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tv   FOX and Friends Sunday  FOX News  March 25, 2012 6:00am-10:00am EDT

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>> good morning, everyone, you're looking live at president obama in seoul, south korea. he's visiting a site and let's listen to the question and answer. >> and to president lee, good to see you again, i wanted to ask you about the nuclear security summit. could you explain how it would have any true and lasting credibility when the two major antagonists of north korea and iran are on the sidelines? >> well, first of all, with respect to the consequences should there be a launch by the north koreans, as president lee indicated, north korea is already under an extraordinary battery of changes. they are the most isolated country in the world. they are cut off from basic
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commerce and exchanges beyond their borders that every other country, almost every other country takes for granted. their people are extraordinarily impoverished. the contrast between living standards in the north and living standards in the south could not be greater. and couldn't be a greater testimony to the benefits of living in a free society. and so, the real consequence, should they go forward with the launch, is they will have missed an opportunity because when he we presented to them and what we've consistently presented to them is an opportunity for them to take a different path than the one they've been taking, which is resulting in not simply hardship for their people, but a state that is decades behind
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their counterparts in the region. in terms of development. in terms of economic strength, in terms of influence in world affairs. and so the immediate concrete, tangible effects we had offered them, the possibility as part of a series of confidence building measures to move forward with a nutritional eight package, position, we've indicated to them very districtly, because this was part of the discussions that had taken place among negotiators that it would be difficult to move forward with that package if they showed themselves unable to the commitments they made even a month earlier. because part of the challenge for any trnutrition aid package,
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for example, is to make sure to get it to people who need it and doesn't go to serve elite in the country or their military. and that's very difficult to have monitors during a period of detention and friction. and it's difficult to provide aid if you don't think it's going to get to the people who actually need it. so, that's just one example of the conflicts that take place. i'll also note that every time north korea has violated the international resolution, security council resolution, it's resulted in further isolation, tightening of tanks, stronger enforcement, greater support on the part of the international community towards stronger enforcement. i suspect that will happen this time as well. so they need to understand
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that bad behavior will not be rewarded. there have been patterns, i think, for decades in which north korea thought that if they acted provocatively, that somehow they would be bribed into ceasing and desisting, and president lee and i have agreed the start of our relationship that we're going to break that pattern. and i suspect it will ultimately end up having the impact intended, but in the meantime, the people of north korea that are most likely to suffer. >> i do want to comment on the issue you raised with respect to the nuclear security summit. now, understand that the concept of the nuclear security summit that we set up was not directed at the
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specific issue of iran or north korea, but was directed at one leg of a multi-legged stool when it comes to the security. and specifically, if you've got a lot of loose, nuclear material, if they had historically because of nuclear programs or currently in terms of how they hospital in their nuclear energy facilities, are leaving a bunch of material out there that could potentially fall into the hands of terrorists, that poses an extraordinary threat to the united states, to south korea and to countries all around the world. and so, our goal with this nuclear security summit has always meant to be very specific, concrete around a set of issues that if we act with the deliberateness and
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enhance everybody's security and should not be controversial, and it's a did hes tament, i think, to that well defined agenda that two years later we're seeing only deliverables take place that are taking a whole bunch of nuclear material out of vulnerable positions and it could fall into the wrong hands. it doesn't solve every problem, it doesn't address every issue that i raised in my speech three and a half years ago. we still have how can we reduce nuclear weapons, in those countries that currently have nuclear weapons, consistent with the obligations, we shall have outlighters like iran and north korea that are potentially pursuing nuclear weapons and are engaging in
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potential nonproliferation activities, but that doesn't diminish in any way, that they're significantly reducing the risk that an al-qaeda or a terrorist organization could get a dirty bomb and explode it in seoul or new york city. that's always been the objective of the nuclear security summit because i think that fine leadership has been shown by president lee and his delegation. we'll see a lot done over the next few days. i think it's hard to have an impression of the situation in north korea appears to be unsettled and not clear who is calling the shots and what their long-term objectives are. but regardless of the north
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korean leadership, what is clear is that they have not yet made that strategic pivot where they say to themselves what we're doing isn't working. it's leading our country and our people down a dead end. and maybe we're there at the dmz and it's like you're in a time warp, like you're looking across 50 years into a country that has missed 40 years or 50 years of progress. and you know, if a country can't feed its people effectively, if it can't make anything of any use to anybody, if it adds no exports other than weapons, and even
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those aren't ones that in any way would be considered state of the art, if it can't you deliver on any indicators of well-being for its people, then you want to try something different. i don't get a sense that they've made that decision yet, but my suspicion is that at some point, that's what the north korean people are going be to be looking for. and they do have that opportunity. and when they make that decision, i know i speak for president lee, no one will welcome it more than we do. because you know, it's in our interest to see every country provide opportunity and prosperity for its people, but there are certain things that don't work and what they're
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doing doesn't work. >> (inaudible). >> first of all we're going to-- back in washington d.c. and then what we're going to do, we're going to make more pledges to reduce and eliminate nuclear materials. we are going to set up more concrete benchmarks and as a result of the this, we will be able to reduce and eliminate about 20,000 nuclear weapons and we still have just about 100,000 nuclear weapons left,
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this is a tremendous amount of nuclear weapons, but i have hope that as we continue to engage in this-- with this problem that we will be able to achieve and attain our goal of a world without nuclear weapons and another important point at that president obama mentioned 50 plus leaders gathered here in seoul are going to be discussing how we can prevent nuclear weapons and weapons from falling into the wrong hands. we are going to discuss how to share intelligence and so we can prevent them from acquiring nuclear weapons. you can only imagine the kind of work that will go into coming up into an agreement between 58 plus states, but nonetheless we share a common vision and commitment and i'm confident following the meeting in washington d.c., the meeting that will start tomorrow will contribute to
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enhancing our safety and security. mr. choi from-- question going to president obama, mr. president, you just visited the dmz this morning, and today the north koreans are commemorating the 100th anniversary of the birth of sun and having a parade in north korea celebrating, the new leadership of kim jong-il. and if you can share your thoughts about the leaders of korea. and second question has to do with extending the missile range of south korea. the south korean government's position north korea has a capability of more than 3000
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kilometers in the missile ranges and one reason you want to extend the missile ranges in south korea. >> and what are some of the pre-conditions in order to presume the six-party talks? last question, was also going out to both president obama and president lee. you just asked three questions. >> it's hard to remember them all. well, the first question, i think, i basically answered, my impressions with respect to the dmz and north korean leadership. with respect to the exception of extending missile ranges, i think that president lee got this exactly right. we had a powerful alliance that's multi-dimensional and involves a whole range of coordination, training
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activities, making sure that there's inner operability with respect to various weapons systems and our defensive capabilities. and so, all of these issues are being discussed as we move forward to implementing the 2015 plan. and so, there are no specific pre conditions around or specific obstacles around the missile range issues, rather, it's a broader question of what are the needs in order for us to fulfill our enduring goals around the alliance. and a lot of that is technical. a lot of it takes place not at the presidential level, but rather, at the military level, and you know, we will continue
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to instruct our teams that they work closer together to ensure what is the ultimate outcome, which is not any particular weapons system or missile range, rather, can we protect our people, can we make sure that the objectives, the alliance are achieved. with respect to the six-party talks, we've been very clear about this. again and again. and it's not that complicated. if the north koreans are serious about entering into the six party talks, they have to show that they are operating in good faith. at minimum. that requires them suspending activities that right now clearly are contrary to previous obligations that they've made. and international law. and when they do that, then we'll be able to sit down and
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resolve, hopefully, some of the longer term issues. in the absence of that, if it's hard to figure out how these discussions would be productive and frankly, president lee and i both have a lot of things to do. so we try not to have our teams sit around tables talking in circles without actually getting anything done and my hope is that at some point the north koreans make the decision that it is in their interests to try to figure out how to feed their people and improve their economy rather than have big parades where they show off weapons.
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weapons. >> thank you both. a question first for president obama, mr. president, in the past you've been particularly when frustrated with china on the issue of north korea, not shy about telling president hu that the u.s. will do what's necessary to protect our national security issue. as you're meeting the president tomorrow, what message will you give him regarding north korea. are you satisfied with the pressure that china has brought to bear on north korea. is there more they could be doing and is it realistic to think that if they worked hard enough they might persuade the north koreans not to go ahead with the satellite launch and the question for president lee, as long as my colleague asked president obama for his views on kim jong-il, you've
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he paid attention to north korea for longer than our president has, i dare say, and i just wonder whether you think he is, as the president suggested, still in a very ten use situation or whether you see him as establishing control. >> well, first, first of all, i look forward to meeting with president hu tomorrow, and obviously, issues of north korea will be one of a number of topics we'll discuss. my, my communications with the chinese has been very specific on this. it is my firm belief that it is-- tension and stability on the peninsula and it's not in anybody's interest to see a nuclear armed peninsula.
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the chinese say they agree to that. the question is, given that they have more influence and closer diplomatic relations with north korea than any other country on earth, what are they doing to help guide or-- north korea a more constructive approach and that certainly will be adopted into the conversation. now, i am sympathetic to the fact that they share a border with north korea. they are deeply concerned about potential instability in that country and what r ramifications might have on china. and it is, it is important to recognize that they have a broad range of equities he
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when it comes to how they operate with north korea, given that they a're neighbors. what i ha've said to them consistently is rewarding bad behavior, turning a blind eye to deliberate provocations, trying to paper over these, not just provocative words, but extraordinarily provocative acts that violate international norms. then that's not, obviously, working. so, in the same way that north korea needs to do something new, if it actually wanted to do right by its people. my suggestion with china is that how they communicate their concerns to north korea should probably reflect the
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fact that the approach they've taken over the last several decades hasn't led to a fundamental shift in north korea's behavior. and the irony, of course, is that during the last 20 years, china has leapt into the 21st century, in part by abandoning some of the practices that north korea still clings to. you couldn't ask for a better model of the difference, at least on the economic front, that different policies have made. and again, i believe china's very sincere that it does not want to see north korea with a nuclear weapon. but it is going to have to-- it's going to have to act on
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that, that interest in a sustained way. and if it does, i think together, between the south koreans, the japanese, the russians, the chinese and ourselves, i think we can have a real impact. >> (inaudible) i think it's safe to say it's rather premature for anyone to make reassessment of kim jong-il or i think it's safe to say the majority of north korean people have a difficult time trying to assess their own leader, it's not been very long since he assumed the leadership role. i don't think any leader around the world is going to give you a definitive
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impression or answer to your question. but having said that, i initially did have a bit after expectation that he will take a different path, but his recent announcement was a source of disappointment. nonetheless, i will wait and see and give you a more definitive answer of my impression on kim jong un. any leader has to realize he cannot survive on his own. and any leader cannot stand on his own. it's imperative that all leaders and countries work together as a responsible member of the community and this is the surest way to ensure a better life for the people of that country. if they do so, of course,
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including the republic of korea and the united states and many other members of the community will help the north koreans realize a better life for their people. thank you very much. . >> thank you very much. >> fox news alert, everyone, you have been listening to president obama there in seoul, south korea and he just wrapped up his press conference, along the south korean president lee. the two leaders discussing a wide range of issues, as you could hear from the nuclear security to defense spending and their free trade agreement. >> dave: earlier in the day, president obama paid his first visit to the tense demilitarized zone separating north and south korea, amid nuclear tensions, imagine that moment. he visited the u.s. military camp just outside. he also met with turkey's prime minister and the two discussed iran's nuclear ambitions as well as the upheaval in syria.
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>> clayton: tomorrow, president obama along with 50 other world leaders will attend the summit in seoul, south korea, the main reason for the trip over there and concerns about who is calling the shots from north korea he and the president says we don't know who is actually calling the shots in the wake of kim jong-il's death. >> alisyn: and joining us with an update, but meanwhile, hi, guys, good to be back with you. >> clayton: yeah, welcome back, alisyn, much morale sin camerota later in the show. >> alisyn: mexico pictures. and meanwhile, obamacare is a founding father of truth. according to house minority nancy pelosi. is the president's health care law something that the founding fathers really would have stood up for? we'll have a debate on this, and we report, you decide. >> and then need some cash to fill up the gas tank or lunch
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money. try hitting up mom and dad like this. >> and then you sit down you might a check for $10,000! >> a new study says some adults still getting an allowance, adults getting an allowance. e-mail us about this one.
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we have two car insurances that we're going to have you taste. the first one we're going to call x. go ahead and take a sip, and then let me know what the baby thinks of it. four million drivers switched to this car insurance last year. oh, she likes it babies' palates are very sensitive so she's probably tasting the low rates. this is car insurance y, they've been losing customers pretty quickly. oh my gosh, that's horrible!, which would you choose? geico. over their competitor. do you want to finish it? no. does the baby want to finish it? no.
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[ male announcer ] remember when you were a kid? you ked getting dirty and building things. there were no limits -- yocould move mountains. the john deere 1 series subcompact tractor -- the way grownups move mountains. and with auto-connect implements, it's the eiest tractor to use yet. what will you create? learn more about the easy-to-use 1 series tractor at johndeere.com/1series. >> good morning efshgs again, former vice-president dick
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cheney is recovering at this hour from a heart transplant. the 71-year-old reportedly in a hospital in virginia. cheney has a known history of heart problems with heart attacks starting at 30 years old. and he was on the list before getting the call for yesterday's surgery and the cheney family saying they will be forever grateful to the donor, whose identity think do not know. >> dave: many sending thoughts and prayers, including former president bush, and wishing him a speedy recovery. >> clayton: let's bring in the expert of heart treasury departme department. as an expert in this field was this a routine procedure. 20 months on the waiting list to receive a heart. what do you know?
