tv Huckabee FOX News February 6, 2012 3:00am-4:00am EST
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have a great week. we'll see you next "fox news captioned by closed captioning services, inc. starts right now. ♪ >> tonight on huckabee. >> she's won two academy awards and nominated for a record 17. >> oh! >>. >> one of the most versatile actresses of our time talked about taking on the role of one of the the most iconic political figures of the 20th century, meryl streep joins the governor tonight. the and an inside look at president obama's reelection headquarters reveals a well oiled machine. are republicans ready to fight this battle. plus-- >> you're broke, always borrowing money. >> and i'll fit right in, won't i. >> and hair i and his friend
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walter with a special announcement. >> ladies and gentlemen, governor mike huckabee. [applaus [applause] >> thank you. thank you very much. wow, what a great audience we have here. and they have reason to be excited. welcome to huckabee, from the fox news studios in new york city, where we are celebrating ten years of being number one in cable news. and even joe biden would say that it's a pretty good big-- pretty big deal. and thanks to the vision, perservance of roger ailes, fox news the most trusted name in news in spite of people like me being on the channel. now, as for us crowing about it a bit. hey, it ain't bragging if it's true. true. >> for ten years, one network has formed, reenvisioned, reinvented the way news is done. >> breaking news now on fox
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news channel. >> going to fight. >> absolutely, got to stand tough with these terrorists. >> usama bin laden is dead, the bum is dead. >> and your client-- >> and a growing national scandal. >> keep your hands out of my piggy bank. >> as this nationwide phenomena. >> and putting your-- >> widespread corruption in the afghan government. >> you want to change washington, mr. president. >> come on, you cowards. >> designing a simple approach and delivering a clear and powerful message. >> a decade of dominating, spanning the globe as an unparalleled news gathering information. >> and the casualty figures nearly 6,000 smuggled through-- >> the forces have begun fire. >> everything from rape to robbery. >> i'm deeply sorry. >> the biggest challenges you're facing. >> democrats could face voters wrath. >> top target for terrorists. >> we're ready to hear this verdict. >> and the tanks are rolling
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into position. >> the body of yasser arafat. >> and more likely the. >> carrying the body of anna nicole smith. >> and clients are racing up-- >> and muammar gaddafi and his son. are you all right? >> yeah. >> and ten years, fox, building the most powerful name in the business, the new for television news, fox news channel, ten years at number one, and counting. [applaus [applause]. >> and president obama, and democrats, a war on christianity? it's plain wrong. obama loves jesus, did you hear his comments this week at the national day of prayer, not only did obama mention jesus and took it up a notch and declared that jesus was supporting the obama plan for higher taxes. now, i searched all over the new testament and i actually have a religion degree among
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my academic pursuits, but the clearest thing i could find about jesus and tax policy, simple and went like this, number one, task ares necessary. and number two, pay what you owe. that's about it. render unto caesar, that which was ceasar's and render on to god that which was his. >> and jesus was serious enough about paying his taxes, he was poor, but got a coin from the mouth of a fish to pay his taxes. if president obama has his way, we're going to have to do a bunch of fishing, and better have coins. he might want to think of invoking the name of jesus, we are to render to caesar, what we owe to caesar, and stuff we don't like and agree with, but it's the last of part of what jesus said, maybe what president missed. render on to god what is god's.
