tv The Five FOX News May 22, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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aria bartiromo in the morning, a power team in this case with us giving you the latest breaking developments realtime real news giving you the best of both. cavuto coast-to-coast. this is a fox news alert. hello, everyone. i'm eric bolling. 296 of hillary clinton's e-mails while at the state department have been released. the ap reporting now that classified information contains "clinton received now classified benghazi info on private e-mail server documents show." you recall a few months ago when hillary clinton denied anything came through that private e-mail server. >> i did not e-mail any classified materials to anyone on my e-mail. there is no classified material. so i'm certainly well aware of
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the classification requirements and did not send classified material. >> consider this in another e-mail we encountered, a fully redacted e-mail indicating more classified information. but take note of the e-mail address. hrod17 which is different than the hr22 which we were told was the only one that she used ever. mrs. clinton trying to tell us she only used one. >> i thought it would be easier to carry just one device for my work and for my personal e-mails instead of two. looking back it would have been better if i simply used a second e-mail account. >> wow. in just two e-mails we uncovered two lies. consider this. these are just two e-mails of the 55,000 and, more importantly, these are the twice-scrubbed 55,000 e-mails. i can't imagine what we would find if we had access to the
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e-mails that she didn't want us to see. let's talk to ed henry. bring us up to date. it seems like every couple of minutes we're finding yet another e-mail with yet another -- i don't know a lie or fabrication or misrepresentation. what's the latest? >> reporter: eric republicans are jumping on this today. rand paul saying what he thinks the real story here is not what the state department has started dribbling out but what hillary clinton doesn't want the public to see. the fact that as you just referred to she has already deleted over 30,000 e-mails that she says her lawyers confirm it to be of a personal nature. rand paul other republicans saying they still want to see her personal server. i think the other issue, obviously, is the security of that server. today, this revelation that the fbi after the fact is saying at least that's what we're being told that they want to classify at least one part of a 2012
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e-mail about the arrest of suspects in the benghazi terror attack. interesting, because as you say, she was so firm in the u.n. press conference saying that there was no classified information at all. her defense, and i was at her press availability just a short time ago, clearly she's gotten the message that she was staying away and not answering these questions for nearly a month, she addressed it by saying look the fbi is saying after the fact the information is sensitive because of events that have happened since 2012 so now it should be classified but clinton -- hillary clinton is insisting it was not classified -- deemed to be classified at the time that she e-mailed it. obviously there's going to be questions about this. number two, more broadly, at the very least we now know that sensitive information was on that personal server. let's not forget a former top cia official mike morell said
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that he thinks somebody hacked into that personal server. so that's a big question the security of that server and what has been sent around. >> i'm not exactly where to begin, ed. i'm flabbergasted. if i was a press office i could not ever defend this. number one, we now now -- let's start at the beginning. she used a private e-mail server as an official employee a member of the cabinet. has anyone asked her if she would govern this way and would she hold them to the same standard she said they would before she broke the law? >> reporter: we have not asked her that directly. we've had limited opportunities to ask her questions. it's been sort of rapid fire a couple of times in the last few days. that is a good question moving forward because i think the ultimate question we can look in the rearview mirror and look at what went wrong but you're looking at something that is
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important. not just what went wrong. and how she would govern because of the decisions she made. you always hear an election and you've always been there before. it's about the future not about the past. the past is relevant obviously, here specifically about these e-mails. but what does it tell us about hillary clinton's leadership? that's going to be a big question. >> ed it seems like her husband, the news keeps dribbling out. the news goes back to one question. it's a question we've been asking forever, which is who pushed the video. doesn't it point to an error of the republicans that they never asked the questions? they had opportunities to ask that question in hearings and even in debates but they never actually asked the question. so it's not just her fault. it's also the fault of the republicans for not seeing the real real crime here and not pursing it. >> reporter: look going back to
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that important debate republican mitt romney had an opportunity. obviously he and others blamed it on the moderator of the debate. stepping in. but he had an opportunity to hit this each a little harder and get to some of those facts and miss the opportunity. so that's something that republicans have to deal with. in terms of hillary clinton, who i'm covering now, bottom line to me is that when you look at some of the e-mails between she and sidney blumenthal who is not working at the state department one thing that we've learned within the past 48 hours, there was an e-mail after the benghazi terror attacks that says it looks like it was inspired by this internet video and then another day, september 13th he says in a fuller memo we have more information and it looks like al qaeda was involved this was a terror attack it was planned for a month and the demonstrations are just a cover for a terror attack. what did she do on september 14th? there are two different narratives spelled out. she decided to go with the one that was more politically
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advantageous for the obama administration and on september 14th even though on september 13th sidney blumenthal said it was a terror attack. these are questions that have come up before and it's going to come up again. >> julie? >> i want to clarify. she said all those weeks ago there was no classified information that she gave out. at that time the information was not classified right? the information only came yesterday or today. she was not lying about the classification part. am i right on saying that? >> reporter: yes. but what i would say and qualify is that is what we are being told by former secretary clinton and josh earnest at the white house, that it's only been classified now. i'm not saying that i have any evidence that they are wrong. that backs up hillary clinton's account. but do we know for sure do we know what was happening in realtime when she sent that e-mail? no. this is something that we have to do more digging on.
