Skip to main content

tv   The Five  FOX News  March 12, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT

2:00 pm
revolting as me in spandex parking orders at you. the naked gal of government bureaucrats, barking theirs at anyone. i knee a lot of those guys in washington don't have a clue but surely, they can see their hypocrisy hypocrisy, pause they got to have a mirror. good night. this is a fox news alert. ferguson on edge and a manhunt under way. seven months after the firestorm that erupted in the wake of michael brown's shooting and just one week after the justice department cleared officer darren wilson of all wrongdoing in that shooting, the city remains tense. last night, two police officers were shot one in the face, and the other in the shoulder while they were standing in front of the police station as demonstrators gathered across the street. let's set the scene. protesters were angry from the start and their target was obvious. >> [ bleep ] >> i don't say that. >> [ bleep ].
2:01 pm
[ bleep ]. >> can't stop the revolution. >> we got to fight back. we got to fight back. >> those words eventually gave way to violence. [ gunshots ] >> [ bleep ] [ screaming ] >> and a final despicable taunt. >> acknowledge nine months ago would have kept that from happening. >> attorney general eric holder weighed in earlier today, condemning the shooting. >> i unequivocally condemn these repug nant attacks. i stand ready to offer the full investigative resources of the united states department of justice the fbi to solve this crime and to hold these perpetrators fully fully
2:02 pm
accountable. what happened last night was a pure ambush. this was not someone trying to bring healing to ferguson. this was -- this was a damn punk. punk. >> last night might have been the result of just one punk, but it's hard to deny there is a lot of anti-police sentiment swirling in this country right now. can you imagine the aftermath of all of this? now it seems it gets even a worse situation, violence on all sides, emotions running high. where do we go from here? >> i -- i will disagree with the anti-cop sentiment swirling around the country. i think it's swirling among a select few of really awful, awful people. the problem is, it's the rest of the country that isn't saying anything. where is the silent majority of the people that love law enforcement, that respect law enforcement? it's time for them to speak up and march for these people that are now bull's eyes. they are men in blue are now bull's eyes. we watched an entire nation of
2:03 pm
law enforcement get smeared over ferguson. they took something local and they made it national. they said it was an epidemic of police shooting blacks. this was wrong. so i'm not gonna indict the white house or the administration. i'm not going to do what they do. but we should indict the salivating, race-crazed media who ginned up this and spread the virus of division that allowed a atmosphere for this to happen. what has progressed in this last decade? seen three major things undermined. we have seen the national spirit, ie, patriotism, which is mocked. seen the family unit fall apart pause we are now endorsing all kinds of lifestyles and we don't care whether they are single parents or what. law enforcement is now seen as a threat. so the triumph of subversion spread from campus to communities whereas right now what you see is the fruits of subversion. these are not people interested, the guy that shot the cops, he is not interested in reckon sill brakes can, holder's right. this is about subversion, about undermining society undermining
2:04 pm
civilization. they show up at protests like this for a reason because it's their way in. >> all right, dana, so ferguson on edge. did the attorney general hit the right taupe? >> sounded like it to me. i do think that when the justice department issued its report and they knew that this was coming, because they were involved, i don't know what sort of help maybe the ferguson police needed then, if they needed more monitoring or support. i don't know if they asked for it, but it seems like that would have been something they should have offered. i was thinking about these -- the community and how it is a difficult decision to choose law enforcement as your career path. but the people that do that, they do it because they want to help their local community. you usually become a law enforcement officer in the place where you grew up, because that's your home and that's what you want to give back to and it's very satisfying work and cab rewarding career. but it's also very dangerous. and i don't know what their recruitment is going to be like in the future for a place like ferguson and not exactly sure
2:05 pm
i'm looking forward to the discussion. in fact, been a's comments about what breaks the cycle. because at this point, the community seems i don't know if this is a point were they can now step back and everybody cool -- cooler heads prevail or if it gets worse. i hope not worse. >> eric, ferguson didn't happen in a vacuum. what we are seeing also yesterday evening, a police officer gunned down in long island thankfully will survive a gang task force officer puts his life on the line. this is really symbolic of frustration and tensions in communities across this country. we even saw it here in new york, shepherded in by our own mayor. a cop shot a couple of weeks ago in philadelphia lost his life. it keeps on happening, even after the attorney general tells us that they found nothing wrong with darren wilson's behavior amount day that michael brown was killed. the media loves this stuff. greg's right. the media eats this up. it is great for ratings. it is great for business. you also great for business people in the race business the
2:06 pm
