Skip to main content

tv   The Five  FOX News  April 26, 2016 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT

2:00 pm
frank, thanks very much for taking the time. >> stop by and see mere. >> done. >> pennsylvania, one of five states up for grabs. a big night that could set the table, as it were. see you tonight on "fbn." hello, everyone, super election day, the battle for the east. i'm here with kimberly guilfoyle. juan williams, dana perino, and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." >> we're just three hours away from closing time in the polls and five states on the east coast, it's primary day in connecticut, delaware, pennsylvania, and rhode island, trump may sweep them all, bringing his delegate count close to the 1,000 mark. it takes 1237 to clinch. his opponents know they
2:01 pm
mathematically can't get there, they've tag-teamed to block the gop front-runner from winning the nomination by strategically pulling out of some upcoming races. kasich and cruz say their plan was hatched to stop the democratic front-runner. the democratic front-runner. >> i'm not out to stop donald trump. i'm out to stop hillary clinton. donald trump has zero chance of being able to beat hillary clinton. >> if donald trump is our nominee, hillary clinton wins, hillary wins by double digits. if hillary wins, the consequences for this country are catastrophic. we lose the supreme court. we lose the senate and we might lose the house and we're trapped with trillions more of debt and economic stagnation. i'm not willing to let that happen. >> trump says the duo are desperate. >> i think it's collusion. i think it's pathetic. it makes them both look weak. they were both doing very badly. they're losing by millions of votes to me. take a look at kasich. we call him 1 for 42, he's won f 42 contests. he's just a guy hanging in.
2:02 pm
but this is just a guy, he keeps losing and he stays in. and you know, honestly, lying ted is a disaster. everything he says is so dishonest. so many things -- he'll talk about me and it's so dishonest. and it's hard to believe. the whole thing is hard to believe. actually. >> what would happen if trump is denied the nomination, that o'reilly and rush limbaugh predict all-out chaos. >> i continue to believe that mr. trump will be very close to winning the nomination outright if he arrives in cleveland and is denied, all hell will break loose. >> i don't think anybody understands the blow-back that would happen from the trumpists if that ever happens, we are going to see a nuclear explosion like you've never seen before. holy smokes. the blow-back that will happen then, the backlash. that will be the end of the
2:03 pm
republican party. >> well, okay, kg -- >> aye-yi-yi. >> they're speaking what a lot of people are saying. >> i think they're on to something. i don't think it's implausible to say there would be chaos or backlash or uproar or disappointment. people have been passionate that our big supporters, donald trump, to come out to hear him speak, waiting in long lines. getting protesters to be able to get into whatever event space he has at the time. tonight's a big night. once again we've heard it again. it's like groundhog day, super tuesday, here we are, let's see what happens tonight. you notice, dana and i, this shift with kasich, they're not saying they're against donald, they're against hillary. >> is that the right strategy? >> i think so will any of these states that trump wins tonight be won by republicans in november? likely not. and that is scary, and i got to
2:04 pm
bring up, we were in in hershey, pennsylvania and some kid asked me a question and his name was mitch, he asked me a question about 2020. he's 18 years old. he just registered to vote. he didn't ask me about 2016. he asked me about 2020. because for him, it was like 2016 is already over. it was heartbreaking. he actually believes that hillary's got this in the bag and there's nothing he can do about it. the one thing i defend cruz and kasich, it's not a back-room deal. they're doing it in front of everybody. this is a telegraphed play. they're not sneaking around. we know what they're doing. i don't think you can blame them for being sneaky. i do think the backlash is overstated. because trump people are like us. we don't riot. do we throw, we don't throw chairs through windows because we own the chairs and we usually own the windows. we don't really riot. it might be some noise.
