tv The Five FOX News April 29, 2016 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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fancy big old jet of his. we do know that he values california very much and thinks he can close the deal there in a couple of weeks. for now, attention convention -- well avoided and done. "the five" is now. this is a fox news alert. hello, i'm eric bolling. this was a scene outside a hoe telling in burlingame, the anti-trump protesters back out again today, crowds gathered, blocked the highway to his venue. trump just wrapped up his address to the state's gop a short while ago. you can see him exiting the event like a scene out of a movie. in order to the event, trump had to pull his motorcade on to the shoulder of the highway. they had to jump a barricade, ducked under a fence and entered the venue through the back door. and it's actually an interesting metaphor for the trump candidacy. they try to block him, but somehow he finds a way in.
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he reacted to the scene during his address to the california gop. listen. >> that was not the easiest entrance i've ever made. my wife called, she said there are helicopters following you and we did, we went under a fence and through a fence. and -- oh boy. it felt like i was crossing the border, actually. i was crossing the border, but i got here. they said mr. trump, it would be much easier, sir, if you didn't speak today and just left and go back immediately to indiana. and i said, you know, we can't let these people down, right? do we agree? >> well crowds were small compared to the bloody protest that took place last night. let's take a minute to look and listen to the anti-trump protesters as they clashed with police in riot gear again last night. >> you know, i absolutely
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believe protesters who turn violent actually help trump, not hurt him. who can honestly say i'm on the side of these animals? now greg, your thoughts on that? do you agree this kind of helps him a little bit when they go crazy? >> maybe. it doesn't help your cause, i was born in burlingame, hello, mills hospital, great place. there were 20 arrests last night. i bet none of them had to call in sick for work the next day. how much you want to bet? >> they don't have a job. >> and i bet the other half of them will get class credit. it's an elective at many colleges, to be, riot against trump. maybe a minor. it's the difference between right- and left-wing protest. the left will trash cop cores, the right will wash them. we have friends and relatives who wear blue and we know people who drive to work every day and we know people who run small businesses, we are less likely to block traffic. less likely to break things and
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more likely to respect police. meanwhile, they're being taken away if other areas, where somebody could be in trouble. but instead, they're baby-sitting some infants. >> what do you think, kg. the protesters, when they get violent like that, don't you kind of want to go for the guy that they're actually protesting? >> i don't think this is hurting trump, to be honest with you. it looks like that he's brave, courageous, he'll climb over fences, do whatever it takes to get there, to do the message, that he's not faint of heart, he's strong. has high energy and is willing to face people who oppose him. that's what you want in a leader, right? so at the same time it's very disappointing because i don't like to see people injured or hurt. there's a way to do this in a peaceful way to respect other people's right to assemble. freedom of speech and the first amendment. i don't like to see lawlessness, of course not, as a former prosecutor. but in that regard, it also shows that this is a very you know, yeah, exciting time in terms of the election process. but and also a challenging one.
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it's complex. >> when both sides get this heated, i feel it's some sort of movement? >> a what? >> a movement. groundswell, it's organic, this is growing, it's getting big. >> i'm not sure what you mean is getting big. i think what's getting big -- >> when protesters come out in force like this. >> but to me there's a consistent pattern of violence at many trump events. and people have real reason to be angry at donald trump. high-levels of disaffection. most of these protesters it looks to me are people carrying the mexican flag and saying they don't like donald trump's attitude about immigrants. inside he's meeting with people whose relatives were killed by illegal immigrants. so what you have here is two dynamic political forces in american society. i think for you to mock these people as oh, they're violent,
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they don't have jobs or they're crazy students, you know what, people have a legitimate right to protest. >> the protest peacefully, juan. no one has a right to do what they did to those police cars last night. jump on them, break windows, trash them. put people at risk. >> please, that's a secondary issue to the idea that there's a larger issue about illegal immigration in this country and how we treat and deal with immigration. >> i don't know anywhere in the constitution where it provide force violent protests, where people and property could be harmed. >> they definitely crossed a line last night. jumping on a cop car? that's straight out of occupy wall street. it might be straight out of occupy wall street in terms of the organization and how te get people there and organize that way. i thought that donald trump today handled that better, like that was the best way to handle it. as kimberly said. the secret service says sir, this is a bad scene. he says no, i'm going. i don't want to disappoint those people. and there's video of him doing
