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tv   Memorial Day Special  FOX News  May 30, 2016 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT

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freedom. we value it and we know why we have it, because of you. thanks for watching. have a terrific memorial day. we thank the veterans today and every day here at fox news. hello everyone. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is the five. welcome to the five on this memorial day. we hope you're having a great holiday weekend. on this day we honor americans who have died serving our country and to our living veterans and those currently in the armed forces we salute you and thank you. we're excited about today's show and we're doing something different. it's graduation theme, our advice for the class of 2016 and more. first tips from these commencement speakers.
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>> engage in the tireless pursuit of finding common ground because not only will you be happier, you will be incredibly more successful. that's where you'll find your reward. >> do not hide your faith and your believes under a bushel basket, especially in this world that seems to have gone mad with political correctness. >> if you know what you're capable of, if you're always prepared and you keep things in perspecti perspective, then life has a way of turning a no into a yes. >> every stumble is not a fall and every fall does not mean failure. being human means you will make mistakes. >> i hope that you live your life each precious day of it with joy and meaning. and when the challenges come, i hope you remember that deep within you is the ability to learn and grow. >> we're going to take it around the table.
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that was some lofty advice and i'm assuming you can keep that going. >> i have four. a, move to a place where you can find a combination of two factors, job prospects plus affordability. all these people move to new york and they move into a closet with 12 people. you want to move to a place where you can live a good life and save money. reject all identity politics in every way, shape and form. no one wants to have a baby working for them. don't overinflate your background either. don't do drugs yet. achievement must arrive before reward. that goes for all indulgenesses. save that until you're successful. if you want to get rich figure out what robots can't do and do that. i have this idea create organic
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businesses but not about like kale or food, human beings. advertise that humans will do things for you because in about ten years that's going to be a delicacy. >> i love this. that's a common theme, this automation that ai is going to take over the world. i don't disagree with you but i disagree on the time frame. maybe 500 years. >> it's coming. now you've done it. >> i would go between 10 and 50. >> all right. >> why don't we go to your advice. >> so above all you graduate you have to be whatever job you get you have to be the hardest worker in the office. make sure you're working harder than the next guy or gal and follow your dream. america is like the vat of opportunity. it's unending opportunity. keep following your dream, even if you don't necessarily have a job that is your dream. you have to work at starbucks or the gap but do whatever makes
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you happy. if you like photography or music or blogging or like creating apps, continue to do that and find the opportunity so that when you move jobs maybe one door opens and you say look this is something that i can get into and it will take you towards your dream and above all that my mom told me on her final words never quit. never quit. >> that's good advice. how about you? >> i'm going to pick up with the mother advice. i got this from my mother. she's a straight chaser lady. she talked about distinguishing between a dream and a goal. dreams with all have them and commencement speakers talk about them but when you put a time line to your dream now you have a goal. she was very adamant about that. something else i want to offer, make sure you get the room on your side. i don't care if you're working at the gap, there's going to be a room of people making decisions about you and your future and make sure you're a good person, that you speak to
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the person that holds the door for you in the morning and the person that prints the copy that you make sure everybody feels important and respected. >> what if you're the guy that makes the copies or holds the door in the morning. >> i've been that person getting coffee and i was treating everybody with respect around listening. you can learn a lot. >> you have to do stuff to get coffee. >> like put cream and sugar in it. >> you have written a book about this. >> yes, i have. i think it's important to develop that self-esteem and self confidence. >> i'm against self-esteem. >> when you find some let me know. >> it's a hindrance to success. >> i don't think so. i think you have to believe in yourself. you'll be able to make yourself compelling to someone that you need a job or advice or mentoring. >> high self-esteem is among
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criminals. >> no. you're getting into the dsm v where you live. >> how did you know. >> i think you need to find something about that you love. even if you are making copies. i loved my job making sandwiches and so it was very good for me to be in that environment because it was something i felt like i knew a lot about and then you build from there and build a resume. so you're not someone that graduates from college that doesn't have the experience. don't be afraid to work for free. say yes. >> however -- >> it's great. >> you have to put a limit on how far you will go in terms of working for free. you don't want to end up -- that's how the blogs start, they have everybody writing for free. >> at a certain point but develop a skills set and make yourself marketable that people