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for a man who only gave away 1% of his income away, he might not be in a position. god requires a dime on the dollar, and trust god to bless the 90% that we keep. you know, i'm not in the mood to take a will being turf taking poor from anyone who believes that jesus wants us to pass the poor people off to the government so the christians could selfishly keep all they have. see, it is the church, not the government who ought to be doing the helping of the poor, but if we follow maybe the government example and give a paltry 1% to church and expect the federal government to do charity, what we're going to end up with is a government that wants not a dime out of a dollar, but 90 cents out the dollar. now, look this is not just obama. it's any candidate, democrat or republican, who claims to love jesus and wants to help poor people. let me tell you something, look into his or her personal contributions and it says all you need to know about how
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serious they are and when someone tells you how much they love jesus, to get your vote. see if they love him enough to obey him in giving. because if they steal from god they'll probably rob you blind. it's that simple. [applause]. >> well, our next guest has won two academy best actress awards, nominated for another for her role as former british prime minister margaret thatcher in the movie iron lady. >> we will stand on principle or we will not stand at all. >>, but margaret, with all due respect. when one has been the war-- >> and with all due respect, sir, i have done battle every single day of my life. and many men have underestimated me before. and this lot is bound to do the same, but they will rue the day. >> now, shall i have another--
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tea, how do you take your tea, black or white. >> ladies and gentlemen, please welcome, meryl streep. [applause] how are you doing? it's so nice to have you here. >> nice to be here. >> and when-- when i saw that scene in which margaret thatcher was just essentially emasculating these men, you scared me. i wasn't sure i was going to introduce you out here. (laughter) >> i scared myself. >> and it is a remarkable film. one of the greatest, i think, movies that depict a living person that i've seen. and it must have been an incredible challenge to play the role of margaret thatcher with so many people still knowing of her and remembering her. >> yeah. >> were you a little intimidated before you start this had whole process? >> i was, not the least because i'm from new jersey, i'm not, you know, british, so
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i was walking into a cast of over 250 actors, all of whom were really beautiful, well-prepared actors playing very specific roles and i was scared about that. scared about playing a real person and also someone that people have such vehement opinions about. >> they really do. and people love her or hate her, very little ground about margaret thatcher. >> that's exactly right. and so, we wanted to make a film that wasn't really a traditional bio pic. i mean, there are a lot of films that could be made about margaret thatcher and everything that she pachieved and tried to do in her life. we were interested in a human story from the human view at the end of life and the sort of reckoning that people make as time goes by. >> there have been some critics, because it starts with her in the contemporary setting. >> yes. >> we know that she's going through some issues of
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dementia, that's very real. and then it looks back on her remarkable career and socritics, thought it was unfair. and that personally made me proosh her more because this remarkable figure, iconic historic figure is very real and very human. >> that's right. i think we tend to, especially with political figures reduce them to either villains or saints. you know? and people are people. we're all many-fastsetted, and we have different sides to us and the truth is always much more interesting, nuanced and complicated. so that's what we were after. >> did you have some maybe preconceptions about margaret thatcher before this role preparation started? what were they? what were things that surprised you, as you got into the role? >> there were so many surprises. i mean, so many surprises and she really is held up as a
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conservative icon in many-- and to many people and together, with president reagan, credited with bringing down the berlin wall and all of that, and i'm also making an approach to the soviet union to just talk, to try to figure out how to talk to people. and so, one of the surprises that i had about her was that she never-- she was a scientist, she was a kemmist by training, thee went to oxford in chemistry and she was early proponent of the idea of global warming and early warning about it was very -- that surprised me. and she also never touched the national health in britain since 1948. every person is afforded health care from the time they're born till they die.
