week nights at 10:00 p.m. eastern on fox business network. and his initial rtz same as adam levine and that's where the similarities end. it is andy levey. he put a foot in his mouth so often you would think he played rugby in uruguay dwaf vin mcbegin -- gavin mcguinness. and he put down more spirits than ghostbusters. tv writer and producer rob long. he is one of the founders of ricochet.com. >> a block. the lede. that's the first story. >> is bb one of my people? according to abc news.com when israeli prime minister benjamin netanyahu addressed congress on tuesday his secret weapon was his strong millen eight l game. he mentions social networks. >> iran's supreme leader spews the oldest hatred of anti-semitism with the newest technology. he tweets that israel must be annihilated. he tweets. >> he tweets. he dropped in the name of a certain internet search engine. >> while the final deal has not yet been signed, special el -- certain elements of any potential deal are now a matter of public record. you don't need intelligence agencies and secret information to know this. you can google it. >> and for good measure he threw in a reference to a popular hbo show. >> in this deadly game of thrones there is no place for america or israel, no peace for christians, jews or muslims who don't share the islamist midevil creed. no right for women. no freedom for anyone. >> damn i was really hoping it would be girls. mainly democrats weren't pleased with the speech especially nancy pelosi who has -- who was visibly upset while on camera. afterwards she released a statement saying, i was near tears throughout the speech. saddened by the insult to the intelligence of the united states. i was saddened by the condescension toward our knowledge of the threat posed by iran. >> sound it out. >> that's what i always do. what do you make of this speech some. >> it was a dangerous speech for him to give. it is one -- first of all mentioning twitter is probably not the most scary thing you can do right? when you say that the leader of iran is not that scary. >> not to millenials. >> which you are. you mentioned it 27 times. i want to see the dob on the driver's license to be sure. the tweet is coming from in the house, and it has the same ring. look, i think he is in trouble. i am not saying -- i am not sanuin. i think it is dangerous for the leader of a small nation like israel that depends on an enormous amount of american support to come to congress and make an argument like that that boldly. that's putting a lot of chips on the table. i don't know if i would have taken that deal. >> right. i think i am the only one at the table that thinks that way. >> i don't fully disagree with you, but what does it say about the state of relations between america and israel that netanyahu felt he had to do this? >> right. traditionally israel when they have bargained with americans and american presidents -- a he mentioned it yesterday when he spoke to apac they did it privately with the president. they said things like i know you want to win florida. it is hard for you to win florida if we are against you. this was a really, really, really blatant and bold thing to do. it seems to me like he was under pressure at home, the political pressure at home and instead of bringing it to the well of congress, it ns a high wire act. >> if you talk about the p5 plus one, it is the united states and it is russia and china who are in bed with iran. and if the united states is capitulating, that's three of the nations. then you have germany, france and britain. the reason israel wanted to come to the table at all is iran wants them wiped off the map. they have made no bones about that. they are next door neighbors with a bunch of countries that want to kill them. >> i am not arguing it is right or wrong. i am arguing it was prudent to do that in congress. >> i think he could have waited for two weeks. i think he could have waited until after the election and had had -- had a powerful impact on the groash yagses and the congress. it is punk rock to come to congress and say you know what, y'all you better step up jie. do you think it was a strategy because the elections are coming up, gavin? >> is it a problem that his balls are too big? it is a great move. it showed out incompetent obama is where israel says i have to handle this. you are not calling me back and i have to move on. my very atoms are at stake and i may be vaporized if this deal goes through. to go back what is going on here? why are we even giving this a why are we discussing iran having nuclear power? we may as well discussing bangladesh having it. sorry. if i was bangladesh or any muslim country's big brother and they came up to me and said can i have nuclear power i would say, what? oh no we are at wore with you. come back after the war. burn coal or something. i wouldn't go you have been good for a longtime. let's weigh the pros and cons. it is all cons so no. >> andy yesterday you said netanyahu's talking to congress was a bad idea. do you still agree with that? >> i don't think he should have given the speech, but i think the speech he gave was a good one. i love that the obama administration was constantly warning -- they said he is going to reveal secret stuff about the negotiations. he didn't do that and now their reaction is, oh there was nothing new in the speech. make up your mind. and then they said the speech was all