the bears in chicago by a score of 21-14 led by a strong defense and quarterback aaron rogers 17 of 30 passing the packers kept the bears off balance throughout the game. the packers are going to the big show again. the steelers of pittsburgh who held off a furious rally by the new york jets who at one point trailed 24-0 to win by a score of 24-19. >> the pit burg steelers are the afc champions again. >> pittsburgh fr pittsburgh hav winners and the jets none. dave briggs and i will talk about the matchup for the super bowl. >> up front tonight two stories perhaps related one involving teenagers having sex and those babies then having babies. for that one we travel down to a memphis high school where an apparent pregnancy pact has been exposed. the other focuses on brand new sexy teen oriented mtv show starring real teenagers having fake sex. the show is called skin and it's shedding advertisers as quickly as the kids in the cast are taking off their clets. that controversy is so intense the program's producers apparently fear possible prosecution for child porn. >> later we will bump it. >> at a party. >> at a party with a pile of drugs. oh and stanley i only like really great nar c narcotics understand. >> it's the way teenagers behave in certain situations when you come from home lives that your parents don't really support you or listen to you. that's what most kids are going through. so the drugs and all of that the sex are vices that's what teenagers have. >> my mom thought if she allowed me to get on birth control she was pretty much giving me the okay to have sex. she didn't want me to have sex. so that's why i wasn't allowed to get birth control. >> before we get under "skin"s" let's travel to memphis, tennessee where local officials embarrassed by the national spotlight are scrambling to get on the site. >> they made national news when it was disclosed nearly 90 students were pregnant or recently delivered a child. while they debate the numbers there is no argument against kids are having kids in this community. >> these girls know how to say no they are having sex when they don't want to they don't know how to say no. >> how many pregnant teens do you see on a daily base says? >> on a regular basis probably 8 to 16 on a busy day. >> 8 to 16 teenage pregnant girls. >> 30 percent of all of the pregnant mothers that we see are teenage mothers. >> dr. greg mull inak the teen pregnancies are not a shock. they move to do this community because teen pregnancy resulted in one of the highest infant mortality rates in the country. >> how many obgyn's are there in this community right now? how many facilities like this one are there? >> we are the only clinics that provi provide obstetrical chair. i am a fami family medicine doc. i am not even a obgyn. >> teen pregnancy has been popularized by glee and juneau and shows like 16 and pregnant. >> because i am pregnapregnant. >> high school grad alisha williamson says in frasier this is not a problem. >> we come on summer break we come back to school and there are kids pregnant. what's going on? >> you can pick up any "people" magazine in a grocery store you will see a lot of people in hollywood that are single unwed, unwed mothers. >> this impoverished community has a shocking 26 percent pregnancy rate among teenagers. the national average is only 10 percent. >> would you consider this an epidemic teenaged pregnancy in this xhubity? >> it is certainly a problem. it is a problem in other areas in memphis, too. but it's certainly something that's a trend we would like to reverse. >> and frasier boys are at risk as well. >> from the youngest patient i have ever diagnosed who had a sexually transmitted disease is an 11-year-old boy. >> the firestorm of negative publicity forced this community to confront the problem with education programs like the no baby campaign, a just say no to teen pregnancy. >> we have to get the message out to both the young men and to the young women that it is a feasible option to wait, to obtain from having babies. >> how many of the kids in that high school the girls in that high school are getting pregnant now? >> they say 1 in 5, school officials won't give an exact number. system wide there are 245 girls in their homebound program where they send teachers to the homes of these girls who have children lately. >> is that a problem in the urban area? >> probably on average. there are like 10 zip codes they say have 20 percent teenage rate. >> we have national network in memphis tonight barbara lee chairwoman of the congressional black caucus author most recently of renegade for peace and justice. congresswoman lee, i know that -- welcome first of all both of you. >> glad to be with you. >> i am the former chair. >> i should have updated that. >> thank you, though. >> geraldo let me also say her book went paper back. you should get it. >> all right. we get it. liberals don't buy books. you have to get on board. you talk about getting pregnant yourself at the age of 16. that one resulted in a miscarria miscarriage. why did you get pregnant? did you know anything about birth control or did you not care? >> it wasn't that i did not care or know anything about birth control. first of all as many teenagers even now we are not allowing young people at our school to be for real. i have a bill peppeding responsible education about life act. we have to get away from the abstinence