tv Red Eye FOX News October 15, 2011 12:00am-1:00am PDT
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like a good boy, he was bornad 6:25 p.m., after the show. aaron, congratulations to you and your family and from all of us here on "the five," >> greg: welcome back to "red eye." i'm filling in for grigg gutfield. don't ask what happened to greg. that's not important. he'll be back monday. >> andy levy is off once again. don't ask what happened to him. that's not important. >> fig is in "fox news" anchor patti ann brown. what's coming up tonight? >> thanks you, i get to ombuds the ombudsman who ombuds the ombudsman. tonight on "red eye," be a occupy wall street protester expresses her concern "we'll all look sick and crazy on tv."
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don't worry, lady, no chance of that. air travelers now have to deal with chatdowns in addition to pat-downs. security personnel now grill passengers with questions like, where are you going? how long are you staying in what wine goes best with fish. plus google plus google plus google -- where was i? oh, yeah, a google plus employee wrote a post bragging that he knows more about social networks than anyone else at his company and then he accidentally shared it publicly and then he apologized explaining that he really don't no much about social networks and more. all that coming up and more on "red eye." >> well, that's our show. [ laughter~] >> thanks, patti. >> guess whether happened to me, right? >> let's welcome our guests, shall we. here tonight with attorney, former contestant on the apprentice and three-time olympic silver medalist,.
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he's already sold three-and-a-half million copies in china as well and it's greg repulsive sidekick bill schulz. and sitting next to me is three-type grammy winner chris cotter. hey, pinch, you jumped right in all over that script, didn't you, buddy? you've been reading the prompter again? >> can ip can you just let me do my thing? today rider john writes when the new techniques deployed by the current mlb playoff teams. back in my day, "moneyball" was used to toss a gaiter aide. i remember one match in 'po 529 the saskatchewan cass royals where. as of high school hans hits his whistle and accidentally swallowed when he should have striked.
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local bookie, box more than just the crooked catcher's ears following that toss-up, let me tell you. back to you, boogie-woogie baker boy of company b. >> that's our show. drive safely. thanks for coming. >> you can still see bill's arm. i'm not happy with the camera shot. >> don't ruin the managic. have you been sleeping out in the park? >> if that's a meal, it was delicious and you can learn more about it in our dining section. de cati is great with tomato sauce. >> good night, finch. >> you good night. >> friday's planned cleaning of the mark getting in our stow where is the guys occupy wall street have been living for the past month? has it only been for a month. if it went well, you mean it didn't happen? yeah, the washout grass a wash yacht. new york city had been set to temporarily clear outer the protesters at 7 a.m. this morning at brookfield properties requested it be againsted. but around 40 minutes before
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tidy up time, the city's debut mayor announced that brook feed had changed its mind and now believe it could work out an arrangement with the protesters to keep the park clean, safe and available for public use. in other words, they are caved. why? well, here's mayor bloomberg on a radio show friday. >> my understanding is that brookfield got lots of calls from many elected officials threatening them and saying if you don't stop this we'll make your life more difficult. >> awesome. so hue did the protests celebrate? note not beinnot being fored tod marching to wall street and in at least 15 cases getting arrested. the park didn't get a scrub, some protesters finally got around to washing their clothes
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>> see what we did there, bill? the clothes must have been really dirty. >> i still don't follow. >> we're going orun it again towards the latter part of the snow. >> thank you. >> chris, what do you make of what mayor bloomberg said? do you think he was right? the. >> no, the thing is they're threatening brookfield properties. they would be threatening them if they weren't going to come in there and clean the park. to me you're damned if you do, damned if you don't. wouldn't the politicians say it's your responsibility if you own the parking to in and clean the park. it just seeps like these politicians are just trying to get on the side of the entire movement, right or wrong. >> and by the way, thank you for take be the time out from protesting to join us on tonight's show. >> oh, yeah, i showered too just for you.
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>>did brookfield do the right thing by backing down? >> i don't think so. these people are living in filth. if they would just clean up after themselves. for a month they haven't been and now they're going to continue and they're claiming it as some sort of a big victory that they won. the thing that you keep hearing from everyone is every moment have these french characters that are odd but at some point you have to say, they seem to have a lot of undesirable characters. perhaps it's even de99 being the movement. >> that's a big umbrella group obviously. there's a lot of people in there but you could argue that about whether it's on the right or the left, light? >> there's a lot of crazies. they're getting in fights with cops. they don't clean up after themselves. i'm sure some people are angry about the bailouts and that's why they're there but a lot of them are just looking for a handout. if you go to occupy wall street.org , they say they want a free college education. they weren't a guaranteed living wage. that's ridiculous. >> i would love those things.