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want to higher and bring into the organization that has good energy and is appreciative to have a job. there's a lot of people out there that wish they could work. look at the coal miners. >> bring value to the table. working for free, 100% i agree but make sure you're cultivating value in what do you so they have what incentives to pay you because now you're going to take your skills and go somewhere else. >> i'm into routine. i think when you're first starting out it's good to have things that you do every day or you have a routine. i would put exercise on the list. reading like choose something you like to read if there's a half hour you can spare or have an app on your phone so if you have a commute you can spend it reading. personal notes to family and friends, a huge fan of it. you can do it by e-mail but if you want to make a mark do the hard copy. the other thing i think is important for this class is
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don't worry your young lives away. >> these young people seem so worried. >> do you wish you had that advice and followed it. >> yes. i worried all the time. >> you know where the worry comes from, that you're not getting there fast enough. >> yes. >> if you put a lot of pressure on yourself it's like why am i not already making this amount of money or why cam i not here n this ladder but there's a new worry, social networks, one thing we haven't touched on is kids these days have the option of ruining their lives before their lives start by doing something on twitter or facebook. >> people are getting number t. all these pictures are out. >> he's a mess now. >> he's coming back. he's going to be another olympian again. i'm saying where we grew up going if that ever got out we would be in trouble how many times have we said the hackers, but now it's like so much stuff
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the world is getting immune to it. >> just recently the government said it would start checking social media when they were doing background checks. >> i've done it. i look at people. i put them right into google and if there's something crazy going on i'm not hiring you. >> if you are applying for a job you google that company so i guess everybody has to understand that. >> that's not that new. when i applied for my first law firm job they went on my facebook page because you're an embassador for a lot of companies whether it's the firm or the da's office you are brand embassador and they want to make sure you're appropriate. >> it is true. >> one more piece. find something you're passionate about. if you're passionate about your hobby, your work, great even better but just be passionate about something.
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>> what if it's sleep. >> even that. >> volunteer in a sleep lab. >> work at sleep eaez. >> there's a lot of great ways to continue learning. you can learn to do stuff on youtube. if you want to learn how to build a robot. >> learn how to play guitar. >> you can do that. >> just from youtube. think of all those ininstructors that are out of work. >> robots will be playing the guitar. >> in five years. >> all right. >> at what point do you get to say kids these days. >> i'm saying it right now, kids these days. my goodness. >> there's much more to come about this topic on the five's memorial day special. we've spoken about the coddled culture and president obama and michael bloomberg lectured
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♪ welcome back. a lot of college students can't seem to handle opposing points of view like this young lady. remember her? >> i am here to -- calm down, young lady. calm down. [ bleep] -- [ bleep]. okay. students are shutting down speakers they don't agree with and their schools are shielding them. even liberals like michael bloomberg and president obama say it's time to grow up. >> the whole purpose of college is to learn how to deal with difficult situations, not to run away from them. one of the most dangerous places
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on a college campus is the so-called safe space because it creates a false impression that we can isolate ourselves from those who hold different views. >> don't try to shut folks out. don't try to shut them down no matter how much you might disagree with them. teach them and beat them on the battlefield of ideas. life has never been completely fair. nobody promised you a crystal stare. >> he could be on "saturday night live" doing impercent nations or something like that. what did you think? >> safe space is essentially moral suicide. what if you took it to the logical extension. that's basically prison. just join a cult where you no
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longer are involved with the community or people or uthen asia. life is really hard and suicide will one day become a viable option because life is too difficult and this is happening in european counties where there are young people opting out of life because it's risky and when you think about it that's the ultimate safe space. >> that's was intense. >> was it. >> it's true. >> it's better than robots. >> are you going to follow that? >> i was hoping you were talking about chinese young people. >> oh, my gosh. >> thankfully president obama did make this speech and said you have to cut it out. you have to have opposite points of viewable to be expressed on your college campuses in the form of commencement speeches but the safe space that goes on every day and the protections for students who feel agresed against for a he or she pronoun,
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it's over. liberals have infected ak dem yeah. it's over. that's a great speech president obama but push back on the safe spaces and the throwing people out of school for saying the wrong thing. >> the college campus should be an open form of ideas and words. >> yes. open your minds. >> i think he did that when he went to the university and chastised those students for bullying secretary rice off the graduation stage. i think it's an old school/new school thing. i think within the liberal camp most old schools understand you cannot shut down things you don't agree with. i think new school generations do feel that way. they're not listening. they booed boombeloomberg when
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said that. almost all the jobs i've worked at i've succeeded because i understand i went to a university that allowed multiple types of people to influence my perspective. >> danny you've had an opportunity toe reach a lot of people. >> i love the milanans. i think they like me because i'm their size. i want to pick up on something eric said about this liberalism has infected academica, but these speeches need to be given in kindergarten because the liberal integration starts k through 12. they don't get to college and think there's micro aggression, this is being taught early on. it's so bad you have to have a