only policy. yes abstain but we have to give them comprehensive sex education so we can focus on pregnancy prevention as well as on helping teens prevent the transmission of hiv and aids and sexually transmitted infections. we all have a responsible. >> that abstinence program start the under bill clinton. why is it 3 times as high in the minority community than it is in the white community? you have the black community rate 12 and a half hispanics about the same whites just 4. why so high? >> i think it's a variety of reasons from a whole question of not having the right kind of infrastructure, all of the way from educational programs as the congresswoman spoke about to family structure and all of the way to the responsibilities in the community. i have spoken to church tonight in memphis i raised this very issue about what is going on in the schools. why are the churches? where are the disc jockeys that glorify and make it bold to have this kinds of ir responsibility? i think we have to deal with this as a crisis where yes, we need government to do more but we need to do more in our community, families, parents, churches, everyone has to be involved just the blame game is not going to solve the problem. >> amen to that. here's the other statistic. you and i talked about it before. i heard you lecture about this at your own church uptown. they have a social breakdown in the minority community in 2009. two out of every three black kids, 67 percent had no fathers in the home. there's the times as many single parent white families. why aren't the dads there. shouldn't every birth certificate have a man's name on it? >> of course. beyond that we should challenge that. there is no excuse for that. beyond that the other structure in the communities were working and the bills like congresswoman is working with i grew up without a father in the household. that didn't mean my mother didn't impose standards and my mother didn't have me know what was right from wrong. there were not things like neighborhood no man dad. even without no man dad you can still not have the same level of teen pregnancy. >> don't cut them any slack, though. i had a woman that worked with me one time a 45-year-old grandma. she was pregnant at 15, she was pregnant at 15. her mother had her at 15. they know they can go on aid for dependent children or welfare system. i think a culture of dependency has really grown-up. i don't agree with that, geraldo. first of all as i write in my book i was on public assistance. 95 percent of women on public assistance don't want to be on public assistance. they want to get a job so they can take care of their family. >> i am not from uptown. i am from the neighborhood. i am talking from what i know. what i know is you have a breakdown from the fabric of our social -- >> i am from the neighborhood also. i have many constituents with similar situations. if you look at each individual case in terms of generational type of dependency for example on public assistance, you will see the lack of education, you will see the lack of economic opportunities, you will see a whole set of circumstances which are very similar which i know owe so well. as a public official my job is to be sure that we begin to close these disparities and fund and support a structure and a support system so that young girls are educated and can move forward and get a job and take care of themselves and their families. >> here's the book "renegade for peace and justice." the old thing for funding programs that day is gone. congresswoman lee thank you. >> it's not gone. we have to put our tax dollars where it makes sense. that's helping the young people. >> in the third and fourth generation of 15-year-olds having babies it doesn't make sense. >> reverend thank you. i know you got the message. i think it's probably unfair to blame any show for kids having sex, but wait until you hear about the controversy involving this one and all of these >> the man on your left is looking to peel the show "skin"s" from the parent council outraged father of a 13-year-old viewer. he's with us along with andrea santaros on your right your favorite cultural commentator. welcome. why no "skin"s." a show is a show. there are plenty of them on there. >> a show is not a show fr in t case. good evening from los angeles. first of all it is showing child actors portraying real children. the boys are treating their girlfriends like sexual doormats glamor rising drug use alcohol use and in spite of what mtv says they are marketing the show directly to kids on a very team targeted web site and a lot of children are watching. over a third of the audience that watched the premiere show were children. >> the show was huge. did a great number. especially in the youngest demographic the 12 to 34-year-old demographic. i am sure there were a lot from 0-12 also. >> controversy sells. garbage. we are addicted to garbage. little kids should not be watching this show. to add to the other point they show this drug use and abuse but yet they don't show the consequences of what happens after. mtv has been pushing the envelope for years. ive i think they finally crossed the line. parents have a responsibility to sensor that channel from the tv set. my mom did that when he was younger. she took off mtv. called the cable company. she said i don't want her watching it. i don't want any of my kids watching it. when you