words and no action which i guess they have no sense of irony whatsoever? they do recognize when something is all words and no action because they are used to it. >> i want to add to that that the democratic senators and representatives that didn't go to the speech and still watched it -- he had the ridiculous reaction after the speech and they all sat and watched it at the office. why not go in person? it made the white house look defensive. >> i wish they would have hate tweeted it. >> that would have been good. >> i am not arguing whether he is right or wrong or if there is an exsew sten shall threat. i just don't think it is good domestic politics where a foreign leader in the middle of a brutal campaign to come to the well of the congress and try to meddle in american negotiations with a foreign country. that's a dangerous things. >> it is negotiations that they don't have a part of. >> that's a high wire act. >> and here is the problem. the administration has the right and they should exercise the right to logically layout why they want to partner with iran on this. they can do what benjamin netanyahu did. what it reminded me of was clinton at the 2012 democratic convention. he is the only american politician who can layout logically an argument for organs something. the president has lost the ability to do that. >> the president has failed in this regard. i just think it is a very dangerous thing for an israeli politician to come. >> was it a bad move on boehner's part inviting him there? is this what is making the democrats so sour because they were not involved in that invitation? >> i think it was a mistake to ask him to speak to congress. >> i think it was a great strategic move that made the democrats look like total wimps. humiliated owe obama which is why they are mad and netanyahu got israel's first interest out in front of the whole country before this whole thing. >> there is zero evidence of that. >> are you saying you don't feel bad for nancy pelosi? she was near tears. >> do you have no emotions gavin? i am this far into obama's presidency. i rejoice at every loss they have. even something on a banana peel. >> speaking of which dianne feinstein said i am going and i am not jumping up and down. i counted her four times up and down. >> it is a great workout. if any good has come from this, it is heart health. >> and she has a firm booty from the bar routine. >> how can we tell that nancy pelosi is visibly upset? there is not much going on. >> she had to tell us. she told us. >> you can tell she is crying because she gets dehydrated. moving on. should hillary be pillaried? she used a private e-mail account for official government business and did not routinely preserve the government records col ction. the "new york times" reports that the private account came to light after a request for clinton and other former secretary records. they turned over thousands of e-mails she sent during her four-year stint as secretary of state. but it is unclear if all of the e-mails were saved. you would think a secretary could keep that record. the white house is outraged jie. the policy allows individuals to use their personal e-mail address as long as the e-mails are maintained and sent to the state department which if you ask secretary clinton's team that's what they complete netted last month or two. >> or not. clinton did not break any laws and reportedly only communicated nonclassified information. they took effect in 2013 after clinton departed. how serious is this? how do we know that? they say so. the clintons have never given us a reason to doubt their honesty, but still you have to think if they were sent through a state department .gov address or through that system we wouldn't have to rely on her or her people and whether or not they are telling the truth. we have to make sure that a bunch were not deleted. >> how would you know with a private account. it is a lot easier to permanently delete the e-mails from the private account. lois lerner came in the same hospital as the president and destroyed and melted the irs servers. >> that's very possible. it is also very not possible and possibly. gavin, is this much a do about nothing? how are you feeling? >> it shows her shear audacity and the gigantic ego. if anyone works at they corporation whether it is mtv or chipotle as a manager they all know they have their company phone. they know that every e-mail they send that says it at the end is public as far as the private company goes. everyone gets their e-mails are going to be seen. she didn't casually get a private account. she knew she was doing something wrong and she didn't care. because the only people who vote for her are basically women who are voting for her because she is a woman and people enjoy the fact that she wants a welfare state and they want a handout they don't care. she can murder somebody. >> again jie. and you can argue that even if you have the government e-mail you can still use your private e-mail for a lot of these things. that's what her spokesperson said. colin powell said the same thing. he add private e-mail and a private lap p to. >> it doesn't make it okay. >> it makes it okay, but she is a lady of a certain age. it will be hard to flip for the accounts. >> hire a nerd. >> if you can't figure out how to flip between two e-mail accounts you have to business being president of the free world. >> i think that's