mr. beck. >> and of course, he was on "saturday night live" featured earlier this week. and he loved it and actually tweeted about it so you can check out his link there, actually pretty funny and "saturday night live" back finally last night. we've been waiting for the satire to dramatize and make fun of all the things we have been talking about here over the past few weeks and past summer and of course the united nations got a lot of play this weekment moammar qadaffi speaking for what, 90 minutes. >> 96 minutes. it was rambling, incoherent. >> papers everywhere. >> i think it was stand-up, but nonetheless, "saturday night live" had a great time
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with colonel qadaffi's speech the other day at the u.n. here is a piece of snl last night. >> hello i'm here today to apologize for my speech on wednesday. it was just so long and so rambling and it didn't make any sense. i watched a tape of it and i was like, who is that guy? those of you who do not know, when i travel i have a large tent i like to bring with me. for this i'm scorned as some kind of weirdo. despite my high diplomatic station my tent and i were turned away by central park, west chester and worse of all, new jersey. and the my computer crashed and i had to write one on loose leaf paper and that made me crazy. this is crushing. that i've written my speech on this right here in spite of
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writing the in-flight movie starring liam neissan. >> they were great last year and just as many laughs. it was hysterical. >> yesterday, interviewing ambassador bolt we played a clip of the speech. and they've got the translator who got fed up with the speech and said i can't take it anymore. i can't take it anymore he nearly passed out from it. >> he walked off. he says no more. >> can't take it anymore. >> absolutely. let's get over to domenica davis in for rick reichmuth. >> where is rick? >> with are is waldo. >> he's here, his sister is visiting, hanging out with-- >> we're glad you're here though. i'm thrilled she's here. what's going on in the weather. >> we do have some fairly nice temperatures this morning, looking at some of the chilliest temperatures through maine and they're waking up to frost and freeze advisories
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because temperatures are hovering right around that 30 degree mark. temperatures though have been holding steady off from the great lakes over to the northeast and that's because the clouds and rain have been moving in overnight so we're really going to see steady temperatures throughout the day in the 60's, even a few 70's down through the mid atlantic, but you can see a chance for scattered showers, not only from the great lakes, but from the mid atlantic up to the northeast today. everybody has roughly a 40% chance of seeing scattered showers throughout the day and that translates to your football forecast with some on and off showers so if you're going to any of the outdoor games today i would say you probably need to bring that poncho, at some time during the game you're going to get wet. down to the south though it looks-- >> what? >> how about yankee stadium, am i in trouble. >> don't interrupt my weather. >> oh. off to the west, he always does that! off to the west, it's warm though, so dave, if you're going out there, which you're not, 'cause clearly this is
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all about you. >> always. >> yankee stadium, 40% chance of rain, bring the poncho. >> okay. >> david bigg. >> i'll be out there, too, actually. >> go ahead and finish. i hope your mascara doesn't run, are you going to take the makeup off. >> you're talking to dave. >> we don't have enough time (laughter) >> you look pretty, you look pretty this morning. >> do your weather sclm. >> oh, now you can. >> thank you. >> dave, where are you going? you have to do something. >> i have to do an interview with chris paul. so finish up. >> okay. done. >> paul, his drive to overcome odds as a kid paved the way to pro basketball success, he shares his inspiring story in long shot, never too small to dream big and chris paul joins me with 6th graders from a middle school in new york. thanks for being here, chris. a two time all star, i know
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the kids are ready for you to read along. >> thanks for having me, i'm happy to be here. >> my little emmerson is tuned in as well, right. >> go ahead. this story is called long shot and never too small to dream big and it's about me overcoming obstacles with, you know, i was a 9th grader at high school, probably some of you guys height, and every one and my brother and friends told me that i wouldn't be much of anything and look at where i'm at now. so, here is the story. all right. my brother cj and his friends were just getting back from the playground. they loved to tease me about my game. you're too small to play football, said one friend. and tiny, said another. did we mention small added the third. they all laughed. a picture of it. and showing the pictures. cj stayed behind as his friends left. they're right, you know,
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chris, he said, the ball is bigger than you are, i threw back my shoulders and straightened up. maybe, i said, but i've got good hands. come on, help me practice. tryouts are only one week away. and that's my lovely mother. >> that's mom? >> yeah, that's mom. . >> that night, i was lying in bed when mom came in. what are you thinking about, chris? coach is only going to take 15 players, what if he thinks i'm too small? mom smiled, you're a great basketball player, chris, but public isn't the only thing that matters. your education does, too and worrying about your height won't make you any better, just do the best you can with the gifts you have. and that's it. >> and the rest is history. >> yes. >> and i know some of the kids from the school in new york here have some questions for you and start in the front row. what do you have for chris. >> who inspired you? >> who inspired me?
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that's a great question. my parents. my parents and my late grandfather and that's what makes the story so special for me is that this is really my story and then, in the book, you saw pictures of my mom, my dad, my brother and my late grandfather who was my best friend. >> arnett, you have another question for chris. >> yeah, how is it like to get into the nba and to be rookie of the year? >> oh, man, a dream come true 'cause you know, i come from a little town in north carolina named louisville where no one has ever made it to the nba, so, growing up, everyone was like, you know, you're never going to leave home. never going to do this and do that, so to play in the nba and live a dream is nothing like it. >> have you finally proven your critics wrong or still more left to accomplish? >> there's still more left to accomplish and it's funny, as much as people talked about how small i was as a kid, i still faced those challenges
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in the nba, now, everyone in the nba is usually 6-5 or taller, so, i'm still the smallest good night on the court. >> and quite often the best player on the court. chris paul we appreciate you being there. >> thank you very much. >> and it's long shot. chris paul, this morning. >> thank you, dave. coming up, are our taxpayer dollars really used to fund the qadaffi's libyan charities? one congressman says yes. we are going to talk to him after the break. talk about cosmic awareness, we are going to talk about exciting new discoveries on the moon and mars, i'm excited about this. how will they impact the future of the space program. proven to target and help repair damage in just three washes. - building shiny, strong... - hair with life. announcer: new aveeno nourish plus.
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you know all the little things you do to help the environment? here's one more... ziploc evolve. ♪ an ultra-light bag designed to keep food fresh... made with 25% less plastic. and made with wind energy. ♪ ziploc evolve. better for the environment. still ziploc fresh. all at no extra cost. designed with you in mind. s.c. johnson. a family company. >> president obama is reportedly sending aid to libyan charities tied directly to the children of moammar qadaffi. illinois congressman makirk
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wrote a letter asking him to withdraw from the charity. >> congressman, thank you for being with us. >> thank you for having me. >> taxpayer dollars, taxpayer dollars, break this down for us. why are we giving this much money to libya? >> the obama administration is adamant that we give 2 1/2 million dollars of taxpayer funding to the qadaffi government. they also proposed as part of this, a grant of $200,000 to the foundation of siev qadaffi, the son of qadaffi that organized the welcome home for the person after the pan am flight. and his daughter. >> again, it's not about the money, congressman, it's about the symbolic gesture of this, right? >> well, it is about the money. it's a wild waste of taxpayer funds. >> this is $400,000 in the
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grand scheme of things, not a tremendous amount of money to our government, but it's about, apparently, endorsing what qadaffi is done, that's your problem with it, right? >> that's right, this-- the obama administration is proposing gig money to saif's foundation before he organized the homecoming, a man who personally murdered 189 of our citizens and after the performance in the u.n. after which he said the israelis killed jfk and corporations designed the h1n1 virus and something that's completely not appropriate in today's environment. >> i think this is absurd. 2.5 million dollars. our country is in debt. let me get this right. we're borrowing money from china to pay libya a country who doesn't even need this money, a country that is anti-american, is that right? >> is that what is happening? >> that's right. libya is an oil-rich country
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the. part of opec that's been gouging western countries on gas prices for 30 years, but now the obama administration wants to give the libyan government 2 1/2 million dollars. well, they're now hesitating on giving the money directly to the qadaffi kids. they insist on giving 2 1/2 million dollar to the qadaffi department of the. >> how does it happen? how does our government and the president have reign to do that? does congress not have to vote on this? >> well, i worry about the timing of this. of course, congress learned about this the kay of the qadaffi speech before the united nations. and i think this is a set of staff members of the obama administration that are completely out of touch with the american people. >> all right. coneman mark kirk from illinois. we peesh your time. if you get a response from the president we'd like to hear about it. >> thanks for having me. >> thank you, congressman. what scientists have just
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shopping less and saving more. now, that's progressive. call or click today. (applause) >> that applause it for you. a little "fly me to the moon". two discovers back-to-back could have our u.s. space program gaining new life. i'm excited about this. ice and water just found on mars and the moon. i'm joined by the associate curator at the american museum of natural history. good morning to you. >> good morning. great to be here. >> so this is an amazing discovery. isn't it? >> it's a great discovery, it's confirmation, some people thought for a while. the lunar community thought the moon is bone dry from the top to the core and this is challenging that.
