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game. well, that movie. foxst "fox & friends" starts right now. don't look down. captions by closed captioning services >> let's stop the crying game analogy. they were crying a lot. >> mike jerrick is here. hi clayton and alisyn. >> jennifer and jessica. i have two cousins who live in south philly and they love mike jerrick. they will be so excited when he they wake up about four hours from now when they wake up they will be very excited to see. >> you they speak the philly language, no nonsense. >> a lot of headlines to get to. back to the super committee which seems to be unraveling as we speak. >> get to your headlines and tell you the protesters in egypt are slipping back into tahrir square after government force take them out. several hundred people spent the night there despite attempts to drive them out. second day of clashes that ended with hundreds of people injured. the military clashed with thousands of protesters there. rocks were hurled at police in riot gear who responded with tear gas. several protesters were beaten. the violence erupted after police evicted them from tahrir square the night before. crews in reno, nevada working to fully extinguish a devastating wildfire caused by faulty power lines. forced more than 10,000 people to seek. >> referee: fugitive at local shelters. the fire being blamed for the death of a 74-year-old man. right now crews are reporting about 60% containment. they hope to have the fire completely put out by the middle of the week. more fallout from the jerry sandusky case the second mile paid penn state $250,000 to use their facilities for boys and girls sleepover camps in 2008 and 2009. it's unknown if the former assistant coach attended those camps. sandusky was given an unenforceable ban from campus in 2002 and banned from the charity in 2008. sandusky has held sleep over camps through other penn state campuses through his own foundation. could have been a marriage security breach involving president obama. you may have remember the president visited the country last week. now australian journalist claiming he found a white house document filled with classified information in the middle of the street. >> i was wondering where that was. the booklet contained the president's itinerary. list of cell phone numbers belonging to top u.s. and australian officials. all right whose back fact did that fall out of it. >> this happens. you put your stuff on the top of the car then you get in the car and drive off. >> they put their coffee on the top of the car and drive off. >> oh my goodness. >> check in with rick reichmuth who has done that plenty of times. >> super big gulp. >> more interested in the slurpee. >> take a look at the maps right now. big headlines going on. everybody getting ready for the thanksgiving week. severe storms moving into the south again. kind of a repeat of what we saw last week. unfortunately we will see more in tornadoes. very cold weather across the far northern plains. california today. rain and snow storm in california means big troubles this week in everybody traveling. kinks because of that temperature map you can see the cold air solidly in place as cro the plains. contrast between kansas city and dallas. that's where the cold front is set up. it will stall out right there. along with that means a threat of severe weather along that boundary. scattered showers across parts of the east. not going to be a big deal. when you head towards places like padduca and memphis that's where heavy rain is and throughout the afternoon places like texas and arkansas are going to be seeing some severe weather fire and that's going it be the case over the next couple of days. all of that is going to get moved across parts of southern california. that will bring in rain toward los angeles and as that ejects a very, very slowly ought across the four corners that will set the stage for severe weather this week. down across the south still cool across the far northern plains. start to see a slight warm upper across the eastern cities by the time we get to tomorrow. just a slight warm up. back to you. >> thanks so much, rick. talk about the super committee because at this hour, who, it is unraveling. i mean, and a lot of people think it could be dead in the water. senator kyl says this super committee is likely to fail. listen to his ominous words. >> i think that's pretty doubtful at this point. but obviously nobody wants to quit until the stroke of midnight as you can see here by my presence. no matter what happens, congress has to reduce spending by $1.2 trillion one way or another. it would be better if we could reach an agreement on how to do it but if we don't then there is the sequester. >> that could have been sunday bite from last summer. a mini me of what happened over the summer. >> absolutely. so this wednesday is the deadline. however, really tell is the deadline. because they had to get the details to the cbo to score it and it doesn't look like it's going to happen. senator jon kyl says i think we are going to be left with a goose gleg i don't know if they are in the same room or not. >> they are not really talking. some of them having coffee and discussions. no hard core discussions in the past day or so. take a look at this deadline ali was referring to. it needs to be done today. they have to get it to the cbo and 48 mandatory review period. they have to read the bill before they vote on it on the 23rd. it would be a 1.2 trillion-dollar trigger option goes into effect if they don't pass this thing. that would mean 492 billion in defense cuts. 123 in entitlements. by the way, not mentioned in any of that is the bush tax cuts. because the bush tax cuts would expire. >> that's right. we need to start calling them the bush obama tax cuts. >> because he extended them. >> he exextended them as well. >> after all these months when they were negotiating, and the people who were hand picked because they knew their way around capitol hill. they were considered good negative yearlts. they were going to go across the aisle and get something done. we are at that point they are at an elm pass and basically admitted failure today. >> already rationalizing failures. democrats go okay we protected the poor. we had to cut spending there a little bit. the defense budget. but we protected the poor. and on the other side the republicans will say see, we didn't have any tax increases. >> right. no tax increases. what happens if this doesn't unfold. no plan to extend the tax cuts and the jobless benefit. if the automatic cuts is altered fear of another credit downgrade. we talked about that last summer. we talked about the debt ceiling debate. moody's of course downgraded us. >> so s&p s&p downgraded us, right? >> moody's. >> moody's. that's right. >> there is discussion that other downgrades could be coming down the pike because the super committee fails. i must admit i'm confused this morning. >> you should be. this is a mess. here is why. i thought that the sequestration the trigger effect was put in there to avoid a downgrade. we have plan. beings n. case we can't come to an agreement we have plan. >> the downgrade, the ratings agency says we don't want the trying tore go into effect because that then proves the solvenciy of the united states. if the super committee can't find where to cut money and put triggers in -- >> who called the super committee the dumbest thing? >> newt gingrich. >> it was newt. maybe that's why he is going up in the polls. >> speaking of that the candidates out there in iowa last night. iowa voters, politico giving newt gingrich a lease on life back when they met with him in february of last year weren't terribly impressed with him. weren't sure why he is running. they is gotten fired up about and it excited about it. >> frank luntz was moderating. they asked the candidates about how they feel basically about war. here is where you can see a real disparity in some of their philosophies. so let's watch this montage. >> as commander and chief, i will not send our young men and women into war unless it is clear why the mission and the definition of victory. and, thirdly, i would not send them into war unless i would send my own son and daughter. >> i think it is an utter tragedy of what is happening, bad economics and war is two most destructive things to the family. >> send those young men and women with the equipment to win. don't let some congressman sitting in an air conditioned office in washington, d.c. deciding what the rules of engagement are. [ applause ] >> let those war fighters win the war. >> you come into our country and you kill 3100 people, and we will do whatever it takes to eliminate your capacity to threaten us ever again. and i would be tougher and more decisive. >> i think you could have predicted those answers, wouldn't you? >> yeah. >> certainly ron paul. he wants to bring all the troops home now. >> interesting to hear them all clustered together. there were many emotional moments i would say here at this family forum. particularly when frank luntz who was moderating asked all the candidates to share a personal story about their own challenge. let's listen. >> walking out of that surgeons office, after she had just told us stage 4 -- >> take your time. >> i said i wasn't going to do this. [ laughter ] >> it's as bad as it gets. i will never forget before my wife and i were about to get in the car, i said i can do this. she said we can do this. amen. [ applause ] >> i decided that the best thing i could do was to treat her differently and not love her like i did because it wouldn't hurt as much if i lost her. >> sea very close friend. he spent six years with a shouldn't in the back of his head. he has a good heart, a good brain. is good at baseball and football. you look at that and you say to yourself all right. do i want some bureaucracy deciding that on a percentage basis this is not worth the investment or i do want a country that cares about every life at that depth? that is what next year is all about. [ applause ] >> i feel like dr. phil. [ laughter ] >> frank, dr. phil. >> man, that was intense. >> i don't know that i have ever seen anything like that. >> i haven't either. >> not in one setting around one table with politicians. i'm a choir -- cryer myself. if you start asking me about my children i will start crying myself. >> were they are fine. >> one of the early moments that had a lot of people talking on twitter and firing up. michele bachmann decided to get up and serve all of the other men there water. she said i served a lot of water in my life. got up and poured their glasses. >> that was nice. >> what was going on? >> much more on that. couple of other big highlights including that and some minor questions and some gaffes there from last night. >> we'll play those. check in on occupy wall street and the occupy movement all around the country. kind of a rough night in oakland, california also in washington, d.c. things got a little rowdy. so some more arrests. and then newt gingrich was asked about this. you know, it's ows occupy wall street. he said it should be owe. it seems like most of them feel like they are owed for everything. >> interesting. >> they bring in food. they don't pay for their sleeping. et cetera. >> he made a point about history. is he a historian. he talked about back in the day in 1607 captain john smith. he went back to. >> wow. >> he made appointment jamestown. you had to fight for yourself go. out and work every day. otherwise, your little family wasn't going to eat unless you went to work. is he making the point that he feels the occupy wall street folks are owed things. and that people should be doing that for them. take a listen. >> all the occupy movement starts with a premise that we all owe them everything. they take over a public park they didn't pay for to go nearby to use bathrooms they didn't pay for, to beg from food to places they don't want to pay for, to obstruct those to go to work to pay the taxes to sustain the bathrooms and to sustain the park so they can self-righteously explain that they're the paragons of virtue to which we owe everything. now, that is a pretty good symptom of how much the left has collapsed as a moral system in this country and why you need to reassert something as simple as saying to them go get a job right after you take a bath. [ applause ] >> i must say that that logic also confuses me, which is go get a job. the unemployment rate is extremely high right now. historically high. if it were that easy, millions of people would have a job. i mean, are we suggesting that everybody there can just go get a job? i hear a lot of people say that that suggests that people who don't have jobs are lazy? that's not where we are in this country right now. it's hard for people who have just graduated if that's who they are, if these are young kids to find work. so i'm looking forward to talking to our next guest about this. >> not just as cut and dried about jobs. of course talking about the snawttle and income inequality in this country. seeing violence protests. 300 different incidents. blood pouring down his face after getting in a tussle with police. >> over 1200 arrests right now. >> occupy receipt had said previously they didn't want to be narrowly defined by their tactics. >> we don't understand their message it isn't necessarily coherent. >> that is the biggest problem. going to school, et cetera, et cetera. what is the message. what is the definitive message? bring in radio host, conservative columnist as well tony cats. tone, if i ask you what is the point of occupy, what do you think it is. >> oh, good lord. there is no point to occupy wall street except let's figure out what to do with more bodily fluids today. there quite literally isn't no point to occupy wall street. maybe in the beginning you could say they were having a conversation about the relationship between wall street and government and that government is picking winners and losers. that would have been legitimate. that ended on day four when that whole movement got co-opted by the columnists of the world and big government people of the world who wanted to use this as a way of pushing their agenda. there is no point to occupy wall street. except rhetoric. >> there is the i do dialogue of a 99%ers vs. the 1%. >> i don't accept the premise of that conversation either. newt gingrich is absolutely right. you can't get a job if you spend your day and night sleeping in a park. if they moved occupy wall street to the front of a home depot, they would have more chances to get employment than in zuccotti park. >> that's the part i do want to ask you about. the idea just go get a job, that would be easy in a climate that isn't where we are right now with 9% unemployment. it's not just that easy to go out and get a job, is it? >> it's a two fold conversation. it's never necessarily easy. but it's impossible if you don't look. and, secondly, part of this conversation is that we dr. have created as newt was alluding to this fantasy world where kids go to college, everything is paid for, it's unbelievably beautiful scene and they expect everything to be handed to them when they leave college because they have professors who teach them that everything should be handed to you when it's not handed to them, they get upset and they engage in this ridiculous conversation of income inequality. there is no such thing as income inequality. the stockbroker makes more than the school teacher. the school teacher exists off the excesses of the stockbroker and capitalists and people who pay into the system to allow the educator to exist. that's the reality. they are not engaged in reality. they are engaged in fantasy and enimanged in violent rhetoric and activity. >> these folks are getting arrested. do you think they see it as fantasy and they see this income inequality in this country and they say the system isn't fair. you are paying more in taxes, you are paying less in taxes. there is disparity they are seeing. they are getting arrested for it do you think it's complete fantasy. >> we can engage in reality. if you don't go to work or try to go to work or if you don't try to create a company which america allows you to be the entrepreneur you want to be, you have no shot. but if you haven't seen this, john nolte over at big hollywood has put together the rap sheet, it is 302 different incidents that have taken place at occupy movement events across america. whether it's blood and urine being thrown on food carts when those food carts wouldn't feed the people for free anymore or stabbings or how many right there in new york where you had people going after school kids, threatening and bullying school kids. here is the real conversation. where is president obama? where are the leadership to talk about how this isn't a way to act and treat people in america? the president and the first lady are all about anti-bullying but they are okay with grown men and women yelling at school children on their way to school? i want someone to ask and i will be the first right here, where is the president? mr. president, why do you condone these activities? why do you believe that these people have a message that is worthwhile when they are involved in rape and sexual assault. >> tony, have you made many great points. nice to see you this morning. thanks for coming on and being so fired up for this. >> it's hard to get coffee out of your system at that hour. >> he he managed. he made some great points. you can like the message as much as well as you understand the message and the points that the conversation. >> i get it. >> but the tactics seem to have changed since they began. >> the broader question though, there has been arguments that the left has co-opted occupy wall street. but also there is the criticism you heard from tony which is where is the president and democrats on it? so it seems a bit -- >> -- does any politician want to be associated with it. >> that's the question. one hand co-opt and other hand distancing themselves? i don't know that they understand the nuances of the debate to thrust themselves into it. >> a lot of people don't understand at all if there is anything to understand. >> a lot of viewers are going to have a lot to say on this. find us on twitter. terrorist suspect linked to the deaths of five u.s. servicemen in iraq. now he may go free because of a legal loophole. can we work with the iraqi government or is it too late? >> and third day, thanksgiving is my favorite holiday. my daughters are coming in to visit and i'm in charge. i want to do something totally different. this is a turkey dinner with a southern flair. we have deep fried mac and cheese. deep frying a turkey. i will show you how to do that in a second. >> john is out there with buffalo sauce and turkey. >> remember this request from one marine? >> i just want to take a moment out of my day to invite you to the marine corps ball. >> the actress rsvp yes but thought a scheduling conflict would get in the way. did she go? >> we have the pictures. congratulations. congratulations. congralations. today, the city of charlotte can use verizon technology to inspire binesses to conserve energy and monitor costs. making communities greener... congratulations. ... and buildings as valuable to the bottom line... whoa ! ... as the people inside them. congratulations. because when you add verizon to your company, you don't just add, you multiply. ♪ discover something new... verizon. ♪ ♪ mama said there'd be days like this ♪ ♪ "there'll be days like this," mama said ♪ [ male announcer ] the toughest job on the planet just got a little easier. with one touch technoly and even an air scrubber. the nissan quest. innovation for family. innovation for all. get up to $050 total savings on the 2011 nissan quest. ♪ >> all right. hot of the morning. mila kunis keeping her marine date. she attended the 236 marine corps birthday ball in greenville, north carolina. >> she is staying hydrated. 