are on the phone with the cable company request fox business. nice plug. >> but tim, censorship is a rough road. >> let's not use the c word if we can. talk about responsible broadcasting responsible entertainment. if we have the show's creator his goal is to deliver kids to add tiesors in this kind of context. with the advertisers who dropped out already. >> if you add to it the fact that they are learning there may be a problem with running a foul of the child pornography production laws what sponsor, what corporate sponsor in america wants to be underwriting what might be child pornography. i hope the answer is zero. certainly we hope subway restaurants, lawyer yell, foot locker joined these other corporations in doing the responsible thing saying we don't want to support this with our ad dollars. >> that's the way to be. >> absolutely. with the pocket book. in the end the parents thinking they have the power of the pocket book and we have the power to see what their children are watching and step in. mtv again they can do whatever they want as long as they claim they are not breaking the laws. this has gone too ffar. they have been doing this for a long time. they have been exploiting the kids for cash. >> tamer than the british version. >> an 18-year-old bullied me what a headache. >> the u.k. should not be a model for what we do. all right. thank you. andrea as always. reagan brother verses reagan brother. stand by. big controversy over ron junior after this >> we don't define their presidencies by the disease. we shouldn't with my father who was likely in the early stages of alzheimer's. >> president reagan once quoted shakespeare to ron junior saying how sharper than a serpent's tooth are the words of an ungrateful child. which brings to mind john junior said in his explosive new book that his late dad who would have turned 100 this year probably had early stage alzheimer's while still in the oval office. before michael reagan responds live here is more from the interview with junior. >> this is a deduction not a diagnosis. it's a deduction based on what which now know about alzheimer's which we didn't know then which is a process it unfolds over years even decades we know now before unidentifiable symptoms arise. the disease itself had to be present or was likely present. >> that was ron junior. welcome michael. nice to have you on the program again. >> respond. >> i guess if i could channel up my father i would simply say, well, there he goes again. i will tell you, i was affected by it. i tell you why. i am the chairman of the foundation took over for art link letter last year when he passed away. i have been on the board a long time. i talk to doctors and scientists all of the time. i don't try to play doctor in my position. i think ron would have been best to talk to his mother or doctors that were with my father, his father before he wrote a book he believed his father had alzheimer's while he was president. i looked and listened for years to people on the left who have tried to say my father was not mentally capable of being president of the united states. bill maher stating infatic cleon his own show that my father must have had alzheimer's. one of my father's own sons comes out and says he believes his father probably did have alzheimer's when every doctor says wait a minute that's not true. barbara walters probably said it best. she said she spent more time with our father than ron did, probably spent more time with our father than me also and dealt with him on a daily basis and never showed any signs of alzheimer's. i don't know what he's talking about unless he is selling books. >> i saw no signs of dementia until after he left office. the half brother says he did all of this because he was trying to sell books says our friend babbs, barbara walters. >> think about this. knowing how the press, remember my dad had polyps removed remember where the cameras were on that? think about sam donaldson, the investigative reporter yourself, if my father would have showed signs of alzheimer's during his presidency do you think you or sam donaldson would have been quiet? >> do you ever speak to your brother? have you called him out on it? what a thing to do? >> i called him out on the air. i have spoken like this interview. i have my own book out ronald reagan the new revolution has been out also at the same time that deals with my father the way he really was and is and what he can be to a generation that's now being raised in america that we live in today. what he did for the world at the time. that's my book that is in fact. i haven't called him out. my brother and i haven't talke since my father passed away. the glue is gone. >> got to go. [ man ] ♪ trouble ♪ trouble, trouble trouble, trouble ♪ ♪ trouble been doggin' my soul ♪ since the day i was born ♪ worry ♪ oh, worry, worry worry,orry ♪ [ announcer ] when it comes to things you care about, leave nothing to chance. travelers. take the scary out of life. in news, fox news channel. >> this is a fox news alert. one of my heroes is dead. jack law lane the fitness guru who inspired weaklings like me to workout. he succumbed to pneumonia. jack lalanne is a wonderful guy. he is a great guy. interviewed him many times over the years. this is a fox news alert. the packers pounded the bears in chicago by a score of 21-14. the steelers held off a furious charge by the new york jets