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>> this is chamging that. and we know that there have been signs about this all along, right? >> there have been, yes. >> what were the signs? >> if a fact-- in fact, there are hints from the mission that went by the moon many years ago and the deep impact mission, they saw little faint signals that might be water, but this is all new, really, with this new discovery. >> now, what we're-- the real question though, i imagine, where is the water, not in a giant lake or pond, for scientists they have to figure out where the water is. >> there's three possibilities, we think there's water in the deep craters that is condensed there like ice in a cold trap. like water condenses on your mir when you have a shower and then we think, also, that this possibly is water, is hydrogen from the solar wind. very small amount, but there's also the possibility that it's actually ice from underneath,
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these degassing from the interior of the moon and that would be super cool because then there's a lot more down teep dooep that we're not seeing yet. >> i love that you get as excited about this as do i. if that's the case, what does it mean, to set up a permanent moon base? >> we need to find out the form of the water, just ice or hydrogen on the surface minerals and top millimeter, where you scrape up a football field you get a quart of water? that's tough to do. mars has more water. we know more about water on mars than water on the moon. >> that's amazing. didn't we, when we returned from the missions, have moon rocks and put in a box and nasa thought water that must have come from an air conditioning unit in the storage facility? >> well, the moon rocks have been sitting on the surface for a long, long, long time. >> yes. >> so they had probably--
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the bone dry nature of them is probably well established. the way that they're kept is in a dry, nitrogen atmosphere, in a box, that he is-- they did the best we could. we live under an ocean of air soaked in water so it's really hard. imagine fish trying to find something that's dry. we're talking about small amounts of water. >> we have about 15 seconds. we are going to crash this probe into the moon in a few-- >> that's in one of those craters, in the deep craters where we think that water from comets that impact, pieces that impact the moon, the water would evaporate and recondense in those places and that's what we are going to test with that. >> fantastic. the associate curator at the museum of natural history. thank you for joining us. i love the space tie, super, may go to the museum and got one of those. all right, dave. >> like you don't already have a space tie in your closet. >> that's true, i do. coming up breaking news, failed film director roman
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manski taken into custody in switzerland for something that happened decades ago. we're looking at the worst movies of the past decades. friends@foxnews.com, the worst movies in the last ten years, we're back in a couple of minutes. dee s d foe t , ew cal thly% raeer swes ne llll ju caesac tuav thci usve n suyo rand tuswne swta™
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>> good sunday morning to you. it's september 27th. gosh, creeping into october soon here, what's happening right now. iran test fires two short range missiles and vows to test another long range missile some. what is driving this latest act of defiance. we'll talk about it. >> also, does president obama plan to heed the warning from his top yen that we need more u.s. troops in afghanistan? well, there's a new development this morning. we'll have that for you. >> and he's back. film maker michael moore has a new target, this time it's capitalism. our slogan this morning, comes
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from zap in ohio, i like that zap, "fox & friends" we love you, there is no show above you. thank you, zap. >> short, but sweet, zap, just like your name. >> thank you for not taking it-- ♪ ♪ fox and friends . >> there it is, "fox & friends," welcome to the big show on this sunday morning, thanks so much for waking up with us, we appreciate it. ainsley earhart in this morning for alisyn camerota. >> yes, she's sleeping in and hopefully she's up and watching the show, dave briggs and clayton morris, we'll talk about the worst movies the last decade. we'll get your e-mails and tweets. >> i'm interested, i can't think of bad-- we've got ishtar and water world. >> who watched that, never heard that have. >> i watched that with my parents, three hours i'll never get back. coming up this morning, the big story of course overnight. all eyes have been on iran this past week with everything that unfolded at the united
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nations and at the g-20. learning now that iran, of course, had that second nuclear site in the second most holy city in that country, now, we learn this morning, that iran has test fired some short range missiles in what, i guess, they're calling war game tests. war games going on the for the next, 10, 11 days and interestingly enough as you point out, coinciding with the whole world watching as they said the u.n. can come inspect their secret nuclear facility and the u.s. demand that had they get in there within weeks. that's what the u.s. has required. they're going to get in, inspect this secret facility within weeks and again, iran says this is for peaceful means not to make nuclear weapons. >> that was what you were just saying is the satellite image of that facility. yeah, iran saying peaceful, they're saying this is energy related, you know, because nuclear is the cleanest energy, but our allies, or america and our allies are saying, uh-uh, we're skeptical of this. so there's going to be a
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meeting on october 1st for the allies, u.s., britain, france, germany, china and russia. and demand iran tell what the plan is, what their intentions are here. >> the real question, look, they're telling us the nuclear site in this holy city, okay, is peaceful. it's for energy related means and what's interesting is that it's heavily guarded with iranian republican guard. those are the finest military soldiers in iran. it's on lockdown, heavily protected. >> and it's not operational for 18 months, yet, it's all of those things you mentioned. >> it's all peaceful. >> and they're saying we can go in and inspect and the u.n. inspectors can go in and look at the facility, but they're not telling us when they're going to allow that which makes you wonder what they're doing over the next few weeks until this happens. >> i want to mention some very interesting insights from an iranian journalist. she said she's talked with the people in iran and telling her they're actually burning
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chinese and russian flags because they want russia and china to join the u.s. this sanctions in cutting off iran from oil. they want sanctions on their own government because they want this thing to be brought to an end. >> the young people do. >> the young people in iran. >> in the country and 70% of iran, reportedly, is under the age of 30. very interesting. and again, cutting them off from oil would choke them virtually. they only refine 40% of their own oil. >> so the question is what will happen? military action, sanctions. >> or sanctions, right. >> we'll continue to keep you posted. a new development whether or not president obama will grant his top general's request for more troops in afghanistan. caroline shively with the details. >> ainsley, general stanley mcchrystal's request is now in the hand of pentagon officials, they're holding it until president obama figures out what overall strategy he wants for the war. mcchrystal's report asks for
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reenforcement potential ly more 40,000 on top of those there are there. would likely fail without them. republicans criticized any delay, the time to act is now, before the taliban grows stronger the 4 is% support the idea. "the washington post" reports the president has scheduled at least five meetings with his national security team to reexamine the strategy in afghanistan and pakistan and that there's no deadline for a decision. last week, president obama referred to himself as a skeptical audience for the case of sending in additional u.s. forces and some other choices that the president could go with, include vice-president biden's suggestion on focusing on military strike or unmanned drones or some by congressional democrats of a complete pull out. >> thank you, caroline shively. >> oscar winning director roman polanski, taken into
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custody in switzerland. arrested on a 30-year-old u.s. warrant. good morning, greg, what are you hearing? >> hey, we've been on the phone with the swiss contacts the past couple of hours trying to sort this thing out. roman polanski, now, as we understand it, under the custody of swiss authorities. he faces extradition to the united states from where he fled 31 years ago after pleading guilty to a charge of sexual misconduct with an underage girl. he has been living in france, since then, i know having lived in france the extradition laws are very, very tight there. he was in switzerland getting ready to receive, ironically, a lifetime achievement award at a film festival sunday night. his lifetime now going to be looked at very, very closely, as i mentioned, our best information is that he's being held actually in a prison at the zurich airport. no word when he could be headed to the states and it's
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our understanding the laws regarding extradition can be played a bit by the lawyers and there could be a bit of back and forth on that. the thinking, why in switzerland, why now? a couple of people mentioned that-- reminded me that switzerland is under a lot of heat now from the u.s. regarding its tax haven status so they might be trying to get in good with the u.s. and finally, ironically, guys, this past year is the year that roman polanski was trying to get his decision, his guilty verdict overturned by his own lawyers back in the state. but the judge, while saying that the case was questionable, said that he would have to return to the states to address that appeal. he might get that returnments greg palkot live for us this morning in london and there's so much more about the case, remember shall 2003 he won the academy award for the pianist. he didn't come back. half of the audience standing
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up and applauding and half not applauding at all in sort of quiet protest. >> it was a pretty amazing morning. >> janine pirro is going to be here and she is going to weigh in on the legal aspects on the case in just a bit. >> meanwhile, in other headlines this morning, three more guantanamo bay detainees now transferred out of the u.s. prison in cuba. the department of justice says that two went to ireland and the third released to the native country of yemen and the transfer closer to the president's goals of closing the detention facility. also an amber alert out for a 13-year-old girl from kentucky. haley was reportedly abducted early yesterday morning and might be in serious danger right now. police say that girl received a text message from the suspect, archie whalen. they're believed to be traveling in a red chevy silverado with maine license plates and might be on the way to maine, new york or possibly florida. if you have any information, please contact the number on
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your screen. there it is, at the bottom of your screen, 270 number. or of course always call 911. more than 600 friend and family gathered to say their final goodbyes at a funeral mass for murdered yale student, university graduate student annie le. including her fiance. the two were supposed to be married days after her body was found. called her the most wonderful girl that god ever sent her. domenica, i was out with friend and talking about the weather in atlanta. noi, isn't it crazy? >> gosh. >> over 20 inches of rain and that's certainly caused some problems out there. cobb county have been hit the worst around the atlanta area, not just atlanta, but alabama as well, but check out what's been going on in atlanta and you can see that that massive sinkhole and that's what happens when you have weeks of rain and over 20 inches. so, that's at a major intersection. police had to block it off. >> yeah. but you know, some creep