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anything it takes to get there. funny line about crossing the border, even though i'm sure a lot of people will be offended by it. when i lived in san diego, i read a really good novel called the tortilla curtain, it's by tc boyle. it was about, almost like the scene where donald trump is inside, meeting with families who have been victims from people who were illegal immigrants when they committed the crime. and people outside, who may not be illegal, but they certainly know people who are. or they had family member who is came over illegally and the struggle that they had. i just commend it, because at the end of it, it helps you be a little more thoughtful about both sides. america doesn't need to have this kind of protest. we can actually have civil conversation about it. and there's a legislative way to do things. and i do think that president obama pushing on the executive order instead of trying to go through the legislative process has exacerbated this problem. >> greg, weigh in on what juan points out. that i guess that the protest needs to take it to the next
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level other than peaceful protest behind a barrier to get attention, to be seen. >> well, you know, you know there are bad apples, it's such a cliche, in every barrel. we see it on the right and we see it on the left. you got to admit, you see a guy punch somebody for no reason on our side, that's wrong. you see this, that's wrong. but what gets me is the choice of protesting. a lot of people aren't in the system, so they don't know, maybe you should protest taxes. or government intrusion, bureaucracy, energy policy. the kinds of things that affect your day-to-day life. not just some famous candidate. >> or children living in poverty. >> i'm wondering if these protests were going on on the left. a campaign event for someone on the left, we would have the same reaction. i'm just blown away that you think this is okay. >> i didn't say it's okay. by the way. i said it was a legitimate protest is okay. think when you get involved with
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violence, i think that guy hurt himself when he was jumping on the police car. to me when you talk about protest and you guys make it out to be like you know, these are a bunch of people, idle people, they don't know what to do with themselves. >> the reason i say that is it's noon, 1:00, 2:00 on a friday. >> i was talking about the tape from yesterday. but your point is well taken. >> i can't do that, i got a job. a lot of people have jobs. >> i'm just saying, to some degree you could say people who take the time to be heard. when they say that there's a demagogue at work, and that their relatives and friends and community are being demonized to the world, these people are standing up. >> you think they're organized? or do you think they're watching tv and say hey, trump is going to be there, and i'm going out. >> we had this discussion in chicago. could you blame it on -- >> it was soros group. >> i wasn't clear, what we knew was it was somehow like an online thing that suddenly everybody was texting everybody
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and i didn't know if it just, it was a combustible -- >> there were connections, because there's people trying to mobilize and get everybody to go out there to do this, dump trump, stop trump. you know movement. but they're not doing themselves any favors, just like when you saw problems like this with occupy wall street and when you saw problems like this with black lives matter. nobody likes this kind of violence and destruction of public property. those cop cars that they're bashing the windows and breaking -- good job. because now that's your taxes. >> that helps trump if that's your point. it helps trump with people who are already trump supporters. >> or maybe not may not be trump supporters. >> that's where i drought it. >> i think people who are not trump supporters are looking at this and saying, so this is what we're going to get with trump? we don't want, america doesn't want that. >> people who are saying, did you notice all the mexican flags that are waving? you don't think that's problematic for the anti-trump crowd? >> no, why?
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>> you have a right to peaceful protest in america, issues that affect americans if you're waving a mexican flag, what are you saying? >> you're saying in fact the immigration issue and these people are probably given it's california, heavily of mexican descent. and maybe some are illegal immigrants from mexico, i don't know. but waving the flag is not the point. the point is that we as americans -- don't have the ability to at this moment to deal with the immigration issue. >> i think it takes away from the message they're trying to send. >> it might. but you, i would rather have somebody wave a flag than actually inflict pain on somebody. i think you can wave whatever you want and it doesn't really bug me. what i find comical are the bandanas over the faces. we, we live in a culture where we romanticize protests. it's something, it's good to be against something, and out on the street, throwing molotovs, remember the battle of seattle. they did a documentary about the wto riots.
