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tv   The Five  FOX News  April 22, 2016 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT

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talk to a local allstate agent and discover how much more their personal service can do for you. call 888-429-5722 now. . hello, everyone, i'm kimberly guilfoyle, along with juan williams, eric bolling, dana perino and greg gutfeld, it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." it's earth day. and if you believe the hysteria from some celebrities and politicians, global warming is going to destroy the planet. >> climate change is happening faster than even the most pessimistic of scientists warned us decades ago. and it's become a run-away freight train bringing with it an impending disaster for all living things. >> when we look at climate change, we have got to realize that this is a global
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environmental crisis. of unprecedented urgency. >> we need to talk about this issue. and we should talk about it in terms of the extraordinary threats that climate change pose to our country and our world. >> climate change is a trend that affects all trends. economic trends, security trends, everything will be impacted. >> so much of what's going on now is something what we to be treated. i think it's a mental illness. i believe that climate change denial is a form of mental illness. >> we're so sick. today at least 175 countries gathered at the united nations, to sign an agreement to address the threat of climate change. that's right, of isis, remains on the back burner as we're just learning about a plot by the terror network to sneak jihadists from syria to the u.s. through mexico to carry out attacks against this country.
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let's weigh it in the balance, right? your favorite thing to talk about is climate change. >> get these bozos to care about isis, you would have to link beheadings to a carbon footprint. they have their priorities backwards. these are the folks that would condemn christian bakery, but don't think about the fact that gays are being thrown out of buildings in iran. it's nuts or iraq. overwhelming majority of client his tearics do not read the literature, they with told they didn't have to. when the president said the science is set stled, that got them a class exemption from science class. if you understand science, you know the whole point, the engine of science is to be willing to proven wrong. the only way you know you can be proven right is to be skeptical. a true scientist is skeptical. now you have guys out trying to penalize skeptics, trying to tie them to corruption. this is an affront to science, enlightenment got rid of this persecution. it makes me think they have a
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lot in common with isis. they both want to go back to the seventh century. >> we have presidential candidates who have tied global warming to isis, to islamic terror, which is even more insane. earth day, i'm going to roll the windows down on my suv. put the air conditioning on and drive home, open my windows at home and turn on the ac and turn on the 20,000 btu barbeque for a nice, nice chicken dinner. in bernie's world i'm causing more terror. >> if you want to drive them crazy, you should have steak. they think the cattle industry is also adding -- >> i'll make a steak for myself. >> dana, when you see the juxtaposition, the real credible threat on national security, on the world of isis, balanced with an obsession with cumulus clouds like does it make any sense to you? >> i do think the climate debate
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has got an little bit out of whack for a couple reasons. one, millennials are now the largest generation of our country. since they were little kids in school. they have been taught that glomg is going to be their demise, they believe that this is their number one issue. if you look at the exit polls from any of the states that have had elections so far, it's all, climate change is usually in the at least the top three of their biggest concern. i think there's a way you can say, i'm nor clean energy, i'd like for us to have more independence from foreign sources of energy. think we should be looking for alternatives. i don't want to penalize the american economy while oer economies don't actually have to participate. because this is a global problem. if we hurt ourselves and china doesn't do anything, w haven't done anything to help the environment there are very reasonable ways to talk about this. what is not reasonable is you now have several, i think it's 15, democratic attorneys general who are targeting climate
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skeptics for prosecution, and the perception from the democrats is that this is perfectly acceptable. and i actually think it's quite scary. >> we're all in trouble. you'll get thrown in jail. >> they might try to prison dineshta souza. >> juan, you'll be a character witness for all of us. reduce our sentences? they seem to be earnest, genuine in their concern. that the rest of us aren't getting it and what they're trying to focus on is a far more significant about climate change. >> yeah well i understand, i'm, i sit here and i think to myself, i think politics is in play. i think you look at the numbers, republicans don't believe in climate change. democrats do, you see it in terms of the presidential candidates, you stee out on the campaign trail. think to myself, why is that? why is it that republicans are invested in saying there's no climate change? these are a bunch of bozo scientists. gregory says science it good, you should be skeptical.
