tv The Five FOX News January 28, 2016 2:00pm-3:01pm PST
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you. news breaks, history is made, things change, life as we know it today will not be the same tomorrow. so it's your choice, america. what are you going to do? >> hello, everybody. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." >> four days to the iowa caucuses and only four hours until the final debate before the first vote of election 2016. first at 7:00 p.m. eastern. four gop candidates will make their case to be the presidential nominee. then at 9:00 p.m. eastern, seven more will face off. who will come out on top tonight? ted cruz could be the biggest target with the highest poll numbers on the stage. and momentum building in the early states. he is feeling confident but still has this call for iowa
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voters. >> this is all about turnout. look, what i am asking folks to do is show up and caucus for us on monday. bring your mom, your son, your next door neighbor. it will be won on the ground in iowa, neighbor to neighbor, friend to friend, iowan to iowan. regardless of what happens here in iowa, i believe we can win. i think we can win. we're very strong in new hampshire, we're very strong in south carolina and we are incredibly strong across the super tuesday states. the so-called s.e.c. primary. >> and marco rubio also expressing confidence. >> i've been telling people all week. if they nominate me, i'll beat hillary clinton. i'll unite the republican party. we'll create new conservatives. and there is a reason why the democrats attacked me more than any other republican. they know if i'm the nominee, the republicans win. >> and joining us now live from
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iowa, as we pre game the debate. you heard a couple of shots from cruz and rubio. which one seems to be making the better case? >> well, i think they're both strong candidates. we have to remind ourselves. this is an extremely strong group of people. we have a handful of governors. we have cares matic outsighters. if we look at the selection and you look at the democrats. like comparing a humvee to a pogo stick. the diversity and the qualifications on the stage are unparalleled. i think the viewer has their work cut out for them. they have a lot of great voices up there. they have a decision to make. the real work is on the shoulders of the viewer. >> four hours left. four hours. exciting, huh? >> yes, yes, indeed. i think it will be fantastic and i love the people we have moderating. top notch, a fine job for the
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channel and the viewers that are watching. there are some very important decisions that need to be made and i think all eyes and ears will be on fox news channel to feast your eyes and ears on the information and get to choose your candidate. i'm excited about it. in terms of, ted cruz will be taking a lot of hits tonight. all eyes on him. i think he'll be ready. he looks fired up. marco rubio, i love that he keeps bringing up that he can beat hillary clinton and i think he's right about that. that's a strong point he should keep hitting home. >> who should these guys be going after? clearly evangelicals is a big thing. >> you have to think about where the weakness is. for someone like cruz, can you make a deal? can you get along with people? is it the fact that you have gone back and forth on ethanol to play the iowa voters? and then of course you go deeper.
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and i'm looking for action from people like rand paul. greg mentioned two senators. i think there are three senators. i think the third one, rand paul -- >> i don't count him. >> well, i think we have to, to be polite. and i think rand paul, now back on the main stage. he was not there last time. >> also, ringing a lot of bells lately. kasich. >> i think we should be prepared for some surprises. i think the questions will be really tough. up to now -- like in a marathon. they stay first 20 miles is easy compared to the last six. so tonight is the last six. we found out that last night when we were on the show that about 35 to 40% of people in iowa who are planning to vote will change their minds between tonight and monday. so you have to i guess sprint to the finish if i'm completing my
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spets m sports metaphor. >> no one is talking about chris christie. >> i think he'll be very good tonight. >> i always thought he would resonate. he has that big personality. he goes and shakes hands with these guys at the diners. tonight i think ted cruz, all the pressure is on ted cruz. he is kind of the front-runner on stage tonight. let's see how he wears that hat. there will be a lot of action coming his way. he needs to look presidential. he needs maintain that he is the outsider. he has a likability issue. we know that. he has to smile more. he has a reputation as a little bit of a nasty guy. he will hit the faith part, conservative principles hard. and he's had better answers on amnesty and surveillance. >> i want to get to this on faithful how far will the candidates to go court the evangelical vote? here's a preview of what we