2:05 pm
but i don't think -- >> remember what they said about the tea party? >> yeah, there was no violence, ever. >> the five states, connecticut, rhode island, delaware, pennsylvania, maryland. trump has a massive lead in most of those states what does he need to have a win in most of those states? what's a win for him? >> i think, i think you know if he has a clean sweep, i don't even care about the delegate count so much. pennsylvania has got a weird thing where they've got 17 that are bound and the rest are not. each state does it a little bit differently, rhode island has a system. about a year ago, the campaign was starting to get under way. i was saying that if there's going to be 17 candidates that come to you on the republican side, they're going to ask you for money or ask you for your vote, you should ask them tell me how you're going to flip a blue state. because that's what has to happen in order for a republican to win this time. out of those five, pennsylvania is the one that republicans always think that they can
2:06 pm
probably win. in a general election, there's really no need for a republican to go and campaign in rhode island or delaware, maryland, i think they've almost always go democrat. but pennsylvania is like that one that you think maybe we'll be able to get that. there's been a lot of crossover in pennsylvania. so you have a lot of democrats that have changed their registration to republican in order to be able to vote tomorrow. i'm assuming that it's going to be for donald trump. pennsylvania, if you could make the case that trump might be able to win that one. i'm not saying that he can, that's the one i think would be a big change. >> let me talk about crossover. juan, the republicans now so far, have increased versus the last time they held the primary. 65% bigger turn-out. the democrats down 20%. crossover? >> in fact i was just watching, i was on the fox business network. it was some guy from pennsylvania saying he was a
2:07 pm
former democrat, he was seeing more democrats now shifting over to the republican side in order to vote for trump. so that would bolster your point. you see a lot of this populism, a lot of the energy coming from people who are attracted to the gop by donald trump and by i mean it's the same with us in the media. we're all attracted to donald trump and you as the viewers, you watch whenever we put donald trump on the screen. that's great news for the republicans right now. >> doesn't that open up the map then? if that happens in a general election? >> i've told you this before, this has happened before, and what happens is you go to the primaries to the general, and it just dissipates. there's no evidence that this is an indicator of what's to come. it's parrot predictive, i would say it's by the way, it's a to mitch in hersey, was that the kid's name? that guy's got a future. >> already giving up at 18. he used to be called little
2:08 pm
marco, since rubio dropped out of the race, trump has taken a big liking to the senator. >> marco rubio did much better. i mean you look at marco rubio, he has more delegates right now than kasich has and he's been in the race for a shorter period of time. >> marco rubio, many of the others were doing much besser than kasich. they could have stuck around. they could have stayed, they would have done much better than him. frankly marco, i'd love to have involved. >> should he still be wary of his former rival. "the new york post" is reporting forces close to rubio helped plan that alliance. one rubio insider telling the "post," little marco ain't so little any more. for what end, dana what do you think? >> well i read something -- i read something also because it was last night that said that rubio is warming up to trump. so the only person who hasn't
2:09 pm
spoken is rubio. soy think we can maybe wait and let the senator decide if he's going to comment on it or not. i will say that his supporters are still very stalwart. they are always marco. they are -- they think that he should still be in the mix if we go to a contested convention. i think that he doesn't think that. he's been quiet, spending time with his family. i don't know how much the softening by donald trump will be persuasive to someone like marco rubio who felt very stunned by the personal communiti comments. >> for one thing this truly is now a reality show. because whether you have reality shows? alliances, it's like "survivor." i think there might be a clash of principals in the sense that maybe it's not right to play a spoiler if the candidate is getting plurality and it looks like you could get to 1237. maybe you shouldn't do that. but -- the critical question
2:10 pm
is -- if you believe that he is going to lose and what hillary will be the nominee and the president will put in four supreme court justices, your conclusion is do you let it happen? or do you do everything possible to stop it and incur the wrath at the convention from, is the wrath that you get from the trumpets as rush says, worth it to save a massacre in november? that's the critical question. >> how do you save? how do you save? >> i don't know -- >> i don't think cruz does well. kasich is the only one that seems to do well. but we don't know that yet. because he hasn't got an lot of attention. >> nobody has been attacking him. you say no violence, what do you call the trumpeters or whatever? you know what i hear from republicans, not democrats, but from republican who is are anti-trump? they get trolled, they get threatened. they get maligned as not being republicans. i don't know about your statement, oh, nothing is going to happen. >> they're threatening delegates. >> that's what i'm saying,
