out of line, lis weihl, mercedes colwin, good to see you both. thanks, gregg. heather: and still ahead. what does a healthy body look like? right there? three, for a second! gregg: well, two. i m excluding myself. just to be clear here. you may be surprised what a new medical study uncovered. >
lis weihl, former federal prosecutor, doug burns. lis, it should be straightforward to check the computer and cell phones and if there is no evidence of a facebook connection. and the police did that. already. the police now are saying, they are siding on the belief that there was no facebook romance or whatever you would have, what the parents said and they are being looked at and haven t called them suspects but said there was no facebook and the question i think from a police enforcement point of view and parental point of view, is if what you say is true, your daughter went missing all of these days, up to ten days. gregg: this is the mom right here, who is crying. isn t it a presumption of guilt? make up a story about gregg: she goes on television, pleading for the safe return and apparently there is evidence that she knew what was going on and it had nothing
blood now drips from my fangs. megyn: jonna spilbor is joining us and so is lis weihl. charlie sheen says he s going to try to get the twins back. watching himmed the past couple days you have got to look at him and say he doesn t seem like somebody who should be raising two 2-year-olds. and yet when you look at mother, it s tough to think they should go to her as well. charlie has led it hang out the last couple days. i have got to defend his right to be an imperfect parents. he did say one thing correctly. you can say anything to get an order of protection against your spouse as a parents of your children. anything. and the court will literally shoot first, ask questions later. they will stop charlie from
everything so insurance companies, et cetera have i think the supreme court will want to see lower courts decisions. and see how they analyze the case before they get to it. at least gregg: this is one of the best, well reasoned i m not taking sides but wonderfully crafted, really all this supreme court needs. have to say good-bye. there is nothing unclear about that. gregg: lis weihl, david schwartz, thank you very much. heather: freezing temperatures sweeping across the country leaving many vulnerable to a winter cold, and wait until you hear what researchers say could help before it hits you hard.
grant the writ now and they ll wait until the october term. gregg: we ll wait and see. thanks. good to see you, lis weihl and merced mercedes colwin. heather: an interesting debate and, you may have heard, eating a big breakfast will actually cut your calorie count and slim your waistline? turns out that is not true. gregg: i knew it wasn t true. i am vindicated. heather: why bigger may not be better. we ll find out coming up next. hey baby i hear the calling scrambled eggs and i seem a bit confused but i ve got you pegged. because she could afford nothing else. ethel couldn t ignore the clear need for health and financial security. and it inspired her to found aarp. for over 50 years, we ve continued that work,