everyone is making it out to be but something else in this plan will shake up the publican party. what is that? >> tt is the fa th rick perry who w dogged for weeks by mitt romney for calling social security a ponzi scheme is doubling down on entitlements. in this plan he is calling for something awful like the program that paul ryan and john sununu put forward was the basis that george w. bush tried to sell in hisecond term and didn't work out. perry is reembracing the notion to changing social security to be individualized account for younger workers that is bold stands for a guy who took a lot heat on social security before. i think mitt romney will be coming back at him. jenna: let's share with viewers what exactly rick perry is saying about social security. we have a little quote from the "wall street journal" op-ed today. it says, quote, america for once and for all face up to entitlement reform. to preserve benefits for current and near-term social security beneficiaries, my plan permanently stops politicians from raiding the program's trust fund. he uses that term, raid a second time in the piece as well. when you talk about shaking up the republican party, is that a good shake, chris? you anticipate that being a good shake for the republican party or a bad shake? >> well, ferry, who has been miserable in the polls of late and needs to shake things up. he has to take some chances. he added on new staffers. he is rolling out a big ad buy. he needs something that will shake this up. this is risky play for him to come out and go back into this issue but he has to do something. the current trend line leaves him out of the running and doesn't give him the opportunity to be the guy conservatives like. conservative republicans love the idea of entitlement reform. it is risky in the general election as mitt romney pointed out time and time again. something that the republican base really has their heart set on. jenna: you mentioned risky. every single time we talk about the nation's debt, some guest, some pundit, some economic expert says, hey, unless we're talking about entitlements we'll not come close to solving this thing. we'll see if that bet for rick perry plays out. another quick question for you chris, about perry's campaign right now. we understand he has taken on some new advisers. tell us a little bit those advisors and how they might change things for perry. >> well, he had a small group of loyal campaign supporters that worked for him for many years. what he added in some people veterans of bush campaigns and who have broader national campaign experience most notably, joe albaugh, who was the 2,000 campaign manager for george w. bush and dick cheney. this is a sign perhaps fences are being mended between the perry camp and the bush camp. something that will probably please some donors and shows perry trying to hit the reset button. jenna: we'll see what happens. chris, always nice to have you. thank you for joining us. >> you bet. jenna: get more of this conversation at foxnews.com. check out chris at the bottom of the hour, he will host his show, p.o.w.er may have live. and quick on the link that goes right to the show. jon: fox news alert on serial rapist own the loose. police in the dallas area say the suspect attacked four women so far. the victims have striking similarities. they're all african-americans, all in their 50s and 60s and everyone of the victims belonged to the same college sorority. rick leventhal is following that story live from our new york city newsroom. why are police thinking that this guy is going after this sorority, rick? >> reporter: it's a good question and police say they don't know why or how but they say that delta sigma theta has absolutely been singled out. our four victims were assaulted between 9:00 a.m. and 4:00 p.m. sleeping in their homes of texas cities of corinth, plano oar coppell. all black females in their 60s and members the sorority. chef video. a heavy black male in late 30s or early 40s. he was between 275 and 300 pounds. five seven to 5'9" with short hair or shaved head and distinctive swagger in his walk. >> physical description that we were given of the perpetrator does match the description of the subject that's in the surveillance video. >> reporter: he has apparently tried to avoid security cameras and tried to disguise himself too. police say they have dna evidence and they're trying to catch him before he strikes again, jon. jon: i guess members of the sorority are on alert, huh? >> reporter: yes, they are especially if they live alone. they're encouraged to stay with a relative or friend and not advertise affiliation with the sorority. stop wearing hats and pins with insignia on it. a sorority official says this is discouraging and disheartening. we encourage members to be alert of their surroundings and call police if they see anything suspicious or feel threatened. anyone with information is encouraged to call police in plano or corinth or the crimestoppers tip line. jon: let's hope they catch this guy. rick, thank you. >> reporter: sure. jenna: we bring you overseas to catastrophic flooding in thailand is killing people. 