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>> well, we're facing a shortage of donors and then waiting time a getting longer and longer, so that it's not unusual, such as waiting on 20 months before getting transplant. >> dave: he is of course, 71 years old as we mentioned there's the five prior heart attacks, what now is his chance of survival and living a healthy life. >> i believe the-- his well, let's say let's assume kidney and liver function is normal, his nutrition is normal and he has never had a stroke, his predicted survival is very similar to the, like the transplant recipient such as 55 years old. >> alisyn: i mean, heart transplant surgery sounds very scary, sounds very intense. what was involved in a procedure like this? >> well, open the chest and for his case, taking the haeart and assist device.
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>> alisyn: they take it out. >> remove it and put the new one in. >> alisyn: how long does that take. >> for his surgery in particular, which is i think his third surgery which may take over six hours. >> clayton: we have some sound when he was on hannity back in the fall and talked about the device he had outside of his chest and listen to what he said about this and talk about any complications on this, take a listen. >> feel the same. much better than i did before. >> that's it right there. >> this is the battery, a control on it here and another battery over year, like to this. and-- >> oh. >> well, you do that to scare me. >> it deeps. >> put the battery back in. >> okay. but it's wonderful technology, so, there you go. >> that was the device. >> alisyn: what do you think of that party trick. >> it's scary, because, he may have had easily another, but
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he's already disconnected. >> so he'd unplug it. will he have to have at that device again, he's free and clear of that. >> dave: that's gone, right. it's connecting to-- >> now that he's had a heart transplant will he need a pace make are. >> no, pacemaker is out. >> dave: how does his life change now? can ehe go about a normal life or change. >> his life much improved, but he was not able to have shower or taking bath now he can do it. >> clayton: given an electronic device. >> but he needs to take immuno suppressive drugs, another issue with transplants. his life will be great.
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>> dave: the strict of your immune system decreases what happens with the result of the drugs. >> that's correct. >> alisyn: you have to be on the drugs forever. yes, until you have the last moment. >> alisyn: well, doctor, thanks so much for your expertise this morning, we appreciate it. >> thank you very much. >> thanks, doctor. >> alisyn: now for other stairs making use, mississippi university is under a campus-wide warning after a shooting. it's believed three male suspects left the scene and took off in a blue crown victoria, they're expected to hold a press conference. no u.s. service members in the air strike at that killed. the accident triggered protest there is and an american investigation in december reportedly found fault with
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both american and pakistani troops. and said that pakistan troops allegedly fired first and pakistan is it refuting that. earlier this week, the parliament expected to resume relations. no doubt that america is hungry for the hunger games. setting an all time record for a nonsequel. and the fifth best opening of all times and expected to beat the record for best weekend debut in the month of march currently held by alice in wonderland starring johnny depp. >> all right. get a load of this purchase. a new poll. >> one in ten americans adults received some kind of allowance from parents or relatives. including many 65 or older. >> clayton: come on. >> alisyn: come on! >> 65 and older. >> alisyn: are they giving the
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allowance or getting the allowance. >> dave: for chores? >> my mom sent me a $5 in an envelope. that's for taking out the trash. i get it here, too. and let's check with rick ri reichmuth. >> rick: and was it for taking out the trash. take a look at the weather picture, guys, a breezy day across the east coast, breezy, cooler day today and tomorrow and the next few days across the northeast, here is what you're waking up to across the southeast and moving forward take a look at your forecast today. there are scattered rain showers in the forecast for the northeast today although i don't think it will be that bad and the worst is across new england and across the mid atlantic, new york city will be kind of all right. and we'll see the heaviest of the showers. and we'll see rain showers
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through the panhandle, through florida not the panhandle, you'll be sunny. warm across texas and the plains, and tell you what, northern plains, get ready a, chance for severe weather across the dakotas, tomorrow and change the picture up a little bit. storms across california and that's a big potent storm, maybe two to three inches of rain, in and around l.a. and maybe up to about a foot of snow. 5 to 6,000 foot level in across southern california. and sunshine, meanwhile, in arizona and that storm you see in california, it's going to move to the north, this time around arizona and no more snow in and around that area. and guys, send it back to you, inside. clayton. >> thank you, rick. as the supreme court gets ready to hear arguments on the constitutionality of the affordable care act. house minority leader nancy pelosi says our founding fathers would have approved of the that. >> the founding fathers, in
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our founding documents, which is life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, that's exactly what the affordable care act helps to guarantee. . >> clayton: joining us now is brad, who co-created learn our history with governor mike huckabee, a product dedicate today help to make it fun, thanks for coming to the show. >> thanks for having he me. >> clayton: you heard nancy pelosi talking on the floor saying the founding fathers would have wanted, what is called obamacare. >> it's funny shoe she's been parrot be this line for two years, she said the freedom that the founding fathers envisioned where people had the opportunity to be writers and artists and poets and not have to worry about health insurance and clearly that's not the case. i mean, if you look back at
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the bill of rights, 10th amendment states anything not given to the federal government specifically goes to the states or to the people and the federalist papers written by madison and john j and alexander hamilton and specifically in number 45, it goes very deeply into the fact the federal government is supposed to be very small, out of the way, less involved than the states. i mean, thomas jefferson himself has gone on-- went on the record many times saying the worst thing that could happen to our country is the government taking away, i'm paraphrasing, from people who work hard under the pretense of taking care of everyone. >> clayton: right, and income tax until the civil war. and she went on and further elaborated on it, i'll read it, she says the legislation will lead to healthier lives more liberty to pursue hopes and dreams and happiness for the american people this is the american proposal that
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honors the tradition of our country this idea of healthier lives she pins on the founding fathers. >> i think that's a corruption of the kind of things they stood for. if you look at what the founding fathers were willing to do for freedom. they all risked their lives, they would have been killed for treason for everything they did. they risked their fortunes, all of them would have had their money taken away if the revolution had been lost. it certainly wasn't freedom from responsibility. a more cynical person than i, would say one of the reasons she wants people to have this liberty is because it makes their, the democrats problem of high unemployment look quite a bit better because it takes people out of the work force looking for legitimate jobs. >> clayton: brad, great to see you this morning. co-creator of learn our history. check it out if you want some interesting educational tools. >> thanks for having me. still on the show, it's the practice of fracking.
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and this document is called misleading for our next guest, why is it government approved? we'll talk to the man who is exposing the movie gas land. and g.o.p. hopeful rick santorum scoops up more delegates with the louisiana win. what's going on with the south, is it more to do with birth order? birth order, we'll explain that next. ♪ having an irregular heartbeat called atrial fibrillation puts you at 5 times greater risk of stroke. don't wait. go to afibstroke.com for a free discussion guide to help you talk to your doctor about reducing your risk. that's afibstroke.com.
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here's a chance to create jobs in america. oil sands projects, like kearl, and the keystone pipeline will provide secure and reliable energy to the united states. over the coming years, projects like these could create more than half a million jobs in the us alone. from the canadian border, through the mid west, to the gulf coast. benefiting hundreds of thousands of families throughout the country. this is just what our economy needs right now.
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>> welcome back, a fox news alert. minutes ago, president obama had a press conference with south korean president. wendall goal. >> reporter: and just last month north korea agreed to a
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moratorium and this month announced plans to make one under the guise of a satellite launch and it will cost them tons of food aid and isolation. earlier the president made his first visit to the demilitarized zone, described as the most heavily fortified in the world. hundreds of troops, and u.s. servicemen and women in the middle. and serving a freedom frontier. >> there's something about this spot in particular where there's such a clear line and there's such an obvious impact that you have for the good each and every day that should make all of you proud. >> with more than 50 other world leaders here, the president is taking the opportunity to talk about issues beyond nuclear security at the korean peninsula and
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discussing iran's nuclear ambitions and upheaval in syria. and has a presidential dinner going on right now and then the summit itself begins tomorrow, dave? >> wendell goler live in seoul. obviously, the leadership situation there of particular interest for the president, ali. >> alisyn: probably hopeful rick santorum snagged a victory in louisiana last night. could his big win have anything to do with his birth order? here to break is down for us. dr. kevin lehman, and the author of the birth order book. >> always great to be here. >> alisyn: we love talking about birth order here, it's super fun to analyze that. let's look at all of the presidential candidates and where they fall in their families. 65% of u.s. presidents were first born, what makes them special. there's not a first born watching that-- i don't care what you did.
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you're the oldest and i expect more from you. we sort of groom the first born to be the leader of the pack. they're natural leaders in the truest sense of the world. >> alisyn: let's look at the presidential contenders. mitt romney interestingly not a first born,s he's actually the youngest of four. >>'s he an a functional first born. >> what's a functional first born. >> there's a six year gap between him and the next one, he's a functional first born, they never fought over a ball or anything, a five year gap. >> alisyn: a five year gap and he has the traits of first born. ceo, financial guy, it fits. >> alisyn: we talk how rick santorum won the louisiana primary last night and he's a middle born. but he's the first born son. the lehmans have five kids, four daughter and a son. he's not a middle child he's a
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first born. so sex and age gaps. people think it's order nal position, it's not. >> alisyn: if you're the first boy you're a functional first born. gingrich was a first born. he's adopted and three half sisters. >> alisyn: i didn't know that. >> very bright. >> alisyn: you say he personifies the first born. >> exactly. >> alisyn: his leadership, i know you were about to say something. >> i'm thinking, bill clinton, look at our past presidents, bill clinton first born. hillary first born. george bush first born. lyndon johnson first born. jimmy carter first born. billy carter got his picture on a bottle of beer. >> alisyn: you make a good point. >> yes. >> alisyn: and president obama has some half siblings, but he's an only child. >>'s a functional only child, a sister nine years removed from him. the first, five, six years, whatever that environment is, that's what your birth order is all about. >> alisyn: and the characteristics of only
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children as if i don't know. >> the only children are super, sometimes a little god-like, a little bossy, okay? they tend to marry youngest children, that's a good deal. another thing where hillary and bill, first borns, like a cat and dog in a bag shaking it up for good measure, but ronald raeken, baby of the family one of the five babies in the white house, marries only child nancy davis, the insider says that's a great love affair. >> alisyn: you say first born-- i'm sorry, only children are adults even at-- >> little adults by themselves. and these kids are way out there and they're part of the triangle, the inverted triangle where they grow up they worry about mom and dad because there's no one else to take care testiof them. >> i know it well. it's fun. thank you. >> you're welcome. >> alisyn: coming up the anti-fracking movie "gasland"
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proving to be wrong. to some extent. how come the government still approves it. we'll talk about the man who exposed the film. lte tablets, you can do business at lightning-fast spes. we'll take all the strawberries, dave. you got it, kid. we have a winner. we're definitely gonna need another one. small sinesses that want to grow use 4g lte technology from verizon. i wonder how she does it. that's why she's the boss. because the small business with the best tecology rules. contact the verizon center for customers with disabilities at 1-800-974-6006. doeshere's what you can the finaexpect from regions.ds? a bank that provides you with real business expertise. check. a professional optimization of your cash flow with a regions cashcor analysis. check. cash management solutions and the smart lending options you need to grow your business. check. plus, it all comes with award-winning service to help you achieve more balance. interested? let's talk. looking good. (bike bell)
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>> welcome back. with the talk of high gas prices and energy, fracking is back in the news, fracking involves extracting gas from rock. and shows residents lighting their tap water on fire to highlight the danger he of fracking and the state department has it on the featured film list. and our next guest says it's wildly misleading. they exposed the lies in gas land. >> good morning, how are you? >> we're doing good.
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the film got so much attention from that clip, lighting tap water on fire. you say that's entirely misleading, why? >> it's shocking clip, but misleading and i questioned the doctor of gas land and he admitted to me that he knew that people could light their tap water decades before fracturing ever started and all across america, there are places called burning springs and people have known for hundreds of years you could light the tap water, nothing to do with fracking and the director of gas land knew that. >> and you confronted the director of the film gas land and we have a clip from your upcoming film. here is the piece. >> and yourware, you said to yourself, people lit their water before fracking started, isn't that correct. >> and they acknowledge that this is isn't entirely
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truthful. why is it still in the film? >> well, i suppose the film was nominated for an oscar, nominated for an emmy, he's not going to change it. pan i had the question, why is the state department promoting unethical journalism. this is withholding of valuable evidence and scare mongering, and would have destroyed that that you could light your water because of fracking. the question is why is the film being promoted and we're going to try and smash that narrative and bringing our fracture nation, our documentary. is that the good question, why is it still promoted? >> and it will be in theaters th summer. you're trying to encourage them to stop promoting this truth. what is their reaction to you. >> i'm trying to expose the unethical journalism in gas land and i think they're
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trying to get the department from doing that, and i think this is supposed to. these films are supposed to showcase modern society and culture. and i'm asking is it scare mongering people, i suspect not, hope not. >> dave: many feel fracking is our key to energy independence in the united states. the film is frag-nation out this summer. >> thank you. >> dave: vice-president dick cheney is here with his health and we'll talk to a cardiovascular expert still ahead. ♪
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the latest on his recovery. >> dave: and rick santorum scooping up more delegates with the louisiana win. what seals the deal. does it have a big impact on the g.o.p. race? we'll break it down for you coming up. >> clayton: want to see if he had a strike there. >> dave: a turkey, my friend. >> clayton: plus, a democratic governor from montana, but doesn't see eye to eye with the obama administration on the pipeline. why he wants it approved and approved now. "fox & friends" hour two starts right now. ♪ >> good morning, everybody, and it's a busy news day here and we start with a fox news alert at this hour, as we just mentioned former vice-president dick cheney is recovering in a virginia hospital this morning after receiving a heart transplant and an aide says the surgery was successful. as you remember, he has a long
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history of cardiovascular problems and suffered the first of five heart attacks at 37 years old and been on the heart transplant list for nearly two years before getting that call and the cheney family says they'll be forever grateful to the donor whose eyed think they don't know. >> clayton: and former press george w. bush and his wife laura speak with the cheney family to wish him a speedy recover. >> the director of heart diabetes and weight loss centers of new york, good to see you. >>en af to have three people interviewing me. >> clayton: overwhelming. >> alisyn: we're sure you're up to the task. >> dave: and you've performed heart surgery, shouldn't be a big problem. let's talk about the recovery for vice-president dick cheney, what are his chances of a normal life.
