murdoch with a pie made of foam, well, he s under arrest this morning. he calls himself a comedian, by the way, news corp is the parent company of fox news. nearly two years after he was charged with murdering 13 people including a pregnant woman, the ft. hood shooter is finally be arraigned in a military court. he is still collecting a paycheck from the military will face a judge this afternoon in technic texas. this will will be his first court appearance since he decided he would face the death penalty. his lawyer is not saying whether they re considering an insanity defense. casey anthony ready for her close-up. reportedly in california right now close to signing a $1 million television deal for her first interview. you knew this one would happen. the offer comes from tv producer al taylor we re told seen here with larry king. he reportedly met with anthony and her lawyer jose baez in palm springs. she seemed eager to take the money but didn t like the idea of taking a li
what we get are real cuts in spending and real reforms in place that ll make sure that this problem never, ever happens again. we mean that. the path forward, we think we have one, but it s certainly not complete yet. we re doing our very, very utmost to get this to pass as well as we can. there s no easy solution. bill: so what harry reid is talking about there is from a gang of six senators, a plan hailed by both democrats and some republicans so far, that plan calls for reducing the deficit by $3.7 trillion over ten years, reducing the costs of medicare and medicaid and increasing revenue by about a trillion dollars. fox business network s stu varney s been up all night studying this stuff, going through all the details and all the fine printing. how you doing, stuart? good morning. i m well, bill. bill: how can it with that republicans how can it be that republicans be in favor of a plan that calls for new revenue? okay, here s how it s supposed to work. this plan
amendment for a balanced budget. the president has said he wants a balanced approach. well, guess what? he does get a balanced approach. he gets his increase in the debt limit of $2.4 trillion. what we get are real cuts in spending and real reforms in place that ll make sure that this problem never, ever happens again. we mean that. the path forward, we think we have one, but it s certainly not complete yet. we re doing our very, very utmost to get this to pass as well as we can. there s no easy solution. bill: so what harry reid is talking about there is from a gang of six senators, a plan hailed by both democrats and some republicans so far, that plan calls for reducing the deficit by $3.7 trillion over ten years, reducing the costs of medicare and medicaid and increasing revenue by about a trillion dollars. fox business network s stu varney s been up all night studying this stuff, going through all the details and all the fine printing. how you doing, stuart? good morn
south boston have sounded for generations of irish immigrants. [ bell ringing ] reporter: it is a tight-knit community that s always protected its own, a place james whitey bulger, one of boston s most notorious gangsters calleded home. bulger learned to fight and survive on the mean streets of south boston, known as southy to locals like john shay who would work for bulger. the guy was legendary. he made tough guys shake. he made them shake. reporter: bulger s life of crime started early. arrested in his teens he was robbing banks by age 20. his shock of blond hair earning him the name whitey a name he s said to despise. with his good looks and flamboyance, he imagined himself boston s version of hollywood gangster jimmy cagney. instead of red carpets, he was headed to alcatraz, a string of bank robberies landing him ten years in federal prison at age 25. he did his time. upon release vowed he would never, ever go back. they had no hard proof. reporter: boston
the fbi could not catch. deborah feyerick takes you inside one of the biggest manhunts in fbi history. [ bagpipes ] reporter: the church bells of saint monica near the harbor in south boston have sounded for generations of irish immigrants. [ bell ringing ] reporter: it is a tight-knit community that s always protected its own, a place james whitey bulger, one of boston s most notorious gangsters calleded home. bulger learned to fight and survive on the mean streets of south boston, known as southy to locals like john shay who would work for bulger. the guy was legendary. he made tough guys shake. he made them shake. reporter: bulger s life of crime started early. arrested in his teens he was robbing banks by age 20. his shock of blond hair earning him the name whitey a name he s said to despise. with his good looks and flamboyance, he imagined himself boston s version of hollywood gangster jimmy cagney. instead of red carpets, he was headed to alcatraz, a strin