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i buy into that. but what happens when you see that the overwhelming consensus is that there's climate change. >> i'm glad you used the phrase consensus, the that was done by a faulty questionnaire done by a grad student. just as you cannot prove that man-made global warming is real. you can't not prove it that's where you start. >> you can't not prove it you don't see increasing temperatures? glaciers melting. >> you're seeing more ice. >> i don't think anybody says you're seeing more ice. >> more ice has grown by 50% -- >> i'm going to say, this is so american. i am never hearing this from anybody but you guys. >> stop it, you haven't heard that the reservoirs. >> are you america shaming us? >> a 17-year pause? >> near two decades now. >> juan, can i give you a little piece of advice? >> i think of anybody i've ever known that has read more about climate change, it is greg gutfe gutfeld. >> which is why i'm losing my
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mind. >> i never use the word hoax, because i don't think it's fair. there could be something going on there. in the list of priorities, where is it? there are millions of people around the world that are burning impure fuels and are dying, and could use coal. so i would say maybe there's a slight uptick. the problem is people don't think what they already know. >> why? >> because it's easy not to read this stuff. >> otherwise -- >> there's a very big -- >> republicans have already -- >> answer. >> there's $100 billion of money floating around to professors and climatologists who will face money in the form of grants. >> what about the coal lobby? >> finance all their labs and studies and their proof that you believe that you buy into, of global warming. which many people who have --
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>> no, i am even lower than gregory gutfeld. gregory, has read a great deal about this. i have not read a great deal about this. but i as a journalist will say, when i read -- >> that's the point. >> no, it's not the point to me because it's much like anything else, it's like looking at the literature and seeing where the literature is based. and saying look, this is overwhelming. >> you don't read the literature. >> the republicans don't do it. >> i read the literature, i'm not a scientist. >> can we just agree on this? rise of ice and rise of isis, thank you so much. >> well done. >> let me finish my point. the defense industry, who i don't think is politically vested says, this is a major threat to us. >> what is? global warming? >> yes. >> you get a 17-year pause in global warming it suddenly becomes climate change, it's not global warming any more.
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the rhetoric, the debate has to center around what is really happening. instead of what was originally for a long time, global warming. you had some warming, then it stopped, now you have to call it climate change. >> if indeed there's warming. the problem has always been that their statistics have been off. sometimes double, tripled the estimation, in order to get money. that creates a skeptical nation when we know that -- when you have, when you have experts saying, 30 years ago that like new york would be under water. or all the polar bears would be dead. >> no, al gore said it. >> al gore himself. >> in preparation for walking this trail of fire with the four of you, i've read online and i looked at politifact. >> politifact? >> are they not to be trusted? >> i'm not saying that, believe me. >> he backed it up with wikipedia. >> oh, my god. >> no no. i snuck in your dad, read the
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propaganda that you're feeding. i looked up and it went point by point about melting gla ining g rising tides. >> there's rebuttal to each one of them if you choose to read both sides, which i try to do. sometimes i walk away and go my god it's real and other times, i'll read the literature that says maybe the way they gauge temperatures are too close to certain areas that artificially raise temperatures. >> one of the points plit facts says this is a big conservative theory. right. there's a conspiracy that they've changed the numbers, they've fudged the numbers to create this image so politi fact went back and checked. they said that's not true. >> but then there are arguments that say that the thermostats or wherever these weather stations are, in areas that actually are artificially increased. >> that was a huge scandal out of britain. >> of course. the climate -- >> that's real.
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i read that. >> that's real. >> what i'm most concerned about is what alec baldwin thinks of all of this, especially, greg. >> i know. >> i believe that climate change denial is a form of mental illness. how are you? >> i am crazy. >> it does show how you don't, you don't think when you believe. when somebody has an ideology, you can't change their mind. and it's almost pointless to keep going back and forth. there almost has to be a room that you go in and you say everybody forget about what they know before, let's start and read the same things, he has an ideology he can't let go of. and i'm possibly the same way. >> we can't allow the criminalization of thought. that's a bad trend. >> oh no, we can't. >> i agree. if i said to you, hey, you know what, dana, that earth is flat and we've been lied to all along. >> i would go immediately to politifax and see. >> the criminalization of thought by dana perino.
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let's see if we can get gutfeld and alec bald wwin in a room together and we'll blank-slate them and see if you can't come out on the wrong side. coming up, is donald trump about to make a dramatic shift in his campaign. climate change on it my head. later, facebook friday, post your questions, we're going to answer some of them straight ahead.