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could expect. >> our nation should hope that our next president is someone who every day and every night and at every moment drops to their knees and asks the lord for guidance and asks the holy spirit for inspiration and asks for wisdom. >> when people ask, is faith real? in my family i would have been raise bade single mom without my father in the household if it were not for the redemptive love of jesus christ. i gave my life to jesus as well and it turned my life around. >> i for one believe people of faith should act on their faith and they should be informed by their faith. >> so i think last time around. 53 or 57% of the vote. the caucusgoers were evangelicals. and one poll said about 36%. we'll see. i do think having worked for somebody that definitely started his day as president every day with a prayer. and i remember, you know that
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funny picture of me with dikembe mutombo? he is towering over me? behind me is a photograph on the wall and it is president bush and he has his head bowed. what is he doing? he is praying. there was a prayer before every cabinet meeting. i think americans still believe that a leader who relies on faith and the humility that it brings and the grace that it provides is important. >> and one they can trust. >> i was out in iowa and talked on some evangelicals. did you vote for romney in the general? no one even voted for romney for theological reasons. i said who did you vote for? rick santorum. they can smell phonies. they know other is an authentic conservative. a lot of them like ted cruz. they recognize that ted cruz has a real relationship with jesus christ. and you can't fake that. >> we need to know, also, every
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piece of u.s. currency, a coin or a bill, in some space it says in god we trust. >> i think jesse brings up a big point. religion is something that can be so easily faked. and naturally for some reason candidates become really, really really religious at election time. that's quite a coincidence for my taste. we train our candidates to overemphasize religion and punish those who don't which i think is unfair. it leads to a key distinction to what a great spiritual leader is. a person who can talk about their god and their religion but not talk about how religious they are. that's political pandering at its worse and often the sign of an imposter. >> and i would like to point out that i go to church every single day -- i'm kidding. >> we got that memo. >> all right. it's important. in god's name we trust.
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>> these people want to hear it. >> and you will hear that tonight. it will be important. iowa has big ears tonight. they'll be paying attention. making some very important last-minute decisions. maybe they've narrowed them down. put them over. we haven't mentioned dr. ben carson. >> i think dr. carson is the main competition. i'm sorry. am i cutting you off? >> no, i'm feeling you bad. i think that you were next. we had the same thought. >> i was going on say i think that ben carson is competing form evangelical vote very strongly. and remember there is a big connection to evangelicals and home schoolers. in the home school community, they're using ben carson's books. so they know ben carson. >> he is doing great in iowa.
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>> the polls don't show that. >> that's not true. >> i think he has -- >> he is doing quite well. do they stay with ben carson? picking up with him, i think there is a ahead to logical difference with the candidates. i don't think they wots he is a phony. >> he was mormon. and that means a lot to evangelicals. carson is in the game. in the caucus, you bring your top three guys. if he is in the mix he could surprise a lot of people. talk about obama, talk about hillary, talk about sanders. obamacare. these trades we're making with the iranians. the wages going down. tie unpopular policies to the neck of hillary clinton and watch her sink. i think the crowd would enjoy that.
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>> i think the bigger issue is values. i think it is about values and feeling as if sometimes they're estranged. >> the really wacky part of this. maybe there will be a bigger number. there are 170,000 who show up, the winner could get 40,000 or 50,000 votes would dictate the beginning of the election cycle. amazing. >> i don't like even thinking about it. it seems so surreal. that's all it takes. it is why i had like four shots of fire ball with sean hannity last night just to calm my nerves. then i charged three desserts to his room. >> can i get the air quotes here with coast with last night?"