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>> don't forget the free weed. >> you should pay for it. >> subject the bottom line that de cati park is privately owned. don't they have a right to clear it out if they want to? >> i just realized the washer knell over and broke because the clothes were filthy. [ laughter~] >> that's hilarious. budbudda boom. >> the park is smell bad because of homeless people, not the protesters. i was hoping the washout would work. i was hoping the protesters were there, it gets all clean and we can tell them to occupy new jersey. >> bill, when was the last time you bathed? >> this morning, thank you very much. and this is a clean shirt and a semi clean tie. i wore it for you and how dare you for sake that. >> could we get a close-up of
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the tie? we have no idea whether the tie is clean or dirty. >> it was once a quilt by his grandmother. >> the volkswagon is missing a seat. >> but as someone who may well understand the protester's mindset better than anyone else hat this table i venture to guess. >> i do and they won. these guys backed down. therapy still there. i think if they were a scoreboard, protesters won. the man, zero and i'm looking at youch when i say that. >> nice, chris. >> i look like a man. >> chris is the man but he's not bearing a tie soap you are a little more so. -- wearing a tie so you. >> after spending the morning at the javed center, i realized that the one thing that this movement is missing is the people of comic-con because i see a lot of people that march but what i don't see is a fat bubblefest. and this thing needs more fat bobofests, also wizards. >> favorite comic, jamie.
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>> you got me from comic-con. >> i'm going superman. >> i like it. >> boring. >> old school. >> star trek, all the star treks. >> they were there en masse. martha, you're a girl, i'm not going oask you. >> i'm thinking. i'm frantically trying to come up with something. >> i would like to change my answer to toby maguire, not spiderman. >> the real adventures of tobey maguire. >> my boys, batman freaks. absolute batman, 4 and 2 years old, they can't get enough of batman. one, i last question on this story because it's fascinating with okay pe wall street. what does it end? >> i don't know. i don't think it's ever going to end. maybe when president obama is not in office and many these peep can goat jobs because we're going to be deregulating. >> people are always going to hate stuff. i saw guy down there with a sign, he encapsulated it
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perfectly, i also hate stuff. >> everybody down there hates something and that's why they're down there. that's why it will never end. everyone will disperse and they'll go home in their villages and neighborhoods and continue to hate stuff. >> i thought i read "i hate bill." >> moving on, shall we from -- no, i'm going onto the next story, thank you. >> from parts to planes. >> can chats prevent attacks here? we do that a lot heater, word play. it's a pat-down of your mind. since august, logan international airport in massachusetts and if only you could seep how much they spelled massachusetts in the prompter. [ laughter~] >> it's never been spelled like that ever before. >> wow! >> they've been testing a new program in which travelers go face-to-face questioning with a tsa official. it's known has chatdown. passengers still have to go through metal detectors and possibly get felt up but now they're also asked a bunch of questions like where why you
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headed. for how long? and what was the purpose of your trip? and who would you rather do michelle pfeiffer. >> it may have seemed like a one-size fits all approach to security. that's into the line by the way that you want to hear in the secondary search and as a former director of security at the airport in tel aviv, "by adding this level of security we create a new situation for the bad guys that is much more difficult to overcome." critics say it's another government way of privacy. do you know who isn't ineffectual? kitty going down a slide >> that's fantastic.