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donald trump hasn't minced words so far this presidential race, he says americans will see a different, softer side of him soon enough. >> my wife is constantly saying -- darling, be more presidential. i just don't know that i want to do it quite yet. we have to be tough for a little while. i'll be at some point i'm going to be so presidential that you people will be so bored and i'll come back as a presidential person, and instead of 10,000 people, i'll have about 150 people. and they'll say, but boy, he really looks presidential. >> his top aide promised party leaders that the candidate would start running a more traditional campaign, including a shift in his persona to target more voters. he said trump is just playing a part in the primary sees and
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will evolve as the general election nears. and that comment elicited this sharp response from ted cruz. >> yesterday they were down in florida meeting with party leaders and they were saying these are their words -- that all of this is just a show. that he doesn't believe anything he is saying, he's just trying to fool gullible voters and he's not going to do any of it. he's not going to build a wall. he's not going to deport anyone. he's telling us he is lying to us. >> we might get to a point where we say paul mannafort. where is donald trump and what have you done with him? >> 2016 is about hope and change. people are hoping that trump will change. but the thing is they keep using phrase "evolve" like he's stuck between homo erectus and homo sap yen. but he might actually be part of the evolution of the republican party that we may not want to admit. his comment on transgendered
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bathrooms and the fact that caitlyn jenner could use any bathroom she wanted. some people watching the sw might disagree with that but they still support donald. they will accept that belief and accept donald. are they hypocrites for that? or is donald creating a fundamental change that's downplaying or reducing the moral, social, conservative ideology that is part of the republican party? is nay be that case. it may be that he might be saying those issues aren't going to get knew the white house any more. they never have. let it go. now he truly is kind of a liberal fiscal republican. >> i think one of the appeals of him is that he wasn't so handled and manufactured by, you look at the difference between hillary clinton, who focus words every word she's going to say and she thinks about it very carefully. look at the fox news exit poll. for those people voting so far this year, if you're most important thing in a president is that he will tell it like it
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is. trump has won that by 78% of the vote and in new york, it was 91% of the vote. so he's been doing something right up to now. >> that sounds almost like a trust issue, people believe what he's saying he's being authentic. a lot of times people see politicians as so full of it. they're tired of it. they say they'll pander and do anything to get your vote. but they're saying this guy is telling us what he believes and what he thinks, he's removed the filter. it's just coming straight out at you. >> how does it jibe with the fact that he may change everything he believes in, according to this pivot. >> to mannafort, about the general election. >> he's going to have to broaden the tent and open it up to get more voters to peel off the democrats, get the inds pents and the establishment republicans to come his way. >> i do think he needed to do something, especially after wisconsin. he's taken some steps, i i guess the risk is that you
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overcorrect. >> i'm glad said exactly what you said. now people are starting to realize that yes, the republicans need someone who can win. it may not be straight along the party line it may not be you have to check the box on abortion, check the box on all the topics and hope to win in a general election. people are now starting to see, you may not like where he is on a couple of social issues, but you like where he is on saying it like it is on being tough on terror. jobs, et cetera. and also we've been talking for five years here and 15 or 20 years since we've been doing this about how both sides need to go to the far primaries. hillary as well on the left. she just carved off the far left trying to go at it with bernie. starting to go back to the middle.
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trump did it with much less skill and softness that hillary is doing it he went far and hard and is now starting to move back. manafort, craig, a long time ago you said you wish he could trust the right people. he's the right guy. he's bringing some graph taz and strength and credibility to the trump camp. i like manafort. >> i thought you didn't like the republican establishment. >> i don't. >> you pick and choose. >> is that the deal? oh, i see. >> let me tell you -- >> i remember, i remember mitch, the former governor of indiana, he said we can't run every time on social issues, you know what got him? out of here, you're gone, see you later, alligator. i think now you're saying oh, it's okay for donald trump to do this hey, you evangelical republicans, we're so sorry. we're so sorry. you can't do that to people.
