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tv   The Five  FOX News  November 12, 2015 2:00pm-3:01pm PST

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if you have an infection. raise your expectations. ask your gastroenterologist about humira. with humira, control is possible. i'm greg gutfeld along with kimberly guilfoyle, julie rajinski, eric bolling and dana perino. and this is "the five." as students at new york's ithaca college hold a walk-out over racism the whole back-story behind the missouri protest crumbles. it reminds us of the sex abuse scandal of the '90s. mass hysteria driven by media attention it ruined lives. now missouri students are hallucinating kkk visits. but the student leader at the center of the missouri mess now
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says his kkk claim was false. but who cares? when hate becomes a hoax, divisive deseptemberors just say, it's happening somewhere. it's just like the preschool case, except these aren't babies, but students who wish to be treated like babies. thousands in afghanistan protest the isis beheading of a little girl. that's real horror. while our kids fret over mean words. i wrote a book on it called the joy of hate, the banning of speakers, the rise of safe spaces, driven by the notion that speech is somehow violent. just hear this. >> i personally am tired of hearing that first amendment rights protect students when they're creating a hostile and unsafe learning environment for myself and for other students here. i think that it's important for us to create that distinction
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and create a space where we can all learn if one another. and start to create a place of healing rather than a place where we're experiencing a lot of hate like we have in the past. >> she's so tired of the first amendment. okay. you want a safe space with no first amendment at all? let's give it to them. i offer the sanctuary campus, a seg gated playpen for infants who reject rule of law and agreed-upon authority in weeks it will be nothing more than a violent dystopia of imploding mainians. providing the world a lesson that fascism flourishes in the absence of guts. dana, we can't say we didn't warn these people. we talk about condi rice or cle, that was the student body vp, brenda smith. >> she's so tired. of the first amendment protecting her. and we used to do a segment, i don't know if we ever branded it, the wussification of
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america. this didn't just materialize on campus, it's been building for a while. i hesitate to criticize her. she seems very sincere and earnest. and i don't know where society failed her. >> i would never hire somebody who said that. >> absolutely not. >> when she says she's in an unsafe learning environment and you compare that to what girls in afghanistan have to go through. to be allowed to go to school. i don't know what, what i don't understand is i don't understand what they're looking for. >> attention. >> when you said that the story crumbled. we keep being told this is not far from ferguson, missouri, but that story crumbled, too. if there's a grievance, that's legitimate, i'm all for working on it. they somehow believe that there is a perceived unsafe environment for them. i don't know what they want. i hope we can figure out a way to get it solved quickly. >> it won't be solved. eric, you're a parent, you're
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looking for a college. for your son what are the parents supposed to be doing at this point? >> i have ten applications out right now, so far, here's i'm looking at, let me tell you, anywhere between 30 and $65,000 i'm looking to spend. i'm look being at these protests and i'm sure the parents had no idea that their kids were going to end up on "the five." they're looking for a win, they're protesting here, protesting downtown. protesting everywhere. once they got the win, they got the college president and chancellor to step down. got their win. that's why ithaca is happening. that's why, scalp. they got scalps. >> did i say scalp? >> that could be racist. >> greg and i both apologize. now they've got a win. they're going to duplicate that effort, and different places, ithaca college, there are people laying on steps saying we want our president and chancellor out as well for the same reasons.
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when the president and chancellor step down they gave them the win. instead of resigning on fact, they resigned on fear. the fear of being labelled a racist. god forbid an academic is labelled a racist. it's worst. academia is the bastion of liberalism and academics is labeled a racist. >> i wonder where they learned that the accusation of racism could hurt you. could it have been during the election of barack hussein obama. >> it's his middle name and he's proud of it the aclu is waking up to this. out of their hibernation are now saying this is weird. students are, are resentful of hurtful speech. you're a liberal, you came from the ukraine. >> no, i came from russian. >> the country that's suppressing you right now. >> you like ben carson.
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>> the land of free speech. this is the land you came to. >> i could not agree with you more. by the way, when is not having your feelings hurt all right? i'm sorry, you know what, there's nothing to, there's nothing to protect you. from not having your feelings hurt. i completely agree with you 100%, i don't understand where these kids think they're going to school. by the way, the real world is not a safe space. it's not a safe zone. to the young laid did you, the first amendment is sacrosanct. the aclu, this why they should exist, they should protect people's right to say what they want to say no matter how offensive it may be. y get what these kids are all about. as a liberal, i find it offensive. when i went to college, a lot of my professors were very conservative. i learned more from them on how to argue my point from them than i could have learned from any liberal professor. they should benefit from that. >> a very good point. >> kimberly, you have a child. >> i do. >> sticks and stones.