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when you see these young like these college kids or whoever wearing bandanas over their face, like oh, it's so dangerous, that's actually cowardly when you're covering your identity if you were enkrajed or upset about something, you go out and show your face. >> maybe they were at work and they left. >> would it make a difference if they were waving the american flag? >> yes, as long as they were peaceful. >> so if they cross the line waving the american flag, it would be crossing the line? >> it would definitely be crossing the line. but i think they lose something in translation so to speak by waving the mexican flag instead of old glory. >> in cultures where you can't express yourself, there's way more violence. if you look at what's going on in the middle east, that's where -- because people don't have the option to do this. >> and they do have the option to peaceful protests, right. dana, so ted cruz right now is watching this coverage, i assume. for the last two hours. saying -- hey -- >> whenever the protests were a couple of months ago, remember we were saying all the
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candidates thought, could somebody protest me and maybe i could get on tv as well? the one thing i would say about the people that are there, if it's 1:00 on a friday afternoon, it's probably sort of student-generated. so maybe they don't have classes. >> and retirees. >> maybe retirees. >> but for the primary, does it help donald trump? yeah, probably. i do think that it's important that if you're a trump supporter, be thinking about the student vote or the millennials are now the largest generation, they are all, this as of this year, all of voting age. they're engaged in ways that we've never seen before because of social media and they're likelihood to vote is going to be very strong. and remember bernie sanders has received 71% of the student vote so far this year. so they are a force to be reckoned with. i don't think that we can say that they're unreliable. like we used to. say that the youth vote is unreliable. i think that the millennials are definitely going to be out there voting.
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and in a general election, this probably doesn't help. >> because of social media and the power and influence of it, the reach, people can find out about this, to assemble and mobilize to try to shut down an event like this. which by the way is their goal. to stop speech. >> one quick thought. >> it's also fun. >> if you're in middle america and you're watching this from california, you're going -- really? this is what, i want these, who are these people? they definitely don't represent where i am on these issues. >> you're saying trump supporters, who are -- especially the people who trump is saying i'm going to build a wall and i'm going to make -- i don't think that's true. i don't think all middle america. let's talk to republicans, right? i don't think all republicans are pro trump, eric and i don't think all republicans think that -- >> trying to make a decision who to vote for. and -- >> i think they see this and say trump sets off another firestorm in another state. oh, my god, is this what we're
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going to get? >> that is not, trump is not responsible for what goes on there. but there is, this is going to happen everywhere. if he gets the nomination, juan, you're right. this is going to be an everyday thing and the media is going to eat it up. they're going to love it. >> are they going to run it like live coverage. the shows might just go around the clock on this stuff. >> you know what ends up happening? the people who may not have been trump supporters will say, i got to get behind this guy. if they're going to do that, i'm so against that, i'll get behind it. >> a great motivator for the primary. for people saying i better make sure i get out there, i want to get this on lock, it's too crazy what's going on. i need to go support him, he's fighting for us. general election, you say who am i going to choose? will there be a lot of unrest? >> and jeb tried, remember jeb bush, he tried to say that donald trump was the chaos candidate? it didn't stick so i don't know,
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maybe people are saying we don't want this in america, but i don't think people think this will continue. >> tom brokaw agreed with you, eric. this helps. >> well that solves everything. if tom brokaw says so. >> we will continue to follow these protests and bring you breaking developments as they come. some say hillary clinton is playing the woman's card to get votes and now she's proving them right by doling them out. i am benedict arnold, the infamous traitor. and i know a thing or two about trading. so i trade with e*trade, where true traders trade on a trademarked trade platform that has all the... get off the computer traitor! i won't. (cannon sound)
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donald trump still accusing hillary clinton of playing the woman card. >> she's playing the woman card, it's the only thing she's got going. that's it. >> what about -- >> she's playing it as much as she can. i've been watching it. all she does every time she raises her voice, it's like oh, look what he's saying and look at the way he talks. give me a break. she raises her voice much more
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than i raise mine, believe me. i don't know how she gets by that problem when so many people's lives have been ruined for doing much less than she did she's only running because she's being protected by the democrats. without that, she wouldn't have a chance of running. >> now she's capitalizing on his jabs by offering supporters their very own woman card, in exchange for donations. gregory, are you going to get one? >> what does that get you? does that get you a seat on the subway? a clear path to the bar. there's a woman's card, it's called ladies night at every bar. talk about sexist. women get free drinks. i think that was a good move on hillary's part. you take criticism and turn it into a plus. trump does that when he gets attacked for certain things, he always flips it. and it's just, it's better, it's better to embrace the criticism than to be defensive. i think it was a good move. >> she says oh yeah, if it's health care, paid leave for