2:11 pm
they're physically threatening their own delegates. >> a couple of numbers for you, kg. the knock against trump when there's 17 people in the race, he can't get above 30%. some drop out, they say he can't get above 40%. he might get above 50%. can we put that to rest now? >> he's definitely got the momentum on his side here. if he steamrolls through this super tuesday, i mean that's you know formidable. there's no way that you can deny that. if i can go back to marco rubio, there's a specific reason that marco rubio has not come out to support cruz or kasich and you haven't heard him bashing donald trump and you see donald trump now not calling him little marco and rehab tating him and their relationship. >> and it is? >> what do you think? feast your eyes on the screen, not me. look at those two. >> that's 100% possibility. i would say marco -- you know from what i hear from the camp, i just think he was deeply hurt by a lot of the things that
2:12 pm
donald trump had to say about him. >> and he's also a big boy. >> didn't he hit 60 in new york? >> no, he also hit 50% in the poll today. >> no, i think he's going to do very well tonight. if that's what you're asking me. >> he hit 50 in the polls. i think he's got to do very well in terms of gathering the delegates tonight. because guess what, we're setting everybody up for indiana. and what we've seen right now is the money, big money, including trump's own money. which is the biggest indicator. trump is putting money into indiana. cruz is already in indiana. he's not even campaigning on the east coast. he's in indiana. >> any thoughts, final? donald trump now has earned 2.1 million more votes than mitt romney did at this exact same time. at this point romney had the nomination. next campaign, carl is here in-studio, stay tuned for his
2:13 pm
inside intel on the gop race, and don't miss an extra special live hour of "the five," the midnight edition, the results of the battle for the east, we'll be right back. ♪ if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis isn't it time to let the real you shine through? introducing otezla, apremilast. otezla is not an injection, or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. some people who took otezla saw 75% clearer skin after 4 months. and otezla's prescribing information has no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't take otezla if you are allergic
2:14 pm
to any of its ingredients. otezla may increase the risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have a history of depression or suicidal thoughts, or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. side effects may include diarrhea, nausea, upper respiratory tract infection, and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take, and if you' pregnant or planning to be. ask your dermatologist about otezla today. otezla. show more of you.
2:15 pm
2:16 pm
2:17 pm
welcome back to "the five" on this super tuesday. primaries are under way in five states in the east, and guess who we have here to forecast how they're going to shake out? campaign carl on set in new york with us. we're glad to have you. you were teasing us in the commercial break, that you have some inside scoop about the internal goings-on of the trump campaign. >> it's not near as dramatic as politico and some of the columns in the "washington post" would have us believe? >> you can't tease us like that. >> it's good stuff. when corey lewandoski was layered, that was mannafort announced he had a $20 million budget to spend in california and the next nine states to vote. and lewandoski had been benched.
2:18 pm
there's a loyalist core to the trump campaign. five people who have been doing it all by themselves. they were desperate for help there was no objection to bringing in more horses but mannafort made a bunch of recommendations to mr. trump and donald didn't like that that put corey back in good stead. he never left the campaign, he never stopped waiting for his moment and now he's back and he's doing part of his job again. and yes, this is an evolution of the trump campaign. in terms of its logistics. in terms of how they'll do some of their data research and where they'll place ads or maybe not based on the momentum he has. all the candidates do that now that he's doing it it's exactly what trump's critics have been begging him to do. and sure it's a little embarrassing for mannafort and lewandoski to be in the spotlight like this but corey is not going anywhere and he and trump finish each other's sentences this he channel one another very well. and manafort brings a level of
2:19 pm
maturity and access to the establishment that trump has been burning bridges to. >> so politico is exaggerate. >> it's common sense preliminarically. if you look at why they would have undertake thn and how it's got enthem this far, you can't argue with the results. the idea that trump is going to stop calling people names, was ridiculous. if you've watched it at 100 trump rallies like my producer andvy done. you know that trump is not going to be able to stop it he doesn't want to, he doesn't need to his rallies are that. he has a speech tomorrow in washington on foreign policy. >> the, this teaming up, cruz and kasich teaming up, internally in the trump campaign, do they look at that as a threat? or do they say you know this is what, this is good for us? >> they know it's a threat. everybody is sitting there with their calculators. i love that you guys have all of this paperwork in front of you. a out on the road it's a blackberry or an iphone, i never