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>> and let's talk about the tactful fact tactffact, this mas made of steel, i've got to tell you, first of all, and aside getting away from the political problems and everyone making fun of him for shooting people he's had bypass, angioplasty, a ventricular assist device. he's had a pacemaker, defibrillator, an aneurysm in his leg and he moves on. >> and here is the-- >> well, we have some video. he was on sean hannity's show talking about that electronic device that you're referring to and to refresh our audience's memory let's play that for him. >> i feel the same. much better than before. that's it right there. this is the battery. you know, there's a control element here and another battery over here, and i like to do this and-- >> oh. you do that to scare me. >> put the battery back on.
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>> yeah. >> okay. but it's a wonderful thi technology. >> clayton: we understand he will not have wear that thing anymore. can take a bath again. >> a new heart and hope it keeps pump ng. infection, kidney failure, stroke, rejection, but you know, with today's modern medical care, hopefully he's going to live for many, many more years. >> alisyn: if all goes well in the next 48 hours, how is his life. >> go hunting and fishing and. >> alisyn: more energy now. >> with heart failure your heart is not pumping. you need the assist device and fatigue if your heart is not pumping. >> dave: another side effect are the drugs you have to take after a transplant affect your immune system. how so. >> they depress your immune system. we're trying to prevent
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rejection. and now they limit the side effects. >> dave: you're more susceptible to infections. >> absolutely. >> clayton: you talk with kidney failure, why would the heart relate. >> poor blood flow, blood flow. >> clayton: interesting. so the next 48 hours, very critical for the vice-president. >> yes, we wish him well. >> clayton: doctor, thanks for bringing your expertise to the show, we thank you. >> alisyn: and heart surgery. >> dave: foe you cuss on the pretty lady. >> alisyn: see you later. >> bye-bye. >> dave: thanks for coming. >> thanks, doc. >> very good. we have to get to your headlines now, even more news to tell you about, because nine people have been killed in a bombing in afghanistan. and this happened in the southern province of kandahar after an ied attack, reportedly four afghan police and three national police and one nate o-soldier and afghan interpreter were killed. afghan officials say two others were hurt and names of
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victims is not been released. hundreds of tea party activists rallying before the supreme court hears about it tomorrow. herman cain was the key both speaker. those opposed calling it unconstitutional and arguing would hurt health care. if unchallenged the act would go into effect in 2014. suspects in connection with a deadly shooting are on the loose. and at mississippi state university. it's protested they quickly escaped in a blew crown victoria. and he's expected to hold a press conference this morning. a news junky, a man challenged inner spider-man and started climbing the office building in manhattan. he claims to have done it in
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search of a newspaper. made it to the fifth floor of the building before being talked down by officers. police say he's undergoing a psychological evaluation. >> they cut the bottom parts of that new york times sign off. and they hung down lower and all of the guys were climbing up and almost down to the ground level above that restaurant there. and looked like a ladder. >> to stop that. >> it's two floors up, i don't know how he did that remarkable. >> dave: remarkable insight by clayton morris, and over to rick reichmuth. >> rick: it's tempting. >> clayton: rick thought about it. >> dave: down there by the shake shack and work off the calories. >> rick: it looks just like a ladder that needs to be climbed. >> alisyn: now that you're a fantasy building rappeler. >> rick: there's something about that building anyway. here we go. we have some winter to be had across southern california.
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hard to imagine we've had so much summer-like temperatures across the plains and southern california all the mountains around the l.a. basin have winter storm warnings in effect. storms affecting southern california for days and now moving into southern california and seeing the snow at a higher elevation and the rain across the coastal areas and i tell you, this is going to move to the north and tomorrow into the northern plains and not a snowstorm for the four corners. across the west, we had-- excuse me, the east, we've had a lot of rain going on there as well and no snow because it's so completely warm. here is your high temperatures for the day today. warm across the central part of the country and 82 in denver and 82 in albuquerque and tomorrow, we'll see them climb into the far northern plains along with that threat for severe weather, all right, back to you guys. >> alisyn: thank you. >> clayton: while all of this other news was happening, the president over in south korea, vice-president dick cheney getting a new heart overnight. rick santorum won the louisiana primary there in one
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of the last of the big southern states to go through the primary process, it was not even close, if you look at voting. >> alisyn: he won a handily as they say with 49%, mitt romney second at 27%, which does entitle him to some delegates. >> clayton: five, i think, he so far. >> dave: they're only handing out 20 of the 46 because 26 doled out later. so, in terms of a delegate win, it's not huge for rick santorum, but he clearly is the candidate of the south. and he was fired up about it last night. and spoke about the win. >> we have an opportunity in the next ten days to strike a great blow for freedom here in wisconsin, you will shock the political world. [applause] >> ten days, it happens, mi miraculously. we will have won 11 campaigns, no one gave us a chance, no
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one gave us a chance. >> dave: he's in wisconsin not louisiana, it's the next biggest primary and d.c. and maryland and that's clearly when he'll have to make a stand and show he can win outside of the south. >> clayton: you look at the delegate count, it's a math issue, simple math for him. after last night's win for him down this, santorum kicks up to 273. look at the numbers for mitt romney at this point. 5 68 and critics say how in the world can newt gingrich or ron paul stay in this thing. mathematically almost impossible for them. >> alisyn: the exit polls are interesting to look at, what happened in louisiana. one again, rick santorum scored well with evangelicals and conservatives and also with working class folks, income under 50 k the for the first time he did well with people who said that the economy is the number one issue for them and that's obviously what mitt romney has banked on. >> i think that was a big headline from the exit polls and the economy issues, you point to the very first time
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that folks walking out of there that rick santorum could do a better job on the economy than mitt romney. >> dave: i was focused on the bowling. and bold a turkey. >> alisyn: what is a turkey. >> dave: three straight strikes. >> alisyn: i've had those. >> clayton: bumper bowl when you put on the bumpers on the side and turn on the glow lights. >> alisyn: exactly. >> dave: a big win for rick santorum. coming up next, he's calling out the white house, saying approve the keystone pipeline now. democratic governor swietzer is live here with us in minutes. >> it's a monument standing on school grounds for decades and now groups have a problem with the 10th commandments. >> clayton: if you've got a daughter, start saving for her wedding now. how much americans dropping
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>> welcome back, note only is he the governor in a state phone nor abundant natural resources, he spent time in saudi arabia, what does the governor have to say surrounding the controversy and the keystone pipeline. >> clayton: he joins us from d.c., nice to see you this morning, great to have you on the show. >> great to be back. >> clayton: a lot of criticism has been heaped on president obama this week, especially now that he's taken to the airway, once again to talk about the keystone pipeline. here he is on friday down in oklahoma, play it and see if you get a response, take a listen. >> right now, a condition called trans canada, building
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a new pipeline from cushing to the state refineries, down to the gulf coast, i'm directing my administration to break through the bureaucrat particular hurdles and make this a priority. >> the criticism that many people on the left and right say that the president is the the one that halted this project, the northern portion of the keystone pipeline ab wants to take credit for the southern portion. >> i'm the advocate for the keystone xl and working with trans canada and an on ramp so that north dakota oil could be pumped onto the pipeline. the oil supply in alberta is our best way forward for conflict-free oil. but the facts are this: pipelines are permitted state by state, in other words, this pipeline is permitted by montana, by south dakota, by nebraska, by kansas, by oklahoma and texas. each of us have our regulatory
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regimes. and if it didn't across the international border we wouldn't ask washington d.c. for anything. the problem right now in nebraska, they are concerned about this pipeline, they're not concerned about the other 15,000 miles of pipelines they have in nebraska, but concerned about this one so they called a special session of their legislature, changed their laws, and right now, montana, south dakota, kansas and oklahoma are ready to go. nebraska says maybe by september we'll have a route. so as soon as they have a route, trans canada can make an application for the entire pipeline. right now it's just a pipeline and over. >> congress cut this thing off and there is bipartisan support for it. >> congress doesn't have much to do with it. it's politician ins nebraska that took the wheels off the bus and now the politicians in d.c. want to know why the bus is arriving late. it's by state, state regulatory environments. when nebraska gets their stuff together then there will be a
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complete pipeline and then they'll have a pipeline that they can apply for permit through the state department. >> clayton: what can we learn from the state of montana, i lived this, in fact, i spent time interviewing you years ago, a beautiful, beautiful country and put on the statistics up on the screen. number one in coal, number one in winds out there. windy in the eastern part of the state. 50 wind farms and what can the rest of the country learn from montana. >> as you mentioned i worked in the middle east for a while and while i was there the king of saudi arabia says we can no longer be dependent on other countries with the food supply. they went to a country who was exporting food. what we can learn from montana markedly increase our energy production, oil, gas, coal,
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wind, energy conservation, and with all of those, america can be independent dependent and the dictators can boil in their own oil, we'll have a supply. >> clearly, air doing right, something the country needs to learn from. and a lot of criticism for the president not controlling the price of gas. is there something he can do to bring down the price of gas in the short-term, even in the long-term? >> well, really, only about 10% of the world's oil supply is supplied here in the united states. we're a-- we're a bit player. every bit of oil that you can produce worldwide helps, but frankly the prices set by international factors. right now, there is he' probably a $20 premium because of what's going on with iran and the persian gulf. but, as we increase our oil production in the united states, it's not necessarily going to drop the price of oil right away. because, we have actually increased our oil production, we're producing more oil today than we have anytime in the last eight years and we're actually importing a lower
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percentage of our oil today tan we have for 20 years. we're going in the right direction, we need to continue to produce more energy here and become more energy self-reliant, which means conservation and more don't energy production. >> if you can bring some common sense down there wile you're in d.c. the governor of big sky country, great to have you on the show. >> good to be back. >> still ahead, a religious rights controversy brewing down in mississippi where you can purchase land in the town square, unless you're a church. is this religious discrimination? we report, you decide. >> clayton: then a movie about bullying gets an r-rating, but the new film hunger games, which depicts teens fighting to the death gets a rating of pg-13. is it a fair rating system? we'll ask a film critic coming up. >> whatever do you don't let them start. >> this program is brought to you by
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. . >> clayton: it's time for news by the numbers. welcome back, first, 100 years how old washington d.c.'s cherry blossom festival is. and the u.s. postal service, with stamp to honor the university. and 27,000 how much the average couple spent on the wedding not including the honeymoon. finally, 356 million dollars, how much the mega millions lotto jackpot sup to. now that nobody's won since late january. the odds of winning, one in 176 million. that will pay for like five weddings, alisyn. >> remind me to play that tonight. thanks, clayton. >> a mississippi church needs to get the okay from 60% of all local residents in order to purchase land in the cities. but, other businesses do not need to get that approval.