who were down at one point 24 zip to head to the super bowl against the packers. it's pittsburgh's 8th time in the big show. they won today 24-14. dave briggs co host of fox weekend is here to join me former sports caster big pats man. you lost last week. >> i was a little disappointed in that. it was great football today. what a classic super bowl. steelers, packers a throw back to the old days. >> do you think because they have been to the show so many times it will have less than a buzz than if any of the metropolitan teams had been there? >> i don't. i think this is perfect for the country. the steelers sorry cowboys fans have become america's team. traveled around the country. they are every where. right on the heels are the packers because their fans are every where as well. they will be in the glitzy billion dollar stadium. two rough defensive teams. blue collar fans and coaches. two best quash quarterbacks in game. >> which is better? >> i can't pick against the steelers. their defense was flying around today. they have a hit you in the face. aaron rogers probably the best young quarterback in the game. ben roethlisberger is 10-2 in the post season that's better than brady, montana, better than bradshaw. >> i will take the packers i bet you because a lot of my friends my gi's are from the wisconsin area. they are all pulling for them. anyway i was so disappointed. this is me with the new york jets cheerleaders. just to show you how intense i was into it. >> hang on one minute. i want to show the viewers. hang with me right there. i believe that is the michael jackson thriller dance. i did not hear michael but i swear. >> dave briggs everybody. dave briggs. thank you, thank you. >> all right folks. let's get serious again. this is a fox news alert. >> 44-year-old ann pettway the woman accused of kidnapping that 19 day old baby from a new york hospital and then raising that child as her own has finally surrendered after the now 23-year-old woman at the heart of this case once baby carlino white discovered her true identity after contacting the center of exploited and missing children and went public with her story. ann petway was arrested in the alleged kidnapping of carlene gnaw white in the harlem hospital. she is expected to appear in manhattan federal court tomorrow to face federal kidnapping charges. no statute of limitations when it comes to kidnapping. doesn't matter it was so long ago. the feds are going to go after her. one thing i will add i can't help thinking there's more to that story as it unfolds. we will let you know. this is a fox news alert. >> finally showing some spunk along with their outrage, two countries south korea and malaysia staged commands doe raids against somali pirates holding the crew hostage. friday's raid killed 8 pirates capturing five as they rescued all 21 of their crew members unharmed. my, how times have changed for the mob. gone is the elaborate code of silence omerta replaced by a sleazier code of dog eat dog and who can get to the feds first to snitch out his brother in exchange for lenient treatment. >> you have any doubts or reservations now is the time to say so. don't want to think any less of you. once you enter this family, there's no getting out. as that cart burns so may your soul burn in hell if y betray the family. >> mobs fallen on hard times. >> family will let y -- friends are let you down. family is what you can die pend on. >> not what it used to be. >> give them a day off tomorrow at school and thursday we start all over again. walk them to the bus stop as i used to do before i went to jail. >> last week 127 alleged mobsters busted. 7 of the country's major mafia crime families hit by the feds. >> their alleged crimes include numerous violent and illegal acts from murder and narcotics trafficking to extortion, illegal gambling, arson, loan sharking. >> there were so many arrests they had to be processed at a gym in an army base. >> soprano, fbi. >> are you lawrence parisi? >> joseph santos you are under arrest. >> among those nabbed the 83-year-old former boss of new england patriarchal crime family the leadership of columbo family and alleged family of the gambinos. it reads like good fellas. you had mickey eyes. and mikey ffranchase. >> frankie meatball rag tony christopher reynolds michael jello and vin chen so car wash. >> it marks an important and encouraging step forward in disrupting the operations. >> john junior gotti's attorney says the roundup is a dog and pony show. >> they are going to cut lose many of them. they will be very low plea deals offered. my guess the great majority of them. >> whatever happens these guys have been around the block. >> mr. gotti? john? geraldo rivera. >> i don't want to talk, all right? >> really? >> it's a free sidewalk, rights? >> will these recent arrests make a real difference in the long run? >> didn't matter. didn't mean anything. when i was broke i would go out and rob some more. we ran everything. paid off tops. paid off lawyers. we paid off judges. everybody had their hands out. everything was for the taking. >> joining me to discuss the huge mob bust that went down in new york and providence, rhode island my favorite congressman michael grimm staten island base former fbi under cover agent who investigated the gambino crime. michael fran says see the born again former mob boss. why didn't they kill you? >> good question. i think