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actually moved the cone and motorists drove into the gaping hole and thankfully only minor injuries with that one. good news, look at the radar, atlanta, the rain is gone. gone from the south, and it's now moving out and this will begin the drying period that we are going to see into next week. so that's great for the next five to seven days we have dry weather in the forecast. unfortunately that's not the case so as you move further north it going to be soggy in new england from the mid atlantic up and back to the great lakes and ohio valley, where we could have some scattered showers and thunderstorms for your sunday. if we do see any severe weather, it's going to be back by the great lakes and we could even see that through northern parts of ohio and indiana. could get a few rough thunderstorms that move by this afternoonment other than that, look at the temperatures here, they're not bad. we have 65 for the high in new york, 74 norfolk, where the rain is, temperatures are pretty much going to stay steady from where they are this morning so we're coming
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in in the 60's through many part of the northeast and stay that through your sunday, rain on and off throughout the day, but much cooler air will be ushering in from canada by the end of the week and to the west, this is the last real hot day in los angeles. they're going to have cooler air move in for the rest of the work week as well so that's some good news with the firefighting out there although the santa ana wind will ten through thursday. that's the latest from here. thank you, domenica. >> thank you. we're looking at video yesterday, last night i was working and there was video of the atlanta area, the house flooded on the bottom and on top, it was on fire. you know, it's a bad day when your house is like flooded and burning. a terrible video. >> you know it's a good day when you get to go to the movies and that's, we're talking this morning about movies and i know, dave, you don't get to go see the movies because of kids. >> i don't. >> and every time i go to the movies, rotten tomatoes.com. it's user generated and the
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worst movies of all time. >> who need the best. >> the worst movies of the last ten years and here they are from five to one. national lampoon's gold diggers. king's ransom. >> there is gold diggers. >> there is gold diggers, national lampoon's flick. unfortunately it brings down the name, doesn't it? >> look at that. >> and back to the list. >> pinochio is on the list. >> it's a live, it's a live-- >> and then one missed call. clayton you've heard of that. my sister loves terrible, terrible cheesy movies, terrible horror movies and that's one of those. >> number one undisclosed, perfect rating ballistic ex versus sever. and lucy lui and antonio bandaras, unfortunately the worst film in the last ten years. >> any sound on this. >> they were listening to
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burning flames. >> that's what the movie was. >>, but we had a bunch of people weigh in and overwhelmingly i have to say of all the people that wrote to me clayton morris on twitter. battlefield earth. >> melissa moore. >> a terrible john travolta movie. with the terrible biodome. that was bad. >> roger marion on face book, glitter. >> that was the flick with the singer, mariah carey, right, wasn't that mariah carey's movie? >> what about gigli. >> what was the ben stiller. >> dodge ball. >> dodge ball. >> that was hilarious! >> dave has patience for movies like that, but when it comes to movies like academy award winning films, english patient. >> this was me. >> elaine, i hope you're watching the close because i
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can't take my eyes off the passion. >> no, i can't do this anymore. i can't. it's too long. quit telling your stupid story about the stupid desert and just die already! die! >> shhhh! >> elaine, you don't like the movie. >> i hate it! >> that was based on me shall i was literally was sitting at the movie on my hand, just die, i know english patient is supposed to be a good movie. i can't stand it. >> i feel the say way about "out of after ka", the same director. >> that was a great one. >> friend@foxnews.com, clayton morris the twitter, and dave briggs at twitter as well. coming up on the show, if you have great health insurance you probably work hard for it, right? nancy pelosi wants those benefits to be taxed in order
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it pay for the house's version of the reform bill. >> more taxes. michael moore aiming his lens at a new subject, capitalism. john telling us where moore is off base coming up next. (announcer) your doctor knows tylenol doesn't interfere with certain high blood pressure medicines the way aleve metimes can. that's one reason why doctors recommend tylenol more than any other brand of pain reliever.
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she wants to punish people who have really good benefits in order to pay for the house's version of health care reform. here to weigh in is jonathan hoenig from capitalist pig asset management. good to see you. >> good morning, dave, thank you. >> first tell me what are cadillac plans and who holds these policies? >> well, everyone from well-to-do ceo's, even to folks on the union lines. union members. but the heart of spoker pelosi's plan, dave, is simply redistribution of wealth and she seems to believe that your earnings, whether it's, you know, cash in your pocket or a health plan that's part of your compensation are really not yours and that you owe society and that it's her job eventually to redistribute that wealth in a manner which she deems to be more appropriate. it's essentially the willy sutton health care in america. they're going where the money is, regardless whether it's wealthy people, union people
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wherever they can find it. >> and within their own party they might be hurting some of their backers as in some of the union folks, right? >> they're hurting health care in america. the notion that health care is a right. what is a right? a right is a right to an action. it's not a freebie from someone else. when speaker pelosi is so eager it give people heb, what she forgets is that that health care must actually be created and produced by other folks, and now what, i'm sorry, but all i eat is salads and vitamins, i work out five times a week, why am i all of a sudden responsible for the health care of a three pack a day smoker who hasn't moved from the couch in 20 years? that's exactly the type of entitlement system that speak pelosi is going to build. it might start with a cadillac plan, but it's going to trickle down and make the system worse for anybody. >> jonathan, if i remember correctly, isn't the exact thing that mr. obama hammered john mccain proposed during
quote
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the campaign, taxing health berths. indeed, you're right. unfortunately it further distorts the last vestige what used to be a free market in this country pt even as it is now, government accounts for 50% of all health care spending in this country. that's why, it's not the greedy pharmaceutical companies and greedy insurance companies, it's the fact that government is such a large player in health care and most of the plans coming from the democrats right now that further distorts what should be a free market force, is pushing up prices for everybody. >> got to leave it there. more with mr. hoenig in a moment. including what he thinks about film maker michael moore's latest target, capitalism. got to hear that. plus now details in the terror bomb plot. it apparently began with a shopping trip for beauty supplies. we'll explain what happens next for the suspect. [ woman ] dear cat. gentle cat.
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>> all right. welcome back here to the show. liberal film maker michael moore is at it again. this time making headline with "capitalism, a love story", replacement of america's capitalism system with socialist and communist ideas. take a look. >> got to be some kind of a rebellion between the people that have nothing and the people that got it all. >> everything is being handled by the treasury secretary from goldman sachs. they had congress right where they wanted them. >> this was almost like an intelligence operation. >> this is straight up capitalism. >> where is our money? >> i don't know. >> jonathan hoenig is back and he says moore is way off base here, that's a shock. hey, jonathan, nice to see you. hey, clayton, good to see you as well. i don't think that michael moore really knows what capitalism is. frankly he's holding the
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bailout culture out as an example of what capitalism is. that's not capitalism at all and many of us on fbn the last couple of years have advocated against all of this bailout. frankly, i think that moore is ignorant as to what actually capitalism is. >> one point that he makes in the film. let's go through some of the other ones here and have you comment on them. he promotes socialist and communist ideals in advocating a sharing of the wealth. that's his system, what he wants. he says at that capitalism has failed. what say you? >> well, look, let's look at just any historical example, clayton. for as much as moore seems to hate capitalism. produced even for the poor in the country shall the greatest exspans of wealth and prosperity in man's history. why poor people in the country are fat and not starving in the streets like they are in north korea, cuba and china, so you know, say what you want, but capitalism protects the individual's right to live his or her own right and allows them in many cases to
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be very successful doing it. what moore has against that, i just don't understand. >> i don't understand, here is a guy, too, from flint, michigan, who lived the american dream, really. decided he was going to become a documentary film maker, makes a movie about flint, michigan and end up now sitting with millions of dollars in his pocket. would that happen in social list or communist country? >> that's a great point. moore seems to want everyone to work for the common sood and socialism is a society where property rights are abolished and seeing where the health care debate is a benefit for the public good. would moore be loving socialism if people came along and said, you know, you can't make movies about flint, michigan or about whatever want to make it, here are the movies we want you to make and that's essentially the elimination of private property that moore is advocating. and i tell you, clayton shall the guy who works, the man or woman who works and doesn't get to keep the benefits of their work, who doesn't
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actually get to keep the proceeds of their labor, that's simply, that's a slave and that's what moore is advocating in this latest film. >> yeah, there's many other points that he makes in here as well. jonathan hoenig, as always, great to see you. >> thank you. >> well, let's talk to ainsley for breaking news. >> it's a lot of fun. about why famed film director roman polanski was taken into custody and you might say it got a-- got creepy i should say for the pope when you're speaking of prague. we'll show you next. there was a time i wouldn't step out of the house
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>> welcome back here to "fox & friends." it's time for your shot of the morning. look at this, meet the world's tallest house cat. her name is scarlet magic. >> looks like a cheetah. >> and her breed is a savannah cat. a cross between a house cat and an african cat. how tall, i heard you ask that question. >> 17 inches. >> that tall. >> look at that, scarlet's magic lives with owners in california and submitted into the guinness book of world records. >> i don't think that's a house cat. i think that's a-- >> a wild cat. >> should be in the zoo. >> you top that with your headlines? >> yeah, tell you about the headlines. you need to talk about something else. >> is there a cat loose in here? sound like it.