2:20 pm
see a pen. >> you want to hold it? >> thank you. >> of course this threatens the trump campaign. they know if they can shave off enough delegates, they canperha clinching the nomination. they hate this concept. candidates always conspire behind the scenes, are you going to go that debate in houston? i'm going to skip that one and go to kentucky. they all arrange this stuff in advance. there's emissaries and back channels. kasich's problem, the reason he's getting badgered by reporters and say you're breaking the alliance, it didn't last a day, is principally because they keep asking him. so you're telling the people in indiana to vote for ted cruz and he said i'm not telling them to vote for anybody. the reason is because john kasich doesn't want to be a presidential candidate who stands in front of the cameras and says, please, voters, go vote for somebody else. it's dumb politics and cruz has said kasich is pulling out of indiana. he hasn't. the resources are going to be cut. he'll focus on oregon and new
2:21 pm
mexico and cruz will back out of that. >> usually those things happen with a wink and a nod and maybe my guy talks to your guy. and had is like publicized. >> they publicized it with joint press releases about six minutes apart from each other and it looked desperate. it looked like we got to join arms and fight. >> there's a little disconnect. you heard cruz saying that kasich is going to pull out. and then you heard kasich saying well no, he's going to do it here. but that's not what cruz said. i wonder if cruz will still honor the bargain. >> it bleeds into the idea that because they're aligned with one another and it looks like a last-ditch effort, they're not trustworthy even in their own alliance. they're so desperate that yeah i'll be the friend of my enemy's enemy. but they've already got the knife halfway into each other's ribs here. >> since you're the man, let me ask you about numbers. we all hear 1237. but i'm reading from people who
2:22 pm
say, including we saw at the top of the show there, limbaugh and o'reilly say but you know it looks like trump is going to have the plurality. let's say he has 90%. let's say he has 80% of 1237. is there a way that you think he would be denied the nomination? they say all hell will break loose. we at this table in the first segment were talking about what about marco rubio's delegates? what happens with rubio's delegates? what happens with people who are pressured? you've got some superdelegates on the republican side. >> states have a lot of different rules, sometimes the delegates are unbound after the first vote in florida and a couple of other states. got to go three. in some cases they have to be released by the candidate, verbally and officially at the convention. and it's too early to answer that question. what we are going to know on june 7th is who won the most states and who has the most of the pledged delegates, we say bound and technically the word that the rnc uses is pledged.
2:23 pm
if he's close in pledged delegates to 1237, the question is what about the unpledged delegates. on the democratic side they have superdelegates, on the republican side they call them unpledged. there's more than 150 of those. that's what cruz and kasich are going after aggressively. cruz has been outmaneuvering trump on the weekend conventions statewide when he's picking up delegates, including some of marco's in south carolina by the way. he might be inflating his numbers a little bit. some of those unbound delegates resent having cruz put them on his ballot card. saying he can't be in my camp because he's a constitutional conservative. technically they're supposed to stay unpledged until the convention. so cruz is putting a lot of people on his list that may not in fact be officially with him. because officially they have to be with somebody else. >> greg, wrap it up for us. >> you're seeing issues that the republicans previously owned whether it was foreign policy. security, economics, they're
2:24 pm
being handed over to the left that hillary is doing better on these issues, she's being trusted on national security, which is like trusting a mountain lion with a bunny. i'm worried about this false hope that we, i don't want to be a part of. that would happen with romney. we have the least-popular democratic candidate running against somebody who might be less popular. what happens after this election when all of this false hope falls apart? >> are you saying can trump beat hillary clinton? >> when trump loses. i'm assuming the word worst. i'm a very depressed person. i'm assuming the worst. i'm hoping it's not going do happen. >> here's a reason for optimism. whenever something that catastrophic happens, when an opportunity is squandered that much. it can, it has the potential to shake both parties, not just one or the one who is actually experiencing that. into some sort of a reform. in 1992, bill clinton ran as a centrist and said to dick gephardt.