8 bottles of water. so sergeant moore just returned from afghanistan, you will remember. he asked mila to accompany him via youtube back in july. >> kunis, you remember from friends with benefits as well as black swan. her co-star in that justin timberlake attended a marine ballast week. his date also used youtube to reach out to the star. >> i'm going to start using youtube. >> to reach out to stars? >> to reach out to stars and get dates. >> keep wishing for the stars and keep your feet on the ground. >> all right casey kaysum. >> mila kunis has looked sexier. >> it's the marine corps ball. >> don't you think the date was hoping she could sex it up a little. >> i see what you are saying. he like oh you came all this way. >> and your hair is in a bun. >> i did see new that movie friends with benefits. why don't i get some of that action? >> i could use some benefits? >> okay. >> she looks beautiful though. >> headlines and tell you what is happening in the news. new details raising more questions this morning in the case of missing baby lisa irwin. the new development has to do with that mysterious phone call reportedly made from lisa's parents cell phone on the night she disappeared. now, initially, police say the phone call was made to a woman named megan wright but now wright's former roommate is coming forward and saying he was using the phone that night. the man, identified only as dain, confirms he received the phone call just before midnight on october 3rd. still, he will not say whether he answered the call or who was on othe other line. all right. those seem like important details. investigators are still trying to figure out why a u-haul truck suddenly sped up in front of a bunch of tailgaters killing a 31-year-old woman. this all happened before harvard yale football game in connecticut. the driver was carrying kegs of beer in the truck and in police custody. not clear if alcohol was a factor. two others were hurt in this crash. one is in critical condition this morning. the other is doing okay. students and faculty members at uc davis is calling for the school's chancellor to step down. [chanting] >> last vacation. >> chancellor says she is launching inquiry all in response to horrifying video that we showed you yesterday after it was release. police officers pepper spraying what appear to be peaceful protesters were their arms linked together. spraying them at close range right in the face. the campus police chief said the students had surrounded the officers which tromented the decision to use pepper spray. doesn't look like that's what's happened here. 10 students were arrested. chancellor initially did not criticize police but she said she did not order the use of pepper spray. >> a major mixup in minnesota after elementary school used some recycled legal documents as scrap paper. the problem, the paper still contained people's private information. jennifer cain noticed the issue when her daughter wrought home a drawing she had done for her first grade class. >> i flipped it over. i notice there was a lot of copy. the more i read it, the more alarmed i became at the amount of information that i had about 'then. >> it turns out a paralegal at the local law firm donated the paper not realizing it still contained classified information. lots of story on classified information this morning. >> just goes missing. >> hang on to your classified information if there is a moral to today's show. >> that's it. frntion that's the moral. >> we can do better top that. let's look for another one. take a look at the maps, guys. it's very cold out there. especially across the northern plains. 2 degrees in rapid city after getting a foot of snow yesterday. that area got pummeled. take a look at the video coming out of the minnesota area. st. cloud minnesota. significant snow there yesterday. first big snow across the northern plains. first snow people maybe having to learn how to drive. good in money society. 400 car accidents in the state of minnesota yesterday. one fatality from that around 50 people were injured from this storm. just in the state of minnesota. the heavier the snow was back across south dakota. big storm there. that is going. now take a look at the forecast for the day today. northeast looking really nice. temps about 10 degrees warmer than yesterday. yesterday was about 10 degrees warmer than the day before. nice warming trend. there will be a few light showers there across interior sections of pennsylvania. maybe upstate new york. nothing that's going to ruin your day at although. more steady rain come over the next few days. today looking pretty good. southeast, another mild day. temps very warm. because you are getting warm out ahead of that cold front moving in, start to see the showers fire. that will be from dallas all the way through little rock and up towards memphis and pa papa dude can a. back behind it as you move off towards the north see the colder air. a 1 in oklahoma city. move on toward the northern plains, that's where the cold air is. one more press there on that map and we will see the northern plains. that's where all the cold air is. 25 degrees in fargo. 41 in north plat. sunny. another storm pulling into california. another rain and snow maker across california. temps in l.a. getting to a 7 today that storm will pull off to the east and cause severe weather for us. travel troubles this week. mike, i will send it over to you. as long as you promise when you are done with this to have something cooked. >> we are on the way. john is here. >> i love coming to fox. >> you do? >> i love cooking turkeys in new york. >> 48th and sixth avenue over the next for hours here what we have left, we are going to have complete turkey dinner set you up for thursday. concepts. southern style turkey dinner on thursday. something a little different this year. >> that's exactly right. masterville is going to show you how to share the experience of doing a thanksgiving and christmas meal so that you can share the experience with your family and friends and let's take a look. >> not the same old stuff. southern style, completely different, your friends and family are going to blow their heads off. >> the master built cookbook is going to show you how to deep fry turkey. how safely to do that prime rib. take you down a country seafood path. also do not only desert but deep friday macaroni and cheese. are you ready to he seat turkey? >> going to soup to nuts here over the next four hours. complete meal including desert at the end. >> master built has developed a product. safety is the number one thing. >> when you are deep fry ago turkey. >> this is the safest way to fry a turkey in the butter ball turkey fryer how easy it is you are goings to get involved. the family gets involved. i'm going to inject this turkey. this is a 16-pound butter ball turkey. we're going to inject it. >> with what? >> butter ball buttery creole. that is the surprise and the marinade. you go in there. give it a little bit. see how it plumps up. >> it's balling up. >> you like that. >> there you go. >> pull it up like that that there you go. >> now, see, i have always wanted to deep fry a turkey have to go out to the garage or whatever. people burn down their houses. so you made deep fryer. >> butter ball's indoor turkey fryer is the way. couple more squirt and show you how ease with it is. >> i'm going to spice the outside. all are outside in the plaza so everybody can see what we are doing here. this is an indoor product, mike. so that when you fry your turkey, the weather that you guys were just talking about, that's what's going to happen all over the country. instead of having to dampen your spirits. you take this turkey. >> what temperature is the oil? >> this is going to be 375 degrees. >> this thing is filled with oil. and it's an electric thermostatly controlled product, mike. lowering that turkey in, that is how easy, that is how safe master built has developed a turkey fryer who you do not have to worry about overheating your oil it is the safest way to fry your turkey, close the lid. set the timer. we're going to fry turkey, we are going to go doo a low country seafood boil. we are going to do macaroni and cheese. we are going to show you how to have zero fear. no fear. >> people go out to their garage or the backyard deep frying a turkey at lo of people did burn their houses. thank you for this. >> this is guaranteed to not overheat your oil. "consumer reports" wrote magazine in 2005 and 2010 that the butter ball indoor turkey fryer was the safest way to fry a turkey not just frying. boil. take you down nontraditional thanksgiving path and do some potatoes, corn, sausages, shrimp. there is clamps in -- clams in there. that's good we are going to add the shrimp when we come back. >> for thanksgiving? >> for thanksgiving. this compliments the thanksgiving meal but what it also does when we are watching football or watching racing, i will do a low country seafood boil in and of itself. the butter ball turkey cooker allows you to fry steam your home guaranteed the be the safe ers way to do it. >> 10:00 this morning, john. >> coming back. >> this is going to be good. [ laughter ] >> oh, god. he was waiting to inject something. that is gross. >> random new yorker walking by. >> that's true. that's gross. now mike will be more tender than he used to be. >> that was lie cajun hot sauce. woo! hot. >> coming up on the show, thanks, mike. linked to the death to american soldier in iraq but may be soon be able to walk as free man and it all has to do with a legal loophole. we will explain that coming up. >> plus, three courageous little boys unable to ever smile because of a condition they were born with now there is good news. and we will share their stories and you will meet all of them next. >> and a major oops by victoria secret. you can see what's wrong with this michigan state shirt? ♪ don't stop it now. >> i was hoping there was some soared afterward robe oops. at regions, we're committed to helping small businesses find new ways to optimize their cash flow. so, stop in and ask for a regions cashcor analysis and see how easy it is to get your cash flow (whistles) heading in the right direction. let's talk. whoa, wait. whoa, whoa. wait a minute. what? just like that? did you even see the allstate? it's te. what is it? great insurance. you get accident forgiveness, deductible rewards, safe-driving bonus checks, plus a free lifetime membership in good hands roadside assistance just for calling. sold. tiny tow truck -- works every time. shop less. get more. make one call to an allstate agent. >> welcome back. quick led headlines for you now. nice idea by victoria secret. they fumbled. the long way company came out with michigan state t-shirt hail to the victors. the problem college will note that belongs to archrival. the t-shirt has been removed from the web site. a new report claims climate change is disrupting the ecosystem in colombia making the perfect coffee beaten there. more difficult and expensive to grow and even harder to find. why can't global warming alisyn kill off the decaffeinated beans? >> i don't know, clayton. let me get back to you on that. listen up to this story, everyone. imagine never being able to smile. these three boys were born with facial paralysis and smiling was impossible. speech and eating were very difficult. but after life changing surgeries, all that has changed and now their mom has teamed up with operation smile for a very special project that will give other children their smiles too. joining us this morning, lisa lori and her boys, zachery, luke and griffin. welcome to all of you. >> hi. >> hi. >> great to he so you guys. so, lisa, all three of your children were born with facial paralysis. >> what does that mean for their child hoods? what could they and couldn't they do. >> it meant they couldn't close their mouth. it meant that speak was difficult. eating was difficult. and, of course, they obviously couldn't smile and almost had a total lack of facial expression. >> zach, i see you smiling now. and it's so great to see that. but tell me before the surgery, what your life was like. what was it like to not be able to smile? >> i don't know. smiling, it helps me feel emotions. and like people can understand me better. >> yes. people can understand you better. can i understand that that makes perfect sense. >> so, lisa, you learned of a surgeon, and in toronto, i believe. that was world renowned. one of the only in the world who could do this. tell us about the surgeries that your sons have had. >> they had something called a muscle transplant. which means they had a muscle taken from the inside of heir leg and transplanted to their face. enabling them to connect the nerves and blood vostles, he is. that's enables them to smile. >> zach, do you remember the first time that you smiled after the surgery? >> um-huh. >> what was that like? >> it was great. >> was great? >> i felt really excited. >> you felt really excited. i bet you did. and, luke, do you remember the first time that you were able to smile? >> no. >> no? >> how does it feel now? >> it feels better, much better. now can can i smile. >> i can see him smiling and hear him saying he feels much better to be able to smile. >> yes, yes. >> and you and your husband matt were so grateful after this surgeryhat you wanted to give back to the surgeon and you found out he was involved in operation smile. what did you decide to do? >> i teamed up with best girlfriend of mine from childhood her name is cathy van zealand she is handbag designer. we decided to create these little bears. zachery, luke and griffin bear. the idea is that when a child goes into surgery they are all allowed to bring something to comfort them. we wanted all children to be able to have this. with operation smile in the developing world, many of these children don't even have a toilet alone a teddy bear. when you donate a smile for $240, you get a bear, the donor gets a bear and a child going into surgery gets a bear. >> i think that's so important to reiterate. one smile cost only $240. but, yet, arptiond the world, people can't afford that. >> yes. and that same surgery here would cost between 15 and $20,000. operation smile is able to do that because they have medical volunteer like our surgeon dr. zucker who donate their time and their expertise to help others. >> it's wonderful what you are all doing. great to see you smiling. lisa, lori, zach, luke, and griffin. and if people want to learn more they should go to operation smile.org? >>.org slash bears. >> i will put that out on twitter as well. >> okay. >> congratulations you guys. great to see you. thanks so much for coming. >> in okay. thank you. >> up next, defense secretary leon pa net tax just stay there luke for one second. leon panetta says a terrorist suspect in iraq will get better justice here in the u.s. there is a legal loophole. he may now go free. can we work with the iraqi government or is it too late? and training trading in his tent for a hotel. key occupy wall street was caught sleeping in luxury. we have the details. ♪ ( phone ringing ) okay... uhh. the bad news, it's probably totaled. the good news is, you don't have to pay your deducble. with vanishing deductible from nationwide insurance, you got $100 off for every year of safe driving, so now your deductible is zero. the other good news ? i held on to your coffee. wow. ♪ nationwide is on your side ( laughing ) it's actually a pretty good day whenou consider. that's great. >> a legal loophole may allow terrorist suspect being held in iraq to go free. >> we have made our concerns known to the iraqs about the importance of detaining that individual but others as well that we're concerned about. >> do you agree with me that if he is tried in iraqi court it's not -- justice is not going to be delivered? he should come to the united states and be tried in the military commission? >> i think he would certainly find better justice here. >> and as the deadline for withdrawing troops from iraq grosecloseer the challenges get more complicated. security policy. nice to see you this morning, frank, welcome. >> good morning, what do you make of this as we approach this deadline here, we look back on this. let's be clear this agreement with the iraqis. this happened under george w. bush's watch. but then we have had a number of years since then and we still haven't managed to get this guy bring him back to the united states does this speak to the fact that both of these administrations have had a difficult time trying to work with the iraqi government? >> no question. particularly as we have seen the obama administration making clear it's withdrawing from iraq. i think our leverage on them has really gone to practically zero. your clip has leon panetta saying is he likely to get more justice here or better justice here. that's a really under stated way of saying he is not going to get any justice at all in iraq if we leave him there. the problem here this is as you indicated a man who has american blood on his hands. he is a top hezbollah operative. hezbollah is, of course, not only a designated terrorist, according to the united states government, it's really the foreign legion of iran. it has the blood of many americans on its hands going back to 1979. and this idea that we will -- as things stand now, leave him behind in iraq because we can't, under the present administration's policy, bring him to guantanamo bay, or resist the temptation they would have, i would think, to put him into civilian courts in this country is, really a microcosm of the very much larger problem this administration has compounding, i think you are right, some of the errors of the previous administration. taking them into a totally new and much more dangerous direction livening us at realistic are. >> talk about the risk we had up on the screen here this legal loophole. is it in the way we define these individuals that's getting us into trouble? you say it's crazy that we're calling these folks, quote, al qaeda and its affiliates. it's a broader terrorism swath? is that the issue here? >> right. well, the authorization for the use of military force, which was adopted by the congress overwhelmingly, immediately after 9/11, talks about those individuals, organizations, and nations that afflicted us with those attacks. there is now, in federal court, very compelling evidence that iran is one of those nations, that it enabled and otherwise facilitated the attacks of 9/11. this isn't something that has generally been discussed. but there is affidavits and other compelling evidence that from iranian films indicating that's what happened. >> does that -- that's a huge moment? that means that we have the authorization, congress has already authorized the president to attack iran? >> well, i think you can certainly interpret it that way. it's a better interpretation for sure than saying the only people that we have the authority to go after are al qaeda. and, you know, we do a book about a year ago talking about what makes these guys particular, whether -- these guys tick. hezbollah, there that what they call cherie a barbaric, totalitarian islamic doctrine that says we must be destroyed. so to parse this so finely that guys that have american -- not that they were just trying to kill americans. this guy actually did kidnap and kill five americans. he is going to walk when he adheres to sharia and he is going to return to the battlefield, it is insane and irresponsible on our part and we must not let this happen where do you draw the line. people speak against america. or hate america. where do you draw the line and say these are the individuals we can arrest on a battlefield? where is that legal limit? >> they call it capturing people on the battlefield. not arresting them. that's one of the important points i would say a distinction between george bush generally fought the war and how barack obama is prosecuting it these people are being turned into defendants military has to treat them forensic on the battlefield make sure they are properly tried with civilian courts and american's constitutional rights at their disposal. that's nuts these are enemy terrorists. this guy should be put in guantanamo bay or at least untiles who tilts is over. to answer your question, we have to define this thing properly. broadly we are up against cherie and a everybody who adheres to it. by violence like it or not. >> sadly out of time. >> frank gaffney great to see you. >> appreciate the opportunity. >> coming up, more "fox & friends" in two minutes. is to keep it whole for better nutrition. and that's what they do with great grains cereal. see the seam on the wheat grain? 