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and she never attempted to dismantle that. she thought that was a birth right. in conservative circles here, she would be drummed out of the the party for that. but it's just a different-- you know, and yet, she adhered to a he very, very strict financial agenda, but there was the certain things that people thought of her as very hard and cold. that were surprising to he me. >> you know, i think that's one of the ways in which the film helps really give us a picture of margaret that much they're we never had because she was the iron lady, this tough person who could just dress down a room of men and have them in tears and yet, there was also a very poignant scene in the film that i remember. after she has virtually just destroyed the ego of every man in her cabinet, and then she dismisses them. sum mayorly dismisses them and they walk out and you see her
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hand trembling and i realize there is some license there, but beneath the crust of the lady there was a soft-- >> and i think as an actor to explore what it means to be a leader and take all that, you take so much hatred and so much venom on yourself. how do people live? how do they remain strong when they still have to go to work and still the worker of the nation depends on them? how do you not have it affect you physically affect to you take all that responsibilities on your shoulders? i think everybody that stands up for public office, should be applauded because there are many sacrifices you're bound to make with your family, in many ways. and i just applaud people, because i realize as i was stepping into her shoes, just a little bit, that i didn't have any, anywhere close to
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the stamina and spine that she had. >> i'm not sure about that. what i read about you, i find, and not only you're an incredibly well-educated person, vassar, valedictorian of your high school. >> no, that's a lie and everyone at the high school knows that, that's a lie. >> and from yale. >> yes, that's right. >> and you're known as a person who's very self-efacing and you're not the person who takes yourself so seriously, so truly with all that have, with your humility, you have no business running for office and-- >> you don't have to worry about that. >> you're too smart and you don't have that sense of self-maybe aggrandizement. so i want to talk more about the roll and margaret thatcher and meryl streep and the remarkable career. we'll do that when we come back,
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(applause) >> we're back with peril streep and the remarkable resemblance that you had to margaret thatcher, those of us who have seen you in so many different roles, there was a time i had to remind myself, you're meryl streep and you're portraying margaret thatcher and that's not margaret thatcher, because the transformation, the physical tran formsmation was stunning. what did they do in terms of the makeup and all the things you had to prepare for just to look so remarkably like
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margaret thatcher. >> well, thank you very much. on behalf of my makeup man and my team, really, i've been working with the same makeup man and hair dresser for 35 years. >> mike: wow. >> we started in the public here in new york city and he bleached my hair for sophie's choice and he did my hair today. >> mike: boy, did he ever hitch up to the right wagon. >> he's busy. >> well, he's also just a master at what-- and he knows what i like to do. i like to transform the physical, because it makes you, it makes it easier to get into the interior of a character, so, the more believable you are physically, the more real go into who-- i mean, we'll believe who you are. and in england, we met a
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british prosthetics designer who is maybe the genius at this that i've ever met. i have he' done this a lot. i've played old ladies in out of africa and everything, but this guy was so together. roy helen and mark coullier, the british guy, made these four decades very, very believable. and the way they did it was by doing less and less. we did four different sessions of testing. and each time, i said be, take away, take away, take away, because the key to, i think, aging makeup is that you see the person, not the stuff. now what i mean, so, we found certain things that really signify, like jowls in the neck that just minimal, but when you apply that and with the tissue, the fine hand that
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mark had, and roy's the iconic hair, it workout really well and i owe everything, everything to these men. >> mike: do you think that roy could make me look like george clooney? (laughter) >> it wasn't supposed to be that funny. why are you guys laughing? let's talk about margaret thatcher, because she was historic not only because of the views she had, she was historic she was the first female prime minister in a very man's british world. how did you find she was able to overcome the natural prejudices people had toward a wanl cannot just in the government, but being the prime minister? >> you know the weird thing is, the biggest leap for british people, i think, was that a grocers daughter made this. >> mike: more so than-- >> it was class more than even being a woman. yes, it was very-- they had very specific ideas
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as to what each gender's job should be in the world and politics didn't really, i think there were 635 members of parliament and there were 17 women when she entered as a 24-year-old. >> we have another clip and i want to ask merrill after we watch. >> and to the streets-- (laughter) >> and she wants us to take her seriously she must learn to calm down. (laughter) >> if the honorable gentleman could pass attention more closely to what i'm saying rather than how i am saying it, and you may receive a valuable education in spite of himself. >> mike: one of the things that i think we all have to love about margaret thatcher, she was fearless, how see in the face of opposition. >> she was, she is. she is.