2:25 pm
to the jesse jackson wing of the 1970s democratic party. done with you, we're moving to the center. not saying that the republicans are going to move to the center. but if trump wins the nomination and loses 45 or more states, then the republican party will have an opportunity to deal with it. after the romney 12 20 12 loss, the rnc put out what was referred to as an autopsy. they didn't follow any of it. they're doing pretty much the opposite. and whether or not that's causing what you're fearing, remains to be seen. >>itis a panic freak. >> that's what the never trump people are worried about. that's precisely what they're concerned about. >> i don't think i'm necessarily right. i think i could be this completely wrong. but i don't know. >> like you're paranoid about robots. >> 60% increase in over 2012 voting on the republican side. >> a lot of them didn't vote for trump. >> but in states well -- lots to discuss. thank you. >> silver lining. >> trying to cling to it. >> now that i've come to the set
2:26 pm
and depressed everybody. >> you could end up -- he could win the popular vote and hillary clinton winning the electoral collage. it's like the reverse of 2000 and you're 36 days in florida. that you enjoyed, right? >> hbo will do a movie about it no, they won't. >> thanks, carl. ahead, hillary clinton has a new strategy to take out donald trump. but will it actually hurt her. why some are calling her a hypocrite, that's next.
2:27 pm
2:28 pm
you can fly across welcome town in minutes16, or across the globe in under an hour. whole communities are living on mars and solar satellites provide earth with unlimited clean power. in less than a century, boeing took the world from seaplanes to space planes, across the universe and beyond. and if you thought that was amazing, you just wait. ♪
2:29 pm
spending the day with my niece. that make me smile. i don't use super poligrip for hold, because my dentures fit well. before those little pieces would get in between my dentures and my gum and it was uncomfortable. even well fitting dentures let in food particles. just a few dabs of super poligrip free is clinically proven to seal out more food particles so you're more comfortable and confident while you eat. so it's not about keeping my dentures in, it's about keeping the food particles out. try super poligrip free.
2:30 pm
sir, this alien life form at an alarming rate. growing fast, you say? we can't contain it any long... oh! you know, that reminds me of how geico's been the fastest-growing auto insurer for over 10 years straight. over ten years? mhm, geico's the company your friends and neighbors trust. and deservedly so. indeed. geico. expect great savings and a whole lot more. ♪ ♪ all right. are you ready for this one? in the irony of all ironies, hillary clinton is now knocking donald trump's lavish lifestyle. >> come out of those towers named for yourself and actually talk and listen to people.
2:31 pm
you know at some point if you want to be president of the united states, you got to get familiar with the united states. you got to spend time with americans. of all sorts and back grounds. in every part of our country. don't just fly that big jet in and land it and go make a big speech and insult everybody you can think of and then go back, get on the big jelt and go back to your country club house in florida or your penthouse in new york. i somehow don't think that kind of puts you in touch with what's going on. >> all right. well trump knows he's rich. he says he hopes to make other americans rich, too. now hillary, on the other hand has claimed to be dead broke. and just like ordinary americans, but she happens to have two mansions, drivers, because she hasn't driven a car since 1996. remember the scooby mobile.
2:32 pm
and she spent nearly $20 million on private jets during her failed presidential campaign in 2008 and she's racking up the aviation bills this campaign season as well. while trump says he hasn't even scratched the surface yet when it comes to hillary. >> i haven't even started with crooked hillary yet. we haven't even started. we can all aun fi and unify and go against crooked hillary and beat her big-league. >> it's like thigh-master. >> you know what's wrong with this whole debate? what is wrong with being out of touch. it means you're successful. it's -- you know what's the opposite of out of touch? bernie sanders, he's in debt. he's never had a real job. i don't trust anybody who says i'm keeping it real. the unspoken truth is everybody wants to be out of touch. do you want to reach a rarified air of existence and in the united states it's about becoming that. the opportunity to become the
2:33 pm
rich and successful. when somebody says you're out of touch, that's a good thing. uber has made it possible for everybody to have their own chauffer. that's luxury that you didn't have before. >> well done. >> what do you make of this, bolling. hillary clinton saying that donald trump is out of touch. but you know, she's not running around like swamp people. >> one multihundred millionaire has a problem with a billionaire? you go after someone's achilles, you want to attack, where's the weakness that no one wants to talk about. the one they go after, she's going after is donald trump's money. except he's embraced his money. he's the guy who said, yeah i'm rich, but i got rich because i worked hard. i bet the heck out of people in new york. i've a real estate magnate.