350 people dead so far because of this massive flooding. the water is surging into bangkok today. you see on video what devastation there is. hundreds of people in waist-high water fleeing area. it is called the worst flooding in decades. domestic airlines are forced to cancel their flights. 4,000 people are taking shelter at a northern bangkok airport. they're being relocated to another province. that is what they're trying to do now. in the meantime thailand announced a five-day holiday to help people cope with the disaster. across the world to a different area dealing with heavy rain. heavy rain is causing incredible flooding across parts of ireland. more than a month's rain fell on dublin in just one day. four rivers overflowed their banks leading it to the suspension of rail services and many roads being closed. the wicked weather caught many people off-guard. >> i never seen nothing like this in last 40 years. living never seen flood as this. >> no warning. like, if it was that bad which it is there should have been a warning or something to say turn back. don't go that way. there wasn't. jenna: dublin city council is activating a major emergency plan sending teams out to evacuate homes and help clear the floodwaterers. the rain is expected to move farther north to scotland. jon: happening now, the stunning fall for one of wall street's brightest stars up till now. netflix shares plunging by more than a third after the video rental company announced it lost 800,000 customers and expects to lose more. fox business network's dennis kneale with that story. dennis? >> reporter: jon, these days netflix it can't win for losing. back in july this stock traded at $304 a share. wall street couldn get enough of it. today it is down $42 a share. that is 35% plunge since it reported earnings last night. so what went wrong? well the earnings were stellar. they were up 63% versus a third quarter year ago. revenue up almost 50%. subscriber growth up 41%. what are you going to do with that? turns out the problem is what lies ahead. netflix lost 800,000 customers in the quarter and it is going to lose maybe 1 1/2 million online subs in the fourth quarter and maybe 3.1 million dvd subs. that is because the company ticked off its customers. in the summer it set up bold-faced 60% pricing increase to get dvd's and on line movies. it could lose 1 1/2 million online subscribers year-end and maybe 3 million dvd customers. that is 300 million in annual revenue that could be loss. worse, netflix predicts of international expansion it will run a loss next quarters next year. they didn't reveal that surprise until page 9. the trapeze from the old business to the new. from dvd's in this case to online streaming. that dvd's are fading. they still have higher profit margins though than the internet business. 50% versus 8% for that online stuff. that is because the company's quadrupled spending in only three years to get all this online stuff. the company now comes out and says, mea culpa. they said what we misjudged how quickly to move there from that trapeze and they said we compounded the problem with our lack of explanation about the rising costs, expansion of streaming content and dvd, gee, absence that, many perceived us as greedy. well the question is will this come back? some people think it is a huge buy now. very hard to catch a falling knife, jon. be careful here. it will get worse before it ever may get better. jon: i imagine the competitors are looking at it too? >> that's right. they have no exclusive lock. so bingo. a booming industry but sometimes the first guys in reap the benefits and then they pay the price. jon: dennis kneale, thank you. >> reporter: okay, thanks. jenna: it was a horrifying crime that really shocked the entire country. now a jury will decide if the second man convicted in a murder of a woman and her two daughters gets life in prison or is sentenced to death. why his attorney said jurors should spare his life. jon: also, keeping an eye on hurricane rina. janice dean whether this powerful storm could still hit the u.s. mainland. jenna: money ball literally. how the big leaguers are saving the little guys in one major u.s. city. jon: a fox news alert. you might get ready for more controversy involving the human papillomavirus. the u.s. vaccine advisory panel is now recommending routine vaccination of boys ages 11 and 12 with the gardasil vaccine that is supposed to protect against the hpv virus. it is supposed to help stop hpv infections. the authorities believe, these government scientists believe it will protect boys against again tall warts and even some kind of cancers. you might know it was recommended that girls ages 11 and 12 get that vaccine starting five years ago. so far only about a third