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and she is fearless, a quality you really want in a leader, isn't it? >> it is the quality that you want. someone who just doesn't care what everyone thinks about him or her, because frankly there is he' always going to be a number of people that don't like you. >> well, she did care about getting her message across and she realized, very canny that in order to be elected and to be seen, she had to kind of transform herself because when women raise their voices, they kind of get higher and it gets like this and shrill and try to make the point. especially in a big room. i'm very familiar with this phenomena. but she realized that see could have more authority and she could kind of cut through the argument if she lowered her voice. when she spoke like this. and it sounded more authoritative. and, that was something that she very designedly worked on. >> mike: she did that in order
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harlem. and music is close to my heart and advocate for art education. when you play the role of someone who is a real person and people know them. is it more difficult or makes them easier because there is a model to go from? >> well, it's a different job. i mean, in some ways, it's easier because you do have sort of everything-- all the back stories done. you don't have to invent that yourself. but on the other hand, for an actor, that's the fun part is to make, make that up. and, but in terms of playing roberta, who was teaching in harlem yesterday, until the bell rang, she is an amazing woman and she started a program that's grown exponentially and i'm so glad that you raise your voice about music education because they're cutting everything now. >> mike: it's wrong the biggest sin to our kids that we've taken music ap art from
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them. it's the heart of education for right-brained dominated children and i know that's not-- and you learned to play the viol violin, that's the only concerto that i learned and nobody wants to hear it at my house. >> mike: we have one, we brought in a violin. >> i can't play it well at all anymore, you have to practice and do it every day, and my life doesn't afford at that kind of time, but i did love it. >> mike: you love music. >> oh, i love music. >> mike: mamma mia, biggest grossing film of your career many people probably don't know. >> yes. >> mike: your daughters were they reluctant and maybe not too sure about you doing that role? >> no, they were thrilled. >> mike: were they thrilled? >> yes, they were thrilled. you know, that movie really went around the world, i mean. >> mike: just a fun movie. >> it's a fun movie, but it's,
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it's exuberance translates around the world into any language and one of the great nights of my life was sitting next to the empress of japan and we watched it it, i'm not kidding you, and everyone was, i mean, she is a god, i mean, related to the deity in some way in japan, and so, people will not look at her. you're not allowed to really look at her. and she came into the audience and i realized that the empty seat next to me was going to be the the empress of japan. and she is so beautiful. and she sat next to me, and it was very quiet. this is a movie about a girl who has slept with three different men and she doesn't know, i mean, her mother slept with three different men and she doesn't know which one is her father on the day she is he' married, didn't know which one to walk down the aisle with. and i'm thinking, like, oh, my
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gosh, how is this going to go over. and we-- the first strains. first song came up and she said, oh, i have this dilemma, i don't know which one is the dad. and she leaned over to me and she said, very naughty. (laughter) >> that's going to be a memory for sure. [applause] >> you've also talked about how difficult it is as an actress that, as one ages, sometimes the roles just disappear, but they haven't for you. and yet, there is a challenge. isn't there, to find roles that are suitable and ones that people will respect you for and not say we'll put her in some type of role that's no longer valid for someone over the age of 40? >> yeah, i think that's true. but, you know, i think if you're -- the cards you play in early years was mostly your sexuality or being cute in a
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way that doesn't transform into the rest of life, then you run a risk of that, it's hard to be cute and really sexy. i mean, i don't think it really is hard to be but-- (laughter) >> it's just the business perceives you differently and so, that never was my thing early on and even though i wanted those parts, i just didn't get them. and so, you know. >> mike: how are you been able to maybe one of most normal lives of anybody within the screen industry. married 30 years, the same gentleman. you have four wonderful children. you live a normal life, you're he not on the scandal sheets all the time. what is the key to that that maybe you would pass on to younger actors and artists and say, look, here is the way to make this thing last for a lifetime? >> well, i just think a lot of it is serendipity and also, i
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probably, for me, i got a lesson early in life about lining up the priorities, you know? i had a boyfriend that i lived with for two years that i was wildly in love with, who died of cancer when he was only 40. and so, i had a-- it all lined up for me pretty clearly, you know, get your life right. and then, everything else will be okay. >> mike: well, everything has been very okay for meryl streep and thank you for sharing your wonderful artistry with us in so many roles. >> thank you. but most recently this powerful portrayal of a truly historic icon margaret thatcher. >> thank you. >> mike: you were and are iron lady, thank you so much. [applause] >> coming up an inside look at the president's reelection campaign that could serve as a