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we were taught sticks and stones, is that -- >> when you say sticks and stones -- is that now considered a hurtful statement? >> yeah, i guess so. these games that they're playing, remember the good old days, kids would play pin the tail on the donkey. they would play tag. and when you get to college it's beer pong and trying to hook up? no now it's shoot a hostage. take a professor, an administrator out in front and see if you can just do them in and get somebody to lose their job. that's what they're more interested in these days. these kind of scare tactics, hysteria that's going on. what about a good, old-fashioned education. you have a teacher teaching lady gaga and "fifty shades of gray." i hope parents are listening and vet the schools their children are going to attend. i went to uc davis, which is considered a liberal school. and we taught roger ailes book. what happened to those days?
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>> excellent plug. >> thank you very much. >> that's true there was a real education, like you said from conservative professors. >> look what's going on in the last year or so. jerry seinfeld and chris rock say they're not going to play college campuses any more. now we have liberal protesters taking on liberal professors, presidents and chancellors. now maybe the left is going to start to wake up. you lose hollywood and academia, what do they have left? >> it's not going to end until parents decide i'm not going to, i'm not going to pay for this crap. i think we have a call for here this is mike middleton, the interim president of the university of missouri on safe spaces. >> i think safe spaces are critical. i think students need spaces where they can feel comfortable, where they can interact. without fear. but i think if you're asking in the context of the first amendment and free speech
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issues, that's a very delicate balance. >> it's not a delicate balance. >> i don't understand what he's talking about. america is a safe space. that's where we live. >> that's what people are trying to climb fences, and cross rivers to get here. we're the safest space on the planet. >> the bad news, it's probably like gun-free zones. everyone wants to do something. run into the safe space and say something bad. then all hell is going do break loose. >> what exactly is a safe space? is it safer not having your feelings hurt? by the way, who is going to be the judge of that? i'm going 0 goo g into your safe space and say hey, greg i don't like your shirt and i violated your safe space? i can't express my opinion any more because it might hurt your feelings? all of a sudden you're not in the safe space any more? this is insane. >> i think that they romanticize rebellion. and so their grandparents, the baby boomers who protested in the '60s, they were protesting actual things.
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they actually had gone through something and they got things changed. that's the thing with this, i don't understand, you're going to do of this, so you can learn in a safe space, in is the grievance? >> the grievances are based on isolated incidences that can't be proven. the swastika they can't find. the guy that talked about the kkk has turned out to be a liar. >> he should be expelled. why don't they expel him from the school. >> because that's racist. >> you have to find your finger at the athletic department and the football team, none of this would have happened, he wouldn't have stepped down unless there was a threat from the football team. the football team, 4-5, you pointed out yesterday, great point if they were 9-0, they probably wouldn't have walked. even if they weren't 4-5, what were they facing, a $1 million fine. there's $1.4 billion in that endowment. the coaches, paying deference to the team.
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and what they've done is by laying over, by wuusifying their team -- >> college sports football teams are entirely too powerful. >> it's like the benjamin button of education, before the babies were in kindergarten, now they're in college. >> it's a self-perpetuating phenomenon. it inspires copycats, if you see the attention based on this, you have guys, this one kid threatening to shoot students i don't think he's from missouri. so but that feeds into the racism at missouri. it's clear lay copycat. >> i think what the kids are missing is there's hate speech, i can see their point and there's hateful speech. just because something is hateful to you or hateful in general doesn't mean that people aren't allowed to express their opinion. college is a place for that exchange. that should be exactly what's happening. >> just like you're safe here.
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>> i disagree with all of you. >> what college did you go to in. >> i went to boston university. i was in the international relations department and all my professors were these cold warriors who served in nato or places in the '80s, they were huge proponent of the reagan policy. i was able to hone my arguments because i found out what their opinion was. i don't have a safe space. not here. that's great. i'm happy to have an exchange of opinion. >> you seem to like it. >> i love it. >> this is a hard list to look at. the list of all the hoaxes in the last couple of years. on campuses, hoaxes, hate crimes, attacks on facebook were all done by students that were perpetuated as a hoech. when they said a woman claimed she had been, she was threatened with rape. she had written in. every single hoax on campus. >> too much free time on college campuses. >> it's the attention that you get. you get to walk out of class.
