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tv   The Five  FOX News  July 19, 2013 11:00pm-12:01am PDT

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we will keep you poeted. thanks for joining us for the special edition of "on the record." good night. this is a fox news alert. this afternoon the president of the united states once again put himself and his office in the middle of the trayvon martin controversy and the heated race debate. listen. >> when trayvon martin was first shot, i said that this could have been my son. another way of saying that is trayvon martin could have been me 35 years ago. and when you think about why in the african-american community at least there's a lot of pain around what happened here, i think it's important to
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recognize that the african-american community is looking at this issue through a set of experiences and a history that doesn't go away. there are very few african-american men in this country who haven't had the experience of being followed when they were shopping in a department store. that includes me. >> and then the president speculated about what would have happened if trayvon were white. >> if a white male teen was involved in the same kind of scenario that from top to bottom both the outcome and the aftermath might have been different. >> so this happened around 1:30 this afternoon. no one saw it coming. no one was briefed. he literally walked in on a jay carney press conference. there's a lot here. where do you want to start? >> let's start with the fact
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that he's the president of the united states. he shouldn't have commented on this case to begin with. that was improper. it could have an effect on the outcome, on the jury selection, the whole process. and now he's gone ahead and done it again repeating talking points from a lot of activists in the community that are displeased with the outcome and really looking for essentially a public crucifixion of george zimmerman to make their point. that is not the way to move forward in this country and improve race relations. >> i was trayvon? 35 years ago that could have been me. before it was i have a son who may have looked like trayvon. now it could have been me. >> clearly president obama should be impeached. today was supposed to be a zimmerman-free friday. the a-block was going to be 15 minutes of ducklings snoring. cut all the tape. and now we have this -- i love the way the media reacted. all of a sudden there was a free rolling stone concert in the park. it didn't matter what songs were playing, it's just that he was there and talking about it. i disagree with you, kimberly.
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i would like to think that we -- that the president has -- i wish he didn't have to address this stuff. >> with the comments he made? >> unfortunately he has to. because this thing has been stagnating and festering forever. and i for one i am out of opinions. i have no opinions. i have opinion depletion. for the last month i've had opinion diarrhea. i am opinion drained. >> take some medication. we need opinion viagra. >> i do. >> hang in there. >> opinion could last four hours, eric. >> okay. >> if it doesn't go away, toif go to the opinion hospital. >> consult your physician. >> call dr. seagal. >> paging dr. seagal. >> i think first of all the first sound bite was exactly right. he made exactly the right points. i'm not black and i'm not in an african-american community, but i spent a lot of time around it during my life, and the fact that he is relating to the american people exactly right. why people are reacting that way. and now his point about it could
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have been him. >> yeah, what about that? >> i don't know. maybe i wouldn't have said that, but i think that the idea that somehow the african-american community is not upset about this. and the only reason they're doing this is because of al sharpton is ridiculous. >> let's talk about this why he did it, dana. i'm trying to figure out, greg thinks he needs to address it, i'm trying to figure out why did he have to go back there? the outcome may have been different if trayvon were just white. >> incredible. >> i'm not good at discerning why he said certain things. i'll tell you why i think he said that is tomorrow is saturday, they're planning to have the big protests around the country, al sharpton and notching that up all week. earlier this week, eric holder, the attorney general, said at the naacp meeting, we will take a look at this from the federal level. then you had trayvon martin's parents give very compelling interviews saying we want the federal government to look at this and dot the is and cross the ts. i think that what president obama was doing today and
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followed up by the naacp statement is they're trying to say, all right, there's not going to be a federal case. and we're going to have to move on. >> because they have no case. >> and they're going to try to do the stand your ground law which i think will be a real flop. >> i'm glad you brought that up. take a listen, president obama spun the debate. he turned the debate from what this really was, a self-defense trial, into this stand your ground thing that frankly al sharptons and jesse jacksons who want to bring up for some reason, we'll look at numbers in a minute, but -- what are you doing? you're like sleeping. >> i'm not sleeping, i'm just shocked. >> he's heavy breathing. >> here's some shocking tape. listen. >> for those who resist that idea that we should think about something like these stand your ground laws, i just ask people to consider if trayvon martin was of age and armed, could he have stood his ground on that
