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tv   The Five  FOX News  January 22, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm PST

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>> something's not right. >> i know what you're saying. prompter, you're two sentences off here. well, much of the western world can move on for now. i don't know if we can. but we'll try. hello, everyone i'm eric alone with kimberly. it's 5:00 in new york city. this is "the five." breaking news on the nfl's deflate. gate. will the scandal deflate before super bowl xlix? this morning bill belichick addressed reporters and said he was shocked by allegations his team's footballs were underinflated on sunday in violation of the league's rules. >> i had no knowledge whatsoever of this situation until monday morning. i learned a lot more about this process in the last three days than i knew or had talked about it in the last 40 years i've coached in this league.
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tom's personal preferences on his footballs are something that he can talk about in much better detail detail and information that i could possibly provide. >> and just a short while ago, his star quarterback did come out to address the controversy, himselves.f himself. here's brady. >> i didn't alter the ball inany way. i have a process i go through before any game where i go in and pick the balls that i want to -- the footballs i want to use for the game. i feel like i've always played within the rules. i would never do anything to break the rules. i believe in fair play. we accomplished something really special getting to this point. i don't like the fact this has taken away from some of the accomplishment of what we've achieved as the team. the biggest challenges end up being the best things that happen in your lifer. we've overcome a lot of those this year as a team. >> bobby a lot of moving parts. first of all, you want
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belichick, you want brady? do you believe belichick and brady? >> i think i do believe them. let's say a couple things. one, a football on a wet day like this one, the guys who would love to see the ball deflated more would be the ends because they're easier to catch that way. a lot of professional football players like the ball to be really hard because they can throw it that much better. i don't believe for a second brady went off to the sideline and tax pressure out of the ball. no. it could have been that somebodying on that team, one of the trainers or somebody else did that. who knows? do i think either one of these guys did? no. >> let's be clear. the balls are supposed to be inflated at 12.5% pounds to 13%. brady said on record he likes a lower inflation on the ball. maybe an equipment manager could put it at the low end. >> sure. >> it was a cold night. >> yep. >> possible, if you ever drive a car, your tires are full and -- >> cold does -- things get -- air gets out of it like tires. >> open your eyes, america.
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open your eyes. president obama is behind this. >> i knew it. >> do we knew where these balls are from? kenya? can you tell me where these balls are from? these balls must be inflated between 12. 1/2 to pounds were inch. here's the problem. here's the problem. it's an analogy i believe for our government and modern politics. >> here we go. >> the patriot, bob, are the democratic party. tom brady is president obama. clear. and the media are the soft balls that are easily thrown. they're intentionally under-inflated for their gorgeous messiah. this goes straight to the top. >> they're gorgeous? >> i am talking about impeachment. impeachment. >> and the equipment managers are the editors. >> the ball boys they are the g. gordon liddis.
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>> tom brady acting like president obama, listen. >> things are going to be fine. this isn't isis, you know, this isn't -- no one's dying. but, you know, we'll get through this, and, you know, hopefully we can really start preparing for seattle and, you know get our mind focused there because, you know they're going to take, you know, all my mental energy for the next ten days. >> you are killing it. k.g., why don't they just fix this -- the bottom line this is a stupid rule. >> right. what is he saying? they're jv? but then who's varsity? >> i don't know. why that one football? each team puts together all the footballs. if you don't like the football the way -- >> the hands on the ball is going to wear it out by the end of the game. >> you come up with 24 footballs. use the same football both sides. if one gets taken out of play and your team doesn't like the way they've inflated it then you fix it. >> if you like your football keep your football. >> under-inflate your football.