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is this a violation of the church's constitutional rights. and joining us is the pastor and the person representing him. thanks for being here. >> thank you for having us. >> pastor, i want to start with you. your congregation is going, you need to larger space, so you want today move to the property at that you had leased, i believe, on the town square, what's the problem? >> the city has an ordinance in place that requires churches and churches alien to require approval from property owners and we have to people and ask if we can exist and we don't think that's fair. >> alisyn: and that's a zoning ordinance that the pastor just spelled out. is that good enough legal grounds? >> well, fortunately, alisyn, we have the constitution of
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the united states which trusts local zoning ordinances and this type of discrimination is not allowed. you can't put on zoning on churches that you don't have for other businesses, churches to be treated like other businesses and this type of rule system has got to go. >> pastor, why do you think that the city ordinance is making your jump through hoops like this? >> well, they say that there's been abuses by other so-called churches that do things for tax benefits and tax breaks and i'm sure if they applied the irs standards they could weed these types out. and they're hiding behind, exactly why they do what they do, i cannot be certain. >> what do you and your client now do about this? we understand that a commission met and they say at that they have tabled this issue. what does that mean and what's next? >> well, we've filed a lawsuit against the city of holly springs and currently working
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its way through the court system. it's unfortunate that churches are forced to sue the cities in which they sit when they want to just to be able to serve the community. serve the community on the town square, as they simply want to have the right to exist. and we just don't understand why the other businesses are treated well there, but why they want to single out churches for this kind of discrimination. >> have you thought about just making a personal overture to the mayor and explaining your case? >> well, we have had discussions, privately, as well somewhat officials with the planning board i talked to, and we've made that appeal and they're stanley behind this. >> it sound like you have a great case. please keep us posted. and pastor, thanks for
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explaining to you us. >> thank you for having me. >> coming up, obama's health care plan forces catholics to go against their religious beliefs. how come the amish get an exemption? is that fair? we report, you decide. and plus, three families showing off their best dance moves. and all for a great cause. we're going to take a look at their skills. and we're going to have a dance contest and you're going to vote on it. that's next. ♪ to work day. campbell's microwavable soups. in three minutes -- the deliciousness that brings a smile to any monday. campbell's -- it's amazing what soup can do. than these gas relievers. these you take after food gives you gas, you take beano before, so you don't get gas. and if you don't get gas,
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>> welcome back, a fox news alert. president obama is in seoul, south korea for a two day summit. >> clayton: and joining us live is wendell goler, who has been covering the president's trip. wendell. >> reporter: south korea's president says the goal of the summit is to eliminate the roughly 120,000 nuclear weapons and more than 50 world leaders are gathered here for a follow on to the summit that president obama hopes in washington 2010. and north korea was the focus of this. and the president hopes to launch a satellite later next month that could hundreds of thousands in food aid. and what the president had to
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say in a news conference with the south kree's president a short while ago. >> my hope is it that at some point the north koreans make the decision that it's in their interest to try to figure out how to feed their people and improve their economy, rather than have big perhaps where they show off weapo weapons. >> earlier, the president made his first visit to the demilitarized zone, often described as the most heavily fortified border in the world with a hundred thousand troops on both sides and u.s. troops in the middle. and president obama and president lee holding a working dinner and the summet gets underway tomorrow with a discussion how countries can share intelligence to prevent nuclear material from getting in the hands of terrorist
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groups. guys, back to you. >> alisyn: wendell goler. thank you for the update. what other news is happening? there are new details revealed about george zimmerman, the man who alleged gunned down florida teen trayvon martin last month. phone records showed the 28-year-old had become a nuisance to 911 operators. the volunteer who wanted to be a real police officer placed 46 calls, varied in urgency and last year focused on black males. zimmerman claimed he killed the unarmed 17-year-old in self-defense. the grand jury will convene to decide whether he will face charges. no sign after missing maine toddler, police and hundreds of volunteers renewed the volunteer for little eva. the 21 month old was last seen in december at her father's home. the search did not turn up any new clues and police found the
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remains of a 53-year-old man who finished eight years ago. well, the controversy at a pennsylvania high school and officials of the valley school district say they're breaking with a legal battle with an atheist group if this statue is not removed immediately. the freedom for religious claims it's a violation. and the school claims the statue has been there 57 years and is not going anywhere. a facebook study shows more people break up in june than any any other months. >> want to kick start your summer. >> alisyn: a new summer squeeze. they say that summertime in general is the worst time for romance, long-term romance and christmas time and valentine's day are the best and gauge these with the scientific method of monitoring relationship status updates. >> clayton: i broke up, lol. get the scientists on that. >> dave: bingo! >> a great night in sports,
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hence the bags under the eyes. let's talk about college hoops and march madness. the guard aaron craft is might mighty proud of the ohio state jersey. and the uniform his brother wore, brandon unable to be there for the buckeyes meeting with syracuse because as an army infantryman he was deployed to afghanistan just as his brother was playing in the game. and pick it up. sulinger, thank goodness for ohio state fans he came back to school for sophomore year and visible in the foul troubles, but took over in the second and finished with a game high 19 points, for the sophomore buckeyes. and bounced syracuse, 77-70 and get the winner of kansas and north carolina. louisville taking on florida and rick pitino coaching again his prosecute guy, billy the
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kid and their up at the second half, but didn't hit one in the second half. louisville down is 6 points and look at the monster dunk. check out the alley-oop, but this one belonged to louisville late a 23-8 run to finish, and 69-68 and gators had two shots to tie it from three-point land and neither goes. rick pitino, 6th final four. one in four different decades. louisville moves on and tiger woods, by the way, leading going into sunday. he's only lost twice in his career, when going into sunday and clayton, last time he won, there was no such thing as an ipad. >> alisyn: wow. >> dave: since 2009. >> clayton: dark ages. >> dave: a long time ago. >> clayton: let's check with rick reichmuth who is outside in the weather. a little cooler today, rick. >> rick: it's a lot cooler, it's windy and get ready because it's going to be a lot colder for a lot of people.
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we've been talking about the warm temperatures across areas of the plains and how you're well above average, look for chicago, and minneapolis, tomorrow. chicago, you're 49 degrees, and after the 87 last week, that's going to feel mighty cold and overnight into the 30's, and we have some frost watches in effect for areas around the great lakes, get ready as we knew, winter is not over. you know, spring, i guess. ab the noeshg for the northeast, right now. a kind of a cloudy and showery day for the northeast, mid atlantic is where we'll he see most of that rain, areas of virginia and towards the carolinas, as you move down to the the southeast and carolinas, a few showers across central florida, as well. the western part that have picture. 90 in laredo. into the northern plains, a very nice day, cold air moves in for the eastern side tomorrow and parts of michigan and wisconsin, chicago, and will see that threat for severe weather, but tomorrow looking very, very nice,
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across the west, snow in southern california and sierras and nice and that storm is to the north and severe weather tomorrow into the northern plains, all right, guys, back to you inside. >> alisyn: thanks, rick, i'll take it. "fox & friends" is going to dance the morning away for charity. it's our sunday morning dance party in honor of the children's miracle network hot line and the national family danceoff contest and we decided to have our own competition in the studio and you'll be the ones to pick the winner voting on fox and friends.com. and two families that will be part of it. we'll announce the winner and a big prize for you guys at 9:30 a.m. eastern, but there will be another family as well and just you guys are dancing, joining us is the senior director of communications for the children's miracle networks hospitals and get to the families in a second. >> thank you. >> tell us about the
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dance-off. >> the children's miracle network partnered with primrose schools for the third annual family dance-off and we're excited to have our own little "fox & friends" dance-off today. >> where will the prize money go? >> to the hospital of one of our winning families choice today. >> why a dance contest? >> for most schools it's passionate helping kids say healthy and fight childhood obesity. what better way to stay healthy and dance. >> i agree. i hear the music starting up and strike the band and move over to the manning family shall elizabeth and kathy. >> great. >> what do you think about dancing for charity. >> my daughter has been dancing forever and for them to go to hospital, it's a better reason to dance. >> alisyn: a wonderful cause. what about you, dancing? do you have some moves? >> is was a new york city cops for almost 18 years, i've got
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loss of moves. >> alisyn: they're dangerous, however. excellent, good luck. >> thank you. >> alisyn: you guys are the ang family and you've got lots of little dancers here. what are you dancing for. >> children' health care network in atlanta, georgia. what does little kayla think about dancing? since she's six months old. >> i'm sure she's happy about it, she'll see it later on. >> alisyn: are you ready to dance, buddy? >> yeah. >> alisyn: that was a rousing yes. let's start with the manning family and have you guys step off and take it away. strike up the music. ♪ ♪
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♪ >> all right! >> nicely done, manning family you have some moves, mom. you guys did a great job. how are you feeling? that's basically the feeling that we have, often in the middle of the show. great, guys. stand by, okay, everybody at that you can vote for the manning family, but ang family, come out. you guys are going to dance with kids in arms? this will be great and interesting. are you feeling nervous?
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how are you going to top that. we'll see, are you ready jaden? >> okay, strike up the movie. jaden looks scared, but hit it. ♪ ♪ woo! >> fantastic. this is fantastic. you guys. jaden, you seemed to enjoy that. >> did you have fun? (laughter) >> dad, you seem to be doing most of the work there. >> well, dad's work is never done. >> fans i foot work and kayla
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slept through it. fantastic, that's great stuff. you guys are such great sports for obviously a wonderful cause and remember, you can vote. go to fox and friends.com and we will have another family coming up in an hour. thanks, terrific. >> alisyn: she slept through it. >> dave: oh, man. >> what just happened. >> dave: funky chicken, thank you, ali. >> clayton: there's a religious exemption in the health care plan, but it's only for the amish. will it help when it goes to obamacare before the supreme court. we report you decide. >> dave: is a pg-13 appropriate for the hunger games? a massive blockbuster, some critics say not enough. we asked one of our own next. . >> whatever you do don't let them start! >>
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exemption, includes only the amish. could this be a lyninchpin when arguments begin tomorrow. the chairman of "of thee i sing", good morning, sir. >> great to be with you, dave. >> dave: good to have you, so the religious exemption of the amish, how could it impact the constitutionality of obamacare when it heads to the supreme court tomorrow. >> the obamacare created a kavr out, religious exemption for all religions, the devil in all the details here, they said if you serve only the people that relate to your religion and only hire people of your religion, then you have a religious exemption, if you go to a catholic hospital and one in six americans do, when you hit the desk they usually ask for are your insurance card and may be asking for you your birth certificate or baptismal certificate to be sure you're
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catholic. this is not how the catholic or baptist outreach or religious informed outreach. in the law itself there's a carve out for the amish, against the amish religion to buy insurance. so what we have here, a religion exemption for one group of religious and we totally ignore the religious convictions and moral understanding of another group. that violates the free exercise clause, clearly. this will be something the supreme court will take up this week, it's all part of that mandate. you're mandating health care yet you're not allowing conscience clauses, forget religion. anyone with conscience can't bring it to bare under the law. >> you don't expect the an amish exemption to be part of the oral arguments we expect to go on for three days, you say that perhaps abortion mandate could really impact the constitutionality of the argument. the things that visits have to consider, why? >> it's tied together, dave.
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people don't realize there's an abortion prul mandate written in the law itself. this isn't a regulation that kathleen sebelius just came up with. it's there in the legislation. here is what it says. if you belong to exchange that covers aportion and most americans will be part of that exchange, every man, woman and child will have to pay $1 a month into what's essentially an abortion kitty, trust fund, anyone in your exchange that wants an abortion can go there to fund it. people don't realize that this is in the law and they have no right to exempt themselves from it under the law. things we all have to take part in. this is certainly, i think, weigh on the justices, it won't be central to the argument, but it does play into the constitutionality of this mandate and whether it stands up to muster, we'll see. >> dave: a massive case and it could all come down to one candidate and how that decision goes.
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and former vice-president dick cheney recovering this morning after a new heart. the latest how he's doing ahead. then, a movie about bullying gets an r-rating, but the new film "the hunger games" you've all heard about, and teens fighting to the death, pg-13. is it a fair rating system. we'll ask a film critic coming up. you can't argue with nutrition you can see. great grains. great grains cereal starts whole and stays whole. see the seam? more pcessed flakes look nothing like natural grains. i'm eating what i kn is better nutrition. mmmm. great grains. search great grains and see for yourself. we asked total strangers to watch it for us. thank you so much, i appreciate it, i'll be right back.
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>> welcome back, a ratings controversy over two new films. there's a documentary about bullying, an r-rating. but teens fighting in the hunger game, pg-13. nice to see you this morning, james. >> hey, good morning, clayton, how are you? >> i'm doing well. it sounds like a bit of a
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double standard of some kind. do we know why the mpaa or the motion picture of america would give an r-rating to a documentary aimed at helping kids and a pg-13 to a movie that basically talks about teens fighting to the death? >> well, the problem is we don't know why. because it's a group that's more secretive than the federal reserve and this kind of inconsistency between the two films undermines the usefulness of the rating system, what parents need to guide their kids. when you have a film like the "the hunger games" promises the slaughter of teens, each other and sort after death match, and it seems as though the mpaa is ignoring violence just looking at scenes that have profanity and "bullying" is designed to help kids with a real issue of bullying. it's a perfect pg-13 film.
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>> clayton: and bullying, as secret as they are, because teens are using profanity, but the other fighting to the death. and they say it's not a judgment of the value of the movie. aren't we hoping it kind of would be a judgment? >> it should be a judgment and shows we really have to scrap the system. they're looking at three things, they're looking at profanity, violence and scenes involving sex. and they don't distinguish them. we just get a single letter, and parent can't know what the criterion is, so they need to disclose their criteria and come up with a new system. >> it brought me to the next question, the thing was put in place, in 1968, mpaa is it time for us to get rid of the rating system and come up with something more modern? >> it absolutely is. and as i said, it undermines
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credibility and i think the system is no longer useful to parents and certainly not useful to the teens and tweens. and really, you know, there's a petition with 300,000 people online because of the film bully, because the issue is so important to parents and kids. i'm hopeful that they will he' make a deal, the weinstein maybe edit out some things and mpaa change that rating so more kids can see this movie. >> clayton: it seems more people paying attention to what rotten tomatoes are saying, than a user critic, generated base than yourself. . >> thank you. >> clayton: some adults still collecting an allowance from their parents, how old is too old to be paid by mommy and daddy? we'll break it down for you next. coming up the g.o.p. vowing to keep up the fight against
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>> it's sunday, march 25. we start with a fox news alert because former vice president dick cheney gets a new heart. cheney is recovering at this hour after waiting 20 months to get this new heart. we'll have the latest on that recovery. >> the second anniversary of obamacare passed without much fanfare from the white house. but tomorrow the billheads to the supreme court. congressman allen west is next on why he thinks it is unconstitutional. >> republican hopeful rick santorum scoops up more delegates with his louisiana win. so what sealed the deal? does it have a big impact on the g.o.p. race? we will break it down. "fox & friends" hour three starts right now. >> good sunday everyone.