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sidewalk? and do we actually think that he would have been justified in shooting mr. zimmerman who had followed him in a car, because he felt threatened. >> kimberly, george zimmerman was acquitted of murder under self-defense. what is president obama bringing stand your ground into the debate court at all? >> this is the problem, okay? because there's so much misinformation. you have people talking about something that they really don't understand. they don't understand the law. they don't understand in fact what was applicable in this case. stand your ground law was not used in the george zimmerman case. >> but why is president obama on friday at 1:30 bring up stand your ground? >> yeah, why is he talking about it? this case has nothing to do with stand your ground law. he's looping in that argument and confusing the public and more irresponsible behavior. look at the holder justice department getting involved, setting up a tip line, confiscating george zimmerman --
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nothing's going to be enough until they get the blood of george zimmerman. >> i'll tell you why he did it, he did it because he's the most devicive -- >> oh, give me a break. >> bob, why else did you bring up stand your ground? >> because he's a black man which we can't relate to. if it wasn't for the stand your ground law, couldn't zimmerman have done what he did? >> yes. how many times do we have to do this, bob? it's like ground hog day. i keep telling you it was self-defense. when you're getting your butt whooped, your head bashed into the ground, you have a forensic pathologist testifying about the injuries that could be fatal if it continues, you're allowed to protect yourself. >> okay, we talked zimmerman to death -- >> i think what he's trying to do is move it on beyond zimmerman. >> i think he's exactly right. they're not going to run a case against him. >> i think he's stirring the pot. >> the one thing about if things would have been different if trayvon was white, you can say that about a lot of black victims, black on black violence as well.
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that point is always going to be relevant. focus on some of the positive things that bob was talking about is that he did mention something that is strikingly different from the sharptons of the world. he says it's getting better. >> i like that. >> which flies in the face of race baiting. and that is a positive thing. the next step for him is to start talking to people other than al sharpton. he could have people like shelby steel or thomas come visit the white house and i think that would be a positive thing. he also talked about -- you got to be fair to him, he talked about black males and aggression and the negative reinforcement in black culture that leads to that. he did connect it to the context of poverty which i sometimes have an issue with because there are a lot of poor people who don't commit crimes, but give him credit or props as we all like to use here, that he's actually starting to address this stuff. maybe this is the beginning of a conversation. >> but why -- >> i thought it was out of comments. >> out of conversation about all the african-americans who were just killed in chicago or in detroit or by urban --
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>> no, he's focusing in on george zimmerman because his race is displeased with the outcome. >> i'm just saying i'm stressing one positive element of his speech. give him something for god sake. >> i agree with you on that aspect. >> allow me black on black crime according to the fbi in 2011 90.7% of black victims of homicide were committed by blacks. >> exactly. he mentioned it too. he brought up black males and aggression. what more do you want? >> he said if trayvon were white, the outcome would have been completely different. >> and i said that that was irrelevant. >> fair enough, greg pointed something very important out. the president ended the speech -- for me he divided and tried to bring people back together in the end. take a listen. >> roll. >> things are getting better. successive generation seems to be making progress in changing attitudes when it comes to race. doesn't mean we're in a
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post-racial society. doesn't mean that racism is eliminated. those of us in authority should be doing everything we can to encourage the better angels of our nature as opposed to using these episodes to heighten divisions. >> dana, you want to comment? >> seriously. >> it looked like he tried to leave on a positive tone. >> right. because i think, again, he's trying to signal -- and i think the naacp in the statement they just released underscores that there will not be a federal case brought. that maybe they will be able to try to do something on stand your ground in some of these states and see if they can make -- get a foothold there. he does have a very calming tone to some people. other people it makes -- drives them crazy. for a lot of people that would turn to the president and say help us get through this, what should we be thinking about tomorrow if we're going to these protests and i think he gave them something to hold onto for tomorrow. >> this is a very good point. did he do this because he