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look at this. >> i'm watching you enjoy that. >> we should just stop the show and just play that over and over again. jamie, do you really care if the tsa chats you up? >> honestly i do. ip travel a lot and i'm kind of sick of all the regulations. i want to get on the plane. i don't think it's going to help. i don't think terrorists are this stupid. i don't think the tsa chat-up is going to be, who are you going to see? just 72 virgins. [ laughter~] >> i don't think they are hear this stupid. no chat-up. >> you don't see any benefit? >> i don't know if they're going to be able to effectively use this. i think if it was psychologist. have you seen the tsa people? a lot 6 their pants don't if i want correctly. >> that's a really good point because they talk about the israeli set up and how this use this personality profiling to make these decision bus you're talking about a much better trained group of individuals over there that do this. >> have you seen the airport in
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tel aviv. they also have submarine guns over their shoulders so that sort of adds another element of near to the would-be terrorists. >> they say we're going to looking for physical clues like an eye twitching or wringing of hands. if they're asking me questions i would be wringing my hands so as to not use them as brun object and punch the guy right in the face. [ laughter~] >> martha, on that serious note... i mean, when peep are flying, are and i remember we talked about there once before and you talked about how nervous a flyer you are. so people walk up to the line. they're nervous already. could that make them seem suspicious? >> absolutely. this is always the case with me. if i think peep are look be at knee a suspicious way, you is that right to kind act a little suspicious but i'm going po take the other side. i have such a fear as you mentioned of flying that it's unreasonable so i can't look at this reasonably and say, oh, mike, my privacy rights or it's into thing. >> to work.
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i will doing anything to not have something like 9/11 happen again. >> you're the open(9) perspective from jamie. >> yes. ordinarily i'm with him but i have such a fear. >> even if you flew on 9/11. class chances that something happened to your plane is very slight. even ifs that day. >> it replays in my head. i'm freaking out. >> because terrorism as opposed to just because of a fear of flying. >> i had no fear of flying before new brunswicklin. >> around the real losers in this whole tsa policies on chats just people trying to get on the plane with drugs? you're the antiman. laugh laugh. >> well, the good news about in a is all the dogs in airports now are only bomb-sniffing dogs and that is great, great thing for people of my ilk. i would also say that chatdown pat-down sounds like an excellent role playing game for bored married couples. i think you and massan should be
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taking notes so that there could be some sexy security pat-downs later on this evening. maybe it will save both your marriages. >> how much chat up with expect before you go to the pat? >> at least a drink, right? >> no chat, no pat. >> it's a pat-free zone. don't even try the pat. >> yours is basically all chat, no pat. is that what it is? yeah. we talked about with the airport and by the way they're also dealing with far fewer flyers on average. we talk about how many flyers are going through airports. >> there's a reason for that. >> ex-hackett lithe. what about profiling, they use that as suspect of their security screening. is there ever likely to happen here? >> you mean like they're chatting with somebody before they pat them down and was the eye twitching or the lip twitching in addition to all of the other things that sort of threw me off on this guy? >> they're also liking for, say, a palestinian.
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they're -- with an eye twitch. >> it almost enables them to profile because they csa agents, jamie's points that aren't really well trained are looking at this person, you know, if it isn't a deterrent, it's the year moving when he's track. >> isn't profiling quite frankly the most efficient way to go about this screening process. >> my wife follow-up last week, we have a baby and she had the baby strapped to her chest and it was asleep and they made her do all this crazy stuff and actually did extra screening with the baby. after some -- >> was the baby carrying a holstered weapon? >> it was wearing what they call a cocaine diaper. [ laughter~] >> they're not looking for that. >> i just love it. i love kids. >> nice. we'll make sure we gotta move on, unfortunately.
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i like this outrageously laughing as i tend to morph into the story. the proposal by brad drake seen here would eliminate the lethal injection method and eliminate putting inmates to death by firing execution. it says the obviously republican state rep 'there shouldn't be anything about a caliber bullet. if it were up to me. we should just throw them off the sunshine skyway bring and be done with it." frankly my dear, i don't give a damn. i'm so tired of many humane to inhumane people. i think actually cary grant said that. i don't know with you but i loved her work. she's fantastic. those nica nora movies. for more let's go to "red eye's" chief correspondent, hiccupping
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at & tie barra. we talked about this before we actually did this part. i said i'm not going to be able to proch pronounce that word but in fact it's the world's largest rodrodent. >> you can see we'll be featuring him every night now. let me ask this. this is a tough issue because obviously despite the fact that, you know, the guy came out with a very strange series of statements about bringing the firing squad into florida. that's a serious, serious problem, right? so let's start off with a serious, serious question. martha, death penalty, yes or no? >> yes in theory, no in practice. >> so no all the way around basically, right? >> look, i would love some guys
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to be killed but i just think of the way it's administered i feel very strongly that we should abolish. death penalty. back to the story, with the firing squad, i think it actually is a lot more humane. with heathing an injections now, nesh highway using a drug that is used to kill animals. we don't know the impact it has on people. i'm going say that i love the death penalty in therapy but our system is imperfect, we make mistakes so i don't think how you could support it. >> you are so conflicted. there are people right now watching this listens to yours and saying i don't know where she stands. >> jeremy, there any way to make this whole death penalty thing funny? >> igarape with all signed of what you just said. >> thank you. it's complicated. >> should we at least give the innates a cocaine diaper beforehand? >> it book a nice gesture. i'm anti-death penalty. i don't want to see an innocent man killed. that's where i stand on it and howf my other question somebody how bad of an aim is this firing
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squad? why not just a firing eye. couldn't just a guy do it. >> because they don't want you to now who shoots the active bullet. >> the fact of the matter is, to your minute, though, it is the fact that it's good in theory but bad from practice because we pat all these people on death row and they sit on death row for years and years and years. it's not the method of the execution, it's the delay of the execution. once we put them on death row, let's gem them through here. assembly line, that's what we do in this country. >> what it cost for to keep somebody on death row each year is millions a dollars. >> maybe a ct you can could have self-checkouts. >> keep them in prison for life and neighbor they're instinct we're not going to kill them. >> we've got the last word on this one. >> i' always been amazed that the far right would be for something that is so expensive.