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[ male announcer ] each of these photos was taken by someone on the first morning of their retirement. it's the first of more than 6,000 sunrises the average retiree wl see. ♪ as we're living longer than ever before, prudential's challenge is to help everyone have the retirement income they'll ed to enjoy every one of their days. ♪ prudential. bring yr challenges. >> good morning, everyone. sunday november 20th, i'm alisyn camerota. keeping a close eye on washington this morning as that super committee deadline draws near. so will the committee reach a deal or will it be a super failure? >> who needs a tent when you have got a room like this one at the w hotel. a key occupier is caught ditching the streets for a luxurious w hotel room. >> that's where you stayed last night, huh? >> that's what i consider camping. >> glamping. and where is the patriotism? retired nypd officer told down to take down his 9/11 flag from his home or pay the penalty. hear his story this hour. "fox & friends" hour two starts right now. captions by closed captioning services >> thanks for joining mike jared in for dave briggs. >> up late because you went to the big twilight premier. >> you know, i saw a review of that. a couple of my friends saw it was fantastic. they said breaking yawn. >> you have seen it? >> the kids love it. >> if you saw the box office numbers through the roof. it's going to win the weekend. >> philadelphia, i work in philadelphia. at the fox station there i do a morning show. thanks for watching. >> get to the point. >> philadelphia marathon is today. a bunch of my friends are getting up right now. they have loaded up on pass attachment good luck to awful you running the philadelphia marathon. 30,000 people are going to show. >> you can actually run? >> a lot of people have been running from me for years. >> let's talk about the news this morning. that is not good news. the super committee basically had until today, sure the official deadline was this coming wednesday. but they had to have something done by today so they could hand it over to the congressional budget office for scoring. this morning there is no good news that they have reached any sort of agreement. >> yeah. no news is good good news with gary ganuws. senator jon kyl came out. he was fired up about this. saying look there is no hope for success. take a listen. >> i think that's pretty doubtful at this point. obviously nobody wants to quit until the stroke of midnight as you can see here by my presence no matter what happens, congress has to reduce spending by $1.2 trillion. one way or another. it would be better if we could reach an agreement on how to do it. but, if we don't. then there is the sequester. >> this is just like the debt ceiling. this is the mini me of the debt ceiling. >> i thought the new style n washington, d.c. take it to the 11th hour. make everybody sweat it out. take it to the 11th hour. take it to chicken and come together at the last minute and do something. that's not what is happening. >> now it's going to the eighth hour. >> going backwards. >> the deadline is off a little bit. let's just cash in our chips now. we got to get home to the kids, babysitter is coming. >> just like the debt ceiling. they started out big. that t. was going to go big, big like a 5 trillion-dollar cut idea. last friday. we were down to 700 billion. >> the speaker's office the idea of not tackling medicare, medicaid and no new tax increases. $693 billion. so what all happens if this doesn't happen? >> downgrade. >> take a look at this. put this up on the screen possibly but that's one of the issues here. this trigger will go into effect. $1.2 trillion option would go in effect. what does it mean? $492 billion in defense cuts would happen. $123 billion in entitlements would be cut. there would be no plan to extend those tax cuts and the jobless aid. so the bush era tax cuts wouldn't be extended there as well under this plan. >> there is, as you were just alluding to, a fear that there could be another downgrade of our credit because this just shows we are unable to work out any agreement whatsoever when it comes to money and entitlements and taxes in this country. but, there is another cynical argument that i think we should introduce at the moment. far be it for me to be a cynic there winners here. it depends on how you spin it if the republicans or democrats win. some people, because of the trigger effect that goes, in some people get what they wanted. some people, in other words, not extending the tax cuts. some cuts in entitlements. some cuts in defense. maybe this is, by them doing nothing, maybe they can claim that they won or they took the high road. >> by doing nothing -- >> this is what paul krugman argued this week in his column. the best thing to do is not have a super committee succeed. let it go. because all these cuts go into effect. others argue like the rating agencies who said if the super committee couldn't come to an agreement, another downgrade. more on that coming up, what this means for the country and your wallet a little bit later. >> last night in iowa they had something called a family forum in the state of iowa. very important state. first one to have the big election. many of the candidates got around the table and talked about many different things. it got emotional at one point. he we will show you that in a second. the topic of war was brought up. what would you do if war was staring you in the faces a a president? >> as commander and chief, i will not send our youngs men and women into war unless it is why the mission and the defense of victory. thirdly, i would not send them into war unless i would send my own son and daughter. >> >> i think it is an utter tragedy of what is happening, bad economics and war is two most destructive things to the family. >> send those young men and women with the equipment to win. don't let some congressman sitting in an air conditioned office in washington, d.c. deciding what the rules of engagement are. [ applause ] >> let those war fighters win the war. >> you come into our country and you kill 3100 people, and we will do whatever it takes to eliminate your capacity to threaten us ever again. and i would be tougher and more decisive. >> a lot of things were discussed at that forum in iowa moderated by frank luntz. one of the things that came up was occupy wall street movement. rough night. simultaneously what was happening in other parts of the country in oakland and washington, d.c. there was a number of arrests. number of violence outbreaks and arrests there were all sorts of problems last night. if you add it up. 300 i want different incidents of violence over the course of some of these occupy movements. >> yeah. so things seem to be reaching more of a boiling point. ever since they were thrown out of zuccotti park here in new york, they have been on the streets. there has been more disruptions. even as we reported this week kids trying to get to school were disrupted. this one we are looking at, oakland, you can see that there is more destruction there. newt gingrich, at the family forum, talked about his solution to these occupy movements. >> all the occupy movement starts with the premise that we all owe them everything. they take over a public park they didn't pay for. to go nearby to use bathrooms they didn't pay for. to beg for food from places that don't want to pay for. to obstruct those that are going to work to pay the taxes to sustain the bathrooms and to sustain the park so they can self-righteously explain that they are the paragons of virtue to which we owe everything. now, that is a pretty good symptom of how much the left has collapsed as a moral system in this country and why you need to reassert something as simple as saying to them go get a job right after you take a bath. [ applause ] our last guest made a point about that i said if it's so easy to get a job. why is there so much unemployment. he made a compelling case at least look for a job. >> not going to find one down there in zuccotti park. at least spend your time looking for a job. doing something productive or creating a company or building something. >> getting a skill set. this is one thing a viewer wrote in after we were talking about this last hour. people are missing the point on this. i'm an employer and i can't find qualified employees right now. go out and get a new skill. go down to the library or doing something else to get that computer skill you need. doing other things to bolster your resume to get the job that that employer would want. novel idea. >> constructive and destructive people have made that point before. constructive is what the country needs right now. >> furthermore, didn't we just have last weekend the story about all the companies having a difficult time finding the dirty jobs that americans don't want and all those jobs up in north dakota that they are hiring like crazy right now. >> i had some dirty jobs. >> [ laughter ] >> by that mean i hot fudge at friendly's. that's what i meant. okay. meanwhile, let's get to your headlines. because we have to tell threw is breaking news. tahrir square is swarming with protesters one day after government forces kicked them out. several hundred people reportedly spent the night there despite police attempts to drive them away. this comes after a second day of clashes that ended with 200 people reportedly hurt. the military clashed with thousands of protesters, rocks were hurled at police in riot gear who responded with tear gas. witnesses say several protesters were beaten. well, someone has got a lot of explaining to do this morning. the australian government is looking into a major security mistake involving president obama. the president visited the country just last week and now an australian journalist is claiming that he found a white house document filled with classified information in the middle of the street. the booklet reportedly contained the president's itinerary, details of his security convoy, and even a list of cell phone numbers belonging to top u.s. and australian officials. all right. a homecoming fit for a hero in tampa, florida this weekend. [bagpipes] looking at a parade honoring army sergeant joe -- the iraq war veteran was blinded and nearly killed in a rocket attack back in 2008. he was just released from the hospital after having 75 surgeries. he not only was honored with a parade but also given the keys to a specially outfitted home. he said he could not be more grateful. >> first of all, i would like to thank god for this opportunity because i'm alive and able to walk around and enjoy my family and my friends. a lot of people here have come to support -- a lot of people i don't even know. >> my josh, what a ---my gosh. what a story of attitude. is he inspirational. those are your headlines. >> check in with rick now for a look at the forecast today. hey, rick. >> everybody is starting to think about travel. lots of travel going on starting today through the next couple of days. here is what is going on today there are going to be some delays, especially out across a lot of california. big storm there is going to make for some delays in san francisco and lang. dallas and memphis, you are both going to have spotty thunderstorms. when they start to pile up they could be worse than that move forward to tuesday. kind of that first get away day. we are going to be looking at some delays from texas through the ohio valley as that system kind of really begins to develop there and going to bring a lot of rain and we're going to be looking at that threat for severe weather. tuesday night it kind of moves in towards the northeast. by wednesday, take a look at this. all of this rain that we're going to be dealing with in the east coast, not good news across that east coast. it's going to be meaning delays from new england to the atlanta area that busy hub, of course. we have got that rain. behind that for thursday we will clear out quite a bit. much colder in across much of that area. today looking pretty good out across the east. out across the west. that's where we have got this big storm big weather maker for us all week long. back to you. >> the super committee is on the verge of becoming a super failure. promise to go big by reaching a deal. mark says maybe they should go small. he will explain that. >> a personal side of the g.o.p. candidates. they got a little emotional, maybe a lot emotional at a family forum in iowa last night. what's got the waterworks going? we will play this for you after the break ♪ don't you know [ male announcer ] cranberry juice? wake up! ♪ that's good morning, veggie style. hmmm [ male announcer ] for half the calories -- plus veggie nutrition. could've had a v8. vietnam, 1967. i got mine in iraq, 2003. u.s.a.a. autonsurance is often handed down from generation to generation, because it offers a superior level of protection and because u.s.a.a.'s commitment to serve the military, veterans, and their families is without equal. ben your lega. get an auto insurance quote. u.s.a.a. we know what it means to serve. congratulations. congralations. today, the city of charlotte can use verizon technology to inspire binesses to conserve energy and monitor costs. making communities greener... congratulations. ... and buildings as valuable to the bottom line... whoa ! ... as the people inside them. congratulations. because when you add verizon to your company, you don't just add, you multiply. ♪ discover something new... verizon. doing laundry is classic problem solving. i mean, kids make stains, i use tide boost to super charge our detergent. boom -- the clothes look amazing, and daddy? well, he's a hero. oh, see this thing here? it was covered in freezer pop. and since i won't have to wash it twice to get it clean, well, now i get to spend a little more me time. daddy, can you french braid my hair? herring bone or fish tail? herring bone. [ man ] good call. tide boost is my tide. what's yours? >> there they are. the super 12. the super committee. once again at the 11th hour for the super committee. still seems unlikely they are going to strike a deal. listen. >> i think that's pretty doubtful at this point. but obviously nobody wants to quit until the stroke of midnight as you can see here by my presence. >> we're still working. i hope we can get there. but i don't know at this point in time. >> so does the dead lock mean the committee can't agree on any spending cuts whatsoever? joining us is mark, a former speech writer for george w. bush. nice to see you this morning, >> mark. >> good. >> go home or go small. >> he he turned blue for a second, mark. >> "avatar." >> super committee might be behind it you are saying go small? why? >> look, the bottom line is the super committee is super pathetic, okay? we have got -- they were urged. >> don't mince words. not only are they going to meet their mandate they are going to come up with zero in cuts. that is quite simply pathetic. the fact is that even if you can't agree on entitlements and taxes, there is still hundreds of billions of dollars of spending that we could agree on on cuts. and they are not even going to do that the republicans put forward a plan on friday, a plan b, $648 billion in cuts. about half the mandate. and the democrats rejected it. and the reason they said was they there are not enough -- there interest no tax increases in this plan. there is no tax increases in the sequester either. if they can't do 648 billion? how about 300 billion? how about 200 billion? how about 1 billion? something. >> what a fool i am on friday. the 700 billion no entitlement cuts, that seemed like it might work for them. no taxes. why did this one fail? i honestly think. the fight over who is to blame on this is going to start up pretty soon starting tomorrow and tuesday. pretty clear to me the democrats are belgt on failure here. the fact is the republicans have put forward two concrete serious proposals. first was the toomey plan which met the mandate and included a big concession, $300 billion in new taxes for the republicans. the democrats dismissed it and they never put on a counter proposal. and now they have put forward this 648 billion-dollar plan and the democrats dismissed it again. it's hard to escape the thought that maybe the democrats don't want this thing to succeed at all. >> paul krugman argued that this week in the "new york times." hey, democrats, let this thing go. let it fail. at the end of the day that trigger is there. does that make democrats happy? that tryinger is there $1.2 trillion in cuts to defense and other programs. >> no, but it's going to be across the board cuts. at least we could do targeted cuts and choose what these cuts are going to be as opposed to cutting programs across the board including the programs the democrats care about. the reason they are sticking to their guns on this to win in november they are in a very bad position in this election. the only way they win in november is if they can't paint the republicans as intransigent and go negative on them. if we come up with a big deal that includes tax increases that's narrative. they are rooting for failure. >> thank you very much. have a good sunday. >> have a good thanksgiving by the way. >> ladies get out of survival mode by getting wicked. i'm talking in a boston sense. wicked good. >> i like this. >> then from the campaign trail to weekend update. how did g.o.p. presidential candidate jon huntsman do on "saturday night live" last night? >> recording in the low single digits? >> it is truth, seth. ♪ wrap my heart around your linger finger ♪ you come again. ♪ a refrigerator has never been hacked. an online virus has never attacked a corkboard. ♪ give your customers the added feeling of security a printed statement or receipt provides... ...with mail. it's good for your business. ♪ and even better for your customers. ♪ for safe and secure ways to stay connected, visit usps.com/mail here's what you can the expect from regions. 