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the other important point to make is this is nearly 300 e-mails. there are 55,000 pages of e-mails, official e-mails from her time as secretary of state. we're seeing benghazi because of that house investigation. what did she say in these e-mails about russia north korea, assad in syria, if not classified sensitive information. we simply don't know. >> ed does anyone seem to be alarmed whatsoever the press corps there about the impropriety about this? what is sidney blumenthal running a private investigation as the department of state? why is she taking direction about what narrative to put forward, offering two stories and she's deciding which one to go with and she chooses the one, despite the one to the contrary she goes with the old story? >> reporter: okay. so on that question an important question you're
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right, i've had extensive conversations with the clinton campaign. and in private they say, look these were unsolicited e-mails from blumenthal asking him to help as an outside adviser. however, that is true that they were sent in to her. it was not her necessarily soliciting it. on the other hand, she forwarded the information. was she following up or saying this is one piece of information? it looks like intelligence information or something like that while he had business dealings we're told in libya. and then what else did he send to her? did he have other information from around the world? this is one reason why republican trey gowdy has subpoenaed sidney blumenthal. >> in one of the e-mails she gets something from sidney blumenthal. it says it's sensitive. it's redacted. so that means the state department guys went through and
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used a black sharp pea and made sure there was not a response and if true we should pass on to the israeli. to me that is running an extra intelligent service through the state department who does not have a clearance and who was banned from working for the administration by president obama himself. that's a question that the white house should be asking. >> right. and you're right that the important question is because at the beginning of the obama administration the white house had hiring and firing if you will, power over who the team hillary clinton was putting together. sidney blumenthal because of past sparring matches with the obama folks, you're right, they blocked him. was this an enron and what was he doing with this sensitive information? what was hillary clinton, more importantly, doing? the bottom line is this is not about sidney blumenthal. it's about hillary clinton and her judgment as secretary of state and what it will mean if
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elected president. that's going to be the big issue. >> hang in there for one second ed because remember during the 2008 primary, 3:00 a.m. the phone is ringing and the sleeping child, then senator obama was blamed for his lack of foreign policy experience. hillary clinton seems to hold the same doubts about his ability -- the future president's ability to handle a crisis. check out the subject line of this e-mail weeks after the benghazi attack. quote, "benghazi was obama's 3:00 a.m. call" and check out hillary's instructions. please pray. if there's any question about the animosity and the whole thing we've been talking about for five or six years, that certainly cleared that up, didn't it? >> no, i don't -- >> reporter: i would caution, print it out. they were not just now attacking
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president obama in the column but raising questions about her stewardship as secretary of state. we're seeing just a small slice of it and anybody could take an e-mail out of context. i'm not saying you. i'm saying we're seeing a slice. we're making judgments about it. i think she may have been because we simply don't know see what else is in this column. let's not forget the benghazi terror attacks were not just about happening on president obama's watch, but on the secretary of state's watch. >> what am i missing here? she said obama's 3:00 a.m. call. >> that's not necessarily her -- >> the headline said that. >> the headline of the article. it's not necessarily her saying that. >> i think we read it the other way. i think we read it as her e-mail being sent saying subject line 3:00 -- >> and it's a forward. it said "fwd". >> actually that was the 3:00 a.m. call i made to her.