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they don't like the spending last i heard and so sinful i would say as far as killing another person. after i read my bible, god is against that and i would also add if you were on one of those firing squad and i know you're not supposed to know who did it, you know if the guy's head blew up, you would be ip did that. i got that guy. >> i'm calling the shots. >> some moore guy gets it in the kneecap. no, slow-mo, i not that guy right between the eyes. >> the law make esche we're talking about down in florida, the way that he expressed his views, i would rather just throw him open the sunshine bring. by the way there's 1150 suicide since that bring has been constructed. >> it's not expensive to kim the guy, it's expensive to keep them alive. that's, the expense is. a 45-caliber bullet, a vial of whatever it is now to kill him, that's not expensive. >> yours and with probably very
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typical of what's out there in the jen public and i do this because that sort of signifies the general public. >> they agree that, you know, certain people have given up their rights and should be, you know, opt but this lingering question, are we getting it right every time? >> anyway, if you have a comment on the show, email us. it's "red eye"@"fox news.com" and to leave a voicemail on greg's direct line,. and still to come, the half-time report from patti ann brown. weather
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brown. >> welcome back. let's find out if we've gotten anything wrong so far and to that we go to the notorious p.a.b. >> you know me. [ laughter~] >> it was so obvious. i had to do this. >> on the park protest, mike baker isn't it the bottom line that it's private property. done the owner have the right to remove thes people. if it was a city, a public park,
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they would absolutely have that right. that is privately-owned public space and this company was ordered to put it there on these variances they are. moving on to -- >> you just put me in my place, didn't you? >> no, u.s. just trying to -- >> that was a verbal spanking, baby. >> i wasn't correcting you. i was answering your questions. you didn't say anything wrong, knock at all. >> thank you. >> but mossa did sop digging and you didn't get to say this on camera but you had mentioned it earlier that one of the interesting things here is ma mayor bloomberg had mentioned that this private company that owns the park is getting pressure from wall street types saying, look, you gotta do something, get these protests out of here or we're going to make things difficult for this private company.
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well, mossa founded you that it just so happens that bloomberg's guy ston the board of directors of this private company. >> that's right. very interesting, right? >> yeah. >> so a lot of things could go on behind the scenes? >> exactly. >> getting his honey so maybe pull a little favor for him. >> i thought that was very interesting research that you did. and by the way, fantastic boots. >> oh, thank you. >> i second that. can we get a close-up of the boots? >> all right. >> there they are. [ laughter~] >> over the side boots. you gotta love it. >> the ratings are shooting. this is why our viewers love fall, i think. >> i'm just trying to russia up to what the standards you have happy set, baby. you notorious indeed. >> well, thank you. >> you all love fall because of my tie. it's very clear. i wish you would fall because of you were tie. >> the argueile vests, we love all that. -- you said that the protesters are
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winning because they're still there. it does lead to a question. why don't these people go moment amount night? is there any reason why they can't leave, shower, sleep, come back in the monk in how would their protester be hurt by that? >> they have no home. >> we're become to that then, that they're all homeless. >> perhaps. are you anti-homeless, patti. >> no, i just don't think that's really what's going on here but jamie actually said the same thing. he said that the smelly ones are actually the homeless ones, not the protests. and i can't ombuds that because a make-up artist here who shall remain nameless had to put make-up on a one of these protesters earlier today and she said she still can't get the stench out of the room. it's bad. >> wow! don't you feel pad, these protests smell. yo, i' smelled this whole thing and you neverf never cared.