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knew -- >> no, i think it was more of that but listen, this is the first black president. i think he's trying to explain to people who are not black why it is that black men feel the way they feel. because they are every one -- >> hard for me to believe, bob, that hispanics wouldn't feel the same way. and george zimmerman being half hispanic, i would imagine that he probably was followed in a store too or looked at differently. >> he may well have been. >> that's why it's hard for me to understand when you're in a position like he is, everybody has to be very disciplined if you're going to comment on that, then why wouldn't you comment about the young mother whose child was killed right in front of her by the two black teenagers? should she have had a gun to protect herself? why didn't they talk about that one? >> they should have. >> i got to follow -- >> because you shoplift, bob. >> can i ask you this? if trayvon martin were white? number one, would the president comment on it and number two, would the media care? >> i won't answer that pop quiz. the media wouldn't care. >> you could argue that
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president obama has more in common with zimmerman because they both have one white parent. >> i thought you were going to say because they both smoked pot when they were -- >> i don't know. but here's an interesting conflict that comes out of his speech. he says we're a better culture, that we're less prejudices. and he's right about kids these days rarely talk about race, but you still have this horrible epidemic of black-on-black crime that's going on. so if there's no racism or racism is going away yet you still have this horrible thing going on, then what's going on? why is this epidemic -- >> it's drug wars. >> so what do you do about that? why are they scared to address the drug war? >> i agree with that. but in chicago you have the bloods and krips fighting over territories to sell drugs. >> blood in, blood out, that's one of the former -- former gang prosecutor in compton in los angeles. i've seen it. i've seen the bloodshed. my point is be noble. rise above this. don't try and stir the pot. violence should not follow violence. and that's what i think as a
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president he should leadoff with. the point isn't just -- >> stir the pot on? >> my point is i want to hear a strong statement about let's get past this, let's make sure that we don't have people protest. i don't think he was strong on it. he seemed very uncomfortable to me. >> you think that speech today put a positive spin on race relations in america now? >> i think it absolutely did. absolutely. i compare that to al sharpton. >> i'm going to say he made it worse. >> i think he staunched the bleeding and that this as i said precincted i think by tuesday there will be other news. and this one will probably not be heard from again. can i say something about the white house press corps? >> yeah. >> i cannot remember a time when in the press briefing room the principal who came in, whoever it was, did not take at least two questions from the press. i don't understand why the white house press corps has allowed this to happen over and over again. i would have liked to have heard him answer a couple of questions
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that were from journalists in the room. i just wish they would -- >> i'm curious, why don't they do that? >> it's probably why they were all tweeting and e-mailing each other about what a major amazing significant moment it was that president obama was making at 2:00 p.m. on a friday because he stopped in briefing, didn't even take questions. i think president obama is not served well by not taking more questions. i think that he probably could have -- because he was so halting in his comments that -- as kimberly said it felt a little uncomfortable to listen to, you're waiting for him. but if he is provoked and he answers a question, he could have hit it out of the park. >> could have. that's what i'm saying. >> i couldn't agree more about that. he should have taken some questions. the questions would have been aggressive and i think he could have answered them fine. >> not even aggressive, just good questions. >> yeah, leadership, show us you're the leader. >> that was leadership. if you're missing that -- >> jou just said to me you thought he should have answered some questions. >> i did. >> afraid of answering the american people. >> we got to go. i got to be leadership right
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here. up next, msnbc host, chris matthews, delivers an apology on behalf of all white people for racism in america and some surprising comments on the zimmerman verdict from bill cosby, don't go away.
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the cramps. okay. on msnbc, a cable access network for sociology majors, chris matthews apologizes on behalf of all white people for the racism experienced by blacks in america. behold beholders. >> this conversation gentlemen privately and on television, a lot of people out there, i'll just tell you one thing and i'm speaking now for all white people especially who have tried to change the last 50 or 60 years and a lot of them have really tried to change. and i'm sorry for this stuff.