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we were supposed to meet for coffee. >> is that what they call it? >> yeah. >> she was too busy with the self-appointed czar. >> do you want to jump in here jule with ed? >> reporter: in "the new york times" today it said hillary clinton, all of these people are trying to get her to answer the questions. i disagree with that because she might not use them now, believe me, one day you'll meet the press and not wanting them turning on you. what's the reaction? has it become a joke now or are people -- is it hard to get her to answer questions or do you think she's opening up some more? >> reporter: yeah she's starting to open up a little bit. the other day in iowa when i started shouting at her and she said maybe i'll come back and answer questions then she did. today, i shouted again. she said hang on i'll be there in a minute. andrea mitchell and others fired
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questions. i think other reporters were jumping in saying that there were important questions t like there are in any presidential campaign and maybe she's now realizing, it's not just reporters complaining about it david axelrod said she should be answering these questions. >> the e-mails between the clinton team when they found out you were moving from the white house to their campaign. i want to ask you one last question. in the press business one of the things you try to do is very bad news on a weekend. i can understand if it was a hillary campaign trying to do this and things were federal employees including two navy s.e.a.l.s that died in gauze sdplee. i don't think it was the wisest thing to do on memorial day. account american people trust the state department which is supposed to work for all of us is not just trying to help hillary clinton here by burying this on a weekend? i think that's an outrage from a professional standpoint, that is not acceptable. >> as a reporter it's hard to prove that's exactly what to do.
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the timing is unmistakable that it's happening right before the weekend. it's clearly something -- news stuff happens, as you know friday before a big holiday weekend. the other point i would make is what happened thursday night, last night. the clinton foundation revealed oh e. by the way, there's another $26 million -- up to 26 million, i should say, in contributions to the foundation that came in the form of fees for almost 100 speeches that bil bill and hillary made. >> including from foreign governments. foreign people. >> hillary is hoping for another big story, knock this right off the map which has happened over the last two or three months. there's always something that has crested. whether it's baltimore or whatever it happens and she coasts and then the media backs off. it's going to happen again.
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>> by the way, we have 55,000 e-mails. 54,000. >> they are cherry picked. >> and two e-mails. >> i guarantee you -- and that really is the most important part of this. all of the bustering and things that we're doing, these are e-mails that are not even picked through massively already. >> and there is communication. >> we want to say good-bye to ed. thank you. a man accused of killing a wealthy d.c. family appeared in court a while ago. new details on how police finally nabbed daron wint and who else they arrested along with him. when it comes to good nutrition...i'm no expert. that would be my daughter -- hi dad. she's a dietitian. and back when i wasn't eating right, she got me drinking boost. it's got a great taste and it helps give me the nutrition i was missing. helping me stay more like me. [ female announcer ] boost complete nutritional drink has 26 essential vitamins
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the questionable murder suspect has been caught quickly but by whom? al sharpton michael moore, bill de blasio? no. the cop. another innocent victim by an unjust society bagged by evil law enforcement. i'm sorry. i'm crafting the story for the left and the ferguson protesters. after all, he's as innocent as the driven snow. sorry, snow is white and that's a racist microaggression. anyway he's awesome.
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just listen to his former lawyer. >> i know him to be a kind gentle nonaggressive person someone you wouldn't mind your grandmother going to lunch with. >> yeah until he orders the pizza. so how did the cops find this creep? phone records. now, did we violate his rights there and did we violate everyone's rights by violating his? that's how we apply the law. after we treated this thug like a terrorist, he'd be out ordering dominos. look, i get it it was a search but why shame the program that provides catching killers before they can kill again. phone records are the least of our worries. consider the ferguson protesters that were hired by the a.c.o.r.n. successor group, the protesters. the group known aptly as more
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while black lives matter so does cold hard cash. so kimberly, thank god this guy was caught. it was a horrible, horrible crime. one of the worst crimes i've ever heard. disgusting and ruthless. >> you're absolutely right. we were discussing before we started here that he was identified pursuant to a traffic stop. this highlights the importance of the work that the police department does working together policing communities that they were able to do this. traffic stops, stop and frisk, all of these things are very important for getting dangerous criminals and someone who committed multiple heinous homicides, right now he's only charged with one of the counts. he will likely be -- the rest will be added. they've got him now and he's being held. it's a tragic case of excellent
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police work. >> can we talk about this lawyer? who wants it? this guy robin thickers it's hard not to laugh, it's a horrible situation and it's -- you shouldn't joke about it but when you're faced with that kind of idiocy julie, someone your grandmother would have lunch with? >> i guess he's trying to try the case before the public. that's the only reason he's doing this. look, everybody is entitled to defense, even though what this guy allegedly did. it was atrocious and a lawyer did what a lawyer is supposed to do. >> the evidence is pretty damning. >> it's probably the best tightest homicide case i've seen in the past. o.j. was pretty tight and he got off.