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>> hillary did the same thing. she went anti-wall street, anti-iraq war and she's going to have to bring it back to the middle. >> i think even you would say that's not -- >> dana, help me. did she not just trash wall street the last two weeks? >> i thought your complaint was she won't release the speeches because she probably was poking wall street. >> i mean they -- they've been having a battle between bernie and -- very nice, kimberly guilfoyle just sneezed with no sound. i've never seen anything like that. >> she's a talent. >> they teach you that. >> hillary and bernie have been fighting over who would be tougher on wall street. my last word, the evolution may be welcome to some, it will give a lot of conservatives even more heartburn than they already have. more to come. there are five more big contests on tuesday on the east coast. we'll preview them in a special tomorrow night live on a saturday edition "the five."
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still to come, facebook friday. but next, what killed prince? an autopsy performed today on the music legend, the latest on the investigation of his death, straight ahead. thousands of people came out today to run the race for retirement. so we asked them... are you completely prepared for retirement? okay, mostly prepared?
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(patrick 2) pretty great.ke to be the boss of you? (patrick 1) how about a 10% raise? (patrick 2) how about 20? (patrick 1) how about done? (patrick 2) that's the kind of control i like...
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...and that's what they give me at national car rental. i can choose any car in the aisle i want- without having to ask anyone. who better to be the boss of you... (patrick 1)than me. i mean, you...us. (vo) go national. go like a pro. ♪ little red corvette ♪ baby, you're much too fast ♪ yes, you are ♪ little red corvette >> prince's sudden death yesterday left the world stunned and greatly saddened. we still don't know what took his life. but an autopsy performed today will determine that soon. here were the investigators earlier. >> there were no obvious signs of trauma on the body at all. we have no reason to believe that at this point that this was a suicide. >> it was a very meticulous exam, it was a complete exam. and so several of the pieces of information that are gathered in that process will be sent to
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labs for further testing. so that answer is pending. and it will take days and weeks to complete those particular investigations. >> here's dr. michael bodin's take on the investigation. >> the autopsy should be finished and they know if he had, any natural disease. they know if he had pneumonia. they know he had heart disease, if he had brain a hemorrhage. all of these innocent things that cause death would be able to be determined just from the regular autopsy. if so, that, they wouldn't, they could release that and say, died a natural death if they don't have any natural disease, they have to wait for the toxicology, which takes a few days. not two weeks. >> so there wasn't a lot there, kg in the press conference by the police. but they did say at one point, a reporter asked if there was a suicide note. he said i can't tell you if there was one. however it didn't appear to be a suicide.
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what do we, let me ask you this, why did they have this press conference today? >> because they kind of had to, right? the autopsy was conducted. it was concluded and now what they're waiting for is toxicology. that tells, you if there's a situation, they came upon a crime scene, foul awe play. would you see visible signs of injury to the body, torso, the head. they said no foul play. now they have to look further and the blood results, the toxicology are going to give them what they need to determine if this was a substance abuse situation. was there an overdose? if he was sick, was that exacerbated by the use of drugs as well? so there's a number of factors in play. they probably have a pretty good idea. they're not going to say until they get the final results, that's going to take a couple of weeks. it just does rule out quite a bit you know in terms of what could have caused this. >> greg, i read today that theres was a stage shot in atlanta. they landed 48 minutes early.
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there was some sort of opiate involved there. there was a save shot. >> in the plane. yes. it's, it is amazing, how powerful these drugs are. and they're powerful because they are so good and they're so addictive. and maybe that's what did it. i don't know. i can't guess. but one thing -- i am a broken record, because every time we do stories like these, i go off on the releasing of the 911 calls. which drives me crazy. i don't understand, the most personal moment in somebody's life. whether they're being injured and filled with fear and panic or dead, are being released. this is the most private part of someone's life. i always feel like and i've said it before, it keeps people from calling 911. if you're with somebody who might have overdosed, and you think that you make that phone call and it's going to be public, you may not make that phone call because you don't want to be on tv. i just don't understand what's the point of us having to hear what goes on?