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>> i think he meant white-haired people. on behalf of loud talk show hosts everywhere, i apologize for that apology. now, i don't doubt his sincerity, i think he really does mean well. but do you think his guests really wanted an apology? short answer, no, longer answer, no, no, no, no. see, all white liberal guilt does is create symbolic inaction to alleviate guilt of the white liberal, or worse, creating real action that hurts. every big handout is born from the destructive selfishness of a white person. they treat the community like one giant homeless man, maybe if i throw him spare change i'll feel better abo myself. white libs cannot bare to talk about the absence of dads, self-reliance or black-on-black crime because it makes them look mean. instead here's money, money only masks the misery. come with a warning sticker, be ware this person will ruin you. maybe why the left have a hard time looking black conservatives in the eye without muttering
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something about a resemblance to the black man's uncle tom, because black cons see right through them and they don't want your apologies. they just want you to stop helping them. they see apoll gists for what they are, a truly sorry group of people. bob. >> yes. >> should chris matthews have apologized for all of our pasts? >> i don't know where, chris -- i mean, if he had said i apologize, but on behalf of all whites, where does he get the standing to do that, one. and, two, i'm a white liberal and i've said on this show and i'll say it again, we've passed a lot of legislation we thought would be helpful, turned out to breed three generations of dependent people. we thought we were doing the right thing and we weren't. and i think that that led to a lot of the problems in the black community. and i think we need to get something done about it. instead, there are some people who just refuse to deal with the poverty programs and the way we put them together in the '60s. we made a mistake. our hearts were in the right
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place, but we made a mistake. >> i love bob. >> can you expand on what you're talking about? >> yeah. i can tell you welfare for children of -- there's a program that the more children you get, the more money you get. and the fathers have no -- these guys -- >> no accountability. >> the other thing was we built these god-awful tall buildings. and they became crime infested, projects. i mean, we put projects every place. >> so if a welfare program is bad and not helpful, aren't bigger and more welfare programs worse and less helpful? >> i don't want to get into that. i want to get into things we did causing a lot of these things to happen. i'm saying it bred three generations of dependent blacks. and we need to change that. >> isn't the accessibility of food stamps that used to be for real people in poverty and now it's just about anyone that says they'd like to have more? the ease of redistribution, the ease of welfare --
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>> more white people get food stamps than blacks. >> isn't that dependent society we're building a dependent society. >> you can say that about every white person who gets food stamps, every hispanic. >> well, food stamps are color blind, bob. >> that's right. there were programs directly directed at the black community. >> he's coming around, folks. >> yeah. >> listen, i'm trying to be honest here about some of the things that i recognize. >> we appreciate it. >> that's why bob's awesome. kimberly, what are your thoughts? >> i thought we had a breakthrough moment here. i can feel it. look, i don't know what chris matthews is doing except i feel like that whole network, they're just chasing an audience or something. it's some kind of like big appeasement puddle they're making over there to try and get people to step into it. >> appeasement puddle. >> come here, come with us, we have a tent for you. i don't want to be in that sweaty tent. it's very bizarre the comments that are made, doesn't make any sense. it's sort of sad at this point. >> dana, what are your thoughts
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on this? >> well -- >> appeasement puddle. >> aapologize for everything at all times for everything. that's kind of in my nature. i don't think chris matthews speaks for most white-haired people even. in fourth and fifth grade when i lived in denver, denver was one of the first cities to start the integrated school system and try to do it through bussing. so in the morning instead of walking three blocks to a school right near me, i had to be bussed 18 miles into school. i was one of only four white kids in the whole school that was in fourth and fifth grade to the point where i was, you know, i was teased, i was bullied. and i'm actually embarrassed to say that because i think of what i've gone through and the privileges i've had in my life are -- it makes that experience pail in comparison. i understand that i do think what president obama said about having been a lot of progress, if i just look at my niece, she never had a negative thought in her head about race and about gay people as a matter of fact. i mean, there has been a lot of
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progress. >> your niece was your dog you're talking about? >> there's been studies now done with kids who are robust. and in fact it was a negative. it did not help. it did not lift people up in their grade point average or a lot of other things. what it did was it was a forced way to force integration which got a lot of people angry. i don't know if you remember, you may be too young, but south boston went crazy when this happened. and it was unnecessary. what would have been helpful is to get better teachers and better schools. >> i agree. >> wow, what happened to you? started speaking swedish overnight. it's like you hit your head -- >> wait until the next block. >> can you please allow me -- will you please allow me -- what i said about this at the beginning which i think there's a lot of programs that are very good, like headstart, there are a lot of them that did breed dependency and i think we need to deal with it. i'm not leaving my positions here. i'm trying to move this conversation along. >> good for you.
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>> wait until the next block when we talk about the unions. >> yeah, this is going to be great. this is all going to go to h-e double toothpicks. >> hockey sticks. >> whatever. detroit goes bust. you're going to love this, bob. becoming the largest city ever to file for bankruptcy. will the white house step in and bail it out? should it?