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who is that? let me tell you about the headlines this morning and what you missed overnight. beginning with new information on that terror plot that stretched from colorado to new york city, it looks like it was the unusual shopping sprees by najibullah zazi that led to his assess, stocking up on hydrogen and acetone and he opened up dozens of credits cards last year. he took a flight to pakistan presumably for a camp. and purchases at macy's, radio shack, best buy before declaring bankruptcy with 50,000 in credit card debt. a car bomb explodes right near afghanistan's energy minister. he survives and four civilians were killed, including a child. 17 others were injured. the taliban's intensified attacks of senior officials in the last month.
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bruce springsteen's underneath the microphone. the boss has a bunch of scholars around the world digesting his tunes and just think, springsteen is the one who says he learned more from a three minute record than he ever learned in school. the symposium was brought about in celebration of springsteen's 60th birthday. >> all right. over to domenica for the weather. >> hey, girls, we're looking at chilly temperatures this morning. especially through the internor parts of nuclear and maine is looking for frost and freeze advisory and elsewhere we have rains to talk about where the temperatures are holding steady in the 60's overnight from the great lakes over to the northeast and that's where we are going to see the rain for your sunday and could even have a few scattered showers and thunderstorms. some severe weather would be possible today through the great lakes and the ohio valley, but really, what you see right along the east coast right now, there's just going to be some on and off showers unfortunately throughout your day. that could bring anywhere from an inch to even two inches of rain by monday. can't rule that out.
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now, take a look at today's highs. what we have here are fairly decent temperatures, they're average temperatures, notice the 69 degrees in minneapolis today. we have a-- some cold air coming in from kansas that's really going to start to seep into the great lakes in the east through the week and it drops tomorrow to 57 degrees and then that cool air is going to move through the midwest. and the northeast by the middle of the week. so, we're looking at some really chilly temperatures, as we get into wednesday and thursday for the eastern half of the country. guys. >> all right, thank you so much, domenica. as you know, it is tradition here on "fox & friends" that on an intern's last day they steal mine and brian's role reading sports. and today, one of our favorite interns around here. >> hi. >> i don't know what we'll do without her. >> have you had fun what have you learned. >> what haven't i learned, everything, this has been the most fulfilling experience. >> we certainly will miss you.
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>> one of our last interns kept interrupting her. >> dave interrupting, i don't mind. >> we'll see if you can do it flawlessly so dave doesn't have to interrupt. it's time for sports, here she is. >> take an away. >> go ahead. >> a scary moment in college football. >> over here. >> see, already. >> just kidding, just kidding, i meant to do that. >> okay. . >> check it out. florida, kentucky. >> florida, kentucky, florida winning the game in blowout fashion when the heisman winter take a monster hit from kentucky defensive end wyndham. he suffered a concussion and lay motionless on the ground for several minutes and eventually would get up. he was carted off the field and taken to a hospital where he spent the night there. there's a possibility he could play in florida next game two weeks from now. >> that was scary, wasn't it? >> yes, it was. a rainy night in state college and the hawk eye nightmare
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continues for penn state. knitney lions a quick start and he caught a 79 yard touchdown. iowa seized control in the fourth quarter and adrian clayborne blocks the punt and takes it in for a score and minutes later, i don't know who any of the people are. finds an opening and the end zone. hawkeyes peten state for the second straight year, 21-10. >> in front of 109,000 fans. >> dynamite. >> the nation's newest supreme court justice showing off her arm, sonia sotomayor threw out the first pitch at the yankees-red sox game. the bronx born sotomayor is a huge jks fan and some credit her with ending the baseball strike in 1994 by ruling in flavor of the players union. >> do you know who won that game? >> i have no idea anything about-- >> the yankees won again over dave briggs boston red sox. >> whew. >> great job. >> we'll miss you. >> thank you. are your parents watching and
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family is watching. >> i don't know didn't call them. >> we're working in television we can find a videotape. >> perfect, thank you guys for everything. >> we have to-- and we have to-- >> i'm done with that, i don't think so. >> we have to switch things here because we have janine pirro. >> thanks, guys. >> thanks, janine, thanks. >> bye (applause) >> one beautiful lady walked off and another-- >> thank you. >> hello. >> julie: naen. >> congratulations. >> i haven't seen you since your show. >> thanks to see you as well. >> great job. >> here is why we're here, she has an excellent perspective and if there's one case that we need excellent perspective on this morning it's this case. roman polanski after 31 years finally arrested in swits lapped on his way to a film festival in which he was to be honored for a lifetime achievement award. the u.s. had this arrest warrant for him since the '70s. why now? >> the irony is stunning as you well said.
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he's going tore a lifetime achievement award and may be on his way to the united states to face the music for a crime that he pled guilty to in 1978. understand, what he pled guilty to was a lesser of all the charges. he could have faced life imprisonment. i read it this morning, and he pled guilty, it was volumety admission on his part that he had a sex with a 13-year-old in a drug fueled and alcohol fueled escapade. i think what's happening now, he made a claim this year through his attorney to have the charges dismissed because he said there was some collusion between the judge and d.a., convenient because the judge is now dead. and ironically, the victim says now, you know, i don't want this publicized. i want it to go away. what they don't understand is that these charges do not go away. he's got to face the music. the judge who denied his request for dismissal says you want these charges dismissed, you come to the united states and submit yourself to our jurisdiction. >> but the extradition laws
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have to be tricky between us and switzerland i would assume? >> yes, what you've got is a lot of politics that come into play here and you know, which is really the answer to your original question. why hasn't he been brought back to the united states? i mean, sometimes it's the government, the state department saying we want this guy or we don't or switzerland saying we want to do a solid for the united states and they wouldn't get something from them. it's curious. >> by pleading guilty to the lesser charge, what is going to happen if he's charged in the u.s.? >> the judge says i will not consider whether your plea was involuntary based on the fact there might have been collusion unless you subject yourself to the jurisdiction of the united states. it may or may not go away. i can't imagine that it would. i mean, even the claim is ridiculous, that, you know, it's not i didn't commit the crime, it's not it didn't happen. it's just i didn't want to go to jail so i took off. >> one final question we remember in 2003, the victim in the rape case came out when he was about to win the academy award for the pine
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pine noist. >> she didn't say that it didn't happen. she said i forgive him. that's part of her therapist or whatever she's going through. the bottom line, the charges or the people of the state of california against a pedophile. it's got nothing to do with her concerns, however many years later, 32. >> got to ask you about the next story, west really gripped the country, about carolyn savage implanted with the wrong embryo and she gave birth to a baby boy on friday. now, one would assume she has one heck after lawsuit against the clinic, who she has not named. we do not know the clinic that implanted the wrong embryo, but what are her legal options receipt now which appear endless? >> well, lawsuit, lawsuit, lawsuit. i mean, medical malpractice, breach of protocol. whatever you're dealing with in vitro fertilization, what you've got is always the possibility of implanting someone else's embryo in your womb. this woman is a class act. she realized early on, it
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wasn't her embryo and she decided to go through the pregnancy, when she could have aborted. she decided to call when she had the baby shall the parents and say, congratulations, you've had a son. but how do you quantify going through nine months of pregnancy and i've done it twice, and then going through labor and say, gee to the center that implanted her, i forgive you. that's not going to happen. nor should it. when there's a breach of protocol in this scenario where the utmost, you know, protocol should be followed, she not only has a right to sue, she should sue. >> the silver lining, she does have three other children, but i'm being told she cannot have anymore kids. >> right, right. that's what happens here, it's costly, emotionally costly. she went through this in the hopes of having another child. she didn't, she literally gave birth and gave the baby to the natural mother. >> wow. >> i mean, how can you quantify that? >> janine, stick around. maybe i can watch this in the green room coming up. we've got a story coming up. i want your perspective on
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this. a new iphone app called date check. you're on a date, it's a sleaze detector. >> we need that in new york city, don't we. >> definitely. >> and find out if the guy is a sex offender. would this save awe lot of time as a judge. >> and find out other things, too, you can find out other things as well. >> like if he lives with his parents. >> right, right. >> or you know, whether he's got, you know, records, convictions or theft or any stuff. whether he's done some scams. i think it's important, i think every woman should have this app. >> that means they can find out your information, too, your address. >> well, you know what, you can find out that addresses no problems. >> that app coming up just after the break. it's called date check. we're going to tell you what you can look out for on your iphone coming up. >> bicycle, i've missed you. gathering dust, as pollen floats through the air. but with the strength of zyrtec ® , the fastest, 24-hour allergy relief, i promise not to wait as long to go for our ride.