2:34 pm
"the apprentice" is about raising a lot of money. to go after his money, i think it might be short-lived. >> that was the problem with -- romney didn't do that. romney got upset when you brought up money. >> he had a different attitude about it dana, what do you think about this as a campaign strategy? how does it work as a communication technique to say, hey, relate with me and not this guy? >> we've watched a lot of tape from hillary clinton speeches and rallies, we saw something there that we haven't seen before, and that is laughter. she knew her crowd very well. they loved it. and so for her crowd it might not work overall with like swing voters, but for her base, they loved it and they like to see the fact that they're probably worried, too, about how she would fare against him and when he starts calling her crooked hillary and goes after her personally. and maybe they kind of like this, to say maybe she's got a little bit of a sharp elbow and she's not afraid to use it and she's trying to use humor, probably one of the better
2:35 pm
performances i've seen her do. >> she wasn't behind a podium. >> she seemed to be having fun. >> moving around, moving and shaking it? what do you think? >> the clinton campaign thinks she's in pretty good shape. we sit here and talk about bernie sanders, but at this point, i don't see it for bernie. the question is what does bernie want to somehow start to embrace hillary? he has not started to play that game. he's still kind of a bad boy in school in the democratic school, anyway. in terms of trump, you know what i see, i pick up the morning "u.s.a. today" and it says there, like 40% of republicans, not even people who have been just voting against trump. but 40% of all republicans say they could never vote for trump. i look at the numbers on women, 70% of women, that's all women, not democratic women, all women, say that they could, they disapprove of donald trump. i look at latinos, i look at latinos in florida. 11%. so 89% never vote for trump.
2:36 pm
i'm thinking that mitch in hersey, got a future in politics. >> mitch has been mentioned three times tonight. >> i don't know. i mean what about the idea that she's trying to say that she's very relatable. she's with the common folk? i mean like dana you said that's not going to work very well. >> it's hard to take. her authenticity. plus, the easy thing for donald trump, you could turn around and say, well i didn't take $250,000 from all the wall street guys. going up and down wall street, taking $250 a pop to give a speech. by the way, where's your transcript? it's answer aebl. i'm saying for her audience, that was a good performance for her. >> how about schools? she took speaking fees from universities, public universities. >> unlv. >> did you see the lead editorial in the "washington post" this morning? it said why doesn't donald trump
2:37 pm
release his tax returns? the only candidate refusing that. >> you're right, we might find out that he's really rich. >> it's about finding out if he's as good a businessman as he claims. >> another celebrity is threatening to move to canada. if trump is elected. he's got some words for her and so does greg, next.
2:38 pm
2:39 pm
2:40 pm
2:41 pm
this is not terrible music, dana, leave. >> mean. >> lena dunham became the latest lefty to threat ton move to canada if trump wins the white house. if you don't know who she is -- i entertain you. the recipient of entertainment welfare, dunham got famous mining feminist naval-gazing crap. her favorite top sick herself and she's as daring as flatulence. dunham is one of many celebrities threatening to move to canada over this election.
2:42 pm
maybe that country should move a wall. i'm assuming dunham wants to leave because she thinks tra thump is a bigot over the things he said about mexicans wixt didn't dunham say she was moving to mexico. why didn't she pick the white north over the darker south. also her threat to move just shows how lazy entertainers become when nothing is expected of them. dunham has coasted on the same banalites, because they're the same ones the media shares. it passes for edgy intellectualism. poor canada, sending them lena dunham. that's like a missile strike. did send us justin bieber. kg -- canada is our ally. >> i know -- >> how can we do this to them? >> they would be like, return to
2:43 pm
sender. you can keep her. and theen send justin bieber back again. >> i don't know, people that keep saying this, i kind of want to see it happen. i want to see all of these people actually move. >> whoopi goldberg. >> michael moore has threatened to leave, sean penn said he would leave. janine gral garrafolo. >> speech trials over there that would be fun for denham. she doesn't like speech, either. >> who has endorsed donald trump and what would happen if hillary clinton wins? i'm thinking gee whiz, what's the name of that -- that, those some of these people who have endorsed trump? i don't think they're even lena dunham b-list celebrities, they're like c-list celebrities.
