tv The Five FOX News January 14, 2014 1:00am-2:01am PST
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see you tonight on fbn. bob, hello, everyone. i'm dana perino along with kimberly guilfoyle, bob beckel, who is paying attention, andrei bekh, and greg gutfield. it's 5:00 in new york, and this is "the five." a fox news alert. just a short while ago, president obama gave his first remarks on the new book out tomorrow by former defense secretary robert gates. we're going to play that for you in a moment. first, gates gave his first fev interviews on the controversial memoir today. one of the things he wrote about was the president's commitment to the afghan war. he had a chance to elaborate on that. >> it's one thing to tell the truths that you support them. it's another to work it, making them believe that you believe as
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president that their sacrifice is worth it, that the cause is just. president bush did that with the troops. when i was secretary. i did not see president obama do that. >> and president obama had a chance to respond to some of the comments in the book. >> secretary gates did an outstanding job for me as secretary of defense. as he notes, he and i and the rest of my national security team came up with a strategy for afghanistan that was the right strategy, and we are continuing to execute it. and i think that what's important is that we got the policy right. whenever you've got men and women that you're sending into harm's way, after having already made enormous investments of blood and treasure in another
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country, then part of your job as commander in chief is to sweat the details on it. war is never easy. and i think that all of us who have been involved in that process understand that. okay, he had a lot more to say and a lot more coming out about the book. we got a first glimpse last week. now the book will be on sale tomorrow, and both gates and president obama have been able to comment. amongst many other people. one of the things i wanted to ask is that robert gates for a long time has always been praised for being very blunt and very candid. do you think that people in official washington mainstream media, even in the administration, still think those two qualities are a virtue. >> i am sure they find them greatly in disfavor at this moment, but i would add courageous, but it's not a place where people are likely to speak their mind in a true way and back it up and not say it once, but put it in a book and repeat it in interview. he's seen a marked difference
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between the administrations of bush and obama. and i think one of the reasons that we have seen such a large number of casualties in afghanistan since president obama has taken over is because of the rules of engagement. that who is getting executed now, u.s. troops being put in harm's way by the tactics s employed by this administration. >> one thing president obama said is the important thing is they got the policy right. do you think that actually the troops on the ground think that we're getting the policy right when fallujah is in danger of returning to al qaeda's hands? >> i'm not sure, and i think the revolutions in the book basically tell the troops on the ground they're not sure about the policy, but now he's going to backtrack and say we got the policy right. the sound bite we heard president obama talking about the things we have learned from the book, he never refutes anything he heard. he simply says we did what we wanted to do. we executed the policy we thought was right and we will continue to do that. to his credit, he's standing firm on that, but gates points something out in the book, and i
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can't wait until we get more, we get, what, 60 pages out. another 500 pageso sore. gates points something out, there's at least some question as to how confident and capable the president is in making decisions when it comes to war. now, gates himself is a warrior. he's a soldier. he says, i answer the president. the president made the right calls. that's what a good soldier does. he doesn't question authority above him, but he does when he leaves and has a look back and says i'm writing my memoir. i have to let people know exactly what i felt. i think he did a nice job releasing the information. >> unbalanced, in reading through the interview on npr, he goes out of his way to say president obama made good decisions. he does question, however, the political involvement of the staff. one of the key elements was a question about national security council staff actually going outside the chain of command and contacting combatant commanders
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on the ground. unheard of, right? >> i could understand why gates would be upset about that. i want to keep in mind, he did say repeatedly, obama made the right decisions and virtually over foreign policy issue, he made the right decisions. in comparison to bush, bush is a warrior president. obama, you cannot suggest that about him. he was against the iraq war to begin with. >> president bush didn't want to be a war president. >> but obama may have had second thoughts about the decision, the rest of it, but he never did anything that -- and terms of engagement. that came from the military, not president obama. >> he's the commander in chief of the military. >> it came out of the joint chiefs, and they wanted to do it that way at the request of the afghani government. you can't lay that at the feet of the president. >> he needs to own it and take responsibility for the decision. >> if the joint chiefs say the afghanis want a change in how you engage, it's difficult to