they had more to worry about than me quite honestly. >> do you think they are off balance now because of the feds? >> no. what's been going on in the last 20-years, geraldo ever since this racketeering law has been used pretty effectively, they created a lot more informants it seems on the street. this is normal usual stuff. just bigger arrests than normal. >> what happened to omerk the code of silence. it was the one thing that made them honorable. ? >> it was meaningful before they had the laws that put you away for many years. that's what happened. there's more fear of the government than anybody else. >> more ammo now than ever. >> exactly. >> do you know the jets were stopped four times inside the two yard line? >> let's not talk about it. >> can you pass a law? >> i wish i could. but you know what? i campaigned on the idea that government is getting into everything. we put government into football we will ruin that. >> good point. >> what about this big bust? you think this will put a tent department in the way the mob operates or sound and fury and a big photo op? >> i think it's a significant important case. it sends a message on two different levels. number one that many people think the mob is gone away so to speak. if the fbi crippled them and this proves they are not. they are still going to continue to do what they have always done. as long as there's money to be made the mob is going to grow. what we learned after the gotti era they went back under ground. they are not as flamboyant and flagrant. that's why the fbi has to remain vigila vigilant. this sends a message. they have five squads in new york. they are down to two. this sends a message also to everyone in government and congress the director of the fbi. we have to remain vigilant. this is a significant case. >> i thought of something as you were speaking you live in staten island. >> yeah. >> it is one of the five counties one of the five boroughs in new york. i remember after 1985 after he got killed you mentioned john gotti up at sparks steakhouse. i went to his house knocked on the door and his widow was there. they could not have been more gracious. they treated me like a member of the family. it was so weird that they had such manners. they don't even have the ghost of that any more do they? >> you know, yes. that is the problem when people asked me when i was under cover. i worked with jack garcia the most prolific fbi agent in the cover of under cover work. in the history of under cover work. they can be very charming. but don't make any mistakes. our guest sitting next to us his father is suspected to be responsible for 60 murders. these people do very bad things on a routine daily basis. you can never forget that. even though they can be charming at times. they are criminals and they are dangerous. >> i want to get right to you. go back to your dad. 60 homicides. did he only kill bad guys? >> didn't he just get sentenced again? >> to # years. >> how old is he? >> 94. >> just got sentenced to 8 years. >> wonder when he will get out? >> he will be 100 in order to get out. my dad was in charge with 60 murders this is what the fbi says he was responsible for? >> do you want to take a guess? >> no. >> do you love your father? >> i love my father very much. >> did you ever counsel him to leave the business? >> i counseled him to get out of new york and move out to california it would have been a better place for him. his name is too hot here in new york. >> how many times has he been in jail? >> spent about 30 years. since 1970. >> stand by we will do more on this and more on the mob. also folks you should know talking about organized criminals, what high rolling rich americans are cheating on their taxes and are about to be exposed by wikileaks after this. úç>?[ozo >> be it atten an ho >> my far is the last of the mow heek cans. >> continuing about the big mob bust in new york. congressman michael grin, jeffery lickman going to hear from him right now and michael francazi. first of all are these big busts? >> i don't think it is. they are big in terms of numbers. when you look at the indictments and i will give an example the eastern district of new york indictment. there is one murder charge from 1991. the rest of it is gambling, extortion. nobody will be going to jail long at all except for the top guy. this idea they were destroying the mafia it's not true because they are going to be on the street in a blink of an eye. >> you think therrel tively minor offenses to the extent that 5, 6, 8 years in jail is a minor offense? >> first of all most of it will be less than that. there is a handful of serious charges. for the most part this is a dog and pony show. you have eric holder coming down as if it's the biggest bust the biggest feather in his cap. >> do you agree with what gloria gotti said he's the last of the mow heek cans? >> he was the last of something. i would say that. he was a different kind of guy. >> the guy is 8 stories under ground. >> he never complained. he never wined. he always took it and was proud of his life. for better or worse it made him at least to me a brave man. >> give us the other side of that story. >> brave men don't do the things that he did. the problem is that the media glorifies the mob. there's nothing gore why yous about what t -- glorious about what they do. it's ir vrelevanirrelevant. you have to constantly keep pulling them