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>> 100% right. >> i think actually tom brady did a good job today defending himself. if something comes out equipment coach is always the first suspect, if somebody did something to alter the ball, he's on the record saying, listen, i had nothing to do with it, i believe in fair play. we worked very hard to get to this point. i think he was believable that i don't know about belichick -- that guy. >> keep up you got it. >> can i bring it to dana? >> i'm sure you've been thinking all day long, how can i possibly include her -- >> look it you have big press conference. >> okay. >> the world is watching. not just america. the world is watching. he's married to giselle, supermodel. seen in the best clothes on the planet. wearing a knit t-shirt and hat. >> this story sucked all the air out of the room, so to speak. he had to come out because it was getting -- the story wasn't going to overwhelm the super bowl. this is what the super bowl will
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be remembered -- i think it's the biggest sports scandal since the wardrobe malfunction of janet jackson. >> good one. >> thank you, craig. he helped me with that earlier. but he's thinking of his audience, who does he care about most right now? it's the fans. so he doesn't have to come out in a suit and everything. he has to come out like i was just practicing, getting ready. the fans are the most important one. i think probably that wardrobe is probably okay. the hat is curious. you know, i have a rule no hats in press conferences. >> somebody clearly did suck air out of those balls. no question about that. but, you know, when you look at this thing you're right. >> you mean -- >> if you can just try for a second and say, i know it's crazy to be talking about this be a lot of people are. tell me about baseball. do pitchers not work on the balls that day throw? >> so here's the thing about baseball. the way that works is the umpires get together with the ball boys and they check the -- they literally make sure they're all the same before the game. if a pitcher doctors a ball that ball is taken out of play and put back -- and other ball
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is replaced. if the pitcher roughs up a ball to get the slickness off of it they can't use it they move it out. but that same ball -- >> you've never seen a catcher -- >> the catcher throws the ball to the mound and the next pitcher from the other team comes out and uses the same baseball. they don't get to use their own baseball. if they don't like it, they throw it out and get a different baseball but they're using the same ball. that's my point. have both teams use the same ball. >> the problem here is officials check the ball 2 hours and 15 minutes before the game then it's transferred to the ball manager then it goes to like i said, the ball boys. who are the ball boys? generally they're the sons and daughters of wealthy team employees. often teenagers, dana. teenagers. i want you to remember that. the question is not should they be imprisoned but for how long and where? these are evil ball boys. >> there's a lot of money riding on this, believe me. there are a lot of people who bet this game that are going to be raising -- even though they got absolutely smothered.
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>> where's al sharpton? >> he'll be there shortly. >> he'll be representing the balls. >> he's going to call an emergency meeting. >> those balls were tested inside in warm weather and take them outside in this cold weather, they could have gone down -- >> they're not going to go down two pounds. that's the problem. >> a pound. a pound. >> let's see. they're going to have a hard time proving it. then you have to prove before the ball -- it would have changed the outcome of the game. you still have a star quarterback in tom brady and a top team for years. >> going down it's going to be the teenage ball boy. >> they're going to blame the teenager. >> equipment coach. >> if the footballs were altered in some way, hall of fake coach madden names tom brady as the prime suspect. he says, "nobody not even the coach would do anything to the football unilaterally like adjust the amount of pressure in the ball without the quarterback knowing it. it would have to be the quarterback's idea." matt lie nert tweeted, "every team tampers with football.
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ask any quarterback in the league. this is ridiculous." it gets to the point you're talking about, bob. happened to be caught. >> it got caught. every quarterback i played with, he'd get the ball and squeeze it at the sideline and get the biggest guy to sit on it. >> that was your role. >> that was my role. that's quite true. no, it is very difficult to get that many pounds out of it, but who's -- if so many people handle it who's going to know? >> how long would it take? we need to have a simulation. the camera is on brady at all times. when would he have gone and deflated these balls? >> he wouldn't have done it. >> that's what madden said. >> 020 seconds. >> he's saying he likes to throw the bam underweight. people know that. maybe he's not even aware of it at his direction. they know that's the way he performed best when the ball is a little bit softer. aaron rodgers doesn't like it like that. >> when i need hot water in my cup. >> wow. another jab at an intern. apparently. fire her now? >> no, it's hot now. >> whatever. what about punishment, though?