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for single ladies or mothers worried about. >> all the single ladies. >> worried about their daughters going out on dates with people they hardly know. there's a brand new free iphone application called date check. it lets you do an instant background check to find out if you're seeing mr. sleaze or mr. right. >> well, here to tell us how it all works is susan, chief marketing officer of intel. >> us. this is awesome, if you're single in new york, a great app. great app for anyone. tell us about it. >> what it does when you're on the go, in a bar, anywhere, all you need is one piece of information, their name, e-mail or phone number and with that, we can do an instant check and get a lot of information for free right up front. >> so let me hold this up here. this is your iphone. and you download the app called date check, it right here, i'm going to launch it here and your a going to walk us through. you plug in the phone number we are not going to do.
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we've already looked up some people here, we've looked up myself, and you looked me up. >> yeah. >> clayton benjamin morris and shows where i live, it shows an old place where i lived. now, where is it pulling the information from. >> from public records. there's about 20 billion pieces of information out there on all kinds, all the americans and we do is bee basically analyze 20 billion records and bring it down to the individual level. so we found your old address, for some reason in the most recent public data we haven't been able to find your current address. >> that's probably smart because it's unlisted because i'm in the witness protection program. so let's go into sleaze detector, that's another thing on here. and ainsley was curious about this. we looked this up for dave briggs as well and surprise today live like 24 criminal records, i don't understand. 24 cyclical records. >> i knew it. >> in the screening, doing a check. >> ainsley you're out at a bar
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and you meet a nice guy and what do you do with this information. >> you run the other way. >> if i looked you up, if you follow up and you actually go in and the address and age. a common name like john smith there are going to be a lot of records, but as you can see, we can track it, if the person lived in multiple states and multiple criminal records. >> i know we're kind of joking, but important from a sexual offender eto learn if they have a criminal past and the phone number, learn their age. if they're telling you i'm 30. it says 39 here. >> or telling us during the commercial break, tell us the story with meeting with the ladies and what what they found out. >> we did a pilot in new york, and they had never met before and try out the app and actually get the chance to get the full reports which are 39.95 and they went crazy, it was like being in a sorority house and they never met and screaming because one of the ladies is saying, oh, my god, he was married! >> i knew he was married, i knew it. >> here it says, date check
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users can rate their prospects. now, this sounds, i have a problem from this from a guy perspective. you can rate their prospects so people can also take photos. and add photos of the guy. >> and-- >> and about the guys they dated and who is your favorite. >> we added fun things, rate them on a five point scale, instead of stars, we have lips. >> how can people find it. on our website, www.intelius. we will have it on iphone, android and blackberry. >> susan, the iphone app is called date check and get that on the blackberry and ancillary devices. i'll look up more on dave briggs. >> i've already looked him up, seven convictions in the state of texas. and coming up, the man with his finger on the pulse of the nation, polster frank luntz says that americans are angrier than ever. we're not angry this morning. there's frank, we'll find out
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>> welcome back here to "fox & friends." >> are you dancing? >> i'm using equipment as ottomans. check this out. we're on pope watch this morning because pope benedict is in the czech republic. look carefully at his left shoulder. that teenie winy spider made itself at home on the pontiff's robe. it didn't leave him alone and kept coming back until he swoted it away. can you imagine, that thing was actually pretty huge and we don't know if it was poisonous or not. we are on pope watch. >> i'm going to be looking in
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the couch pillows freaking out the rest of the show. i don't know how he did it. thank you, clayton. americans are mad as heck and they're not going to take it anymore, that's the latest finding by the man with his finger on the pulse of america, that's what we say about fox news political analyst frank luntz, the author of a new book "what americans really want, really" which hit the new york times best seller list in the first week of release. currently ranks. >> where. >> 23. >> number 23, nice debut. good to see you here, frank, so, people are angry. what are the numbers that are telling you this. >> they're mad as hell and you can see hell on television. >> okay. >> 72% of americans, almost three out of four, use that phrase from the movie "network" i'm mad as hell, not going to take it anymore. 57% believe that the country that their children will herit will be worse than there and 33% believe their children will have a better quality of life. we see this intergenerational
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collapse and lose our faith in the future and that's what makes us so angry. >> all right, 72% mad as hell and not going to take it anymore, end quote. what are they mad at? >> they're mad at washington. they believe there's no accountability, they're mad at wall street and they believe there's no respect for the hard working men and women and mad at hollywood for the courses of the culture and what i've tried to do. i've tried to give answers for the business elite so this they can relate much more to their employees, by the way, in here are three phrases you need to never say, not to get fired. in terms of politics, i tried to give the politicians ways to reconnect with voters. number one, don't cancel a town hall meeting. don't cancel a town hall meeting. let the public yell at you and for people who would read this, this is the script of what to say and how to say it in the workplace, in politics, in religion, in retirement, how to communicate to your kids. the problem is, our language has become so coarse. we don't know what to say to
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the boss to get the raise. what to say it a pastor or a rabbi with yom kippur coming up, to connect spiritually and that's what i've tried to do here. >> i can find out how to ask my boss for a raise in this book? >> yes. >> i'm definitely going buy it now. how do you channel the anger. you want to do that for something positive. >> you should speak up. the anger should not be kept inside or at home. you have the right to raise your concerns at the work place and in politics and then the second thing, you have to do it effectively. it's not what you say that matters, it's what people hear. and too much of the phraseology that i'm hearing when people are angry, comes across as divisive and abusive, rather than informative and effective. >> got it. thank you, frank luntz. the book is "what americans really want really" number 23 on the new york times best seller list. and got out and coming up on the show. >> good deal, hey, yes, some
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patients out there really scared about the swine flu vaccine and we are going to tell you why many are them are deciding not to vaccinate their kids. >> and also this morning, "saturday night live" back, if you fell asleep last night and weren't up until 11:30. we'll show you their take on one of the biggest stories of the week. here is a sneak preview for you. >> the computer with my speech crashed. i had to write one at the last minute on loose leaf paper. and that made me crazy. >> much murray straight ahead. >> much murray straight ahead. cr captioned by closed captioning services, inc. essure medicines the way aleve sometimes can. that's one reason why doctors recommend tylenol more than any other brand of pain reliever.
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>> good morning to you, we're having fun, sunday, september 27th, and here's what is happening right now. you were seeing -- you a seeing the first video of iran's latest missile launches, news agency claims it fired two short range missiles, one of two -- is this the video of them firing the missiles?
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i guess it is, i am being told it is, now plans to test a longer one tomorrow, and capable of reaching israel, we'll talk about that. >> dave: and the top commander in afghanistan says he needs more troops to fight the taliban. but, the president says he is thinking this one over. more on that, rift, state ready. >> clayton: the school under scrutiny for making kids sing president obama's praises, an example of the radical left trying to transform america, is he right, our slogan from dan, three on the couch and one on her feet, "fox and friends" cannot be beat. the one on her feet, is comment ka. >> time to get up with fox and friend, safe, natural rand effective. is it natural. >> natural, safe and effective. >> dave: sometimes it's not 100% natural. are you asking the guy that said that off camera there? good morning to you, dave
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briggs, clayton morris and ainsley in for alisyn and glad you started your sunday with us. >> clayton: i have to address this, alisyn, ainsley or alisyn, why do you sit so close to them, because i have to move over this way -- >> dave: why would i not. >> clayton: alisyn calls it the muffin top chair, you sit to the side, it is awkward. that is why i'm sitting closely. >> dave: that's why? nice try. nobody is buying that. >> this is a hard seat to sis in. i remember when i used to do headlines for the show, you sit on the edge, you look like the giant. >> clayton: this is a tip in a new book, how to choose the right women and to sit next to them, you might get in sight and we'll talk to an author who uses sports analogies to help men pick this right women. >> julie: the author's name appropriately enough, jack daniels and our top story this morning, in iran, two short range missiles fired over the weekend. over on saturday, and this is the same -- at the same time as the whole world is up in arms
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over the secret nuclear facility, that mahmoud ahmadinejad did acknowledge, and here in new york and the missiles, what they are calling war games, reported by state tv in the new video just into fox news. clearly, sending a message on the iranians, and they say they could go on for the next 10 to 11 days. >> clayton: we are actually seeing real video this time as opposed to photographs, of course we all remember those reconstructed photos they sent out the last time, they tested these short range -- long range ballistic missiles, tried to test fire and they doctored them by adding extra missiles to it because some of them failed and those, apparently successful and dave as you pointed out, going to be launching one that could reach israel and this is the satellite imagery that made news of the second nuclear site. in the city of koum, the second
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most holy, sacred city in iran and is under lock and key and iranian republican guards locking it and iran says it is for peaceful purposes. for energy purposes. but, we have got it locked down with republican guard just in case. >> and yesterday they announced the iranian leaders said yes, we'll let the u.n. investigators come in and take a look inside to see we truly are doing this for energy purposes. for clean and peaceful reasons. but, you know, america, american leaders as well as our allies which include britain, france, germany, china and russia say not so fast, we are skeptical here and we are calling a meeting, and meeting in geneva, october 1st and will talk about this with iranian leaders and then try and figure out a date as to when we can go in and look inside the facility. >> dave: the u.s. along with the allies demand, quote, unfettered access to that facility. within just a couple of weeks. so we should know soon if this
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is in fact for peaceful means and what the united states plans to do about it, if it's not. sanctions to be -- is there military oil or sanctions related to oil. >> clayton: and also, another development, we are following this story, whether president obama will grant his top generals urgent request for more troops in afghanistan, caroline shivley live with more details, in washington on this publicly issue. good morning. >> reporter: good morning, to you, clayton, general stanley mcchrystal's report, an urgent request for more troops in afghanistan, is now in the hands of pentagon officials and he submitted it yesterday, but the pentagon is holding on to it until president obama figures out what overall strategy he wants for the war. mcchrystal's report asks for reinforcements, potentially up to 40,000, on top of the 63,000 americans already there. mcchrystal wrote his mission would likely fail out them and republicans criticized any potential delay saying the time to act is now, before the taliban grows stronger but a
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"gallup poll" shows 50% of americans are opposed to sending more troops and the "washington post" reports the president scheduled at least five meetings with the national security team to reexamine the strategy in afghanistan, and pakistan as well. and there is no deadline for decision and last week the president referred to himself as a skeptical audience for the case of send in additional u.s. forces. back to you guys. >> clayton: thanks, caroline live in washington, tracking the developing story. >> dave: we talk about this a lot, we wonder, does mccristsal stand by now that he is being defied, and what do gates and the rest of them do, fall line. >> clayton: and it's interesting to see the blogs, many believe the memo was leaked ahead of time and would that not be a smart move and puts mcchrystal out unfront and lays the groundwork for what the generals want and the obama administration can say, i have to go along with it or they'll have to -- will have to charge with the new direction. >> dave: and that may happen the next couple of weeks.