hard. >> like you said -- >> this is common sense. you give your friends your personal e-mail and you use your workde-mail for everything that has to do with work. those go to your private accounts. >> if only amy pascal learned that. >> it is common sense. >> we are always bringing up transparency. is this going to hurt her come her 2016 run do you hinge? do you think? >> i don't think it will hurt her at all. >> benghazi didn't hurt her. >> the algerians are funneling a half million dollars into the clinton foundation and i think that is more suspect to people who are watching closely. >> this is a rerun from the 90s. it is a shady financial dealing and weird contributions from the foreigners and the missing records. this is actually a retread of 1993 if you are old enough. you are not because you are a millenial, and if not you won't. >> is there a way to make sure this doesn't happen? >> yes here is what you do. if you are going to get up to clandestine activities and do corrupt things don't write it on any accounts. you say you know that thing about the stuff, it would be good if that thing wasn't a thing in my face. and then boom benghazi in jail. >> i have a bad itch. i don't think it is eczema. i think you can maybe help me scratch this itch by making it go away. >> boy, i miss my old friend vince foster. >> has anyone seen his briefcase? >> i would like this problem to go away permanently. >> i like that. >> i sent that to my dermatologist. >> and he killed one of your co-workers. >> i am still itchy, but i miss her. all right then. should teens be tallied? on tuesday the -- a tiny town in vermont took up a refer wren deem that would -- referendum that would extend to 16 and 17-year-olds. activists proposed the idea of a way of increasing turnout and a disenfranchised group. he says, quote many teens have part-time jobs. they pay sales tax like everyone else. and yet they have no representation in government. that's a terrible failure of our democracy. if approved the quaint vermont village will be the second municipality to lower the voting age to 16. following in the foot steps of takoma park maryland in 2013. kennedy, 18-year-olds rarely get anything, right? will 16-year-olds do any better? >> i remember 16 very clearly and i knew everything in the world then. that's the age i had the highest concentration of knowledge. no risk aversion at all whatsoever. if you have dangerous know it alls who enough to lose it was the best voting block. >> will it be a few people who were really educated and passionate about what is coming out? >> no, young people are idiots. have you ever spoken to them? they believe in sasquatch. if we let them vote they will vote for the guy in the hawaiian shirt. they voted for obama. i think the voting age should be raised to 40 or 45 or even 50. >> and the drinking age. >> that should be lowered. i am not saying you can't have fun. the problem is young people are credulous. they believe everything works out. they actually believe these things are going to, would. >> they are hopeful. >> what if have you an emotionally immature 25-year-old. >> raise it to 50. >> no one thoughs teens like andy does. is there a big difference between 16 and 18? >> according to the judge there is. i probably shouldn't talk more about that. there is a big difference between 16 and 18 and there is a big difference between 18 and 21. i believe the only way for this to be fair is to have no voting age at all. i believe if a 2 yearly can pull the lever a 2-year-old should vote. >> and if a dog can run aren't there someplaces where these dogs are running for mayor? if that can happen why can't they vote? >> he is a good man and you take that back. coming up, christmas, it is never too early to start buying me gifts. first, edward snowden goes hollywood. sounds like stealing government secrets is my ticket to stardom. could edward beheading homeward? according to his attorney, edward snowden is ready to return to the land of the free, but on one condition. free burritos for the rest of his life. kidding of course. how great would that be? at a news conference on tuesday, snowden's russian lawyers said the contractor wants to come home as long as he is grabted -- granted an impartial trial. he promised snowden he would not face the death penalty, but he would still face charges under the espionage act that limits the ways he can defend himself. and snowden's legal advisors say that's not fare. sad face. joseph gordon eleven -- eleven vit reveals him in his latest film. i'm sure you think snowden is a lovable scam p. should he come back to the country? >> i think he should. if he wants to face the music i think it is a good precedent to set. i think sending the whistle blowers to siberia is bad policy. >> did he? >> yeah. >> i read the screenplay of this movie. >> citizen 4? >> everything he did was great and you are on board with it? >> i think the issues that he raised make this country a better place. i absolutely 100% do. >> how about exposing spies? >> he didn't do that. and he writes about that specifically. there was a lot edward snowden had and did not reveal as not to compromise people in sensitive positions. >> if he committed crimes, how can they say it is not the same case for him? >> it is a dangerous legal place to go. the punishment for treason in this country is death. i think it shows us how much russia sucks. report the chicks -- they look hot to me. >> and he has a girlfriend. >> it is a remarkable coincidence. >> after being there several months and after talking about vladimir putin and suddenly changes his mind when there is a a -- an opposition figure gunned down on the the cream lynn. he says i think i have been here a little too long. i will get home and see my family. >> remember he had the question where he said so mr. putin how did you get to be so talented and gifted at running a country. >> i did forget it. >> andy you have been clear that you think he should be executed. have you changed your mind? >> i have been. i feel the opposite. >> there are a couple of things. none has to do with the fact that -- the espionage act is the issue. when you try it under the espionage act you are not allowed to bring up the motive. this is why i did this. there is no question what he did was legal but did he do the right thing? did he expose unethical and illegal practices et cetera? that's the issue, but it doesn't matter in a treel under the espionage act. what he wants and what his lawyers want is they don't want him tried under that account a. they want him tried in another way. >> the question i have for everyone super anti-snowden is do you not want whistleblowers to come forward? what about the guy who worked for the nsa for 20 years and knew what they were doing was so wrong. they knew that it was what the agency stood for. and that it violated every internal and exter national policy that governed them. he was interrogated by fbi agents and snowden sees the same thing happening. he knows they have clearly crossed the line and americans have no idea what they are up against. it is unethical. the way he went around it and about it, there are better ways to do it. >> there are many whistleblowers who try to do the same thing. they tried to contact their representative. they tried to go through management and they have been thwarted and silenced and fired. >> the woman from sony who convinced everyone she went to north korea. he purposely didn't do that. that is what sets him apart from wikileaks that takes this stuff and regardless of what might come of it, dumps it. what i do like about the way snowden went about it and there are things he revealed i wish he didn't reveal mostly how we spy on foreign governments and foreign leaders but i do think he actually kind of went about it the right way. he didn't reveal any identities of spies that would lead to that that -- you candice agree with him, but he did it in a better way that wikileaks and chelsea manning and whatever. >> do you say nice use of chelsea? >> thank you, thank you very much. >> on the one hand i am for the transparency. especially when it is filtered to not jeprodize our safety. as a guy who is doing nasty stuff, you have to just dump it and get out or you will end up choosing assassinated by putin. >> it will be very difficult to have a fair and impartial trial the way he is defining it. if he wants to come back and face the music more power to him. >> i hope he can come back for the red carpet premiere. >> an important point, bruce jenner as he transitions has chosen the name chelsea manning. >> heard it here first. >> coming up, the food gets a hipster makeover. every one has a hoody and handlebar mustache. >> tonight's sponsor have no fro-yo, don't go oh no. fro-yo to got, fo-sho. are hipsters no longer hip? they pride themselves on being too cool for the cultural mainstream and they are being targeted by the least cool thing on the planet, brands. they created a u.s. taco company where milk shakes are served in mason jars and the 1 percenters is served with lobster meat. and then there is a pepsi cola that created a fair sugar cane sugar. and not to be outdone mcdonalds has launched a dish like chipotle pulled pork and lentil and egg salad. that sounds like it is right up your alley. >> i can't do the accent. >> it is weird because i do it so well. >> i had no idea you were using that fake american accent all along. >> that may be true. >> yeah, who cares? i go to old mcdonald's at least once a week. i love taco bell when it is getting late and i am getting dirty. if they want to rebrand, more power to them? i am not a rebrander. i am a g -- i am not a millenial. i am a gen-xer. >> when you show up to taco bell you give up. >> what about tradition? there is something traditional about fast food. is it just the young people trying to breakaway from tradition? >> it is the old people trying to look cool. the old specials where he put on a hippie wig and he said peace, you can see right through it. c's like the clown. >> that thing said mccafe and no one is fooled. people still lineup. look, if you are hungry enough or drunk enough you will eat it. that should be the slogan. >> mccafe is mcdone willeds ? >> yeah. >> do you think they prefer image over quality? if the food doesn't taste good does it matter? >> you are all out of your mind. >> let me explain what the people i created are up to. boomers grew up with great depression parents. they would get a crappy bun and a piece of corn and they would scoff it down. when the fast-food came out they would start eating because the shear volume was exciting. they have a fork and a knife and they eat like they are in prison. they drink at the end now that we have access to food we go, we don't want that gross grease feeling you get. the weird condom on your