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huckabee in new york. . >> if you'd like to comment on tonight's show e-mail us at huckmail@foxnews.com. >> mike: are the republicans overconfident about defeating president obama? they might need to realize they're facing one of the most formidable machines. and andrew, you've been inside this incredible obama machine and i want to ask you, what did you see that was amazing to you, in terms of the organization, and just how prepared they are? >> sure. you know, i went back in early december. to the headquarters in chicago. and it struck me, as a contrast between my visit in 2007, in april of 2007. they were just like a little start-up then. now it's a behemoth. there's about 50,000 square
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feet of office spaus. >> 50,000 square feet. >> mike: they're using most of it? >> there's room for expansion there. at the time they had more than 200 staffers in the headquarters, and for comparison, romney's campaign the biggest republican campaign had aboabout 98. go back it bill clinton, or george hf.w. bush, 10 or fewer, at this point. and they're ramped up early. and the scope and intensity of it. they're really, really focused one day, that's election day. 2012. they don't have to worry about primaries and caucuses and they're worried about winning on election day. >> mike: talk about the comparison. four years ago, it was ayn insurgent campaigns and most people weren't taking barack obama that seriously. looked lining hillary clinton was the default candidate and only later it was a race. this time what you're saying, this is maybe the difference
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between the start-up of just a group of kids in facebook and full-blown microsoft, huh? >> yeah, no, i think that's an accurate comparison and especially when you mention the technology aspect. they are really, really focused on technology as a way to turn out voters and to get votes on election day. and you know, you saw some of this in 2008, but i think what you're going to see this year, this is a quote from the campaign, we'll make 2008 look pre historic. and-- >> in terms of technology. in terms of the technology, just to talk a little about that, they're going to plug everything they do back in facebook. back in 2008. they had an internal social network and back then you had to sign up. now you sign in with facebook and get the information you have from your social network there and use that to target their messages, so instead of sending out, say a message to all of your friends, say send it to your five friends in the swing district in pennsylvania really concerned about taxes
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because they can know that information. >> mike: in politics, by the way, just for the audience, it's called microtargeting. >> yes. >> mike: it's where you don't just send a generic letter, hey, vote for me. you send a letter and find out this guy say, is a gun owner and pro-life, obviously, that's not obama, but you would send to him and say, i hope you've renewed your membership to the n.r.a. and given another contribution to the national right to life and that's what i'm going to be trying to do when i'm elected. so you're saying they are gleaning information out of everyone's facebook and every type of google search, so that when they send a message to you, andrew, they're going to know a lot of stuff about you and target very specifically to what your interests are? >> they're going to know a lot about my friends as well and that's what the power of the social network will do. and the term this year, actually they're talking about is microlistening, goes beyond microtargeting, where they can really look at, for example, a feature on the site where they say share your story, tell us
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about yourself. and be able to use all of those and complicated algorithms to kind of look for patterns and find exactly what you are concerned about, exactly what you want and who you are. >> andrew romano who has been inside and i hope people recognize something, a lot of republicans are maybe thinking this is going to be an easy election, no, it isn't and i want you to understand from our conversation today, that not only is it the amount of money, but it's the strategic way in which this money is being used and unprecedented ways that will make this one of the most toughest and difficult challenges that any candidate has ever faced. so, whoever that republican she's going to be walking into a, an amazing extraordinary mountain to climb and we're going to see a pretty amazing election. anyway, thank you very much, andrew. [applause] >> we'll see your story. and coming up, las vegas headliner, terry fader, he's got one of his co-stars and
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(applause) >> over the past week, all of the political live events from nevada. and the state caucuses are this weekend and even donald trump made news in las vegas with his endorsement of the mitt romney. and earlier i went to las vegas where america's got talent ventrioquist terry fader and his special guest had a special announcement. >> thank you for having us, mike. normally one of my characters would do a song, but listen, i've got one of my guys who has something to say and walter key air dale and wants to talk about the 2012 election. >> things aren't going that great in las vegas. >> are you kidding me? they're more screwed up than a vegas wedding.