al sharptons of the world. you listen to al sharpton and you don't hear what he should be saying. he should be saying this is ridiculous, enough is enough. we have to stop. hands up don't shoot didn't work. it wasn't -- >> didn't happen. >> didn't happen. it didn't happen that way. wilson's been exonerated let's move on. let's work on race relations not race divisions in the country. he is not saying that. so is it too har to be say there's two more cops with their blood on sharpton's hands in addition to the other buns that happened in the aftermath of al sharpton's protest that he called for it down here in new york. now, there was a professor who was involved in that one, too i get that. but he is not -- sharpton and jesse jackson and marc morial, those are the people who should be out in front and center saying stop. calming tone. you don't hear that you hear explanation, yes but racism exists, blacks are treated poorly in relation to whites in police departments, by police departments around the country. that's not the tone that's going to fix things. >> what kind of tone do we need to hear and especially from the
2:07 pm
black community? >> i think you need to be very clear here that this is wrong. i think -- it is not hard to say this is wrong. you do not shoot anybody, but certainly not officers of the law who protect your community and i got to tell you, the minority community, we are more dependent on the police maybe than in of a fluent, wealthy communities with their alarms and guards and private security. so anyway i'm just telling you, that is crazy. but the problem i think that exists is one of building trust. and how do you build trust, especially with poor black communities where they often see the police as coming in, stereotyping them and all the rest. this eric says it was wrong what happened and it was proven to be untrue, in terms of the hands up and don't shoot and all that and he is right. you the other half of that report was a community that felt that the police department was unfairly targeting them and aggressive in the way that they handle and directed that aggression toward people of color and especially poor people
2:08 pm
of color. so, that exists, too. i will say this, i hope you know, because i believe that those reforms necessary to build the trust are being pursued by officials in missouri. i mean, you saw the police chief had resigned. the -- you know people in st. louis, they are thinking about taking over that police department. all of law enforcement is trying to find these folks but you know what seems to me, there are good people in st. louis working on this issue, then you have these folks come in and they undermine. i think they play to all of our antagonisms and fears and racial hatreds and that's -- i mean, just destructive. >> yep. the comments, too. yes, the shootings were awful, it was horrible, but the comes before and after the shooting, i mean, they are still -- it's still -- >> very -- >> still present there. >> how do you think police officers feel when they get up every morning kiss their wife, their child good bye to try to go out there make a good living, don't dealt paid very much.
2:09 pm
cops' lives matter too black lives matter. all lives matter. law enforcement officials are understandably furious about the shooting. listen to st. louis county police chief and the ferguson police rep. >> this is really an ambush, what it is. you can't see it coming. you don't understand it. it is going to happen. you're basically defenseless from the fact that it is happening to you at the time. >> i kept hearing yesterday, oh, the protesters finally got what they wanted chief jackson stepped down. they didn't get what they wanted earlier yesterday when tom stepped down. they got it late last night when they successfully finally successfully shot two police officers. is that what it takes? is it pay back an eye for an eye? >> i have mentioned this a couple of times before. we talk about backlash a lot when there's an act of terror done by radical islamists. we are told you know, you know, don't go after modern muslims, mosques are being threatened. ben ever there is an isolated incident involving an incident
2:10 pm
don't hear people saying, hey, you guys, lay off the cop, don't go after cops no one seems to be concerned about the backlash against cops. instead created an environment, where it is almost the opposite. there is a solution for ferguson and it is to resign. all the cops go. let the activists police this neighborhood. in a week, they will make aleppo look like epcot center. it is -- if they actually believe that the cops are a negative influence, then the cops have every reason to say, see ya later we are out of here, good luck. >> you're right. you know what? >> is that what it will take? >> anarchy. what the anarchists want. >> you know what, guess what? higher levels of violence and crime. you always hear the conservatives, this is just the truth. higher levels of violent crime in the black community higher levels, robbery, all this. so, what you're saying, you know, self-evident. without police, you do not have structure, don't have protection even to walk to school and little old ladies with the bars over the windows and gates with the doors, they would pay a
2:11 pm
terrible price, but that's not to say a bad cop is to be excused. >> so, is very telling when they finds this guy or guys, whoever it is three or four shots fired whoever it is they think it was one who is he? is he someone from the community? is he a protester shipped? in an anarchist that came from some other group and wants to make a stand and keep the race debate going. very, very telling. if it's someone from -- i just -- i don't know, just a feeling, not someone from the ferguson community. just doesn't seem like they -- they seem -- look, they protested. they broke some windows. they lit some stuff on fire. you to shoot cops? >> wrong. >> like the a guy who traveled to new york to the shoe the cops. >> the only thing i would quibble with the attorney general's comments a perpetrator is a punk. a punk is somebody who does graffiti or something. this individual shot people. a cold-blooded murderer. >> violent crime. be treated that way. >> unfortunate term used.