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>> all right. it was an hour ago. >> don't forget that emben carson's team said they had 40,000 committed caucusgoers that were ready to vote for him. >> if that's the three, he'll be in the top three. >> and rand paul could have strong organization too. >> up next, our advice for the candidates tonight and later, we'll answer some of your questions on the debate and caucuses. so tweet them to us. use the #the five. i've smoked a lot
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we'll bring greg back. we talked yesterday, your book, how to be persuasively correct. how do you do that in a debate format? they have 60 to 90 seconds to make a point. >> i would say the number one thing is no jargon. i always, when i try to write a monologue or to answer a question during a speech, i imagine myself at a bar talking to somebody after drinking a few beers. you're most honest when you're slightly buzzed and you're less afraid to say what you really think. the goal, i think the goal for these candidates is to point at the democrats and say, are you kidding me? and have america go, you're absolutely right. these three people are a joke. that's the end goal. you have to be clear, persuasive and humorous and avoid all jargon. >> okay. that's a lot. they need a list of all your
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band phrases to make sure they avoid that. >> jesse watters? >> my one piece of advice is to smile more. i think people want leadership in this country but they also want personality. look like you're having fun. like reagan happy warrior out there. when you're voting, you're voting to invite someone into your home for four years. you have to hear that person. it is okay to crack jokes about hillary's pants suits, bernie's hair, whatever. that's all on the table. you want to be compassionate but you want to have a little more personality. and i think that's important. >> you're describing yourself. i was so amused by that. >> unless you're going to church. >> i think you have to film up the collar. >> it is iowa. the short shorts. >> oh! >> did you remember your advice? >> did i. because they asked us earlier in the day.
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>> typically a forward looking happy group. from happy, not beating the you know what out of each other. and take a look at what bernie sanders is doing on the democratic side. he is staying focus asked positive and he is crushing hillary clinton staying positive so maybe make a name for yourself being very pro american. do you know who has been like that? john kasich. and it worked for him, especially in new hampshire. juan williams, you're next with your advice for republicans so take it worth a grain of salt. >> i thought, gee. i can imagine mr. ted cruz is in for the deluge. so ted cruz, get yourself a rain slicker, buddy, before you get on stage. it is going to rain hard. a hard rain is going to fall on you as the leader. but i think there will be a lot
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of splashing. so remember, if you are, for example, marco rubio, and you're in a fight with ted cruz. he is going on splash back and guess what, ben carson, jeb bush. if you're trying to engage, don't think you can stay dry. the rain doesn't fall on one man's house. >> i disagree. i think marco rubio is the one everybody is targeting tonight. not ted cruz. remember, there are three tickets out of new hampshire. k.g.? >> so be presidential. people are looking for a winner into the future. show why people should choose you and invest in you and more importantly, stay with you. that's what i'm looking for tonight. a commander in chief. >> i'm going with another sports metaphor which i've used before. you have to stick the landing. in gymnastics, you have to stick the landing. you have to nail it. if you think people will make up their minds between two, maybe
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three candidates, perhaps change their minds between tonight and monday. you want to leave them with your best argument. >> greg, how did we do on our advice? >> i learned a lot. i would add, if no one is coming to you. don't make a big deal out of it. that makes things look worse. if you keep trying to interrupt. it becomes such a problem. wait your turn. >> any senator that you have in mind? oh, senator. i think i gave it away. >> i guess we have to go. all right. greg, we'll see you a little later this hour. a quick reminder, that kimberly and i will be joining greg live tomorrow, saturday and monday. next, we'll answer your questions on tonight's debate. don't go away. announcer: a horrific terror attack in paris.
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it's twitter thursday. do you know what that means? it's time to answer your questions for us. and i've got them here. oh, yeah. are you feeling lucky? i am a going to read your question? maybe, perhaps. question from eb cook. explain the significance of iowa since it has been proven that a candidate doesn't have to win iowa to get the nomination nor elected. juan? >> you're right. you don't have to. but this is kind of jimmy carter's legacy. since jimmy carter decided to spend a lot of time there. make a name for himself with the media and win, that everybody thinks, oh, that's what you've got to do. as a result, media, donors and politicians think iowa is, i don't know if it is, maybe it is the pig's oink. >> oh, yeah.