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say we're going to do it differently. >> let me get greg in here. one of the things gates talks about in the book is how he hates partisanship in washington, d.c. and he thinks part of the rollout of the book has actually been fairly partisan. >> the book has sort of been hijacked by people along the political spectrum to serve their own purposes, taking quote out of context, and it's sort of part of the political warfare in washington that i decry in the book. >> do you think that he actually -- the book has been successful so far because of those tactics and about the partisanship. why are you laughing? >> it's hard not to say something. >> he's wearing a neck brace. >> he's a great man, he looks like a golf ball being teed up. adorable, but i hope he gets better. you know what? he's basically saying the media is using the book to serve a purpose. >> right. >> however, he sold you a box of firecrackers and now he's condemning you for setting them
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off. the book is filled with these nuggets that were highlighted to be used in such a manner. and it's selling books, so he should be grateful and he should also understand that's how a book is used. again, i want to get back to what bob said and i gree with. no one should be surprised by president obama's behavior. we weren't electing patton. he has more in common with macaulay culkin than mccarther. there was a certain kind of snotty defensiveness in the book about a perceived lack of trust by the military that obama felt, that they don't trust him because of his inexperience. but what do you expect when you hang out with anti-western radicals all your life, operating under the assumption that the u.s. is this evil goliath. don't expect troops to rally behind you when for years, for years you hung out with people who hated the troops. >> let me get kimberly on that. to that very point, gates addresses his criticisms of vice
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president biden, who gates is saying that he kind of was feeding president obama this line about the military boxing president obama in. listen to this. >> where i had particular problem with the vice president was in his encouragement of suspicion of the military. and the senior military with the president. you can't trust these guys, they're going to try and jam you. they're going to try and box you in and so on. and that did disturb me a lot. >> what do you make of that, kimberly? he also did say today in subsequent interviews when asked about the vice president and whether he would make a good president, he said, on balance, i guess i would have to say yes. >> he's a fair and balanced kind of guy, but if you read the message, okay, the headline, you don't bury the lead. it's that he does not feel that he's fairly competent. he may say he's not a bad guy, but he's been wrong on almost every single foreign policy
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issue. is that who you want to elect? that's the message. >> the other thing he was unequivocal about was that hillary clinton would make a good president. that was lost in this. number one, he got along with her very well. biden spent 35 years in the congress, which has always had an adversarial relationship with the military. gates took congress on in uncertain terms and he was right. remember when he said he had the dream, he would like to say, screw it, i'm not going to take it from you guys anymore, i'm out of here. i only wish he had done it. >> it's the job of the cabinet secretary to take the over sight of the congress. i want to ask eric a question based on something you said friday, which was a question of the timing of the book and why did he say stow long as secretary of defense if he had these problems. in the interview on npr this morning, he said, basically, he became so caught up emotionally with the troops and that every night, every single evening for four and a half years, he would write these letters to the families of the fallen, and he
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said he didn't tell anybody about it. that he kept it very private, and there wasn't a single evening in four and a half years where he did not weep. do you think that is a sign that we need to rethink any sort of troop decisions or strain on the troops or what we're asking our military to do, when you have somebody like secretary gates, who is not a stranger to adversity, but basically weeping every night over the war? >> not sure we should change our strategy. i think it thoushows a side of s that maybe people didn't realize. he's been known as a straightforward guy, a tough guy with tremendous resolve, and i didn't know until you read that, that he was weeping, writing letters home to most people's family, which i think most people would. however, regarding what i said on friday, questioning the timing, he did clarify that yesterday or today, when he said i felt it difficult to think i was going to wait until 2017 to get the information out that he had. he didn't want to sit on it for
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arth three years. it also highlights what i said earlier, he's a hero, a soldier. a soldier doesn't take down his commanding officer or all the way up, or all the way down the channel, when you're in battle. we're at war, still at war. he's admirable for that. >> let me get greg's last word. do you think timing is a concern for obama. do you think it's dangerous at this time to question a commander in chief? >> i don't know, because i'm always of the feeling that people hold on to material for a book when they should be letting it out sooner. if you feel the people are in danger, you should come out and say something and sacrifice the couple of million dollars you're going to make out of this book. but more important, i think the book doesn't just really expose president obama's innate beliefs america and his anti-exceptionalism. it also exposes the media for its kind of intentional hibernation.