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>> but he was independentnocent. >> that's true. they are still looking for the real killer. >> you know what sparked up the debate in the last ten hours or so whether or not we should be taking dna swabs anytime someone is arrested. we have a much better -- a much bigger drag net when you get the dna. >> maryland does it and they do it for any violent crimes that are committed. >> when you get arrested get dna and put it into a database. >> and listen to phone calls. i'm for both of them. i'm all for the police having the tools that they need. >> i'm for dna swabbing every criminal. >> so if you are a good lawyer
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and when i read that what a despicable human being. i understand everybody has a right to a lawyer. i don't understand how -- how is this guy, daron wint, going to pay him? i don't understand how that works. why would this defense lawyer basically shame himself on national television by defending him and saying he wouldn't hurt a kitten and know that he has been arrested six times and with the evidence why not have a little bit of caution. >> yeah. >> have a second to talk to a client. >> i don't know why he thinks he's so nonviolent. he's arrested with a machete. he assaulted a girlfriend and her infant child. he's a real winner. >> also there was a restraining order from his father and stepmother because he threatened to kill them. >> we don't have much time. i heard stories that these protesters are being paid. i had no idea that they were paying thousands of dollars. it's money through something
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called more. >> the sieu does the same thing. anytime there's a food protest, they do the same thing. >> i protested before. >> you know a lot of the street protests in d.c. in front of the various agencies. >> the washington times hired black lives matters and #cutthecheck after they were stiffed by a.c.o.r.n. >> thousands of people are walking through and they are paid. they are not fast food workers. first gop debate of 2016 is set and all of the candidates won't make it on the stage and dana will tell you which ones, next.
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the presidential date of 2015 is listen to this just 11 weeks away. who issing go going to make the cut? participants must place in the top ten of the five most recent recognized national polls leading up to august 4th. they also have to meet constitutional requirements and pay filing fees. we don't know who they will be because they will decide as they go forward. if you look at the real clear politics average poll today, this is your top ten. take a look here. this is who would make that cut if that debate were happening tomorrow and if we were actually going to use at least there are ten possible candidates not
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going to make that list. some are probably concerned about those rules but i like carly fiorina. she's a candidate. she declared. she said "fox news released for first debate. i'll look forward to making the cut and making my case to gop voters on august 6th." >> she wants to compete. >> she wants to make the list. i like her energy and enthusiasm. jeb bush is in the lead scott walker marco rubio, huckabee. we can pop this up because we have a screen of it. ben carson chris christie. so far this looks like a great mix. very good debaters in there. >> eric what you said yesterday, the polls agree with you, the economy is the most important thing. in the next 11 weeks, if you
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were any of those candidates what can they say that's going to set them apart? what are the people on the stage that they pump up their profile by saying something outrageous or an economic policy perhaps, they throw it out there right before or go on tv a lot and get into the top ten? it's going to be interesting when fox decides and the rnc decides. >> and right before. >> does the media push for each one of those. >> yes. greg you have been making the case that when candidates get up there, they have to make their case and call it being persuasively right. what do you think they should do? >> go on a low-carb diet because the stage is going to collapse.