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the queen might have been nominated. >> they usually say their three tickets out of iowa that get you to new hampshire. it doesn't always turn out that way. santorum would probably disagree. everyone tauks about iowa and new hampshire. the most important one i think is south carolina which happens on saturday, february 20th. ever since 1980, only once have they not been the determining state for the republican nominee. so i think south carolina is the real state on watch. >> that's the hot one and that is your state. all right. mr. bolling. question from joshua kelly. if you were running and only had a few percentage points in the polls, would you stay in this long? is it an ego thing for some? >> i don't know why they do stay in this long other than they want to be picked as the vice president. they want to be picked on the ticket. for someone like john kasich who comes from ohio, an important state. it makes sense for him to stay in. the guys from florida, it makes sense. other than that, i'm not sure why they stay.
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remember, new hampshire, a lot of people are not even paying attention. they have all their marbles in new hampshire. >> so can i be a little mean here? >> go ahead. >> if you're on the earlier debate stage with, i don't know, they go from 1% to 3 or 4%. >> it won't happen. >> you can raise your speaking fee. your appearance fee yurg book deal. >> i was being nice. you're being meaner than i was. >> i think the first debate will be excellent. people will be very heavy on substance like carly fiorina, and jim gilmore, welcome to the party. who drops out after iowa and new hampshire? >> i don't think anyone is dropping out after iowa. i think after new hampshire, if you're an establishment guy and you don't do well. if you're a christie. i won't say jeb.
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if you're a christie and you are not performing in either of those states. especially new hampshire where there are a lot of establishment votes. going on south carolina a loser where you'll get slaughtered again by more conservatives. i think it is time to go. >> anyone else? >> then you have the opportunity to throw your name and your weight and your supporters behind whoever you decide to choose. >> do you realize that through iowa, new hampshire, there are only maybe 100 or so delegates total that will commit? and on super tuesday, there are 600? so we put all the eggs in the iowa/new hampshire basket. tuesday is when it is made or broken. >> first impressions count. politics count because the donors are paying attention. may i double back to you? >> sure. >> question from gary.
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what is a more important factor in iowa? likability or green with a candidate on the issues. >> they have to feel like they know you. that's the thing about iowa. you really get to meet the candidates, you shake their hands. you can walk in and there's a candidate. i remember meeting rick santorum. it was off the highway. there's rick. hey, rick! >> like for you and me in new york, we can't imagine a politician would be that available. >> they're available. believe me. >> i agree. there would be four or five candidates on the stage with almost identical policy stands.
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>> 99, can you imagine? going to 99 of them? >> you're having like, i think chris christie had something like ten town halls in three counties in an afternoon or something. >> then iowa, too. working hard. dana, this is one of your favorite questions. this is from boone rogers. what will your number one argument be against hrc to completely destroy her in the general election? okay. i adlibed that part. >> trust worthiness and likability. i believe if her unfavorable numbers can get to about 60% in the key swing states like if colorado, that she is beatable. that has to happen. >> i would say she is a corrupt liar who cannot be trusted and she will continue to do what president obama has done to this country.
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>> and because benghazi lives matter. >> i'll kind of good at this. i decided. a little break from national security. what about juan? advice to beat hillary. tell truth. >> tell the truth? i would say go look at the future and talk about this as a campaign for the future. we don't want to look backward. >> like bernie. >> i didn't say it. >> bolling, how do you do her in? then mama's got to go. >> you just point out the clinton foundation corruption that's going on that is so obvious to everyone except the clinton voters. >> and that's a wrap. thank you, twitter that voters. head over to foxnews.com for the postgame analysis. you can see some of your favorite numbers. at 8:00 p.m. and again at 11:00 p.m. eastern. up next, a major debate drama in
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the debate race. much more coming up. my moderate to severe chronic plaque psoriasis made a simple trip to the grocery store anything but simple. so finally, i had an important conversation with my dermatologist about humira. he explained that humira works inside my body to target and help block a specific source of inflammation that contributes to my symptoms. in clinical trials, most adults saw 75% skin clearance. and the majority were clear or almost clear in just 4 months. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened; as have blood, liver, and nervous system problems, serious allergic reactions, and new or worsening heart failure. before treatment, get tested for tb. tell your doctor if you've been to areas where certain fungal infections are common, and if you've had tb, hepatitis b, are prone to infections, or have flu-like symptoms or sores.