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) >> feel free to whistle along at home. it's news by the number. one in three how many americans are either living in poverty or close to it according to new census numbers. 100 million americans. next, $226,000, -- yeah, let me try that again. $226,920. that's how much it costs to raise a child in the u.s. what? that's up from $165,000 just 10 years ago. kids are expensive. finally, 91. that's how many years young bernice bates is the florida resident broke the guinness world record for the oldest yoga teacher. >> that is fantastic. >> can you even do a downward dog like that. >> that's not a downward dog. >> i know. >> listen up, ladies, do you feel like you have been put on the mommy track and, therefore, sidelined in your own career? well, we have got the tools to help you get ahead in these tough economic times. vicki lazzo is the author of wicked success. she joins us now with her tips on how moms can succeed in this climate. vicki, great to see you. >> great to be here. >> you have some great tips for what every woman should do. even though it's a tough economic climate. that's no excuse. you can still have a lot of success. let's go through them because they are pretty fascinating. the first is commit to having a passionate work or a passionate life or both. what is that to you? >> well, passion is everything. that's how i built my business into a 16-million-dollar company. that's how i survived the recession. women probably spend more time at work than with their family. so, life is too short not to be passionate about work. >> meaning if you feel like you are just punching the clock, go and do something that you have a passion for? what if you love cooking but you should really start a cooking business? >> well, for some women it might be starting a cooking business. for another woman it might be trying to be passionate at the job she has to be in that moment. if you are passionate, you are more enthusiastic, you are going to attract people and attract that next big thing for yourself. >> less of a chore, obviously. i love this one. you say go for it or reject it. and this is about the dreams that we all harbor for years. you say it's time to sort of put the pedal to the metal. >> the challenge for moms are moms are the chief everything officer. so, they are not only the ceo of their career but also housekeeping, transportation, child care, education, all of the above. and so, what they have to to do is rally the family behind their dream just like they rally behind everyone else's dream. >> start enacting your dream. take one action step per day towards your dream. that's a good one because some of us procrastinate. >> this is the buck up promise. when i started my business, i just had to buck up. i had a full-time job. i still had to go home every night and do something on my business. and so for many women, this is going to be the biggest challenge. you have to, again, get your family involved. it's okay for your husband and your kids to help with the housework. it's not going to kill them. >> what a novel concept. i like that. number 4. i commit to being a success student for life. and you say that part of this is carving out time for yourself. when can you do that? >> wake up for yourself in the morning not for your kids. not for your man. and not for those time sucking distractions like farmville. get up 30 minutes early. put those 30 minutes to work for your personal and professional development. >> i'm going to start getting up at 2:30 a.m. meanwhile, you say -- believe that as a woman you really can do everything. this is your own sort of personal pep talk. >> this is huge for me. when i first walked into an attorney's office for the very first time, i'm facing this texas good old boy. i'm shaking. i don't know how i'm going to get out of the interview. then i thought i'm reajsterred nurse. if you were in the hospital with your hospital gown on and your back side showing, i would have no problem talking to you, sticking with you a needle or worse. so, women need to use their past successes to move forward with their new goals and dreams. >> theta a great one. imagine your box -- boss with his back side showing. a helpful at this point. vickie you are the author of wicked success. thanks for coming. >> in thanks for having me. >> bring on the waterworks. what got all of the g.o.p. candidates choked up and crying yesterday. plus, want to spice up your thanksgiving meal with a tasty side dish? we are talking deep fried mac and cheese. vicki, you will want to stick around for. this we will learn how to make these tasty tidbits coming up. 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's heart-healthier than butter. with omega-3s. 64% less saturated fat. andlinically proven to help support healthy cholesterol. ♪ put a little love in your heart ♪ >> something you never get to hear at the debates, governor huntsman, the first question is for you. [ laughter ] isn't it true that nationally you are currently polling in the low single digits? >> it is true, seth. but only a few months ago i was polling at margin of error. so to have any digit at all is a pretty big deal. [ laughter ] >> he has got to do something there. funny on weekend update last night. one of the reasons he wasn't in iowa. not competing in iowa so, therefore, why not go to "saturday night live," more eyeballs. >> makes perfect sense. >> that's for sure. >> it is good to poke fun at yourself. obviously that's worked for a lot of the candidates. it's funny. we do want to talk about what happened. the flip side of emotion happened last night at the family forum in iowa where so many of the g.o.p. candidates opened up about their own personal struggles and really got teary. >> i think the discussion got into the health care issue a little bit, too. they asked them well personally how has health touched your life or lack of it? and people got very choked um. listen. >> walking out of that surgeons office, after she had just told us stage 4 -- >> take your time. >> i said i wasn't going to do this. [ laughter ] >> it's as bad as it gets. i will never forget before my wife and i were about to get in the car, i said i can do this. she said we can do this. amen. [ applause ] >> i decided that the best thing i could do was to treat her differently and not love her like i did because it wouldn't hurt as much if i lost her. >> he is a very close friend. he spent six years with a shunt in the back of his head. he has a good heart, a good brain. he is good at baseball and football. you look at that and you say to yourself all right. do i want some bureaucracy deciding that on a percentage basis this is not worth the investment or do i want a country that cares about every life at that depth? that is what next year is all about. [ applause ] >> i feel like dr. phil. [ laughter ] >> i don't know if i have ever seen anything like that. it wasn't a debate. it was online a discussion around the table. the three of them broke down in tears. herman cain talking about his own battle with cancer and his wife's support. and rick santorum talking about his own daughter. and newt gingrich talking about a friend with health issues. >> i liked it. >> herman cain doesn't talk about his brush with colon cancer very much. obviously still there on the surface and how intense the struggle was. i had never heard rick santorum talk about his daughter born with a disease. very interesting. >> michele bachmann did not cry. but, remember when hillary clinton cried and there was all that curflufol in the press. no one talking about the men crying it's cute. >> >> it's endearing. >> new age. everybody can cry now. we have made progress. >> that was real. >> yeah, it was. let's get to your headlines. we have to tell what you is happening in the news because libya's interim prime minister saying the captured son of muammar qaddafi will get a fair trial. saef al islam was found near the border. they want him tried to libya. no word when he will be transferred to the government. they are concerned he won't get a fair trial. they want to charge him with crimes against humanity. another bizarre twist in the case of missing baby lisa irwin. new development has to do with mysterious phone call reportedly made from lisa's parents cell phone the night she disappeared. now, initially, police say the phone call was made to this woman megan wright now wright's former roommate say he was using the phone that night. that man is identified only as deign. he confirmed he received the phone call just before midnight on october 3rd. still, he will not say whether he answered the call or who was on the other line. that's an important detail. the sat and act cheating scandal in long island is growing by the day. the "new york post" says three more high schools being implicated with three students paying people to take the test for them for $3,500. they join at least three other schools believed to be involved. at least six students and three paid surrogates already under suspicion. all right. those are your headlines at this hour. >> thanks so much. check in with rick who is outside in the brisk weather. actually not that cold today. >> what are you guys eating for breakfast? >> friday macaroni and cheese. >> sounds like that is milk, maybe? >> it's milk. >> take a look at the maps. temperatures as you are waking up very cold. 1 degree in rapid city and take a look at video out of this area. major snow falling yesterday the first significant snow falling from the year spear fish south dakota. got over a foot of snow in that area. absolutely beautiful if you are ready to get into that mood. take a look at the next picture sent it to me down from lakeland near georgia. just at the north of the atlanta area. absolutely beautiful sunrise. nice day ahead of you. starting out auto degrees or so this morning. temps wise, but going to be getting up to the low 70s and a few scattered showers, not a complete washout of the day but a few showers. keep sending me your pictures, rick reichmuth on twitter or put them on my facebook page. forecast for the day. northeast looking pretty good. there will be a few showers but nothing that's going to cause any real significant problems today in the northeast. temps in the 60's. down across the southeast. a warm day as well. we will see a few showers. and a few thunderstorms as well. all right, mike. we will send it over to you in a second. >> hey, rick. stop it hi, john. >> here is our concept today. we want our thanksgiving dinner to be way different this year. we are doing it southern style. john thanks for coming in. >> our message is we want you to share the experience. instead of just cooking your thanksgiving meal and sitting down and going i did it. we want everybody to get the family and friends involved so that you can sit down and say, you know, we cooked this meal together. that's what it is about at the our house. >> totally southern style your book is doggone that's good. >> you know what -- >> -- we deep fried a turkey in the first hour. now what are you going to do? >> this is why people love the butter ball turkey fryer at 6:30 we put this 14-pound turkey in less than one hour later that's done. that is going to be the juiciest turkey inside your home. instead of worrying about all this weather we have been talking about today. don't worry about dampening your spirits. cook your turkey inside with the butter ball turkey fryer. >> with the machine can you do it in your kitchen. we would take it out not backyard or garage. we were burning down our houses. >> that's the message they want to get across. viral videos going out there saying it is a dangerous recipe no more. this is a thermostatly controlled electric appliance. two turkeys in less than two hours. if you have a big crowd coming over. >> how much are the machines? >> going to range from $99 to $149 nationally. >> nicely done. and lady gaga got one and now she is all gaga over it. >> we are going to be making announcement about that coming up. >> gaga announcement you said that you can make mac and cheese balls and then deep fry them. how do you do that? >> here you go. take macaroni and cheese and bread it up where you deep fry it. not only deep frying turkeys but there is mac and cheese in there look at that. >> oh, stop it that's unusual for thanksgiving. >> yeah. you eat, tell me is that as good as the injectable marinade earlier? >> it's 10 times better. that's good. i love mac and cheese. i didn't know you could make it any better but deep frying it is good. >> deep fried turkey there. something else in our cookbook, look at this honey glazed roasted pecan deep fried turkey breast. we have freed up our often. we friday the turkey, the turkey breast. cajun honey glaze. we are going to go from frying your turkeys, doing your macaroni and cheese. i will show you that in the next hour how to do that. >> real quickly what have you got there? >> nontraditional thanksgiving meal. we're going to do potatoes, corn, sausage and shrimp. i'm going to lower this down into. we are going from frying the turkey to boiling the seafood. this make a nontraditional low country seafood boil your next traditional seafood meal. >> next hour and final hour all the way to desert as well. everything, almost everything out here is deep fried. we're going to show you deep fried oreos, you name it. >> thank you very much. >> you guys are going crazy out there. mixing it all up. >> i want some. trying to come through the tv to get some of that. >> bring that in. >> that's good. >> more on that coming up. more on the super committee too. because as the u.s. military now has a secret missile that travels five times the speed of sound. watch this. it could hit a target anywhere in the world within an hour. sounds like science fiction. how does it work? he we will get to the bottom of it. >> plus, we all knew we wouldn't hear the last from this love triangle. find out why salahi is now telling guitarist he owes her millions of dollars. 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it's not taking off as i understand it like a typical rocket, right? >> this is actually the third test. but the first two tests were something slightly different. the air force is developing the ferrari of these systems, if you like. the army, which was the system tested recently is going for something a lit less ambitious. this is like the bmw of these systems. what this bmw missile does is it's launched by conventional rocket. but it doesn't go into space. it stays in the atmosphere and then it glides at very high altitude. very quickly. without being powered. it's t. really is a super glider. >> wow. interesting. i'm thinking of this and i was talking with the producer early this morning about this. thinking about the cuban missile crisis, for instance, just a short time ago in american history when our concern was having missiles in the western hemisphere that could hit us and because at that time they couldn't really hit us from another continents. now we are talking about hitting any target on earth within an hour? >> you know, clayton, there a number of countries, five at the moment that already have intercontinental ballistic missiles. the u.s. homeland has been vulnerable for some time. i think the big question these system raise is what are they going to be used for? at the moment, the technological development of these systems is proceeding faster than the doctrinal development. >> that's interesting. it makes an interesting point and how precise will the targeting be? can we sit there with someone in albuquerque decides they want to hit a target in afghanistan. will they be able to do it with pinpoint accuracy? after all it's gliding down. >> that's the big question. in order to fulfill any of the missions that this system might try to be used for, you need extraordinary accuracy. within a few meters. and that is going to be one of the key challenges in this development pathway is will these systems be accurate enough to do the missions, to which they might be assigned. >> james acheton, senior carnegie endowment. thanks for joining us this morning. >> thank you very much. >> coming up on the show, tearing down signs and fences. occupy movement turning violent overnight. why is the government still supporting them. >> one retired nypd officer being told to take down his 9/11 flag or pay a price for his patriotism. he joins us next to talk about it. regions quick deposit lets you deposit checks right from your office. so sitting at your desk is just like going to the bank. see? i'm at the bank. now i'm in the office. at the bank. in the office. at the bank. in the office. >> welcome back. a retired nypd officer told to take down his 9/11 commemorative flag or face fines but is he not budging. >> joining us now is richard whence, good morning, richard. >> good morning. how are you? >> we are doing well. >> you can tell us why it is so important to you to hang this 9/11 flag? >> i lost 43 dear personal friends that morning and i have numerous friends now who are sick and have passed away since 9/11 from illnesses. i also am sick from the events of 9/11 and my work at rescue and recovery. i will not take that flag down. that flag is specifically pointed out by the president of the association and told to me that that flag must come down. i won't budge. >> the homeowner's association where you live, this is in florida, right? >> yes, sir. >> and you can put up an american flag, which we see up there, but describe this flag that they have a problem with. >> the flag itself is what's called a ghost flag. it's faded. looks like it's worn. it's not. purposely faded to look like a ghost flag. it's got the stars. 50 stars, background, red and white stripes. in the stripes are embroidered the names of every single person who perished on the morning of september 11th, 2001. >> here is what the management company says called benchmark only flag allowside american flag. the problem is he is flying two flags. until someone changes that, there is a problem. you received a letter, richard, saying that you have until tomorrow to take down the 9/11 commemorative flag or face a fine. what will you do tomorrow? >> that flag will still be flying very proudly at my house. >> it's always difficult because our job is to take both sides. so i'm going to attempt this because i agree with you. rules are rules. when somebody says to you, you know, this is one of the rules, you agreed to it by moving into this community you have got to follow the rules. >> yes. i do agree with that i do agree with the fact that we need to follow rules. we need to follow laws. if you think about it, every day laws are broken. laws are bent. when a law enforcement officer stops a person for a traffic offense, he is allowed and he has the discretion whether to write that summons or not. let's face it everybody has been stopped once by law enforcement officer. they always ask for a break. >> it's one of those situations i just don't understand it who is going to complain? come on. keep us updated sir, will you, please? >> i certainly, will thank you. >> richard, thanks, good luck tomorrow. let us know what happens. >> thank you very much. >> coming up, ali, her fiance gave her the ultimate sacrifice and for our country as well. now she has decided to put a uniform on herself to honor him. he lost his life overseas. now she is going to go herself. >> and babies to the back of the plane. that's the new rule some airlines are setting for traveling parents. those parents are now fired up. we're going to have a fair and balanced baby debate still ahead. 