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like, what -- you know how parents, they take kids who shop lift and put a sign and they stand out there and go, i stole from walmart? should tom brady have a placard that says, i underinflated footballs before the super bowl? have him stand out there for two hours. >> if they catch him, that's a pretty good punishment. >> we have to think about, what kind of message -- >> humiliation. >> -- are we sending to america's children? isn't that what this is about? america's children? >> uh-huh. >> exactly what i knew you'd be concerned about. >> something has to happen. there has to be some kind of punishment. there will be. >> that really is the underlying theme. isn't necessarily the bet on the game or necessarily tom brady's image to the public or his fans but whether cheat you can get away with cheating and -- >> there are rules in this in the lesion guideague guidelines. $25,000 fine. there are things they can do. so what, the super bowl is on the line. $25,000 is nothing if that is, in fact, what happened and they cheated or somebody altered the ball. with our without his knowledge.
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>> let's talk about seahawks quarterback richard sherman who thinks football fans shouldn't be fooled by brady's clean-cut image. here's sherman sounding off. >> i think people sometimes get a skewed view of tom brady. that he's just a clean cut, does everything right and never says a bad word to anyone. and we know him to be otherwise. it's not going to have any effect on this game. nobody's going to get suspended. nothing's going to happen. you know, they're going to play this game. whatever they did, the risk/reward was greater. >> so that brings up the question, is the distraction dana, you pointed that out, they need to focus on football, but the patriots were at risk of this being too big of a distraction for the team. >> imagine if he played these kind of mind games with the iranians on their nuclear threat. what these people are thinking about is this really does seem to go -- i think the story is over-inflated. >> very good. greg, your thoughts on sherman? >> when they show all these quarterbacks, there has got to
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be a study, why are all star quarterbacks handsome? never an ugly -- >> they all are. >> -- star quarterback. >> that's right. >> no it goes back to high school. the best looking guy decides he wants to play football because the girls like the football players and, of course, he wants to be the quarterback. >> then you want to get to him and you want to attack him and talk to him about their family. >> that's nice. >> richard sherman throwing it down before the football game. ten days way. >> i know. you know what, let him speak his mind. that's what he thinks. it's true. tom brady has this beautiful little squeaky clean, like, firemen calendar image. however, people in the know he's not so squeaky clean. >> somebody hit on you. >> he also comes from a team that does not have a squeaky clean record in terms of playing by the rules. >> one quick point -- >> because the patriots are recidivists not the first time. >> 1 11 -- they expect 120
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million-plus to watch it this year. >> good answer. >> did you prepare that all day? i just came up with that myself. >> handmade signs were put in the -- >> yeah, the fans will hold up signs during that game that will say -- >> cheater. >> yeah. right. >> what do you got? are your balls inflated properly? >> that's -- you said it. >> you're encourageing bob here. we're already on -- >> we have to take it apart right at the end? >> all good? ready to go? >> ready to wrap. the white house always calls israel one of our closest allies, so why would it be mad at congress for inviting prime minister netanyahu to make an address? that is up next.