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>> and it will take six years to, you know... all right, the headlines, what you missed slightly you were sleeping and breaking news, famous director, roman polanski is held by police in switzerland in connection with the u.s. arrest warrant which dates back more than 30 years and he was picked up right before the start of the zurich film festival and the u.s. considers him a fugitive because he did leave our country, after pleading guilty to having sex with a 13-year-old girl. back in 1977. and he fled before his sentencing in california. and never came back. well, he now wants a judge to reconsider his case and the judge says, polanski must return to the u.s. to get a hearing on his request. president obama continuing his push for health care reform and this time a speech at the congressional black caucus dinner last night and saying, time is running out. >>. >> president barack obama: now this is time to offer stability and security to americans who have insurance, now this is time to make it affordable for those
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who don't have health insurance, now is the time to slow the growth of health care costs for our families and business, and our government. >> despite the task at hand they seemed to enjoy themselves, and waving to the crowd add then dancing off the stage together and several thousand people turned out for that event. also, some tragic news to report, the husband of new york democratic congresswoman carolyn maloney died while mountain climbing in the himalaya, clifton maloney was heading back to base camp after reaching the summit and died of natural causes and the congresswoman was here in new york at the time, at her home here, and secretary of state hillary clinton asked the chinese government to return his body, to the u.s. now, we'll hand it over domenica. who is filling in for rick this morning. with our forecast. hello. >> the south is drying out and all the rain pushed off to the east and it will be a little bit of a soggy day, from new england down to the mid at lark and back through the great lakes.
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because, that is where we'll have scattered showers, and thunderstorms, and really, the majority of the day, the better part of day could see 1-2 inches of rain that will come down from the ohio valley and push off through new england and cold temperatures in new england now, maine has frost and freeze advisories and those will likely go -- are going to continue right into our work week. guys? >> thanks so much, domenica. well, if you were sleeping last night and didn't get a chance to stay up to 11:30, nearly midnight to watch "saturday night live," it is back and they did a great job during the election season, pointing out the irony of the candidates throughout the campaign. and this week of course a lot of headlines, and gadhafi. >> dave: this is comedy gold, gadhafi, of course spoke for 96 minutes, at the u.n. the other day, and gave "saturday night live" plenty of material, here's what they did: >> hello.
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i'm here today to apologize for my speech on wednesday. it was so long and rambling and didn't make any sense. i watched the tape of it and i was like, who is that guy! for those of you who don't know, when i travel i have a large tent, that i like to bring with me. for this, i am scorned as some kind of weirdo. despite my high diplomatic station my tent and i were turned away by central park, westchester county and worst of also inglewood, new jersey and the computer with my speech crashed and i had to write one at the last minute on loose leaf paper. and that may be the... [laughter]. >> it is crushing, as i had written my speech here instead of watching the in flight movie, "taken" starring liam neeson. >> clayton: if you missed his speech, it was a treat, the
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translator who did the translating, the real one at one point got so fed up, he said i can't take it any more. i can't take it anymore and one thing he talked about in the speech, he talked about jps. >> dav -- gps. >> and imagine translating a speech for an hour-and-a-half. >> dave: the longest ever u.n. speech, castro spoke for four-and-a-half hours, at one point. >> dave: trying to be defiant by giving the speech. >> dave: coming up, democrats vying with republicans to win back seniors, scared medicare is not scaffe under health care reform, and details on the wrangling on capitol hill and the info your elderly relatives need to know. >> and parents putting the brakes on vaccinating their children against the swine flu. is that a good idea? we'll talk about it, coming up next. geatmagi reen f a..
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>> clayton: welcome back to "fox and friends," democrats on the fencive, trying to -- defensive, trying to ease the fear of medicare being cut under potential health care reform and they president talked about it, in his joint session of congress address and new polls this morning show the important demographics, the seniors, largely against the party's plans, and fox news contributor monica crowley is here and tara daradell, a democratic political consultant. welcome to you, monica, 15% in the new poll out, say -- 15% of seniors, believe only -- only believe it would make medicare better or health care better with the cut. 15% and not exactly a good number. >> i'm surprised it is as high as 15%, because when you look at
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the numbers, that he democrats are talking -- and these are democrats, now, are talking about killing 500 billion dollars out of medicare, the cuts are extremely steep and seniors know this and also know this is just the beginning. so when they talk about these kind of cuts to medicare, and also, to medicaid, but primarily when talking about the elderly, medicare and it is that's dra doing it and they know steeper cuts are coming along. >> clayton: and do the democrats -- did they learn something from george w. bush, going after social security and seniors pounced on it and said republicans are trying to get rid of social security and republicans are doing the same thing and democrats have to backtrack now. >> they are not trying to get rid of medicare. first of all, the funding in all of the different health reform bills the democrats sponsored, they are funding to allow the closure of the doughnut hole as it is called for prescription drugs, to actually bring it to a close and it will start off by saving seniors, actually $1700,
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on average, for their prescription drugs pills, a year. >> clayton: are republicans doing something trick. >> chris: though, monica, let's be honest and suddenly they are champions of medicare and anyone who knows history knows they fought against it tooth and nail and harry truman introduced it and it took 20 years until lbj approved it and truman became the first person on mac and republicans have not been a fan of this, it seems as if they now are. >> the democrats, though, to go ahead and try to put these huge cuts in place, the republicans are saying, wait a minute. we have been accused all of these years, talk about social security reform and in the '80s and '90s and wanting to throw grandma in this snow and the democrats will be throwing grandma in them snow, and here's why. it is not just the medicare cuts, rationing will be -- >> no. >> a cons kweequence of obama c you cannot matriculate between 30 and 47 million, into the health care system without adding new doctors and the folks who will bear the brunt of
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reduced care and reduced access and rationing are going to be the elderly. >> clayton: tara, rationing. >> i have to disagree and people saying they don't get health care because of being victims of domestic violence and firefighters and police officers, some insurance companies refuse to cover them and we have rationing and -- i feel like i'm in the twilight zone, democrats have been champions of medicare for years and under a democratic president who fought tooth and nail that, medicare even became a reality -- >> why are the democrats now, tara, saying they want a half a trillion dollars in cuts. >> that they are -- >> they are trying to eliminate the fraud, and there is a lot of fraud and with technology it can be addressed -- >> do democrats care about eliminating waste, fraud and abuse to pay for the health care boondoggle why haven't they eliminated the waste already. >> clayton: we have to leave it
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there. we have to leave it there. >> we're working on it. >> clayton: good debate and the wrangling continues on capitol hill, monica, great to see you both, monica, tara, will stick around, many americans are angry over one element, the schools ode to obama, you have to talk about this, including r.n.c. chair michael steele has strong words for the school officials, and compares them to stalin and kim jong-il, our fair and balanced debate, continues right after the break, and what all men needed to know, when it comes to choosing the right woman, our next guest says it is a lot like sports, from the twilight zone. >> tara and i are paying for that! ree r thevla
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boss: come on in, i had some other things you can tell people about geico - great claims service and a 97% customer satisfaction rate. show people really trust us. gecko: yeah right, that makes sense. boss: trust is key when talking about geico. you gotta feel it. why don't you and i practice that with a little exercise where i fall backwards and you catch me. gecko: uh no sir, honestly... uh...i don't think...uh... boss: no, no. we can do this. gecko: oh dear. vo: geico. fifteen minutes could save you 15% or more on car insurance. you weren't always my favorite day. with all the pet hair in the air, i'd spend class preoccupied, bothered by itchy eyes. but now i have new zyrtec® itchy eye drops. it works fast, with just one drop, to relieve my itchy eyes from allergies for up to 12 hours. no other allergy itchy eye drop works faster or longer. which is good, 'cause there's a lotta paws to shake.