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the democratic race is dead locked in iowa. one poll shows bernie sanders ahead by 3 points. both camps engaged in fiery debates over debates. clinton wanls to take part in an unsanctioned one in new hampshire next week shelf call on sanders to get on board. >> what i am through my campaign is, i would look forward to another debate. i am anxious if we can get something set up to be able to be there so let's try to make it
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happen. i'm ready for the debate and i hear senator sanders will change his mind and join us. and i think they can work this out. >> he will agree but only if hillary agrees later on. the only reason her team was willing to agree to unsanctioned debates was, quote, the hide hillary plan back fired. the dynamics have change and not sanders has significant momentum. >> the only thing worse than hearing hillary on tv is hearing her on radio. that voice is absolutely annoying. i think the race is tightening. not because hillary has been hiding. i think people have seen her and they don't like what they see. every time she's out in public the numbers go down. for hillary, all of a sudden, change her campaign strategy last second makes her look like she's scrambling. it doesn't make her look like
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the front returner shelf shouldn't want to do more debates. i think sanders is starting to turn up the heat. he is going after her from the left and handling punches. if write her, i would wait it out. survive the loss in new hampshire. then you get to south carolina and some of the other be states. she starts the momentum. she is doing it all wrong. >> what are you saying? is it time for bernie, even apart from the debates to start running tougher more confrontational ads? >> i've never known why he didn't want to attack her on her most vulnerable point. however, he is up by a lot in new hampshire. he is the front-runner there. and front-runners never like to debate. especially in the last few days before the election, right? so i would also say, look how they're circling the wagons on the democratic side. i read all the columns every
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morning, the columnists all going after bernie sanders. even saying his tax reform would cost too much money. all of a sudden the liberal columnists are circling the wagons to try defend hillary. i think they're worried. >> here was a surprise for me if i was doing my dana perino and reading the payments. there is a republican running against bernie sanders in iowa. >> can i stay on her? >> sure. go right ahead. >> he has got her dead to the wall right now. what she did over the last two days is unbelievable. bernie sanders is knocking on doors, shaking handles in iowa. hillary clinton last night was in philadelphia with a group called franklin square capital. it is a hedge fund. it is a wall street firm. 310 people raised, i don't know, maybe a couple hundred thousand bucks. today she is in new york doing the same thing. raising money. shaking hands with wall street ties. and bernie sanders has been saying about her that she is tied to wall street. and she said no, i'm not.
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if you don't use last night and today as an example. go to the clinton foundation. wall street, wall street, wall street. he has her. he should stay on this track. it is working for him. especially when he is in iowa shaking hands. >> any connection to wall street. bernie sanders is legitimately -- >> quickly, come back to my queson. here you have on wall street guy. he is in chicago. a big investment banker running ads against bernie sanders in iowa. >> no opinion. >> who cares about that? she has to feel bern, okay? finish her off. >> i play to win. i would get after it. >> the reason she's probably doing these fund-raisers. she probably took bernie sanders
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a little too lightly. she is filling up the war chest. she may need it down the road. >> remember, bernie has convery well in fundraising. he is terrific on fundraising. do you know what? >> small donors. >> hit her on the e-mails. >> guess who is the front-runner in new hampshire? it's bernie. today is the 30th anniversary of the "challenger" disaster. it was a dark day in history but a day that ended up uniting the country. what kit teach us about uniting a nation. next. hi i'm heather cox on location with the famous, big idaho potato truck. our truck? it's touring across america telling people about idaho potatoes. farmer: let's go boy. again this year the big idaho potato truck is traveling the country spreading the word about heart healthy idaho potatoes and making donations to local charities. excuse me miss, have you seen our truck?