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israel's prime minister has one of the most powerful voices to warn the world about iran. >> for 35 years, iran has relentlessly pursued the global mission which was set forth by its founding ruler, in these
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words. "we will export our revolution to the entire world, so don't be fooled by iran's ma nipnipulative charm offensive, designed for one purpose and one purpose only, to lift the sanctions and remove the obstacles to iran's past to the bomb." >> that's why congress invited netanyahu to address a joint session on march 3rd seen as a rebuke to the president who's threatened to veto any new sanctions imposed on iran. the white house isn't happy about the invite calling it a departure from protocol but it wasn't notified first. house speaker john boehner says congress doesn't have to ask for permission permission. >> i did not consult with the white house. the congress can make this decision on its own. i don't believe i'm poking anyone in the eye. and the fact is that there needs to be a more serious conversation in america about how serious a threat is from radical islamic jihadists and
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the threat posed by iran. >> and reaction from the state department. >> it's certainly unusual. we heard as you know, and have reported on from speaker boehner, not from israel about plans for the prime minister to come here. it was a bit of an episode of the bizarre today. seeing all of this unfold. >> okay. so josh ernest called it a breach of protocol. >> john boehner pointed out they weren't poking the president in the eye when inviting netanyahu when the president clearly didn't want netanyahu to address congress. president obama poke congress in the eye saturday night saying no matter what you decide, i'll veto it if it has to do with sanctions in iran, especially when we know sanctions on iran work and congress would likely recommend imposing sanctions. the poke goes from the president to congress, not the other way around. i think it's the right thing to do. and i think the president should be meeting with netanyahu, and i
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believe he's not, isn't that true? >> he is not. he's gone on the record. >> he might change his mind. this is a heat of the moment frustration. we should have the same goal. of course i think the president should meet with the prime minister of ooerzisrael if we're going to continue to have the strong relationship with them that we want and i think israel wants, we should be able to put aside the logistical details of how an invitation was offered. now, last week when prime minister david cameron of the uk was here, president obama asked him, and he talked about it in the press conference to actually lobby members of congress to not vote for sanctions. so president obama was asking a world leader to weigh in and i think that the congress has a right to say, benjamin netanyahu is the leader of israel. it's his responsibility. he has strong feelings. let's have him come and speak. so i think that because we have the same goal, which is that iran should not be allowed to get a nuclear weapon, then i
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think the parties should be able to come together. i think the sanctions could pass the congress. i think because they are -- slap back in terms of it's not proactive sanctions, it's sanctions if "x" is not met. i think that is something that is important, because leverage does not weaken your position when you're in negotiations. leverage is good thing and i think our congress is right to press the president on it. >> all right. strong move? >> well, here's what's wrong with this picture. it's okay to make deals with your adversaries behind closed 't meet with an ally in public. it's always been about that. ignoring our allies at the expense of our adversaries. part of this is a skepticism is about obama's negotiating abilities. you feel like you're watching a 6-year-old play chess against bobby fisher. at times it seems like he has a form of stockholm syndrome. he likes everybody but us and he feels that, like, leverage, the idea of leverage is kind of an
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old -- a part of the past that we have to let go. >> something jbgeorge bush did. >> yeah we don't need leverage, instead let's get james taylor. >> that's always the diplomatic solution. >> let me try to put two points on the table. i don't remember, maybe dana does, remember when a leader of another country has been asked to speak before congress without the white house being informed. number one. number two you know who breaks with netanyahu on this? his own intelligence service. they say he should not get in the middle of encouraging sanctions by the u.s. congress. >> did you see the update on that today, bob? >> youdo you have that? >> they came out and said that's not what they were saying. the chairman, himself, said it. i'm just telling you this is what the new information that they put out today. >> answer my other question. did you remember when you had a speaker that you didn't know about? >> no. you know why? one reason i think is because we had really good relationships with legislative -- through our legislative affairs office. they were excellent and knew the