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i don't know. >> dana, prince had been known to have some hip problems, at some point someone said he may have needed a double hip replacement. he may be, had used some sort of pain killers for that. >> possibly. he would be like many other americans, he needed pain medication. i think the important thing for police is that there was no foul play. we could do continue to do what we've been doing, which is to celebrate the life and to let him rest in peace. does it matter at this point? to there's no foul play, i don't know if it matters to any of us how he died. >> juan, you weren't here yesterday, we did analysis on prince, his life, career. you want to weigh in on some of that? >> i love prince. i remember, i went down to the essence music festival in new orleans. and it was unbelievable, it was in the superdome. you couldn't move. you could not move. it was -- a fabulous performance, chaka kan was there
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and the time. it was a party. he had always refused to do that music. this was like, black american women and baby let me tell you, they love prince, they just no question. because there's lots, people say, prince is like male/female. at one point he said he was black, he was white. in fact he's from black parents, there was a sense of, questioning identity about prince. i think that's why he was reluctant to go down to the essence music festival. afterwards, no question. the same summer, i then saw him in washington and the verdictsen center, he did a completely different concert for a different audience, it was similarly spectacular and sold out. i've been traveling to get back to you guys today. all day, i appreciate you guys, let me just say, what i hear and especially from black folks is -- drugs. we're not tucking about perk seset percocets and opioids. he's a public figure.
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whitney houston? gone. whitney houston's daughter, gone. michael jackson. you think about the stars that go and about their lifestyle, it's a problem. do they ever learn, do they ever figure it out? i don't know. >> highly intelligent people are prone to high-risk behaviors, it's their ticket to oblivion. they don't have to think as much. >> we got to go. >> stay right there. facebook friday is next. ♪ i could get used to this. now you can, with the luxuriously transformed 2016 lexus es and es hybrid. ♪
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how to gete big flavorw out of each and every itsy, bitsy, little, bitty bite. new sargento snack bites, just 20 calories per stick, with larger than life flavor, like colby- pepper jack and savory garlic & herb jack. you can nibble 'em, grab 'em, skewer 'em, pop 'em. you can call 'em big, bold, and brazen. real cheese people know better than to call them mild. new sargento snack bites, big flavor in a little bite. > >> do you love that show, "bosom buddies." kimberly, get your mind out of the gutter. >> it reminds me of somebody. >> tom hanks. >> yes.
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all right from dana, what do you miss the most about your high school days. >> studying, for sure. >> i love the speech team. i had a really good group of friends on the speech team and, what are you laughing about? >> you are lisa simpson. >> what you're worried about me giving a nerdy answer. >> we would practice and go to our meets on saturday. 5:30 in the morning, it was great. the speech team is -- should get more support. >> i agree with you. >> i agree with you. >> like from people like you. >> eric? >> not much. not much. i went to a jesuit high school. all boys. had the paddle, corporal punishment after school. did sports, you know all the seasons and then had to literally, this is when you could do this, had to hitchhike home. i was about 15 miles from school. the whole team would stand there and people would pick you up and drop you off. >> ever had the same people twice? >> over the years, yes. you can't do that any more.
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don't do that. >> juan? highhool? >> free time. you know, hanging out and for me it was real blossoming time. i grew newspaper brooklyn, right. but then i got this scholarship and i went off to a prep school and it was like, i had never seen anything like it, manicured and green. anyway, for me i was growing up and i had free time. i could do things, i could, like now my life is so structured. >> kimberly? >> okay. i did speech, too. but i would say what i loved about high school, i went to all-girls private catholic school, mercy high school, go skippers. i loved the sports, obviously i had straight a's, a.p. classes, perfect attendance. i loved it because i was captain of the varsity women's softball fast-pitch and we won the championship every year. >> you could eat crap. lunchtime. two hot dogs and chocolate milk
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who eats hot dogs with chocolate milk? >> me. >> i did. that's what you ate at lunch i don't miss anything else, i'm like you, this is high school, this is like home room. >> this is like the "breakfast club." >> here's from mary h. what do you imagine your retirement looking like? >> what will you be like in retirement? >> exactly like this. >> so you think. i'll be like this. it will just be a little steel magnolia. just running around, looking for love in all the wrong places. >> juan, you're perplexed. >> just like this it's not going to be just like this. we change, right? >> i'm going to -- >> don't bust her bubble. >> okay. >> this is curious, because i always think i would love to be in a warm place, right? part of me says the caribbean or some place like that, right? >> i would like that. so i would think that's cool. but on the other hand i live with a woman who says she ain't
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moving. she likes where she lives. i got that problem, too. mine will never move. i'm never retiring. >> i love working. >> the villages? right? >> a lot of action there. >> i hear there's a nightclub, restaurants. i kind of think that would be fun. >> bar scene. >> would you clean up over there, my friend. dana? >> might have more than one dog. i would get another couple dogs. >> of course you would. i agree, i think it's important to keep doing something. teach, maybe. >> you retire, you die. i'm going to have my, i'm going to lose my whole physical body. have my brain uploaded into a computer. it will be in a big fat of gel and have all of these things plugged in and i'll sit there for the rest of existence and do nothing. they'll have certain kind of euphoric drugs packed into my brain and i will never do anything. >> who is paying for this? >> medicare? >> climate change. his brain will climate change.