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alison back. nice to have you back. >> thank you. i hope you enjoy the deluxe model alison. >> you got up at 2:00 a.m., i would guess. >> it hasn't warmed up. still high on quack -- guacamole. >> how old is too old to get allowance? >> we started to have colonel allen west ahead but we begin with a news alert. former vice president dick cheney recovering at an intensive care unit at a virginia hospital after undergoing heart transplant surgery. >> we know that the 71-year-old former vice president was on the cardiac transplant list for more than 20 months. he's had five heart attacks since 1978. in july 2010, vice
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president cheney had a ventricular assist device installed to help pump blood through his body. two years later he said he still hadn't decided if he wanted a heart transplant. >> one of the questions is whether or not i want to go for a heart transplant. the equipment that i wear was originally put together as a transition device to keep somebody going until they could get a transplant. now it's gotten good enough that a lot of people live on it for years. i haven't made a decision what i'm going to do yet, but that's one of the options i'll have to look at down the road. >> former vice president cheney is obviously receiving world-class care, but on average there is an 88% survival rate for people who have gotten new hearts one year after the transplant. after five years it is a 75% patient survival rate. after 10 years it is a 56% survival rate. not long ago we heard about the things cheney's doctors will need to keep an eye on right now. >> the thing we have to
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worry about is the next 24 to 48 hours: infection, kidney failure, stroke and finally rejection. with today's modern medical care, hopefully he's going to live for many, many more years. >> a spokesman for former president george w. bush says president bush has been in contact with the cheney family. he and mrs. bush were thrilled that the surgery went well and they are keeping v.p. cheney in their prayers for a full and speedy recovery. a spokeswoman said the cheney family does not know the identity of the heart donor but will be forever grateful for this lifesaving gift. >> interesting he was recently on the fence about whether he wanted to get a transplant. meanwhile more of your headlines right now. just ahead of the supreme court hearing tomorrow, the affordable care act, hundreds of activists rally at capitol hill, or on capitol hill.
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former republican presidential candidate was was -- herman cain was the keynote speaker. those opposed to obamacare urging the legislation be overturned. rallies took place across the country. if unchallenged, it would go into effect in 2014. in about three hours officials at mississippi state university are expected to release more information about last night's fatal shooting. police say a 21-year-old victim was shot multiple times. it is believed the suspects who were seen fleeing in a blue sedan did not attend the school. >> sufpls service members involved -- u.s. service members involved in the nato airstrike will not be facing charges. the decision is expected to anger pakistani officials. an american investigation in december reportedly found fault with both
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american and pakistani troops for the deadly exchange of fire. it said pakistan's troops allegedly fired first. pakistan refuse -- earlier this week pakistan's parliament is expected to resume debates with the united states and nato supplies supply lines. take a look at this brand-new video out of orlando, florida. nothing like a good old implosion to start your morning. unbelievable. really unbelievable. that one was a beaut. that was the amway arena. i don't know who sunny is or who that was. we agree, the onetime centerpiece of the downtown orlando landscape coming down in a matter of seconds. this is the place where the orlando magic used to play. it is demolition, clearing the way for a residential and office complex. >> a lot of memories. >> when shaquille o'neal
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played there it was a circus? >> some of the best pink hop corn i ever had -- some of the best pink popcorn i ever had. >> where did you get your worst pink popcorn? >> actually the same place. >> alison, while you were gone, we had summer. >> i'm not happy about that. i like to go away when it's snowing. >> you should have been here last week when it was wrong. 46 degrees right now in new york city. 55 still in chicago. enjoy that because tomorrow you're not even going to get towards 50, which is going to feel not nearly as comfortable after this week. a few scattered showers. the worst of it across parts of new england. that cloud cover and gloomy conditions are going to stick with us for much of the day. this is that upper-level low, the same one that brought the snow a week ago into arizona, such a slow-moving storm it will
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finally be gone by tomorrow and we'll be done with it. but it's going to remain very, very cool across the northeast for the next number of days. here's the next stores, out across parts of the west. very heavy rain and very heavy mountain snow and across parts of california. this system spinning here, by tomorrow it ejects out into parts of the northern plains. the threat for severe weather moves there. this is more of what we would see for severe weather in june, not what we typically see in march. if you're in the northern plains, tomorrow you need to watch that across the dakotas and out towards nevada. by the next day it moves farther towards the east. high temperatures with us again at least across the plains again. so enjoy that. >> obamacare will have its day in court tomorrow. the supreme court will decide the constitutionality of the affordable care act. if it is not ruled unconstitutional, the g.o.p. says they will try to repeal it. but can they? >> joining us now to weigh
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in on this is florida congressman alan west. nice to see you. welcome back to the shoefplt >> good -- welcome back to the show. >> tomorrow all eyes on the supreme court. the obama administration going to try to put a halt to any legal proceedings, basically saying this thing isn't out of the gate yet, so you guys can't rule on it. what do you think is going to happen tomorrow? >> i think that shows undue influence coming from the executive branch. i think once again you see an obama administration that doesn't understand we have coequal branches of government. the legislative branch and the judicial branch. for them to try to influence any decision of the supreme court shows they have no real concern about the founding fathers and how they established our government. >> do you think there is a way the supreme court could rule some tenets of the affordable care act unconstitutional but keep some in place.
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>> i think the heart of the matter is when you look at the individual mandate. they're trying to go to the commerce clause of the constitution. i did some cross-referencing and study to include edwin meese's good to the u.s. constitution. the word "commerce" as it was written and understood then talked about trade practices. the commerce clause talks about regulating trade practices and fair trade practices between the federal government or congress and other states of the nation and then the indian tribes. if we were to believe the united states federal government now has the right to mandate the private american individual citizen to buy a certain type of private-sector commodity or be fined because of it, that goes against everything that thomas jefferson believed when he wrote the declaration of independence that talked about the inalienable rights that come from our creator, which is life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. >> interesting piece by george will about this going against decades of
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contract law as well in the united states. if this is ruled constitutional by the supreme court, is there any chance that the g.o.p. can, as the candidates are promising, repeal it short of having the senate, the house and the white house? >> i think you ask a very interesting question because really the obama administration and truly the liberal disciples are in an untenable position. either the supreme court does as they should do -- without a doubt, i think it should be a unanimous decision, to say that the independent payment advisory board, the individual mandate are not just unconstitutional. they really are anticonstitutional because they inject the government into our most personal decision. that's about our life. the thing is this. if the supreme court does rule it to be constitutional, you will see the american people rise up and understand that this is truly a threat to what the united states of america is as a constitutional republic. you probably will see a
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change in the presidency, the senate and a maintaining of the house under the g.o.p. so that we can repeal this as well as other very onerous legislation that was passed into law. >> that all starts tomorrow. fox news will be covering it from wall to wall, coverage of what happens with the affordable care act. also on friday, the president was in oklahoma talking about the southern portion of the keystone pipeline, saying he's going to cut through red tape and get this process going. still at issue is the northern portion of the keystone pipeline. critics say the president has blocked this at every turn. is the president wrong for getting credit for this now? >> leaders take responsibility, not credit. i think when you look at this whole thing about the southern portion, it would be very much the same as if i went home right now to wash my car and i cut the water hose in half and i said i was still going to wash my car with the lower part of the water hose without being able to turn
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on the spigot. this is insidious what the president is talking about. >> congressman allen west, always great to talk to you. we will be watching closely as to what happens at the supreme court this week. thank you. >> coming up, rick santorum, picking up a big win in louisiana last night. is this the momentum he needs to push him closer to scoring the g.o.p. nomination? we'll talk to chris wallace, the anchor of "fox news sunday" about that next. >> a disturbing video. a man tased and dragged across the floor by airport security. how it all started, still ahead. getting your business from point a to point b can be tricky. sometimes what you need is extra working capital or leasing options.
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>> big political news. yesterday republican hopeful rick santorum won louisiana and he rallied the crowd last night. >> we have an opportunity in the next ten days to
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strike a great blow for freedom in wisconsin. you will shock the political world. [cheers and applause] >> ten days. it happens miraculously. we will have won 11 states in this campaign. the first won we won, no one gave us a chance. >> was his victory expected? is this momentum the exact momentum santorum needs to continue? joining us now the host the "fox news sunday" chris wallace. good morning. no big surprise santorum won in louisiana. he does well with the conservatives, evangelicals, those who make less than 50 grand. but if there was a surprise was that he did well with the folks who voted on the economy? >> yes, that was a bit of a surprise. this race of kind of static in the sense that when they go to the midwest or the northeast, romney wins. when they go down south, santorum wins.
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gingrich has only won two states: his home state of georgia and south carolina. it is a little surprising at how poorly he did in louisiana. and that's why wisconsin is important, because one of them has to break through in the other's turf or this race continues along the same tracks. wisconsin not this tuesday, but a week from tuesday -- we get a break of ten days -- is the next big test for romney and rick santorum. >> the american voters may be a little weary of this too, chris. you're getting a sense they're not happy with the current crop of candidates. you saw that poll. they're getting kind of weary of the candidates right now. this momentum, kansan toerpl capitalize on louisiana going into wisconsin and pennsylvania. or do you think he was expected to win there and romney is going to get back on track? >> i don't think this is a big surprise and big
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breakthrough. i think were santorum to win in wisconsin in a few days, that would be a big deal. april is going to be a big month for santorum. all the southern states are finished voting now, the places where gingrich and santorum were supposed to do well. they go to the northeast and mid-atlantic states primarily, and you have wisconsin in april -- new york is going to vote, delaware is going to vote, maryland is going to vote. you get a lot of states where romney should do very well and where santorum is unlikely to do so well except for his own state of pennsylvania, in late april. at this point the calendar very much favors romney. he picked up some delegates and he is just a couple of votes shy of actually being halfway to the nomination. i think he's 568 delegates, the clinching number, magic number is 1,144. >> you read articles of people who crunch the numbers differently and says there is a way romney won't make it to that magical number.
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that he would have to keep winning all of the winner-take-all states plus other things. >> he needs 40% of the delegates. >> if you want to play the math, he needs less than 50%. he can actually do worse than he did in the first half and still win the nomination. he needs 47%, 48% of the remaining delegates. santorum, talk about santorum and gingrich, he would need over 70% of the remaining delegates. it's either romney gets it or nobody gets it, i think it is almost impossible that santorum or gingrich is going to get to 1,144. they say if nobody gets it, we get to this open convention and everything is up for grabs. >> plenty to talk about, you have obama advisor david plouff addressing the constitutionality of obamacare. should be a great fox news sunday. check local listings.
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your brackets are doing all right, chris? >> they're doing great. how about yours? >> i'm happy. >> i don't know what that means. >> the only one i'm out is louisville. >> he was talking about his brackets in his kitchen to hold the glasses. >> i don't know what it is. >> thanks, chris. >> president dwight d. eisenhower's family is outraged or plans for his memorial in our nation's capital. we'll talk to his granddaughter about what the problem is. >> we'll tell you about one bride and groom's royal wedding crasher experience. wedding crasher experience. >> the salah i s? ♪ when your chain of supply goes from here to shanghai, that's logistics. ♪ ♪ chips from here, boards from there track it all through the air, that's logistics. ♪ ♪ clearing customs like that hurry up no time flat that's logistics. ♪
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>> there's a heated debate over plans for a memorial to commemorate president
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dwight d. eisenhower. the memorial which will be built off the national mall, shows ike as a young, shoeless boy instead of focusing on his time as president and war hero. those plans have eisenhower's family outraged. joining us is the granddaughter of the late president eisenhower, susan eisenhower. good morning, susan. >>guest: good morning. >> what is the problem with this plan for the memorial? >>guest: i think there are two problems. one, the memorial is focusing largely on eisenhower's origins rather than his accomplishments. even though there are design elements that show the presidency and his wartime accomplishments, it's dwarfed by the very, very large metal screens -- 80-feet high -- that are going to reflect his roots in kansas. it just seems to me that the concentration and the focus of the memorial should be about his role in
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beating the nazis during world war ii and his two-term presidency. >> the memorial was designed by a renowned architect. what his brainchild was and his vision was a young eisenhower marveling at the two later versions of himself. it sounds like he was trying to be poetic. >>guest: i'm sure it was an attempt to be poetic. but the truth is that the idea of a young boy dreaming about his life sounds like he's only aspiring to his career. eisenhower was called upon to do some of the most important things of the 20th century, which was to beat back the nazis in europe and to go on and reconfigure the united states for its superpower status, to grow the economy, to protect us against the soviet threat during the cold war. so this is really what the focus of the memorial should be. not some dreamy young boy. >> i have a statement here from the memorial
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commission in which they say "i respect the family's concerns and the commission has asked for their input. but ultimately it is not the family memorial to eisenhower. it is the national memorial to eisenhower." your response to that? >> that's exactly right. but they haven't been reading the newspapers, then they don't know this has become a very, very controversial issue. i think the only way to move into a sense of consensus is to have a redesign. >> we shall see. that's what your family is calling for. we shall see if they are responsive to that. susan eisenhower, the granddaughter of president eisenhower. thank you for coming in and explaining your personal perspective on this. >>guest: thank you. >> a new study says some adults are still collecting allowance from their parents. how old is too old to be paid by mommy and daddy? we'll listen to your comments next. we're continuing our "fox & friends" dance-off. find out which family has all the right moves.
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let's make medicare stronger when my tempur-pedic moves. [ male announcer ] why not talk to someone who owns an adjustable version of the most highly recommended bed in america? ask me about my tempur advanced ergo. goes up. goes up. ask me what it's like to get a massage anytime you want. goes down. goes down. [ male announcer ] tempur-pedic brand owners are more satisfied than owners of any traditional mattress brand. ergonomics. [ male announcer ] tempur-pedic. the most highly recommended bed in america. it's the perfect time to save up to $300 on select mattress sets. >> welcome back everybody. the mania surrounding tim tebow coming to new york this weekend. this is a good look at
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jockey's new billboard with the new york jets backup quarterback looking over commuters at the lincoln tunnel on the new jersey side. it says "we support tebow" -- yeah, support --"and new york." 500,000 people are expected to see this ad. it will be up until friday and tebow will be introduced at a press conference tomorrow. >> wait. it's for jockey. why are they just showing a face. why don't they take a page from the mark e. mark ad campaign and show the product. >> like "the new york post" did on the cover? >> right here. >> that's what you want to see when you're coming through the lincoln tunnel to start your morning. >> any time. >> with tebow here in new york, there will be plenty of shirtless tebow ads around. he's introduced tomorrow. i'll be at this press conference. it's going to be an enormous circus. >> you're making our mail
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producer uncomfortable. he's like when do we have the victoria's secret segment. >> let's talk about this. i find this fascinating and probably the most e-mailed story of the morning. how old is too old for allowance? that is like what you hand to your five-year-old for maybe cleaning the room. according to this story, adults are still getting allowances. >> 20% of adults between 18 and 34 get, although it says financial help from parents, not necessarily an allowance but a little bit of help. one in ten of all adults get financial help from their parents. >> how do you define allowance? >> allowance is for doing chores. >> but one in five -- which is a high number -- are somehow on the dole from their parents, which is probably because isn't being broke a right of passage in your 20's? isn't that a character-builder, to be broke in your 20's?