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right now before this, walter e air dale announce i'm running for president of the united states? >> no, president of the hair club for men. of course i meant the united states. >> wait, wait, wait, walter, you're totally unprepared and broke and always borrowing money. >> i'll fight right in in washington. >> walter if you're running for president you have to have a campaign slogan, maybe something like the audacity of hope? >> okay, how about the audacity of a dope? no, no, just kidding. i've got a real slogan, mike. walter d air dale for president, he won't talk unless you put words in his mouth. >> mike: now, that would be historic, walter, really would. >> now what john f. kennedy we had the first catholic american president, with barack obama we had the first african-american president. and now, mike, i think it's time for the kind of american i am, to be president. >> and what kind of america are you? >> i am a proud mannequin
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american. >> that's an interesting idea. and you know, i don't think anyone whose he' made of wood has ever been president before. >> no, but al gore and mitt romney have come awful close. >> mike: walter, if you're going to run for president, which party are you affiliated with. >> i'm not sure. i'm considering starting a whole new one, maybe i'll be a re-puppet-kin. or think of becoming a dummy-kratt. >> will there be a first lady? >> you bet and a second and third and fourth. >> walter be, don't you think it's a little much? >> it did hurt bill clinton. >> what about the theme song. >> i've got the perfect one for washington d.c. ♪ i've got friends in low place ♪ >> i tell you, terry, all this have campaigning is exhausting, and can someone come out here and take me back to the campaign bus so i can rest. here, she is. >> mr. air dale, you look tense, can i give you a back rub? >> if i'm elected president
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i'll give every man in the country a private nurse just like her. >> wait, wait, wait. >> that's going to cast the taxpayers a fortune. >> that's a sacrifice i'm willing to make. any final word you want the voters to remember? >> mike, thanks for having us on, and remember, vote for walter t airdale. let's put a real dummy in the white house. >> mike: well said, walter. [applause] all right. we're going to be checking in with terry and walter over the next two weeks to see just how his campaign is going. up next, we're playing some of neil diamond's greatest hit with tribute band super
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>> one of the best bands in the country today. and they got a wonderful act with sequinned shirts and guitars and sing the songs of the great legendary neil diamond. ladies and gentlemen, this is super diamond. and the leader of the band, surreal neil. great to have you with us. >> great to be here. >> how did you start with the idea of a tribute band of neil diamond and what makes you such a fan? >> well, we believe that mr. diamond is one of america's greatest singer song writers of all time. and besides, it's the only band i've ever been in that my parents really like. >> and did you ever meet neil diamond, has he heard the band? yes, what a great guy. he sang with us two different times. >> really? >> and doesn't get any better than that. >> a little intimidating, isn't it, doing this stuff with neil diamond and he shows up. >> yeah, a little bit. >> the good news, he's not going to show up today. so you have it all to
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yourself. look here, neil diamond from super diamond. >> thank you, governor. >> (applause). ♪ ♪ money talks, it don't walk ♪ ♪ as long as i can have you here with me, i'd much rather, forever in blue jeans ♪ ♪ money's sweet, it ain't nothing next to baby's treats ♪ ♪ if you pardon me, i'd like to stay, we do okay, forever in blue jeans ♪ ♪ where it begins, i can't begin to know it ♪ ♪, but then i know it's going
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neil diamond. thank you for joining us, and hope you've had a great time just as we have. good night, god bless, have a great week. [applause]. [applause]. ♪ captioned by closed captioning services, inc. i can tell you that childhood is a magical time. but for children with diabetes, life is not quite so carefree. the barbara davis center for childhood diabetes is fighting hard to find a cure. know the signs: irritability, excessive urination,
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