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tv   The Five  FOX News  July 5, 2014 1:00am-2:01am PDT

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happy birthday, america. i'm greg gutfeld along with kimberly guilfoyle, eric bolling, dana perino and bob beckel. this is "the five." something july 4th is the time to shore patriotism. not to me. to me it's like drinking on new year's eve you should do it year round. patriotism is the celebration of luck. you're lucky you are here and not there. it necessary to express such pride? yes, because so many others don't in this unbalanced world your patriotism cancels out those who find it uncool. younger people need to see that
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it's okay to love this place because in pop culture and on campus they are taught that it's far cooler to denigrate than elevate. mockery ma y masquerades as ris. pentagon says some young people are not eligible to serve in the service. time to change those standards. a tattoo of me on your neck doesn't make you any less patriotic. may make you look odd so does the hair on our politicians. bad hair plugs can get you elected but a tattoo won't let you fight. as for drug use, everyone is on something. to deny opportunity to serve one's country because of treatment is to deny that reality. often the cure for most things is purpose, service and achievement, the one place left for that in a world succumbing
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to a femoral satisfaction is the military. all right. k.g. you got a lot of tatoos all over the lays. >> invisible tatoos >> you're like an atlas. >> just for the record before we spread for bob-like no tattoo . >> you have a tattoo of your body on your body. >> just be honest. >> you have a tattoo of tattoo -- >> how did you know. "fantasy island" i used to watch that all the time. >> should tatoos keep young men and women from serving? >> no. it matters what's in your heart not what's on your skin. to me -- i don't care. pull the cork out maybe that's a little bit excessive, it can get tangled on something.
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that's your body art, that's your expression. i don't see how there's a direct correlation defining you un-foot serve. there's plenty of people in the armed forces that we're happy we have them where they are and they have tatoos. what is the rationale here? >> my friends in the military are covered with tattoos. i think it looks scary. that frightens the enemy. >> very good point. why is it you can't have tattoos and fight for your country but have tattoos and be an elected official. the hair i agree with you on the hair thing too. culture has changed. it's time, i would say, in my opinion, maybe it's time for the military to rethink that philosophy. i do one what they get to. that's why you get the short hair cuts. they want you focused on the goal. kill infidel not look at the other guy's tatoos. more and more people have tatoos. i might agree with bob.
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maybe a little heart or strawberry or rose. >> that might be a birth mark. >> bob, what about prescription drug use? why should that prevent people from serving. >> i have no idea. one of the things they talked about was anything to do either ritalin or adderal for attention deficit disorder. if you have attention deficit disorder to take drugs to get focused in i don't understand why that's a problem. if you're doing 200 vicatin a day that might be a problem. but specifically talking adhd. i don't understand that. tattoo thing i heard somebody argue in order to stay as an organized force and everybody following like the hair cut, a tattoo is an expression -- they want uniformity.
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i can't remember the last time i went out with a girl that didn't have a tattoo. >> look who you go out with. >> tattoo on the arm from here to here. >> dana, tattoos and let's say, ear gauges, which you used to have them years ago. >> they are really small. >> when you were in a biker band. these are high-risk behaviors or resemble high-risk behaviors. somebody who gets tatoos or piercings could be ideal for the military. >> defendapartment of defense at looking to turn people away. on tattoos it's very specific. into a toos on your fingers, neck or your face. so if you want to get the dolphin tattoo on your hip bone, i mean, knock yourself out. that's not going to disqualify you from service. on the ritalin piece, i do think the military has to think in the long term which is if ever the
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troops are out in the field and they get cut off from everybody and you can't get your ritalin or adderal and responsible for the well being of your comrades then maybe that's a problem. they are probably being overly cautious but i don't think -- it's not without some thought. >> in pakistan there's a walgreen's on every corner. >> you can't have the things in the ears because what if the enemy grabs you by the ear. >> is that what they mean by ear pollution. >> we have a picture of it. it's this thing, it's a very thick -- >> i don't understand that. i don't understand the appeal. why do people do that. >> you start with a piercing and move up to a different kind of piercing and then you move up to these things. usually you see it in certain communities. >> i'm looking at this.