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members of congress. they could go in and talk to them and could have said hey, speaker boehner, this is going to happen. okay, fine, unhappy about it, but all right, i'll take the message back to the president. the relationship had been broken. i think they have new legislative affairs people that could be better. over six years, president obama has treated them terribly and i think it's wrong for them to invite them. >> i've never -- i'm just saying for the record, i did not know. >> netanyahu is being criticized. maybe it was his, under protocol, for him to alert the white house about it. maybe that didn't happen. >> nevertheless, why is this taking place? >> right. >> because the president of the united states has failed in his relationship with israel. this is the worst our relationship with israel has been. but for the absence of leadership, the vacuum he's created in this very strategic alliance in the world that we need congress had to step in. good for boehner for doing it. put the full-court press on the president. make a decision on this. go ahead and veto it. see what happen. >>s. >> we don't know what kind of
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negotiations are going on. the fact of the matter is there could be substantive negotiations going on and other allies do not want this thing vote in by the u.s. congress. doesn't that tell us something? >> i don't know. let's see with negotiations going on. let's listen to menendez who plays for your team and the president's team and hear what he has to say. >> i have to be honest with you. the more i hear from its administration and its quotes, the more it sounds like talking points that come straight out of tehran. and it feeds to the iranian narrative of victimization. when they are the ones with original sin. and elicit nuclear weapons program. >> and those are nuclear talking points from a democrat. >> it's no longer about stopping the bomb. all we're doing at this point is delaying the inevitable because it's gone this far. i don't -- >> oh, come on. >> we have to realize, bob, that iran doesn't want to be our friend. >> ever. >> never going to be a long walk on the beach. >> menendez has no idea what
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he's talking about, first of all. >> how could you say that? he's chairman of the foreign relations committee. he has no idea what he's talking about? >> talking points for tehran? >> he was using a little hyperbole hyperbole. >> a little hyperbole. >> you can't say he doesn't have any idea what he's talking about. >> the speech writers for president obama in state yoofof the union declared iran is decreasing its some piletockpile of nuclear -- enriched uranium. that's not true. they decreased the speed at which they're enriching uranium. democrats do this. this is the same argument they made about health care premiums. bend the cost curve down. health care premiums were going to go down. they haven't gone down. they're not going down. the speed as which it's going up have slowed. >> do you really believe the democrats want to see iran move ahead on -- >> i don't know what they want. >> oh, my god. >> bob it's not about that they
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believe their kind of thinking will work as though that every country is like a romance novel that obama can crack open and read. it's not that way. they don't care about -- >> like with putin and assad. >> yeah. >> i don't -- >> everything is a new burgeoning, flowering romance. >> just the president of the united states doesn't care about what iran is doing. >> you said that bob. >> i did not say that. i said that he delivered numbers that were patently false in the state of the union. >> given three pinocchios. >> they were given three pinocchios. >> that's the problem. >> to suggest he doesn't care -- >> you suggested it. >> i did not suggest it. >> i said are you suggesting he cares too much? >> i did not suggest it. >> i think i said i don't know what he cares about but i do know he's delivering talking points. >> i don't know. look at an example as who he chooses to golf with. people who are the heads of oppressive regimes but won't meet with netanyahu. we haven't heard from hollywood hot head alec baldwin for a while.
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to help maintain muscle. all with a delicious taste. grandpa! [ female announcer ] stay strong, stay active with boost. so, it's day 6,000 of the "american sniper" controversy. alec baldwin finally weighed in with its ample buttocks. admonishing actor dean cane for saying he'd kick seth rogen's butt for a crack about chris kyle. baldwin blasted a guy for making a threat. i guess with alec you're only allowed to do that to photographers and children. i kid the husky bucket of hate. meanwhile "rolling stones" shreds the film which is a great thing since zsit's the same mag at cannononized a -- i'm just shocked