of the girls in this country who are eligible have chosen to use that vaccine. we'll keep you updated whether the implementation for boys is also adopted. jenna: the jury that convicted joshua komisarjevsky in a brutal triple murder case is deciding whether he will live or die. rick folbaum has more on this. >> reporter: jenna, he will soon find out if he will be going to death row just like his partner in this horrible, horrible case. the two men convicted of breaking into a suburban connecticut home, forcing a woman to withdraw thousands of dollars from her bank account, taking her two daughters hostage and sexually assaulting them. the woman's husband, dr. william petit seen there, beaten and tied up in the family's basement. forced to listen helplessly to the cries upstairs. he broke free, survived and has been in the courtroom throughout every phase of these two trials. right now a jury deliberating whether joshua komisarjevsky will go to prison for life or be sentenced to death for his role in the crimes. his attorney says that he was abused as a child. and that that should be a factor as the jurors decide his punishment. his codefendant, steven hayes, sentenced to die by lethal injection. connecticut by the way only executed one person since 1976 and the state's death row has only 10 inmates. it could soon have one more. we'll keep you posted, jenna. jenna: rick, we'll stay on it. thank you. jon: a fox news weather alert for you now. hurricane rina, strengthening to a category 2 storm. rina's winds are topping 100 miles an hour right now and it is gaining power in the warm waters of the caribbean. is this storm going to hit the u.s.? meteorologist janice dean is tracking rina in the extreme weather center. jd. >> can you believe we're talking about the tropics this late in the season. jon, it is 7th busiest tropical season on record. this is rina. this is strengthening storm. let's zoom, i'm hoping my maps are working. come on. brandon, my producer if you can hear me. i'm hoping he can advance my maps for me. there he is. he is the best. you can see an eye forming right here. that is indicator this storm is strengthening. the last few frames you can see, right there, yeah. so we think this, very well could become a major hurricane, a category in the next several hours. certainly the track, the official track in the national hurricane center makes it a three as we go forward in time. can kuhn, you could be hit by a major hurricane heading into friday. as we head further out in time, we're not really sure where this storm is going to go and the computer models agree with that statement. take a look. again it looks like somebody just took crayons and decided to scribble all over this map. you can see most of them moving into the yucatan peninsula. a couple moving into the yucatan channel. south florida, we still need to monitor this storm. the other big story we are talking about is winter, coming to colorado, denver, with we could see six to 12 inches of snow. now beautiful there right now. yesterday they actually hit a high of 80 degrees. we're going to be in the 50s today. then overnight tomorrow, 19 degrees. and there is your winter weather advisories for the denver area and surrounding regions where again we could get upwards of a foot or more especially in the foothills. so that's the interesting story. and jon scott, i will bring you in here because just a couple days ago we were talking about you as a young boy living in denver, colorado. jon: yes. >> and seeing snow on the ground trick-or-treated. jon: snow on halloween. >> this is not when you were a young boy. this was taken over the weekend where he won third prize, jenna lee costume at halloween party. jon: that is not a costume. you flew with me. i wear that every time i go flying right? >> i don't remember. i was drinking. but thankfully you weren't. where did you get this? jenna: that is good look for you, jon. the scarf, everything. jon: beats my usual vampire outfit. jenna: good detail. >> where did you get that outfit? jon: that is my flying outfit. >> come on. jon: i rented it. great costume supply store in youngers. >> fantastic he won third prize our john any love. we want to see pictures of awe young boy in colorado. jon: i see if i dig those out of the vault. if they took photos back then. jenna: did they have electricity? jon: they didn't but they did have cameras. jenna: good luck, jon. we appreciate that. one of the most powerful weapons in our nuclear arsenal, a bomb, 600 times stronger than the one that flatten hiroshima during world war ii. now big news about the final ones left. what is happening to it today? we're live with that story. illegal aliens sneaking across our border, some of them dangerous. patrol agents are powerless in some spots because of this guy. looks friendly enough. jon: yep. jenna: we're going to talk to a lawmaker that says the antelope is affecting our national security. why? we'll tell you