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28% of them don't qualify because of medical reasons, obesity one of them. but here's how fortunate we are. we have what 2 million active military members or so. we have a national guard. we have all that. it's all volunteer. we can be selective like that. that's the beauty of the american military. hats off to our military because volunteers make you want up. we have 2 million the strongest military in the world. >> also, it's a great place to learn a lot of leadership. it's a great career if you choose to do that for the long haul. great way to see the world. sad thing is listen to the requirements for a 17 to 21-year-old male. all you have to be able to do is 35 push ups in two minutes, 47 sit ups in two minutes and have to be able to run two miles in just over 16 minutes. that doesn't seem like too much to ask. >> no, it doesn't. >> not that i could do what a 17-year-old male. for women 32 push ups.
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>> what do you think about an arrest record for stuff like pot possession, kimberly? >> have to get over it. >> there's just too many people. >> it's for possession a small amount for personal use. i recommend to people they get those things expunged off their record. >> how? >> hire a good lawyer. after a certain period of time it goes off the record. >> in vietnam you could have all the tatoos you wanted they needed bodies. in a volunteer army you can be more selective. if the draft comes back what about the criteria then? >> we have a strong volunteer army we don't need to relax these restrictions. maybe it's working. >> well let's go "around the table." >> what a cheerful segment so far. >> what makes america great is the military. if it wasn't for the military we would be nowhere. go around the table what do you think makes america great, kimberly besides its shoes?
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>> i believe our diversity. only in america you can meet people from all over the world, different background in life and two people who start out with very different circumstances, come from very different families could end up in the same place like the white house. i think that's what's amazing. that's why everybody wants to cross our borders. they want the american dream. they want to be part of the life we're so fortunate to be able to enjoy. i get the motivation but we also have to preserve the way of life for everybody who is here and do it in a legal and orderly way. >> bob? >> i like the freedom to be able to be opposed to military action and that's -- i oppose a lot of military action. but that's my right to do that. >> hundreds of thousands have died for you to have that right to do that. >> you have to throw that pressing comment in. >> but that's the beauty of america, you're right, you can do that even though people are dying on the battlefield so you can do that. what makes america great for me is our capital system, free
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market capitalism generates more wealth, more strength, more power than any other country in the history of the planet. hopefully we have elected politicians who try to screw it up they can't. >> what about you, dana. dog parks? >> there's really not enough of them. we need to work on that. >> organize. >> in the next election it should be one of the platform pieces for the republican party. i like america protects your god given inalienable right to be free. everyone is conceived with that right and it's only governments who take that away. in america we've been able to protect it for over 200 years. >> i would add choice and innovation. we're overwhelmed by so many options. to our detriment we don't know what we want. we have the greatest culture i think in the world which is why when people come over here they have to learn to leave behind
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the crappie part of their culture and only bring the best. that's why we have great restaurants. >> go to the parade. you're not forced to clap at certain places. >> look at the diversity of food you eat every day. what are you having today, cambodian food? >> a lot more to come on our july 4th special. the 2016 presidential predictions. you don't want to miss that.