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these are things in the last six years that should have been talked about that weren't because it made president obama look bad. it's a book that is critical of obama and of course the media will then implode towards gates. >> is this book, from part of it, i have read every excerpt i can get my hands on. he's not overly critical of obama. there are pieces you can pull out and they make for interesting debate, but he's gone out of his way to say obama made the right decision, and he believed he might not have had the same instincts about the military, but he was a good commander in chief. >> but the publicity tactic for getting it out for a week worked. >> i'm just saying there's another aspect, another side, where he makes a comparison between bush and obama and said bush was genuine and believable when he was motivating troops and saying it's worth it, your sacrifice. that's important for a commander in chief. that's where president obama fell short on the sale. >> and there's a whole chapter that hasn't come out where he says president obama is
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sasatanest. i was shocked by that. >> waiting for that to come out. >> i'm not sure if it's true. i don't know. >> i'm not going to question, but you keep questioning me about the kids getting killed on the george washington bridge. >> all right, the gates book, a lot of kroefrb, but i also think there's a lot to chew on. it's not necessarily about politics. >> it seems well-written to me. what i have read so far, i like it. >> you can't read. >> directly ahead, stunning allegations in another new book. this one claims hillary clinton had a hit list for those who didn't back her in 2008. greg has the details and the names allegedly on it. [ male announcer ] this is joe woods' first day of work.
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doesn't do enough for women. translation, america doesn't do enough for hillary. and you can fix that by electing her. it's a smart but predictable move. in 2007, she was the most qualified democrat for president, and she got tossed aside for a little known grad student with a resume thinner than kate moss's septum. why she was dump eed like an agg first wife? well, in politics, black trumped female. voting for obama became historical instead of hisitarical, so hillary realizes to win now, what was once about color must now be about chromosomes. a vote for her is a vote for all women. and even now, critcome of hillary will be seen as sexist. if she claims america doesn't help women, then what country does. my guess is she's less interested in injustices for women worldwide, than injustices
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for her. hell hath no fury like a woman scorned, which is why her husband better blow off serious steam before 2016. once you say first man, say adios to your favorite hobby. you know what i'm talking about. >> bob's trying not to laugh. >> so, where do we start? hillary has a hit list, bob. surprised? >> no, by the way, gates probably that was from axelrod, the reason she got that collar on. i don't think you could really fault hillary for this thing on the women. that's her platform, what chose rr going to run on. that's been her main message from the time she was -- before she was secretary of state. i think the idea of highlighting it now is smart politics and the right thing to do. >> eric, isn't it kind of ironic hillary is speaking on women's rights since she let herself get humiliated on a national stage
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by a scandal. she refused to leave that man. that's some feminist. that's interesting. >> honestly, bob, the hit list. you hear about the hit list and say that's really, really sleazy politics. >> okay, listen, i agree with you 100%, but the -- have we found out about it? i was thinking about it, typical democrat. new jersey governor had a hit list and may have shut down a bridge -- may have, to chuck one name off the list, but you're right, it's sleazy politics and apparently, all politicians are just as sleazy as the next. >> when you're in a campaign, particularly one as high profile -- >> it was over. she had already lost. >> these are people in the aftermath. >> awesome, i love it. she should be president because i want to help her compile an international list. i really want to talk about it. >> ted kennedy was on that list.