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[crying] >> he cannot turn up his ipod loud enough to drown that out. >> more airlines forcing babies to sit in the back of the plane. is this fair for families or age discrimination? we debate that next. "fox & friends" hour three starts right now. don't cry about it. captions by closed captioning services >> that's a tough one, isn't it. >> no. i hate to break it to the people who make these policy decisions you can still hear them crying. unless they are had soundproof room. >> put them by the bathroom. >> you are too young to remember when they smoked on planes. >> i still do. >> do you? >> he is smoking now. >> row 19 no smoking. row 20 you could smoke. >> oh my god. >> and they thought row 19 would be okay. >> you are going to be fine. >> nothing about second hand smoke at the time. get in your emails and tweets about that one. should kids be banned or pushed to the back of the plane? we will debate that coming up. super committee talk because it looks like tick to come particular tock. we're heading for a super failure. we thought the news might be better this morning. they might pull one of those 11th hour saviors all come to the table and make a final good faith compromise. no, it sounds as though they may be left with, as senator kyl of arizona said a big goose egg. listen to him. >> i think that's pretty doubtful at this point. but obviously nobody wants to quit until the stroke of midnight as you can see here by my presence. no matter what happens, congress has to reduce spending by $1.2 trillion one way or another. it would be better if we could reach an agreement on how to do it but if we don't then there is the sequester. >> they are going to have to do that today, right? the vote would be by midnight wednesday. that's the vote but the cbo has got to look at all the material. they have got to have it by tomorrow morning. >> have to have it by today and midnight monday night was the super cut off. let's be honest. they have that 48 hour window where they have to review the bill. all members of congress look at it and review it before they can actually put it to a vote. that deadline is wednesday for that vote. >> what happens if nothing happens today? if they can't reach a compromise as senator jon kyl was just talking about? well, $1.2 trillion is triggered. the trigger option known as the sequestration goes into effect. that means that $492 billion will be cut out of the defense budget and 123 billion from entitlements. it also means there would be no plan to extend the tax cuts, the bush era tax cuts or the unemployment. >> right, the weeks. that would expire as well. >> of course, there is also the big worry about a credit downgrade which we saw earlier this summer as the -- as the debt ceiling debate unfolded and there was little confidence that we could get anything done in washington. almost no confidence votes. wasn't really about substance. they were just saying looks like washington can't get anything done. i think as evidenced by the super committee one viewer wrote this morning can we stop calling them the super committee because they are no so super. >> lame committee. >> here is like the debt ceiling i'm not surprised that they can't come to a decision because it's just like last summer in the debt ceiling debate, right? that's why newt gingrich said this super committee is one of the dumbest ideas he has ever heard of. work will fill the time allotted and the time is out later today probably. >> let's talk about the occupy wall street protests that are still going on in so many pockets of the country. last night in oakland, things got a little hairy. they started a peaceful protests and there were thousands that had congregated. then, what happened is ended up causing destruction. aerial view here of oakland. they pushed over a chain link fence and they declared this, this i guess what we're looking at this parking lot was their new encampment. he they needed new area, new sort of base of operations. they called for more tents to be brought. in you will remember that the tents were confiscated kicked out of wherever they were yet. they are trying to set up in new park. >> it was like an area to set up because we think this is symbolic of what they are trying to do with big business and developers which are coming in here. if we set up here, we're going to make a statement about it last night at this iowa forum that was moderated by frank luntz out there with the six of the candidates on hand to discuss some policies and different issues out there. occupy wall street came up and newt has a plan, take a listen. >> all the occupy movement starts with a premise that we all owe them everything. they take over a public park they didn't pay for to go nearby to use bathrooms they didn't pay for, to beg from food to places they don't want to pay for, to obstruct those to go to work to pay the taxes to sustain the bathrooms and to sustain the park so they can self-righteously explain that they're the paragons of virtue to which we owe everything. now, that is a pretty good symptom of how much the left has collapsed as a moral system in this country and why you need to reassert something as simple as saying to them go get a job right after you take a bath. [ applause ] >> speaking of taking baths, i know a great place to take a bath the w hotel. if you don't know the w hotel around the country we have quite a few in new york city lavish establishments. >> front page of the most. occupy wall suite. w hotel suite where it turns out one of the leaders of the occupy wreath movement down there and other leaders of the occupy wreath movement staying in $700 a night suite at the w hotel getting nice showers. >> who can blame them? would you rather stay at the w hotel or it a tent with no running water? the point is, i think, there real solid a cross section of people who are involved in this movement. he is one of the guys who manages the money, interestingly. so they have gotten $500,000 worth of donations. he manages the money. there is no suggestion that is he misusing the funds. he says he is paying for this himself. the point is that some people are wealthy who are involved in the protest. >> no question. >> some people are wildly wealthy like nancy pelosi who support the protesters. it's a cross section. >> i love the pictures of them. jump online to the post. because it shows this gentleman leaving the hotel with a mug of coffee with the logo on the side of it. >> peter dutro the one that organized the finance committee. wall street, the one in new york here, is fairly well organized, better organized than the other occupies around the country. >> on the night they cleaned out the park. this guy says i'm not going to my apartment in brooklyn i'm going to w. this guy is 24 years old. brad spitzer in new york city on a business trip. he works for deloit they made $30 billion last year. >> yeah i'm in finance but i still support their causes. >> interesting. interesting to see all the different people who on some level support them and believe in them though, again, not the tactics because he didn't want to sleep the in tents and stay on the city streets. >> can i give you an example how expensive it is to stay at w hotel. a bottle of glen levit scotch is $55. >> a bottle of it. >> this big. >> same bottle at the w is $375. that's a steal. >> you sound like you are experienced. you made that mistake in room service. >> mike made the mistake on a bill one night. did i just order that? more on that coming up and mike's dinner bill. >> let's get to your evidence lines and tell you what you are about to see. look at live pictures of tahrir square in cairo, egypt where demonstrators has been protesting for two days now. they returned to the square last night just one day after government forces kicked them out. several hundred people reportedly spent the night there despite police attempts to drive them out. this comes after a second day of clashes that ended with 200 people reportedly hurt. the military clashed with thousands of protesters. rocks were hurled at police in riot gear who responded with tear gas. witnesses say several protesters were beaten. crews in reno nevada working to extinguish devastated wildfire. forced 10,000 people to seek refuge at local shelters. the fire being blamed for the death of a 74-year-old man. right now crews are reporting about 80% containment. they hope to have the fire completely put out, they say, by the middle of the week. call at it the kramer effect. the simple act of walking into a room can make you forget what you were doing. [ laughter ] >> hey. >> hey. >> hey. >> [ laughter ] >> hey. >> hey. >> i wish dave briggs were here. he can do a mean kramer impression. different rooms with different sets of events. that's why entering a new room may cause a lapse in memory. >> right. i thought i was getting old which i am. >> you walk in another room and you really can't remember why you walked in there just the simple act of walking through the doorway. >> tricker rare thought. >> it happens to me when i walk in the studio in the morning before the show. >> we noticed that. >> we want to know if this has ever happened to you friends@foxnews.com or tweet us at ff weekend or us individually on twitter a million ways to get ahold of us. >> at mike jarrett. >> at ali.com. >> has this ever happened? this has never happened to rick because he lives in a studio. >> call ali at 646 -- just teasing. >> i give him a fake number, too. >> i it happens and then you have to go back to the other room and then suddenly you remember it again. >> right? >> you don't know why you came there. lots of weather going on. big story. severe storms in the south again today, tomorrow, and possibly on tuesday as well. very cold temps across far northern plains and northern rockies. another storm for california. have you been very stormy over the last would he goes. another one. everyone is wondering what's going to be happening with their travel this week. troubles to talk about. temps waking up far northern plains. minus 6 degrees in jackson wyoming right now. very cold one. seattle as well. probably breaking a record for a cold temperature overnight. here is the eastern part of the country. you see these storms lining up across kind of that mississippi river valley. those potentially turning severe later. this right here, this rotation you see around california is bringing rain, bringing mountain snow maybe up to a foot of snow across the higher elevations. that's going to be the one that eventually drives a lot of severe weather for us this we. today though, a chance where you see that yellow for severe weather around dallas and stretching up in across parts of arkansas. that firing line not going to move much. very cold off toward the knot. north part of texas. temps only in the 40s. dallas 79. back to you. >> thanks, rick. >> coming up here on the show. mitt romney skipping the iowa forum to spend time in new hampshire. may be paying off. about to get a big endorsement. will it help? we will ask chris wallace next. >> fairly attractive human by the name of mila kunis said yes. what does d. she say yes to? it involves the marines. >> hey, mila, i'm sergeant warren you can call me scott. i want to take a moment out of of my day to invite you to the marine corps ball. >> did she go to the ball? what did she wear and how did she look. >> i have the pictures. >> in your phone. 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[ male announcer ] if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. >> >> "fox news sunday" we are talking about really really good. >> of course it is. >> once again the 11th hour for the super committee. still seems unlikely they are close to striking a deal. >> chris wallace joins us live now. hi chris. >> hey, guys. >> what are the chances that they are going to reach a deal today? >> well, it doesn't look good. but we're going to talk to two of the key members of the committee, the republic co-chair, jebb hensarling of texas and one of the democratic members javier be sara. they have not had a formal meeting of this committee and i just read this, since november 1st. so if you are not talking. now, you could have serious talks behind the scenes. it just seems like the basic division that we saw last summer with the debt ceiling debate, you know, the republics want it to be overwhelmingly spending cuts. and don't want to see a sizeable increase in taxes on the wealthy. and the democrats are resistant to serious entitlement reform. that division still is there and it looks like the super committee is going to not be so gliewrp what do you make about the argument we had march tease on the show a little while ago he says he believes it's hard for him not to believe that the democrats would want had this to fail. heard that argument from paul krugman this week this would be the best thing for democrats to have this fail. what do you make of that. >> i don't agree with that. let's take president obama. i think for president obama it would have been a tremendous plus. i think actually for everybody it would have been a tremendous plus for this thing to succeed. i know the narrative is well, obama is campaigning against a do-nothing congress. let's say they had made a deal. let's say they made a big deal, $4 trillion. sizeable tax increases but really significant entitlement reform, basically what the president walked away from with the deficit commission back last december. the bowls simpson commission i think that would have been a huge financial plus, an economic plus. i think the markets would have soared. i think the approval rating would have gone way up for both congress and the white house, which are in the tank right now. >> i agree. >> i think that a success would have been a success for everybody. >> hey, chris. mike jarrett here. i know we have talked many times. we are emotional guys we cry a lot about our football teams and stuff like that. did you happen to see what happened in iowa last night at family forum? three of the candidates got so checked up they started talking about their personal lives a little bit. herman cain about his battle with cancer and the support of his wife. rick santorum about his daughter and health issues and then also newt with a friend who had health issues. did you see it? >> i did not see it. but i read about it. and, you know, i'm not surprised. you know, it's good that there are different kinds of forums sms we have these fox debates where we are asking them what your presidency is on such and such an issue. this was obviously an opportunity for them to open up about more personal issues. it was a faith and family forum and they obviously are trying to appeal to those evangelize voters who make up a very large proportion of the republic voters in the g.o.p. caucus in iowa. interesting thing, mitt romney, the frontrunner in the overall race didn't show up. he has shown some concern. i think two things. first of all some concern about iowa because he spent $10 million there four years ago and finished second. and also i think he thinks i'm just not going to win the evangelical voters. others are. and it would have been a waste of time. it's interesting. he and jon huntsman were the only two candidates not to season show up. >> chris, is he getting a big endorsement though in new hampshire, romney is, tell us about that and why is that important? >> kelly aot the new senator there it's important because she is one of the real bright lights in new hampshire. she hadn't endorsed anybody. she came out now. and it comes at an interesting time because according to the most recent poll, new hampshire let me just back up for a second. romney has a kind of strange position versus iowa. on the one hand i think he he is nervous about it on the other hand, i think he knows if i could go in there and i win and i won in new hampshire this race might be over in mid january. he has got to win new hampshire. that's always been his strong hold. of course he was the governor of four years in neighboring massachusetts. that's got to be the place where he does win and the latest poll shows him only 2 points ahead of newt gingrich. so obviously getting this particular endorsement at this moment is important for romney as he tries to shore up his support in new hampshire. >> chris, you are going to be talking about the super committee. you have two key lawmakers on with you this morning. we will be watching "fox news sunday." check your local listings. great to see you. >> buy, guys. >> airlines now taking lines into their own hands and pushing the babies to the back of the plane. is this fair? we have that baby debate next. >> he has had it, huh? 