2:12 pm
talk this, this is important. national urban league president marc morial had some interesting commentary on what the shootings meant a and he says they showed that change is still needed. >> there's a report that i saw that stated that the shots did not come from the protesters. right. >> and only an investigation or an inkburry is going to tell the truth about what happened. having said that, it demonstrates that there's still tremendous need, demand for change in ferguson, that people want further change and that the resignation of the chief and the city manager are just steps toward that type of change that needs to take place. >> his comments suggest that this kind of violence and attempted murder is warranted and in fact, necessary as part dialogue. >> whatever, 25 minutes -- soundbite, marc morial found two excuses he planted for the occurrence last night. number one, the shot may not have come from the protesters,
2:13 pm
really? 'cause there are eyewitnesss that saw it eyewitnesses on both sides both cops and non-cops who saw where the shots were fired. they were definitely fired from the protesters' side into where the cops were standing. number two he said, well, change is needed so almost like, well, that's why that happened. so, in 25 or 30 seconds two excuses were made. like i said in my prior comment, marc morial, a leader in the black community, al sharpton jesse jackson stop making excuses. start pointing the finger to the thugs and the punks that they are and say enough, cut it out. this is not helping the cause at all. >> well 'cause if not guess what, hands up, they have got blood on their hands. if you are not part of being the solution and if you are promoting a false narrative it's not only irresponsible it is deadly. look what's happened in the police communities. >> but not a false narrative to say there are tensions between poor black people in this country and the police. >> but it is a false narrative to suggest that something that did not happen, such as hands up, don't shoot and cops are
2:14 pm
going out specifically to murder african-americans, that is not true. >> no, you're talking specifically about the michael brown situation. and even in new york, with the eric garner situation, the guy was choked, i think grand juries have both spoken very clearly on these issues, but it's not to say there is not this larger issue about tensions teen how the poor black community in this country feels the police. >> right and your comments were specific with respect to establishing a relationship of trust? >> yes. and you have to deal. >> they are not helping it. they are undermining the trust. and they are putting minority neighborhoods in grave risk for this kind of behave or. that's problem. >> what i'm saying is you need to understand, you know i disagree with you. i don't think that marc morial was making an excuse. i think he is saying that there is a continuing angst, anger in that black community and that people are looking for change. that's part of the building trust that i'm talking about. >> but to mention these two things that that shot may not have come from --
2:15 pm
>> where it came from. >> to mention that and say that the community needs change or the country needs change, just in the -- mentioning the same breath of a shooting two cops shot, certainly certainly ties that -- ties those two together. in many people's worlds, including mine. >> okay. greg? >> well, the joke is on everybody. on anybody who has a sincere feeling about this whether you believe that the police -- the police acted wrongly or you believe in defending the police. ber all being preyed on by infill traitors. pace clirks a roving band of minstrels, these radicals that move from protest to protest. they -- they were there at occupy wall street. they show up at every -- #
2:16 pm
>> the same thing, morial those cops being shot was wrong but there may be some other reasons explaining why. >> you think it was justification? >> i do not. i don't think either one. i don't -- >> no, no you think morial was trying to justify? >> no trying to say he was making excuses why that may have taken place and there's no -- there's no justification. >> all right. dana? >> i'm good. i know we need to go. >> stay with us, right? coming up did hillary clinton break the law by keeping work-related e-mails on a private server. why her exit from the state department may hold the answer when "the five" returns.
