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Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20151104:16:56:00

greats to have anti-bodies in their blood for specific diseases. if we want to know where diseases come from or ability to fight off flu or other diseases looking at dna of sharks is great place. reporter: he despite immense size they post no threats to humans allowing researchers to get up crows and personal as i'm about to do. studying the genome could help protect the human species. >> people love them because they're beautiful animals. they're extremely mysterious. we know so little about ecology of whale sharks in the wild. reporter: at only aquarium with whale sharks researchers and visitors have the unique opportunity to swim among the giant fish. that was amazing. i was amazing how close they get to you. they were not afraid of you. difference in the presence of people. >> essentially the same when you see them in the natural setting out in the ocean, they're largest fish in the world. they don't have a lot of natural predators. we represent very little threat to them at all.

Reporter , Place , Diseases , Blood , Sharks , Dna , Flu , Greats , Ability , Anti-bodies , People , Humans

Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20151016:14:54:00

elephants can change the way we treat childhood cancers. the large land animals rarely get the disease and scientist think their genes are warding that off and a study is underway to see how they can use that in humans. ringling brothers is playing a big part of this. phil keeting is live. >> reporter: the researchers wanted to study the genome of the elephants and these guys stepped up the spotlight. these asian elephants in

Way , Elephants , Childhood-cancers , Genes , Land-animals , Warding , Disease , Study , Scientist , Part , Humans , Phil-keeting

Erin Burnett OutFront-20150930-01:30:00

he had good cardiac bypass, look how much slimmer he is right now than he was in the white house. >> yeah, i'm less chunky than i was when i'm in the white house. >> i haven't picked up your diet. but i want to. preventive medicine, is what we discussed. this next ten years will be the most exciting in the history of biology and medicine. because what we did ten years ago that cost my team $100 million for that first map, today, we can make it for roughly $150,000. that is a big change, his genome is obviously unique, but all of ours are. it's this this 3% difference. we got an honorary degree together a few years ago. he was the speaker. he said he learned from me that he was 4% neanderthal, and it

White-house , Slimmer , Cardiac-bypass , Preventive-medicine , Exciting , Haven-t , Diet , History-of-biology , Ten , Genome , Change , Team

CNN Tonight With Don Lemon-20150930-02:17:00

i would rather see bill clinton talking about the genome than donald trump calling people names. >> that was at the clint global initiative today by the way. >> he was brilliant and so was erin burnett. >> thank you. >> you're coming back? >> we're coming back. the interview's not over. >> this interview is over. i'm going to sit down with donald trump one-on-one right here tomorrow night. i want everybody to stick around. when we come right back, the candidate breathing donald trump's neck, ben carson, whose anti-muslim comments don't seem to have hurt him. are supporters putting their money where their mouths are? >> i 100% refuse to loick the boots of billionaires or millionaires or get into bed with special interest groups. [ applause ] the microsoft cloud gives our team the power

Donald-trump , People , Bill-clinton , Way , Erin-burnett , Names , Calling , Genome , Clint-global-initiative , Everybody , Interview , Back

Erin Burnett OutFront-20150930-01:42:00

can make the decision about whether to have an abortion or not. it's inevitable we'll go in this direction. i'm hoping we'll wait until we get more knowledge and wisdom to do it a little bit more intelligently. >> let's look at something i think will happen a little sooner. you have a lot of -- because of the practice now of studying people with cancer and trying to stop people from dying premat e prematurely even if the cancer is rapidly growing, by analyzing the genome, the tumor, we know that we have 10,000 cancer cells that the body destroys. but there are a lot of researchers who believe we should basically be able to kill all of these tumors the way our body disposes of all the others by in essence attacking them with killer cells.

Something , Knowledge , Decision , Direction , Abortion , Little , Wisdom , People , Lot , Cancer , Practice , Premat-e

Erin Burnett OutFront-20150929-23:32:00

example. being the first one in history to have his genome sequenced, i found out early on i had a high risk for melanoma. i'm in the 90 percentile. surfing and being in the sun, i'm probably in the 100%. i had a small melanoma on my back and removed it. had i ignored it even six months, we might not have that conversation today. knowledge about yourself and what is unique to you gives each of us personal power, potentially, over our future. that's key. >> so many incredible things it can do. president clinton, the pope we were talking about the pope earlier when he was here in congress he talked about the golden rule. one of the things he said was the golden rule reminds us of our responsibility to protect and defend human lived a every

One-of-us , History , Genome , Melanoma , Risk , Example , One , Percentile , Surfing , The-sun , 100 , 90

Erin Burnett OutFront-20150929-23:30:00

right now. i haven't picked up your diet yet. i need to. preventive medicine is the future. it's going to be based on what we announced together 15 years ago. this next ten years is going to be the most exciting in the history of biology and medicine because what we did ten years ago that, cost my team $100 million for that first map. today we can sequence a human genome for roughly $1,000. that is a big change. his genome is unique, but all of ours are. there is this 3% difference. we got an honorary degree together a few years back. he was the speaker. he said he learned from me that he was 4% neanderthal and that explained all the problems he had in the white house.

Haven-t , Medicine , Diet , 15 , History , Human-genome , Team , Exciting , Biology , Map , 100-million , Ten

Erin Burnett OutFront-20150929-23:43:00

practical questions to be resolve resolved, and matching yourer in landscape to our outer reality will be a different kettle of fish 20 years from now than it is today, but that's always been part of the burden and the joy of being human, trying to decide what is the right thing to do in complicated circumstances. we shouldn't make it the enemy. this is going to be way good. i mean it's going to be really, really good. >> if you have cancer, there is nothing more important you can know than the genetic code of yourself and your tumor, knowing a good oncologist is important, as well. only about 3% of cancer patients in the u.s. have this information right now. >> so you have ten years of cgi. health has been a big part of it. vaccines. i was with you in africa once

Questions , Reality , Yourer , Landscape , Fish , Kettle , 20 , Thing , Part , Being-human , Joy , Circumstances

Erin Burnett OutFront-20150929-23:42:00

do it a little bit more intelligently. >> and something i think will happen a little sooner. you have a lot of -- because of the practice now of studying people with cancer and trying to stop people from dying prematurely even if the cancer is addressed in later stages or rapidly growing by analyzing the genome, the tumor, we know every one of us has about 10,000 cancerous cells every day that our bodies just destroy. there are a lot of genome researchers who believe that we should basically be able to kill all these tumors the way our body disposes of others by attacking them with killer cells. so on balance, this stuff is going to be way good for us. at the margins, there will be continuing moral, ethical,

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Erin Burnett OutFront-20150929-23:31:00

>> it is true, you know. every human on earth whose ancestors do not come 100% from subsahara africa have a genome 4% neanderthal. hillary wasn't surprised. they were astonished to find out they were part neanderthal, too. >> they are positive traits which is why they lasted. they were part of your success in the white house. >> they were bigger and stronger than we were. >> would you want to know? when you get there and you can sequence the gene and you know all kinds of things, personality traits, you know whether you are going to get alzheimer's, you know things like that. the question is, would you want to know? >> knowledge is power. i can give you a very personal

Genome , Human , Ancestors , Earth , Sub-sahara-africa , 100 , Part , Neanderthal , Hillary-wasn-t , 4 , Traits , White-house