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>> i don't see 80 smellberry part is necessary. it does seem like they would probably leave it out and there wouldn't be nip part of that. in any case, moving onto the security measures and the chatdowns. mike baker says that, you know, critics say that this is another, you know, privacy issue and in fact that's true. the aclu says it is nobody's business where you're travelling and why and that people have the absolute right to refuse. but mike, isn't it something that you think would make people uncomfortable saying, well, eif i refuse to answer the get. doesn't that automatically put you on the suspicious list. >> yes, it raises concerns and apartment matlic sets up a confrontational tone. much like when you use my full name during the half-time show. mike baker said this. >> ipius want to be clear. do we mark you down at anti-homeless then? [ laughter~] >> no? >> no,. >> everybody should have a home, okay? i'm going to go out on a lymph
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on that one. -- eight on a limb. >> that's me. and jamie, you know, you had said the whole thing about how difficult it is for these tsa screeners and ip would have to agree with that. they have actually say the tsa, they're not just listens to the answers. the obviously the terrorist isn't going a say he's a terrorist but they are looking for behaviorable clues. >> i'm trying to tilt my head like mike baker. second of all -- >> ip put my head like mike jackson earlier. >> i think it looks very professal. >> do we think that these tsa screeners are trained in body language? >> no, i'm serious. [ laughter~] >> there's a story of a lovely lady... >> i fly so much and honestly there's great t st. a agents. there's intelligent and there's the other side that i've seen
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too many times. i don't know what kind of extra training we've given these guys. they're makes mistakes all the time. my baby frisked for wearing a heroin onesy. >> mossa, mike baker mentioned the fact that, you know, and in israel, they do this and that there is this profiling element that, you know, the civil liberties folks are very opposed to. in the united states. but do you think that that's more of the direction, more of an efficient direction to be heading in rather than this kind of thing? >> i mean i think it works really well and in israel i think they're highly trained. i think it's a much smaller airport, i can you have a lot less traffic going through. it would be ideal if we could, you know, have something like that here. like you said, the tsa people that i've come across cannot
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feel impressed. >> chris, the point that was made about the what they're going to be reading, one of the things the tsa said was you were looking for cues such as hostility. by the time you've been the cavity search and then the shutdown, aren't you maybe a little bit hostile? >> unless it's a one-size-fits-all approach. [ laughter~] >> all right. women i guess that's it. i guess we're done. all right. great job, guys. i don't think anybody did actually anything wrong. oh, i did want to say, mike baker that it was clark gable. frankly, my dear, i don't give a damn all though the politician did allude to humphrey boeingart. >> the you didn't think anybody did anything wrong, correct?
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>> so you were aerosaying your highway for cocaine diapers? >> unreal. unreal. okay. i don't know how we're going to sort that out. thank you very much, very, very much coming out program homeless and of course we'll be back to insult all the other tsa employees we haven't insulted. coming up, what the heck is san francisco up to next. my money is on some socially conservative mood meant bte to l more values into an already heavily burdened citizenry.
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the crime fighter thought that clubgoers were part of it. >> don't touch me! >> clearly his super power is deflecting attacks from drunk chicks. which when you think about it is a really good super power. >> i wish i had that, yeah. >> i think right now we all want to change our mind about who's our favorite super hero? >> what superhero runs from a woman whirring a baton. prosecutors have declined to charge jones with anything but he remains under investigation. and for what i have no idea.