next. jenna: a fox news alert. want to bring you back down to south carolina where rick perry, governor of texas and also potentially the republican presidential candidate sun veiling his economic plan. this is supposed to be his time to ramp up his campaign after a slew of, well, what some are calling lackluster debate performances. key parts of his plan, an optional flat tax for americans and also doubling down a bit on social security. saying yet again we need to fix entitlement programs. if you want to listen in to rick perry go to foxnews.com. we'll monitor what he says and bring you any breaking news as it happens. jon: some brand new developments in the battle against illegal immigration. as a new bill aims to give border patrol agents more powerful tools t would allow them to bypass 36 environmental laws involving millions of acres of federal land along the canadian and mexican borders. right now border patrol agent can't put up fences or surveillance equipment in national parks or forests within 100 miles of border. they can't even use planes or cars to patrol those areas. in one spot border patrol agents were told they could not construct watch towers if there is one endangered antelope in the area. congressman rob bishop, republican from utah, is the chief sponsor of the new bill. what, you see it as common sense legislation, congressman? >> definitely. the border patrol does a great job where they're allowed to work. that is on private public. only on public property we don't allow the border patrol to do their jobs. that is counterintuitive at best. jon: congressman edward mark can i is a liberal democrat from massachusetts. he is on the environment, i'm sorry the national resources committee. he says your plan is shortsighted and just nonsense. your response? >> well, quite frankly we have a problem on public property which is now on the southern border, basically ceded to drug cartels. we have an amissing opportunity for the bad guys to come into this country and we have also the opportunity for terrorists to come into this country because we limit what the border patrol can do. we don't need more boarder patrol agents. we need to give them access to do their routine patrolling. the only place we stop that is on public property. i want to give them the same rights on public property they already have on priority property. jon: you say they are limited n what way? what do you mean? >> it simply means if you come to an area considered wilderness category or endangered species or conservation habitat the border patrol must stop and do anything else on patrol basis on foot. if they're in hot pursuit they might be able to have a decent land manager working with them to continue in some hot pursuit. they're limited to what they can do on foot. they're limited what they can do by transportation. they're limited where they can put tracking devices. only on public property. that once again makes no sense at all. i don't know why we want to tie our hands against bad guys coming into the country on public property when we don't have the same restrictions on the private property. jon: you mentioned the lead-in, the antelope which is center of controversy here. if you want to build a watchtower you can't build it if there are antelope nearby. >> the rural they have to encounter encounter prong horns. have to back up and can't go back 25 miles an hour doing it until the animal voluntarily left the area, which is i'm sorry, a silly rule. jon: even if you're chasing a drug suspect and antelope comes between you and the suspect you have to give way to the antelope? >> actually that is a gray area. if you're in hot pursuit you might be able to do it. however if you have too many bad marks against you by the land manager who protests what the border patrol does you endanger your career. a lot of border patrol will take the safer route which is not helpful to the american public. jon: i mentioned the opposition of congressman markey earlier. what do you think chances are getting this legislation passed? >> hope it is a no-brainer. it is right thing to do. the house already voted on similar language that was much broader and less specific couple of years ago. and it passed overwhelmingly the house. the senate has voice voted the same concepts a couple of times. so once its is on the floor i don't think you can argue against of the logic of what we're trying to do. the reason we have specifically listed this bill basically interior department said if you don't list specifically what can be waived for the border patrol to do their jobs of patrolling we won't accept it. so we listed what has historically been listed when we had to build the fence. those were the same laws that were put, allowed to be suspended for the purpose of building the border fence. jon: congressman rob bishop, republican of utah. thank you. >> thank you. jenna: sort of have home on the range playing the background. jon: where the anim