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you didn't have the paris killers on the cover this month. i guess it's because they shot up a magazine which is a little bit closer to home than the boston marathon. bottom line, "american sniper" is way more nuanced than these morons care to admit. it's about a human being, strengths and flaws included. war is not glorified. instead, it's seen as hell, inescapable and tragic. as with everything in a political world, the movie gets tossed into a divisive blender creating two smoothies of opinion, one left, one normal. the film works as one of those hotel flashlights that exposes the grime that was previously unseen. here are exposes shallow thinking of knee jerk ideologues. it's also simplistic, predict predictable predictable, stale, and old. much like yaun wenner. i have to read you alec baldwin
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baldwin's tweet. "isn't that the same kind of troubled thinking that got chris kyle killed?" baldwin, he's actually dancing on a dude's grave. >> wait a minute. how -- this guy was killed by a soldier with -- >> he was trying to help. >> he was trying to help. >> he was trying to help. >> i'm not sure -- al here is just trying -- >> what's wrong with him? >> remember he was going to be done with media but he's clearly trying to get back in. dean cane said i think it was -- he said i want to kick one of the two's butsts seth rogen or michael moore. dean cane, kid rock on one side, alec baldwin and other idiots on one side. we side with people who are more patriotic, american, morn our side. jean fonda, did she -- >> we have her tweet. she compared it to "coming home", a movie she was in about returning vietnam veterans. she at least sees the ambiguity
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and moral challenge, struggles. >> she also made a statement. i'm not sure if it's in conjunction of this. she said she wished she hadn't done that thing back then when she hung out with the vietnamese protesting the war. >> yeah. >> all right. she's coming around. >> what do you think, dana? isn't it kind of -- is it sad that those who like and hate the movie are patterned exactly down political lines? does that bother you? except for jane fonda. >> she's the only woman involved in this. a reasonable point. >> i'm shocked. >> the rest are all these nonsense. frankly, middle-aged white guys fighting amongst themselves about this movie. everybody else seems to love the movie. they're fighting with each other on twitter, no less. give me a break. >> it's kind of embarrassing. >> it is. >> grow up. >> grow. >> well, do you think dean cane was wrong? i think he was just talking like a dude saying, hey if i see you i'm going to kick your butt. >> i mean did you expect anything else from superman,
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baby? i love it. good for you. he's in hollywood. people will be like, oh, let's boycott dean cane, don't put him in anymore movies. good for him. i would love -- i would pay to see him whoop on michael moore. >> can i add something? dean cane was buddies with chris kyle. if you're alec baldwin, not to understand that, that's part of the problem. he didn't realize dean cain and kyle are friends. >> good for him for sanding up, too. >> bob? >> it doesn't matter because president obama's outlawed snipers and so there won't be any snipers around. >> much better. much better. >> i'm going to say -- probably going to outlaw most of the military so we don't have to worry about this. >> oh, bob, bob's a little deflated. >> are you saying obama hates america? is that what you're saying? >> no, no, no, no hates snipers and all kinds of things like that. he should be impeached. >> really? >> we have been saying that,
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a lot of people do things to try to make themselves appear smarter. "the wall street journal" compiled a list. some put on serious facial impressions to appear intelligence. others hold their hands or arms still or use big words. here's what actually works according to psychologists. you should make eye contact, stand or sit up straight or wear glasses to look smarter. >> oh, my goodness. >> look this guy. remember this? >> oh my gosh. >> craig, we miss your glasses. i mean, you don't need glasses to make you appear smarter. >> what happened to those? >> it was a prop. >> you know what you just described? what lawyers tell their guilty suspects when they go to court.
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wear glasses. >> look at bob. >> the person who wrote this piece is dumb. >> wow. >> wait a minute on second thought -- >> no, i tell you what, because generally people mistake -- >> bob, you do look smarter. >> mistake -- they believe certain people are dumb when they're not because they just don't know them. >> you clearly have not studied the 153, intellectual and deviant behavior, have you? >> you have. >> certainly deviant far of it. i don't want to talk to you you're not on the i.q. level i have. go right ahead. >> it's amazing, you put on eric's glasses -- >> i look smarter. you can't make me look smarter. it doesn't do anything. here you go. >> here's another tip i like this in this, eric. they said put away the phone and listen instead of, you know, talking to somebody while you're also looking at your phone. if you simply put down your phone and listen to them, you will appear smarter. >> i'm not sure i'm buying that.