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that's a reward. >> you're punishing yourself, because you're paying tuition for something you're not actually doing. ahead, o'reilly confronts trump on his mass deportation plan.
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♪ ♪ the immigration debate is still front and center in the race for the white house. donald trump making even more waves on the issue with this new pledge if he becomes president. >> you're going to have a deportation force and you're going to do it humanely. people are going to come in and they're going to come in legally. but we have no choice. otherwise we don't have a country. we don't even know how many people. we don't know if it's eight million or 20 million. we have no idea. >> last night bill o'reilly challenged trump for sporting deportation model used by dwight eisenhower in the 1950s. >> believe me when i tell you,
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mr. trump, that was brutal what they did to those people to kick them back. the stuff they did was really brutal. it could never happen today. >> well, well -- i've heard it both ways. i've heard reports. good reports, bad reports. we would do it in a very you main way. >> let's get reaction here on this. obviously this is a contentious issue. but it's something that actually needs to be dealt with. this is a serious problem of immigration crisis in this country. how about even to start with, eric, enforcing the laws that are on the books now. >> so, correct. and i think trump has said he wants to build a wall first and then work on deportation. >> secure the border. >> i don't know how you deport 11 or 12 million. but he wants to do it. if you get caught doing something wrong. speeding, drunk driving, the deportation force. they're deported, they get in line and they come back in legally. it has so many good aspects. you may not like the process. but bringing an illegal back into the country legally.
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they'll pay taxes, contribute to society. they won't hide in the shadows. it's good for both, it's good for latinos as well. the people who are trying to get in, the four or five million per year that try to get in, only a million get in. some wait ten years to get in. they'll be happy they're doing it the right way and people who didn't do it the right way will be in the same in line with them. >> so maybe make the process more fair and equitable. >> i don't know how you get 12 million out at once. maybe over the course of 20 years or something. >> that's not what he said. he actually has said now, he thinks, he told a group i believe in alabama that he can get this done, this deportation, in 18 to 24 months. which means are you forcibly deporting 23,000 people a day. it's not possible to do that. unless there's some sort of magic thing that he can come up with. this is why it's really important. if you say you're going to have a deportation force and you have 50% of people in america saying
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they trust him most on immigration, then you as a candidate have an obligation to explain how it would actually work. and what does that deportation force look like? how much is it going to cost? what bill o'reilly was talking about in terms of operation wetback, the name of the program in the '50s, one of the things they did, was they took you across the border. you got to step one foot over and come right back in. is that the kind of thing we're talking about. bringing people back in that way? the other thing is the way that program worked, it was two-pronged. not only did they push people out and as o'reilly said a lot of it was really horrible. you could never do it today. and they had a temporary worker program. that's why immigration went down. the wage issue is another one. it's just so complicated. but to say you're going to have a deportation force, you have an obligation to explain it and how you would get 23,000 people out a day would be an interesting thing to hear how that actually would get done.
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>> i think if you, at a very minimum, one you have to secure the borders. two you have to make a fair and equitable process that everybody plays by the same rules, people who violate the laws are not rewarded. three, i think you start with people that are committing crimes of violence, committing crimes in the united states that are here legally -- yes. you've got to go. that i think is a very sane approach of what you need to be doing. i don't understand how anyone would quarrel with that particular approach. because you shouldn't be rewarding people who are criminals. they should not be allowed to have the rights and privileges. i'm saying what my ideas are and that's what i think as a prosecutor. who has seen it from the inside out, maybe you can do that as a start. >> there were a few republicans who said they can stay. i mean, it's basically saying you don't have to leave. you don't have to get in line. you don't have to -- i don't even know how you end up getting them documented. you just say everything is okay.