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>> ♪ ♪ hello, mr. president we honor you today...♪ >> dave: schoolchildren sing and praising president obama, and it didn't anger parents, it also got the attention of michael steele and he is not mincing words. look at what he had to say in a fund-raising e-mail, quoted, this is the type of propaganda you would see install lynn's russia or kim jong-il's north korea. i never thought the day would come when i would see it here, this is the type of fanaticism republicans are up against as we fight to stop the obama democrats' radical leftist transformation of america. i'm joined by fox news contributor monica crowley and tara... democratic political consultants, pretty stinging words from the r.n.c. chair, tara, what do you think. >> i feel like i'm in the
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twilight zone, to go from obviously the teacher crossed the line in terms of this, having the kids sing in the -- as part of her lesson but to take it to the level of nazi germany or stalin or kim jong-il is ridiculous and out ranges and clearly, he is trying to play the outrage card in order to raise more money and i think it is transparent and to say that the president, who passed the pay equity act is the same as a dictator, i think is more than a stretch, beyond a stretch. >> dave: mon car, the indoctrinating of the most impressionable members of our society. is that how you see it. >> here's the problem, we are talking about very, very young children, we are not talking about mature minds who can engage in critical thinking about the president and make their own decisions, so, when i state, i thought it is indoctrination, straight up but the problem is that it seems like it is an orchestrated attempt and i'm not saying the teacher was part of it but what we saw was the department of education, memorandum to teachers, when obama was coming out the first day of school and the speech was totally fine and
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that wasn't the problem. the problem is, it seems like it is an administration-wide attempt to get to kids early, and here's the point. it is not about the president per se. it is about what they are telling kids to do, which is allegiance to the man rather than allegiance to the office of the presidency or alleges -- >> dave: let me ask you about something. what do you think about the fact in 2006, kids sang about president bush, and fema's response to hurricane katrina, you feel the same way about that. >> here's the problem with that. fema? and hurricane katrina? >> dave: but are you okay with that. >> look, here's the problem. if these kids were singing about president bush after 9/11, or even singing about the bush tax cuts, now, that would have been one thing but the response to hurricane katrina, was a little -- listen, my problem is that with any very young kids, when they are taught allegiance to the specific man rather than the office of the country, that is the problem. >> dave: and this is the
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question, if it were your kids would you want them singing about a sitting president, say it were president bush, would you be okay. >> my issue, my issue is that the way it is being portrayed. it is portrayed as if there is a grand conspiracy, when that is not the case and what the teacher did crossed the line in both instances with the seingin about president bush and president obama and my issue is to make it into a fascist regime, to impress the people is way over the top and unfair and gin appropriate. however, i do agree, we agree, both of those instances were not appropriate. however, again, if the character -- the characterization of this, part of what i call the nazi-obama strategy. >> dave: yeah, playing politics and we can celebrate the office of the presidency, not a current sitting president. we appreciate you both, monica and tara, good luck to you both and thanks for being here. coming up, iran putting the world on notice. new details, today's missile
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launches and plans to do even more testing, in the week to come. plus, a senior who -- authorities looking for the woman they call the grandma bandit, don't let her get away, coming right back. but now i have new zyrtec® itchy eye drops. no other allergy itchy eye drop works faster or longer. zyrtec® itchy eye drops work fast i can love the air™. (announcer) find it in the allergy aisle.
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some people like to pretend... a flood could never happen to them... and that their homeowners insurance... protects them. it doesn't. stop pretending. it can happen to you. protect your home with flood insurance. call the number on your screen... for your free brochure. >> dave: what's going on over here? i see there is orchestration on
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the other side of the couch i'm not part of. ainsley in for alisyn -- >> you make it sound really bad. nothing is happening on this side -- >> dave: i'm just saying... some of the best fried foods from the texas state fair, we'll have them here in studio and show you what they are frying up, at the big... at at the texas state fair. >> clayton: goes perfect with our calorie restriction diet segment. >> dave: our gluten diet as well. >> i lived in texas and i gained a lot of weight when i lived there. the food is so good. >> clayton: and can i say i'm going on sometime, this is my second day in three years without coffee. >> dave: how is it going. >> clayton: terrible. i don't have the headaches, but you know, i just... i feel like i want it. red bull. >> you -- jeannine pirro filled up a cup in front of me and i wanted to grab it out of her hands, you do the headlines, i'll steal your coffee.
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>> let me tell you this headlines and what you missed while you were sleeping and we'll begin with a "fox news alert." iran test fires two short range missiles today, you broke your record, according to state tv and plans to test a controversial long range missile capable of reaching israel tomorrow and tests are only heightening tensions among nations, and, they come any days after tehran a-- only days after tehran said it is building a second uranium enrichment plant, and iran is meeting with the u.s., russia, china, france and britain later this week in geneva to discuss the nuke ambitions. also, secretary of state hillary clinton says arab leaders need to do more to get the middle east peace process going again. clinton met with arab leaders in new york and told them they should take steps to normalize relations with israel readers. -- israel, leaders from saudi arabia and kuwait and bahrain attended and 106 people, at least, dead and dramatic rescues continue in the philippines
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after a tropical storm dumped more than a month's worth of rain on the asian nation yesterday. several survivors stranded on rooftops, and waiting for help, and others, spotted clinging onto high voltage power lines. dramatic video. and a man snuck into the grizzly bear exhibit at the san francisco zoo and amazingly got out without a scratch, and the sharp shooting teen -- this jumped to action and almost immediately were able to get there. and firing a warning shot to keep the bears away and police took the 27-year-old guy, into custody, and police say he will be charged. the incident shows how the safety procedures put into place after a fatal tiger attack at the zoo in 2007 are working now. >> dave: don't try that at home. >> only an anchorman... an elderly lady at large. wanted for robbing two banks in texas. the fbi calling her "grandma bandit." and she wears a camouflage ball
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cap and if you have seen her -- have you seen the grandma, call 911, camouflage ball cap and purple shirt, complete with purple feathers and threatens to fire her gun and demands cash. and there is a $5,000 reward for any information leading to the identity and whereabouts of the woman. >> clayton: and what is great about her, the bank robberies, she does them before 5:00 p.m. >> the early bird special! >> dave: a good movie, wouldn't it, the grandma bandit? we have to talk about the iphone application, that you can use, if you are going out on a date you want to check up on who you are going out with, a new iphone app allows you to check up on them, where do they live, own their own home, have a criminal background. >> and we spoke to susan kohler, and one of the marketing people, and date check will be out in application and we asked her how it works. listen: >> when you are on the go, you
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could be in the bar, anywhere you need one piece of information, the name, their e-mail or phone number and away can do an instant check and get information for e free up front, if you follow up and go in and get more details, which address and what is his age and have a name like john smith there will be a lot of records but you can we can track it, if the person lived in multiple states and had multiple criminal records and you can find out. >> we looked up dave briggs and found like -- >> clayton: 24 criminal records. >> all in the state of texas. hanging out with grandma bandit. apparently. >> clayton: most of those are expunged, right. >> dave: i have speeding tickets... >> i'll show you how it works, on the commercial break i asked, is it really true, fit says -- because if you look up someone with a bizarre name, ainsley earnhardt, you look up a common name it will say 21 criminal
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records and then you have to pay, money, to find out the criminal records -- >> dave: if it is me. >> and once you get the list, it will say dave briggs, at this address, that address and --... >> clayton: might be 30 across the country and you have to dig deeper. >> dave: a good thing my wife didn't have it six, seven, eight years ago. >> all of those records... before you went into the criminal -- the witness protection program, so, check that out, and it is date check and available, in the app store and also for android devices and blackberries, come act. >> dave: and incorrectly identified your criminal record. 24 arrests. >> clayton: 24 criminal records. i was surprised, that many clayton morrises. >> and all of them obviously are not yours, but it had your address, your old address. >> clayton: my address and it was accurate. >> dave: sunday, it times for our nfl pick and there are glitches and this at fox news is
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another example. >> dave: stop there. >> clayton: dave did so wife dave had his wife pick, how -- 0 for 4. >> dave: she did terrible. [laughter]. >> clayton: so after week two, oh, look at that. who is that handsome man at number one? dave, how is it possible? every year, the sports guy in last place. >> dave: it's a computer glitch. >> clayton: this week, dave... >> dave: there is game i gain on you, as we move on to the next ballgame, we have denver, at oakland. rick and aly, wow, will -- that is wrong! i would never pick the raiders. i'm a denver fan, look at my cuff links, can you zoom in on the cuff links? those are denver broncos. now you can see the computer glitch that goes on here! when we do -- >> clayton: is it all computers. >> dave: orange and blue tie --
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>> clayton: why we can't have electronic voting and the cardinals. >> i'm in for aly today. >> dave: and titans at the jets, and clayton only one with the road team winning here in new york on what appears to be a rainy day. >> is the jets. the jets. i did pick the jets. >> clayton: football picks, time now, though, for fresh start. have you been looking for mrs. right? well, our next guest created a handbook for men, linking with -- excuse me, men linking women, love and dating to a universal male language, which is sports, appropriately enough. >> dave: jack daniel daniels, is the author. >> i'll never, ever be concerned about being checked by date check! >> clayton: here's the book, called "the man's handbook for choosing this right woman" and
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relationship expert jack daniels is here to talk about it. i love it. you take us and men through sports analogies, and let's be honest, we are too dumb to read something a little bit... and i dive right into this, point number one, you make, post-season analysis. what is this. >> post-season analysis, your ex became your ex for a reason and everyone knows that and if you stand in the context of a sports analogy, what do you do when you do things wrong? if you lost the championship, if you lost the game, you review the tape. right. >> clayton: don't look through with rose-colored glasses and go back and say we screwed up. >> dave: you want to remember the feeling, too, of losing the game. >> exactly what you did wrong and don't -- >> that is hard to -- creature of habit you want to go back, because you ash comfortable. >> comfortable. and our levels of comfortable -- >> dave: number 2, tryouts. how do we relate that to dating. >> tryouts is nothing more than just dating. when you think about it, if you put a team together, you need to have the ability to be able to
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say, okay. these are going to be my positions, so, from your first round draft pick, who is typically young an knicks experien-- and unexperienced, fresh out of college and -- >> clayton: no red shirted freshmen and number 3, game strategy. >> have integrity in whatever you are doing. the book is not say that you are dating -- >> say that again, please. loud and clear. >> when are doing these things, not to say we are doing all of -- dating all of these people simultaneously, it is to say we utilize relationships as a catalyst to catapult us into our true character and having the ability to have integrity, which ainsley, so modestly likes, is -- integrity is basically saying, doing the right thing, when no one is looking. >> dave: a novel idea, integrity and no substitution. >> everyone in the game and think of a basketball and you have your starting five
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positions, okay? the urge and tendency for us to substitute the six men off the bench, you know who that is the person you put in the game went one of the starters is not acting right. >> last on your list, kind of thing. >> last or first, depending on who you are. >> clayton: and finally, post-game evaluation. you have to wrap it all up and make post-game evaluations. >> yes, evaluate everything that you have done in terms of who you are, and what is going on -- >> whipping up something... >> dave: started... >> should have put that in your book. >> clayton: and you can read more about the book, the men's handbook for choosing the right woman and get it on amazon right now, is that right. >> amazon and any bookstore where they are sold, a bestseller and women lift, because they are nosey and women want to know how guys think. >> we want to know what men want. what men want out of women. >> dave: he doesn't have time for that! that is three-hour show.