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>> i will start with you, eric from sylvia, if you could be any age for a week, what age would you be? for one week? >> one week. >> you go back to the current age? >> i think i would like to be 18 for one week again. >> just the first year of college. freshman in college. >> would you sleep all week. >> juan? >> i was thinking about this, i had lots of anxieties and -- always trying to prove something when i was 18. i was trying to dined what kind of person i was. i was much more comfortable in my 30s, i think i knew who i was, i had successful, i had some money. money beats being poor every time. >> it can buy happiness. kimberly? >> i would like to go back to being 21. for my 21st birthday. i was the designated driver and drank rootbeer floats and maybe i should do that one over.
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>> good point. dana? >> i'm going to fast-forward. i'd like to be 100 for a week. because my great grandmother lived to be 104. i want to know what it's like at 100, so i can -- when i come back to being this age, which is also kind of old, but i would know some things i shouldn't do. like i should take better care of my health. >> i would go to be 8o, so when the week's over, i could say it's great to be 40. >> if you go back to your 18 or 21 year, you know it's going it turn out okay. >> that's true, you don't have to worry about it. >> go back to my 21st birthday. >> i did something really stupid. that is affecting me for a long time. not do that. >> but you know what -- you know -- when you read advice that comes from people who are really old. you know what they say, they say take moore risks, have more fun. >> eat more ice cream.
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>> and nobody dies saying i should have worked more. >> drink more cocktails. >> have a good time, man. >> i think we learned absolutely nothing. >> and everything. >> at the same time. >> well she's calling herself the world's meanest mom after tossing her kid's ice cream in the trash. will you agree when you hear why? next on "the five" show me movies with romance.
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♪ 10th avenue freezout is this the world's meanest mom? jamie sullivan once appeared on a bravo show called "jersey belle." she shared a tough love lesson for her kids on facebook. she explained how she disciplined her three young children, after they didn't thank the server at dairy queen. she wrote quote, so i am the meanest mom ever. like ever. the young lady maybe 17 handed each child their ice cream. not one looked her in the eye. not one said thank you. i calmly collected their ice creams and my kids watched in horror as i deposited them into the nearby garbage can. sullivan explained her action on
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"fox & friends" earlier. >> for me, throwing away three ice creams was worth it to me to teach them to see the value in other people. i was raised to treat the janitor with the same amount of respect as the president. and that is what i intend to teach my children. whether they like it or not. if i have to be the meanest mom in the world, then so be it. >> kimberly, the meanest mom? >> yeah, i don't know. i don't like her and i think she's got suspect motives. i think she wants to be famous, i think she's completely horrible and i would tell her to her face. >> holy smokes. what brought out the shark. >> i think she's mean, i think there's a way to could do that that's instructive and isn't punitive and emotionally damaging to kids. all you see now going on talking about it and bragging about it. she's so proud of herself and so full of it. she's making the story all about her. i don't think that's a very educational learning teachable
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moment for her kids. they're probably traumatized. >> i missed you, surprise me every time. >> eric, isn't there a lesson for kids, to say hey you know what be respectful of people who serve you. >> i happen to loik what she did. >> i'm an advocate of tough love. and she epitomizes tough love. maybe she went a little bit too far. maybe she could have taught them a little bit while she was doing it. but the other extreme is where you buy your kid ice cream and they basically ignore the people around them, the servers, and that's an extreme on the other side. maybe somewhere in the middle. i don't have a problem with this. i'm the worst at this. i don't administrator tough love the way i think parents should. >> dana, what do you think about what kimberly said. do you think this woman mom is out for publicity or trying to instill good values in her children. >> maybe a little bit of both. i think there's pressure enough on parents, and the peer pressure for parents when it comes to social media is really a problem.