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bob, that's me. the city of detroit was once a symbol of america's industrial might, building cars that put the world on wheels and creating millions of jobs as a result. but yesterday it became the largest city ever to file for bankruptcy despite a pledge by the president that he would never let it happen. >> i refuse to walk away from those workers. i bet on those workers. i refuse to walk away from those jobs. i understood that americans can compete. i wasn't about to let detroit go bankrupt. >> well, that was before the election, but times may have changed because here's the vice president today. >> can we help detroit? the question is we don't know at this point. >> that'd be the answer. >> it's one thing when i dance, but when greg does, it's bad. having a moment in private please. >> so, detroit, in the '50s and
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'60s the crown jewel of american manufacturing. and there was one event, there's one cancer that started that spread. and it materialized and it ended up killing detroit yesterday. it was the 350,000 gm workers that walked off the job. they walked off for 67 days. they got their wages increased by 30%, but they realized their might, their muscle. so the uaw basically started it right there. it's been a 40-year decline, ended up with a bankruptcy yesterday. the population of detroit's crashing and burning. but we can do something, we can fix it. we can make detroit a symbol of how not to run a government, how not to run a city. >> union lover ricky bobby, what do you say? >> first of all, you are sitting in a city here we bailed out. you remember jerry ford got beat in the presidency because he said new york drop dead, well, the government came in and bailed them out. we absolutely should bailout detroit. first of all, they had every right in the world to go on strike. that's the whole idea. and you try to get the best deal you can get.
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the other thing is what happened is the manufacturers all went down to the south where all this -- i don't want to say it. >> be careful. >> i don't want to say it. where labor was very cheap and cars were not built nearly as well. >> are they bankrupt? >> are they bankrupt? >> the cities they moved to, are they bankrupt? >> at $7.40 an hour, no. >> do you think detroit would rather have jobs back? >> not at the wages they're paying them in the south. >> isn't it the case, eric, that automotive industry is actually doing fairly well. >> right. >> it's the city itself that is falling apart under the weight of all the other obligations that it has. and part of that role is there's so many properties that have been abandoned. and the city got too big. >> yes. >> i think maybe one of the things you do is geographically then shrink the city, do some sort of new kind of a homestead act type of thing and require people to clean up those properties and get them back -- >> i think because of the strike by the united auto workers
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caused all of this is just ridiculous. >> 100% right. detroit population -- detroit population grew to 2 million people in 1960. and then when the unions did this little game they played, the auto industry left because it was too expensive to do business there. and the city and infrastructure for 2 million people that slunk down to 700,000. i'm sorry. >> greg. >> i'll say what the problem is and i'll tell you what the solution. in the 2012 election, 98% voted for obama, 2% for romney and it wasn't even that close. i have no sympathy for a city dying from liberal rule who keeps voting in liberals. it's like a hemophiliac who takes up fencing. >> that was good. >> here's the solution, solution to the immigration problem, hand detroit over to the 11 million new immigrants. give it to them. say create businesses, build stores because there's no great stores there. everybody's buying their food from local marts. churches, everything. let them have a stab at saving a bad place. i call it the accelerated
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citizenship plan. if you make detroit a success, you're an american citizen. put trump in charge or jewrudy giuliani. new immigrants would die to do this. give them a project. >> you would need more than detroit. >> yeah. >> 11 or 15 million. >> that's not exactly -- >> your great capitalist took the jobs took south took half the wages. your unions put -- >> not only that. why people don't want to live there because the schools are terrible and the crime is high. >> crime is high. >> we need to bail it out. it's a very important city. >> bail it out? really? >> we bailed out new york. >> you got to let something bottom out. every time you bail it out you create a new bottom. it's like the endless bottom. that's your nickname. >> now your real name is i'm the endless bottom. [ laughter ] >> i apologize.
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i swore i never would. >> that didn't even come from bob. >> all right. coming up, coming up, coming up, a massachusetts police photographer suspended after releasing photos of boston's dzhokhar tsarnaev emerging bloody. not the glamorous snapshot "rolling stone" put on its cover. should the treooper be in trouble? that debate when we come back.