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[ female announcer ] the travelocity guarantee. from the price to the room to the trip you'll never roam alone. >> welcome back, babies sit in the back of the plane. new rules airlines are implementing with parents traveling with small children. makes the fly experience better for everyone. some parents say it's not fair or even safe. joining us from a fair and balanced debate on this is mcdermott the founder of the web site has baby will fly.com. and blogger amman delker. ben, correct lie last name pronunciation. >> you got it just right on the last try right there. >> fifth time is a charm. >> mandealter. >> you big airplane flying with a baby next to you. take a second look at this piece of video here. caused quite a bit of an uproar. you are recording this video for a nonstop flight baby crying next to you. a lot of people suffering from this. you put this up on your web site up on your blog and you got a lot of traffic. what were people saying to you? >> you know, it was mixed. i got a lot of people were in support of me who felt my frustration. i got a lot of people who felt like i was being unsympathetic and lacking compassion for a child uncomfortable. what people don't seem to realize it's not really about the baby or the toddler. they can't help it sometimes. it's real buy about the parents that do nothing about it on that flight the father spent four and a half hours reading a book and the mom was doing a cross word puzzle. it was driving me absolutely crazy. >> corrine sometimes it's difficult to get a baby to stop crying. especially dealing with ear issues. they don't know that they can swallow and release so. pressure in their ears. very difficult in some pass cities. do you agree or disagree with the idea of putting the kids on the back of the plane. >> i mean it's one thing to say we're going to have a family friendly section of an aircraft where there is going to be special entertainment for children and there is going to be great snacks. but that's not what they're saying. essentially they are saying we want to lump all the families together for whatever reason and i think you just simply wouldn't say that about anyone other than children these days. you would never say we are going to lump all the arm rest hogs in one section of a. everyone has a story about a baby crying. everyone has a story about arm rest hog. a drunk obnoxious person on plane. let's lump them into one section of the plane. >> make a good point here, age discrimination what is the difference between this or perhaps an elderly passenger that needs extra care and concern and may take a long time as other passengers are waiting to board the plane or the drunk passenger or somebody else? >> well, look, if you have got like an unruly drunk passenger, there are repercussions to that. they don't always get off scot-free. sometimes they are kicked off the plane. i'm not saying kick off the babies. but, you know, i think this is ultimately about respect and courtesy. fly something a stressful experience. people are on edge. and if you could create an environment where they are, perhaps, some baby free zones. areas where some of the passengers where babies are and people can have some peace and quiet. i think that would be better for the flight as a whole. >> ben as my co-host alisyn had pointed out doesn't matter where you are on the plane you still hear the crying babies. >> i don't know if that's necessarily as true. i mean, there is a lot of actually white noise that happens. you would be amazed if a baby is separated by five or six or seven isles, it actually can make a huge difference. >> you have studied. this corrine, i will give you the final word on this. maybe creating a safe zone or area where the families can go and be away from everyone else. >> well, one of the reasons i created have baby will travel.com inspire and motivate and help people travel with babies toddlers and young children. some of that is being prepared. gone are the days of traveling light. getting there is no longer half the fun. traveling with children is, would. if you are prepared, you know you have everything on the ready for your child, for your baby, something to suck, something to eat, something to keep them busy, then everyone is going to be happy. i don't think the onus is on parents to be responsible for everyone's comfort and safety on an aircraft. my responsibility as a traveling parent is to my child. a great side effect of my child being happy and comfortable is that they are quiet and engaged. that makes everybody happy on the plane. >> being prepared. i definitely agree with that. check out have baby will fly.com. >> will travel. >> also b side blog.com. the other side of the debate. the debate will continue online i'm sure. >> find me at clayton morris on twitter. continue that debate there plus, coming up, honoring her fallen fiance. one woman now completing his unfinished mission. we're going to share this incredible story. plus, harmless kids' television? >> have fun. >> hi, kids. [ laughter ] >> one man says programs geared towards children lacking one vital component a higher power he explains next. plus, back with another southern style take on thanksgiving. tell you why these recipes are smoking. we're back with master built in a little bit. [ male announcer ] what if you have potatoes? but you've got a meat and potatoes guy? pour chunky sirloin burger soup over those mashed potatoes and dinner is served. four minutes, around four bucks. campbell's chunky -- it's amazing what soup can do. 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. >> this is my favorite shot of the day ever. >> there is mila kunis keeping her date with marine sergeant scott moore. she got him good. the 70s show actress attended the marine core birthday ball in greenville, north carolina. that was on friday night. >> nice. >> sergeant moore just returned from afghanistan, you will remember. he asked kunis to accompany him via youtube back in july. friends with benefits co-star justin timberlake attended a ballast week. his date also used youtube to reach out to the star. >> by the way, sergeant moore kunis' date will be joining us on "fox & friends" tomorrow to tell us what happened on his date. >> do you think he was disappointed because she came dressed kind of looking like a legal secretary. >> yes. >> nice ball, right? >> yeah. okay. i mean there could have been something a little bit more. >> something more revealing. >> yes. i do think -- >> i agree. talk about. this following the movenber bring awareness about men's cancer. how much of the guys raised and what do their mustaches look like? we have been waiting for update. >> after shots of the team. 11 members on their team. their team has raised $2,650 thus far. nationally, $7.4 million have been raised. >> that's a good one. >> for men's health. these guys have done a great effort on their own. you can see that not only have they donned mustaches but strange hats. >> and village people outfits. >> he gray feathers. >> starting to love their mustaches. they are waiting to hear from geraldo rivera. [ laughter ] that's one of their icons. and they call you and me out. they are waiting for donations from their lovely hosts. >> really? >> um-huh. >> and dave. >> and mike and i. i think it's time for killed a 30-year-old woman. the driver was carrying kegs of beer in the truck and is now in police custody. not clear if alcohol was a factor. two other women hurt in the crash as well. you have to hear this amazing love story. madeline is enlisting in the marines after her fiance travis nelson was killed in afghanistan last august. she says she is making this sacrifice because nelson was not able to complete his mission. so she is doing it for him. >> people will say oh, travis wouldn't want you to do this but i think i know travis better than everyone. i think that he would be okay with it as long as long as it'si wanted to do. >> in march go training. same month she and her fiance were to be married. joining us live in our next hour to tell us her incredible story. those are your headlines. >> get to weather with rick. hey, rick. >> nice cool start to the morning out across the east. brutally cold across the far northern rockies. temps below zero in so many areas. take a look at the maps. nice down across the south. dallas, 72, go around 100 miles to the northwest. drop 30 degrees. that's where the front and big changes of weather are going to be for the next few days. take a look at the forecast for your day though. northeast, looking pretty good. 10 degrees warmer than yesterday. there will be a few scattered showers, nothing going to cause problems across interior sections. down across the southeast. also very nice temperatures. move forward one there the southeast warms but some storms going to be across areas dallas to arkansas. up across parts of mid mississippi river valley to ohio valley. some of those could be severe at times and dealing with travel problems as well. all right. up towards the north. the northern plains, here is where the colder air is, temps into the 20's and 30's. see plenty of sunshine. little bit of wind and head out across the west and that's where we have the snow. snow continuing across the mountains of california. see some rain in toward the l.a. basin and one more day of sunshine before the rain moves into arizona tomorrow. all right, clayton, i got to get all my food from you before we start because i know you are going to do something dirty to it. >> john, bringing turkey over to rick. john is back author and master built manufacturing. seafood. i have tried this before. it's fantastic. >> is it dag gum good. >> just like the cookbook said i followed it to the letter. >> where they can buy these things. i want to let them know they can go to wal-mart. amazon, cosco or lowe's for the turkey fryer. for the cookbook go to amazon and qvc to get recipes like this, clayton. take a look at the low country seafood boil. >> my wife and i did this and it was fantastic, corn, sausage, shrimp, claims it was amazing with the seasoning. >> what people love is the fact we have taken indoor electric turkey fryer. butter ball fryer not only fries the turkeys about 35 minute sausage corn and shrimp and threw a little crab legs in there because i understand somebody in the studio wants to have some crab legs. >> i will eat half of that. >> also cooking up some mac and cheese. four cheese smoked mac and cheese. >> we have actually done some smoke check mac and cheese. this is also what they have been raving about inside. that is our deep fried macaroni and cheese. >> oh. in the butter ball turkey fryer. not only deep fried macaroni and cheese, clayton. >> i just heard someone sigh behind me. let out a grown of oh, try that. >> are you ready for this? >> yes. >> this is smoked macaroni and cheese. master built also manufacturers an electric smoker. smoked. >> this is electric smoker this sits on top of. >> this is smoked macaroni and cheese. another nontraditional meal low country seafood boil. instead of doing baked. smoke it look how it caramelizes. >> forget turkey. i wouldn't leave the couch. put wood chips inside of. this wood chips inside of this. i will give you a little peek right out front here. we have actually done, governor huckabee's favorite recipe. this is a full smoked prime rib. so, governor huckabee, if you are watching. >> that is not yours. do you understand. >> he is running down the street right now. >> master built wants everybody, again, we talked about sharing the experience. bring the recipe inside your home. so that you can do it with all your family and friends. every recipe here is from the pages of my dag gum recipe book is it dag gum good. >> it is. people mentioning on twitter if you want to get one of these friars. go to wal-mart and go online to find it? >> the announcement that we have been talking people going gaga over friday turkey lady gaga has personally use my fryer. we will be auctioning it off on master built facebook page so people can -- we will operate had national alliance to end homelessness. tomorrow is a big day for us. >> find facebook page and get a part of that auction. john, thank you so much. back a little bit more later eating more and i'm going to get fatter. guys, back into you. >> if you come back in here empty-handed you are fired. >> you don't have that pair ali. >> try me. >> she is going to snap. when we come back, she is sitting in solitary confinement while a mexican drug smuggler is immunity. why border agent was imprisoned for doing his job. his wife dine -- diana is going to join us next. dora the explorer may be entertaining some man says destroying your children's religion. he will be here to explain next. regions quick deposit lets you deposit checks right from your office. so sitting at your desk is just like going to the bank. see? i'm at the bank. now i'm in the office. at the bank. in the office. at the bank. in the office. ♪ ♪ ♪ when your chain of supply ♪ goes fr 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. ♪ ♪ all new technology ups brings to me, ♪ ♪ that's logistics. ♪ >> could children's tv shows be destroying your child's religion? our next guest says most kid's tv is like an atheist babysitter. the creator of veggie tales and new series buck denver he asks what's in the bible. hi, phil. >> hey, thanks for having me. >> our pleasure. so, listen, you say that kids tv is like having an atheist babysitter. is it really television's responsibility to teach our kids about religion? >> absolutely not. no. but if you go back 40 years or so, there were only a couple of kids shows on in any given day. kids weren't watching that much tv. kidd kid's tv was like a friendly uncle telling you a story and leaving. now so much kids tv and watching so much that tv has moved. in it's like a thane. it's an atheist nanny and kids are spending so much time watching that parents, especially the 8 a% of americans that say they are christian and want to pass on christian faith to their kids need to be aware how much time kids are spending looking at a picture of the world that has no god, no church, no one ever prays. and they begin to believe that's the real world. >> sesame street would say it's not their goal to teach kids that religion. rather, they are trying to teach kids their abcs and how to counted from 1 to 10. >> absolutely. i'm not saying they need to start teaching religion. what i'm trying to say is parents need to be aware how little their kids will experience a view of the world with god in it by watching kids' television. they need to look for alternatives. not necessarily sesame street's job but a parent's job to be aware that god has gone missing from their kid's tv diet. >> maybe the shows aren't focused on religion but a lot of kids' shows do talk about values. i think of the shows that my kids watch. kayu and the bernstein bears and always sort of a mortal tale nice to your neighbors and not bully other kids. isn't that good enough for what kids are watching? >> that helps. some kids it comes very naturally for them to be good kids. religious instruction is really what helps kids shape their character though. it's okay -- most kids in christian families they go to church on sunday morning and they will get an hour of a view of the world with requested to in it. the average 11-year-old in america is consuming eight hours a day of electronic media. they get an hour of church on sunday morning and then they get 56 hours of a view of the world. 350,000 churches in america. not one church on the disney channel. not one church on nickelodeon. getting a view of the world on tv that really isn't the real world. >> interesting. phil vischer you are the founder of veggie tallies. thanks for pointing that out to me. >> my pleasure. thanks for having me. >> sitting in confinement while mexican drug smuggler granted immunity. now want to know why he was imprisoned while doing his job. diaz's wife is going to join us next. plus, you may have to spend 2,000 extra dollars when you buy a car. that is the reported plan under president obama's new fuel efficiency program. is he fueling up an auto firestorm? ♪ >> welcome back, everybody. 37 congress people wrote a letter to president obama urging him to challenge the sentence of a u.s. border agent jesus diaz. serving two years in prison for perjury and excessive force to stop a drug smuggler. two government departments cleared him of any wrongdoing. the wife of the border agent diana diaz joins us now from san antonio, texas. thanks for being with us. how much more time does he have? >> he is looking anywhere from 6 to 8 months. >> so, you have six children between the two of you. what do you -- how do you explain their dad being in prison? how do you explain it to them? >> they don't know that he is in prison. they think that he is away working somewhere. the only ones that have seen him are my 2-year-old daughter and my 8 month old daughter. >> here is where i see maybe a problem. it seems to me he is in prison simply for doing his job. the trouble is when he he comes out he will be a convicted felon. you are border agent. you have a gun in the home. you have to use it for your job. how is that going to work because he can't be around guns? >> i don't know how we are going to do that because like you said i do have to have a weapon. and if he is ever in the vicinity of a weapon and we get pulled over or something happens, he will go back to prison. so we haven't gonna far as to what we are going to do. >> what you could do is get a presidential pardon. is that a possibility? >> that's what we need pretty much to be able to begin to fix what has happened to my family. i don't know if it's possible, but i would pray to god that it is. >> so, you have filled out and started that pardon process? i know you have to fill out forms. you have started that? >> no. because the appeal is still going through. he has to complete at least 8 a% of his prison time. >> okay. i know a lot of congress people are trying to help you out here. including duncan hunter. has he been a big help for you? >> he has been god-sent. he is pretty much the voice for my husband right now. >> okay. and, by the way, some republic lawmakers wrote this letter to the white house, to the president. border patrol agents must be able to appropriately and effectively protect our nation's border without the threat of federal prosecution, hanging over their head. would you agree with that? of course you do, right? >> oh, he yes. definitely. >> okay. so how optimistic are you that things can be resolved and how can we help? >> i think just getting the word out to everyone about what has happened is a big help. as you can see. just by me being on tv a couple of times, congress has stepped up and i wish more would step up to the plate. because it effects everyone it effects the people who are doing the job right now and those who have gone before my husband because there have been others. david science. there has been too many in the western district of texas. >> why do you think this is happening? real quickly, what happened to the drug smuggler. >> he got to go home that same day. he went home with the mexican consulate. he never saw five minutes in jail. >> my goodness. all right. we will keep track of this. keep us up to date, okay? thank you for joining us. >> i will. thank you. >> coming up on our program here the g.o.p. candidates tackle war and families last night and their answers may surprise you. especially when it comes to war. and first it was called t bowing. now fans are putting the name jesus on the back of their jersey. is that okay? father jonathan is here with his take on that. tebowing, after the break. ♪ reflections of the love you took from me ♪ i'm all alone now ♪ [ male announcer ] cranberry juice? wake up! ♪ that's good morning, veggie style. hmmm [ male announcer ] for half the calories -- plus veggie nutrition. could've had a v8. plus veggie nutrition. you could save a bundle with geico's multi-policy discount. geico, saving people money on more than just car insurance. ♪ geico, saving people money on more than just car insurance. how about making it brighter. more colorful. ♪ and putting all our helpers to work? so we can build on our favorite traditions by adding a few new ones. we've all got garlands and budgets to stretch. and this year, we can keep them both evergreen. more saving. more doing. that's the power of the home depot. make your season even brighter with 300-count icicle lights for just $7.48. makif something is simplyghter the color of gold, is it really worth more? we don't think so. chase sapphire preferred is a card of a different color. that's because you always get two times the points on travel, from taxis to trains, airfare to hotels, and all kinds of dining... from fast food to fine dining. and that's not all you get. there are expert advisors who answer immediately, whenever you call. and absolutely no foreign transaction fees. does your card do all that? apply today and earn 50,000 ultimate rewards bonus points when you spend $3,000 in the first 3 months. that's $625 toward your next trip when you redeem through ultimate rewards. so, why settle for gold when you can have so much more? chase sapphire preferred. a card of a different color. call the number on your screen or visit our