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♪ the last several weeks we've been talking about whether hillary clinton will run for president and she doesn't look as inevitable as she did a month ago. regardless what she decides democrats have to run against a republican and who that's going to be is anyone's guess. the presidential parlor game is an all time favorite and this week "the washington post" listed ten republicans that could be the nominee. it's top five are jeb bush, marco rubio, rand paul, scott walker and rounding out the list is chris christie. kimberly, do you think that's the field. is there anyone else? >> no, i think this is a pretty comprehensive list, to be honest with you. i think the dark horse here is rand paul. >> for the republican nomination. >> yes. i think that's the guy that can come up and surprise everybody. i mean, when you look at the list, jeb bush, always been a
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fan of. strong support for common core is a little bit of an achilles heel for them and some immigration issues. as talented and smart and capable as he is those two issues could be problematic for him in terms of securing the nomination. chris christie, i still think don't count him out. >> bob, do you think this is a strong list or lots of weaknesses? don't be like a democrat. >> first of all let me just say i picked out my candidate. >> "fantasy island." >> teddy cruz. i'm biassed. i'll tell you what i think. the republican party has always had an heir apparent in the wings except last time around it was a little bit shaky with mitt romney but a good front-runner. nobody considered the front-runner right now. i agree with you about rand paul. if anybody you pick out of here that has some new ideas and interesting ways to draw the demographics. this is the year, 2016 will be the year when you'll see, i think, somebody like a ben
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carlson or who is the other guy, business guy, herman cain coming from the outside and decideding to run. if there was ever a year to take the republican nomination without a front-runner this is the year, 2016. >> given the primary situation that recognizes go through right, they go iowa and then new hampshire, south carolina and on through the country and then the general, is there anyone on the list that you think can thread the needle that gets through frirm into the general. >> that's the point. i outlined the way i see the field. you have ran paul, ted cruz and marco rubio probably the more conservative views, the further right let's call it that which does very well in the primary process because it goes through the iowas and new hampshire and south carolina, et cetera and they do very well and get this whole head of steam. for the general election, they say you want to attack to the center which is a chris christie, jeb or paul ryan who
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play that more both sides further left from the far right group of rand and rubio. what does the country what? what does the country need? >> what happened to your guy scott walker? >> he's on the list. >> there were some issues recently that are bubbling up. for me the top three ted, rand and rubio. >> greg, you think that mitt romney could come back, but i think that all the tea leaves are showing he probably is going to say no to that opportunity. >> tea leaves. >> i won't let another word be taken away from me. do you like anybody on the list? >> i think they are all fine people. i really do. >> that's not going to get you anywhere. >> they don't light that fire. i remember was it 2004, i remember i saw when i was writing for the "huffington post" in 2005 when people were talking about obama you sensed fire. you sensed like this was the
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change. because they need a pendulum to swing back in that direction from bush, he was the guy. the pendulum has now swung back into the favor of republicans. they need a nominee who cannot just be right but persuasively right. he has to understand pop culture. able to talk about things that people get without making a fool of himself which has always been a problem for republicans and older republicans who don't go to movies or listen to music. they need to be alive in the world today. >> what about alan west. >> alan west is the anti-obama. he's the guy that scares the hell out of our enemies and i love that about him. remember obama's running mate wasn't joe biden it was the media. they were able to cover up his friendship with terrorist. the republicans don't have that benefit. so they are already running with a handicap. that person has to be able to leap past and antagonistic media with a charming personality, who
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is correct and lives in today and isn't a dork. >> you're now dreaming. >> you can't have two people on this list together and that's to say jeb bush and marco rubio cannot both run. florida is too big of a fundraising center. one of the other of them have to get out of the way. >> let's set aside personality. forgetting the actual people here. >> easy with the republicans. >> yeah. is there an issue, if you were to say there was an issue in 2016 like a policy one, policy platform that you think could actually help propel one of these characters into a good position in the general, what would it be? >> for me it's the economy and i would like mitt romney for that but, you know, wake me after i'm done crying. >> anything specific. like a major tax reform push.
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>> i think what happens in november is going to dictate on whether or not will actually be able to be accomplished in 2016 or not because if the senate stays democrat then i'm not sure you're going to get any policy change through because you'll have the same long jam in government. the one, again, you guys all know i'm a good friend of rand paul. i love that libertarian stance. i think when -- identify been traveling around the country. you talk to people they say get government out of our way. not just taxes i'm talking about regulations. we don't just talk about it on here. >> it boggles the economy. >> people are out there stop with tropical depressions. some regulating the farmers. stop regulating the epa. it makes them impossible to do business. >> if i was an adviser to the republicans, two things here that play to ran paul's advantage.