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president of the united states in his last year in office spend time in a commencement speech telling college students they should be willing to be open to other thoughts. that to me shows there's an epidemic on this issue. ben sha peer row gives an example once a week where they try to shut down his speeches or protest them or make it impossible. it's absurd. i think the problem goes much deep deeper. it starts early on. >> in high school, if you spend any time in your kid's classroom in high school, they are completely liberal. they say things that you would not believe. it's almost ignoring history. it starts in high school and don't forget every high school teaches part of the teachers' union so they lean extremely far
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left as well. your kids our kids are getting from -- >> progressives figured this out a long time ago and conservatives are playing catch up. >> we talk about this generation, but the people teaching these classes were in classes in 1970s and 1980s so they were part of the old freedom speech movement in berkeley and elsewhere so they're cupable. when we talk about -- you talked about old and new. the old kind of wanted this. they kind of wanted conservative thought off campus. a lot of freedom of speech movement wanted freedom for them. >> you believe the extent to which it went liberal and left? it's incredible. it went from 50/50 to 70/30 and now it's probably 90/10. what? >> i was smiling at allison. next, a refresher for america's
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here are your headlines. president obama is challenging americans on this memorial day to fill the silence left by those who died serving their country with love and support of the families of the fallen. the president laid a wreath at the tomb of the unknowns and earlier he hosted a breakfast reception at the white house for family members of fallen troops. u.s. forces are providing air support as iraqi forces start pushing into the city of fallujah. they are trying to retake the city from isis. today militants killed at least 24 people in a wave of bombing in and around baghdad.
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donald trump and hillary clinton off the campaign trail and bernie sanders has two events in oakland. please join me at 6:00 eastern for a special report. for now we'll take it back to the five in new york. ladies and gentlemen that greed for lack of a better word is good. greed is right and greed works. >> he explained the importance of greed but that position isn't resonating with america's ma listen listenans. a new certify va does not support socialism. you pointed out many times on
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the show that capitalisms saves lives. >> if you took the word -- capitalism helps get the vaccines out there as a free market system. but if you just replace socialism and treated it like a disease it actually probably kills more people than you could imagine. i know you didn't pick that wall street clip. that's why capitalism gets a bad wrap because the left makes capitalism greed. >> it was about 1983 when i saw that. i was in chicago and i'll never forget watching it and i was like i got to get to new york.
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i wanted to be him. capitalism equals profit and profit equals innovation and innovation makes our lives better. >> profit has become a four letter word. >> i think there is this romantic idea of what socialism is and they don't understand what it has done in the past. we should do a documentary about what is happening in ven swale yeah right now. i think they have trust in government -- they trust the government more than they trust the free market. the free market is a leap of faith but it's more efficient and produces more winners than the government. >> at some point these young people -- by the way, harvard weren't thrilled with socialism either. they didn't like anything. >> i have a theory about that,
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why that's different coming from harvard, depending on where you look i fall into the millennial category. i think we operate from fear. i think if you're at harvard you're less afraid because there's indicators to tell you that you're doing something right but millennials are afraid that some people are doing better than others. my mother raised me. she was a single parent. she was a small business owner and she raised me to believe that it is absolutely within your range to do the best but that's up to you. it's a risk and that's i think what a lot of millennials don't like. >> the only system in the world that allows someone to have an idea and dream and put it together and take the risk and put some money up. >> get a patent and change the world an change lives and reach out and think big. i
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i love it. look at our country and then look at these other countries where people are getting lit on fire for stealing something that's $5. it's shocking. when you look at the benefits of capitalism and a free market, look on the map when you see it. north korea and south korea, just based on a government that allows one to have the free market and capitalism, the lights are on. >> vitamin c, baby. >> before we go, we have about a minute or so, and the importance, the secret ingredient to capitalism, regulation. keeping regulation under control. >> and it's also risk. so in order to succeed you have to have a willingness to risk, like a tolerance to risk like you did. you woke up every day and said i'm going to put it on the line and then did i do the right thing and then you find out i did the right thing. i think there is a risk, a
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reluctance to take risks. they also grew up when they saw the financial crisis and 9/11 so they're thinking the government can take care of this. regulations are strangle the country. this is who is going to take over 2,500 positions across the government. all those things are happening right now. president obama said 26,000 new regs are supposed to hit the books by january and all business sectors are complaining about this. it's not just at the federal level. >> i would like to see millennials be more resilient. you may make the wrong decision but you bounce back from it.