out. that's why we have fbi and local law enforcement that go to work every day to make sure the weeds don't continue to grow back. as long as they keep growing the fbi has to keep cutting them down. >> this is one thing that bothers me. this is not such a big bust. eric holder comes down and says these are all guilty men and f mafia guys. what happened to the guy who shoots up fort hood. >> the charm is gone. i am over them. i am over them. >> i am just a defense lawyer i have to take what i get. >> besides being murderers and drug dealers now they are snitches. >> that's the worst of all. >> michael good luck. i hope you stay on the side of the angels there continued success in that regard. congressman thank you again. jeffery. >> coming up guess what wikileaks has in store for a >> welcome back everybody. everybody hatsz wikileaks except when they are leaking stuff we want to know about. like who were the 2,000 high rolling americans allegedly evading u.s. tax man by taking their cash in other offshore bank accounts. in the big american banks helping these alleged tax cheats beat uncle sam. nobody knows more about the inner workings of wall street than my next guest charlie gaspirino. thank you for coming on. are your tax problems keeping you awake? >> are tax problems keeping you awake at night? >> david selleck the well-known tax practitioner. i got to talk to you about the rudolph elmer former manager of the cayman islands branch of a swiss bank. he gave kick which leaks the cd's that allegedly have the 2,000 high rolling americans on them. >> tax chied cheaters. >> alleged tax cheaters. >> the banks know and big boys know money is being secreted away for tax division purposes and other things such as money laundering. once you are part of the senior management you are part of the plot. >> do we have any idea who the 2000 alleged tax cheaters are? >> you get the idea it's huge. when you talk to rich people, which i am not. i do interview them from time to time. there's always talk among them on how to evade taxes. one reason they buy municipal bonds it's away to circle around taxes and trip tax rate. when you get to their level and move stuff offshore it sounds like a thung they do. doesn't it smell like it's real? >> it does. it is irritating because you think if you have a billion dollars what's the difference in 100 million? >> when the financial crisis was occurring these are people that weren't getting hit they would skimp on bottles of wine. they didn't care. they were skip on tips to working class waiters. rich people are some of the most penny pinching types you have ever met. david, do you advise these people, whoever they are, if they exist and charlie and i share the suspicion they do exist, would you advise them to come forward and volunteer now and say i am one of them. i want to pay my taxes and make a deal ahead of time anonymously for amnesty? >> a lot of these people already did. this is the problem. the people who answered that were not the people the government envisioned. the majority of the people who came forward and essentially clogged the system were individuals who received inheritances from family members holocaust restitution payments any number of moneys that came from tax exempt transferences. >> you are saying the innocent people surrendered rather than the guilty people? >> this is what i want to tell you. the people who really came forward and jumped through all of the hoops were not the people the government wanted. they earned the money and didn't pay taxes. that's why this is potentially a huge story. that's probably what you have here. >> maybe. you don't know. you are in this business. it is people that either want to shield wealth from taxes or people that want to shield wealth because they attained it illegally. >> isn't the whole system rotten? why do you have the cayman islands? >> because you don't have a flat tax. >> if you are going to have -- the suntan oil capital not the offshore banking. >> right. if you are going to have a system in the country where the tax code is so absurd you will find ways around it. you find loopholes. this is one of the hoop locals legitimately sometimes ill legitimately sometimes. >> might be doing us a favor. >> however ironic orbiter that is to people who believe he may have done some treason i say thing, he is australian after all. i think that you can also say if these people are really exposed and nothing is more detestable when you have these unemployed people and the deficit is so malignant than those who have enough to pay easily and try to cheat the system. >> david sell lick associates do you have a tax problem keeping you up at night call him. >> that's it for us. once again green bay packers beat the chicago bearings by the score of 21-14. a big shout out to colonel scott blake well and dan bosio they are going against the steelers of pittsburgh who beat my jets 24-19. the jets were down 24-0 though. they fought their way back. they were inside the two yard line four times didn't score. >> good morning, everyone. it's monday, january 24, 2011. i'm gretchen carlson. thank you for sharing your time. president obama set to deliver his second state of the union address. he hasn't even spoken yet and he's already angering the left. >> they want to focus on cut, cut, cutting. the former secretary of state says start with defense. >> i don't think the de