tongue, the layer of grease. we want actual good food and the market is heading that way. we are not eating kale. it is good on gross food because you feel better after. >> what about in-n-out burger? >> it is great in small doses. >> i have never had -- >> and the cut fries. they are not frozen fries. you can make the same hipy argument about in-n-out. jay there is nothing more classic or authentic than mcdonald's french fries. >> thisy are disgusting. >> no, they are the best. i don't eat fast-food and they are the best. >> my great depression boomer parents are not making me not eat fries. >> the best fries in all of the country are not from in-n-out. they are from dick's burgers in seattle, washington. you go there late at night and they have a fantastic health care program for the workers and they have their greasy fries. >> everyone acts like the hipsters are authentic and real. if that were the case they wouldn't all look exactly -- they wouldn't all have copied you. they wouldn't all bewaring -- >> their clothes are secondhand. they don't buy brands. >> they are all the same clothes. >> but gavin -- >> it is all used clothing. >> it is a uniform. it is the same skinny jeans. >> who makes the skinny jeans? >> it doesn't matter. >> exactly because there is no allegiance to brand. >> it is still marketing. it is you saying i want to be like that. every time i go to brooklyn you say it never ends. >> what is the brand this. >> apple. >> oh no, apple. >> i completely agree that this is more about marketing. there are no parts on them. it is sad. >> you are telling willy wonka about his oompaloomps right now. it is what happened when they left the chocolate factory. >> they all look the same. >> to the naked eye. >> and they are all going to get diabetes. it is very sad. >> rabbits in utah can't stop eating pot. so says the deo that would allow certain conditions to be treated with edible forms of marijuana. they expressed environmental concerns over allowing pot growers to separate legally on such a large scale testifying that he has seen rabbits that had, quote cultivated a taste for marijuana. he claims that even after they eradicated the illegal cannibus the poor little bunny wouldn't leave because his natural instinct to run were gone. >> i want to start with you. you hate seeing rabbits stoned? >> i do. and i like how the left downplays isis and extremist muslims. >> they stone women to death in the middle east and it will never happen here. >> they are getting stoned to death, why? because they cheated on their man or they were raped or something? >> gavin they are talking about the bunnies #r getting high. stoned is an idiom. >> well that's cool. >> he and his fellow dea agents went to a mountain site where there was a big, illegal growery. >> growery? >> he said there you go. there is the evidence right there. this animal has been eating marijuana and is no longer scared of us. >> it was not the rabbit with treats in their pockets. >> maybe he was mentally deficient. >> he took away the bunny's weed? you don't care about the bunny. he was happy and now the bunny is miserable. i don't blame the dea for being against legalization. how scared are they right now? it used to be theng about the children and now they resort to think about the bunnies? >> priorities are in check now some. >> well this is weird. >> all animals are basically stoned. >> i am not really sure that this is going to -- they are just bunnies. i wouldn't be afraid dea agent either. >> i did do some research and if you want to make sure that the rabbits don't eat your pot plants you can get coffee cans to put around the base of the plant or human urine. >> who want like it. >> he is making an argument for illegally grown weed. if you legalize it you can probably figure out a way to keep the bunnies from getting stoned. the cartels are in it. that's because the drugs are illegal. it is the same thing. >> if you have farmers growing marijuana like they grow okra they will figure out the best fertilizers and fess tau sides and keeping people out. >> i can't wait to see the hipster stoned bugs bunny cartoon. basically where elmer-fudd kills him in the first real. >> you are not tenacious when you are high. >> that should be the new slogan. >> leave it there. >> chillax. coming up, how hot do you look after one drink? who stops at one? back in a moment. kennedy just ran into another studio to tell us what is coming up tomorrow on "kennedy." >> don't look, but i'm right here. but i'm over there. hi guys, obamacare is about to have its day in court. i mean hey ladies. we will have the latest and try to get back to the studio now. please stand by. ugly people may just be drunk. the journal alcohol and alcoholism my favorite journal, claims that people are more attracted after consuming one drink, but looks fade after two. a study at the university of bristol photographed 40 students to see how alcohol altered appearances. pictures were taken of the co-eds after sober after one drink and then after two drinks. and then a separate group of sober students compared the photos and rated their attractiveness. moderation ranked highest. reitch soars say dilated pupils and the rosy cheeks brought on by alcohol enhance a person's looks. since this study was not performed in america, we should throw it out, correct? >> clearly. i read this over a plate of pre dom frys and i immediately