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>> i don't like that. >> what happened to him? >> i can't blame the clintons. >> you have claire mccaskill, rob andrews. >> how about bill richardson? >> jane rockefeller. what do you make of this? >> it could be better, actually. it's not that good of a hit list. there's other people she could be on there. i think it's no surprise. she's a crafty pop titian. if you want to be president, you have to be able to play ball. i'm not advocating hit lists, per se, but she has a stomach for politics, put it that way. no one can question this woman is soft. going to say that. >> the sevens because it's ranked from one to seven. >> the sevens are the bad. >> yeah. dana, i have a theory that because the democratic party are a history of first, republicans should fight fire with fire and also nominate a powerful woman and go a step further, lesbian. >> how about and also like with
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a martian. do all the firsts. >> let's be realistic, dana. somebody from middle earth? >> sure, we'll take anybody at this point. republicans are desperate. so what she was doing is she was trying -- we forget how hard fought that campaign was, the primary campaign between clinton and obama. so she -- helping politicians for decades. it comes time for them to turn around and help her, and she's finding out, oh, my gosh, they're not going to choose me and they're going to choose him. they get put on a list. maybe they didn't have a list. maybe they had it on some sort of text message gizmo, but the obama team had a similar thing going on because they were trying to figure out the numbers they needed to get the endorsement and the win. >> they would be on each other's hit list, let's make sure about that. >> bob, i have to ask you before we go out, is part of the fun of seeing her elected is bill clinton becoming the first gentleman, what that's going to
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be like, the tepgz and the hilarity? >> you can't write it better than it is. it's going to be just -- >> you're be traveling the world, going to funerals, on behalf of the united states. >> everybody knows, don't cross the clintons. this hit list is seriously no joke. the people may live on it now just because it's been exposed. that's all i got to say. >> directly ahead, the man who says he personally injected yankees slugger a-rod with performance enhancing drugs speaks out in a new interview. and he wages some other very serious allegations against rodriguez that you're going to want to hear about next.
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this week in independent baseball, they reduced the yankee slugger's suspension from 211 to 180 games. that mean s he'll miss the entie next season. we heard for the first time from the owner of the clinic where he was administered performance enhancing drugs. >> what were the various banned substances he was taking. >> testosterone, insulin growth factor one. human growth hormone. and some different forms of peptides. >> all of them banned? >> all of them banned. >> and he knew that? >> yes, he did. >> and the allegations didn't stop there. bosh also spoke about why he turned to the mlb to cooperate on its investigation of a-rod. he feared for his life. >> rodriguez's people told you
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to go to colombia. >> colombia. >> and they would take care of you there. >> they would take care of me there. >> bosh said he was suspicious and turned down the offer. he told us after he turned down the colombia offer, things got sinister. he said his ex-girlfriend received a text message in spanish saying bosh would not live to see the end of the year. >> okay, that seems like some kind of evidence of something. i'm not sure what, exactly, but do you buy it, eric? >> well, i'm not questioning -- yeah, maybe bosh did probably supply a-rod with performance enhancing drugs and maybe he did shoot him up, but i'm trying to figure out why he's suspended. in other news this week, major league baseball came out and said, guess what, we're kind of okay with medical marijuana. on one hand, they're okay with medical marijuana, but god forbid you use a performance
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enhancing drug and get caught, because they know 60% to of athletes use them. this is one of the superstars they hung their hat on for years. now they don't like him anymore and they're hanging him out to dry. >> perhaps trying to get out of that contract. >> the yankees certainly are. >> correct, that's what i'm saying. have they been very supportive? besides mlb, i'm saying the yankees of their star player who they had such great stock in. >> if they had medical marijuana and players used that, it would be the slowest game in history. >> that's one thing baseball needs to be is longer. >> dana, you would enjoy it. >> just watch one game in eight hours. >> dana goes to batting practice before the doubleheaders to watch the game. >> greg? >> drugs are going to exist as long as they're incentive to use it. the incentive is to win. the hypocrisy of the sports writers condemning a-rod is spectacular given that for decades, they've used an