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seriously, they have to thin this herd. the big voices and visions will be lost. if you're not serious about running for president, don't run. if you are just angling for the 8 8:00 p.m. slot everybody put on singlets and get into a cage. >> like mma? >> yes. by the way facebook is hosting the debate. the candidate can update their status and flirt with their exits. that's going to be good. i don't have any advice for them. >> okay. that's been very helpful. >> that does not necessarily mean who is going to be there. right? >> are they going to be robots? >> we have to -- >> julie, you're an expert in political consulting. forget the democrats. if you were working for a candidate that maybe was in that second ten, what would you tell
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them to do in the next 11 weeks? >> eric, you nailed it. here's the problem. these guys not only have to compete in iowa and new hampshire, we were four months earlier to try to get space. they have to spend resources. >> money. >> if you don't get into the first debate you're not done. it's going to be that much harder to make up ground. you now have a primary, the debate primary. it's not the iowa straw poll. it's a great thing that fox did what they did. >> i was just looking at the list. carly is not in there. kasich is not in there. >> polls can move in 11 weeks. >> what about donald trump? >> he's not polled enough to release. >> he's looking for the 8:00 p.m. plug. >> all right. we've been giving tips all week to this year's college grads. we'll finish it off when "the five" returns.
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to discover the true you, thousand mile hike to discover your inner self forget t instead, learn something, achieve something, create something outside yourself. when you're old and gray you can look back and contemplate the stealth that emerged from the you that did something. and whereas nike would say, just do it. >> nice. that was our friend charles krauthammer with advice for the class of 2016. we'd like to share some tips now on how to make things easier for them as they enter into the real world. what in fact is the real world? >> being late will kill your career. pretend you're an alien and your goal is to infiltrate make
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friends, observe and climb. like the area that you can see things you have a being traingtracking system heavy drug use, casual but flings and you need a device everything that your professors taught you in school so you can start over in the real world. >> what i like is heavy drug use. minimum drug use -- >> no. there's no contradiction. >> i'm asking the question. casual but -- >> stressful flings are not good. why worry about stuff? >> perfect. thanks for that good advice. moving on to something more wholesome, dana? >> i like one of the things in the research today and that is the financial security that you need to start creating for
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yourself. a lot of people starting out don't make a lot of money initially so you think i can't possibly put anything into savings. it's important, if it's 10 20 bucks a month, just to try to put some money away because you are going to need it. not only for the long term and your retirement but also because you want to be able to walk away from a job that you hate some day or if you have an ethical problem, being able to walk away there's power and freedom in that. the second thing i was going to say, don't watch that much reality tv. limit yourself one-hour a day. otherwise, read. >> when people leave high school or college, they can't figure out how to handle money. their checkbooks are a disaster.: it's really important to do
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that. when you feg out how to be successful sell. sell something, sell your products learn how to enfluns people by selling, talk them into things. try it. >> not just in bars. >> you can try that. >> expand to other things. >> i think that's good advice. i didn't do that. >> practice on people in bars after they've had at least one or two drinks and might be more receptive. is that what you're saying? >> sure. >> cheerful advice. okay. julie? >> so i would say i know that mom and dad told you you were super special growing up but when you get out into the real world, you have to understand that you are not super special. you have to show up and work. i don't care if it's the biggest grungiest job ever just show up and start working. nothing is beneath you or below you. that's how you climb the ladder. keep doing it. understand that eventually you won't be doing that job. in the meantime do whatever it
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takes and show up and show up and show up. that's the most important lesson i can impart. >> get a job. any job. >> also create a billion dollar app. >> i'm going to create a billion dollar app. it's the same thing. >> that's what i'm talking about. people think they are going to be the next bill gates or whoever. >> steve jobs. >> they might be. but in the mean type do whatever it takes to climb the ladder until you make a billion dollars. >> okay. there you go. all very good advice. and you can make less than a billion dollars and be happy, too. >> making the case. that's what you should do graduates. and the good news is it's available on amazon. >> yeah. >> grab your popcorn and stay tuned. your memorial weekend movie preview is up next. (vo) around age 7, the glucose metabolism
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"tomorrowland" opens at movies nationwide tomorrow. there's "pitch perfect 2" or the remake of "poltergeist". >> are you going to the movies? >> no. >> me either. >> the weather is supposed to be iffy on sunday afternoon and monday. >> you like to go to the movies. >> yeah. when jurassic park was coming out, the original one, i waited in line for four hours to be the first one in because i wanted to see them on the big screen front row. >> this explains so much. >> interesting that you say
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this. i am of the opposite extreme, 86% people would pay money to see a first-run movie at home. i would rather sit in bed than hang out. >> i cannot go to films because i cannot concentrate if there's something going on oh over here and i have to fight the urge to something because if i say something or do something, i will get beaten up or be in the newspaper. there's now these theaters where you can see films in luxury boxes with food and eat and i could probably do that. but i've had it. i'm done. this is what happens in a decline of culture. you lose things. we can't deserve things anymore. plus they are overpriced. >> you can also rent pay-per-view in your home.