website to apply. >> alisyn: good morning, sunday, november the 20th, i'm alisyn camero camerota, the super committee is deadlocked at this hour and the clock is ticking. >> pretty doubtful at this point, but obviously nobody wants to quit until the stroke of midnight. >> alisyn: oh, boy, is the super committee about to become a super failure. >> up close and personal with the republican hopefuls, at last night's forum, family forum in iowa. we have some of the highlights, straight ahead. >> clayton: and, you have a room key to get you into a room like this. key occupier, ditching the streets for $700 a night digs at a high end new york city hotel. "fox & friends," hour four, "fox & friends," hour four, starts, right now. captioning by, closed captioning services, inc. >> alisyn: what do you have in your hand? >> we have a little bit of peanut oil left. this is all we have left. >> alisyn: how do we get through the rest of the show? >> dave: deep frying anything that moves, we'll do maybe deep frying intern. >> clayton: john mcelmore is here with his fantastic cookbook. that's good. >> alisyn: there it is. >> clayton: dad gum. >> my wife finishes my sentences and clayton, a finish yours and i want to come bearing gifts. >> alisyn: that's the kind of guest we like. >> you said you wanted to eat, right? i >> alisyn: that's right. >> here's a dad gum, that's good. and i want you all saying, dad gum, that's good! >> one of his dreams in life was to sit on the kirby couch. how was it? >> i thought it would be sitting with you, mike. alisyn, you had me at dad gum... >> clayton: once you see alisyn, and... >> see you at 9:30. >> alisyn: you are a charmer and know the way to my heart. >> clayton: better get cooking! thanks, john. >> alisyn: we'll be clogging your arteries, soon, meanwhile, your headlines, we want to show you live pictures, you are looking at tahrir square, demonstrators have been protesting two straight days and returned to tahrir square after government force kicked them out, after a violent day of fighting, two people were killed and as many as 700 hurt. the military clashed with thousands of protesters, rocks were thrown, at police in riot gear who responded with tear gas and witnesses say several protesters were beaten. and fire crews in reno, nevada working to extinguish what is left of a devastating wildfire, reportedly caused by faulty power lines. the flames have now destroyed 32 homes, and forced more than 10,000 people to seek refuge at local shelters and the fire also being blamed for the death of a 74-year-old man, right now, the fire is about 80% contained, and they hope to have the fire completely put out, they say by the middle of the week and a major mix-up in minnesota after an elementary school used recycled legal documents, as scrap paper. problem? the paper still contained people's private information and the woman noticed the issue when her daughter brought home a drawing she did in her first grade class. >> when i flipped it over i noticed there was a lot of copy. and the more i read the more alarmed i became at the amount of information that i had about this person. >> alisyn: well it turns out, a pair legal at a local law firm donated the paper, not realizing it still contained classified information. >> clayton: mike, what did it say. >> my divorce decree. and, social security number on it. >> alisyn: yep, and... the agreement, restraining order. >> clayton: i'm glad at least it is out there now. let's check in with rick reichmuth... >> rick: which one, mike? >> the third, okay, good. the second one you wouldn't want out there. no way. expecting travel problems today, people starting to get out for thanksgiving travel and problems on the west coast, l.a. and san francisco, i think, seeing delays because of some rain, in that area and wind with it. and dallas and memphis, you will see thunderstorms, this afternoon, you'll have light delays throughout the day and it might pick up as the afternoon progresses. let's move forward to tuesday and wednesday, big travel days. this, right higher, you see the green, that is rain, tuesday, midday, and i think we will see delays from dallas, through louisiana, stretching up in towards the ohio valley, and kind of a rough travel day and it is rain, not snow and that is good news and the rain moves towards the northeast, by tuesday night and into the day on wednesday, by 9:00, 10:00 a.m., and everybody across the east coast, dealing with rain and we'll talk about that, places like atlanta, the busiest hub in the world, delays and washington, d.c. and towards the new york city airport and, unfortunately, there is going to be troubles and by thursday it is gone and there will be cooler air behind it and if you are driving, to get to your family on thursday, you'll be looking a little better and today, a threat for severe weather, where you see green, maybe a few thunderstorms and the yellow area stretching into arkansas and parts of texas could be dealing with a tornado or two and hail and damaging winds. today, the highs: warm into texas, and that cold front right there will stall out and will be the firing line for storms, for around the next three days. all right, guys. >> alisyn: thanks, rick, all right, those of you waking up optimistic this morning, hoping that we'd be delivering some news... >> clayton: alisyn is about to dash your hopes. >> alisyn: the super committee, coming to a grand compromise, we are sorry to dash your hopes. it doesn't look good. >> work will fill the time allotted, maybe not this time. >> clayton: and, they didn't -- learning from chris wallace, a short time ago, the super committee actually last met face-to-face, november 1st. >> sending e-mails back and forth. >> clayton: you get a lot of work done by e-mail but i don't think you can solve the nation's problems by e-mail and now, we know the deadline is quickly approaching on the 23rd and, most people say monday night was -- midnight was really the dead lined and looks like all signs pointing to a failure. here is senator jon kyl from committee. listen: >> it is pretty doubtful at this point, but, obviously, nobody wants to quit, until the stroke of midnight, as you can see by my presence. no matter what happens, congress has to reduce spending by $1.2 trillion, one way or another. it would be better if we could reach an agreement on how to do it but, if we don't there is the sequester. >> remember the good old days you didn't have to read bills before signed them into law? now there is a law you have to. and, they need to get it done. >> clayton: and the law isn't even you have to read it. they have to have 48 hours in case want to read it. >> alisyn: right. and usually is a good idea, i think to read it. but here's what happens, if the super committee fails in their objectives to reach a compromise, the 1.2 trillion trigger, that you heard, john talk about the sequestration option, goes into effect and that means, that $492 billion are cut from the defense department and $123 billion, are cut out of entitlements. >> clayton: and here's more of what will happen, too, extension of the bush era tax cuts would not happen, those will expire. and those are set to expire anyway and they thought within the committee something might be addressed and, jobless, 99 weeks of jobless benefits would dry up and the credit downgrade, another downgrade could come from the ratings agencies which threatened to do so, if the committee doesn't act. >> alisyn: basically, they think that we are incapable of solving problems, and reaching any compromise and reaching across the aisle, then they could downgrade, and they thought that the first time around. >> clayton: a lot of people say we could look like greece in four or five years as a result of this. >> no question, that is our future, folks. europe is the way they are dealing with things now, and the look of europe is us, in three or four years. >> clayton: it will be interesting to see, a little later now, asia future markets, to see how the market opens monday as a result of this. >> we have mitt romney in new hampshire, and john haunn hunts across the street on "saturday night live" last night and the candidates were around the roundtable in iowa, something called the family forum and were asked all sorts of question, health care to the personal issues, and, emotional moment and one topic they touched on was war. as the president, you are the commander-in-chief in charge of the took place, and if you have to send our men and women overseas to a war, what is the barometer for you, basically is what the question was. >> as commander-in-chief, i will not send our young men and women into war unless it is clear why, the mission, and the definition of victory, and, thirdly, i would not send them into war, unless i would send my own son and daughter. >> i think it is a -- an utter tragedy of what is happening. bad economics and war is the two most destructive things to the family. >> send those young men and women with the equipment to win. don't let some congressman sitting in an air conditional office in washington, d.c. deciding what the rules of engagement are. let those war-fighters win the war. [applause]. >> you come into our country and you kill 3100 people, and we will do whatever it takes to eliminate your capacity to threaten us ever again. and i would be tougher and more decisive. >> i thought it was really good, one of the better debates. >> alisyn: and, the very emotional moment when they all broke down in tears, talking about their own personal challenges, fascinating. >> clayton: and twitter was afire, and, michelle bachmann, with gaffes, and, it lit up, about her and george washington and look that up, that was interesting and on fire on twitter. >> alisyn: and they are contemporaries. >> clayton: you would be surprised and interestingly enough, on twitter, last night, one thing that came up during the forum, occupy wall street. of course, newt gingrich asked about it and gave an interesting answer to it. but now we're learning because of the violence this erupted in oakland and the vice -- violence in washington, d.c., there is a critical eye to those leading the group of individuals, and, some photographers caught up with one of the leaders in new york city. where he is staying... >> this was back when zuccotti park was cleared, earlier this week, one of the guys in charge of the finance committee, it is a little city down there in lower manhattan and they have a finance committee and collected half a million dollars and the guy in charge of that, or one of them, when occupy -- zuccotti park was cleared out, had to go someplace and had a nice apartment in brooklyn and decided not to do that and checked into the luxury hotel, the "w". >> alisyn: can you blame him? >> dave: $00 a night. >> alisyn: and he -- >> alisyn: $700 a night and wanted to stay there as opposed to a cold city park and he was able to invite one or a couple of the other protesters in, there are different reports in terms of the numbers so they could shower but illustrates they are a cross-section of people and he can afford $700 a night. no suggestion that he is using some of the money they've raised. they have raised $500,000 and he's head of finance but no suggestion he is misusing funds, he put it on his own credit card and some of the people there, obviously, are not just poor, sort of brifters, as they are sometimes depicted. he had money, and, he says he believes in their principles though he is in finance. but, wanted to stay at the "w" hotel. >> you can have a lot of money and be a believer in their cause. >> alisyn: look at nancy pelosi. >> michael moore. >> alisyn: some of the millionaires, who are believers in their cause and wouldn't you rather stay at the "w" hotel. >> clayton: the pictures are fun and he's walking out of the hoe kel and brad spitzer with a nice cup of fresh, hot coffee. drop the banner. here's the hotel coffee. it is a paradox, right? the idea of the 99 cents versus the 1%, staying at a $700 room, let us know what you think, friends@foxnews.com. >> alisyn: still ahead, you heard there is no crime in baseball but, apparently there is plenty in politics, the g.o.p. candidates got very, very choked up and emotional last night and we'll tell you about that. >> and prepare for sticker shock. president obama's fuel efficiency program, could cost you thousands of dollars in sticker shock at your car dealership. maybe $2,000 more? for that new car? that man, right there, mike kelly will join us to talk about it. ♪ ♪ i'm the king of wishful thinking ♪ ♪ i refuse to give in to my blues...♪ [ male announcer ] what if you have potatoes? but you've got a meat and potatoes guy? pour chunky sirloin burger soup over those mashed potatoes and dinner is served. four minutes, around four bucks. campbell's chunky -- it's amazing what soup can do. somebody didn't book with travelocity, with 24/7 customer support to help move them to theool daddy promised! look at me, i'm swimming! somebody, get her a pony! [ female announcer ] the travelocity guarantee. from the price to the room to the trip you'll never roam alone. >> welcome back. prepare or sticker shock. at the car dealership. president barack obama wants to require all passenger cars to get 54 miles per gallon by 2025. a move that could add at least $2,000 or so, to the price of a new car. >> alisyn: wow. auto trade groups are also concerned, the white house is setting a standard that they will not be able to meet and now the house oversight committee is investigating. congressman mike kelly, a member of the oversight and government reform committee joins us from pittsburgh. >> good morning, alisyn, happy sunday to you. >> alisyn: the administration wants to double fuel efficiency by 2025, obviously a laudable goal but it will cost money to the tune of $157 billion, who will pay for that? >> well, the same people that always pay for it. the consumers pay for everything and you pay for it, the price of the car or increased taxes, to help run the government and i have to tell you, we came out of church, right? this bill is 900 pages, the same size as the old testament in our bible and how do we navigate the regulation nightmare we are face and the congressional record, right now, 67,000 pages, all new, all new regulations, add costs the way we live every day and makes no sense, upside-down thinking and it is difficult and the 2,000 per car is this minimum and it will knock a lot of people off the bottom that would have bought a new car and will not be able to do it. >> i'll try and take the other side here. i want a car that gets twice as good gas mileage, congressman. >> sure. >> i want that. >> and you can buy that. and that is the beauty of the free market. we allow you to buy whatever you want. and, back in the old days, you can't regulate obesity by telling tailors they can only make small clothes and the same is true in the automobile business and some people need and want a bigger family, with big families and feel safer and smaller cars are find and for those who want to drive a smaller car, have at it. that is not the problem. the problem is, you have an administration that keeps telling us how to heat or homes and light or lights and what kind of cars we're going to drive and food we'll eat and this is not the way america works. >> alisyn: here's a -- >> doesn't make sense. >> alisyn: here's a statement from the epa administrator, lisa jackson who says the obama administration is ensuring that american car buyers have their choice of the most efficient vehicles ever produced in our country. that will save them money, reduce our nation's oil consumption, and, cut harmful emissions, in the air we breathe. and she says save the money, by filling up your gas tank less? >> these are the same fox who told us you like the health care package you have you can keep it and now, wait, maybe we made a mistake and, it will save you money and we'll save a trillion and, now we are finding out it will cost us a trillion? and i want you to think about something and our viewers need to understand this. 1975, we went to the cafe standard we did it for one reason, the arab oil embargo forced us to go to cars with better gas mileage, and fast forward, why don't we have an aggressive energy strategy that allows us to use our domestic plies. >> it isn't a car problem,' government problem and congressman, thanks for joining us after church today. >> thank you, happy thanksgiving, everybody. >> alisyn: you, too, coming up, cracking down on food stamps scammers, how merchants are cashing in on them. >> and fans stamp jesus's name on the back of their football jerseys. tim tebow, you know, he believes in the lord. is this blasphemous or is it okay? father jonathan will know. coming up. sweetie i think you need a little extra fiber in your diet. carol. fiber makes me sad. oh common. and how can you talk to me about fiber while you are eating a candy bar? you enjoy that. i am. [ male announcer ] fiber beyond recognition. fiber one. try smart balance buttery sead. 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i don't know the answer, we brought in father jonathan morris. hi, father. >> is that okay? i think it is absolutely fine and looked to see if there was a conspiracy, some organization behind it, either to make fun of him or somehow to make profit off of this. and they are some might havcust get your favorite team player and put something hope to back, sometimes funny, sometimes serious and it personalizes it and the real story here is, tim tebow, has -- which is, as a celebrity athlete, instead of making himself be the object of worship, has actually shown the country that he believes that there is another being and that is god, that deserves our worship. and thanks him and prays and, in his own way, we don't all do it that way, but this is his own way. >> scores a touchdown and goes down on one knee and says a quick prayer. >> and when the fans look at him, they say he reminds me of my faith and put gejesus on the back and it is a fan-based phenomenon, not a conspiracy. >> clayton: read a statement from tim tebow on the jerseys. he says, i don't know what to think about that. because i don't know where people's hearts are, it is important not to judge without knowing their hearts. is he talking about, perhaps, in some ways, maybe the commercialization of this idea? >>, no people made fun of the fact me gets you on on his knees, nfl players who to it in a mocking fashion. >> will do the tebow... >> and there are reasons, wondering are they doing it to mock me? but these are fans, people who love him and the real story is he won four out of the last five games in a miraculous way, and maybe that is why they are putting jesus on -- i was rooting for the jets last week, and, yet, i found myself rooting for tim tebow, as this unbelievable come back and he beat the jets. >> alisyn: it is interesting, the nfl prevents customers from putting 1,159 different things on these customized jerseys and there's a lot of names, and in fact don't like jesus christ. but, this is obviously a loophole the fans found, they don't want usama bin laden... >> usama bin laden on the back, jesus christ and don't want things that make football controversial. but, this is just people recognizing this is a man of deep faith, we love him, he works unbelievable miracles, so to speak on the field. and we like this guy. so i'm glad they are letting it. >> if there is seems to be a backlash, some people don't like him because he shows his faith so much. what is that about? i don't like you because you like jesus too much? night is true, he does it in a way that makes some people feel uncomfortable. so what? you know, so what? you know? and, everybody has different ways of expressing their faith and the guy is a great football player and might not be able to throw a pass... but... >> clayton: he manages to win, somehow. >> threw 8 the week before, he wins and pulls off miracles and if they want to put "jesus" on the back of number 15 that is okay with me. >> clayton: are you forgetful? blame it on the room you are in, we'll explain, coming up. >> alisyn: and he died while defending our country and his fiancee is completing his unfished mission and shares her incredible story with us. >> that is the story of the day, coming up. >> clayton: don't fill up, just yet, because we have dessert. john mcelmore is back with his final course. >> alisyn: what are we deep frying? >> hey, have you seen my small intestines? i think they're down on 48th. ♪ ♪ it's come to bring the ship into the shore...