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the american people do want smaller government and less regulation. i agree. and the other thing is they are tired of foreign policy. that's where rand paul is as well. i think with all the talk we have about terrorism and the rest of it they think we can take care of it with drones and special force and police here at home. they don't want to get involved in anything else overseas. that and they want a smaller government. >> i get the small government thing opinion his achilles heel is foreign policy. and he's got to grow up or he will not have a chance. foreign policy and borders are the same thing. you have to combine that vision together. if you're going to refreight the world stage then you have to build a moot and a wall. you can't do that. you have to establish an american presence around the world which we did after world war ii. now we're pulling out every where and see the world crumble around us. the point is you need an adult on foreign policy and rand paul is a child. he's a child on foreign policy. he doesn't know the first thing about terror.
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he's got -- once he reads the files he'll learn and group like everybody else does. president obama grew up on foreign policy and started droning. >> that may be something to be said about that. there's a little reminiscent. after the first world war there was a movie. they fought roosevelt up until the time pearl harbor. i think that's exactly where the country is now. call ran paul a child but -- >> on foreign policy. >> on foreign policy. you call a vast majority of american people a child because they don't want to be involved in it either. the other thing we can't afford. you can't ask for balanced budget and do that. >> maybe the american people feel this way but maybe they are wrong. remember the military exists to preserve our survival. and sometimes that goes against our own feelings about war. the fact is they go out and they kill so we don't have to. that is their role. whether we like it or not.
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whether we don't want our sons out there, the fact is somebody's son is out there so you don't have to. that's the nature of the military. >> but you have to convince the american people we should go back to iraq and they would disapprove. >> nobody is saying going in and invagd. we're talking about a presence in the world. if we didn't have a presence in the world we would be speaking german, speaking japanese, we would be speaking korean. >> i don't think rand paul is saying we shouldn't have a presence in the world. >> i feel lining he does. >> in my opinion -- listen i'm not here as a proxy for ran paul. but i think his foreign policy is misunderstood. general public attaches ron paul's foreign policy to rand and he has a far, far different foreign policy -- >> than his father. >> map than his father does. >> he is vulnerable on that issue. he has a hurdle to clear. can i give you guys my
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prediction. >> yeah. >> it has nothing to do with rand paul. i think that jeb bush and hillary clinton will compete against one another as candidates in 2016. >> who wins. >> not for the presidency. i think they will be on the vice presidential choice, because -- >> she would never do that. >> i've made a bet with somebody i know. don't put it past her. it's eight weeks instead of two year long campaign. she can get it done for them, especially if it's close and i think she would be willing to do it. >> as a vice presidential candidates. to biden. >> whoever it might be. >> very interesting. >> what do you think, bob? >> i don't think she will do it but it's an interesting thought. the american footprint around the world right now with the military bases we have is status quo. that's what the american people are. we're covered around the world. we have big naval bases.
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i'm saying expansion of that is something the american people don't want. >> what about condoleezza rice. >> i love her. in more ways -- she plays the piano. >> call her, dana. ahead on the july 4th holiday there's one in every office. the over sharer. co-workers that tell you every detail of every minute of their life. like dating dramas and so on. bob, you know who you are. we have one over sharer here. i used to share an office with him. >> that's a felix and an oscar.
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♪ welcome back to "the five" fourth of july special. anyone who has ever had a job can relate to this. in every office there's always that s too much about their personal life. they are called over sharers. there's the blunderer that co-workers that misses social accuse that conversation isn't welcome. next is the narcissist. the patient, one who uses the office to vent and analyze personal problems. the storyteller they will talk endlessly about any topic.