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>> i'll never forget the day i lost more money than i should have ever in my life. my mentor sat me down and called my father on the phone and said you know what your father lost day, my father was so let down. it taught me about risk. >> why did he call your dad? >> that's brutal. >> you never did it again. >> it worked. next, we answer your facebook questions on the real world after college coming up. i take prilosec otc each morning for my frequent heartburn
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♪ ♪ it's facebook monday. the graduation edition for today's show we asked our viewers to send in whatever
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questions they had for us on college and life beyond. let's begin with kimberly because she's texting. what did each of you do after graduation? immediately after jobs, peace corp. >> i went straight to law school three weeks later. the second youngest in the class and trying cases by 24. >> interesting. can you beat that? >> i would never dare. but i went straight from college to law school as well and then i went straight to law school, i grad the bar and didn't have a job. i was staying with my mother. she said congratulations on your license. you have four weeks to get a law job or you'll be waiting tables.
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i had a dream of practicing law but it had to become a goal. >> that would have been fun. >> so you got a job. >> i did and started working at a firm. i beat the time line. >> so i graduated from college. i got a fellowship to duke university. got to duke university, public policy and i got drafted by the pie r pirates. i loved public policy. >> i did go to graduate school but in the three months in between more the summer i waited tables on capitol hill in denver. >> i heard about that. i went to the american spec taiter. i was an intern there.
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got paid crap. my paycheck every two weeks was $330 and i lived with two elderly women in virginia in their basement that i shared with a priest. i'm not kidding. we shared a bathroom and when i would bring a girl home i would lock the bathroom door and forget and he was locked out of the bathroom in the morning. he hated me. >> so that's why you're so eccentric. >> it was bad news. i'm leaving out some things that happened. >> i would love to hear his side of the story. >> he's not around. i don't think he's here anymore. he was an older gentlemen. one of them passed away. >> what a terrible life. can you imagine. >> i had to lie and tell them i quit my job and moved so i could move out and then i ran into them at the supermarket. >> they're all going thank god he finally moved out. >> this is why you say you're
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living in the basement. >> i did live in the basement. what kind of advice would you give to those who can't find jobs in their degree field. >> this is happening a lot. let's say you get a communications degree. it's a broad degree and you think that you want to do like press secretary of stawork. it's not going to happen right away and i feel like you got to take a job, get working and then things start to happen. >> assuming you didn't go to school for a specific area, like you're an engineer and then you can't find an engineering job. i would continue to try and find a job in your field. that's a tough question. the better question is for people who are going to college do you specify, do you go into an area where it's so specific, a geology, engineering, et cetera or do you go with liberal arts. >> liberal arts you can go
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anywhere with that. people think political science, which has really come in handy. >> what a stake major. >> what was yours? >> english. in terms of me i'm glad i didn't get in my degree field. what a relief. >> you would be a professor. >> i know. >> you were an editor in chief of a magazine. >> i had to relearn how to write after college. >> you want to get a job that teaches you skills. maybe you can't get an engineering job in your field but you can accumulate some help you move forward. >> i don't think engineers are having any problems. >> that's a great gig. >> it's very specific. >> i love trains. one last question -- >> robots are going to drive trains now. >> how near are each of you to the goals you set for yourself
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after high school graduation? are you satisfied with your path so far? i'll start with you eric. >> i'm thrilled with my path but it wasn't a goal. my goal was to play professional baseball and i got hurt and i ended up starting an oil trading business and nbc asked me to do a tv show. make the best of where you are and if you love it continue to do it. >> yeah, obviously. >> i'm thrilled with the path. i'm just never satisfied. i'm that person, not even close. so i'll keep riding the waves. >> you can't plan it all out. the good news is that i realized i didn't have to worry so much if i tried to plan everything out then it doesn't actually happen and things come along because you're prepared and willing to take a risk. >> you have to be fearless. >> and prepared. >> my path is what was i doing in high school? i was sitting in home run making
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joe jokes and being a complete idiot and i've been doing the same thing since 1983. >> you've grown into the job. >> i've grown into the job. >> you've mastered it. >> you're doing something you're passionate about, being ridiculous. i love it. >> want to know what we looked like way back when we graduated from college? neither do i. with hydrogenated oil... ...but real joyful moments are shared over the real cream in reddi-wip. ♪ reddi-wip. share the joy.