♪ >> alisyn: you -- >> you seem to be putting all of your eggs in one basket in new hampshire. are you worried you'll alienate all of the country. >> i love america from the innovation of silicon valley to the affordable outlet malls in north conway, new hampshire. i can't help -- >> you keep mentioning places from new hampshire. >> well, i would never tie myself to one state. i like to spread my wings and fly like the purple finch... >> which this is state bird of new hampshire? >> yes. >> clayton: he was not there in iowa last night, the family forum there, but he went on "saturday night live," arguably, probably got nor emore eyeballs family forum was only streaming on the internet. >> it was good and they sat around the table and talked about all sorts of issues but this came up. they talked about health care, and so herman cain talked about something he rarely talks about, his brush with colon cancer. and rick santorum talked about the health of one of his daughters. and newt gingrich brought up someone, a close friend who has had health issues, and, they all got touched by it. listen to this: >> walking out of that surgeon's office, after he had just told us, stage 4... >> take your time. >> i said i wasn't going to do this... it is as bad as it gets. i will never forget, before my wife and i were about to get into the car, i said, i can do this. she said, we can do this. amen. [applause]. >> i decided that the best thing i could do was to treat her different differently, somehow love her like i did, because it wouldn't hurt as much if i lost her. >> do i want some bureaucracy deciding that on a percentage basis this is not worth the investment? or do i want something that cares about every life at that depth. that is what next year is all about. [applause]. >> i feel like dr. phil. >> clayton: it kind of was. >> alisyn: frank luntz had the great question, tell us about your own personal challenges, we have never seen them in that mode before and we have an e-mail from nancy, so many of you weighed in on this and she said we watched the forum and it was fabulous and we were touched by their honesty and emotion, how can you not be. >> and tears can be contagious, you know? >> clayton: and everyone is opening up. >> alisyn: like us, this morning. watching it. >> clayton: here's a tweet, rolled in from mommy-go-around. it was great, not only are they humans, people like you and me, they struggled and fought and gave a peek into their souls. >> i think it is okay. i cry, i'm a retired fighter pilot combat veteran and wing commander and worry about those who don't cry. >> alisyn: and, if they can cry, so can the rest of us. a great window, that we rarely see, thank you for sharing your tweets. okay, let's get to your news, libya's interim prime minister is saying the captured son of muammar qaddafi will get a fair trial, and comes as another libyan officials says see you yeef al-islam will not be handed over to the criminal court in the netherlands and, there are worries he will not get a fair trial in libya, and, he was found by rebels near the niger border yesterday. another bizarre twist in the case of missing baby lisa irwin, it has to do with the mysterious phone call made from lisa's parents' cell phone the night she disappeared and police initially the phone call was made to megyn wright and now her former roommate is coming forward and saying he was using the phone that night and that man is identified only as dane and confirms she received the phone call just before midnight on october 3rd. still, he will not say whether he answered the call, or who was on the other line. police want to know that. the scandal in long island new york is growing by the day, this new york post says three more high schools are now implicated. with students paying people up to $3500, to take the tests for them and they joined three other schools believed to be involved, at least 6 students and three paid surrogates are already under suspicion. take this for me. >> clayton: i'm bringing you the wacky news, call it this cramer effect. the study shows the simple act of walking into a new room can make you completely forget what you were doing. watch: >> hey. >> hey. >> hey. >> hey. >> clayton: researchers say the human brain identifies different rooms with different sets of events, like entering a new room, may cause a lapse in memory. why did i walk down here? that's right, the laundry and we asked you what you thought an wendy from new jersey says: we call that the here aftereffect. you enter a room and, can't remember what you are here after. and brian from clairmont, florida, says, i came into the den to e-mail you and i forgot what i was going to say. thanks, brian. >> alisyn: that's funny, those are your headlines an outside to rick, how is this weather. >> rick: nice across the east coast and 10° warmer today and yesterday, great news, look at the maps. there is a lot of weather going on, we have weather today, around parts of the ohio valley and mississippi valley and that will be severe later and we also have the stormy sea, spinning off the california coast, bringing rain and mountain snow and the forecast for the areas today, you can see what is going on, northeast, you are looking good. there will be a few showers and clouds, especially across interior seconds and nothing that will cause big problems, and you can see the temperatures are quite nice and warm, and down across the southeast, however, that is where we are extremely warm and will be dealing with the threat for severe weather, could see a tornado or two today and areas like dallas, stretching towards little rock, and we'll see rain there and the warmth, 93 in loredo, and, the cold front went through the north yesterday and brought snow to south dakota and minnesota and now, clear conditions and temps are cooler behind the storm and across the west, more snow, across the mountains, colorado and utah, but the big storm pulling into the southwest, that will be the weather maker this week. we have severe weather today, tomorrow, and tuesday, across parts of the south, and, tuesday and wednesday, big travel days, of course and dealing with problems there, especially across the east coast, by wednesday and we'll keep you alerted to that all week long, all right. >> clayton: rick... >> i wanted nothing to do with that. >> i hope you have been with us all four hours, we have done a complete thanksgiving dinner southern style and we have deep fried everything at 48th and 6th. >> and everybody has been asking and we have been here and they have been at home, and, watching "fox & friends" and drinking coffee and we deep fried four turkeys. and we're outside today but, guess what, the product allows you to death. >> get a shot of that. >> this is a butterball buttery creole. and we are injecting a 16 pound turkey with and this is what you -- you injected yourself, earlier today and we'll inject 16 ounces through the entire butterball turkeyment one shore shot and i have it pre-injected and we'll put cajun spices on, and, again the beauty of this product is that we are doing it indoors and we'll put a little seasoning on here. >> you and your brother and your dad, started the company, master... >> we did. >> and some of us did the deep fried in our garage and set the garage on fire and people were burning down their houses and you wanted to figure out a way to deep fry in your kitchen. >> the butterball indoor turkey fryer allows you not only to fry any recipe, all of them from the dadgum, that's good, cookbook and this is how safe it is. to fry your turkey. >> how hot is the oil. >> 375° and that is -- look. don't worry about this. no is no flame. it is guaranteed, guaranteed the butterball turkey fryer not to overheat your oil. >> how soon does it looks like that. >> that is a 56-minute turkey from start to finish. 14 pound turkey and we can do up to a 20 pound turkey and people have been asking all morning, where can i buy them? walmart, costco, amazon.com, low's, and qvc and amazon. >> how much are they. >> $99 to $149. >> and we deep fried... >> macaroni and cheese. that is macaroni and cheese rolled into a ball and dropped in the fryer. >> they are going in, in a moment and buy your turkey, you want crab cakes, i have to get this out, really fast. >> ten seconds. >> ten seconds. year around, how about crab legs? this is another grill down in georgia, we call it, earlier we did the lowcountry seafood boil and that is crab legs. >> you know what i think it is. >> dadgum and don't forget, lady gaga, we'll be doing an auction on the butterball turkey fryer for the national alliance to end hunger. >> alisyn: bring in the leg. john, great to see you, thanks. >> clayton: might get burned out there. not sure. here's a story that has everyone talking, police are reopening the investigation into actress natalie wood's drowning death 30 years later. is this just a publicity stunt or does the captain of the boat really have new information? >> alisyn: honoring her fallen fiance, putting on the uniform he proudly wore until his death. that's good morning, veggie style. hmmm [ male announcer ] for half the calories -- plus veggie nutrition. could've had a v8. so i wasn't playing much of a role in my own life, but with advair, i'm breathing better so now i can take the lead on a science adventure. advair is clinically proven to help significantly improve lung function. unlike most copd medications, advair contains both an anti-inflammatory and a long-acting bronchodilator, workintogether to help improve ur lung function all day. advair won't replace fast-acting inhalersor sudden symptoms and should not be used more than twice a day people with copd taking advair may have a higher chance of pneumonia advair may increase your risk of osteoporosis and some eye problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking advair. if you're still having difficulty breathing, take the lead. ask your doctor if incling advair get your first fl prescription free and save on refills at advaircopd.com. >> clayton: welcome back. a hollywood mystery that is still intriguing us nearly 30 years later. police reopening the investigation into the drowning death of actress natalie wood. after the boat captain seems to be revealing new evidence about that night. the late actress's sister, lana wood, spoke to fox news about the captain's claims. >> for him to have told me the things he did, put him in a horrible position, makes him look like a weakling, makes him look like a coward. and a lot of other things as well. why would someone purposely want to do that? >> alisyn: susan estrich, professor of law and political science and fox news contributor joins us now. good morning, susan. >> good morning. >> alisyn: natalie's sister, lana, was referring to there, she said the captain told her that robert wagner basically allowed natalie wood to drown. that he didn't want any help given to her, once she was in the water. and, also heard a very violent fight, can robert wagner be charged with something 30 years later, based just on this captain's new recollection? >> the short answer is no. i mean, it is very rare to ever get a criminal charge 30 years after the fact. if you have body parts in the basement and dna evidence, you might stand a chance. but, this is sort of inexplicable logically. i mean, you have this captain, who a year ago now says i didn't tell the full story and i underwent hypnosis and now i have additional information. you know, it is hard not to believe that the sheriffs office is responding to the pub publicity and complaints that are going to come around the 30th anniversary and trying to show the public actually we did a good job but that is not really a reason to spend money on a new criminal investigation. >> clayton: right, i mean, resources going after this, now, some would argue, never has been solved and they should, others criticizing the sheriffs office for even reopening this thing, and, after all, you brought up the hypnosis therapy and this guy, the captain who was apparently drunk on the night, anyway, of her drowning, goes -- undergoes hypnosis therapy, and, suddenly recalls all of this information, do you think it was all a publicity stunt for a book? >> i don't know if it was a publicity stunt. i don't want to question his motives. people do far worse to sell books but the hard one to understand is why the sheriffs office which i have to say just last week lindsay lohan was sentenced to 30 days in jail, on her 6th jail term, and she was out in four-and-a-half hours and the same sheriffs office said, well, we can't do anything, we don't have money, the jails are crowded. now, if the jails are that crowded that you can't punish lindsay lohan for more than four-and-a-half hours, what are you doing, spending money, reopening an investigation which any criminal defense lawyer -- and i'm one -- could eat the guy for lunch on the stand. >> alisyn: good context, susan estrich, thanks for joining us. >> my pleasure, have a great day. >> clayton: coming up, her fiance gave the ultimate sacrifice for the country and she's honoring him, following in his footsteps and finishing his mission. ♪ if you have painful, swollen joints, i've been in your shoes. one day i'm on p of the world... the next i'm saying... i have this thing called psoriatic arthritis. i had some intense pain. it progressively got worse. my rheumatologist told me about enbrel. i'm surprid how quickly my symoms have beemanaged. [ male announcer ] because enbrel suppresses your immune system, it may lower your ability to fight infections. serious, sometimes fatal events including infections, tuberculosis, lymphoma, other cancers, and nervo system and blood disorders have occurred. before starting enbrel, your doctor should test you for tuberculosis and discuss whetr you've been to a region where certain fungal infections are common. don't start enbrel if you have an infection like the flu. tell your doctor if you're prone to infections, have cuts or sores, have had hepatitis b, have beetreated for heart failure, or if, while on enbrel, you experience persistent fever, bruising, bleeding, or paleness. get back to the things that matter most. good job girls. ask your rheumatologist if enbrel is right for you. >> alisyn: for anyone with loved ones serving in our military it is the dreaded phone call and last august, madeleine case lived through the nightmare and got a call that her fiance, lance corporal travis nelson was killed in the line of duty in afghanistan. after burying him, she made a shocking decision. she enlisted in the marine corps and joining us now, is madeleine case as she leaves for basic training in march. good morning. >> good morning, how are you? >> alisyn: we're doing well and we're also intrigued by your story, can you tell us a little bit about your fiance? corporal travis nelson and why the mission was so important to him? >> he was pretty much the best person you could ever hope to meet. everyone who knew him was lucky and everyone loved him. he was funny, caring, just, all around great person, and, he's always had the drive to be in the military, be in the marines, and, i think it would mean a lot to him that i want to honor him in that way. >> alisyn: why did he feel it was important to serve his country. >> something he was born with. since 9/11 happened he knew he'd join the marines, something that he had to do. >> alisyn: one of the most poignant parts of your story is that i understand that your fiance left behind a note in the event that he didn't return from his tour in afghanistan. what did it say? >> he did. it was sent back with miss belongings from afghanistan. and pretty much it said, dear family and friends, if you are reading this, i did not get the chance to come home but i did doing something meaningful and i have no regrets. >> alisyn: tell us how you made the decision then to enlist. >> it was -- i thought about it for the first time a few days after everything happened, and, i didn't really say anything, but, to a few close friends and family members, and, a month or so later, i went to the recruiter, and that is where it call started. just something in me and i still, like i can honor him in that way, and, i think it would be a great future, a great career. . >> alisyn: i understand you are set to report to boot camp in march. and, that was going to be another significant month for you. explain the timing. >> well, his deployment was supposed toned the february-march timeframe and that is when we were supposed to come and get married. so... it happened to work out like that, but i'm glad it would be a good distraction to get away and start the new path for me. >> alisyn: what do you think travis would say about your decision? >> he -- i think would support anything i want to do and is always supportive of me, everything i wanted, so, i hear a lot of people tell me that he wouldn't want me to do this. but... i think he'd be okay. if it is really what i wanted to do. >> alisyn: madeleine, we are so sorry for your loss and we are so impressed with your bravery. and, wanting to carry on his mission. best of luck to you, and we hope that you will stay in touch with us. >> thank you so much. >> alisyn: great to meet you. more "fox & friends" in just two minutes. [ male announcer ] drinking a smoothie with no vegetable nutrition? ♪ [ gong ] strawberry banana! [ male announcer ] for a smoothie with real fruit plus veggie nutrition new v8 v-fusion smoothie. could've had a v8. new v8 v-fusion smoothie. a vacation on a budget with expedia. make it work. booking a flight by itself is an uh-oh. see if we can "stitch" together a better deal. that's a hint, antoine. ooh! see what anandra did? booking your flight and hotel at the same time gets you prices hotels and airlines won't let expedia show separately. book it. major wow factor! where you book matters. expedia. ♪ [ multiple sounds making melodic tune ] ♪ [ male announcer ] at northrop grumman, every innovation, every solution, comes together for a single purpose -- to make the world a safer place. that's the value of performance. northrop grumman. >> alisyn: finally... >> clayton: we're out here and the cookbook is, dadgum, that's good!

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