2:17 pm
2:18 pm
♪ help brazil reduce its overall reliance on foreign imports with the launch of the country's largest petrochemical operations. when emerson takes up the challenge it's never been done before simply becomes consider it solved. emerson.
2:19 pm
2:20 pm
2:21 pm
new questions are being raised about whether hillary clinton broke the law by keeping work-related e-mails on a private server. the former secretary of state claimed the her tuesday press conference she or bayed all federal flaws place because those laws allowed her to police herself. one former justice department attorney is calling that into question. here is shannon kaufman on the kelly file last week. >> every employee at the state department has to sign this little piece of paper when they leave the state department. and it says, i certify, basically under penalty of perjury, that i have returned all official records that were in my possession while -- while i was an officer in the department of state. so where is that document, and if she didn't sign that, why not? >> grow greg why not? >> how ironic that coffin buried hillary. hillary is suffering from clinton privilege, white privilege, feel like you're entitled to everything and that you want but she wants. the white house is the pony that she was promised. the pony that she was promised
2:22 pm
for letting this young man, barack obama, go first. remember, she deserved it but she let him go this was the deal, she is ticked all she is in a bind, when she is silent she looks pad, it is worse. about as likable as elective surgery. every time she speaks, an angel shoots a check rub. >> listen to robert dpibs former white house press secretary the strategy of hillary clinton waiting for eight days and how problematic that might have been. >> problematic? >> i will say waiting eight days to say what they said yesterday i think was startling to democrat it is. i doubt there was anything that was said yesterday that couldn't have been said last wednesday or thursday or friday and put a little pit of this story to bed a lot earlier. i think they also didn't understand who the stakeholders were in this, the media. the media was vested rightly, i think, in asking serious questions and they had surrogates on tv actually making it seem as if it was republicans pushing these questions. >> eric, that's been their m.o.,
2:23 pm
right? they want the media basically to carry their water. and that's starting to. the media is very uninterested in the facts about this forum, of 109 or the actual law that was broken or the guidelines the state department has had, they are pored with that. like the media wants to automatically i were by the end of this weekend that it doesn't matter if she acted up ethically pause 86% of democrats like her very much. and so, there's nothing more there. >> carville and lanny davis, they are all out there spinning and saying, wait look, the right-wing talking heads media are blowing it out of proportion. we're not. it is important. think about this for a second. '09 to '13, she was secretary of state, benghazi 12, all the pz e-mails, everything with benghazi went through her private server and we don't know what was going on, never know what back and forth correspondence. she is the one that said nothing was classified, her words
2:24 pm
nothing she did on her personal was classified. >> doesn't matter. it doesn't matter. all federal records, doesn't matter if it's classified or not. >> we should have access to it agreed. >> yep. >> however how can nothing from benghazi or didn't send any benghazi e-mails which i find that more ludicrous. mention yesterday 1 billion, 1 billion e-mails the state department in those years and they only thought 71,000 were important enough to keep. 71,000 out of 1 billion. kim perry, listen to shannon coffin, if you put your prosecutor hat on could you make this case? >> yeah i think make the case. all you need is one good sam mare tan to turn over the goods right? >> that document should be available to the public. >> should be available to the public. we should have access to it the fact of the matter is when she came out and spoke on her own behalf, big problem. no lawyer should ever represent themselves. she would have been better off being quiet. she did not advance the case for
2:25 pm
i think it just added to more conjecture and speculation and you wait and see, because people are going to come forward with e-mails that they were on the receiving end that had privileged and, you know state department information on and it's going to be bad. there's no justification for her not turning this over or complying with the regulationser signing that document and if she did sign it then she -- >> should have had all the information and answers before she went out. >> she did. >> created more questions. >> she did but she didn't want to share them. >> watch, do you think she acted unethically? >> yeah. yeah. >> why -- this is what i wanted to get to this. yeah, yeah i think she acted up ethically, but does that not matter the democrats? >> of course it matters. i tell you, you know how it matters most of all, sets a precedent. so if a future republican was to do such a thing then people would say, you guys didn't raise holy questions about hillary clinton. politicses doliticians do stuff that
2:26 pm
is wrong. >> she was secretary of state, a basic responsibility she couldn't fulfill. it was basic. >> i think you have a situation here where she acted entitled. some people say she is very defensive because she has been beaten up previously by the press. i feel trapped between the law firm of gut feld and guilfoyle. the one happened, you say she should have come out earlier. you say she shouldn't have come out at all. >> i say she should have complied with the law and wouldn't have this problem in the first place. >> yes. >> that is the idea, right? placed herself in this predicament, pad judgment. >> you think kimberly is going to bring a prosecute tore y'all case on the basis of this forum? ludicrous. nobody would. >> you know what kimberly guilfoyle told me in the green room? never lost a case. i want her as my lawyer. >> don't bet against me, juan. >> never hire a secretary who can't use e-mail. doesn't work. >> good point. >> good secretary. coming up a new study says while americans' confidence in government is hitting
2:27 pm
near-record lows a majority still trust the military. greg will explain why. later, an update on the man hunt for the gunman on the loose in ferguson. please stay with us.