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the worer relieves anxiety through none stop chatter and finally the true confessor. tends to blurt out the first embarrassing personal experience that springs to mind. >> this is a bob blog. >> it's an intervention. >> this is all bob. unbelievable. bob, we'll just start with you. which one of those are you. >> i qualify for all of them. that's why i think this is a scam. we enthusiast there on the fourth of july because you figured i wouldn't be paying attention which i usually don't. i share with you i don't pay a lot of attention. >> over sharing. >> i have a wealth full of experience that the rest of you have not. i think -- >> see. >> that's part of it. this is for like offices, you do it on air. >> he's the over share of america. bob beckel. >> this is my office. >> the blunderer, missing social
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cues. >> me? no. >> how about uses the office to vent and analyze personal problems. no. the story teller. talks endlessly about -- you are willing to talk about any topic. >> i'm open that way. i'll tell a story here or two. self-deprecating stories. funny. >> dana? >> a lot of people don't know this but when we first start this show because it was temporary, remember, we had to share offices. bob and i didn't have an office. they put bob and i together in an office with four computers. i don't even know, a couple were ever turned on. bob would bring in pastries and croissants. my closet was in the stairwell.
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bob was always in the office. so when i finally said look is it possible for me to have my own spot even if i had to share with a woman. >> it was like the odd couple. >> you were there at odd hours. >> i haven't been in my office in three months probably. i was there today. >> they are going take it away from you. >> on my floor all the offices are glass walls and i kept changing. poor morning show the producers are right there. i'm hiding behind books. finally i paid a guy to smoke the glass. >> of course you did. aren't there any normal workers. >> everybody has got -- everybody has something wrong with them. i hate over sharing. like, for example, yesterday i was getting a mole removed from my butt. the doctor wouldn't stop talking about his psoriasis. >> you don't like over sharers or talking in the hair and
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makeup chair. >> some people are shy and awkward and therefore they suffer from an arrested development where maybe they haven't had as much skill, and so they don't know the parameters when they are talk towing. i do also think we've come from a doing country to a feeling country so we encourage people to talk about their feelings. our role models were clint eastwood, lee marvin and now -- >> there's twitter. >> there's twitter and there's these actors that -- russell brand who won't shut up. >> can you tell an over sharer to stop over sharing or will that ruin their lives. >> leave a note i heard your conversations when you're fighting with your wife or husband and it's grossing me out. please stop. >> social media is changing things because if you follow your colleagues on social media they might be putting personal things on there so even if they didn't share at the office now
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you know about it. >> i can have a slight defense of my indictment here on all these things. one of the reasons that i share a lot about drinking and drugging and women on occasion is that i would be outed otherwise. >> do the obama thing. write the book. >> so i put that out because the right-wing would out me anyway. the second thing about it turned out to be helpful to people who have gotten in touch with me about their alcoholism. second thing coming out of a background that i came out of which very abusive family you have a tendency told back everything. when you get a chance to get out, anybody that listen to you. they are tired of hearing it. you want to tell your story. because if i told that at home i would get the hell beat out of me. for 16 years i said nothing. >> see how bob turns this around. >> an example of over sharing. >> i'm trying to defend over sharing. >> honestly if bob didn't over share what would we talk about
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in the green room? nothing to talk about. >> you know what's really scary, the under sharer. the person who doesn't say anything. that's the person who shoots you. all of a sudden he walks into the office and goes you and then all of a sudden that's the last thing you hear. that's the only time he opens his mouth. >> and then everybody says we thought there was something odd about him. each one of us have that kind of person on our staff. >> you know who you are. >> sean -- >> sean is okay. >> definitely josh. >> josh? >> josh is just waiting to explode. >> he was very quiet. when "the five" returns kimberly has some important etiquette tips for us when we're glued to our smartphones when we probably shouldn't be.
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make sure kids learn how to swim. always watch them in and around water and properly fence all pools. simple steps saves lives. to learn some new ones visit poolsafely.gov
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report" at the top of the hour.