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>> i was still paying for chinese food i charged on a credit card when i was 21. >> how many years did you pay for that? >> still paying for that. >> i remember my first job in journalism, i made such little money that i would buy one hot pretzel from a vendor and ration it the whole day. >> you still do that. >> old habits die hard. >> you started the allowance factor for your kids? >> just starting it at four and six, although we're not good at keeping up with their chores so it kind of falls apart. >> they say, dad, can i have my five dollars. >> we want to know from your folks, are you still getting allowance from mom and dad? and how old is too old? we got e-mails. greg in atlanta. my cousin lives with his 87-year-old father and gets a weekly allowance. he is 58.
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>> christie in tennessee writes who's giving this allowance? i want to be adopted. >> this is from jay, allowance from children should stop once they graduate college or begin working for themselves. that's part of the problem, so many 20-year olds are out of work right now. >> or coming back and living at home. >> here's page, no checks for me except for christmas and my birthday. but that doesn't count, does it? >> no. that's not allowance. >> keep them coming. first, what else is happening? >> a deadly house fire in west virginia where eight people were killed. it could possibly have been prevented. officials are saying a fire inspector was turned away from the charleston home last month because no adults were home at the time of the visit. two adults and six children under the anal of eight died in this tragic fire. one adult and a child
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survived. that child is on life support. the home had only one working fire detector. >> a disturbing scene at will rogers airport in oklahoma. police tased and dragged a man while he pleads for them to stop. this incident reportedly started when the passenger tried to enter a restricted area after hearing that newt gingrich might be there. officials now confirm that gingrich was never in danger. police are now launching an internal investigation admitting the arresting officers may have used excessive force. maybe just turning the guy away could have helped. >> there is no doubt that america is hungry for "hunger games" the movie brought in more than $68 million on its opening day. it is the fifth-best opening of all time. it is also expected to beat the record for the best
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weekend debut in the month of march. that title currently held by "alice in wonderland." imagine your wedding day getting the royal seal of approval by the queen. that happened to john and francis canning. they could hardly believe their eyes when her majesty accompanied by prince phillip walked into the room. it was moments after they tied the knot. the royal couple had been attending a luncheon in the same manchester hall and asked if they could pop in and congratulate the newlyweds. >> i didn't think you were allowed to shake the hand of the queen. >> she is curtsying. that is protocol. >> that is one for the photo book. >> i would screw that up, the protocol meeting the royal family. >> there would be an international incident. >> i would have no idea what to do. >> if you're not expecting it, you can do whatever. when you meet the queen, you do the practice for
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what you have to do. but if she crashes your party -- all right, look at the weather map. a lot colder across the northeast today. this is what the difference is in the last 24 hours. the northern plains around 15 to 20 degrees cooler than you were 24 hours ago. same towards the eastern part of the country. 10 to 15 degrees cool. you feel it out here. breezy as well. the forecast for today will reflect changes in temperatures. the northeast, quite a bit cooler. spotty showers. sprinkling out here now. not going to be a big rainout but remain cloudy and a lot cooler. towards the southeast, rain showers that will be more persistent across parts of the car carolinas. the western side of the picture, plentiful sunshine and very nice temperatures into the 80's for almost everyone. towards the north, another
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nice day today. it is going to cool down by tomorrow. severe weather moving in towards the northern plains. out toward the west, that's where the weather is. southern california, that's where you go for your rain and snow. >> an hour ago we watched the manning family boogie doing it for the children's miracle network hospital. it is a danceoff. take a look. i before e except after c ♪ ♪ and why 2 plus 2 makes 4 ♪ >> it's going to be hard to top those moves. you're getting nervous here. we have our next family, which is the white family. we're also going to announce our big winner at 9:30. get your votes in. go to foxandfriends.com. i want to bring in the
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senior director of communication for children's miracle network. >> we are dancing to celebrate the danceoff which they do to benefit children's hospitals. >> i want to talk to the white family. this is our third family. are you guys -- you consider yourself pretty good cutters of the rug? >> we're going to try. hoping we're not going to ruin kevin bacon's song. >> your daughter behind you is giving the "let's not do this mom" nod. i'm not sure she believes in your moves. you see what i'm saying. tell us about your cause. i know your kids were affected in a car crash. tell us about that. >> aaron's is in the army. while he was deployed to afghanistan, my mom had the kids and they were involved in a car accident and my mother passed away from her injuries and both of the kids have traumatic brain
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injuries. mackenzie is doing better. michael uses a washing, but -- uses a walker but he can wiggle and dance. we love the hospital and we want to give back to them as much as we can because they gave life back to our family. >> thank you. we are now ready to see your moves. are you guys ready? in 3, 2, 1, strike up the music. ♪
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>> nicely done. aaron, i see you have a signature move. what do you call that? >> trying not to embarrass myself too much. >> you succeeded. you guys were great. great dancing. that was excellent. nicely done. remember you guys can go and vote for any of these families. it's all for a great cause. we will show the winner at 9:30. that was terrific. thank you. you saw yourself. i know. you were excellent. thanks so much. meanwhile, he broke his own record yesterday. the u.s.a. memory championship winner is in our studio. he's going to test us coming up. >> high unemployment, high gas prices. what's president obama doing to get the country back on track?
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our next guest says not enough. he's the c.e.o. of the consumer electron eubgs association. he's not -- consumer electronics association. he's not happy about this. ♪
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>> unemployment above 8%. gas prices nearing an average of $4 a gallon. one of the biggest challenges our nation faces as an economic recovery. our next guest says president obama's antibusiness attitude is not helping our country get back on track. joining me is the director of the consumer electronics association, gary shapiro. nice to see you this
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morning. >>guest: good morning, clayton. >> doing well. i had a chance to see you at the electronics consumer show. you've written an opinion piece talking about president obama is hurting business in this country. you had a record-breaking year. how do you square the two? >> there's great reason for optimism because there's fantastic innovation. it's a great show, 35,000 people from abroad, over 150,000 in total, and it's all business. innovation does cause growth. it helps the economy and creates jobs. but there's not enough of it throughout the economy and our government is doing things to hurt us. >> you talk about in your opinion piece two specific areas where you think president obama is hurting job growth. what are they? take us through them. >> first, as a leader, president obama is trying to divide the country. he talks of this 91.1%
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rhetoric. he attacks industries, whether they be banking, oil, people who use aircraft or anyone who makes money. yet the people who make money are the ones in the best position to create jobs. when you're being attacked by the leader of the country, which is unprecedented in my lifetime that you have a president who makes business the enemy, job creators the enemy, it is not very healthy. you can go overseas without being taxed the way we're double taxed in the u.s. we make it difficult to hire the best and brightest here. we have challenges at the top. >> number two on your list is regulation. we have a chart here to show you -- to highlight what you're talking about here. under president obama, 106 the number of major regulations compared to 28 under the bush regulation. the cost of regulation is about $46 billion to $8 billion under the bush administration. and the heritage foundation providing those numbers. you think regulation is also crushing business in the u.s.? >> absolutely.
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it's not -- those are the rules that actually passed and they are now law. as i go around the country and i talk about my book, i've spoken to so many groups of different industries and businesses. every one of them says the same thing. their group is under attack by the federal government because some bureaucrat in a cubicle has directions from very bright, smart, zealots put into place. he's hired several thousand of these people we don't pay attention to, and they have a passion. their passion is to regulate business. they don't care about jobs, don't care about the impact. it used to be in price white houses, there was a stop. you go to the white house and you say does this rule make sense. there is no stop. you have almost four times the amount of bush administration rules in place, but every industry is under attack in a bunch of different ways. that makes you as a c.e.o. freeze. you say i don't know what my tax is going to be next year. i'm under attack by the federal government. there was the boeing, solyndra. there's what happened with
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gibson. they had 30-odd agents take over gibson. there are so many things which are negative. maybe i'll invest abroad rather than hire americans. it is not a healthy situation. we need a change in the presidential attitude towards business. >> gary shapiro, director of the consumer electronics association. great to see you. coming up on the show, republican hopeful rick santorum scoops up more delegates with his louisiana win. what sealed the deal? does it have a big impact on the g.o.p. race? we'll break it down. the winner of the u.s.a. memory championship joins us next. he's going to test our skills. i hope he doesn't test alisyn. she doesn't remember what she had for breakfast this she had for breakfast this morning. twenty-five thousand mornings, give or take, is all we humans get. we spend them on treadmills.
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we spend them in traffic. and if we get lucky, really lucky, it dawns on us to go spend them in a world where a simple sunrise can still be magic. twenty-five thousand mornings. make sure some of them are pure michigan. your trip begins at michigan.org.
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>> welcome back. it was an unforgettable win for a florida man as the 15th annual u.s.a. memory championship. our next guest is a two-time winner and even broke his own record yesterday by memorizing 303 random numbers in just five minutes. >> that makes no sense to me. maybe we can learn from him. joining us is the winner of the u.s.a. memory championship. welcome. >> you're talking to two people who can't remember where they put their keys, phone, coffee. >> everybody has these problems. the interesting thing is you can train yourself to improve your memory. >> though you can memorize 303 random numbers in five minutes, you can memorize a deck of cards in under 40 seconds, you say you have an average memory. how is that possible? >> i never had a good memory. i heard about memory
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championships a few years ago and decided to train my mind because that's what they do. all these mental athletes that compete, they have average memories and train them to do these phenomenal feats. >> mental athletes. you say it's basically all tricks. >> you're tricking your mind. our minds don't like to memorize things. it's boring, repetition. but there are ways to trick it into making it fun and almost easy. >> you're going to test us but then you're going to tell us the secret of how to do it. >> i'll say out ten random words and after i'm done, write down as many as you can from your memory. >> we can't write them as you're saying it. >> that's not remembering. >> here we go. wheel. shoe. book. banana. table. wallet. television. balloon. finger. elephant.
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>> how many words did we get? >> there were ten. i have seven. >> i have seven. >> that's pretty good. wheel, shoe, book, table, ban in a in a wallet. >> you wrote shoe twice. >> i wrote book twice. >> what was your method? you were probably searching from what you remember. that's about the average people can do. about six or seven items. >> we keep repeating wheel, we can get to ten. >> the technique is twofold. it's turn those words into have i individual pictures and then -- vivid pictures
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and store those pictures into a skwrer ni around a -- into a journey around a place. the first was wheel and shoe. i picture this wheel smushing somebody's shoe. you have to make it really -- >> graphic. >> maybe that's happening on the edge of the couch. picture a wheel rolling over the edge of the shoe. maybe on your lap. the next two words are going to be book and ban in a in a. you have a book -- book and banana. you have a book on your lap. you open it and there is a disgusting ban in a in -- banana. >> the point is to make them graphic images. >> the ones that stick are repulsive. >> more "fox & friends" in two minutes. remember to stay on this
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. >> alisyn: good morning it is sundays, march 25, i'm alisyn camero camerota, a "fox news alert," dick cheney recovering after get a new heart, next we talk to a heart surgeon about this former vice president's recovery. >> dave: the second anniversary of the affordable care act. passed without much fan fare, from the white house, but, tomorrow, the bill is headed to the supreme court, the man who led the effort against so-called obamacare. joins us, coming up. >> clayton: and, call him the cull back kid, rick santorum, scoring a big win in liouisianl can we keep up the momentum to. ka up to mitt romney with delegates? . we'll break down the numbers for you. fox and friends, hour four, fox and friends, hour four, starts, right now. captioning by, closed captioning services, inc.
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>> alisyn: welcome, great to have you joining us this morning. we'll get to the news in one moment. i wanted to say our last guest, the memory expert, we forgot to mention his web site climbformemory.com. our last segment, if you can remember our last segment. >> clayton: we remember waking up, we have you a "fox news alert." former vice president dick cheney recovering in an intensive care unit after receiving a heart transplant, an aide saying surgery was successful. good news. >> dave: he has a long history, as you know of cardiovascular problems, and suffered his first of five heart attacks when he was 37 years old, and had been on the transplant list for nearly two years, before getting the call. and, his family saying they'll be forever grateful to the donor whose identity they do not know. >> alisyn: joining us now is the board certified cardiovascular
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surgeon and director of heart, diabetes and weight loss centers of new york. great to have you back with us. you know how the surgeries go, how complicated a surgery is what the vice president had. >> a modern day miracle. our prayers go to he and his family,ees the iron man, had a heart attack that the 37 and you don't live long after that, mulitple heart attacks, angioplasties, bypass and angle rich -- aneurysms. and, only 2300 performed in the u.s., last year. >> clayton: you mentioned the mechanical pacemaker and he was in sean hannity's audience and he talked about it, and he took out the battery. >> i feel the same, much better than i did before. >> this is it. right there. >> this is the battery and there's a control element here and another battery here.