2:28 pm
you're giving away pie? what would you like, apple or cherry? cherry. oil or cream? definitely cream. [reddi wip spray sound] never made with hydrogenated oil, oh, yeah... always made with real cream. the sound of reddi wip is the sound of joy.
2:29 pm
2:30 pm
2:31 pm
a recent survey finds americans distrust all parts of government, except for one. only 5% have a great deal of confidence in congress. this rises to only 11 for the president. but it goes to 50% for the military. the rest are pink co-s who should die. i kid. barely. but it's intriguing that such attitudes are the inverse of the media academic complex, but embraces all pure bureaucracy, except the warrior class. so why the reverse? credit the pernicious spread of campus radicalism, a movement that fuels hate for the military, a symbol of we were aggression and imperialism. for the teachers' lounge
2:32 pm
marxist, it is always the powerful versus the powerless and guess who is the villain is in the pig biggest scam in history in the idea that the most humane civilization ever is evil because its ideas won. by that belief, only the world's most vile can be championed. helps, you have professor and hacks who have embraced the ussr, mao, chavez, pinochet so as 2016 approaches, you have to ask yourself who do you trust? angry mouthpieces soaked in an antipathy for the west or leaders unashamed of our freedoms and the military who guaranteed them. it is not jingoistic to admit the one thing protecting america from extinction has been its military. you can't have them -- without them you will have nothing. it's a truth so obvious that it's rendered a joke by those it protects the most. so are you surprise pied these findings, kim perry? >> you know i'm really not.
2:33 pm
you look at the specific examples that have really brewed distrust, with the american people for government and almost, in fact, disdane, why should we trust them? we have secretaries of state that are hiding e-mails in a pocket, some server somewhere that refuse to comply with the rules, with the laws, because they are above it. they are better than it, they are impenetrable like you said the clinton privilege. they feel like they can get away with everything and anything. right now the polls are rewarding that kind of malfeasance. so, no and we have a president who with his mighty pen, would change anything and everything that he would like to about america, about our laws about our rules, that will agree and get into treat test and use semantic gymnastics to justify the things that he does with other countries or to show total disregard for congress the rule of law or the separation of powers. so, no, i think it's quite in keeping. >> we will be right back. juan, is the military more loved
2:34 pm
because you can actually see what they do? >> yes, ma'am i tell you what was shocking to me about this, people said the number one problem in the country is government. >> yeah. the >> the government's the big problem. and i think that has to do with people saying they don't solve any problems. they all -- all they do is finger point and game blame and, you know, tar each other. i think people -- it's interesting to me republicans have less confidence in congress than even the democrats, you pot sides in single digits. it's just -- >> don't think anything to do with half the population paying for the 100% of the population's expenses and then the half that does pay pays almost 50% of what they he were? that may have a little bit to do with it. the -- may i? >> yeah. >> the three areas that people trusted the least were congress the media and the financial institutions. i get the financial institutions. they, you know, they were bailed out. they got billions trillions of dollars. i understand congress for the reasons we just pointed out. but what did the media do? the media really supposed to just present the facts, right? you may present -- >> mainstream media doesn't.