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okay. the controversial "rolling stone" issue with boston bombing suspect dzhokhar tsarnaev hit newsstands today. and one officer has had enough. sergeant sean murphy a 22-year
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veteran of the massachusetts state police. yesterday he released a series of pictures from that night saying he is not somebody who is fluffed and buffed for the cover of rolling stone. now, murphy has been suspended indefinitely for leaking the pictures and will face a more formal review next week. but i say here-here. a guy knows the difference between right and wrong. i understand why the u.s. attorney and the mayor had to say what he did was wrong, he broke the law, he's going to have to be off of work for a day. but then i think he should get a raise when he comes back on monday. hopefully he'll come back, what do you think? >> they'll give him a slap on the wrist because everybody pretty much agrees with the sentiment. he broke the policy, so couple days, stay home, watch whatever's on tv, "the five." the thing is i like the idea he had. what a great prank would be is to find all the people that believe the bomber's innocent and you'd send them a little thing saying surprise you've won
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a special like two-week hawaiian gift. you fly them to some hotel, right? >> and then what? >> and then you blow it up. no, no. they put them in there and go into a convention room and nothing is on the walls but graphic photos of the tragedy. and they have to sit in that room for one week and they can't leave to teach them a lesson. >> thank god it's friday. >> kimberly -- >> that was really intense and dark. >> he violated the rules it's possible because he's a tactical photographer for the police department that these photographs might have been used as evidence in the trial against him. what do you think? >> i understand that, but every once in a while the rules need to be bent. i mean, i admire what he did. i think it was courageous and he was probably completely sick of what he saw this glorification of jihad turning him into some kind of teen beat model on the cover of "rolling stones." it's sickening. it's part of the problem going on in this country, glamorizing terror, all it's going to do is recruit. like a recruitment poster for
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anybody else who has sickness in their head or think they doept get enough free bis from this country. and the police department is not that upset. they gave him one day off. are you kidding me? >> and it really did step on the "rolling stones" pr. >> yeah, mission accomplished. by the way, i'm pretty sure the officer wouldn't have done it if that was the only evidence. >> right. >> there was substantial evidence all over the place, videotapes, i mean, if that was it, he probably wouldn't have done it. >> you think in boston tonight, bob, if sean murphy were to go out to a bar that anyone would buy him a round? >> i think that boy would be so drunk by the end of the night -- listen, i think it's ridiculous. >> boston strong. >> eric's exactly right. there's plenty of photographs. why they did this to the guy i have no idea. he was trying to say in his own way -- i don't agree with it. i think the rolling stone magazine if you want to buy it, buy it, if you don't, don't. i think he was trying to make a point. i think the police department if they've got that rule and it's not necessary evidence, they should give him a break. >> yeah. they should bring him back to
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work next week. >> they gave him a two-week vacation. >> he's going to have a hangover for a few days. >> the promotion he never got. >> his retirement party is going to be amazing. i want to go. >> kimberly's on board. she'll be there with her new nickname. >> with her endless bottom. >> okay, ahead on "the five," bob wants to thank president reagan. he'll tell us why when we come back.
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in case you didn't know, it's national ice cream month. and ronald reagan designated that in 1984. saturday is actually national ice cream day. we're going to celebrate it right now here on "the five." it's not monday because it says sunday. mayor bloomberg, i hope you're watching big boy. a new study reveals what your favorite ice cream flavor says abtd you. kimberly, what's your favorite? >> i love vanilla. i think it is so delicious. >> so boring. >> i love vanilla. it's really not. people think you have to get all crazy, but some of those other
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ice creams with too much in it. >> you're racist. >> i love this with a little bit of caramel on top. >> you know what that says about you, likely to be impulsive, easily suggestible and an idealist with an endless bottom. >> it doesn't say that. >> eric, what's your favorite? >> i normally don't partake in ice cream, but my dog, freedom, loves ice cream and i always get him chocolate-vanilla swirl. >> excuse me. now, does anybody -- >> you're right, you're 100% right. no chocolate for dogs. >> excuse me, you know what this says about you? likely to be impulsive -- oh, no, easily suggestible, that's certainly not true and idealist. likely to be dramatic. lively, charming, flirtatious and gullible. >> what happened in 1984 that reed, something happened in
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1984. >> i said it was 1984 when he designated ice cream -- >> like your hairdo. >> how was 1985 for you? >> who would buy mint chocolate ice cream? >> that was my dad's favorite and then i started eating it -- >> but it's not even green. >> that's the weird thing.green >> apparently, it's not green. i don't know. >> stop! >> it's still mint. i will take a bite. >> take a bite! >> understand, i have a twinkie problem. >> this is what it says about you. likely to be argumentative and frugal and cautious. >> frugal? >> now, greg, what is your favorite ice dream? >> nyquil is my favorite ice cream. i keep it in the freezer until it's really, really cold and guzzle it. ben and jerry's kills more than smith and wesson and a major factor to premature death. the big crime, ice cream headaches! nobody ever talks about ice
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cream headaches! >> i'm eating his ice cream! he doesn't care. >> can you imagine a weapon filled with ice cream and shooting with our enemies? they would be paralyzed with ice cream headaches. you would be like this. i surrender! >> it ka dog get a ice cream headaches? >> no. >> i've had a drug headache but not a -- >> you don't know how to eat it right. that is your problem. >> my favorite is rocky road. what that says about me i'm likely to be aggressive, engage is. >> you're making it up. >> you're not reading what it says, bob. >> it says i'm likely to be aggressive and engaging and a good listener. >> that is not true. >> i am too! i listen to your stuff! >> i am not conservative. please stop that. >> do you ever add anything to your ice cream, bob? like sprinkles? >> rocky road. i have a pint every night before i go to bed.