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for now we'll take you back to new york and "the five." shannon bream >> checking our smartphones at dinner even though it's really not polite. the "wall street journal" has come up with some rules for who should be allowed to sneak a peek. here are four of them. only parents with small kids at home with sitters are allowed to keep smartphones face up on the table. the first person to notice someone else at the be table checking their phone is allowed to check theirs for one minute. babies at weddings may be shown on a phone. a die-hard sports fan maybe allowed to check the score of the big game. everyone else is allowed to go on the tmz.
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okay. so what do you think of these rules? >> i think -- now i can go on the offensive. i don't ever check my twitter. these guys on the break or not on the break look through their twitter stuff. when one of you people say something outrageous -- oh, my god. it's the most obnoxious thing to have. people at the dinner table is worse. >> how many times has your phone even been on during the show, ring during the show -- >> i'm not looking at it. i don't look at my -- >> white house during the show. >> i don't ever look at my phone during the show. ever. >> bob what are your talking about? >> these guys go through their twitter stuff. >> your phone rings like once every other week. >> that's different than -- >> you do look and it's about making bets and calls. >> i think he's got a point. i think it would be an interesting experiment for all of us not to have our phones on set for a week and see if it's better. i like some of the interaction
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in between but i feel too addicted to my phone as well. i side with bob. >> bob does check his. >> no, i don't. that's wrong. >> it's okay if he has a date. >> or a bookie. >> this article was a joke. it wasn't real. yeah. also, by the way, what we're seeing right now is a new compulsion. we had three major compulsions, food, sex, alcohol or drugs. compulsions, things anything that creates an internal dialogue in your head when you're arguing or battling over the use of it. i won't look at the internet today. i won't eat bread today. i'm not going to look at certain things on the web today. >> you do a lot of that. >> it's a compulsion when you know nothing has changed on your phone yet you still look at it anyway. i do that. it's a modern compulsion. and i think it's changing the
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way our brains work. i really do. >> i think if my wife is watching right now honey don't listen to this at least 50% of the time when i'm at dinner and i have to use the men's room i'm going to the men's room to check twitter. so the bottom line, she's like this. >> i do it in the car. i'm bad about that because i don't drive. peter drives. if i'm riding along i sometimes will start giggling and peter will say what did greg say next? he always knows it's funny. sometimes the conversation you have online is more entertaining. can you have an ongoing dialogue. >> you don't like the dog drool on you >> he doesn't drool. >> he's america's perfect dog. >> how do you clean your phone. i'm assume field goal you took one of those pool lights on your phone.
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i bring it into the bathroom. >> that compulsion thing is -- on a serious note that's a very important point. it very much -- it strikes me like drink and drug with me. i don't have the compulsion to look at my phone all the time but i can imagine as i think about it, i think about it just like that. >> anything that has an internal dialogue, a struggle. >> have they discovered that the serotonin levels are up. >> remember i went to mercy ships in africa. there's a neurosurgeon there who said in his research they found every time you refresh your screen on your phone you get a little bit of a rush so that's why people -- >> like pavlov's dog. >> you want to check it in case there's more bad things. >> the thing about that, you went through that list, alcoholic will always say i won't drink tomorrow or i'm going some place.
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people will say i'll go some place and not bring my twitter. an alcoholic will say i won't drink but they go and there they are. there's a lot to be said about that one. >> the only interesting about this compulsion that it is not as disruptive because it involves other people. you're talking to people and maybe you're learning something whereas you're not in a room alone with porpornography. you're interacting with other people. it's a compulsion but maybe a healthy one. >> bob could you become addicted immediately to reading the packets? reading your packets. >> that's the point. nobody is compulsive about work or things you have to do. >> only pleasure inducing things. next, good point. next "the five" will have an independence day barbecue right here at this table.
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i'm so excited. bob is licking his chops. we've been celebrating america's birthday all week. if you're a proud citizen tweet us at "the five." use the #proudamerican and tell us.