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anderson valley brewing company is definitely a leader in the adoption of energy efficiency. pg&e is a strong supporter of solar energy. we focus on helping our customers understand it and be able to apply it in the best way possible. not only is it good for the environment, it's good for the businesses' bottom line. these are our neighbors. these are the people that we work with. that matters to me. i have three children that are going to grow up here and i want them to be able to enjoy all the things that i was able to enjoy. together, we're building a better california.
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today is the 30th anniversary of the "challenger" explosion. it united the country under a bursting cloud of horror. the sheer trauma could be felt by all of us as we watched. for days, weeks and months afterward. before 9/11, this was our 9/11. and back then we had no internet, no texting, no facebook. 30 years ago, challenger was not trending on twitter. it was trending in our heads. we dwelled on the tragedy. there was no expiration date to the pain and everywhere we went, discussion never strayed from the topic. universal grief. i wonder if that's a skill we've
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somehow forgotten, to grieve as one. we can grieve alone but rarely together. it is as though we're all in these separate tracks. something else happen that's diverts us to another story that demands another comment. we are scattered, distracted, sometimes we come together briefly. then we move on. is it no wonder we seek but fail to find resolutions to conflicts amongst ourselves? instead, the idea of unity, whether through grief or joy seems as fleeting as an explosion in the sky. the "challenger," three decades agoer it went up in one piece and came back down in many. i call that a metaphor for today as a country prepares for another debate, a coming caucus and a looming general election. it is good to remind ourselves that it is better to come together than it is to break apart. >> i want to go to you, juan, first. it happen in 1986.
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you were probably in your mid 30s so you remember it well. the incredible thing about this was, it happened live on television. and we were all watching it. we were not even sure what was happening. we knew it wasn't a good thing. >> i really liked what you had to say. i think it really spoke to what's going on in the country right now. so i guess i was 32 years old. and i was in the "washington post" newsroom. and we were all watching it. because christa mcauliffe who was the teacher on it, had competed and won among 11,000 other teachers to be on that flight. and the idea that her students were so excited. students all over the country were excited. had the nation excited as one. as you were pointing out. we were excited that it was taking off. and someone who was a civilian, someone like you and me was getting to travel to outer space. it seemed so unbelievable. then in that moment, in the middle of the newsroom.
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all these news people. you could see the perplex at this. what's going on? is that right? did it blow up? nobody could believe it. and of course, the other thing that stands out was ronald reagan. and what he had to say afterwards when he talked about, you know, slipping the bonds of earth. quoting the bible. just so pro found and so perfect. >> we talked about this a lot on "the five." about how social networks have changed the way we express our emotions and our grief. do you think that we have become more shallow or superficial when dealing with tragedies? we don't dwell on them ordeal with them personally? instead we go online and express a comment. >> do you remember when the paris attacks happened from a few months ago. when people were operaffering t prayers. they were mocked for offering prayers on social media.
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so yerg things have changed. an interesting thing about the speech ronald reagan gave that day. he was scheduled to give a state of the union writer. there was a young speech writer, peggy noonan, who just wrote a book this year call time of our lives. the first column of her work was this lecture she gave in talking about the wrifgt speech. and that was how they bonded. they were all finished writing the state of union. out of the corner of her eye she saw what happened on cnn and she knew the president would need something shelf didn't know that he would know the quote that he used at the end of that speech. but did it speak to how a president can lead nation. and i remember it very well from my childhood, juan. >> i remember being in a bedroom in college watching this on a terrible television. do you remember where you were? >> i was at home. and i remember seeing it in utter shock. the excitement of when it took
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off and watching it. and it broke apart. and maybe that's one of those booster rockets falling apart. and wasn't. when it started to break into more pieces and the commentators telling what was going. on it reminds us, let's talk about the positive of this. after that, there was, of course, a time of mourning. then americans are resillen. he with got up and we made bigger, better safer exploration going forward. and it reminds to you when the country was founded. basically people on the east coast. they came here and decided to find out what was west. a lot of people died going west will not knowing what they would final. they found animals, native-americans, weather. disease, insects, everything. they died massively but they pushed forward and we did too and we have a lot of innovation that came because of the aftermath of that. and christa mcauliffe and the
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other six can be credited. >> i guess hit to do with the seal. amazing how something so small. what you would think would be a marginal thing could led to this. >> can have such catastrophic results. >> that's why it is so important to check these things out very careful carefully. i'm very proud to live in a nation where people like the crew of the "challenger" will put their lives on the line to make a better future and a better world for all of us. so take a moment today and remember the sacrifices they have made. >> i'm not sure, jesse, were you even born? >> second grade. thank you. >> i do remember. it was a horrible tragedy, unfortunately it takes tragedy to unite this country and space floridaation is so significant. we are pioneers.