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good for you. >> oh, my god! >> vegas nerve. look at me. you have that nerve! >> vegas nerve! >> is it a nerve? >> i love ice cream. >> you are such -- >> you need to buy me a dress. >> okay. fine. let's go buy one. >> you're so bad! come on! >> did he just shoot ice cream
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test test.
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honestly. >> he did. >> time for one more -- >> more friday. you have no idea! >> please, kimberly, go first. >> cold. >> okay. >> i'll do it later! go to dana. >> rick wallace. equestrian rider. he was at a competition in georgia on july 6th and look what happens. he falls off. here is the thing. if his feet touch the ground he would be disqualified. he has great horse but the horse's name is decision. he was holding on to the horse. look how patient that horse is. >> i think i saw this in a movie
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in berlin. >> a great horse. what an effort. >> did you pull yourself together? >> you're up. >> what did you do with rest of the material of that dress? >> now that you've dirtied it, you have ruined it. this is one great more thing, i believe. this is parker who is 4 years old and he always wants to be just like his dad and his dad was an incredible volunteer with the west fire department and he helped organize a fund-raiser and do all kinds of things. sadly his father was killed when he was -- i'm sorry, greg, but this is really -- >> it's serious. >> fighting the fertilizer fire in the explosion that happened. in order to honor his father and raise money, he says he wants to be like his dad and give back to the community and be a
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philanthropist. >> hazel is 3 years old and she -- has a rare form of childhood cancer and she taped a message to her hospital window that reads send pizza, room 4112 and people all over the country sent pizza to this girl and it was a wonderful thing and she's a wonderful girl and god bless her. at that age, can you imagine -- i'd write that sign if i was in the hospital. >> i think is there a website. google it and i think is there a website. >> good luck, sweetheart. >> go ahead, greg. >> he has it on his shirt back, send pizza. >> anybody ever tells you they are going to bounce around ideas it means it's going to be quickly forgotten. nobody ever bounces around ideas. >> bounce some ideas off of you? >> exactly. >> i think people bounce off. bad, bad phrase. >> it is.
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>> so tomorrow, here is why. take a look. >> no, not bob. >> no, him! >> first of all, i missed your show two weeks ago enyou -- me off by being -- >> you know, it was supposed to go the other way. >> bob, tell them about your new -- >> kate can, you know -- >> tell them about the new alarm clock that you've got. >> i was terrible. i didn't show up like i was supposed to two weeks ago. i was terrible and eric had done me a big favor. i bought an alarm clock that bounces around. when it starts going off -- >> you made it. >> i made it earlier than you did. i took your chair. >> before we go, i know we have a little extra time. can we point out mr. bill hemmer is filling in for brett on special report. >> from d.c. or here? >> that, i don't know. >> no, d.c. >> i thought he was here. >> hear about the baby? >> he has a curfew.
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>> don't have a baby until after cashing in. >> please. we have to leave that. can we do this? >> i'll let you know. >> i'll let you know. welcome to "red eye." it is like game of throwns if by thrones you mine spin the bottle with a drifter who has no idea what i did with that bottle. now to andy levy with a pre game report. what is coming up on tonight's show? >> thanks. our top story, are health websites giving your search terms to third parties ? yes it does and that rash needs to be treated asap. and should video gamers be granted visas to professional athletes? the story that will have a massive affect and you will wish you are the last of us. and finally what happens when we send bill schulz to major league baseball's pre allstar game extravaganza known as fanfest?

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