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this july 4th less talk about my favorite topics. food. we have a whole barbecue here. it's now cold. there's a new study that says comfort foods like ice cream or mac and cheese don't make you feel better. >> it's one of those things that sends off that feel good serotonin. yeah. of course. i do believe it. that said, you know, i have some quirky eating habits. >> you do. i asked you first. you don't eat meat? >> i don't eat any red meat and i fast on tuesdays which is a problem because -- >> get out of here, man. dana you're a red meat person. >> am i a red meat person? yeah. every day i eat meat of some sort. usually steak, sometimes
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hamburgers. little bit of chicken. i have learned as i have advanced in age that things that i might have thought of as comfort food now are no longer a comfort to me it's just a moment of pleasure and then like actually physically feel bad and then i don't eat the rest of the day. >> like what? >> like why are you having that. >> greg you and i have a fondness for one particular steak restaurant here. you're a meat either. what about comfort food generally. >> i love mcdonald's but mcdonald's doesn't love me. when you eat it finds a shortcut -- >> i know so much about your g.i. tract. >> it's incredible. >> somehow it gets in there. all right. it goes off the road and drives across my spleen. it's firing out into space. it's amazing. >> that's gross. >> you're trying get an imodium
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endorsement. >> we're the on place where we have comfort foods. generally people have to feed. we have food to comfort. in many countries, you know, the foods are a comfort against starvation. >> i can have a rib? >> i want one too. >> the ribs are pretty good. >> we have to go? we have to eat the ribs first. kimberly, i have a food eating contest. >> maybe you will fare better than the last one. remember when i whooped bob in the eating contest. >> you choose. all right. one more thing is up next.
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time for one more thing and because it's fourth of july it's time for greg's fireworks tips. all right. not the normal fireworks i'm talking intestimal fireworks. when you have potato salad on the picnic table no eggs or mayo should be out for longer than two hours. in the hot sun keep it in a cooler in ice or you're is going to be counting bathroom tiles for the next two days. trust me on that one. i like to help america, dana. can you top that? >> i will not -- actually i'll tell you. if you don't like cities and like small town america and patriotism of the country, proud to be an american there are seven small towns that are noted
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for their best fourth of july activities. chatham, massachusetts, bristol, rhode island, they have the longest running parade and events since 1785. independence, iowa. harrisville, michigan. natchitoches, louisiana. prescott, arizona. home to the world's oldest rodeo. >> isn't see that one coming. miserable little which. kimberly? >> are we going to get sick from eating that or just your stories. >> i'm feeling sick now. >> this is an amazing story about a dream come true. a young little boy 7 years old, andrew starr ii, you see a picture of the little boy this past week on monday. the dream became a reality, he received an honorary title of being a marine, honorary marine.
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this has only been happening less than 100 people is in 1992. he's been beyond thrilled. i'm just so happy i'm a marine like my dad. >> nice. good one. eric. >> better than royals. very quickly, cashing in. last week 23 weeks in a row, trended on twitter, also john oliver picked it up. watch it tomorrow, 28 days left that the house and senate are in session together between now and the 2014 elections. 28 days. yet these guys make $174,000 plus millions a dollars each in bonuses not bonuses but benefits and perks. >> is it my turn? i got to go some place fast. this is a great announcement to make on the fourth of july. god bless you, son. the leader of the mississippi college republicans resigned to become a democrat. smart move on his part. he didn't want his party to go the tea and that's exactly right.
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congratulations. we welcome you to our party. >> gosh. >> all right. >> at least we didn't have any partisanship here. that's it for us. ha of the brave ♪ welcome to "hannity." here we are in west monroe, louisiana. he see duck commander. it's the number one hit cable show in the entire country. 15 million viewers on any given week and we're going to check in with the robertson family. today we check in with willy and maybe even uncle sy and maybe we'll play basketball, we might go fishing, we may have lunch together. we may play golf. you never know. this special edition of "hannity" straight ahead. >> if you not heard of "duck dynasty," you must be living in the woods somewhere. it just launched the sixth season and it's been broking viewership records from the very

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