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>> there's differing opinions, people want, if it has to be done, it has to be donohue mainly. you don't want to to split up families. they're saying that's not american. >> yeah. >> just like we're the country that goes to help and rescue everybody in humanitarian ways. >> you know what the real dream act is for the democrats. when republicans talk about forced deportation. we cannot make this about the immigrant. we cannot make it about the people. we have to make it about the process. the anxiety in america is real. but it really isn't about the immigrant. there's a certain feeling that our nation's saving traditions are under fire and therefore our country cannot handle an influx of people. we always have been able to handle an influx of people. but for some reason we feel because of the last seven or eight years, our country is under attack and therefore, we can't have any more people. we need more people. this is a big country and these are people who don't steal jobs, they do jobs. so i applaud the idea of getting
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through the process. i explain it this way, disneyland has a wall. you have to pay to get into disneyland. you can't climb a fence to get there. guess what, america is the world's disneyland. everybody is dying to get into this theme park if you're in pakistan, syria, if you're from canada, you want to come. let me finish. you want to come here. we were lucky to be born here. we cannot decide, we're shutting the door because we're born here. we have to do what you say, we have to enforce the law and the processes but we can't demonize a group of people. we have to fix the process, welcome the people. >> but what about the people who aren't -- who didn't pay to into disneyland. >> you create a process where they can't pay. that doesn't necessarily mean forced deportation, i hate to use the word optics, but the optics of forced deportation will destroy the republican party forever. >> to dana's point how do you do
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this? do you go up to every person who might look like they're from mexico or -- >> i don't know, how does he, how does he plan on doing it? show me your papers? >> kind of address itself. if you have specific laws in place that are enforced, people know that. that's a shot across the bow that you're going to do this. we want to welcome immigrants this is a country based on hard work of immigrants families as well. we all came from someplace. back when it was last generation or generations before so be the country that is welcoming for those that want to adhere to the laws, contribute to society, work hard, pay for things, pay taxes like the rest of us, right? >> you're talking about a pathway to citizenship. the gang of eight bill was endorsing, i'm all for it neither side was thrilled waswiwa with it. but it got killed. >> we're living in the age of exaggerated rhetoric. >> thank god i have a rhetoric
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in communications degree. battling a new wave of issues surrounding her emails, ed henry is here with how her campaign is now reacting.
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another new development today on the fbi's investigation of hillary clinton's emails, fox's catherine herridge has discovered that agents are working to discover if they violated the false statement statute. every time the clinton campaign looks to put the email scandal behind them, another issue pops up. we have chief white house correspondent ed henry on the campaign trail with hillary clinton. he joins us now. how did they take the news today, ed? >> i think what's interesting is i've been told that behind the scenes, the clinton campaign has been telling some of their top campaign donors, the media is blowing this fbi deal out of proportion.
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and their claim is that the fbi only came in to take the sierve and go through the remaining emails to certify what's classified and what's not. and to make sure you've got all of these intelligence agencies fighting over information. make sure more information does not leak out. the point being the clinton camp claims that it's not really an investigation of hillary clinton. it's an investigation of the information and the server. if this is true, that there's a widening investigation, and it's looking at false statements, statutes as well as the mishandling of classified information, that would blow their explanation to their own campaign donors out of the water. it would mean she's in bigger trouble than they're letting on. >> is there any way the fbi, any indication the fbi wants to look for the 30,000 emails that hillary clinton and her staff scrubbed prior to turning over whatever she turned over? that's the smoking gun if there is one. >> there's no clear evidence that they are and what the fbi does behind the scenes is also, is always often very secretive.