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i see it on "fox & friends" or hear it from friends about how they'll go to chat rooms or be on blogs and it's just so much pressure to be a certain kind of parent. i think you can do that without having to tell the world about it. >> you kind of agree with kimberly? >> uh-huh. >> i wanted to take your ice cream away the other day, but i didn't, because i thought i didn't want to be a mean guy, you know. >> clearly she's lactose intolerant. it would have been great if she reenacted the scene from witness, when the guy comes over to harrison ford with the ice cream. she should have gone up to the kid with ice cream in the face and said this is what you get. i don't think she went far enough, kimberly. i think you have to have tough love. i question the fact she had to publicize it. and get this, she's a reality tv star, who would have thought. >> need i say more? one more thing is up next. you both have a perfect driving record.
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one of millions of orders on this company's servers. accessible by thousands of suppliers and employees globally. but with cyber threats on the rise, mary's data could be under attack. with the help of the at&t network, a network that senses and mitigates cyber threats, their critical data is safer than ever. giving them the agility to be open & secure. because no one knows & like at&t. time for one more thing. juan, what do you have for us? >> it's been a whilwind week for me. i've been on the road talking to people about my new book, "we the people." i stopped first at the nixon library, following in greg's footsteps, you wouldn't believe what he told them about "we the people." then i went on -- by the way, you should go to the nixon library, they have a new display coming in the fall. it's very interesting. i didn't realize you could ask the president questions, just
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fascinating, love the people. great questions. from there it was on to guess what kimberly's home town of san francisco. i spoke at the commonwealth club, had a wonderful time. there i am in seattle. went to seattle to speak at seattle town hall. again a great time. you no he what's great being on the road talking about a book. even though you wrote the book, you're learning things and people ask you questions and interact in ways that you -- wow, that's a great question. >> and were you very well received. >> people love "the five" no doubt about it. >> even in san francisco. all right. >> greg? >> tomorrow night, greg gutfeld, i got ambassador john bolton, larry gatlin, the return of lauren savon and we send gavin mckinness to an earth day event. >> what should we do, what should i do? >> volunteer. >> for what? >> i don't know. planting a tree? >> i should plant a tree? for earth day?
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what's going on with your ears there? >> they're stretched out. got some gauges in them. >> i don't understand when you're 40 and a dad and you want to remove those, what do you do to your ears now? >> it's not going to be any different. i mean i've plenty of nephews an nieces that hang from them. >> oh. >> i'm leaving with you that image. tomorrow at 10:00 p.m. >> that sounds bizarre and painful. get the tissues, okay? this is a sweet story out of south carolina. a woman named april was in south carolina and she went to the greenville county animal care center she had had a dog that ran away two years ago, they couldn't find it, they looked for it for a year. they were thinking about getting another dog. she wasn't sure. she was waiting around and decides to go through the animal shelter, is going through the animal shelter, she sees a familiar face, it was her dog, buddy. and she says buddy. he turns around, gets so excited. now the family is reunited with buddy after two years of him being missing. can you imagine? >> how long did they say they
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had him? >> they're not exactly sure, he had not been in the shelter for very long. >> maybe he's trying to get away from them. >> eric, we got to go, hurry. >> we'll go quickly. a happy passover to all our jewish friends who celebrate passovers. in member ration of their liberation from slavery in egypt. so happy passover everyone. and to my beautiful wife's half-jewish side on passover. >> very sweet. >> okay. kimberly's royal news. again, just to please greg. three in a row, president obama and first lady michelle obama met the uk's prince george for the first time. look at how cute he is in his little robe before he goes to bed. he got a 15-minute extension on his bed time so he could meet the couple. which is wonderful and he thanked them for the rocking horse they gave him. >> is that greg's shorty robe?
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>> greg wants it back. i would like to you come back with me for greta. i'll be in for her from 7:00 to 8:00 tonight. see you back here tomorrow, same time, same place for a special live saturday edition, "special report" is next. this is a fox news alert. i'm shannon breen. california and indiana could not be much different as far as location, weather and politics. but both states have big delegate primaries in coming weeks. and both are to one degree or another, polling well for the front-runners. we have brand new fox surveys on both races tonight. and we've got fox team coverage. the republicans and hints that donald trump may be photographering from campaign mode to presidential mode and peter deucy and questions about hillary clinton's relationship with companies. republican polls, indiana's primary is may 3rd. donald trump has an eighpo

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