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we're curious and innovative. when you talk about going into space. you're not sending a black guy or a white guy or a christian or a woman. you're sending an american and they're recommending the stars and stripes. so you feel like everybody died. when there is a success, like when there is a man on the moon, it ignites the country. i would love to have something to unite behind. all right, greg. have fun at the debate tonight. one more thing is next. for over 850 miles. my men driven nearly mad from starvation and frostbite. today we make history. >>bienvenidos! welcome to the south pole! if you're dora the explorer, you explore. it's what you do. >>what took you so long? if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car insurance, you switch to geico. it's what you do. >>you did it, yay!
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the access informationlows us to from anywhere. the microsoft cloud allows us to scale up. microsoft cloud changes our world dramatically. it wasn't too long ago it would take two weeks to sequence and analyze a genome. now, we can do a hundred per day. with the microsoft cloud we don't have to build server rooms. we have instant scale. the microsoft cloud is helping us to re-build and re-interpret our business. this cloud helps transform business. this is the microsoft cloud. lots of vitamins a&c, and, only 50 calories a serving... good morning, indeed. v8. veggies for all.
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time for one more thing. >> on wednesday, during the pope's general audience, held every week, suddenly vatican square was transformed into a circus. there was a circus in town. the pope, not only did he sit there. afterward, he got up and he started talking about the beauty of acrobats and talk about how beauty is good for the soul. he said beauty brings us closer to god. but behind the spectacle, how many hours of training and honor of these athletes. go, pope, go! >> thank you. so we have a new baby, we do. not "the five" but gerber has new baby.
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seven months old. from troy, michigan. just won the gerber baby contest. her picture was picked from more than 170,000 entries by a panel of judges. they look for key gerber like features, such as happiness and expressiveness. so she nailed it. so did her parents. this athletic get $50,000 in prize money. >> and now ultra bonita. >> campaign carl gave me an idea. to talk about things other than the evangelical who's live in the state. i call one of my favorite iowans. a tim things you should know. iowa is called the sill cone prairie. it is a lot lower cost of living and there is a lot of excellent opportunities there. especially in bioengineering. the 15th largest concentration
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of biotech countries in the nation. if you're to get into that field, you can go there. it is fifth in soybean production. the highest literacy rate in the nation. 99%. and iowa native, was the first female lawyer in the united states. >> i love it. i'm going to my homeland. >> all right. jesse? >> so what is everybody going to be doing saturday night at 10:00? we know dana will be at some library thinking about biotech. kimberly will be drinking. >> and dancing. >> but everybody else, watters' world. i'll be at the beach. >> popping a collar. >> before we go. one more reminder. we're going to drop into des moines, iowa. friday, tomorrow, january 29th. we'll have the show there. another brand new live show. saturday at 5:00, january thrthre30
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ths. and then in the middle of the caucuses. that's it for us. we'll see you all tomorrow night. live from iowa, until then, "special report" coming up right now. i'm bret baier and this is "special report" live from des moines. in less than an hour, the final debates before the iowa caucuses begin. they are in he is egs the closing arguments. the republican presidential contenters make their final pitches to the voters before the first voting of the 2016 campaign. in the next hour we'll check in on the candidates. what they're doing in their last-minute preparations. we'll take you behind the scenes and get a preview of the main event. with megyn kelly and chris wallace.
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