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>> there's a movie theater near where kimberly and i live. >> what's the street? >> 84th. >> where the movie theater is. not where we live. where the movie theater is. >> excuse me. it's not where we live. it's a movie theater. i'm not giving out anybody's address. calm down. they've completely revamped the seats so now you have people all but having time in there. >> what? >> yeah. it's made it quite miserable. >> i have not been there. >> nocturnal intermission. >> whatever happens, oh, my lord. >> that was funny. >> what happened to "earthquake"? >> i don't know.
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i got out of it and said i don't like being thrown around. remember roller coaster? >> i do remember roller coaster. >> dana do you have anything to add? >> i think that this is where the market is going and i don't know which movie company is going to be the first one to offer first-run movies at home for 20 $30 extra but i think that's where the market is headed so it will be interesting. i think it will happen in the next five years. all right. "one more thing" is up next.
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hey america, still not sure whether to stay or go to your people? ♪ well this summer, stay with choice hotels twice and get a $50 gift card you can use for just about anything. go you always have a choice. book now at choicehotels.com i've lived my whole life here in fairbanks, alaska. i love the outdoors, spending time with my family. i have a family history of prostate cancer. i had the test done and that was when i got the news. my wife and i looked at treatment options. cancer treatment centers of america kept coming up on the radar. so we flew to phoenix. greg progressed excellently. we proceeded to treat him with hormonal therapy, concurrent with intensity modulated radiation
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all right. time for "one more thing." check out what goodyear is going to do. i believe it's in all of the nascar races, and they are replacing the normal eagle design on the side of the tire with the "support our troops" right onto the tire. take it out. take a look. >> isn't that cool? >> there you go. support our troops all weekend long. >> really wonderful. >> hey, you know i think i speak for everyone. when anybody ever says i think i speak for everyone whatever follows is usually the opposite perverted or evil.
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you know i think i speak for everyone that kittens are delicious. >> i think i said that yesterday. >> i think i speak for everyone here at the table. >> oh my god. lean in huh? >> okay. so there's an excerpt from my book about a wounded warrior. president bush went to visit a wounded warrior at walter readed and i was able to visit at that time. the story is on our website at foxnews.com. also new tour dates added. i'm going back to colorado, new jersey and florida. it's going to be good right? >> right. >> okay k.j., you are up.
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>> i have a very nice story, especially on this weekend as we go into memorial day. world war ii veteran receiving his high school diploma some 70 years later. james dalton was a senior in high school when he was drafted in the navy. >> oh, wow. >> and while the rest of his peers were graduated, he was fighting in the battle of okinawa. >> hmm. >> so his son helped him and he was able to receive his diploma with his name. take a listen. >> i was able to come here today and show what you've done for me. >> he said he's going to keep it in his room for as long as he lives. he arranged this for his father. central high school in alabama, way to go. >> jewels, you're up.
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>> i'll be tweeting greg's home address when the show is over. it's fleet week here in new york and then memorial day. >> fleet week. >> navy marine and coast guard men and women walking around the city. >> yay. >> i want to thank you all for your service. i think i speak for all of us when i say thank you all for your service. and thank you for everything that you do. it's wonderful to see you in new york and we hope that you'll be spending as much time in the city. >> the only time i don't dress up as a sailor. >> why stop now? >> i think it's disrespectful. i'm not in the military. >> and don't forget if you see greg in a sailor outfit -- >> with his short shorts. >> i'll be dancing. >> buy him a drink. >> i just got you good.
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>> all right. dvr so you never miss an episode of "the five". that's it for us. have a great memorial weekend. "special report" is coming up. this is a fox news alert. i'm shannon breen in for bret baier. the state department chooses the friday before memorial day to release documents while hillary clinton was secretary of state, the one from her unsecure private e-mail. these are not the thousands that she says were deleted and supposedly gone forever. we have fox team coverage. james rosen has a look at what was written in the e-mails but first, ed henry. good evening, ed. >> good evening, shannon.
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