2:44 pm
>> the dude that -- the that catches the animals in the south. >> you mean "duck dynasty"? >> yes. >> what is wrong with you? >> i can never figure out what they do for a living. >> i always forget what they do for a living. >> duck calls. >> "duck dynasty". >> do you know the money they've made in the duck call business. >> duck dynasty sounds to me like a chinese restaurant. >> it's quite entertaining and they're a lovely family. >> i'm jealous of their life. >> i hope the robots come to get you. dana, thoughts? >> well, i agree with everything. i don't think these celebrities ever really follow through on their threats. except johnny depp, he moved to paris. >> that helped him out. >> here's something to keep in mind. we can make fun of lena dunham. but the electorate of 2016, one-quarter of the voters in 2016 are single women and they probably agree with her.
2:45 pm
>> just to make you more depressed. >> i don't think the majority of women even know who lena dunham is. >> younger women do. >> it's only in new york. >> that's not true. >> younger people don't buy books. >> her show was canceled, "girls" is over. >> in all honesty, at my ripe old age, i wasn't sure who she was. look it up. but on the other hand tila tequila is endorsing trump. >> the only person who watched "girls" was brian williams. >> why, greg? >> i don't know. something about the actress there. >> friend or relative? >> you've done it this time. >> what are you talking about? >> there's no nominee but candidates are talking about possible running mates. some are reportedly vetting them. the names, next. every insurance policy has a number. but not every insurance company
2:46 pm
understands the life behind it. for those who've served and the families that have supported them, we offer our best service in return. usaa. we know what it means to serve. get an insurance quote and see why 92% of our members plan to stay for life.
2:47 pm
2:48 pm
we're always looking for ways to speed up your car insurance search. here's the latest. problem is, we haven't figured out how to reverse it. for now, just log on to compare.com... plug in some simple info and get up to 50 free quotes. choose the lowest and hit purchase. now...if you'll excuse me, i'm late for an important function. compare.com. saving humanity from high insurance rates.
2:49 pm
shoshow me more like this.e. show me "previously watched." what's recommended for me. x1 makes it easy to find what you love. call or go online and switch to x1. only with xfinity. the primaries are still under way. but the vice president buzz has begun. truch has thrown out possibilities, walker, rubio, even kasich. sanders has named elizabeth warren as a possible running mate. cruz is vetting carly fiorina and others.