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women, equal pay for women, deal me in. kimberly, is her response good? >> no. who cares if i'm a man or a woman. vote for me because i'm qualified and capable and i have all the experience you could need in the world and i'm not the captain of chaos and i'm the best choice for america. and i want to represent all of you. >> so roger stone, who is hanging around with trump says he has, trump has to deconstruct hillary clinton, he can't let her be the former secretary of state, the former senator, he's got to say hey look, all she's running on is being a woman. can't let her have it. >> i think hillary, the whole woman card thing is cute, it's funny. i agree with greg in that respect. however politically i think it was a mistake. think she gave away the woman card, she had fun with it. when you have some fun with it, you kind of disarm everybody. oh, the woman card -- >> you can't keep revisiting the joke. you've made it into a fun thing, instead of being very offended by what's going on. she could have held that out for
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a while and maybe worked it, if it ends up being a general. >> now it's played out. >> yeah, it's going to run its course. >> and elizabeth warren, the senator from massachusetts said, this is evidence that trump is a weak man. he's a sexist. if you ask me, it's like, is he a sexist, it's like asking me, does he have bad hair. his sexism is for all to see and right now 71% of women disapprove of donald trump. >> personal and physical attacks. >> when i saw the woman card, i thought darn, that was smart. we should have thought of that at some point. the gop could have done that why not embrace it and say, i'll give you the woman card. >> what about the trump card? >> well good. >> everybody can have dueling cards. >> yes, exactly. the. >> i thought that he hit upon something. he didn't say it but he's inching up to it which is i think one of her biggest problems is that she thinks she's above the law. and when he said that the only reason she has such and such is
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because she's being protected by the democrats. he's getting closer to what i think is one of the things that gets her her trustworthy numbers, which is that she thinks she's above the law and other people's lives have been ruined for doing things that were like less offensive than what she did. and i think he's talking about the classified server. >> this is crooked hillary. i think he's already started using crooked hillary. >> i haven't heard it. >> but his thing is like even on the issues that she says she's such a great advocate for women, he's saying she hasn't done much. so he's saying women, pay attention, is she as strong as she claims. still to come, facebook friday. but up next, major drama at last night's nfl draft. bombs, gas masks and twitter accounts and more. (announcer) need to hire fast?
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okay, as a resident sports expert here on "the five," i spent the night live-tweeting the nfl draft. jasper was on pins and needles about who the broncos were going to pick. it was a dramatic and bizarre evening. ole miss player laramie tunsil was predicted to get. but a video of him tweeting smoking a bong through a gas mask. he said he was a hacked. >> i made the mistake several years ago and somehow people got through my photos. and i can't control somebody hacking my twitter. i'm blessed to be part of the dolphins organization. >> so sabotaged by a hacking? >> the way it went down, the video came up about 13 minutes before the draft. he was going to be the allegedly going to be the first pick of the draft.
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he was going to be him. and then this thing arises. and originally he said it wasn't him. then he said, i was hacked. the problem is when you have a guy who you're about to spend millions upon millions of dollars on -- you can't have that stuff come out. i mean so the estimates are now somewhere between $7 million to $8 million he lost, because he was eventually picked 13th. still a great place to be picked. but not one, two, or three where he would have commanded the massive bucks. he thinks there was some issues with his ex-girlfriend, that she might have posted it. you know you talk about pulling the -- >> the thread on the sweat centre. >> there's accusations now that he took money from coaches while at ole miss, which is another violation. i wouldn't -- i wouldn't blame any team from passing on someone with this much history. this much baggage. >> what do you think about the way it went down, like now you can be, blackmailed or
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sabotaged -- >> racist. twitter is the kevorkian of career prospects. he tried to pull the wiener defense, like that's not me and i got hacked. he wasn't hacked. twitter kills more careers than any kind of drug addiction, it's the best time to be alive with technology. but it's the worst time, because it abuses you as you abuse it. and i do think, i think -- >> you could write a book on that. >> we have to declare an amnesty for these mistakes, we're all hypocrits, at least i'm a him cr hypocrite. if this technology existed when i was his age. i would not be here. i would not be anywhere. ways an idiot. i still am, but i was more of an idiot when i was younger. but it was never documented. >> have a glass in high school for young people and the elderly because they make the same mistakes on social networks, they don't realize the reach of
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the things that they do. >> a lot of this story is so interesting to me. it's broken families, this is about the step-father. the steppon father and he are at it. the step-father may be the one who leaked this more than the ex-girlfriend. >> that is so mean. >> how are people so destructive and hateful. >> it's his moment in the sun and you know, possibly the father in law thinks this is the moment that i can get him and embarrass him and cost him money. i think this is -- >> he's going to have less money to give him. >> but to get to your point, greg. you stop and think about the demise of so many people like johnny manziel. >> this is the picture of the guy you're talking about. >> johnny manziel watching the nfl draft because he's nowhere near a football. >> he always has to wear the headband. >> and then another story.