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enhancement drug called booze, and now adderall is now the sponsor of journalists everywhere. if there are drugs that can make you do your job better, by god, you should be able to do those drugs. think about fighter pilots, which they have looked at, and the use of amphetamines. there are people who have died from fatigue while flying. these ideas should be open for discussion, and in every job that you do, if there is a drug that helps you do the damn drug, and no one should get in your way and stop you. >> my god, what can you take to help your performance? >> i drink so much coffee, i'm about to explode. >> we know about that, but that's other issues. >> i challenge 60% to 70% of athletes doing them. there are very good baseball players who have been overwhelmed by a-rod and his enhancement drugs. i think the penalty was too little. i think this guy is a loud mouth, he is a thug, and he's losing $22 million and 162 games. good. they're going to take it and
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challenge it in court. the court will throw it out. >> that's why you're against performance enhancing drugs? >> a, they're dangerous. b, they're not equitable for people not on the field. gr that's their choice. you can't make the case that marijuana should be legalized, your choice to use or not use, and then say well, those people can't use in professional sports. >> you're talking about not dangerous drugs in 60% of the sport. >> it's not dangerous to the sport. >> also, i'm not willing to say it's any number. you're saying it less or fewer. when you're making -- when you have an incentive to make $100 million in three years -- >> right. >> you're probably going to find a way to make $100 million. >> i want to get this in. this is a-rod's lawyer, he responded to 60 minutes. every major league baseball player and every fan should not only be disgusted by tonight's salem witch trial display and they should be troubled by what it portends for the future of players' rights and the
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distraction and damage it will cause to the game. >> what do you think? >> i think they're making an example of him, that he's a scapegoat, and that one minute, he's the fan favorite. next minute, they're tossing him out in the trash. >> the arbitration agreement thrown out? >> i think it's possible. >> what's a scapegoat? >> scapegoat? >> anyway -- >> a goat that escapes. >> one example, bob, let's use one of your examples. in the porn industry, if a male porn actor uses viagra, does that enhance his performance? >> you have to go there. >> you're asking bob this question? >> it's not the same thing? >> oh, my gosh. okay, all right. coming up -- >> you're using spices to enhance your meal. you're a chef. >> the best of tv and movies at the golden globe awards last night. there were surprising winners and losers and not to mention
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somewhere between the end of the football games and the nfl and the beginning of the hot cop drama, i was able to catch the first hour of the golden globes. it was amazing, a bipolar experience of tv at its best and worst. take the opening monologue. an incredibly timed and delivered 12 minutes of purely entertaining tv. tina fey, amy poehler, were simply stated, the bomb. >> gravity is nominated for best film. it's a story of how george clooney would rather float away into space and die than spend
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one more minute with a woman his own age. >> the beautiful kerry washington is here. she's expecting her first child later this year. >> oh, my god, is it president. >> i thought amanda was carrying his baby. >> oh, amanda. >> unfortunately for nbc, it went south from there. minutes later, possibly the worst acceptance speech ever, i blew that one, too, delivered by a rambling and sometimes confused jaclyn bisette. >> okay. okay. i'm sorry. i'm going to get this together. i want to thank the people who have given me joy, and there have been many. and the people who have given me
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[ bleep ]. i say, like my mother, what does she say? she used to say, go to hell and don't come back. >> that was incredible. k.g., your thoughts on the golden globes, her, the best moment? >> liked the golden globes, lov loved tina fey and amy, and i liked this moment with amy poehler and bono. >> the golden globe goes to amy poehler, "parks and recreation." >> everyone wants to kiss bono. she's hilarious. >> you're a winner, you kiss bob. >> when you're in the moment of freezing from hypothermia. >> there was almost a moment where p. diddy leaned over and they almost went at it, very awkward. >> a near miss. they almost collided. >> went to kiss. anyway, let's move on. bob, your thoughts on the golden
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globes? >> i had it set up to watch it tonight. i had about as much interest in this stuff as i do with dog crap in the street that i step in. >> that's the smell? >> as somewhat of an expert of being under the influence, jackie was under the influence, no question about it. >> of what? >> i would say alcohol, but you don't get up there and do something like that -- what is it about these people? can they not just get up there and graciously accept something, say thank you for this thing. they have to go on and on and make fools of themselves? i don't get it. i will say when she was younger, she was a pin-up in my book. >> all right, dana, your thoughts? a moment, anything -- >> i didn't watch it because i watched the broncos win and then i went to my room to read a novel that ended up irritating me to no end when i got to the end of it, but i liked watching the round-up today. i'm glad that some sof these movies won.