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so let's just discuss this, shall we, in tonight's always fun lightning round. >> that was smooth, wasn't it? mossa, are they letting them off early here? >> i think he had good intentions but he did consult people for no particular reason so he needs to be a careful about in a in the future. he can fet in trouble. >> good answer. hero or idiot and by in a i mean bill. >> and by both, i meanby as well. i do at this point twice. i admire him to what he's doing, moss is correct. if you break the law, you clearly needs to face the consequences. i'm sure it won't be too bad. jamie, he is a superhero, right? but i think we all realize that there's a chance he might have the crap kicked out of hem. what do you think? >> this is the opposite of a plain clothes cop. wouldn't that be easier? i saylet this guy go, arrest a
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dirty super hero who's trying to take pictures of my kid at time square. >> bill, you are constantly dressing up in costume but you don't actually crime and why is that? >> i just have a costume for pat-downs with my lovely wife. i saved our marriage. i don't think i can top chris' comment on this. chris goes, i admire him forewhat he's doing. your got your talking points today and you load up the video and you're looking at that guy walking away from a girl. i know what he's doing. and that's something that i would inspire to be with the heap ending doesn't work out. >> all right. [ laughter~] >> lightning round. bill, what about the words lightning round don't you get? [ laughter~] >> kudos to you. come on. on friday the president shared a link to an item.
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we actual actually be talking about phoenix jones for the rest of the evening. the president shared a link to an item for sale on this 2012 website. we are not make third quarter up. need to keep your sodas cold, vps got you covered hit rally. the product he was referring to, a joe biden accusey with the slogan, cheers, chant." >> chris, whether do you make of this? >> he's clearing going after the swing states in the midwest reefing to them as soda but because it's brilliant. not only does he get the money originally buying the stuff but they're carrying it around with them as they get slashed into tailgated to keep their beers cold. i love it. it's great to see. totally thumbs up on that. >> nice. martha, is it proper for the president to actually be hawking items? >> is it problem? i don't know if it's proper but
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i think it's a really good idea. i really like joe biden. he looks choo-choo trains. he's just a character. he makes big mistakes that he's said in the past. my favorite youtube venues. >> you're -- jamie, you collect my vice presidential koozies. >> martin van bureen, i just grab it off amazon. >> i don't have the bison doozy but i think they will sell more than rick per-in's hats with the name of his ranch on them. >> brill, whether could you make the doozy? >> i think that the office of vice presidency has never been awesomer and they've got hen into the game. first of all we have a bob doozy. now what better way to celebrate this celtics legend by having him make the beer all the more cold and now we've also got a
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fluesy, doozy. can we take a look at that? there we go even we also have a boozey accusey which is actually the same one. and finally we are a fox newsy coady. shepherd, i never wanted to have a drink with your boys, sir. courage. >> we're giving all the scourgee accuseys. don't forget to look for the ticket. psa, i'm the biker and meet baker. i'm out of here then. powerplay
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>> now bill, since it would be really odd, yes, to ask myself a variety of questions related to this. what we're going to do is create a situation whereby you ask the questions, i ponder and then ip respond and then you ask another question. >> gotcha. i actually disagree. i maintain you are an enough of a narcissist to indeed ask yourself a question, ponder and answer. but i will fire away nonetheless. now first off, what is an uganda? i believe we have a map. >> if we could bring that up. this would be very helpful for all the viewers out there. there my friend is an uganda. it's a very important country and they've got a really serious very difficult problem right now which we are currently intervening in. in your personal opinion, should we be doing this? >> frank hi, yes. we are going after a group the
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resistance army that's been around for some 25 years and during the course of that period of time, they have abducted and for a variety of horrible reasons probably about 66,000 kids, children, some they bring in to their army, and make then fight on their behalf. others they turn into slaves. others are just horribly abusedded. they've displaced 2 million people. the head of this, joseph koney is an incredibly crazed psychotic individual. help claims the lords resistance army is fighting to reinforce the ten commandments. it's a good move that we go in there and assist the various armies in the african union to do this. >> i'm impressed even i'm learning. what exactly does limited u.s. assistance mean as far as this venture we're going to is concerned. >> it means that we're only giving half a dozen rounds of ammunition to each much our
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fellas going over there. >> really? >> no, i'm kidding. no, limited assistance means that we're going in essentially as advisors. we're going to work with the -- i mean this lords resistance armies affects several countries in there. they've turned this into a variety of countries so we're going in there to gork with the various military and intelligence services to proper ride is, you know, some assistance, some training, some guidance and intel support to try to track down the leaders of this group and try to put this thindown. >> obviously we're not going to stand by and let that happen. we were not some u.n. forces. but it is limited and it is an important thing to do. i do agree with the concept. >> do you know what i agree with? >> what's that. >> you existing. you did a great job. >> how creeped eight am i? we'll close things out with the post game wrap-up from patti ann
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