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>> juan's on a monologue. >> this video didn't get leaked, this went up on his own verified twitter account. >> somebody hacked him. he said. you don't believe it? >> why would he release it himself. >> you got, the definition of hacking is breaking in. he had, he shared his password with somebody or it was already up on the laptop and somebody saw it. >> right, but what's wrong with that picture? >> what's wrong with the picture? >> what do you mean -- >> the gas mask. >> the video of the bong. no, i'm just saying, you know how i feel about drugs, but seriously, i thought we were all supposed to be permissive about drug use. now. >> it's a portable humidifier. >> i use a real humidifier. >> a real sports story about an l.a. lakers player, nick young. he was with a fellow player, deangelo russell.
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deangelo russell leaks a tape of him talking about having an affair with another woman. a teenaged girl. >> yes. >> and then then of course becomes a scandal and hurts the team. this is not like a once-off thing. >> also, juan ito, there are teams who said they knew this video existed. they're like guess what, thanks, we just paid less and we knew it was there. winning. >> you know what you want kimberly on your side she just wrapped it up for us. a big development from a story we gave you yesterday. ronald reagan's story extremely upset about a planned movie about the late president's aleimer's.
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reagan. will ferrell was supposed to star in the film that would make light of reagan's battle with alzheimer's, but after an outcry from the late president's family. ferrell's agent put out a statement saying the actor won't be doing it. quote the reagan script is one of a number of scripts that had been submitted to will ferrell which he had considered. while it is by no means an alzheimer's comedy as has been suggested. mr. ferrell is not pursuing this project. so that's a wrap on that. but a tremendous outcry, dana. i think for good reason. because of the seriousness of algs hiemer's, the toll it takes on the people who suffer from it and the family members that surround them. >> it was two years ago that julianne moore won the oscar for best actress for her starring role in "still alice." if you haven't seen that, it's a pretty intense movie about early-onset alzheimer's. i don't think this was just about the attack, the family being upset.
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i think overall people with alzheimer's in their family were upset. i think, i don't really understand -- >> even in the general public as well. in terms of the outcry was like wait a second. this is ill-conceived and not appropriate. >> right. >> it's disturbing for sure. eric, what do you think? >> so, is, was it ever going to be a big film? i mean everyone is saying it was going to be this huge thing. everyone wanted the script. i can't imagine that's a highly sought-after script. >> they said that. >> only will faierrell because put his name on it, made it interesting. i have to say what he could have done instead of walking away from the project completely is will ferrell is amazing, he does george w. bush amazing, he did ricky bobby. why wouldn't you do ronald reagan for the full term of ronald reagan. if you want to play around with it at the end, go ahead. i thought maybe rewriting the script that way. i said that on o'reilly tonight.