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quite fabulous. at the time that was considered a very good graduation photo. everyone was like yourself is really good. this is prom. that is my brother because i went down to army navy military academy and that's me again rocking the hair. >> that's a great head of hair. what you got? >> it's me, not you? the first one is prom. there i am with a white tux. there's my first love. >> colleen, call us. >> i like the white jacket. >> that's graduation. >> we're getting a phone call right now from all of her friends. >> it was the same tux because it's a week apart. >> remember when you did -- was it your recommitment ceremony and you both wore the white. >> i don't know why it's always
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white. >> you're racist. >> my pride and joy right there. pre-prom right there. >> isn't that cute. >> i don't know which one is first so put it up there and let's get it over with. this one is not bad. this is college graduation. my dad in the back. i think my mom is taking the picture. that's my niece, jessica wilkerson who just this week had her first hearing she ran on capitol hill on cyber security. she was only 2 or 3 at the time, now she's 25. okay, then prom. here is the thing. why is there no guy in the picture. i'm the shortest, then tiffany and andrea bell. the thing is, we had dates with our guy friends. >> are those your outfits? >> yes. >> what are you talking about? >> for what? >> prom. >> what are you talking about? >> maybe i can't see it.
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>> are they casual clothes? >> wow! wow! okay. >> i think it was satin. our friends ended up going to the national rugby team championship, unbelievely. anyway, we went as a group together. >> i'm next. we can keep talking. that's horrible. that's a glare. that's high school graduation, the ripe old age of 16, hot mess, then college graduation, again, a glare. hot mess. prom, as you can tell, i'm by myself, this is junior prom. i was not allowed to go with a boy because i was only 15. this is senior prom. i had a date. his name was damian, but we broke up, so i got rid of all the pictures. that's the kind of gal i am. >> i can't see any of these. >> let's go to my prom picture here.
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here in the back i took -- >> angelina jolie? >> no. julia lewis. i couldn't stand her corn rolls. this is my graduation picture. >> oh, my god. why didn't you tell me? >> this is so mean. where is the one where you look like greg brady. >> not fair. we are shamed in this process. one more thing is up next.
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shut your mouth and say goodnight, mouthbreathers. breathe right. it's time for one more thing. k.g. is going kick it off. >> kimberly's food court. olive garden. all right. just in time for memorial day. we have a big kick off from olive garden, specials including spaghetti pie. breadstick sandwiches and pastas. we have the spicy chicken breadstick sandwich, feast your eyes on that. the meatball deep dish pie. greg's intestines are screaming over that. the meatball deep dish and chicken alfredo.
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there's a lot of spaghetti situations going on here. these fries are delicious. i think they have garlic on them, then these breadsticks. olive garden is a great value and large portion. >> can you give us the calorie count on any of those? >> no. eric? >> so, a little history behind memorial day, originally called decoration day after the civil war, may 30th, every year. in 1968, the last monday of may. 1971, an official holiday. that said, check out haitian born emotional alex. you know why he's emotional? he just made it through u.s. military academy. he is now second lieutenant. congratulations. >> i love that. god bless him. amazing. >> we talk a lot about graduates and you are going to meet a
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young man here who is only 12 years old and already accepted in the university of california santa cruz and university of california davis. he is from sacramento. take a listen to him. >> i think i'll be 18 when i get my m.d. mad scientist code thing. i think about learning is fun. >> he got his high school diploma a year prior to this. that was an accomplishment that got a letter from president obama. he's glad to be going because he's been waiting a long time for this. >> awesome. >> how cute. greg? >> something new. >> leaps right out at ya, doesn't it? weaner, the documentary on anthony weaner is out. check it out. it's cringe worthy.
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decided to film on the second try of being mayor. as the new scandal unfolds when he was texting with leathers. it's quite disturbing. it's fun. it's a fun movie. >> we should see it? >> you should see it. i gave it four unicorn horns. >> how many can you get? >> five. >> ebony? >> retired connecticut police officer carried this young woman to her safety 20 years ago. in turn, she invited him to her high school graduation. so sweet. she was carried out of a burning building at 5 years old by officer peter jens. then he showed up at her graduation. she graduated magnum cum laude with a bachelors in accounting. >> good for you for the one more thing of the day. that was epic. >> i think mine was good, too.
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>> thank you for joining us this memorial day. "special report" is up next. as american troops assist iraqis in an effort to drive isis terrorists out of fa lucia, americans at home remember their heroes who never came back. this is "special report." welcome to washington. i'm in for bret baier. it is a solemn, but calm memorial day here in the nation's capital. president obama paid respects to the fallen, a half world away, it is anything but calm. americans are, again, engaged in conflict. in conflict where the bullets j. kevin begins the coverage tonight from the white house.

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