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i like the dresses. >> oh, my gosh. >> the dresses in the new york post today. >> i thought drew berry more looks good. >> cate blanchett and sandra bullock. >> okay. >> greg, you had a moment? >> two things. one, there's this trend of men bringing their mothers as dates, which i find nice, but it's getting old. i long for the good old days when successful actors brought their beers. diane keaton was part of a tribute to an absent woody allen who was busy sleeping with a candy striper. this is her, and then i have a comment. ♪ make new friends but keep the old ♪ ♪ one is silver and the other's gold ♪ >> all right, so that was a tribute to woody allen. that was actually the girl scout anthem, so in a way, it was a fitting salute to the age group that woody dates.
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>> nice. >> slam. >> your joke about the beers, you're not saying dicaprio who brought his mother should have brought a beer? you're not saying that, right? >> no. >> didn't he win the award for best actor? >> yeah. >> for "wolf on wall street", right? >> yeah, right here. >> greatest, jacqueline bisett, the deep. >> she won for comedy, and matthew mcconaughey won for drama. >> can we go? >> fine. >> all right, coming up, the winter olympics are just three weeks away, and our resident sochi expert, bob beckel, has an update on a big controversy rocking the games. team usa, the sochi skating scandal, next on "the five." fighting constipation by eating healthier, drinking plenty of water, but still not getting relief?
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>> that was me testing out the luge in a goldperformance on the road to sochi event on the road. it's less than a week amonth to and already, there's a scandal on ice. ashley wagner placed fourth at the u.s. championships this weekend. >> again, a little slow on the triple lutz. >> triple -- oh. >> disgrace. >> despite falling twice in the free skate, she qualified for team usa ahead of third-place finisher. u.s. figure skating rules allow for a skater's resume during the
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past year to be considered. is this fair? according to some reports, the top three finishers at the nationals get to be on the u.s. olympic team. do you think this is a little bit of pr because wagner is attractive and fits into the profile of what you want to see from an american -- >> i hope it's not because she's attractive. i hope it's because they think she can compete. we're screwed. there are so many good skaters. my wife was watching that while i was watching football. she kept saying, oh, we fell. oh, we fell. i mean, the couples. is it doubles or couples? they were fantastic. if we have individualed and that's the best we're going to show up. don't yell at me, i know it sounds back, but we're in trouble. >> we're a team of chokers. that's the problem. you have to be able to handle the pressure. half of it is mental. you have to be a great skater. >> what about her being in fourth place and coming in and being named third. >> i would be pissed, i performed. i would be angry and i would call my friend tonya harding and
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we would take care of it. >> and hillary, hit list. >> number one person, nancy kerrigan, kneecapped, but i h e hope -- what do you think? >> i think disturbed a little bit by wagner, who said about the event where she fell twice, she said, i was overwhelmed from the big lights and the big show. what does she think the olympics are going to be? >> i understand the judges on the u.s. olympic committee can look at the totality of your career and make a decision, so that's what happens. >> get a sports psychologist and fast. >> you're our resident expert on women's figure skating. what do you think? >> you were one in another life? >> as a leader, a focal leader in the figure skating community, i can say that all of us are disgusted. no, actually, i have never been on ice. ice is for scotch. figure skating to me is like musical theater and variety dancing. the only people who are
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interested in it are people who have participated in it or know somebody who is participating in it, like the parent of a child. people like me, no. >> i tell you one thing -- >> you would be so graceful on ice. can you imagine? >> those -- >> they do work hard. >> the figure skating people work harder than just about anybody else. they start at 5:00. >> i agree, tremendous sacrifice. >> one spill and you're in real trouble, but i think you're right. a tough road to hoe. sochi. and by the way, a travel advisory. so be careful. it's not, it's going to be fine, no problem. right near chechnya, but no problem. one more thing is up next. just ask the state department.