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he dismantled me. if you want to watch o'reilly get mad at me, watch that. >> killing bolling. >> a bestseller, hasn't been written. >> an exercise, imagine if it were a liberal icon. if it were -- let me think, if you did a comedy about bobby kennedy's assassination or if you did something, on any great liberal who died tragically. the, it would never have gotten this far. it would have been overwhelming, the outrage. but the script was so lauded, among, as an independent, edgy film. that's why, it had been around. it had legendary status. that's why everybody was so excited but it shows new hollywood, there's edgy as a nerf ball. there was nothing brave about this i know that will ferrell is a liberal. but is your ideology so unbending that you couldn't see maybe that this might be some cruelty to this premise? >> yeah, because the whole idea to me is mockery of people who
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are sick. i don't dig it. i don't get it. and i think that you're right. i think it adds on that he's a conservative, and you hear this all about reagan by the way in liberal corners, he was losing it. but the idea that you make fun of it. now i think that there are lots of points of weakness in my life. in all our lives where you think, that could be funny. like you know, granddad forgot he left the cigarette there and he's asking you where the cigarettes are. where are my keys? he always puts the keys on the refrigerator. when it comes to ronald reagan, because he's such a political icon, it looks like you're going after the right and you're going after their hero. i think, i don't know why it went that far, because it seems to me pretty self-evident. that's a loser. >> may we say this -- thank you for reconsidering, will ferrell and any other actor, we'll find you and hunt you down if you try to do this. >> i'm sure lena dunham will stay on the film. >> yes, she can do it.
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"soul train" come on, facebook friday, everybody. let's start with this question. i had my students design war plaques for a world war ii hero today. who do you consider to be the best example of an american hero? we'll go this way. >> well, the first person that comes to mind is george h.w. bush, the youngest fighter pilot. wanted to sign up even earlier. his parents made him wait until e was 18. how he's lived his life. think he's a great example of it. you don't make them like that any more. >> i'm named after a guy named eric bolling and it's my father's oldest brother. so he was the oldest of 12. my father was the youngest of 12. my parents were substantially older when they had me. he was killed, shot down over the new hebrides island. he's a navy aviator and he's still my hero.
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>> what a great story. >> juan? >> i find myself always locked up on these, jim thorpe i think is the greatest american hero. not only is he great soldier, but he was a great sports hero. >> they argue over whether or not they should keep his remains in jim thorpe, pennsylvania. i also, though, the reason i find myself in a trap on this is i have a friend, i have such respect for muhammed ali, going at the olympics and his hands are shaking and he lights the flame in atlanta. and my friend blew up at me. he said how can you say muhammed ali is a hero? he avoided the draft. for that black 80-year-old man who served in the military, it was a great disappointment. >> that guy is my hero. >> your friend. >> mr. cobb, that one's for you. >> there's so many to choose from. that's what's so beautiful. he's mouthing to me. >> me, me. >> no. when i think of somebody who
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served admirably and refused to be released when he was held as a prisoner of war. you know, the admirable, think of john mccain what he went through as a prisoner of war, it's really resonates with me about how much people give up when they serve this country so valiantly and they put it all on the line, despite the fabulous upbringing and the family they have. they go there and they want to be treated just like everyone else and i think it's an incredible lesson. >> you stole my choice. and you? >> i'll just go with me. no, i'll go away from the military and i won't say the police, i think businessmen, small businessmen. people who have to get up every morning. make the payroll, not take a salary for a couple of years. pick up the doughnuts and sleep on floors for the first year, they do everything possible so they can get a second business and then all of a sudden the government shows up and wants to
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take everything and you have people picketing you and yelling at you and all you're try to do is create something. so i don't know. this now is for -- i'll start with you, you'll like this one. melissa f, what do you think has been your greatest accomplishment so far in your career? kimberly? >> if were you going to say in my life, it would be raising my son, ronan for sure. what parents do, mothers and fathers, people who have children born to them and those that adopt children is really incredible. however, the question is career. i would say working as a prosecutor and prosecuting child abuse, sexual abuse cases. definitely and also some of the career criminal cases, things like that. gang cases where people were just taking whole neighborhoods on communities under siege. >> i wouldn't want you coming after me. >> no, because you would be in jail. >> that's what i was talking about, too, in court. hey, juan? >> you said careerwise.