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and, i'm... >> you do that to scare people? >> it beeps when you take it off. >> put the battery back on. yeah. >> okay. >> but, it is... it is wonderful technology. >> clayton: he doesn't need to wear it anymore if the surgery was successful. he has done with that and can shower and bathe. >> dave: >> pretty good show business, right? absolutely, that is out and he has the new heart pumping for him and, hopefully will go and live many, many more years. >> dave: he's 71 years old. >> that's not old. >> dave: fairly old for a heart trar transplant, how does his quality of life change and how important is the next 48 hours. >> all positive. there were 300 performed in people over 65 and longevity at five years is like over 75%. his health is going to be a lot better and he'll be able to do
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more activities and, we don't know what the symptoms were and he had a heart pump nut input i him. >> alisyn: and the next 24 hours are critical. >> strokes heart attacks, blood clots and arrhythmias and, rejection. >> alisyn: but they are monitoring that and at the moment everything is going well. >> it's not like an appendectomy. he has a team of 20, 30, 40, 50 people working on him. >> clayton: we appreciate you joining us with your expertise. stay there, alisyn has more headlines. >> dave: assume his assume system will be weakened by the drugs you take after a transplant. >> alisyn: we'll keep you posted on the development with vice president cheney and your other headlines... ten people have been killed in a bombing in afghanistan in kandahar after an ied attack and a nato service member is reportedly among those killed and two other officers
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were hurt in the explosion and names of the victims have not yet been released. officials at mississippi state expected to release information on a fatal campus shoot which happened overnight in a dorm for male students and the police say the 21-year-old victim was shot more than once and the suspects seen freeing in a blue sedan did not attend the university. the ten commandments causing controversy, at a pennsylvania high school. officials at the valley school district say they are bracing for a legal battle for a battle with a group, and the group claims it is a violation of the co constitution but it has been there, 57 years and they say it is not going any where. if you are not awake look at new video out of order lindy. -- orlando.
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unbelievable. really, unbelievable. >> alisyn: unbelievable, sonny, really, unbelievable. a one time centerpiece of the downtown orlando landscape, coming down in a matter of seconds. this is the place where the orlando magic used to play and clayton has nostalgic feelings. >> clayton: i went to a couple of circuses there. it was not a pretty building. good that it is gone. >> alisyn: bon voyage. >> dave: the magic called that home for a couple of years and rick reichmuth has a check of the weather. a little cooler. >> rick: only the 40s by tuesday, for a high across a lot of the northeast. a far cry from the 70s and 80s. your temps, cooler in general and we have rain across parts of the northeast and the cold front will drop temperatures over cross areas of the northeast and today we'll have light showers and maybe a thunderstorm or two, across parts of virginia. and into the carol lines, and
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this is the same upper level system that brought the snow across arizona, 9 days ago. still, dealing with it. it will be gone dby tomorrow. and out of the west, a system bringing rain and snow, across southern california and advisories across the mountains, the storm tonight and tomorrow, it enters the northern plains, we'll have a threat for severe weather and normally we see it in june, across the northern plains and we are early for that, don't be caught off guard, could be seeing an isolated tornado or two tomorrow across parts of the plains. your highs for your day today, everybody in the plains, again, well above average, not that bad towards the northeast, really, we see the colder air move in. around the great lakes and towards the northeast tomorrow and tuesday and, looks like we'll stay unsettled and cool, for a lot of the coming week... even two weeks. i hate to tell you that. >> alisyn: stay cool. >> clayton: he's always cool. >> dave: politics, the dynamic
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of the jg.o.p. race, after santorum had a dominating win, down south, 49 to 27 and it comes to delegates and he talks away with it looks like ten delegates because of proportional rules. >> clayton: and mitt romney, of all people, gets five delegates as a result, when he loses, he is still picking up delegates. >> alisyn: he got more than 25% and that was the tipping point for being able to collect delegates but rick santorum says it is a moment he can capitalize on and people of louisiana can send a message. >> we have an opportunity the next ten days to strike a great blow for freedom here in wisconsin. you will shock the political world. [cheers and applause]. >> ten days. it happened.
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miraculous miraculously. we will have won 11 states in this campaign and the first one we won, no one gave us a chance. >> clayton: so, what is interesting, if you look at the exit polls, they are stacked up similarly across a lot of the contests and this one, with louisiana voters among severely conservative individuals, to quote mitt romney. he does very well, rick santorum does, but the most interesting of all the exit polls, is the one rick santorum won, was the economy, asked about why they voted for him, it was the economy they thought he'd handle better than mitt romney and mitt romney won that in every other contest so far in the primary battle. >> alisyn: that was interesting. people who rate the economy as their top issue on which they'll vote and mitt romney had that sewn up, being from the business world, people give it to him and people at least in louisiana, if they see him as carrying the mantle it could change things up. >> dave: if... if rick santorum can go up april 3rd, ten days
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away, win in wisconsin, win in d.c. and maryland, and, especially wisconsin and maybe get momentum going into pe pennsylvan pennsylvania. he needs 70% of the remaining delegates to get 1144. a tall hill to climb. >> alisyn: many people said if mitt romney doesn't get to the 1144, what newt gingrich is obviously banking on at the convention, anything is possible. >> clayton: right. >> dave: the late states of new york, california, will be tough to present mitt romney from getting a lot of numbers. >> clayton: and keeping the math, add it up, keeping him from getting the top number, if all of them get the rest of the remaining delegates, does it become a brokered convention, do they go behind in the smoke-filled rooms and have discussions who will get the next ballot. >> alisyn: there is no smoking now. dave, you are not allowed to smoke in buildings everything. >> dave: a game-changer. >> clayton: true. >> dave: let us know where you think the race is saided, ten days before a primary. coming up, as it celebrates the two year anniversary, the
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president's health care law about to go before the supreme court. could the high court rule it unconstitutional? we ask constitutional lawyer, david rivkin who represented the 26 states who opposed obamacare. >> alisyn: and this disturbing video. a man tased and dragged across the floor, by airport security and we'll show it to you as well. still ahead. but also a caring touch. you learn to get a feel for the trouble spots. to know its wants... its needs...its dreams. ♪call 1-800-steemer.
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while you are eating a candy bar? you enjoy that. i am. [ male announcer ] fiber beyond recognition. fiber one. >> clayton: now two years since pat obama signed the health care bill into law and at least 26 states, hoping that it will not make to it next year's anniversary. the law is set to be reviewed by the supreme court tomorrow. to determine whether or not it is constitutional. and democrats like house minority leader nancy pelosi are confident the act will avoid a repeal. >> we knew what we were doing when we passed the bill. it is iron-clad constitutionally. i have faith in the courts and i have faith in the bill. >> clayton: joining us now is
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constitutional attorney and one of the prosecutors against the act, david rivkin, nice to see you this morning and you have recommended 26 states who sued on the health care law. a couple of them, have been successful. moving forward, some have been thrown out. what do you think the obama administration is going to start with, tomorrow, in front of the supreme court? do they have a strong case? is it iron-clad, like nancy pelosi says? >> the same nancy pelosi who said that in order to pass the bill, we'll learn more about the bill after we pass it? no, they have a weak case, let me say what is interesting about this, is, typically, you improve your arguments as you go along, the government is in the same position, as it was, when they begin defending the statute, they've come up with no meaningful limiting principle that would enable the court to distinguish within this mandate, in an infinite variety of other mandates and therefore are going to lose, the arguments are no
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better than they used to be at the beginning. >> clayton: what i have read, with the obama administration pinning its hopes on a law, a court case that goes back to the 1930s, i believe, a weak law, where a guy, basically, was told by the federal government, hey, stop producing this amount of wheat on your land. is that what they are pinning their hopes on, a wheat law from back then. >> yes. and the marijuana case. wheat an weed and the reason they are wrong, because those cases which really represent the greatest, broadest reading of a commercial clause, clayton are about regulating things, not people and the first instance, they regulated wheat and, the second, weed and the people are regulated only to the extent they view the products as commodities, and they grow them and this individual mandate regulates people merely because
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they exist and can only be supported by plenary police power and in our constitutional system, the power is exercisable only by the states. never by the federal government. the government has absolutely no good argument. >> clayton: and the issue is the mandate being forced by the federal government to buy health insurance for existing as you say. now, if that portion of it gets shot down by the supreme court, will other provisions be able to live on? michelle malkin wrote at hotair.com says it is a multi-tentacled beast, many heads to it, if one is cut off, portions live on. >> the states challenged to the only the individual mandate at the heart of the bill but improper provisions relating to medicaid what are coercive and diminish the sovereignty and the other major piece of the bill is being challenged but what you are asking, clayton has to do
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with severability, and, whether or not the individual mandate goes down as i'm confident it will, it would take down the whole bill and that is one of the issues before the court and we're hopeful the statute would meet its much deserved demise. >> clayton: we heard the supreme court already likely all made up its mind and they've been working on it a long time and it will not be a surprise when they see the individuals giving the oral arguments. is that the case, do they think it is an open-and-shut case? >> well, i happen to believe all of the justices by now have read excellent briefs admitted by the parties and amicus briefs and they've read them and what will happen in next few days is very, very consequential and they've allocated an unprecedented amount of time, three days over five-and-a-half hours of argument, the longest, if i'm not mistaken since brown versus
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the board of education case. >> clayton: decades, and one of the most consequential cases before the supreme court in american history. >> by the way, one thing to say. it is not a case about health care but it is a case about individual liberty aren't whether or not individual liberty, would continue to be expected by the struct tournament separati structural separation of powers. >> clayton: we appreciate you joining us, constitutional attorney, knee-deep in the for years now. coming up on the show, the hunger games, the movie, facing criticism for the plot line, but there is an underlying religious messages, father jonathan is here to weigh in on it. how old is too old to collect cash from mom and dad? a survey says some adults getting an allowance from their parents, 20% of you, we'll break it down, next. ♪ ♪ i get knocked down ♪ but i get up again... blanks
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. >> clayton: welcome back, quick headlines now, no service members will be charged in the nato airstrike in november that killed 24 pakistani soldiers. the strike triggered these protests, and the military's recent decision will likely anger pakistani officials. and get aload of this: a poll from the pew research center reveals 1 in 10 american adults still get some kind of allowance from their parents. or other relatives. that reportedly applies to all kinds of people including many who are 65 or older. >> alisyn: i don't think that guy is doling out allowance. >> clayton: i hope so. i want to know what parents those are. >> dave: meanwhile "the hmounge
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games", speaking of money, breaking box office records, you heard about the violence. >> alisyn: here is fox news contributor and author of "god wants you happy", father jonathan morris. people talk about how violent the themes are. >> this is not an endorsement and no one would care if i endorsed it anyway. i tried to get into the movie because i was going to talk about it and i couldn't get into it in long island but i stayed up and got little sleep. i could not put down the book. it is very good. now, it is not a kids movie. there is violence. it is dark. it is very dark. but, it has not so much religious themes, as tremendously important existential themes. one, a government that was a democracy and now is a
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totalitarian regime and people don't know that. and, you have this class war fare of people saying, who are living in great poverty, people who are living in the capital by the president who has taken over, are living in great luxury and wealth, and, then, little by little, they are emptying out the country's soul, of all spiritual and existential meaning and, so, these people, get to the point in which the government actually puts them up in these hunger games, which is putting kids up against other kids to the point of death and they have to fight for their lives. >> clayton: having a discussion as parents... a better review than i have heard. perhaps having the discussions, what would you say to parents whose kids are really interested in it and maybe are hesitant about getting involved in the subject matter? it seems the way you are talking about it. it would be an interesting dinner conversation. >> that is the point. this is a teaching moment, a story about self-sacrifice, right?