2:35 pm
>> right. but are you not surprised that the media's sole -- >> not surprised at all. >> 99% of fox news, that's our point of view. what fox news is successful, we say the media sucks. >> last word? >> that's my point. >> trusted name in news people, because the rest of them are terrible. >> i can give you one specific example that happened today, why people are frustrated with congress. there's a human trafficking bill, anti-human trafficking bill going through the congress it passed unanimously in the committee. it goes -- we had 13 democratic co-sponsors in the senate. it goes to the floor today and because of the hyde amendment, which has been voted on, but in fact, even included in obamacare, harry reid blocked passage of that bill, the human trafficking bill is not moving forward pause democrats are jerks on this issue. >> whoa. dana, way to get, aggressive. >> i had to try to match kimberly there. >> there you go.
2:36 pm
>> get your shazam on. >> i don't even know what that means, but it sounds good. >> we do. >> oh wow. sounds like a sin nah max plot. vh-1 wants to take you for a ride on the walk of shame. sounds like fun, up next.
2:37 pm
real cheese poeple don't eat pasteurized, processed cheese food. it's only required to contain 51 percent real cheese. with sargento natural cheese slices, you always get 100 percent real. sargento. we're real cheese people.
2:38 pm
[ male announcer ] when john huntsman was diagnosed with cancer, he didn't just vow to beat it. i vowed to eradicate it from the earth. so he founded huntsman cancer institute. ♪ ♪ everything about it would be different. ♪ ♪ it would feel different. ♪ ♪ look different. and fight cancer in new and different ways. with the largest genetic database on earth
2:39 pm
that combines 300 years of family histories with health records to treat, predict and in many cases, prevent, cancer. [ huntsman ] we made it welcoming and warm with a focus on beauty serenity and getting on with life. [ male announcer ] huntsman cancer institute is the only cancer hospital in the world designed by a patient, with the vital understanding that cancer moves fast. and we have to move faster. to learn more or support the cause, go to huntsmancancer.org. ♪ ♪
2:40 pm
at ally bank no branches equals great rates. it's a fact. kind of like mute buttons equal danger. ...that sound good? not being on this phone call sounds good. it's not muted. was that you jason? it was geoffrey! it was jason. it could've been brenda. welcome back. time for the fastest six minutes on television today, cable or otherwise. three consuming stories, seven curt minutes one convivial host. more proof that american culture is in decline or why didn't i think of that, i would make millions. walk of shame shuttle could be called morning after mayhem, the new vh-1 show that interviews young people the morning after a big night out. here's a clip.
2:41 pm
>> this season on "walk of shame shuttle" -- >> how are you doing? >> i'm a mess. >> we have all done it the dreaded walk of shame. in college, i made a living out of picking up my friends after their drunk.nights. >> walk of shame shuttle, kelly ann speaking. >> no, literally, i did. and that walk of shame shuttle was born. >> what you think of the walk of shame shuttle? >> you know i think so many of these shows are all about, you know, looking down at other people you this is just debasing it. atlanta housewives it is jersey shore. now you got young people supposedly -- >> why you got to -- >> [ inaudible ]. >> walk of -- is it degrading? >> well look who wants to really be on that show? i mean, honest will? i you're not winning if you're on that show. you're not a closing. you're leaving. never gonna see the guy again. >> might see a closer by the
2:42 pm
fact that -- >> not winning on a one-night stand. >> all right. okay. >> i thought this was about terrible asian cooking. >> what? >> i actually think -- >> i don't know. >> anyway, michelle collins is on this show who is a great comedian and she is a red eye regular, i think it is going to be a fun show. it is just people getting in a car talking. the pest part about "walk of shame" walking home and people are jogging and going yeah, good luck. >> dana -- >> just don't have a lot of experience in this. >> no kidding. >> you back your dog of shame. >> with pride. >> i will tell you, in college, that was very, very interesting in the morning, going to payable practice, you see the walks of shame. >> why is it called shame? i don't understand. >> in high heels. got to roll. yesterday, kimberly told you about the $7.3 million penalty pharrell and robin thicke have to turn over to robin gaye's estate. here is a comparison of marin
2:43 pm
gaye 1977 hit "got to give it up" and pharrell and robin thicke's "blurred lines." ♪ ♪ hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey ♪ >> all right, kg, now the lawyers for pharrell williams says he is going to appeal that judgment. >> to the end of time. you called it yesterday. >> yeah, got to appeal it a challenging precedent for a musician going forward. there's a lot of back and forth about whether or not it is similar. going to be an important decision for the courts to make. let's see what happens. >> overlay it again, that doesn't sound that close does it? >> overlit gating that is an epidemic in america. i'm curious how it's going to turn out. i can kind of hear a little bit of similarity, i don't know where the line is. >> blurred lines? >> oh. nice. >> get it? >> there was no -- there was no melody. this is a first, 'cause there's no melody or harmony lifted, you can't copyright a cowbell or a false set toe. if you can -- if you can sue
2:44 pm