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>> yes. >> i would guess that i write books and i love books, i would guess -- looking back, what surprises me is that you know ronald reagan once said. he said they were giving him an honorary degree, and he said a lot of my classmates thought the first one was honorary. >> and the book is "we the people." >> i've been very fortunate. the baseball career is fantastic. started the business with the oil. but i will tell you this is more fun and more challenging and more rewarding than any of the other three. >> producers are thanking you. is that because of dana? >> because of family. if you sat closer to me you'd have less fun. >> dana? >> what did you do before "the five"? nothing. >> in my one more thing, you'll want to take a look at this,
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we're going to give a tribute to fox news sunday having a 20th anniversary. i was a deputy to tony snow. and we, i remember i remember tony snow telling me, before a press conference, he asked, can you go brief the president. because you'll do a better job than i did. and i said i don't think that's true. and he said please, can you go do it and i went and did the first press conference briefing for the president. by myself and at the end of it the president said i never am surprised by a question when you brief me. i always hold on to that. >> great praise. i like that. >> i have to say i agree with eric. my greatest achievement was snowing fox news into hiring me. i had no tv experience, i had just been fired by maxim uk. i used to do fox news when i was at "men's health." you would ask the booker, the
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and like you say can you get me a job here, because you don't know what you're supposed to do. seven years to get here. do we have time for one more? >> you don't want to do this question. >> what's the one thing you wish you never did. >> one thing? >> i don't have an answer for that. >> one thing. >> you said, oh, dana. >> maybe it was something mean. >> one more thing, up next. >>
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. one moyer thing, greg? >> tomorrow night, the show greg gutfeld show at 10:00 is going to be live. we're going to be covering the white house correspondents dinner, it will be like a viewing party. we'll have comedians, we'll be watching it as it happens. taking the speeches, like a viewing party meets mystery science theater. it will be unpredictable. >> will you look out for me there? >> yes. >> will you wave to him? >> would you like to do a little thing? >> like hi. >> he can keep up with me. >> i guess i'm next. okay. i mentioned in the last block that we were going to pay
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tribute to fox news sunday, celebrating 20 years this sunday. the show first premiered on april 28th, 1996. the official anniversary is this sunday. and we have some exciting news in a moment. tony snow anchored first show from its start, until 2003. and then chris wallace took over as host. and here's some play between the two. >> good morning, i'm tony snow and welcome to fox news sunday. >> over the seven-plus years, is there one show, one sunday that stands out? >> right after september 11th. >> you choked up at the end. >> yeah, of course i did. a solitary candle, a flag, a tear? these are the tokens of our renewal. at the end i get choked up by saying we're not going to lose and i get choked up even thinking about it now. >> he's missed, a lot. i'm going to try to get through the rest of this. this weekend on sunday our very own kimberly guilfoyle and juan williams, karl rove and george
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ouellet all be on with chris wallace so don't miss it. >> fantastic. >> kg, congratulations on the gig. >> don't be hung over. >> don't worry. >> do you remember the story where the u.s. army was taking a green beret was going to be suspended, because he physically confronted a local afghan commander who had been accused of raping a boy over the course of many days. but he stood up. he was courageous, another example of an american hero. they've decided to do the right thing and reinstate him and he said he's very grateful for being able to continue to serve with no hard feelings. >> juanito? >> last night it was debate night for me in oil country at the john ben shepherd
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distinguished lecture series at the university of texas, i was joined by the chairman of the texas republican party and chairman of the democratic party. a great time before 2,000 people. friday night lights country in midland, texas. >> how interesting, juan. >> let me tell you something, the level of debate last night, i wish we could see it on the presidential campaign trail. no mockery, no put-downs, serious, debate. sometimes pointed, but terrific. hats off to the folks in midland and odessa for hosting, i think a first-rate debate. >> anyone ask you about the little lizrd that stopping drilling in texas? >> no. >> tomorrow morning, full screen, i will be tweeting and facebooking the white house correspondents' dinner tomorrow night. and what my goal is this year -- for two years in a row i've gone
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up on the dais after president obama leaves and i've had his dessert, because he doesn't touch it. >> it's so creepy, but awesome. >> and i'm o'reilly. candidates pitch the delegates directly. one climbing over a wall to avoid protesters today. and another touting an unconventional endorsement. this is "special report." good evening, welcome to washington, i'm bret baier, the race son to the gop nomination. texas nor ted cruz picked up a big endorsement while his opponents insisted it wasn't all it was hyped to be. and donald trump likened his entrance to california's republican convention, to crossing the border. after hundreds of protesters lined the streets outside the hotel, where he gave a
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