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a total self-sacrifice of the main character, who decides she's going to go in place of her younger sister, and be the one who is going to die, or fight trying to survive. and there is also the whole question of, whether or not you can kill somebody if it is self-defense, and on live television a government putting kids up against each other saying you have to kill another person... >> clayton: i'm reading it. >> dave: i'm thinking the same thing, you should be a film critic. >> i put it on my facebook and i said, what do you think about it and people were saying, i hate it. the worst thing and others are saying i loved it and it is deep, not black and white and very deep themes that parents could be teaching their kids with. >> dave: all right, e bettbert. is it a cautionary tale, a cautionary tale about big government. >> i don't get the impression that this is a partisan book in
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any way. but it does show when government gets too big they can little by little take away your freedoms and people don't realize it to the point where they become dictators and saying, we're going to have fun and games with people killing each other. is it totally fictional? how about the times of the roman empire? the coliseum. >> clayton: soviet russia, the nazi regime, negative things in history that are... >> dave: i have to see the movie. >> alisyn: if you can get in. >> i am not a paid spokesman for the fitch. >> alisyn: gre -- the film. >> alisyn: thanks, father. >> what happened, nobody is on the couch. >> alisyn: they went to the movies. >> no self-control. >> alisyn: we'll talk about that, next sunday. still ahead you have to see the video, a man tasered and dragged across the floor of an airport by security. the entire incident caught on
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camera. we'll show you how it started and, they've shown us their dance moves all morning long and which family has the right stuff? the family dance-off winner is revealed. all for a great cause, for charity, after the break. [ male announcer ] this is lawn ranger -- eden prairie, minnesota. in here, the landscaping business grows with snow. to keep big winter job on track,
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>> alisyn: a "fox news alert" for you now, because president obama is in south korea ahead of
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a two day nuclear summit there. >> dave: joining us live in seoul, south korea, wendell goler. good evening to you, wendell. >> reporter: good evening, this got underway with a warning to north korea, to cancel plans for a satellite launch next month the rest of the world sees as a poorly disguised test which would violate the u.n. security council resolution, and president obama made clear it would cost the north hundreds of thousands of tons of food aid an suggested china try a different approach in dealing with the north. >> president barack obama: trying to paper over these not just provocative words but extraordinarily provocative acts that violate international norms, that that is not obviously working. >> reporter: earlier the president made his first trip to the demilitarized zone, often
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caused the most heavily fortified border in the world with a million troops on either side an 28,000 u.s. servicemen, he says, are serving freedom's fro frontier and he said looking across the border was like looking 40 to 50 years in the past, and, 50 leaders will be here when the summit gets under way and they hope to dismantle a 5th of the world's total of nuclear weapons and share intelligence to keep nuclear materiel out of the hands of terrorists. >> alisyn: wendal goaler live from seoul. and now the rest of your headlines, more news, because it has been more than three months and still no sign of missing maine toddler aila reynolds, the 20-month-old was last seen in december at her father's home and he has not been charged with anything and thy the search
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didn't turn up clues, police found the remains of a 53-year-old man who vanished 8 years ago. just ahead of the supreme court hearings tomorrow on the affordable care act, hundreds of activists rallied at capitol hi and herman cane was the keynote speaker and those opposed to obamacare urging that the legislation be overturned, calling it unconstitutional and arguing it would hurt the quality of health care, rallies took place across the country. if unchallenged, the act would go into effect in the year 2014. a disturbing scene at will rogers world airport in oklahoma. look at police, tased and dragged a man while he pleads for them to stop. >> alisyn: the whole incident reportedly started when the passenger tried to enter a restricted area after hearing newt gingrich might be there. officials confirm that newt
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gingrich was never in any danger but, the same is not said for the passenger and police are launching an internal investigation, admitting the officers may have used excessive force and kim kardashian deciding to press charges against a woman who flour bombed here at an event in hollywood. >> dave: use it for baking. >> alisyn: an animal rights activist was protesting her love of fur. sources say that kim did not press charges that night. and didn't want to miss the event but has now changed her mind. >> clayton: and her outfit. >> alisyn: that's all i can tell you. >> clayton: all choked up. let's check in with rick reichmuth, who is outside, about to get flour-bombed. >> rick: all of these people out here. okay. it will not happen. there is nobody here. all right, look at the weather maps, guys. we have rain and snow, out
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across parts of california. and, it will be heavy at times, and southern california, the mountains, may be seeing up to 8 to -- 8 inches to a foot of snow, that storm as we move into tomorrow becomes a severe weather maker in across parts of the far northern plains, tomorrow, move forward, on that map and we'll see the storm into the northern plains and threat for severe weather. i want to point out because people in this area typically see severe weather in june, not in march. and people will not be expecting it. but we can see a tornado or two, and, certainly wind and hail, for tomorrow. and look at today's forecast, in across parts of the northeast, a cloudy, kind of gloomy day, certainly much colder than it has been. get ready. it will be colder by tuesday, temps not getting out of the 40s, for almost everyone in across the northeast and the southeast, a few showers across the carolinas and virginia and parts of florida, as well and we'll be seeing sunshine, in across areas of the south. towards the north, another nice day, again, temps well above your averages from chicago back
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towards north platt and sioux falls, and we'll cool down in chicago, temps in the 40s and across the west, rain and snow across parts of california, and that storm will bring the severe weather, tomorrow, nice in seattle and plenty of sunshine in and around the four corners today. we'll send it back to you. >> alisyn: if you like dancing get on in here, the moment everyone has been waiting for, you voted, and, now it is time to reveal the winner. in honor of the children's miracle network hospital and primrose school national family dance off contest and we decided to have our own competition here in the dance studio. a sunday morning dance contest. ♪ ♪ >> alisyn: which of these talented families danced their way into your hearts? the senior director of
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communication for the children's miracle network hospital joins us and our three dancing families, and okay, this is moment of truth, guys, i know you have all done really well. miranda, tell us what the winner will win. >> the winner is winning $2,000, provided by primrose schools, a national franchise and we're excited the funds go to the hospital for the dancing family -- the dancing family is dancing for. >> alisyn: everybody gave it the real college try. there were great dances, though the baby slept through the whole thing. did not wake up at all. miranda, reveal the winner. >> the winner is the white family. >> alisyn: congratulations! congratulations! you guys were great. and do you think it was your dad's moves that won it for you? >> maybe on mars, never on this
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planet. >> alisyn: spoken like a true adolescent and the check is right here. >> right here. congratulations, you guys get $2,000 and tell us again your great cause. >> children's specialized hospital in new jersey, there are nine locations with another being built and we are thrilled to help them out, we love them so much, so good to us. >> alisyn: great and all of you guys, the consolation prize, you get great t-shirts and the joy of having danced on fox and friends and this moment that will live in, well, memorial forever. thanks so much, you guys, you were all great. let's go to clayton and dave for what is coming up and we'll do a little more dancing. >> clayton: we were shocked you couldn't find the check. a tiny check. >> alisyn: it is so small. hard to see it. >> dave: that and the chicken. >> clayton: she's near sighted. >> dave: a weird chick. >> clayton: a scaled-back stock act. a mouthful. passed on capitol hill. don't have to satan prevents congress from insider trading, a
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big deal and will it be enough to keep lawmakers from cashing in? we'll talk to the man who broke the story, next. >> dave: from the "american idol" stage to topping the country charts. lauren elena. is here live with us. here she is in the greenroom. don't go anywhere. ♪ ♪ n't just listen to me. listen to these happy progressive customers. i plugged in snapshot, and 30 days later, i was saving big on car insurance. i was worried it would be hard to install. but it's really easy. the better i drive, the more i save. i wish our company had something this cool. yeah. you're not... filming this, are you? aw! camera shy. snapshot from progressive. plug into the savings you deserve with snapshot from progressive.
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>> dave: hey, everybody, a bill preventing congress from insider trading is finally making its way to the president's desk after being passed in the senate, 96-3. but, many say the so-called stock act is a watered down version. so, will it be enough to stop lawmakers from insider trading? from cashing in? joining us now, peter schweitzer, a fellow at the hoover institute and the author
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of the book "throw them all out", you have to saketake a bo you say it is a small first step, as the president says as well, why? >> that's exactly right. look at the good things in the bill. members of congress now will have to disclose their financial transactions, every 30 days rather than once a year, which is this current law, and number 2, you have a restriction on getting the sweetheart ipo, initial public offerings of stock and the bad news is, i think, really, it will be hard to see the bill being enforced as far as actually going avenues a member of congress who engages in insider trading. i don't think the securities and exchange commission will do that. so, there are good things here, dave, but, there are also some things that really are not going to be able to accomplish a lot. we have a lot further we need to go. >> dave: without teeth what is the point? why do you believe the sec will not enforce it. >> the problem is this sec's
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budget and the head of the sec is confirmed by the senate and a couple of years ago you may recall there was a congressman, william jefferson, who was caught with $90,000 of cold, hard cash in his freezer and the fbi issued a search warrant, based on knowledge that there was bribery taking place here and they searched his office, and, congress was outraged. there were threats to cut the fbi budget because they were doing this. so the law enforcement agencies are well aware that congress wants to police itself, and, i just don't think they'll have the stomach, dave, to go after a powerful member of congress. >> dave: i can imagine that scene playing out. lamar axle ander from tennessee said it was a modest gesture and he says lawmakers are already prohibited from insider trading. >> the sec is of two hoivoices they say existing laws cover it but on the other hand, say there
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was never an enforcement action that has taken place, the law removes any ambiguity and it makes it clear that if you were an elect owed official and are introducing a bill, say on health care reform that will benefit or hurt certain companies, you better not be making time stock trades on that. you'll have to reveal those stock trades now, with in 30 days of the day they take place and, ultimately, the answer here, dave, is not to count on a law enforcement agency, it is for the american people to be vigilant in paying attention to what their elected members of congress are doing, with their investment dollars. that is the key here, transparency and accountability. >> dave: you have had a major impact, and, a great -- the reason why this legislation really got done and it may be a small step but it is in the right direction. right? peter schweitzer, the author of "the them all out" thanks for being with us and for the work you did. >> thanks, appreciate it. >> dave: up next, she has taken the country by storm, "american idol" runner up and country
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superstar, lauren elena joins us live, on her way in. ♪ [ male announcer ] you're at the age where you don't get thrown by curveballs. ♪ this is the age of knowing how to get things done. so, why let erectile dysfunction get in your way? talk to your doctor about viagra. 20 million men already have. ask your doctor if your heart is healthy enough for sex. do not take viagra if you take nitrates for chest pain; it may cause an unsafe drop in blood pressure. side effects include headache, flushing, upset stomach, and abnormal vision. to avoid long-term injury, seek immediate medical help for an erection lasting more than four hours. stop taking viagra and call your doctor right away if you experience a sudden decrease or loss in vision or hearing.
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>> clayton: well. quick headlines, so much for summer loving, alisyn, a new study... >> alisyn: john travolta? >> clayton: they study looked at facebook status updates and more people break up in june than any other month of the year and they say, summertime in general is the worst time for a romance, and christmas time and valentine's day are the best.
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and drivers on the new jersey side of the lunge cincoln tunne tebow, is on a billboard, it is coming down on friday and maybe they'll replace it of the -- >> alisyn: you have to see the bod, okay? can you agree? you have to see the bod. >> clayton: i agree. >> alisyn: the nation fell in love with her when she won first runner up on american idol and now, after her debut album, landed the number one spot on the country charts, georgia peach is getting ready to go on tour with one of the biggest country music bands of all time. >> dave: lauren alaina is live with us on the curvy couch and oftentimes the runner-up does better than the "american idol" and you are doing extremely well, tell us how excited you are to tour with sugar land. >> i grew up loving them, all my girlfriends and i, when i told my friends, it was supposed to be a secret. and of course i had to tell my best friends and my mom is in
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the kitchen on the phone, and, my best friend, in my bedroom and i'm like, you have to be quiet and, i said i'm going on tour with sugar land and she screamed, so loud, you're going on tour with sugar land! and i'm like... >> alisyn: it's out. >> and my mom is like, what are you talking about in there. >> clayton: and soon it is on the internet. do you watch this season of "american idol." >> i performed on it a few weeks ago and got to meet the contestants then. i think phillip phillips is really good and, i love holly, because, you know, she has like a really beautiful voice and is different and she was on the show with me last year, that is my top three. >> alisyn: and you'll be singing on steven tyler's new album. >> dave: alisyn's lifelong
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dream. >> alisyn: and, my lack of talent doesn't stop me from wanting to do it. >> i went and performed on idol and steven is a judge, of course, and, after the show he was like, do you want to come to the studio and record on my album and i was like, yeah! yeah! let me make sure my schedule is free! what time? >> clayton: when can i be there? >> dave: and, scotty mccreary was the winner and, have you stayed in contact throughout the process. >> we're going completely op sits, he's on tour with brad paisley and i'm with jason al dean and, i'm about to go on tour with sugar land and we are crazy, going everywhere and i haven't seen him in a while but, when i do it is good to caution. >> alisyn: what is your life like with the meteoric rise? you were so young on "american idol." and you still are so young and now having this kind of success. what has life been like.
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>> well i was 15 when i tried out, and i was a sophomore in high school and now i'm a junior and i'm 17. >> clayton: the album, look at that. >> dave: and you're still in high school. >> i am a junior in high school. >> clayton: how do you mesh the two? going on tour with sugar land and you have to have your history paper turned in on time. >> that is my worst subject. >> clayton: really? i can help you. steven tyler with music, i'm happy to help with history. >> i need to. >> clayton: you do your studies on the road. >> i do, i have an on-line class program, thing i do. >> dave: what was the moment you said, wow, my life is for ever changed? was there a moment that just... >> well i didn't realize how much it had changed until like i would go to the mall and stuff and people were like asking me to take pictures, and, i'm like, no makeup on and sweatpants and
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a sweatshirt and now i'm like, brushing my hair every time i leave the house, just in case. >> clayton: go to the gas station. >> yeah, i could be running to walgreens to pick up mascara. >> alisyn: life is no longer that's it was and you say sometimes it is hard to watch the current season of "american idol." why? >> it is just different, like, you know, how they -- i feel like the stress and -- i feel their pain, because, it is so hard and people think it is really easy, but when you are actually on the show, and, like, if you know it is like, on tv, it is like, stressful and you are always worried about if your hair looks good and on top of that you have to worry about whether people will vote for and it is crazy. i feel bad for them, not bad, i'm super excited for what will happen to 'em, but at the same time it is like, you don't know what is going to happen next.
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and, you are like... yeah, it is scary. i'm scared for them. >> dave: two minutes, stick around after the break? >> yes. >> dave: she's not going anywhere, more in two minutes. ♪ ♪ bla we have two car insurances that we're going to have you taste. the first one we're going to call x. go ahead and take a sip, and then let me know what the baby thinks of it. four million drivers switched to this car insurance last year. oh, she likes it babies' palates are very sensitive so she's probably tasting the low rates. this is car insurance y, they've been losing customers pretty quickly. oh my gosh, that's horrible!, which would you choose?
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♪ ♪ >> clayton: lauren alaina and, she was telling us, that is her best friend in the hat, right? >> yes. it is. >> alisyn: from childhood, stick around, we'll talk to her in the "after the show" show and hear how highlighted your high school friends are to be friends with you, now. >> clayton: tomorrow on fox and friends, dana perino and dump and singer joan osborne, another singer for you. >> dave: join us for the "after the show" show, foxandfriends.com, see you next week, everybody, thafo

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