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i think you can look more trustworthy. i think you can look more credible. i don't know how you can look smarter. i don't think the way a person looks has anything to do with their i.q. >> women go through this at the workforce, right? you have to decide -- >> duh, it does. >> duh is a really good word. >> look how smart i look here. feast the eyes on the intelligence. >> have you ever seen this before? a guy who does this? >> does that make you smart, too? >> really. >> it's interesting. it's interesting. clearly. interesting. thank you. >> i'll throw some other things out here since you don't like this. kimberly, things smart people say that make them sound dumb. one of them i picked up on this one, you know when you're telling somebody a problem that you have and they will say, oh, you'll be fine. you'll be fine. apparently that makes them sound dumb. >> i don't like the word "fine." it's probably one of the most offensive words in the english -- >> fine means a lot of things. >> it's just nothing. >> if i say to -- >> i do.
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oh, it will be fine. that's nice. what does that mean? there's no enthusiasm or substance behind it. >> how about when people say -- >> garbage. >> people like these stories. >> can i just rest why this story is garbage? >> what? >> it's not talking about actual intelligence. it's talking about stupid behaviors. intelligence is doing one thing right. there's a thomas aquina said, i fear the man of a single book. it's about somebody who understands depth of an idea or has knowledge about one thing. that's why go back to chris kyle, and stephen hawking, are both geniuses. hawking in his realm of mathematics was brilliant. kyle in neutralizing brilliant. the whole point of intelligence is taking one thing and knowing it backwards and forwards. >> it's aquinas. >> here, put these on. >> i'm telling you.
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i looked it up. >> whatever. >> you look smarter. >> yes, it is phonetically. the "i" is long. >> how do you pronounce -- >> it is aquinas. phonetically speaking the "i" is long when it's followed by a vowel. >> go to the pronunciation of his name. these little movements don't make you look smart. >> i know you -- >> go like this. going like this doesn't make you look smart. >> i'm so smart it doesn't matter what i do or what i wear. >> you render men dumb. >> who's the smart one that picked out this segment is what i want to know? >> i think i'm the winner. win/win/win. >> good segment, dana. >> it's win/win. no win/win/win. it's win/win. >> did you just become the ombudsman? >> i'm your ombuddy. i'm going to move on. coming up, sportscaster brian gumbel is taking aim at the nra. why he says he hates america's largest gun rights organization, next.
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the votes are in. 92% for aquinas. hbo "real sports" host bryant gumbel never one to mince words. pretty strong ones for the
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national rifle association. in a new interview with "rolling stone" gumbel targets the group with millions of members saying there are few things i hate more than the nra. i think they're pigs. i think they don't care about human life. i think they're a curse upon the american landscape." i am one to not like the national rifle association but i wouldn't say that. what do you think got into him here? >> his hatred and ideology overtook him not realizing how many wonderful people are members of the nra. he may not like what the nra stands for but he just encompassed everyone who's an nra member. women, children, heroes, veterans. those are the people who are going to be very insulted by what he said. >> dana, what do you think? >> in particular -- he has a right to say whatever he wants. the part i didn't really understand is that they don't care about human life which it's actually -- i think that's very unfair what they're trying to do is protect human life. i think what bryant gumbel is
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really against i would think, are people who use guns illegally who are not part of the nra. >> you know, i don't nra. >> i don't know him personally but i'm not a fan of some of his commentary. this will be another example of it. i don't understand what he is trying to action pleasure with this kind of rhetoric. i don't get it. i think he is an unhappy person. >> what do you think? >> i think kimberly is on to something. bryant is a very unhappy guy. he's always been living in the shadow of his more talented brother, greg gumbel who is a talented broadcaster. he never has to make a decision involving guns because every where he boring has security. unlike theaters and schools where these crimes take place. he works in broadcasting where you're surrounded by people who are armed. he's never had to work in a gun-free zone. >> i've seen him on television.