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>> and goes to the manshandbook.com. >> dave: if you are a parent like me you are concerned the new swine flu vaccine might put your kids at greater risk than the actual swine flu itself, but is the fear justified? we'll talk to a doctor about that next. >> and later the kitchen, doing deep frying and we'll show you tasty texas treats. ♪ crunch time, wheat thins. you and your tasty whole grain. this can only end one way. (crunch) wheat thins. toasted. whole grain. crunch. have at it.
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>> the h1n1 vaccine is coming our way in october. but many parents, they aren't so sold on the idea of having them administered to their kids and check out the results of a study conducted by the university of michigan. asking parents whether they will vaccinate their kids, and it is broken down by race, let's look at this. all right, so this is the poll, about 1600, 1700 u.s. parents, and 50% of latinos say they'll vaccinate their kids and 38% of caucasians say they will and 30%
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of african-americans say they will and some parents fear the flu vaccine will put their kids at greater risk than the actual swine flu itself. we are wanting to know, are there -- their concerns valid, be are joined by dr. levine, a pediatrician and spokesperson for the american academy of pediatrics. thanks tor being with us. >> good morning, ainsley. >> are the concerns valid? >> i don't think so. we have a few tools to fight against the h1n1 virus. one is good hand washing and two is keepinger kids home at... excuse me -- staying home when are sick and three, vaccinating people to protect them from the virus. >> a lot of people state is new but it this is same old technology, right. >> yes. and a lot of the reason people want to withhold it from people is they fear it is new and rushing to production but we are using the same old technology we have used for years to make flu vaccine and each year the
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season seasonal flu has a new strain of virus in it and all the studies show it to be really safe. >> all this parents i talked to are scared about the side effects. are there side effects, if so, what are they. >> they are mild, redness and soreness at the site of injection and that is all we have seen and that is so much less, if you weigh the risks and the benefits, from giving the vaccine, a little redness for a day or so versus being sick or potentially dying, from the vaccine -- illness, doesn't make sense. >> did you vaccinate your kids. >> they had the seasonal flu and will get this h1n1 as soon as it is available. >> you suggest we vaccinate with the seasonal and the swine flu vaccines. >> absolutely. >> what is tamiflu, the nasal. >> it is actually a medication. that once you have the flu, you can use the -- short then duration of illness and not everybody needs it and certain people are more at risk for severe complications from the flu and they really need the tamiflu, like pregnant women if they got it an underlying
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medical conditions and are very young but a healthy adult doesn't necessarily need tamiflu and you need to discuss it with your doctor. >> every doctor i talked, to and we have talked about it on fox for a long time and all said vaccinate the kids and isn't that the natural response of a doctor. >> the doctors are scientists and we follow the science and with every decision i make and every recommendation i make, i weigh the risks and benefits and the benefits way out weigh the risks. >> good deal and are celebrities lieshti are saying don't vaccinate your kids when they are born and it could cause autism and is that unfound and are celebrities perpetuating the fear. >> in lift circumstances they are and rather than base your decisions on what a celebrity mom would do, talk to a doctor who readily looked at the research and the science and help them guide you through your decision. >> what are you hearing from your patient senators most of my patients actually are coming in for the seasonal flu vaccine and will come back for h1n1, and that makes me happy and i'm
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doing my job and people have hesitations and i really try to educate them to the best of my ability. wash your hands and stay home and get vaccinated. >> thank you so much. good to have you here. the rift over afghanistan, the top military advisors split on whether there should be more boots on the ground and we'll have the latest details coming up and you have to live a little, coming up... deep fried recipes, what is the doctor saying about that snshgs fried food, from -- fried food from texas, finger lickin' good, stay with us. [ woman ] dear cat. gentle cat. your hair mixes with pollen and dust in the air. i get congested. my eyes itch. i have to banish you to the garden. but now with zyrtec-d®,
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mcchrystal report. general stanley mcchrystal, the top commander in afghanistan, and he is asking for more troops to help push back against the taliban. president obama is said to still be mulling over his recommendations. >> and the smell of deep fried butter in the air and the sound of it, remember the last commercial... last bit we were hearing it. the annual texas state fair is officially underway. and in honor of that events we are deep frying texas favorites. >> clayton: to help us out is great scott, we appreciate it, any time we need a vat of fried oil we call in great! >> we'll start with down there at the fair they do this, which is -- >> everything at the fair, they fry everything and it just finished peanut butter and jelly was one of the mainly winners and peaches and believe it or not, 4-1, butter and cream cheese in the batter --
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>> part with pb & j. >> wonderbread, important, trim off the ends and make sure you don't go all the way with the peanut butter, a half inch from the end and put your jelly and we put it together and take the tines of a fork and you want to seal it so no crust is key here. >> so it doesn't fall out. >> clayton: like a hot pocket. >> like a ravioli. >> like a ravioli. >> and we'll put it into the egg and the recipe is on the web site. greatscottchef.com and now we have baking powder, all-purpose flour, and, sugar. and, now, we have our oil pre-heated to 350° and we'll place that in there,. >> dave: we're safe. >> and we want to fry it until it is golden brown, around a minute-and-a-half. >> clayton: this is the --
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>> this is the finished product here. >> and we have here... 4-1 cream cheese and butter. butter to cream cheese and batter similar -- this is just mixed and flour and egg milk batter from previous item, and we put black pepper in there and we -- >> clayton: a ball of butter. >> very low calorie. we have two% milk. >> pop the baby in there... >> and it is important, you want to always take care when you are frying, ep with something like butter. let it go for around 30 seconds. >> clayton: and the but your does not like oil night doesn't, any kind of fat, water, soap, even -- >> dave: a heart attack waiting to happen and clayton will try it... because he's clayton! >> clayton: and dave has been eyeing the stuff up and you sure you don't want to try one of those... >> dave: the gluten issue is not
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helping me this morning and we'll deep fry peaches, instead of taking something unhealthy like but your we'll actually fry something relatively healthy. >> put that down and you want to powder sugar it. and eat it right away. >> clayton: i do? >> it is hot. >> clayton: i can't believe i'll do this. 4-1, butter to chemo cheese and we have our fork and put our peach in our batter. >> clayton: how do they eat that in texas. can i get a piece of wonderbread to soak up the grease. >> the black pepper. >> i put it -- everything we dip, the peanut but your and jelly and add black pepper and -- >> clayton: stand by, we deep fry up more stuff, maybe a shoe... somebody will eat that, too. we'll be right back. we'll be right back breeshg. -- (announcer) your doctor knows tylenol doesn't interfere with certain high blood pressure medicines
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