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and so you don't know fully, you know what is really happening. politico a few days ago had reported, remember, that in some of the interviews, former state department officials were being asked very pointed questions about whether there was concern inside the state department when hillary clinton was the secretary, about classified information leaking out. if that's true as well, and again, it was anonymous sources then. we've got to let all of this play out. it makes you wonder whether there's a lot more going on behind the scenes. and whether or not to your point, they will also look at what was deleted and whether or not on that server they can get the information back. >> kimberly? >> this seems to me that this is far expanded from a preliminary investigation to now, a criminal investigation. i don't understand how they're going to be able to separate hillary clinton, it's her private server, from just quote-unquote, an information-seeking, fact-finding mission. the two are connected together. that's genuine nexus there. >> and to make it like, it's a
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distant server somewhere. this was a server set up by the clintons, specifically the secretary of state, in order to keep her information on that server instead of the official servers. >> who paid for it? >> there's somebody behind it. >> who's footing the bill. >> all of that is going to come out here. >> earlier there was a federal judge who also ordered that another 700 pages of documents have to come out. not just emails, but written records and what-not from huma abedin and other top clinton officials at the state department, they have to be released by december 1st. so there's more information dripping out all of it dripping out closer and closer to iowa and new hampshire. >> greg gutfeld? >> good to see you again, carl. >> hello, greg. >> two questions -- >> carl? >> i love your man bun. >> thank you, thank you. i'm sitting on it. if hillary clinton were a republican lying to victims of a terror attack, wouldn't there be
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a run on pitchforks by the media at home depot? first question. second one, we talked about historical firsts, black president, female president, could we have the first president under white house arrest? she could wear orange on her inauguration? answer those questions. >> the new black. >> i don't know anything about that. next question? all right. >> what about the first question. >> what was the first question? >> pitchforks. >> you can't win a pulitzer when you're chasing after someone you admire. >> wow, poor election, ed. >> that's ed? i thought it was carl. >> maybe we can talk about carl instead. i'm not sure where your questions are going. >> his questions made perfect sense to me. >> his man bun. i feel like we have to give julie the last word here. >> are the hillary people going out there and saying she spent 11, 13 hours testifying about all this nothing to see and let's move on. is that the narrative coming out of the campaign? >> that's their feeling. i've been out on the trail since the 11 hours of benghazi testimony. hillary clinton is trying at
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least. i'm not saying she's going to get away with that. but she's trying to wear it as a badge of honor. when she brings up 11 hours of testimony. democrats cheer her and say you withstood the scrutiny from the republicans and you've turned the beige. that's why this story can be so big. the email server, the fbi investigation lurking, that could blow anything positive for her on the benghazi testimony, out of the water. >> everybody who has a top-secret clearance is watching this very carefully. they were held to a different standard than she's been. thanks, ed, we appreciate it. next a "south park" show of support for police in america and the trump skit you did not see on "snl." and something ironic you might enjoy. phil! oh no... (under his breath) hey man! hey peter. (unenthusiastic) oh... ha ha ha!
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joanne? is that you? it's me... you don't look a day over 70. am i right? jingle jingle. if you're peter pan, you stay young forever. it's what you do. if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. ♪ you make me feel so young... it's what you do. ♪ you make me feel ♪ so spring has sprung.
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jeb bush: leadership means it's not about yappin'.. it's not about talking. it's about doing. i know how to do this because i was privileged to serve in florida for eight years. and we turned the systems upside down that weren't working. 1.3 million new jobs were created. we cut taxes every year. income rose in people's pockets. people were lifted out of poverty. children started to learn. as president of the united states, i pledge to you that i will solve problems. announcer: right to rise usa is responsible for the content of this message.
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♪ ♪ welcome back, time for --
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the fastest seven minutes on television. three riveting stories. seven minutes, one host. first up, "south park" we can't get enough of you. last week she hoed you how they destroyed the politically correct crowd with a new character, the politically incorrect pc principal. now you crushed the anti-cop movement with this. >> hey, what do you want? it's okay, i'm off-duty, came for a nice pinot. >> go somewhere else, copper. city park town is for people who care about each other. >> we don't take kindly to folks who impose their authority on the underprivileged. >> not all cops are trigger-happy [ bleep ]. >> i bet you don't even know what farm to table means. >> wow. we've only had a whole foods for a month and already we don't
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need cops. so cool. >> nice job, guys. you nailed it. everyone thinks they don't need a cop until they do heads up, quentin tarantino. kg. at the end of that episode. they don't realize how much they need cops and they welcomed the cops back. >> so listen that's what you have to do. you have to educate the ignorant through cartoons so they understand what's happening. aha. >> this is reminiscent, just reminded me of a classic "si "simpsons" episode. the only brave commentary left is in animation by outsiders. these guys don't answer to anybody. they can't get live actors to do this stuff. they can't get fired. that's the point so they can do this. and there's no actor who is are willing to play by their rules this is truly edgy. they can do it and they're the only people left that are doing it. >> it's going to be cartoons
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on "the five." >> how effective, they took the anti-quentin tarantino message and nailed it. they locked it down. >> to some extent. don't forget at the end of the episode, the cops went on a racist killing spree. >> no, no, no. >> anarchy. in fact this is what -- >> the cops did it. >> no, no, right. >> greg was pointing out in the a block, for a while there was anarchy. anarchy broke out because there were no cops. >> i took offense that he was ordering a pinot. i don't think real men should drink pinot. >> is that a jab at me? >> "saturday night live" hosted by donald trump, broke ratings records this skit coming up didn't even make the cut, the hair cut, that is. >> an elite team of super soldiers are responsible for protecting our nation's most valuable asset -- donald trump's hair.