somebody for sounding like somebody else, then all of us are screwed. mclaughlin group can sue the capitol gang, the capitol gang can sue the five the five can sue outnumbered. all with dough is copy each other. yfrnl didn't they pay -- i think sampling like in rap happens all the time. >> right. >> you they pay for t. >> so they didn't pay that is the problem. >> they sounded like and -- >> this is different. >> pause they claim they didn't. they claim they didn't lift t anyway, got to move on. finally, tony bennett announced -- just announced he will sing at lady gaga's upcoming wedding to actor taylor kinney that got us thinking if we pfeiffers could have anyone sing at our wedding, who would we pick? dana? >> i know. well, yeah. kimberly, can you answer for me? >> dirks bentley. >> i got to meet him. play at my wedding. he is a great singer. >> yes. >> yeah. >> why don't you renew your vows and do it? >> want us to push beyond this one. kg who would sing at your wedding?
2:45 pm
>> journey. steve perry. >> nice. wow. >> very cool. i like that one. how but, juanito? >> when my daughter got married, danced to stevie wonders "ment is she lovely"? i thought that was great. when i did get married, that was pack in the disco days bee gee gees, taste of honey. >> discoing. platform shoes? >> how i met my wife in a disco. >> platform shoes on? >> me? no. >> not a i canner is i have a theory that marriages are weddings that happen in very dramatic fashion end misplay. wonders what happens to photo albums, these big photo albums to weddings a truck pick them up a i long the way, take them and send them to third world countries here, have these photo albums? i picked neil ham burger. the world's greatest comedian. he would be my -- he would be the guy that would officiate. >> the opening act? >> yeah. >> and mine would be adele, 'cause my wife loves adele. >> a good one. >> yeah.
2:46 pm
>> that would be for her. ahead on "the five," one of the most creative ways to fry bacon, a must-see video for all you bacon lovers out there. coming up. >> yeah.
2:47 pm
[ female announcer ] we help make secure financial tomorrows a reality for over 19 million people. [ alex ] transamerica helped provide a lifetime of retirement income. so i can focus on what matters most. [ female announcer ] everyone has a moment when tomorrow becomes real. transamerica.
2:48 pm
2:49 pm
this is a fox news alert.
2:50 pm
mike tobin is standing by in ferguson with a late-breaking update on the situation there. mike? >> and juan, it's all about the manhunt now, that according to the chief of the st. louis county police saying that is the number one priority. that is why we saw the search of a home about four blocks from here. neighbors say police took three adults out of that house. one -- or all of them in cuffs, one female two adult men. we also know that there was a juvenile in that home and he is going to the care of his mother. now, police are only confirming they have gathered some people for kbeg, they are not saying they have arrested anyone at this point. in front of the st. louis city police here today, we are seeing them put in concrete jersey barriers in anticipation of demonstration. we also know that the city police are losing control of the situation, just like they did during the state of emergency. the state police and the county police will take over operations. they will take over security in anticipation of more demonstration tonight. juan? >> mike thanks so much. you know dana this is to me
2:51 pm
the idea that there are going to be more demonstrations, what's going on here? you think people would be remorseful? >> yes, you would think that. but i think that there is a -- that probably people from outside of the community, that, as greg said, the professional protesters that go from place to place to create more problems and a lot of expense. you think of how many businesses were destroyed during the rioting before in the fall and those businesses probably are not coming back to that community. >> eric you know, we were talking earlier about where this came from you it seems like they are searching a house. >> right. interesting they brought up a family out in handcuffs you didn't arrest anyone yet? whatever. make a long story short. so this reminds me of the first time ferguson, remember waiting for the sun to go down. rioting looting. businesses being burned. again, that was on the heels of michael brown being killed when they thought hands up don't shoot was happening, never did. this is two cops being shot. why would there be more protesting? >> hopefully, maybe it might be a surprisingly positive protest,
2:52 pm
where there are people out supporting the police? maybe thousands from the communities all over will get out the word because a lot of these people work for a living that's why they don't protest and they got up their jobs and coming down to support the police. that would be awesome. >> you know what, i can just see it now, gregory. >> yes. >> al sharpton. >> gregory. >> leading this protest. >> oh, my god. >> in support of good policing in america. do you think this is -- >> you should be his pr guy. >> i'm feverish brother. >> that's called blurred lines. >> absolutely. >> 'cause that's not happening. but i like the idea of coming out to support the police department and try to move forward in a way to heel communities and -- heal communities, businesses can prosper, understanding, respect for the laws and law enforcement officers. >> you are exactly wry lit. i was with mayor nutter, the police officers shot in philly, 99% of the community came out in support. that's what should be happening in ferguson. >> one more thing, up next.