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on politics you start talking about sports. he does have a tendency -- i'm not sure why he went off on a political tangent on something like this. he is very, very well educated when he talks about sports. >> you can talk about anything. remember bob costas did that. >> what did he do? >> he won't an anti-gun rant after one of the football players -- >> shouldn't there be a rule of thumb, if your particular expertise is in a particular field, should you not stick to that field? >> we would not have a show! >> what are you talking about? you just put us all out of a job. >> i put myself in that category. i'll get into anything, that makes no sense. >> i would have had to leave before the "a" block. it was on sports. >> oh i see. >> i thought you were supposed to like --
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>> no. >> this is talk show kind of stuff. not something you talk about in a sporting event. why do you do that? particularly when he will hurt his o.j. brand as a sports guy. as much as i hate the nra, i agree. >> why do you hate them? >> i think they push legislation which is decidedly dangerous. i don't think they don't care about people. >> they advocate the second amendment. >> not having the second amendment -- >> let's not get into guns. then you want to get into climate change. so,as my personal financial psychic, i'm sure you know what this meeting is about. yes, a raise. i'm letting you go. i knew that. you see, this is my amerivest managed... balances. no. portfolio. and if doesn't perform well for two consecutive gold. quarters. quarters...yup. then amerivest gives me back their advisory... stocks. fees. fees. fees for those quarters. yeah. so, i'm confident i'm in good hands. for all the confidence you need.
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td ameritrade. you got this.
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time for one more thing. >> what a weirdo! >> a lot of people ask me if i'm into unicorns. since i am one, i've been trapped in this body for a long time. this came from linldda. the guy who sent never slippers yesterday, his name is peter. he is a missionary in the philippines and he sent me that. i have to say you have to stop sending me unicorn mugs because they break in the mail and i don't like broken mugs. enough with the unicorn crap, okay? i've had enough. >> crazy thing is i couldn't even see your helps move. >> there is like a gaping hole
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in the center there. >> i can see you right through my nose. >> is this a real show? >> i'm not sure. one of the all time great nascar sprint club champions, jeff gordon, has decided he would retire. he has run 92 career sprint cup wins. the second or third only to richard petty. he will be missed in the sport. he was controversial but he won. and we'll miss him. >> i want to point you to washington, d.c. where the 42nd annual march for life is happening now. this happens every year since 1973. they have hundreds of thousands of people. the official count will be in tomorrow morning. people from all over the united states. as he did last year and the year i guess just last year, the pope tweeted support. on these lines i point you to another reading assignment.
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i'll give you another one today. it is the national review online. and kevin williamson, one of our favorite writers who writes headlines about the 20-week abortion bill. it tell a very personal story that i think will touch your heart so i hope you will read and it send me your thoughts on twitter. >> you're up. >> who doesn't like rocky balboa right? on the steps of philadelphia on the museum of art. a group of tourists who ran up the rocky steps, yeah. all of a sudden, sylvester stallone was actually there. so there you go them did a little selfie. did he the whole rocky balboa thing. >> i'm all about eye of the tiger. >> why? >> what? >> he just hangs out there. i'm kidding. >> can we roll a little video of she is a self-described
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queen of youtube. she's gotten millions of hits. she just interviewed president obama at the white house. now, i'm all for it. i see the outreach to young people. when people like megan kelly and bret baier cannot get that interview with president obama in studio -- >> and he will meet with bb netanyahu. >> she tweeted me. >> she said xoxo. >> i'm appalled at this. i am absolutely appalled. but the unicorns are not happy. the unicorns are not happy. i speak for all unicorns when i say i'm outraged. there are a fife us. >> why don't you roll around in a bathtub with milk and fruit loops. >> are you hot in there? >> i'm hot all the time. >> thank god you have that mask
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thing. set your dvrs so you don't miss us. a key u.s. ally in one of president obama's self-declared success stories falls into chaos. and it's raising questions about efforts to track down terrorists there. this is special report. good evening. welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. yemen was one of president obama's examples of where the u.s. was getting it right on foreign policy. that's what he said a little more than four months ago. the situation in yemen has gotten progressively worse. tonight yemen's president and his cabinet have resigned. and worries that increasing danger are even stronger and the

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