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they are -- >> getting a little breezy out here. i'm not liking it. >> we're making our approach. >> they've landed. >> okay, team. take the scalp. >> go, go go. >> we got to stabilize the perimeter. everybody grab a hair. >> the wind is too strong. >> i can't get a good grip. how are we doing with the hairspray, mccormick. >> not good. this is just medium hold. >> i absolutely love the "saturday night live" crew in that skit. how did that not make air? >> it was about as funny as the rest of it not funny at all. it was funnier than other stuff they had. >> bolling thinks it's funny because he uses more hairspray than you. >> i love their humor. >> i thought it was funny. >> i think it's fine to watch in a sound byte. but i think it reinforces my good decision to go to bed early that night.
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>> you go to bed early every night. >> yeah. >> you never regret going to bed early. do you notice that. it's like saying, it's like you never regret not going to the bar at 1:00 a.m. >> i regret going to bed early. >> it's funnier than the stuff that was on saturday. >> that was such a low bar i could step over it. >> i think it used to be a daring show. but it's stilted and manufactured, because they keep rewriting it. >> and trump had veto power, that's the worst part. >> i thought it was funny. >> alannis morrisette topped the charts in 1995, with her hit song "ironic" that was before facebook, snapchat and vaping. fast forward 20 years and "ironic" gets a facelift. ♪ ♪ ♪
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>> amanda tells me she wore that hat in the original video. >> i can't remember. it's one of the most hated disputed songs of all time. because of the heinous lyrics in which she uses ironic improperly. it's not ironic when it rains on your wedding day. it's not ironic when there's a traffic jam when you're late to work. what's ironic is a large dog named tiny. so she kind of convoluted the idea of what ironic is. it's a figure of speech that means something else than the expressed words, and for that, i can't stand her. >> i've always felt the same way, it's a bummer that it rained on your wedding day. not ironic. >> it's supposed to be good luck. >> a big dog named tiny. >> and it was '90s, when winona ryder explained that in "reality bites." >> she learned from you, greg.
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oh yeah. >> thanks to her own hair. something we do quite often. >> should have issued an apology. >> next, two oscar award-winning actresses with two different takes on the hollywood gender wage gap debate. vo: know you have a dedicated advisor and team who understand where you come from. we didn't really have anything, you know. but, we made do. vo: know you can craft an investment plan as strong as your values. al, how you doing. hey, mr. hamilton. vo: know that together you can establish a meaningful legacy. with the guidance and support of your dedicated pnc wealth management team. and my brother ray and i started searching for answers. (vo) when it's time to navigate in-home care,
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♪ actress jennifer lawrence has ignited a conversation about gender pay inequality and now other major hollywood actresses are giving their takes. take for instance, sandra bullock who said this to "variety" quote money is the by-product of everything. how do you explain to your son that the e.r.a. hasn't passed? i want him to think i'm the boss and women are equal. but i can't really support that in the outside world. i hope if my lifetime for him everything is a level playing field. we can hope. >> actress kate winslet wants no part of the discussion. watch. >> i'm having such a problem with these conversations. because they keep coming up. i understand why they're coming up. but maybe it's a british thing. i don't like talking about money. it's a bit vulgar, isn't it? i'm a very lucky woman. and i'm quite happy with how things are ticking along.