2:50 pm
and clinton is going to start vetting names soon. some of those names being thrown around include senators tim caine and mark werner. is it too early to talk about the vice presidential nominees? >> i like it i think it's interesting and entertaining. ultimately is it going to make a difference? if you ask dana perino as quoted on "fox & friends" on saturday morning, 1% of the people decide who they're going to vote for for president based on the vice presidential candidate. >> let's go to the source. >> that came from bill galston's column in the "wall street journal" last week. it's a good media tactic. if there's anything that the candidates need right now it's for someone to pay attention to something, unless you're trump, trump doesn't need to worry about this. hillary clinton's team on sunday morning. they put out, here's five names we're thinking about 0 for vice president. that drove the news cycle for two days. which was a better news cycle for them than talking about how
2:51 pm
bernie sanders is still on her heels and that he's within two points of her and in the latest polls out of california. so i think it's a little bit of a tactic. and not -- not a bad one. >> why is cruz talking so openly about carly feiorina here? >> people like her. >> i'm not sure why, if i was cruz, i wouldn't be talking about anyone right now. i would be waiting to let donald trump go first. if i was donald trump, i would wait and let hillary clinton go first. he's going to have to figure out what kind of balance. he needs help with women. he needs help with hispanics, bill o'reilly says that's why susanna martinez is the logical choice. >> but you're down river. and i think a lot of this has to do with getting delegates. and winning the nomination. >> get rubio then. >> you're going to take a vice president to get the nomination. the general worry about the general now. start worries about the general
2:52 pm
now and wait. i know lena dunham is available. >> i might have mentioned this name before, she's an icon. she's conservative, and if trump picked her, would destroy the left. i'm speaking of -- >> condoleezza rice? >> no, caitlyn jenner. caitlyn jenner is hard-core right-winger transgendered icon. the left wouldn't know what to do it would blow their minds. >> is that right? >> it would be glorious. >> it would be glorious. >> would you let her in the bathroom? >> of course. i thought so, one more thing, up next. why do so many businesses rely on the us postal service? because when they ship with us, their business becomes our business. that's why we make more e-commerce deliveries
2:53 pm
to homes than anyone else in the country. here, there, everywhere. united states postal service priority: you
2:54 pm
2:55 pm
2:56 pm
time for one more thing. greg starts. >> let's do this thing that i haven't done in a while. >> i hate these people! >> what's the difference between a real musician and a fake musician? a real musician doesn't play air guitar or worse -- air drums. ♪ ♪ >> i'm sorry. i'm sorry. you don't play air drums. air drums is worse than air guitar. no, unless you're 14. but not when you're in your 50s. >> wasn't he kind of clapping? >> he was doing a lot of this. a lot of imaginary hitting of
2:57 pm
drums. >> was that a port anywheer in background? >> yeah. >> that was chris christie, first time we've seen him in years. >> was seen going into trump towers, too. four marines reunite to create, recreate a photo after 50 years, they had taken a photo 59 years ago at camp pendleton in san diego, they reunite on saturday, and they're all in the exact same position. see the guy in the striped shirt. he went to a bunch of different stores to find the specific white and blue striped polo shirt. he said we all know we've been given a gift of 50 years. god bless them. thank you for your service. >> excellent. >> the odds of that happening are very, very slim.
2:58 pm
congratulations. quickly, kelly ripa and michael strahan, he's announced he'll be leaving the show may 13th instead of staying until september. which he was originally going to do. kelly came back. she said she went away. guys, it's tv. can you just do your jobs? juan, you're up. >> kind of the sad note here among one more things. april 26th, 1986, the worst nuclear disaster in all history. worst than three mile island, worse than fukushima, what happened at chernobyl, unbelievable, it literally blew the roof off. and only about 180 people now live anywhere in the vicinity. but here's the surprise -- there's tourism now. people want to go and look at it. and guess what, surprise number two, animals have thrived in this environment because there are no people. so tourists and animals --
2:59 pm
>> they're super animals. >> did you know chernobyl is named after cher? >> thanks, greg. >> it's official. millennials have surpassed baby boomers to become america's largest living generation. they're now all of voting age, 18-34 is their age range. there are some consequences for that they're for example more likely to support marijuana legalization. definitely vast majority for gay marriage. and a lot of the growth is from hispanic millennials. so as people factor in you know, if you're a company and you're advertising or if you're a political campaign, all sorts of things matter when it comes to this generation of millennials. they don't like to be called millennials. >> i think they're the biggest spenders now, aren't they? >> they save more than previous generation. >> pepperidge farm millennials,
3:00 pm
they're so tasty. >> dana and juan will join megyn kelly and bret baier, we'll be back at midnight for a special edition of "the five." a quinn at the time of presidential primaries could all but lock up the democratic nomination for hillary clinton and keep donald trump on a collision course with the republican establishment. in the fight for delegates. and a place at the top of the ticket this is a fox news alert. ite bret baier. >> hi, everybody, i'm megyn kelly. we're coming to you tonight from america's election headquarters, live in new york. over the next -- four hours -- >> four hours? >> there's a lot of news, we will bring you all the news from today's big primaries happening right now, as well as exit polls, analysis and where the delegate counts stand up to the minute. >> we also have reporters on the ground, spread out across the northeast corridor. carl

215 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on