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thing. >> it's sad you can actually make that voice. >> do i live in your house all night, all day? all right, elisabeth hasselbeck sits on the advisory board of team red, white, and blue, and they help veterans coming back to the community. and you can join, too, in your own community. they get everyone involved. it's a great organization. today i was watching fox and friends and saw this great thing. >> we're celebrating our 100th anniversary. we started a campaign called 100 years of good, and we're trying to find organizations and individuals who do great things like red, white, and blue, and you're our first recipient. >> great and wonderful to do that. elizabesabeth hasselbeck is one the nicest people and she does a ton. >> where do they cash that check? >> a big bank. next is bob. >> an israeli legend, former
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prime minister sharon died after many, many months of being in a very difficult condition. and so he was buried this last weekend, and vice president joe biden represented the united states. let's see what biden had to say. >> the defining attributes of this great man's character, passion for the jewish people. physical as well as political courage. and love of this land. they have all played out on the canvas, the state of israel's historic trajectory. >> i think that was quite a good job on biden's part. he didn't make any mistakes in that, and ariel sharon was a military leader and a political leader and very tough and very good. >> all right, thank you for that. eric, you're next. >> one more thing, supposed to be things we didn't get to in the show that we individually have an opinion about. the christie, what's going on with christie --
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>> that's not the only thing. >> i know, but one of the things. i'm going to writethening and put it up on foxnews.com. chris christie is going to deliver the state of the state address tomorrow, so i'm going to preview that a little bit. for my one more thing, i was watching shep earlier, and he said this. >> liquor before wine, you're doing fine. >> is that right? >> oh, yeah. >> put the wine in the liquor and add beer as a chaser. >> that's just ghetto. >> kind of what they do on "the five." >> oh, boy, is that their secret. >> they have many secrets. >> yes, we laugh knowingly. let's go out for a drink sometime. >> was that funny? >> you and me and a beer and a shot. >> you drink vodka. >> i do know that. >> what's next, man? come on. >> you drink vodka. >> i do. >> greg, you're next. >> you know, it's time for this. >> i hate these people. >> as you know, i like to lift
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weights. people come and watch me lift weights, i don't mind that as long as you stay far away. i hate station hogs. you know what station hogs are? those are the people who put towels on let's say the incline bench while they go and do something on the curling bench. or they're sitting there texting or whatever, but they're using more than one piece of equipment. these are bad people. these are bad people. they should be punished. they should be hurt. and you know who should hurt them? the managers of the club and not me. you have to discipline these people. you're only supposed to have one place to work out so other people can work out. you don't hog the machines. >> floor machines i want to use. those are different. >> that's why i don't go to the gym. nothing but a headache. >> i reserve a space in the bar class. i have to say. >> what do you mean? >> put a towel over the bar area you want to be. >> people at the beach do that. i hate those people, too.
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>> let's do something more fun, talk about the 49ers. yay. there i am in my five jersey, isn't that nice? we sent that in, one of our fans of "the five." says 5 on the front and cumbe y kimberly on the back. ronan said boo, mom's team, and yelled go giants the entire time. there you go, but we had a good time watching the game and looking forward to the niners playing again, although the seahawks favored. >> seattle minus 3. >> i'm going with the niners, come on, true blood. >> don't forget to set your dvrs. never miss an episode of "the five." "special report" is next. we'll have our ghetto shots next.
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police are ready to make multiple arrests in the mad listen mccan case. new numbers reveal just who is signing up and it it seems that something isn't adding up. why taxpayers could get stuck bailing out another big industry. she lost more than 100 pounds. look at that. facebook says she can't post this fat pants picture because they say she's bragging about her body. is that fair? we report, you decide. fox and friends first starts right now. ♪ one of my favorite songs to start this morning. good morning. you are watching "fox and friends first" on this tuesday.
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>> thank you for starting your day off. we begin with a fox news alert. a break in the case of the missing involved in the 3-year-old's disappearance seven years ago. the men were accused of robbing the resort where maddie and her family were vacationing in portugal. police checked phone records and are looking at why they made unusually amount of phone calls to each other in the hours after she vanished. this stems from the review of the original investigation. british police uncovered nearly 200 leads that the portuguese police failed to follow up on and identified 40 persons of interest including these three men. >> a retired police captain behind bars after allegedly shooting two people in a florida movie theater. 71-year-old curtis reed is
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