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if i had ever been in that situation i would have either dealt with it or removed myself from it. >> this is interesting. she's uncomfortable talking about it i'm a little uncomfortable with the fact that the ten highest paid movie actors in 2015 made $431 million. and the equivalent for women only made $52 million. >> ten each. so top ten of both. this is what i think. i think both things can be true. think that can you advocate for equal pay for the kind of work that you do and you should advocate for it what kate winslet said is true. noits the a british thing, it's a thing that a lot of women deal with. and kimberly, in your book making the case, you make good points about how women can actually try to get the salary or the fee or the product, whatever it is they are deserving. so i think that both for me -- i feel like kate winslet does not do women any favors by suggesting it's vulgar to try to get paid what you're worth. >> that's a good point thaw
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raise, do you think that women don't stand up for themselves as much as men? >> some do, some don't. i don't want to generalize. i think it happens you know on both sides of the gender equation. but you should be able to articulate in a meaningful way your worth. kind of be able to put yourself out there and say, this is what i think what i've done, what i'm worth. do your research in the marketplace to find out what people are making that work in a similar position to yourself. when you're armed with those facts, you can present it based on facts and work ethic and you should prevail. don't be afraid to advocate for yourself or get a better agent. >> a lot of these women, these women even the right people to make this argument? they're getting paid a tremendous amount of money. is hollywood the right forum for this? >> two points, single women in their 20s without kids make more than single men without kids.
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i love movies and i love female heroines. my list of female heroines. clarice "silence of the lambs" all written by men. when you want strong heroines, thank the men. >> it's clear you haven't seen a movie in a few years. >> and i've made a few. >> they're art films. >> they're made by men. >> sorry. >> featuring lou dobbs, okay. >> if i can throw this out there. advocate, but don't mandate. once you mandate, then you're getting into the anti-free market discussion. like minimum wage. treat market will pay women what they're worth and pay men what they're worth. >> but women typically will not ask for what they're worth.
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let's say you offer them a job, give them their first or second job, they'll say okay, thank you so much. they don't argue for more. it's annoying if they can't prove they're worth it that's a generational difference. i think millennials and generation z, they won't have those problems. if you're in a position to need to ask for a raise. i encourage you to get kimberly's book. her advice works. one more thing is up next. you do all this research on a perfect car, then smash it into a tree. your insurance company raises your rates. maybe you should've done more research on them. for drivers with accident forgiveness, liberty mutual won't raise your rates due to your first accident. liberty mutual insurance.
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contact your health plan for the latest information. one more thing. eric? >> let's roll a little reveal of the ceremony, the medal of honor ceremony that took place today, army captain florence groberg. former track star at maryland. he became a nationalized citizen of the united states in 2001. fast-forward to 2012 in afghanistan. captain groberg threw himself, tackled a suicide bomber and saving the security people he was protecting. i since had 33 surgeries to save his leg. folks, these are the heroes who we should be, we should be highlighting every single day. captain florent groberg. >> naturalized citizen. >> can't beat that one. why bother trying. i was in texas signing books,
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every now and then someone gives me something that's not contagious. in this case, this might be the greatest thing i've ever seen. it's a painting of me without my shirt on, riding a unicorn, with a rainbow mane and an american flag and a tattoo of the scales of justice. >> did you bring that back on the plane with you? >> really long legs. >> i think those abs are really generous. >> the traps are pretty much overdone. but the abs are -- >> it's a very colorful painting there. >> it celebrates a lot of things, eric. it celebrates a lot of things. >> it's very putin-esque. you look like six feet tall there. which pleases you. >> all right, dana? >> kelly eureka did this. >> last night i had the pleasure of attending a fantastic event in new york city honoring a great american and patriot. that's a picture there of ambassador john lobe and his wife, sharon lobe.
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he received the 2015 emma lazarus statue of liberty award. and he was addressed by his son nick who accompanied him and spoke eloquently on behalf of his father and former national security adviser, richard allen who worked for president reagan. ambassador loeb was given this award because he devoted his life to fostering public awareness to jewish society and promoting religious freedom and liberty in the country. he's chairman of the winston churchill foundation in the united states, it was a great night. i want to say congratulations. >> i'm going to save my one more thing for another day. i'll say there are three people at this table who are also on o'reilly tonight. not together. separate. make sure you watch. >> quickly, apparently there's new words that have been added to dictionary.com. i know none of them. but they're all millennial words. if they know what they mean. tweet me. i had to ask somebody, i feel
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very old. i like the old words. "special report" is up next. immigration becomes the dominant topic in the republican presidential race. ted cruz goes on the attack. marco rubio fires back and donald trump refuses to back down. this is "special report." good evening, welcome to washington, i'm brett baier. republicans hoping to be the party's choice to battle it out likely with hillary clinton next year are going to war with each other right now over immigration. donald trump is brushing off criticism that his plan for mass deportations is either cruel or impro cal or both. i'll go one-on-one with mr. trump in a few minutes.

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