hurled. it proved something when you can have another study that props the opposite. some people get moderately buzzed after one drink. gavin it takes like 12. >> and you still look great. >> british women are hideous, right? we are looking at this picture like this 1.5 looks like a three. it is too much micromanaging here. if we did this -- if we did this in say america where we have a lot more eight's and nine's we would have more fluctuation and it would be easier to tell. look at their teeth. they look like they are eating a muscle or banana chick lets. >> do you ever want a sober person judging you? i don't. >> the problem is it doesn't matter how drunk you are. it depends on how drunk your date is. what is weird about this is you can tell it was done and designed with the result ahead of time. i'm guessing it is against those things one drink and you are super hot and two drinks and you fall off a cliff. two drinks it increases. >> the other point to add to that, the more you drink less attractive people become more attractive. >> it doesn't matter how many drinks you have had. it matters how many i have had. >> i may be getting less attractive the more i drink but you are getting more attractive. at the least it is a wash. >> and if you quietly grab your jeans at 5:00 a.m. and sneak out of the house she never sees the huge mistake she made. >> i think she will know she made a mistake no matter what. >> if you leave at 5:00 a.m. quietly. >> it will burn the 8 she went to bed with and she won't see the 5. >> i think it also depends on what it is you are drinking. so when i drink a glass of wine i am feel confident. and confidence is attractive or so they tell me. i think that matters too. no one likes the cry face. >> what is with the -- i never understood the crying drunks. i know people like that who just -- you never want to be around them. you never want to get into a heavy conversation with someone especially if they have a propensity. >> new york is not the city to avoid. >> they are going to love you tonight. single women will flock to you. go to an english club. >> you are irish dissent? >> no. >> if i order a margarita and there is not enough salt, i will start to cry to get more salt. >> do you have videos of your animals? send them to us fox news.com/red eye. we will see you on "outnumbered" at noon eastern with kennedy. coming up tomorrow on the next "red eye" return appearances from lori rothman and joe devito. >> e block. last story. that's the last story. >> can a snap save your soul? according to a press release in san antonio an ordained catholic priest will hear confessions with snap chat. he claims he has been a man of the cloth for 23 years. they say the church is not involved and it goes against their teachings. is this real? i believe it is real in a sense that there is a guy doing this. it is one of two things. it is a simple case of a guy who wants revealing pictures of girls or boys and so he is pretending to be a priest or it is a blackmail thing and you tell this guy your sins -- >> come on, have a little faith. >> you tell this guy your sins and for a price he says you won't reveal you committed adultery or look looked at a 16-year-old with lust in your heart. >> rut catholic at the table. >> aren't you? >> i am too, but it is not about me. >> here is the deal. there is a tattoo shop and it is run by the former guerrilla biscuit. i said to him one day isn't this a pain in the ass? he had to have it out there. he had it before and he still has it. it must suck to be way the hell out here. they know what tattoo they want and they don't do taz main yen devils on jocks and someone who care what's they want and they have their mind made up and it is a fun experience. and that's the way the catholic church should be. it is quality and not quantity. the church does what gets the numbers up and no. you have to do the hard work. >> it is creepy because there are plenty of people who get the priest collar and walk around. how do you know this is not jerry sandusky in prison? >> should they embrace technology? >> this is not technology. you look at snap chat and most snap chats are of the sin and not really of the contrition. i am not sure if that would count. therefore people would be black mailed. that requires some kind of public sense of shame that doesn't exist. >> you can. >> someone else can screen shot it. >> we are telling him what to do. i want to receive the sacrament of communion at my local pub. special thanks to kennedy and gavin mcginnis and rob long. that's it for me. i'm joanne nosuchunsky. see you next time. it's mucinex fast-max night time and it's got a nasal decongestant. is that really a thing? it sounds made up. mucinex fast max night time for multi-symptom relief. breathe easy. sleep easy. let's end this. breaking tonight on a busy night for "the kelly file," new reaction rolling in from across the country. after an unprecedented speech to america from israel's prime minister. tonight described as a moment for the history books. welcome to "the kelly file," everyone i'm megyn kelly. benjamin netanyahu receiving standing ovations as he urged american lawmakers to oppose a pending nuclear deal with iran. we will hear tonight from brit hume top democrats and marco rubio joins us later. breaking news on hillary clinton. allegations that she may have broken the law when serving as secretary of state. but first, the