2:53 pm
in new york state, we're reinventing how we do business so businesses can reinvent the world. from pharmaceuticals to 3d prototyping, biotech to clean energy. whether your business is moving, expanding or just getting started... only new york offers you zero taxes
2:54 pm
for 10 years with startup ny business incubators that partner companies with universities, and venture capital funding for high growth industries. see how new york can grow your business and create jobs. visit ny.gov/business
2:55 pm
2:56 pm
bacon and guns. like a dream come true for me. [ gunfire ] >> nothing wrong with that.
2:57 pm
>> oh, yeah. >> now. >> i mean, where has he been all my life? can you imagine how delicious? you can shoot your own bacon and then you can cook it up fry it on your m-16. that's -- >> rob o'neil can do that. >> okay. >> he has an m-16 and he could cook -- >> totally happening on one more thing. what's up, are be? dana? >> okay so i like little funny videos. there is a new source for little funny videos you can find out the "new york post" digital network it's called internet action force, iaf.tv. take a look at -- this is a little funny video about politics. >> representative trey gowdy
2:58 pm
discussed hillary clinton's e-mails while wearing a brooks brothers suits. can he wear white after labor day? >> no, that is gaudy. >> you might have seen a friend of ours on red eye, worked for conan o'pry yen, back here in new york and heading this up, a great place to find little funny things to enjoy. and pass along to people. >> what do you have for us, greg, anything? >> funny little thing. >> so are you? >> secrets to happiness, now with 65% more unicorn. hey, you know if you're at a social convenient, it is important to stay off the phone unlike this woman here, oblivious to about what was to occur. show it! >> there's lance. nice ball handled. three. >> here we come a ball. there it goes. see this woman too busy on the phone. smack. ow. quite painful, i must say. >> say it again. >> must see it again in slow motion, so horrible. >> ouch. >> look at the guy just pretending to block it.
2:59 pm
just an update on this. she passed away. no. she is doing great. she is fine. she is fine. she had a little bloody nose. everything is. however, they had to shoot the ball. >> that was like so marsha brady. >> not the first time the ball has done that. >> why i don't go. i don't go to baseball or basketball games for that very reason. >> is that why you don't go? >> afraid of the face. >> will ferrell took to the baseball field cactus league games in arizona, played ten -- nine fielding position, delayed this ten different games today in benefit all cancer organizations. that's hbo and funny or die a great cause. >> no doubt about it. >> all right. juan? >> so marc morial said today in reacting to the ferguson thing you know what, we should just retire the n-word and i just want to back him up because i don't care if it's a black rapper, i don't care if it's a redneck, i don't care if it's a comedian, remember richard pryor once saying he didn't see any people like that when he went to
3:00 pm
africa, stopped using in his comedy routines. talking to eric about my e-mail so unbelievable, like a sludge coming through there with the n-word, it's just wrong. painful. stop it. don't use that word. i don't care who you are. >> set your dvr so you never miss an episode of "the five." "special report" is up next. did hillary clinton commit a felony when she deleted e-mails from her time as secretary of state? plus, new information about how secure her server was. this is "special report." good evening, welcome to washington, i'm bret baier. the implication of the hillary clinton e-mail scandal are growing potentially much more serious tonight. clinton's admission that she decided which e-mails to keep and which to destroy could set her up for criminal prosecution. chief white house correspondent ed henry, has the latest on this story tonight. >> reporter: former secretary of

183 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on